The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 1 (September 25, 1975)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0093.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 4, Number 1 (September 25, 1975)
Date
25 September 1975
Evergreen Subject
Student Organizing and Activism
Faculty Hiring and Governance
Media Studies/Arts
Description
Eng Page 1: Cooper Point Journal (front page) Registration: Advancing Around Us Again (drawing by Woo);
Page 2: Staff credits;
Page 2: Table of contents;
Page 2: (advertisement) Collegiate Research;
Page 2: (advertisement) Demiurge: a monthly supplement to the Journal;
Page 3: LETTERS: (image) Olympia Yacht Club (by Doug King);
Page 3: To Editor: Has All the Info Gone?;
Page 3-4: To Editor: Registration Roulette;
Page 4: To Editor: Rules and Regulations;
Page 4: To Editor: Price Rip-Off;
Page 4: To Editor: Love and Raisin;
Page 4: (advertisement) SAGA Food Services and Deli;
Page 5: In Brief: Campus: Hom Nevv Director of Counseling Services (image: George L. Hom);
Page 5: In Brief: Campus: Evergreen Receives Humanities Grant;
Page 5: In Brief: Campus: Return the Library Locker Keys!;
Page 5: (advertisement) Graduation Photographs '75;
Page 5: (cartoon) Da Boidz;
Page 6: In Brief: Campus: Visiting Faculty Named (image) Pam Schick;
Page 6: In Brief: Campus: Feeney Named Evergreen Development Officer;
Page 6: In Brief: Local: UW Offers Televised Sexuality Course;
Page 6: In Brief: Campus: Library's Periodical Section Returns;
Page 6: In Brief: Campus: Richter New Vets Supervisor;
Page 6: (advertisement) Sell or trade Hart Freestyle Skis;
Page 7: In Brief: Local: Action Childcare Coalition Meets at Governor's Office;
Page 7: (advertisement) The Cooper Point Journal;
Page 8: (advertisement) Campus Housing: "Meet Felden";
Page 9: Announcements;
Page 9: (advertisement) Word of Mouth Books;
Page 10: NEWS BRIEFS National: JoAnne Views the Future
Page 10-11: NEWS BRIEFS National: A Cartoonist's Free Speech Battle (O'Neil, Brian);
Page 10: (image) O'Neill 's parody of Mickey Mouse for City of SF Magazine;
Page 10: (image) O 'Neill 's parody of himself for City of SF Magazine;
Page 10: (advertisement) Unclaimed Scholarships;
Page 11: NEWS BRIEFS International: A Vacation in Communist Saigon;
Page 12: An EVERGREEN DICTIONARY;
Page 13: Interview with John Woo (image: John Woo);
Page 13: (advertisement) Kawasaki Inc.;
Page 13 ORIENTATlON WEEK;
Page 14: Registration Dialogue (images: Renzo Difuria (by Gilbreath), students at Academic Fair, male student at Academic Fair;
Page 14: Parking Fees;
Page 14: (advertisement) Massoth Autoparts & Machine Shop;
Page 15: Meet Maggie, the Great Geoduck (image: Maggie the Geoduc (by King);
Page 15: Housing Check-in;
Page 15: (advertisement) Shipwreck Beads;
Page 16: (advertisement) Intercity Transit
Creator
Eng King, Janice
Eng Stillwell, Larry
Eng Herron, Bob
Eng Jones,David
Eng Kaufman, Cary
Eng Cowger, Christina
Eng Smith, Ralph
Eng Trabka, Barbara Shellnut
Contributor
Eng Locke-Flemming, Ti
Eng Saterwhite, Owens
Eng Plautz, Gary
Eng Carroll, Chris
Eng King, Janice
Eng Stillwell, Larry
Eng Herron, Bob
Eng Jones, David
Eng Cowger, Christina
Eng Kaufman, Gary
Eng Smith, Ralph
Eng Shellnut-Trabka, Barbara
Eng King, Doug
Eng Gilbreath, Ford
Eng Meighan, Kathleen
Eng Spearman, Danny
Eng Edge, Dexter
Eng Martinez, Tess
Eng Zupa, John
Eng Connolly, Nancy
Eng Sargent, Heidi
Eng Feyk, Jim
Eng Riddell, Catherine
Eng Stivers, Michael
Eng Grisbov, Margaret
Eng Cornish, Billie
Eng Hester, Mary
Subject
Eng The Evergreen State College Class Registration
Eng Communism
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Olympia,WA
Eng Washington
Eng Saigon
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 16 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1975/1976
extracted text
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48

Intercity Transit

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-= COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Welcomes
-

~the l

Volume IV Number 1

........

Budd
I n l tJ f

September 25. 1975

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" 8US DOES NOT RUN ON SA TURDA YS
BUS RUNS TO T .E.S.C. ONLY DURING THE AC ADEMIC YEAR ; DURING SIl EAKS, BUS WILL " DEADH EAU " AT
f. LLlOTT 1l0. & DIVISION ST .
C ALL 866-6300 FOR CHANGE IN SCHWULE

REGISTRA nON: ADVANCING AROUND US AGAIN

l-AI<£S
With TESC Clmrll ~ Se rv icl' C<lrJ
Adulh
l~ - I S '· l'.lI' ~
l ' mlt-I" C' "('.1 r~

1St
2S (
1St
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Schedules of all routes
can be obtained at the
Information Center. in . the CAB.

W ith another Orientation Week almost over, John Woo's draw ing
a ptly illustrates s tudents' fru strati o ns, Long lines scra mbled dire f
sea rching for a progra m , an advisor, a n obscure room .' or a Fi Aid ch~~~n~~
beCtlrnl.ng th e rul e, not the exception, to Evergreen 's mode of registering
Se I11ln..lrS star t next week .. . w e h ope yo u f'In d yourself In
. the program
.
yo u
w.ln ll'd (or a reaso na ble facs imil e ther:?ot) .... a nd happy beginnin g of the yea r .

)

2

~JOURNAL
~

September 25,1975

Staf f

3

LETTERS

CONTENTS

Registration Roulette

EDITOR
Ti Locke- Fleming

MANAGING EDITOR

LETTERS .. ..... ........ .... ...... . .... ...... ...... .................... .. ... ..... ..... ......... PAGE 3

T o th e Edit o r :

ORIENT A TlON WEEK .. .. ........ .. ... .. ............... ..... ... .... .. .... . .. ...... . .... PAGE 13

A s m a ll y et re vea ling ex p e rience occurred this w E'ek , o n e whi c h spoiled a few
illu s io n s fo r m e ; na m e ly , o ur "firs t come ,
firs t se rved " reg istrati o n .
Kn ow in g the re wo uld be o the rs equall y
de te rmined to be firs t, I planted my body
a n ho ur befo re reg is trati o n , a mid 30 or so
o th e r e arl y -bird s , r e ad a book , and
wa it eu , co nfide nt th a t I co uld secure a
sp o t in the limited numbe r o f o penings of
m y c hose n co urse.
S tea dil y , o th e r pr os p ec tive s tudent s
wa lk ed up , o bse rved th e number ahead of
th e m , a nd sa t d o wn . O cca s io nally , someo ne would casu a ll y c ross the invisible
bo undr v, a nd s it d o wn beyond their
" rig htful " place in line, either joining a
tri e nd , o r simpl y a ware that n o one wa s
go in g to rai se a s tink over one or two
peopl e v io la ting thi s unwritten code of
ethi cs. They w e re ri ght.
A fe w minut es before the doors o pened,
so m eo ne nea r the fr o nt said something,
th o u gh I didn 't hea r , cau sing a very
hum o ro u s domin o eff ec t to run through
th e c r ow d . Eve r yo n e s tood up a nd
p ressed fo rwa rd , beg inning the great p osi ti o nin g game th a t wa s to foll o w. This
fa lse a la rm t rigge red the built-up tens ion
of us a ll. Th ose fa rthe r back grew more
pa n ick y. Afte r a ll. getting onl y o ne s hot
a t a co urse that could la s t the entire year
is seri o u s bus iness, and a ll actio ns were
unde rs tandabl e.
Th e re \ove re no unto rtunat es tra mpled or
eve n ph ys ica ll y a bu sed , th o ugh one
w o ul d h ave bee n a t o dds ~ o remain seated
wh e n th e m ass of us m oved forward . The
infa m o u s b a ttlefi eld o f regi stration was
not an y w o rse tha n m y pre viou s exper ie nce at othe r co ll eg~,?, but the fact that it
was th e sa me cha nged a few o pinions of
this o b se rve r.
A m o re a ppropri a te phra se for this
yea r's reg is tra tion w o'uld have been , "first
to d o min a te , firs t se rved. " The maj o rity
of abu se wa s m e ntal , with people gaining
te rrit o ry, a nd ge nerall y inhibiting those
w ho tried to m<lint a in the ori g inal form of
orde r .
co ntinued on page 4

Owens Satterwhite

NEWS BRIEFS CAMPUS / LOCAL ....... .. .. .. ........ .... . .... .. , .. ..... .. .. .... .... PAGE 5

NEWS EDITORS
Ga ry Pl a ut z, CaI1'lpUS, Local
C hris Ca rro ll. N atio nal
ltlternatio nal

NEWS STAFF
1.lni ce Kin g

Bll b He rron
Ca ry Ka ufman

Larry Stillwell
David Jo nes
C hri s tin a Cow ger

DA BOIDZ ... .... . ...... .... .... ... .. , .... "" .. , . .. ... ... ... . .. , .. , .... . , ... ....... , .. . . ,.. PAGE 5
ANNOUNCEMENTS .. ....... ... .............. .... .................... ... ... ,., ... ... .. ,. PAGE 15
NEWS BRIEFS NATIONAlI INTERNA TlONAL.. .... .. .. .. .... .... .. .... ...... . Page

9

EVERGREEN DICTIONARy ..... .... ... .. .. ....... ........... ............ .... .... .. .. PAGE 12

Ralph Smith
Barbara She llnut Tra bka

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug King
F(Iru Gilbreath
Ka thlee n M e igh a n

This material is designed to be used as a research aid only.

PRODUCTION
Da nny Spearman , Manager
D ex ter Edge, Ass is tant
T ess Martin ez , A ss istant

ADVERTISING

Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog of
5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling.

COLLEGIATE RESEARCH

BUSINESS MANAGER
SECRETARY
Catherine Riddell
The Cooper Point Journal is publi s hed we e kly by the Evergreen
State College Board of Publications
and ml'mbers of the Evergreen community. The Journal is funded
through student Services and Activities fees and advertising revenue .
Views expressed in the Journal are
not necessarily those of the editorial
staff or The Evergreen State College.
The Journal new s and business
o ffic es are located in the College
Activities Building (CAB) rm . 306 .
New s phones : 866-6214 and -6213;
ad vertising and business 866-6080.
The Journal is free to all students
of The Evergreen State College and
i, di stributed on campus without
charge. For non-Evergreen students,
a nine-month subscription may be
obtained at the price of four dollars .

ADVISOR
\ lirgarl' t C ribsk ov ( p m

RESEARCH PAPERS
THOUSANDS ON FILE

Jo hn Zupa , Manager
N ancy Conn o ll y
H e idi Sa rgent
Michael Stive rs
lim Fey k

Has All the Info. Gone?

1720 PONTIUS AVE ., SUITE 201
LOS ANGELES, CALIF . 90025

-------------------------------------------------------Name ____________.__________________________________
Address ____________________________________________

City ______________.__________________
State _____________________________ Zip ----__----''--_

INTRODUCING

th€ b€mlUQCj€
A monthly Supplement to the JOURNAL
First issue October 30ih.
A coll ec tion of poetry and pro se. photoqraphs and oth er original art
drawn from in an d a ro und th e E'/e rg ree n co mmunity .

/ (' 111)

TYPESETTERS

For more information ca ll Gary Kaufm an at th e Journal (- 6214) .

. Billie Co rni s h
M ar y H es tl' r

PRINTER

CJJte t.;;;Jourrtal

• o ne who work s for th e people.
In Plato's philosophy, t h e c reative s pirit who made th e world _

T(1 t he Edit o r :
I'd li ke to m ake a s ta te m e nt o f g rea t
p(1liti ca l a nd socia l imp o rt ... Oh Lo rd y
w on 't so m eo ne s ta rt thinking seri o us ly
a b o ut deve lo pIn g a nd m a intaining an acti ve sys t e m o f c(1 ll ec tin g in fo rm at io n
a bout ac ti v iti es s phn so red by the v a ri 0 us
aca d e mi c pro g r a m ~. O r a n yo ne fo r th a t
m a tte r . The Info rm a ti o n Ce nt e r ca n' t d o
it (lo r reason s .o f eco n o mi c necess it y), a lIh o ugh th ey wo uld be m orE' tha n ha pp y
t(1 publi c ize w ha te ve r co m es ac ross th e ir
desk . Th e so m e tim e Aca de mi c A d viso r
1I1ay b e a bl e to d o it (it d e pe nds o n h,) w
he she fee ls a b o ut th at so rt o f thing) . The
C I'I wO llld d ll it . if o nl y th ey ha d the
s ta ff. Th e p rog ra m sec re ta ri es mi ght do it
it som eo ne wo uld te ll th e m w ha t's g oing
lIn a hea u o f tim e , a nd in b e twee n ph o ne
m e~sages a nd eva lu a ti o ns. Fac ult y mi g ht ,
b ut th E'y' re so b usy runnin g thei r prn g ra m ~ . May be th e stude nts wo uld , m ay b e.
Eve rYl) ne has the ir excuse .
In th e m ea ntim e , Eve rg ree n lac k s a ny
~ (1rt 01 p os t - progralll hi s to ri es, Pro jec t a r c h iv<:., . ll r int e r - p rog ra m a n y thin g. Onl y
b y th e m e res t c ha nce d oe" on e finu o ut
wh .1t Jnl) t h,' r s tu de nt m ig ht helve do n e in
J ~ imi "'lr pr og rd m last qu a rt e r . No forum
e, is t-; I(l r crea t i n g s tud t' nt o ri g in a te d
gro up llln! r.l ch ; l' XC U ~ l' nw, th e re a re bul lelin b ' IM c! " <Ind Ihl' Wil li s in th e rest r(1(1m ., . J) iJ lo g. l.rl'J t .
F Vl'rVI\)W " ,'(' n b t ~ ) rl'Cl Ig ni 7e the ditfu sl'
Il J t II I'l ' -(I I Ih l' k ll (1w il'd g(' .1I1d sk ill s flo<l t in g ,d)(1l11 th(' ( .lml'lI ". M o s l pe opl e see m
1(1 IT( \'g n l/ I' I h .11 il i ~ tlUl' 1(1 S(\lll l' Js pec t
(I I Till' Fn 'q'. I l'L· 1l SI.11(' CI1 II ('g(' Rh L' lllri c.
S "Ill!' "'Til 1'1',, 1('"'' I " h.1l1\\V w h v
Few
\\' 1',,101 ,I, . I i '. " ·" " '1,11 Ill\' id e.! 111.11 ,h iS

m a rs hm a ll o w s itu a ti o n a t times presents
cl' ri a in diffi c ulti es. Th e co ncept o f freef(\ rm edu ca ti o n d oes no t condo ne lac k o f
cp nt e nt. A free fl ow o f kn ow led ge d oes
nll t exc use lack o f accessa bilit y.
I sugges t th a t the e ntit y whi c h call s
it se lf Eve rg ree n (a nd the people w ho ca ll
t he msclv es Eve rg ree ne rs) recog ni ze th e
fac t th a t , in thi s s ituati o n a t leas t, so m ew he re be twee n th e rhe to ri c a nd process,
",' m e thin g o f vit a l impo rt a n ce to the qu a lil y o f edu ca tion al Eve rgree n has bee n
(l vl'r loo ked ; th e deve lo pm e nt a nd m a in le na nce o f a c, ui ck. acc ura te a nd access ib le sys te m o f info rm a ti o n exc ha nge be twee n peo ple o n ca mpu s. The idea that a
su<; ta in ed fl ow o f kn o wl ed ge a nd sk ill s is
some how up to th ose w h o fee l lik e publi c iz in g th eir inte res ts in a n ex tracurri cul a r
S(' rt of way s ma c ks o f irresponsibilit y.
Irres p(In s ibilit y O f) th e part o f " Everg ree n "
er~ " w hll see m ca ug ht up in th e co ncept
o t inform a ti o n as som e so rt ,of o n e- w ay ,
publ i" hed ! hrna d,as ted , pa ss i1. entertain me nt , a nd irresp o nsibilit y o n the part o f
t he in s tituti ll n in its di sinte res t in taking
"a Hirm a ti ve ac tion " in a tte mpting to d evl' ll1p an ac tiv e a w a re ness of the int erd ept' nd pnt na ture of tha t fl ow. Fro m thi s
a ng le (nvl' riooking the new la b building)
il see nl S th <l t the tim e has a lrea d y pa ssed
wh e n those (we) a t Ev ergreen sta rt b ecom ing ac ti vel y resp o ns ibl e for th e fund o f
rflluu c ti vl' dl,'rt s a nd c un centra ted poo l
" I l'x pe ri e nce w hi ch ex is ts he re. A fund
w hi c h . a t prese nt , is be ing di ssipa ted a nd
ig nl1 red fo r a n y num ber o f reas nn a hl e exClI St'S.
Ma rv in Young
-5 187
53.1 -62 -6 175
l'vl .10oA
otl<;05

The JOllrnal w elcom es all sign ed
Ir tt e rs tc. th e Edit o r , a nd w ill print
th e m <IS space pe rmit s . To b e co n side red f,Ir publi ca tion th a t w eek ,
le tt e rs mu st b e received no la te r
th cl n 5 p.m . o n the Tu esd ay preced in g th e Thursd ay o f publi cati o n .
Le tt e rs rece iv ed af te r ' thi s dea dlin e
w ill be co ns id e red f ~) r the fo ll o win g
wrc k's issue. Le tt e rs th a t a re t y pe w ri t te n , uo ubl e-spaced a nd 700
wI1 rLis o r less have a b e tte r c ha nce
1(\ be p ll h li ~ h ed .

I

2

~JOURNAL
~

September 25,1975

Staf f

3

LETTERS

CONTENTS

Registration Roulette

EDITOR
Ti Locke- Fleming

MANAGING EDITOR

LETTERS .. ..... ........ .... ...... . .... ...... ...... .................... .. ... ..... ..... ......... PAGE 3

T o th e Edit o r :

ORIENT A TlON WEEK .. .. ........ .. ... .. ............... ..... ... .... .. .... . .. ...... . .... PAGE 13

A s m a ll y et re vea ling ex p e rience occurred this w E'ek , o n e whi c h spoiled a few
illu s io n s fo r m e ; na m e ly , o ur "firs t come ,
firs t se rved " reg istrati o n .
Kn ow in g the re wo uld be o the rs equall y
de te rmined to be firs t, I planted my body
a n ho ur befo re reg is trati o n , a mid 30 or so
o th e r e arl y -bird s , r e ad a book , and
wa it eu , co nfide nt th a t I co uld secure a
sp o t in the limited numbe r o f o penings of
m y c hose n co urse.
S tea dil y , o th e r pr os p ec tive s tudent s
wa lk ed up , o bse rved th e number ahead of
th e m , a nd sa t d o wn . O cca s io nally , someo ne would casu a ll y c ross the invisible
bo undr v, a nd s it d o wn beyond their
" rig htful " place in line, either joining a
tri e nd , o r simpl y a ware that n o one wa s
go in g to rai se a s tink over one or two
peopl e v io la ting thi s unwritten code of
ethi cs. They w e re ri ght.
A fe w minut es before the doors o pened,
so m eo ne nea r the fr o nt said something,
th o u gh I didn 't hea r , cau sing a very
hum o ro u s domin o eff ec t to run through
th e c r ow d . Eve r yo n e s tood up a nd
p ressed fo rwa rd , beg inning the great p osi ti o nin g game th a t wa s to foll o w. This
fa lse a la rm t rigge red the built-up tens ion
of us a ll. Th ose fa rthe r back grew more
pa n ick y. Afte r a ll. getting onl y o ne s hot
a t a co urse that could la s t the entire year
is seri o u s bus iness, and a ll actio ns were
unde rs tandabl e.
Th e re \ove re no unto rtunat es tra mpled or
eve n ph ys ica ll y a bu sed , th o ugh one
w o ul d h ave bee n a t o dds ~ o remain seated
wh e n th e m ass of us m oved forward . The
infa m o u s b a ttlefi eld o f regi stration was
not an y w o rse tha n m y pre viou s exper ie nce at othe r co ll eg~,?, but the fact that it
was th e sa me cha nged a few o pinions of
this o b se rve r.
A m o re a ppropri a te phra se for this
yea r's reg is tra tion w o'uld have been , "first
to d o min a te , firs t se rved. " The maj o rity
of abu se wa s m e ntal , with people gaining
te rrit o ry, a nd ge nerall y inhibiting those
w ho tried to m<lint a in the ori g inal form of
orde r .
co ntinued on page 4

Owens Satterwhite

NEWS BRIEFS CAMPUS / LOCAL ....... .. .. .. ........ .... . .... .. , .. ..... .. .. .... .... PAGE 5

NEWS EDITORS
Ga ry Pl a ut z, CaI1'lpUS, Local
C hris Ca rro ll. N atio nal
ltlternatio nal

NEWS STAFF
1.lni ce Kin g

Bll b He rron
Ca ry Ka ufman

Larry Stillwell
David Jo nes
C hri s tin a Cow ger

DA BOIDZ ... .... . ...... .... .... ... .. , .... "" .. , . .. ... ... ... . .. , .. , .... . , ... ....... , .. . . ,.. PAGE 5
ANNOUNCEMENTS .. ....... ... .............. .... .................... ... ... ,., ... ... .. ,. PAGE 15
NEWS BRIEFS NATIONAlI INTERNA TlONAL.. .... .. .. .. .... .... .. .... ...... . Page

9

EVERGREEN DICTIONARy ..... .... ... .. .. ....... ........... ............ .... .... .. .. PAGE 12

Ralph Smith
Barbara She llnut Tra bka

PHOTOGRAPHY
Doug King
F(Iru Gilbreath
Ka thlee n M e igh a n

This material is designed to be used as a research aid only.

PRODUCTION
Da nny Spearman , Manager
D ex ter Edge, Ass is tant
T ess Martin ez , A ss istant

ADVERTISING

Send for your up-to-date, 160-page, mail order catalog of
5,500 topics. Enclose $1.00 to cover postage and handling.

COLLEGIATE RESEARCH

BUSINESS MANAGER
SECRETARY
Catherine Riddell
The Cooper Point Journal is publi s hed we e kly by the Evergreen
State College Board of Publications
and ml'mbers of the Evergreen community. The Journal is funded
through student Services and Activities fees and advertising revenue .
Views expressed in the Journal are
not necessarily those of the editorial
staff or The Evergreen State College.
The Journal new s and business
o ffic es are located in the College
Activities Building (CAB) rm . 306 .
New s phones : 866-6214 and -6213;
ad vertising and business 866-6080.
The Journal is free to all students
of The Evergreen State College and
i, di stributed on campus without
charge. For non-Evergreen students,
a nine-month subscription may be
obtained at the price of four dollars .

ADVISOR
\ lirgarl' t C ribsk ov ( p m

RESEARCH PAPERS
THOUSANDS ON FILE

Jo hn Zupa , Manager
N ancy Conn o ll y
H e idi Sa rgent
Michael Stive rs
lim Fey k

Has All the Info. Gone?

1720 PONTIUS AVE ., SUITE 201
LOS ANGELES, CALIF . 90025

-------------------------------------------------------Name ____________.__________________________________
Address ____________________________________________

City ______________.__________________
State _____________________________ Zip ----__----''--_

INTRODUCING

th€ b€mlUQCj€
A monthly Supplement to the JOURNAL
First issue October 30ih.
A coll ec tion of poetry and pro se. photoqraphs and oth er original art
drawn from in an d a ro und th e E'/e rg ree n co mmunity .

/ (' 111)

TYPESETTERS

For more information ca ll Gary Kaufm an at th e Journal (- 6214) .

. Billie Co rni s h
M ar y H es tl' r

PRINTER

CJJte t.;;;Jourrtal

• o ne who work s for th e people.
In Plato's philosophy, t h e c reative s pirit who made th e world _

T(1 t he Edit o r :
I'd li ke to m ake a s ta te m e nt o f g rea t
p(1liti ca l a nd socia l imp o rt ... Oh Lo rd y
w on 't so m eo ne s ta rt thinking seri o us ly
a b o ut deve lo pIn g a nd m a intaining an acti ve sys t e m o f c(1 ll ec tin g in fo rm at io n
a bout ac ti v iti es s phn so red by the v a ri 0 us
aca d e mi c pro g r a m ~. O r a n yo ne fo r th a t
m a tte r . The Info rm a ti o n Ce nt e r ca n' t d o
it (lo r reason s .o f eco n o mi c necess it y), a lIh o ugh th ey wo uld be m orE' tha n ha pp y
t(1 publi c ize w ha te ve r co m es ac ross th e ir
desk . Th e so m e tim e Aca de mi c A d viso r
1I1ay b e a bl e to d o it (it d e pe nds o n h,) w
he she fee ls a b o ut th at so rt o f thing) . The
C I'I wO llld d ll it . if o nl y th ey ha d the
s ta ff. Th e p rog ra m sec re ta ri es mi ght do it
it som eo ne wo uld te ll th e m w ha t's g oing
lIn a hea u o f tim e , a nd in b e twee n ph o ne
m e~sages a nd eva lu a ti o ns. Fac ult y mi g ht ,
b ut th E'y' re so b usy runnin g thei r prn g ra m ~ . May be th e stude nts wo uld , m ay b e.
Eve rYl) ne has the ir excuse .
In th e m ea ntim e , Eve rg ree n lac k s a ny
~ (1rt 01 p os t - progralll hi s to ri es, Pro jec t a r c h iv<:., . ll r int e r - p rog ra m a n y thin g. Onl y
b y th e m e res t c ha nce d oe" on e finu o ut
wh .1t Jnl) t h,' r s tu de nt m ig ht helve do n e in
J ~ imi "'lr pr og rd m last qu a rt e r . No forum
e, is t-; I(l r crea t i n g s tud t' nt o ri g in a te d
gro up llln! r.l ch ; l' XC U ~ l' nw, th e re a re bul lelin b ' IM c! " <Ind Ihl' Wil li s in th e rest r(1(1m ., . J) iJ lo g. l.rl'J t .
F Vl'rVI\)W " ,'(' n b t ~ ) rl'Cl Ig ni 7e the ditfu sl'
Il J t II I'l ' -(I I Ih l' k ll (1w il'd g(' .1I1d sk ill s flo<l t in g ,d)(1l11 th(' ( .lml'lI ". M o s l pe opl e see m
1(1 IT( \'g n l/ I' I h .11 il i ~ tlUl' 1(1 S(\lll l' Js pec t
(I I Till' Fn 'q'. I l'L· 1l SI.11(' CI1 II ('g(' Rh L' lllri c.
S "Ill!' "'Til 1'1',, 1('"'' I " h.1l1\\V w h v
Few
\\' 1',,101 ,I, . I i '. " ·" " '1,11 Ill\' id e.! 111.11 ,h iS

m a rs hm a ll o w s itu a ti o n a t times presents
cl' ri a in diffi c ulti es. Th e co ncept o f freef(\ rm edu ca ti o n d oes no t condo ne lac k o f
cp nt e nt. A free fl ow o f kn ow led ge d oes
nll t exc use lack o f accessa bilit y.
I sugges t th a t the e ntit y whi c h call s
it se lf Eve rg ree n (a nd the people w ho ca ll
t he msclv es Eve rg ree ne rs) recog ni ze th e
fac t th a t , in thi s s ituati o n a t leas t, so m ew he re be twee n th e rhe to ri c a nd process,
",' m e thin g o f vit a l impo rt a n ce to the qu a lil y o f edu ca tion al Eve rgree n has bee n
(l vl'r loo ked ; th e deve lo pm e nt a nd m a in le na nce o f a c, ui ck. acc ura te a nd access ib le sys te m o f info rm a ti o n exc ha nge be twee n peo ple o n ca mpu s. The idea that a
su<; ta in ed fl ow o f kn o wl ed ge a nd sk ill s is
some how up to th ose w h o fee l lik e publi c iz in g th eir inte res ts in a n ex tracurri cul a r
S(' rt of way s ma c ks o f irresponsibilit y.
Irres p(In s ibilit y O f) th e part o f " Everg ree n "
er~ " w hll see m ca ug ht up in th e co ncept
o t inform a ti o n as som e so rt ,of o n e- w ay ,
publ i" hed ! hrna d,as ted , pa ss i1. entertain me nt , a nd irresp o nsibilit y o n the part o f
t he in s tituti ll n in its di sinte res t in taking
"a Hirm a ti ve ac tion " in a tte mpting to d evl' ll1p an ac tiv e a w a re ness of the int erd ept' nd pnt na ture of tha t fl ow. Fro m thi s
a ng le (nvl' riooking the new la b building)
il see nl S th <l t the tim e has a lrea d y pa ssed
wh e n those (we) a t Ev ergreen sta rt b ecom ing ac ti vel y resp o ns ibl e for th e fund o f
rflluu c ti vl' dl,'rt s a nd c un centra ted poo l
" I l'x pe ri e nce w hi ch ex is ts he re. A fund
w hi c h . a t prese nt , is be ing di ssipa ted a nd
ig nl1 red fo r a n y num ber o f reas nn a hl e exClI St'S.
Ma rv in Young
-5 187
53.1 -62 -6 175
l'vl .10oA
otl<;05

The JOllrnal w elcom es all sign ed
Ir tt e rs tc. th e Edit o r , a nd w ill print
th e m <IS space pe rmit s . To b e co n side red f,Ir publi ca tion th a t w eek ,
le tt e rs mu st b e received no la te r
th cl n 5 p.m . o n the Tu esd ay preced in g th e Thursd ay o f publi cati o n .
Le tt e rs rece iv ed af te r ' thi s dea dlin e
w ill be co ns id e red f ~) r the fo ll o win g
wrc k's issue. Le tt e rs th a t a re t y pe w ri t te n , uo ubl e-spaced a nd 700
wI1 rLis o r less have a b e tte r c ha nce
1(\ be p ll h li ~ h ed .

I

4
co ntinued rrmll

J

IX(' , ;

T he ana logies were obviolls . As the
doo rs o pened and we common peo ple
surged throu gh , wailing moo's filte:ed
above th e indist in ct tal k ing and shuffling
fee t, typ ifying the herd we were. In the
end , my ho ur o f pat ience paid very Itttle,
as I no ti ced ma ny more we re registe red
th a n were origi nall y ahead of me.
Th e a lt e rnativ~ co llege of Evergreen ,
thou gh ca ught a t its wo rst, is no t rea ll y
so d ifferent . Do n' t let the ai r of uniqueness here blind yo u too mu ch . It is no big
thing, peop le a re people, selfi sh in our
ow n civi li zed fash io n, but it wo uld have
been reassuring if the honest a ttempt s at
co mmuniccl ti o n a nd understanding that
we profess in o ur programs were ca rried
dow n to the simpl e function of regi stra tio n . T he maxi m remains; get them belore th ey get you.
C h ris Carroll

Rules and Regulations
T <, th e Ed it or :
A new a ltern a tive school was started
thi s fall for the Olympia area , calling
itse lf the Open Communit y Junior School.
Designed for people fro m 9 to 12 years
old , it is a lready full y approved and
accredited by the State. This school is an
outgrow th of th e Open ' Community
Sc hool fo r 5 to 8 yea r-o lds, with which
many peop le in the Evergreen community

are familiar .
Richard Matchette started the junior
school after graduating fr o m TESC and
teaching for a year in Open Community
School. Also teaching in the schoo l is
Mike Gonsalves, a graduate of Ohio State
University (Goodbye, Columbus ). Mike
h as 2 years experience in alternative
schoo ls in the East.
Th e sc hoo l s tress es a p e rso n a liz ed,
individu ali zed, positive learning experie nce. It is also ac tivity or ie nted ,
endeavo ring through a ha nds-on approach
to lea rning, to develop the. students as
good problem solvers. And a 5 to 1
s tud e nt - to-t eac h er ratio doesn't hurt
things a ny.
Th e school is presently operating out of
Tum wa ter. Interes ted people should call
Mike a t 866-3967 or David Jones at
866-7646 .

Price Rip-Off
T o the Editor:
. The large billboard outside of Mark-it
Foods in downtown Olympia advertised
"five pounds for a dollar" apples on
Wednesday and Thursday of las t week.
On Thursday I picked up a couple of
apples . At the check stand I gave a
penny to a lady ~n front of me who was
short.
I remarked these apples I'm buying are
the five pounds for a dollar apples. The
clerk says there aren' t any such thing. I

'D ELI

Mon

September 25, 1975
point e d out the sign out front still
advertising five pounds for a dollar. The
sign over the "Red Delicious" apples
inside had been changed to four pounds
for a dollar since I had picked up the
apples to buy. False advertising. The clerk
charged me four pounds for a dollar and
make me break a bill to . pay the total. I
was a penny short.
Today I found o ut I have bugs .
b o ug ht some " Kwell " at the Mark-it
pharmacy for $3.19 a bottle. I didn' t have
enough for shampoo . I went home and
got money . I got to Sea-mart for the
shampoo. Shampoos' $1.79 at Sea-mart as
the lo tion would have been if I bought it
there . $1.40 difference for an identical
a mount of the same product.
Elliot N . Jones

IN BRIEF
CAMPUS
Hom Nevv Director of
Counseling Services

TM : Love is to share, and to share is
to receive and to receive is to understand
and to understand you most certainly
have to compromise and to compromise
you have to accept one's feelings without
being chained to that part of human
nature. Then to the best of my knowledge
you ' re only relating to the everyday
encounter that we all fear. That is the
fragile encounter that bonds the human
so ul and mind.
Jesse
P.S . There must be something .. .. trees,
Raisin Bran .... or something.

George L. Hom , most recently director
of a Seattle children's and youth program ,
is Evergreen 's new coordinator of Counseling Services.
In hi s new job, Hom will coordinate the
services of counseling - including workshops and out-reach programs - a nd will
supervise and help train counseling's paraprofessio nal staff.
Hom, who coo rdinated the children's
and youth program a t the Highline West
Seattle Mental Health Center for the past
yea r, has also served as director of the
Asia n Counseling a nd Referral Service in
Seattle and as chief psychologist a t a
mental hea lth center in Springfield, Ill.

SERVICES

- Fri

Evergreen Receives
Humanities Grant

Hours: lOam - 6pm
of the CAB
Whole Kosher Pickles,
Cheese, Bread, Fruit,
Yogurt, Ice cream,
Soda Pop, etc.

The o ther colleges to receive grants
were P ortland State University, University of Virginia , an d University of Massachu se tt s Harbo r Ca mpus in Bosto n .

Return the Library
Locker Keys!

don't be shy, give our hard working staH
in the library a break a nd return your
keys. You ' ll get your quarter ba ck to o . If
you've got an y qu es ti ons or problems,
just ask.

Love and Raisin Bran

~UOD

Located on the 2nd Floor

September 25, 1975

5

Breakfast 7:45 - 9:00
Lunch
11 :30 - 1 :00
Dinner
5:00 - 6:00
Snack bar Open
9:30 - 4:30
Breakfast; all you can eat for $1.35

"

Evergreen is one of four co lleges in the
United States to receive a gra nt from the
National Endowment for the Humanities
to support advanced-level hum a niti es
studies , it was announced this week in
Wa shington , D .C.
The amount of the three-year gra nt is
$176,934 a nd it will enable the college, acco rding to proj ect director and faculty
member C ha rles Teske, to strengthen itse lf
in aca d e mi c fie ld s s uch as lit e ra tur e,
philosophy , political scie nce. la nguages ,
speech , hi story, and criticism of the arts.
The initia l program to be benefi tted by
the large gra nt will be Cu lture, Ideology,
a nd Social C ha nge in A mer ica , a coo rdi na ted studies pnlgram. The awa rd will
provide for guest lecturers for t he program a nd will suppo rt new acqu isiti ons to
Eve rgr('(' n '~ library reso urces in th e hu ma nities.
Cummen ting nn the lllng- ra nge va lu e of
the gra nt , Teske SJ id , "T hi s gran! w ill
all ow thl' Cll lll'ge to devt'lor mlldd s a nd
tr,ldition s nl ad vanced hUIll .l ni o.; ti c stud y
in it-; turm,1t ivl' years whic h wil l h.lvt' a
~ Ir(lllg imr.1ct on tht' lutufl' curri culu lll ."

'Let' s get those keys returned to the
libra ry . Library fo lk s did a cleaning-clearing ou.t of all unl ocked lockers, and left a
no te in the locked ones, requesting the
u ser t Cl re turn the locker key. The
problem is, a second set of keys was
never sent by the manufacturer, a nd so it
is essentia l that they be returned .
All kinds of items were left in the
locke rs over the summer. These included
w inter coats, boo ts, a bottle of shampoo,
a combination lock , dishes, jam , mugs,
asso rted bill s, letters, receipt s, papers and
books, a nd one locker stuffed with shirts.
These item s are now in Security , and
items left in the lockers ca n be picked up
there.
If th e user of a locked locker returns in
the nex t two weeks he / she should remove
the no te to show tha t the locker is in use.
You've go t until Oct. 10 before a nother
cleaning of a ll lockers takes place . All
paraphernalia will then be collected, so

Afler -the 9radu.o.1:itm ceremony this past June,
a. group photo was taken out on -the mound (in. .
seeminJ'J du ory:Wzed fashion. n - however, +here
reo.lLy .i§. ().. "grodua:kon .!J1"OUf phcfo" and if can be
ordered :from /he Studio address below. Ihes~
are bla.ck and while.. prints em double-weiJh.t poper.
Please help spreod the word

rYJQ.y wo..n.:I

*' :Jrodu.a.fes

copy! ThanksBx/O: $2!9 ((X'4:.13~
&\.

who

4
co ntinued rrmll

J

IX(' , ;

T he ana logies were obviolls . As the
doo rs o pened and we common peo ple
surged throu gh , wailing moo's filte:ed
above th e indist in ct tal k ing and shuffling
fee t, typ ifying the herd we were. In the
end , my ho ur o f pat ience paid very Itttle,
as I no ti ced ma ny more we re registe red
th a n were origi nall y ahead of me.
Th e a lt e rnativ~ co llege of Evergreen ,
thou gh ca ught a t its wo rst, is no t rea ll y
so d ifferent . Do n' t let the ai r of uniqueness here blind yo u too mu ch . It is no big
thing, peop le a re people, selfi sh in our
ow n civi li zed fash io n, but it wo uld have
been reassuring if the honest a ttempt s at
co mmuniccl ti o n a nd understanding that
we profess in o ur programs were ca rried
dow n to the simpl e function of regi stra tio n . T he maxi m remains; get them belore th ey get you.
C h ris Carroll

Rules and Regulations
T <, th e Ed it or :
A new a ltern a tive school was started
thi s fall for the Olympia area , calling
itse lf the Open Communit y Junior School.
Designed for people fro m 9 to 12 years
old , it is a lready full y approved and
accredited by the State. This school is an
outgrow th of th e Open ' Community
Sc hool fo r 5 to 8 yea r-o lds, with which
many peop le in the Evergreen community

are familiar .
Richard Matchette started the junior
school after graduating fr o m TESC and
teaching for a year in Open Community
School. Also teaching in the schoo l is
Mike Gonsalves, a graduate of Ohio State
University (Goodbye, Columbus ). Mike
h as 2 years experience in alternative
schoo ls in the East.
Th e sc hoo l s tress es a p e rso n a liz ed,
individu ali zed, positive learning experie nce. It is also ac tivity or ie nted ,
endeavo ring through a ha nds-on approach
to lea rning, to develop the. students as
good problem solvers. And a 5 to 1
s tud e nt - to-t eac h er ratio doesn't hurt
things a ny.
Th e school is presently operating out of
Tum wa ter. Interes ted people should call
Mike a t 866-3967 or David Jones at
866-7646 .

Price Rip-Off
T o the Editor:
. The large billboard outside of Mark-it
Foods in downtown Olympia advertised
"five pounds for a dollar" apples on
Wednesday and Thursday of las t week.
On Thursday I picked up a couple of
apples . At the check stand I gave a
penny to a lady ~n front of me who was
short.
I remarked these apples I'm buying are
the five pounds for a dollar apples. The
clerk says there aren' t any such thing. I

'D ELI

Mon

September 25, 1975
point e d out the sign out front still
advertising five pounds for a dollar. The
sign over the "Red Delicious" apples
inside had been changed to four pounds
for a dollar since I had picked up the
apples to buy. False advertising. The clerk
charged me four pounds for a dollar and
make me break a bill to . pay the total. I
was a penny short.
Today I found o ut I have bugs .
b o ug ht some " Kwell " at the Mark-it
pharmacy for $3.19 a bottle. I didn' t have
enough for shampoo . I went home and
got money . I got to Sea-mart for the
shampoo. Shampoos' $1.79 at Sea-mart as
the lo tion would have been if I bought it
there . $1.40 difference for an identical
a mount of the same product.
Elliot N . Jones

IN BRIEF
CAMPUS
Hom Nevv Director of
Counseling Services

TM : Love is to share, and to share is
to receive and to receive is to understand
and to understand you most certainly
have to compromise and to compromise
you have to accept one's feelings without
being chained to that part of human
nature. Then to the best of my knowledge
you ' re only relating to the everyday
encounter that we all fear. That is the
fragile encounter that bonds the human
so ul and mind.
Jesse
P.S . There must be something .. .. trees,
Raisin Bran .... or something.

George L. Hom , most recently director
of a Seattle children's and youth program ,
is Evergreen 's new coordinator of Counseling Services.
In hi s new job, Hom will coordinate the
services of counseling - including workshops and out-reach programs - a nd will
supervise and help train counseling's paraprofessio nal staff.
Hom, who coo rdinated the children's
and youth program a t the Highline West
Seattle Mental Health Center for the past
yea r, has also served as director of the
Asia n Counseling a nd Referral Service in
Seattle and as chief psychologist a t a
mental hea lth center in Springfield, Ill.

SERVICES

- Fri

Evergreen Receives
Humanities Grant

Hours: lOam - 6pm
of the CAB
Whole Kosher Pickles,
Cheese, Bread, Fruit,
Yogurt, Ice cream,
Soda Pop, etc.

The o ther colleges to receive grants
were P ortland State University, University of Virginia , an d University of Massachu se tt s Harbo r Ca mpus in Bosto n .

Return the Library
Locker Keys!

don't be shy, give our hard working staH
in the library a break a nd return your
keys. You ' ll get your quarter ba ck to o . If
you've got an y qu es ti ons or problems,
just ask.

Love and Raisin Bran

~UOD

Located on the 2nd Floor

September 25, 1975

5

Breakfast 7:45 - 9:00
Lunch
11 :30 - 1 :00
Dinner
5:00 - 6:00
Snack bar Open
9:30 - 4:30
Breakfast; all you can eat for $1.35

"

Evergreen is one of four co lleges in the
United States to receive a gra nt from the
National Endowment for the Humanities
to support advanced-level hum a niti es
studies , it was announced this week in
Wa shington , D .C.
The amount of the three-year gra nt is
$176,934 a nd it will enable the college, acco rding to proj ect director and faculty
member C ha rles Teske, to strengthen itse lf
in aca d e mi c fie ld s s uch as lit e ra tur e,
philosophy , political scie nce. la nguages ,
speech , hi story, and criticism of the arts.
The initia l program to be benefi tted by
the large gra nt will be Cu lture, Ideology,
a nd Social C ha nge in A mer ica , a coo rdi na ted studies pnlgram. The awa rd will
provide for guest lecturers for t he program a nd will suppo rt new acqu isiti ons to
Eve rgr('(' n '~ library reso urces in th e hu ma nities.
Cummen ting nn the lllng- ra nge va lu e of
the gra nt , Teske SJ id , "T hi s gran! w ill
all ow thl' Cll lll'ge to devt'lor mlldd s a nd
tr,ldition s nl ad vanced hUIll .l ni o.; ti c stud y
in it-; turm,1t ivl' years whic h wil l h.lvt' a
~ Ir(lllg imr.1ct on tht' lutufl' curri culu lll ."

'Let' s get those keys returned to the
libra ry . Library fo lk s did a cleaning-clearing ou.t of all unl ocked lockers, and left a
no te in the locked ones, requesting the
u ser t Cl re turn the locker key. The
problem is, a second set of keys was
never sent by the manufacturer, a nd so it
is essentia l that they be returned .
All kinds of items were left in the
locke rs over the summer. These included
w inter coats, boo ts, a bottle of shampoo,
a combination lock , dishes, jam , mugs,
asso rted bill s, letters, receipt s, papers and
books, a nd one locker stuffed with shirts.
These item s are now in Security , and
items left in the lockers ca n be picked up
there.
If th e user of a locked locker returns in
the nex t two weeks he / she should remove
the no te to show tha t the locker is in use.
You've go t until Oct. 10 before a nother
cleaning of a ll lockers takes place . All
paraphernalia will then be collected, so

Afler -the 9radu.o.1:itm ceremony this past June,
a. group photo was taken out on -the mound (in. .
seeminJ'J du ory:Wzed fashion. n - however, +here
reo.lLy .i§. ().. "grodua:kon .!J1"OUf phcfo" and if can be
ordered :from /he Studio address below. Ihes~
are bla.ck and while.. prints em double-weiJh.t poper.
Please help spreod the word

rYJQ.y wo..n.:I

*' :Jrodu.a.fes

copy! ThanksBx/O: $2!9 ((X'4:.13~
&\.

who

7

Pam Sc hick. n ew faculty m em ber in dallc e.

Visiting Faculty Named
A Seattle da nce instructor, a Massachuse tts math ema ti cian , a n Olympia attorney , and an Iri sh poet have been appointed to posts as visitin g faculty m em bers at Evergreen , beginning fall quarter.
Named to a one-year posit io n as a facult y membe r in dance is Pamela Schi ck,
a n in st ructor , choreographe r, a nd perfo rm er at Dance Theater Sea ttl e. Sc hick ,
w ho has a lso wo rked w ith the King
County Arts Commission a nd Black Arts
West, will teach in the Live and Recorded: The Performing Arts coo rdina ted
st udies program.

Feeney Named Evergreen
Development Officer
Suzanne C . Feeney, formerly execu tive
officer of th e Washingto n State Higher
Ed ucati on Assistance Authority, ha s been
na med Development Officer at Evergreen .
T he appointment is effective Sep t. 29.
Feeney, in her new role, will be responsible for pla nning a nd adm ini sterin g fu nd ra ising efforts a imed at private sources such as individu als, corpora ti ons, and
foundations - a nd public sources, such
as the Nati onal Science Foundation . She
will also coo rdinate a ll a lunmi activ iti es
for Evergreen's gra du a tes .
Before work ing for the 'Higher Education Assistance Authority , Feeney was director of Student Financial Aid at the Uni vers ity of Washingto n and taught at Loy o la Universit y in Chicago . She has a lso
se rved as a co nsultant to the U.S. Hou se
l't Represe nt at ives' Specia l Subcomm ittee
l'n Ed ucat io n .
Hl'nd,l Step thru Mo torcycle . Elee.
StMt . Auto clutch . 5375. Offer.
~52-3125 .

William Marsh, most recentl y a n associate professor of mathemat ics a t Hampshire Co ll ege in Am herst, Mass., has rece ived d part - time appo intment in math ema ti cs fo r fa ll q uarte r o nl y. He wi ll
teach in th e indi v idua l co ntract poo l.
Geo rge Ki nnear, a n Olympia a tt o rne y
a nd former director of the Washington
State Department of Revenu e, will be a
part - tim e faculty member in public admini stra ti o n thn1l ugh o ut the schoo l year.
He w ill teach a m od ul e entitl ed " Econom ic Problems, T echnol ogy a nd Business Policy" fall qu a rter.
Tom Macintyre is a n Irish poet who
w ill be a t Eve rgreen fa ll quarter onl y . He
wi ll teac h in the Self -Ex pression T hrough
Autobiography coo rdin a ted studies pro gram.

UW Offers Televised
Sexuality Course
A se ri es o n hum a n sex ualit y that is the
fi rst ever offered for cred it o n telev isio n
w ill be presented by the University of
Wa shingto n's Psychology Depa rtm ent this
fa ll.
In 20 half- ho ur programs to ' be show n
over a ten - week period , Professor Natha niel N . Wagner's three credit telecourse,
" Human Sex uality : The Psyc hol ogy of
Human Sexua l Behavior," will dea l with
such topi cs as sex e thics , a borti on, homo sex ua lit y, the prob lems of ado lescence,
ag ing, a nd sex ual dysfunction .
l:3e g inning Sept . 29, Dr. Wagner 's
co urse w ill be show n o n Mondays and
Wednesdays on KCTS -TV, C hannel 9, at
6:30 p.m. , repea ting on Tuesdays and
Thur sday s a t 12:30 p . m . K IN G - TV ,
C ha nnel S, wi ll broadcast the program s
o n Mondays and Wednesdays a t 6: 30
a.m ., beginnin g Oct. 6 .

Library's Periodical
Section Returns

Action Childcare Coalition Meets at Governor's Office

The ma ssiv e disarray of las t yea r is
over - th e library 's periodical sec ti on is
bac k a nd ex ist ing o n the third floor.
Another new additio n a t the library is a
Rare Books room , co ntaining abo ut 250
entri es .
The reva mped periodical s sec ti o n has
an expa nded lo unge a nd stud y area a nd
a n open di sp lay of curre nt copies of 500
of th e 1.350 publications to w hi ch the li bra ry subsc ribes. Periodicals a re not ava ilab le for check-ou t a nd ca n o nl y be used
in the new lounge area .
T he Rare Books section , a lso 'on the
third floor , cont a ins not o nl y books but
a lso the co llege a rchi ves , a rt prints, and
slides. A rt prints and slides ca n be checked
out. but rare books a nd archi ves material
have to stay o n the third floor.
Mos t of the rare books focu s on Pacific
No rthwest or Ca lifo rnia history and cul ture . Examples include a n 1897 edition of
"As toria: Or Anecdotes of an Enterprise
Beyond the Rocky Mountains" by Washingto n Irving, a n or iginal edi ti on of the
1798 publication " Vanco uv er's Voyages, "
and H. W. McCurdy's "Marine Hi story of
th e Pacific Northwes t. " .
A m o ng o th er ite ms in the co ll ec tion in clude a hand-written lett er from F. Scott
Fitzge rald to hi s publi sher a nd a first ed ition of " H im a layas" by p hotographer Up shikazu Shi rakawa.
"The ra re books co ll ect ion a ll ows stu dents a nd o th er library users a chan ce to
work wit h original ed iti o ns of publica ti ons ot herw ise on ly ava il able as reprint s, "
sa id Malco lm Stils() n. Acq ui siti o n librarian. "Th ey ca n handle, feel , a nd wo rk
with fine quality ,ra re books ... items to
whi ch they no rm a ll y wo uld have little or
no access.

Wednesday morning representatives of
the Action Childcare Coalition (ACe) met
with the Governor's staff to vigorously
oppose the implementation of a new
Social Service law known as Title 20 . The
Coalition is accusing the state Department
of Social and Health Services - and the
Governor by implication - of giving
priority in the state plan to its own
bureaucracy , rather than to the needs of
women, minorities, elderly , and the
ha ndicapped .
The meeting was characterized by a
tense atmosphere and an obvious gulf
between the two sides represented. Nat
Jackson represented the Governor at the
mee ting. Jackson 's title is Special Assistant
to Governor Daniel J. Evans, and has
been called by a national Black audience
magazine the most powerful Black man in
. this state. The Coalition members later
expressed resentment to Jackson's statement that he would "grant them an
audience." Apparently Governor Evans
was unable to attend becuase be was
taking a trip to Sun Valley .
The Action Childcare Coalition outlined
the problem as follows :
• The state plans to use 60 % of the
federal funds for administration of the
program. This leaves only 40 % for all
actual services to people who need them.
• The wording of the new law gives

To ~e ll or tr a d e: n ew, never
mounted Hart Frees tyl e Sk is. 185
em. La nge Phantoms used o ne sea~ on. Pao lo 866 -5 125 .

I/ Z
acre, 2 bedroom house near
college . Owner will carry contract.
$14,5QO. $3,000 down , $125 mo .
Owner agent Moen Realty West
357-779 or 866-7316 evenings.

To start the new academic year, the Cooper Point Journal is offering:

FREE
CLASSIFIED
ADS

Richter Nevv Vets
Supervisor
Step he n Richter w ill sta rt wo rk Monday
as Evergreen 's new Ve tera n's Services Superviso r .
Richter, former ass ista nt coordinato r of
Veteran 's Affairs a t Grays Harbor College in Aberdeen, will be responsible for
su pervi sin g and coord ina ting Evergreen's
Vetera n's Affairs Office - which serves
so me 300 military veterans on campus developing outreach programs for veter a ns in the Olympia vic inity . a nd acting as
a lia iso n between adm inistrative o ffi cers
of federa l, state , a nd loca l veterans organization s.
The Vete ran' s Affa irs Office is located
in Li b. 1209 .

childcare only to women qualifying for
welfare . This would effectively force
thousands of women back on welfare
because they can't afford to pay childcare .
• The people in the state who are affected
by the law were given no voice in its
conception. It is therefore not responsive
to their needs, which is supposed to be '
why the federal government gave it back
to the states.
According to Mary Morrison, spokesperson for the group and Childcare
Coordinator for the University of
Washington , many women have already
quit their jobs or dropped out of school
after being told by the ~tate of the new
plan. Ironically, some women working for
the Department of Social and Health
Services itself are finding themselves in
the same position. This view was
expressed by Gwen Wicker, an employee.
o(DSHS, who also stated that the money
was being absorbed in the upper echelons
of the Department. She said that the
actual number of case workers was being
cut back . Ms. Morrison told the Journal
that the Governor is not responsive , and
that the only chance now for stopping
implementation of the law is for poor
people , women, students, and others
affected to organize and fight.
Mr. Jackson later told the Journal that
the law was already "at the printer," and
that he felt it was responsive to the needs

of all the people of the state. He also
stated that the Action Childcare Coalition
We also talked with a former
supervisor in the Department of Social
and Health Services, now a volunteer for
legal Aid . She felt that this was "just
more of the same old shit from DHSH,
except this time it might backfire, by
forcing women who have struggled to get
off welfare back on the rolls." She also
stated that the department often made a
spectacle of something like Title 20 to
keep everyone's attention focused, while
they "sneaked through other bad policy
changes." This idea was given some
credance when the Journal discovered that
;'! so callfd public hearing was held by
DHS.H at the sa me time as the meeting in
the Governor's office. No one was present
to oppose the measures called for , so that
some major changes were passed on the
way welfare recIpients receive their
checks, with no public viewpoint expressed.
The Action Childcare Coalition is
planning a rally in Seattle on September
27 at 2 pm . Those who want to attend
and need transportatiori are asked to call
943-1683

for the follovving tvvo vveeks (the issues of October 2 and 9).
RULES:
1. Use the form below to submit your ad. 35 characters per line (punctuation and spaces count as characters).
2. Up to three ads per person can be submitted.
3. Ads can be shorter or longer than three lines, but keep them brief.
4. Publication deadline: noon, Tuesday, Sept. 30 for the Oct. 2 issue and
noon Oct. ' 7 for the Oct. 9 issue.
I

Call Nancy Connolly at the Journal (-6080) for more information.
t ·

Use the order fonn below your free ad. One character per space. Punctuation
and spaces count as characters.

7

Pam Sc hick. n ew faculty m em ber in dallc e.

Visiting Faculty Named
A Seattle da nce instructor, a Massachuse tts math ema ti cian , a n Olympia attorney , and an Iri sh poet have been appointed to posts as visitin g faculty m em bers at Evergreen , beginning fall quarter.
Named to a one-year posit io n as a facult y membe r in dance is Pamela Schi ck,
a n in st ructor , choreographe r, a nd perfo rm er at Dance Theater Sea ttl e. Sc hick ,
w ho has a lso wo rked w ith the King
County Arts Commission a nd Black Arts
West, will teach in the Live and Recorded: The Performing Arts coo rdina ted
st udies program.

Feeney Named Evergreen
Development Officer
Suzanne C . Feeney, formerly execu tive
officer of th e Washingto n State Higher
Ed ucati on Assistance Authority, ha s been
na med Development Officer at Evergreen .
T he appointment is effective Sep t. 29.
Feeney, in her new role, will be responsible for pla nning a nd adm ini sterin g fu nd ra ising efforts a imed at private sources such as individu als, corpora ti ons, and
foundations - a nd public sources, such
as the Nati onal Science Foundation . She
will also coo rdinate a ll a lunmi activ iti es
for Evergreen's gra du a tes .
Before work ing for the 'Higher Education Assistance Authority , Feeney was director of Student Financial Aid at the Uni vers ity of Washingto n and taught at Loy o la Universit y in Chicago . She has a lso
se rved as a co nsultant to the U.S. Hou se
l't Represe nt at ives' Specia l Subcomm ittee
l'n Ed ucat io n .
Hl'nd,l Step thru Mo torcycle . Elee.
StMt . Auto clutch . 5375. Offer.
~52-3125 .

William Marsh, most recentl y a n associate professor of mathemat ics a t Hampshire Co ll ege in Am herst, Mass., has rece ived d part - time appo intment in math ema ti cs fo r fa ll q uarte r o nl y. He wi ll
teach in th e indi v idua l co ntract poo l.
Geo rge Ki nnear, a n Olympia a tt o rne y
a nd former director of the Washington
State Department of Revenu e, will be a
part - tim e faculty member in public admini stra ti o n thn1l ugh o ut the schoo l year.
He w ill teach a m od ul e entitl ed " Econom ic Problems, T echnol ogy a nd Business Policy" fall qu a rter.
Tom Macintyre is a n Irish poet who
w ill be a t Eve rgreen fa ll quarter onl y . He
wi ll teac h in the Self -Ex pression T hrough
Autobiography coo rdin a ted studies pro gram.

UW Offers Televised
Sexuality Course
A se ri es o n hum a n sex ualit y that is the
fi rst ever offered for cred it o n telev isio n
w ill be presented by the University of
Wa shingto n's Psychology Depa rtm ent this
fa ll.
In 20 half- ho ur programs to ' be show n
over a ten - week period , Professor Natha niel N . Wagner's three credit telecourse,
" Human Sex uality : The Psyc hol ogy of
Human Sexua l Behavior," will dea l with
such topi cs as sex e thics , a borti on, homo sex ua lit y, the prob lems of ado lescence,
ag ing, a nd sex ual dysfunction .
l:3e g inning Sept . 29, Dr. Wagner 's
co urse w ill be show n o n Mondays and
Wednesdays on KCTS -TV, C hannel 9, at
6:30 p.m. , repea ting on Tuesdays and
Thur sday s a t 12:30 p . m . K IN G - TV ,
C ha nnel S, wi ll broadcast the program s
o n Mondays and Wednesdays a t 6: 30
a.m ., beginnin g Oct. 6 .

Library's Periodical
Section Returns

Action Childcare Coalition Meets at Governor's Office

The ma ssiv e disarray of las t yea r is
over - th e library 's periodical sec ti on is
bac k a nd ex ist ing o n the third floor.
Another new additio n a t the library is a
Rare Books room , co ntaining abo ut 250
entri es .
The reva mped periodical s sec ti o n has
an expa nded lo unge a nd stud y area a nd
a n open di sp lay of curre nt copies of 500
of th e 1.350 publications to w hi ch the li bra ry subsc ribes. Periodicals a re not ava ilab le for check-ou t a nd ca n o nl y be used
in the new lounge area .
T he Rare Books section , a lso 'on the
third floor , cont a ins not o nl y books but
a lso the co llege a rchi ves , a rt prints, and
slides. A rt prints and slides ca n be checked
out. but rare books a nd archi ves material
have to stay o n the third floor.
Mos t of the rare books focu s on Pacific
No rthwest or Ca lifo rnia history and cul ture . Examples include a n 1897 edition of
"As toria: Or Anecdotes of an Enterprise
Beyond the Rocky Mountains" by Washingto n Irving, a n or iginal edi ti on of the
1798 publication " Vanco uv er's Voyages, "
and H. W. McCurdy's "Marine Hi story of
th e Pacific Northwes t. " .
A m o ng o th er ite ms in the co ll ec tion in clude a hand-written lett er from F. Scott
Fitzge rald to hi s publi sher a nd a first ed ition of " H im a layas" by p hotographer Up shikazu Shi rakawa.
"The ra re books co ll ect ion a ll ows stu dents a nd o th er library users a chan ce to
work wit h original ed iti o ns of publica ti ons ot herw ise on ly ava il able as reprint s, "
sa id Malco lm Stils() n. Acq ui siti o n librarian. "Th ey ca n handle, feel , a nd wo rk
with fine quality ,ra re books ... items to
whi ch they no rm a ll y wo uld have little or
no access.

Wednesday morning representatives of
the Action Childcare Coalition (ACe) met
with the Governor's staff to vigorously
oppose the implementation of a new
Social Service law known as Title 20 . The
Coalition is accusing the state Department
of Social and Health Services - and the
Governor by implication - of giving
priority in the state plan to its own
bureaucracy , rather than to the needs of
women, minorities, elderly , and the
ha ndicapped .
The meeting was characterized by a
tense atmosphere and an obvious gulf
between the two sides represented. Nat
Jackson represented the Governor at the
mee ting. Jackson 's title is Special Assistant
to Governor Daniel J. Evans, and has
been called by a national Black audience
magazine the most powerful Black man in
. this state. The Coalition members later
expressed resentment to Jackson's statement that he would "grant them an
audience." Apparently Governor Evans
was unable to attend becuase be was
taking a trip to Sun Valley .
The Action Childcare Coalition outlined
the problem as follows :
• The state plans to use 60 % of the
federal funds for administration of the
program. This leaves only 40 % for all
actual services to people who need them.
• The wording of the new law gives

To ~e ll or tr a d e: n ew, never
mounted Hart Frees tyl e Sk is. 185
em. La nge Phantoms used o ne sea~ on. Pao lo 866 -5 125 .

I/ Z
acre, 2 bedroom house near
college . Owner will carry contract.
$14,5QO. $3,000 down , $125 mo .
Owner agent Moen Realty West
357-779 or 866-7316 evenings.

To start the new academic year, the Cooper Point Journal is offering:

FREE
CLASSIFIED
ADS

Richter Nevv Vets
Supervisor
Step he n Richter w ill sta rt wo rk Monday
as Evergreen 's new Ve tera n's Services Superviso r .
Richter, former ass ista nt coordinato r of
Veteran 's Affairs a t Grays Harbor College in Aberdeen, will be responsible for
su pervi sin g and coord ina ting Evergreen's
Vetera n's Affairs Office - which serves
so me 300 military veterans on campus developing outreach programs for veter a ns in the Olympia vic inity . a nd acting as
a lia iso n between adm inistrative o ffi cers
of federa l, state , a nd loca l veterans organization s.
The Vete ran' s Affa irs Office is located
in Li b. 1209 .

childcare only to women qualifying for
welfare . This would effectively force
thousands of women back on welfare
because they can't afford to pay childcare .
• The people in the state who are affected
by the law were given no voice in its
conception. It is therefore not responsive
to their needs, which is supposed to be '
why the federal government gave it back
to the states.
According to Mary Morrison, spokesperson for the group and Childcare
Coordinator for the University of
Washington , many women have already
quit their jobs or dropped out of school
after being told by the ~tate of the new
plan. Ironically, some women working for
the Department of Social and Health
Services itself are finding themselves in
the same position. This view was
expressed by Gwen Wicker, an employee.
o(DSHS, who also stated that the money
was being absorbed in the upper echelons
of the Department. She said that the
actual number of case workers was being
cut back . Ms. Morrison told the Journal
that the Governor is not responsive , and
that the only chance now for stopping
implementation of the law is for poor
people , women, students, and others
affected to organize and fight.
Mr. Jackson later told the Journal that
the law was already "at the printer," and
that he felt it was responsive to the needs

of all the people of the state. He also
stated that the Action Childcare Coalition
We also talked with a former
supervisor in the Department of Social
and Health Services, now a volunteer for
legal Aid . She felt that this was "just
more of the same old shit from DHSH,
except this time it might backfire, by
forcing women who have struggled to get
off welfare back on the rolls." She also
stated that the department often made a
spectacle of something like Title 20 to
keep everyone's attention focused, while
they "sneaked through other bad policy
changes." This idea was given some
credance when the Journal discovered that
;'! so callfd public hearing was held by
DHS.H at the sa me time as the meeting in
the Governor's office. No one was present
to oppose the measures called for , so that
some major changes were passed on the
way welfare recIpients receive their
checks, with no public viewpoint expressed.
The Action Childcare Coalition is
planning a rally in Seattle on September
27 at 2 pm . Those who want to attend
and need transportatiori are asked to call
943-1683

for the follovving tvvo vveeks (the issues of October 2 and 9).
RULES:
1. Use the form below to submit your ad. 35 characters per line (punctuation and spaces count as characters).
2. Up to three ads per person can be submitted.
3. Ads can be shorter or longer than three lines, but keep them brief.
4. Publication deadline: noon, Tuesday, Sept. 30 for the Oct. 2 issue and
noon Oct. ' 7 for the Oct. 9 issue.
I

Call Nancy Connolly at the Journal (-6080) for more information.
t ·

Use the order fonn below your free ad. One character per space. Punctuation
and spaces count as characters.

September 25, 1975

8

9

• In s trll ctllrs of Eve rgreen's 38 fall qua rter
Leisure Educa ti o n workshops will be on
hand to ni g ht a t 7 : 30 p . m. in Lib . 4300 to
discu ss and desc ribe their progra m s during a special orient a tion prog ram .
Reg istra ti o n fo r the workshops will
beg in a t 7:30 a. m . in CRC 302 next
Thursday 'a nd wi ll continu e from 9 a .m.
to 6 p. m. weekdays thro ug h Oct. 8 . Enro llm ent s in the non- c red it wo rksho ps are
li mited a nd regis trati o n is o n a first-come ,
first -se rved basis.
Wo rkshops w ill be offered in areas such
a<; pa in t in g, pho tography , cook ing, weavin g, dan c in g, p o tt ery, woo dworkin g,
mou nt ai nee rin g, a nd ka ra te. For a complete li s ting of the workshops , co mmunity
membe rs are adv ised to attend tonight's
mee tin g o r pick up a brochure at CRC
302 .
Workshops wi ll begin O cto ber 9.
• For th ose people o n campus with hypoglycemia - a deficiency of sugar in the
blood - a hypoglycemia support group is
now being formed , according to Judy
Libby in Health Services .
libby sa id the support group is designed for people w h o know they have o r
think they might h ave hypoglycemia .
W ee kly lun c h es and di s cussions are
plan ned for people to exchange informati o n about diet a nd nutrition .
Peop le interested in the hypoglycemia
suppo rt g ro up a re asked to contact either
Judith Utevsky a t 866-5183 , or Bill Fovargue at 943-4208 , or else sign up a t
Hea lth Se rvices

n.
This IS Felden. He tmded urban living, his
high school sweetheart, a nagging mother,
a few polyester friends for Evergreen, fresh
air, trees, and Earth Shoes.
Felden is serious He:s traded his puka
shells, his hai r dryer . and his Mick Jagger
records for granola, good books, and a
quiet campus apartment.
Felden is smart. He traded gas bills, electricit y bills, phone bills, water bills, sewage
bills, and bouncing checks for a conventent
campus apartment. This year. Felden will
save 20 °'0 from last year's rates because
he's Unit leasing.

Felden IS just one of many people who's
findtng campus living convenient, fun and
just plain enjoyable. Gone are the
responsibilities of off-campus living and in
with 20-J" savings. more quiet. and more
opportullity to enjoy Evergreen.
To find out more about Unit Leasing or traditional housing, call the Housing Office at
866-6132.

• Th e Me n's Reso urce Center, a gro up of
men interested in developing a n a ntisex ist co nsci o usness among themselves
and ot her Evergree n men, w ill hold an or ga ni za ti o nal meeting Tuesday , Sept. 30,
at noon in lib. 3211.
T he Center, formed in the summer of
1974, is p la nning seve ra l activities for fall
qua rter , includ in g a male sex uality workshop , a da nce class for men , and child
care act ivities during femini st, college,
a nd communi ty functions . The Center
will also create new a nd maintain o ld
men 's co n sc i o u s n ess- r a i ~ in g groups , expand th eir speaker's bureau , a nd have
mo nthly pot lucks.
T he Ce nter w ill be open Tuesday and
Wed nesday afternoo ns during fall quarter .

a re planned , as well -as activity d emon stra tions in the CRe. Campus guests may
sw im free of charge at the co llege pool.
Members of the Ev e rgre e n College
Community Organ izatio n (EC C O) will
se rve tea, coffee, a nd punch during the
af te rnoon in th e main lo bb y of th e
libra ry building.
Parking will be free for the open house .
• A semin ar entitled "The Spanish Speak ing a nd the American Political System :
Participation or Isolation ," sponso red by
the Washington Hispa nic American Society, will b e held Saturday from 7 to 10
p .m. at the Olympia Community Center,
1314 E. 4th Ave.
The purpose of the seminar is to discuss
the role of Spanish-speaking peopl e in the
American political process , particularly in
the Puget Sound area . There is no admission charge.
For further information, call Christina
Valadez, 753-4143 (work) or 352-0278
(home).
• Stephen Rabow a nd Peter Ne lso n, Evergreen students who served two quarters as
inte rns in Bo liv ia, wi ll present a slide a nd
tape show relating their experiences Sun day a t 2 p . m. in the lo bby of the Coop era tive Education Office, first floor o f the
lab building.
The two students worked throug h the
"Food for the Hungry" program in Bolivia. They worked in food distribution
and nutriti o n programs and counseled
children o n nutritional matters.

• For the next coup le of weeks , Mary
Hester will be helping Beth Harris do aca demic advising for the fall quarter. She'll
be here o nly part-time . Her schedule is
pretty fluid , but it looks something like
this :
Se ptember 22 - 26 , 1 - 5 p . m .
dail y, lab. 1008, X6312.
September 29 - October 3, 6 - 8
p .m . d a ily, Sem 2150, X6180.
• Ga il Martin , formerly coordinator of
the Pla cement Office, has been given an
add iti o nal job a nd is now the coordi1fJtor
of Career Planning a nd P lacement.
• All interested in volunteering at the
Women's Clinic meet October 3 at 4 p . m.
in lib . 1223.
• The module Cosmology , to be taught
by faculty membe r Sig Kutter , will begin
winter qua rt er and no t fall quarter , as .
was inco rrectly stat ed in the catalog sup plement.
The sup plement also reported tha t Kutter's life Beyond Spaceship Earth module
would start winter quarter . It will in stead
be offered spring quarter.
• The Evergreen Coffeehouse's Sunda y
Night film this week will be "The Boob, "
starring Peter Sellers. The film will be
shown in lecture Hall 3 at 7 a nd 9: 30
p .m . A don a tion w ill be asked at the
doo r .

10 to 6
Tues. thru Sat.

36th & Overhulse

866-1252

• Evergreen's a nnu a l fa ll quarter open
ho use for the Olympia co mmunity will be
held f~om 1 to 5 p .m. Sunday.
A ll campus buildings will be open for
self-guided tours with campus h osts ava il a bl e to a nswe r questi o ns a nd acquai nt vi sitors wit h th e vario us bui lding ope ra tions.
Specia l demonstrat ions of a udi o a nd
video equ ipment a nd campus co mputers

,I

September 25, 1975

8

9

• In s trll ctllrs of Eve rgreen's 38 fall qua rter
Leisure Educa ti o n workshops will be on
hand to ni g ht a t 7 : 30 p . m. in Lib . 4300 to
discu ss and desc ribe their progra m s during a special orient a tion prog ram .
Reg istra ti o n fo r the workshops will
beg in a t 7:30 a. m . in CRC 302 next
Thursday 'a nd wi ll continu e from 9 a .m.
to 6 p. m. weekdays thro ug h Oct. 8 . Enro llm ent s in the non- c red it wo rksho ps are
li mited a nd regis trati o n is o n a first-come ,
first -se rved basis.
Wo rkshops w ill be offered in areas such
a<; pa in t in g, pho tography , cook ing, weavin g, dan c in g, p o tt ery, woo dworkin g,
mou nt ai nee rin g, a nd ka ra te. For a complete li s ting of the workshops , co mmunity
membe rs are adv ised to attend tonight's
mee tin g o r pick up a brochure at CRC
302 .
Workshops wi ll begin O cto ber 9.
• For th ose people o n campus with hypoglycemia - a deficiency of sugar in the
blood - a hypoglycemia support group is
now being formed , according to Judy
Libby in Health Services .
libby sa id the support group is designed for people w h o know they have o r
think they might h ave hypoglycemia .
W ee kly lun c h es and di s cussions are
plan ned for people to exchange informati o n about diet a nd nutrition .
Peop le interested in the hypoglycemia
suppo rt g ro up a re asked to contact either
Judith Utevsky a t 866-5183 , or Bill Fovargue at 943-4208 , or else sign up a t
Hea lth Se rvices

n.
This IS Felden. He tmded urban living, his
high school sweetheart, a nagging mother,
a few polyester friends for Evergreen, fresh
air, trees, and Earth Shoes.
Felden is serious He:s traded his puka
shells, his hai r dryer . and his Mick Jagger
records for granola, good books, and a
quiet campus apartment.
Felden is smart. He traded gas bills, electricit y bills, phone bills, water bills, sewage
bills, and bouncing checks for a conventent
campus apartment. This year. Felden will
save 20 °'0 from last year's rates because
he's Unit leasing.

Felden IS just one of many people who's
findtng campus living convenient, fun and
just plain enjoyable. Gone are the
responsibilities of off-campus living and in
with 20-J" savings. more quiet. and more
opportullity to enjoy Evergreen.
To find out more about Unit Leasing or traditional housing, call the Housing Office at
866-6132.

• Th e Me n's Reso urce Center, a gro up of
men interested in developing a n a ntisex ist co nsci o usness among themselves
and ot her Evergree n men, w ill hold an or ga ni za ti o nal meeting Tuesday , Sept. 30,
at noon in lib. 3211.
T he Center, formed in the summer of
1974, is p la nning seve ra l activities for fall
qua rter , includ in g a male sex uality workshop , a da nce class for men , and child
care act ivities during femini st, college,
a nd communi ty functions . The Center
will also create new a nd maintain o ld
men 's co n sc i o u s n ess- r a i ~ in g groups , expand th eir speaker's bureau , a nd have
mo nthly pot lucks.
T he Ce nter w ill be open Tuesday and
Wed nesday afternoo ns during fall quarter .

a re planned , as well -as activity d emon stra tions in the CRe. Campus guests may
sw im free of charge at the co llege pool.
Members of the Ev e rgre e n College
Community Organ izatio n (EC C O) will
se rve tea, coffee, a nd punch during the
af te rnoon in th e main lo bb y of th e
libra ry building.
Parking will be free for the open house .
• A semin ar entitled "The Spanish Speak ing a nd the American Political System :
Participation or Isolation ," sponso red by
the Washington Hispa nic American Society, will b e held Saturday from 7 to 10
p .m. at the Olympia Community Center,
1314 E. 4th Ave.
The purpose of the seminar is to discuss
the role of Spanish-speaking peopl e in the
American political process , particularly in
the Puget Sound area . There is no admission charge.
For further information, call Christina
Valadez, 753-4143 (work) or 352-0278
(home).
• Stephen Rabow a nd Peter Ne lso n, Evergreen students who served two quarters as
inte rns in Bo liv ia, wi ll present a slide a nd
tape show relating their experiences Sun day a t 2 p . m. in the lo bby of the Coop era tive Education Office, first floor o f the
lab building.
The two students worked throug h the
"Food for the Hungry" program in Bolivia. They worked in food distribution
and nutriti o n programs and counseled
children o n nutritional matters.

• For the next coup le of weeks , Mary
Hester will be helping Beth Harris do aca demic advising for the fall quarter. She'll
be here o nly part-time . Her schedule is
pretty fluid , but it looks something like
this :
Se ptember 22 - 26 , 1 - 5 p . m .
dail y, lab. 1008, X6312.
September 29 - October 3, 6 - 8
p .m . d a ily, Sem 2150, X6180.
• Ga il Martin , formerly coordinator of
the Pla cement Office, has been given an
add iti o nal job a nd is now the coordi1fJtor
of Career Planning a nd P lacement.
• All interested in volunteering at the
Women's Clinic meet October 3 at 4 p . m.
in lib . 1223.
• The module Cosmology , to be taught
by faculty membe r Sig Kutter , will begin
winter qua rt er and no t fall quarter , as .
was inco rrectly stat ed in the catalog sup plement.
The sup plement also reported tha t Kutter's life Beyond Spaceship Earth module
would start winter quarter . It will in stead
be offered spring quarter.
• The Evergreen Coffeehouse's Sunda y
Night film this week will be "The Boob, "
starring Peter Sellers. The film will be
shown in lecture Hall 3 at 7 a nd 9: 30
p .m . A don a tion w ill be asked at the
doo r .

10 to 6
Tues. thru Sat.

36th & Overhulse

866-1252

• Evergreen's a nnu a l fa ll quarter open
ho use for the Olympia co mmunity will be
held f~om 1 to 5 p .m. Sunday.
A ll campus buildings will be open for
self-guided tours with campus h osts ava il a bl e to a nswe r questi o ns a nd acquai nt vi sitors wit h th e vario us bui lding ope ra tions.
Specia l demonstrat ions of a udi o a nd
video equ ipment a nd campus co mputers

,I

September 25, 1975

10

l~m l [')~M'

JoAnne Views the Future

The lo ll (1w ing is an
( el . D ITO R'S NOTE:
. '
'th Joa n Llt ('xce rpt f rl'nl ,1n In t erv lew WI
tie the lirs t she 11 ,1S ~ran t ed sin cc she ~as
.' ' Ucd in N ll rth Caro lina of th e mU l der
d(f, qul
(-llll'ne(' AlIi gllo d . The int e rv Iew
o Jil ller "
.
d' t
W,.IS cl1l1d ucted by David D u Bo Is, e l o r
uf tlte ma ck I'clnther Party p a per a nd In tcrcommun ,11 News Service.)
PN S' y,)ur tr iJI ,md acq ui tt a l hilve ~ad e
h eJ;l\'inl' ~ JI I l'Vcr the cou ntr y. H ow ave
they changed yo ur li fe ?
.
Ll TTLE : ~ T lll' trial h as cha nged me I na~
l(1 t d W,1V ~. Since I a m a b lack wom
Jnd I h av~ becn th rough thI S kllld o~ or d CJ I I ,1m ab le to look at my self ane say
m~ lile i ~ nwrc impo rt ant in te r m s ,of ~:~­
ing to h elp black p eop le III a n y way Ide th'
It's made me ll1(lk at the p n so n s an
e
w~y pea pic have b ee n ra il roaded , bee n
tr appe d ·In I' I'' h 1I. man eo n d I t 10 n 5 ahn d .
trea ted less th an h uma n be ing,s. It
as
I me fec i th a t thi s is w here I m needed
mac e '
I the most
I'
a nd where I G lIl h e lp m y p~ op e
PNS: W hy dl) yo u thi nk so m a n y peo p e
rallied to your defe nse?
I
LITTLE : p ()L) r bl acks und ers tood w ha t
ch
h i t'"· not "50 muin
was gl) ing t Ilrou!!,.
w heth er they ucl ie ved I was gu tlt y or
nocent , It wa s th a t they saw what th e sys.
d to m e They saw
tem Wd S tr y in g to a
.
th a t if nn om' h elp ed m e that they w0u ld
se nd me to th e gas ch amber w ith o u t even
tr y in g tll find out the true fac ts,
P NS: What do yo u think the current
' t" mpod 0 1 this country IS, speCi flca ll Y
W1I 1 ,.
' t 'es a n d
w hi te a ttitud es abo ut m lnnrJ I
cri me?
I.I TTLE: I thin k racis m is on th e in crea se
in th is cnun t ry,
I' vc heil rd some white off ici a ls say th at
pour peo p le - li k e from the community
th a t I cO Tll e h o m - are the ones that are
cr im ina ls , the ones that need to. be su b jrctl'd tn ,11 1 the in huma n condltillns . In
pr i~o n <; , th,lt need to h e pu t away an d no t
turn ed I tH I ~('. They th ink all the cnmlll a is
. ~ t I ) h e le t loose an d w tll ta ke
,Ire !'. (lIn
<, ver th e vV(l rld .
Id I'k t
f'NS: Ml,<; t b l.lck women wou
l eO
ItI'M ,I rcr ~"T1il l message from yo u.
.
e
1 n TtF ' I h url' th a t b lack women w tl l b
.lbll' to t;Jke my ca se a nd use it a s an ~x­
dmp\e, no t on ly for themselves but °i~
their ch ildren . Fo r once they can say
h.1 S h ee n proven that a b lack woman ha s
d I ight to defe nd hehelf and that . sh e
lh)('~n ' t have to s ubmit to a man beca use
'
I· 'te ~I'll she h as a r igh t t() stand u p
Ill'"W
II
, " "
.
h
.t
If II it evl'f h ap pen s aga lll , s e
Il)r l cr ~l' '
f'
rs
wi ll h I;' ,1 h ll' tl' ~ ay th Jt fo u r or lve yea
. by th e l1;Jme of j oa n LIt tle
,I ~:') . •1 W l)I1lJIl
h
o.; t""d up tl'l' h er r ight c; and proved t a t
~I ll' \\' ,b rit: h t ,Inc! th ey co u ld b~ ~~o ~~~
;\nd sh e (.1 11 S.lY, \\'hy can 't
~.1111l' t h i n h ~
l " 'I'III ;,, !I! ['<" 'ifi, ,\i,',I':' S"'·;' i(,'
~, . ! t,.\.It; I ' t·' ~ lJ- 5

11

A Cartoonist's Free Speech Battle
A ft er his, sy ndi ca tor cancel ed his comic
., trir in 1970 , O 'Ne ill helped form with
"evl'ra l ot h er ca r t O () 1ll's ts a "~ rnup call ed
thl' A ir Pira tes, H o led up in a Sa n Fra n cist<' wa rehou se, they le t loose s nm ~ un Jl'rg rllund co mi c b OI)k s in which Mi cke y
I M' . - a" w ell as Pluto , Ba mbI
,lil t
IIlnl e
·
d ' ac tivities
,1 nd va fl (1 l1 ~ bu gs - ' en gage III
.,h ,'c king tn the ir o ffi cia l purv ey ors. Th ey
t""k LS D , enj(l yed sex , ta lked ab o ut the ir
r re iuJi ce~ a nd sh ;J mef ul d eed s .
I
" It was sa tire a nd pa rod y o n t~ e s~x u a
m:sbt' hav io r n l a n e ntire gen era ti o n , exr Ia 'ill S, ON el' II . " It wa~. also a m ora ls bu s t

SAN FI?A NC /SCO , Scp t , 2 (PNS) - . .
ca n go a ft er God, the V irgin
Ma ry , vo u ca n bou nce of t eve ry ra? b l, g()
a lt er Bill y G ra ha m - b ut yo u ca n t draw
t h e Mo u se," lame nt s car tl )O nl s t B n a n
ONe ill , curre ntl y perso n a n o n !!,rata ill the
Wo nd erful Wo rld o f D isn ey,
ONeill 's ba ttle w ith M ickey Mo use be g ;:lIl fi ve yea rs ago w hen , as the crea tor of
the nationa ll y sy nd ica ted ((l mlC s tn p .Odd
\3{ldk in s, he dec ided to pa rod y D is ney

- " You

characters.
. .' h
A nd the ba ttl e is s till co nt n1UlIlg, Wit a
c(lnlrlln ta ti nn in fede ral co u rt sc h eduII~~
thi ~ fa ll over th e sa nct it y of the W0 r s
m(ls t faml)U ~, car too n cha rac ter.
" It 's sta rt ing to bo th er m e a lo t, n o,~
being ab le tll pa rody th a t st u p id m o ~r :
O ' Nei ll grum b les. " \3u t I find myse III
.,
Fede ra l
h
thl' s trange pos iti on were
It s a
cr im e if I do ."

" n D is ney ."
P' k
T he ir w nr k was cut ~ h l lrt b y q,. III e r tp n m a n w h n ca me ti l the c;tudlD do o r
wi th a sum mp ns. Wa lt D is ney Pro du cti l'n s h J d fil ed s uit , Cllmpl a inin g th a t th e
Ai r Pi ra tes we re co mpl' tin g unf a irly , in -

, If D\~'1'
I<E:€I'S fillS
v\' .. 1-' \"1.-

MP>'f(f. ~
~U..
of \~ .. ~

W-\~\I'~E.
~(.

..

~p'V\~ ..

· u e of City of San Fra nCISco
rece n t Iss
, n all. az in e ,

THAT MOUSE , AGA IN
At s ta ke , Fo r hi m , is th e right to make
fu n of anyt hin g in a n y way , a v ita l pa rt
of hi s freedo m of speech . "Pu tt in g so meth ing o ut of bo un ds fo r ridi cul e is th o ught
po li ce ," he says.
O ' Ne ill arg u es th a t M ickey Mo use has
lo ng since transce n ded cop yr ight law b y
b eco min g a m o d e rn fo lk m y th . M ickey
Mouse h a s even b eco me pa rt of the la n g u age : A mi ckey m o u se co ur se, t o
s tud ent s, is a pu sh ove r , So ld iers ca ll VD
f ilm s m ickey m o u se m ovies. Mi ckey
mouse h as become a n a dj ec ti ve im p ly ing
tri v ia lit y a nd s h odd in ess.
NO -NO'S
T he sacrosa ncti ty of the Mo use h ad led

-a/!f"

I L \ O'Ne ill 's parody of Mickey Mous e for

fr in gin g on Cllpy r ight a nd tra de m a rk, ru in ing th e D i ~ ney re put a ti o n , Th e mult imilli !1 n J o ll a I' cn mpa n y cl a im ed d a mages
of $700 ,000 fro m the Pi ra tes, w h o a t the
ti ml' ~ ( ln let i mf's lacked m o n ey fo r a decen t
mea l.
A fe d era l cu urt orde r ubseque ntl y Forh.lde the [> ir .Jte~ to con tin ue th eir pa rody.
A ll co ri es llf th e firs t two iss ues we re
~c i /e d and la ter s h redd ed , says O'Ne ill.

II~II
afJ~M
I [')~r!11
A V
t" n in

m

IR \ O 'Ne ill 's parody o f himself for ~ecent

aca 10
Communist S aigon

iss ue of Cit y of Sa n Francis co magazrn e.
By Jo hn Lewa ll en
>.<S:-«':';'-'hXC<:;:~~;;

OA KLAND , Sep t. 17 (PNS) -

$33,500,000
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
:~

$33500000 unclaimed scholarships,
grants, al'd s, and
fel~~wshi~S ;anging from $50 to $10,000, Current ~ist 50\~~~se
sources researched and compiled as of Septem er ,
'

Ov

UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS

,

369 Allen Avenue, Portland, Maine 04103
,
·
$1295
plus
$100
for
postage
and
handling,
I am enc IoSlng.
'

o

(Check or money order -

,

i

iJ

PLEASREENRTUSLHISTYOOUFR
CUR
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
SOURCES TO:

Mu ter Ch l ,oe
Inte rb l nk No .

:;:;

l

apprOlt_I:_:.I_~_!robeIOW'

Expirltlon Olle [
MonthlYe l r
L..
_ _ _ _ __

il :
~.~::

out

~

i.::;:

~~:

no c~sh , please.)

II yo u w , s h to use your charg e card :

Pl eoas e ." "

I

C re d it
C l r" No . L.- - - - - - - - -

Name
Address

CitY

· ..
·
.. .. . . ... .........
State
.. Zip
M~i~eresidents ptease add 5% sales tax,

O ' Neill to d o the se ries in the Firs t place.
''I'd ust'd C hris t as ea rl y as '64 . G o d w as
in th e re a ll the tim e, a vo ice coming fr o m
th e sky , m ess in g thi ngs up. I'd used (Ly n don) j o hn so n . Bu t th e r e w e re th ese
no -n u 's abo ut the Mo use,"
He co ns ide red th e wh o le Di s ney w o rld
tha t ha d sa tura ted hi s mind as a ki d: It
was a wo rld w ith o u t sex o r sex o rga n s,
w here eve ryo ne was cute but ha rdl y in noc u'ous, Cer ta in cha rac ters seem ed to
pe rson ify e thni c a nd sex is t ste reo ty pes:
Sy lves te r S h yster was the greed y Jew.
Zeke Wo lf wa s th e bumbling, s tupid
so uth ern w hite. Do n Jo li o was the Mex ica n. M inni e was th e sill y gi rl. cl ea rl y less
im po rt a n t th a n M ickey.
O nce up o n a time M ickey M o use ha d
been inn oce nt , pe rh aps, as we ll as cute.
But he ha d co me to s tand with so m e sin is te r a lli es . In a 1950 s trip he h a d ca rr ied
a m ac h in e g un , fo r in sta nce, w hil e o n a
m iss ion fo r the C IA . Even the Di s ney
firm h ad ch a n ged co urse - o n ce fa m o us
for na ture Film s, it was n ow tr y ing to put
am use m ent pa rks int o na tural w ildern ess
a reas.
Wa lt D isn ey Prod uc ti ons a rg ued in its
de m a nd Fo r a n injun cti o n aga in s t th e
P ira tes th a t they h a d indul ged in "per ve rt ed " a n d "g ro tesque" mi suse o f D isney
cha racte rs a nd h ad portrayed th em in a

L:,:x'~:"''''';:;'>'<s:<~~;:''':'':~':'':'':'::W'«:«$:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::_;. : :;:,:v:":':«~~:':':::~::::::~:;::': ;' ' ' : ;:~: ;:~;~:~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:~~~:~';:):;::>:;:;e;:~w.,

A t a tim e w he n most A m e ricans in Sa igon we re sc ra mbli ng a b oa rd d e pa rting
a ircraft, Joe Hu ghes o f P itt sburg h , Pa.
wa s w in g ing b lithe ly int o w h a t see med to
be a h o loca ust. " It's incredib le to say th a t
in Ap ril o f 1975 I we nt to Vietn a m fo r a
vaca ti o n , " Hi g hes, a 34-yea r- o ld soc ia l
wo rke r , says. "B ut as it tu rned o u t , th a t's
w ha t it was. "
j oe Hu ghes, w h o stayed on in Sa igon
u n til mi d-A ugus t, we nt there to v isit his
brot her. Dick H ughes h as headed the
S hoes hine Boy Fo unda ti o n since 1968 .
T he o rga ni zat io n takes ca re o f s tree t chil d re n se pa rated from th eir homes by wa r ,
D ick H ug hes wa n ted to s tay in South
V ietn am to ma n age eight h o uses of chil dren in Sa igon a n d Da na ng, a nd was n 't
worr ied a b o ut hi s sa fety af ter the Pro vi siona l Revo luti o nary Governm ent (PRG)
took OVI'L He wa nt ed joe to take a fi rs t hand luok , then !!,U ba ck to A m erica a nd
a ~~ ur(;' their pare n ts that he wa s a ll righ t
in Scl igo n .
" M(ls t Saigun pcople jlls t w ent abou t
thei r b us incss ," Joc says of the PRG takellVcr , "w .J itin g tll l' events tll tclke th e ir

O n Ap ril 30 , the Sa igo n po li ce s ta ti o ned
in th e co rner by the Hughes' a p a rtment
diJn 't s h ow up For wo rk, The cease-fire
was a nn o un ced th a t m o rning. At a bout
noo n the PRe' fo rm a ll y took o ve r the
gove rnme nt of So uth Vietna m .
" Th ere was i n cessa nt s h oo tin g th a t
day ," j oe Hu g hes reca ll s, "beca use the
A R VN so ldi ers ha d take n o ff their uni fo rm s, throw n th em do wn in the s treets
w ith th e ir gun s, a nd go ne ho m e, Kids
we re p ick ing u p the ir a uto ma tic r ifles a nd
e mpty in g th e cl ips int o the sky ,"
Sh o rtly th e reafter , the Hu ghes bro thers
wa tched th e No rth Vi e tn a mese A rm y en te r thei r ne ighborh oo d. "T hey ca m e in
w ith ~ h e i r wea p o ns lowered , w ith flo w ers
o n th e ir tanks a nd jeeps, " Joe H ughes
says. " They po lit e ly asked peo pl e fo r di - '
rec ti o ns , a nd even o b eyed tra ffi c sig na ls .
Loca l res ide nt s wa tched the m a pprehen ive ly , For yea rs people had been to ld by
the ir gove rnm e nt tha t the co mmunists
wo ul d brin g a b lood b a th to Sa igo n ."
T h e Nor t h Vi et n a m ese so ld ie r s go t
a lo ng v ery well wi th tne Hu ghes b ro thers.
"T hey a ll w a nt ed to ha v e their p ic ture
take n s ta nding w ith m e , to send ho m e to
Ha noi ," Hu gh es sa ys.
No rth V ie tn a m ese tr oo p s we re li ke
co un try b um pk ins in Sa igon , a n d we re
easy ma rks for the s ha rk s of th e b lack
marke t. " T hey p ut espec ia ll y hi gh va lue
o n wa tc hes ," Joe sayd . " [ took p ic tu res of
a ho ut eigh t sl, ldie rs, eac h s ta nd in g w ith a
w,l tch s hllwing nn hi s arm, It was the

"deg ra ding, lewd a nd o ffensiv e m a nn er
ca leu la ted to . "d egra de a nd disp a rage a ll
th a t Di s ney has d o ne. "
O 'Ne ill m a int a ins there's no th ing po rn ugra phi c in his pa ro d y. M ice a nd bu gs
we re simpl y give n the sex ua l o rga n s Di sney ha J d e ni ed them , a nd we re a ll owed
to ac t as mi ce a nd bugs na tura ll y wo uld ,
"On its highes t level. pa rndy ex tends
co mm ent a ry beyo nd th e orig in a l work to
the premises o n w hi ch th e o r ig ina l is
based ," a tt o rneys fo r the Pira tes a rgu ed ,
D is ney cl a imed th a t u ns uspecting bu y e r s co ul d h ave co n f u se d th e Pir a tes'
comi cs wit h a uthe nti c D isney p rod u cts,
b ut O 'Ne ill p o ints o ut th a t th e co mics
we re draw n fo r a sm a ll undergro un d m a r ke t, w ith n o intent to expa nd to o th er
D isney- li ke item s .
A m o n g th ose w h o h ave ag ree d t o
tes tify in co urt fo r the A ir P ira tes a re
co lumni sts Ni cho las vo n H offm a n , C ha rles
McCa b e a nd Art H o ppe, a nd N a ti o na l
La mpoo n Fo unde r M ich ae l ODo no hu e.
It may seem funn y th a t M ickey Mouse
a nd Plut o a re go ing to co urt. But th e re's
no thing funn y to O ' N eill a bo ut th e iss ue
a t s ta ke - copy rig ht ve rsus pa rod y .
,

Rasa G Listaitis is all ed it or of Cit y of Sail (
F,-all cisco m agazin e w ll o writ es freq uently
for Pacific News Service alln th e Was h i IIgton Pos t ,

sa me wa tch in each pi ct ure !"
Vie tn a m ese wh o had wo rked for the
o ld reg im l' were req ui red to a ttend re edu ca ti o n cl asses. " I h a ppened upo n a
co upl e of these cl asses a t the A ir V ietna m
office," Hu g hes says, "G roups o f SO o r 60
peopl e we re si tting toge ther , w ith a PR G
di scuss io n lea d er. It a l\ seemed quite lowkey.
" A pa rti cipa nt in o ne described w ha t
h a ppened. The P R G lea d er sa id , 'Yo u
wo rked fo r th e A m erica ns a nd the N gu ye n
Va n T hi e u gover nm e nt, w hi c h was
aga ins t the inte rests of the Vietna m ese
people. Yo u ha ve to admit th a t, a nd w o rk
w ith us n ow . T hi s is a tim e of reco nc ili ati o n , no t rep ri sa l. W e have to m ove forwa rd toge the r to buil d the co untry. "
A ft er a ppl y in g fo r a nd rece iving a n ex it
v isa in Jun e , Hu ghes was n o t abl e to ge t a
Hig ht o ut of Sa igo n until A ugus t , w hen
Ai r Fra nce b ega n o pera ting three fli g ht s a
week. O n A ugus t 12 , H ug hes headed
ho m e .
" A yo ung V ietn a mese w h o ha s worked
wi th D ick to r seve n years to ld him , 'I' m
glad , as yo ur fr ie nd , th a t yo u are leav ing
Vie tn a m now, I k now tha t w hen Vietn a mese see YO ll , a n A meri can, it awake n s a
fee lin g o f Jepe nd e n cy i n th em , and
a rouses the fa lse be lief th a t th o usa n d s of
A m e ri ca ns mig ht co m e back aga in , Now
is the tim e For Vietn a m ese to b u ild their
ow n li ves wi th o ut o ut side he lp or in terfe r ence , li ke a fami ly gett ing over a tra gedy .'"

September 25, 1975

10

l~m l [')~M'

JoAnne Views the Future

The lo ll (1w ing is an
( el . D ITO R'S NOTE:
. '
'th Joa n Llt ('xce rpt f rl'nl ,1n In t erv lew WI
tie the lirs t she 11 ,1S ~ran t ed sin cc she ~as
.' ' Ucd in N ll rth Caro lina of th e mU l der
d(f, qul
(-llll'ne(' AlIi gllo d . The int e rv Iew
o Jil ller "
.
d' t
W,.IS cl1l1d ucted by David D u Bo Is, e l o r
uf tlte ma ck I'clnther Party p a per a nd In tcrcommun ,11 News Service.)
PN S' y,)ur tr iJI ,md acq ui tt a l hilve ~ad e
h eJ;l\'inl' ~ JI I l'Vcr the cou ntr y. H ow ave
they changed yo ur li fe ?
.
Ll TTLE : ~ T lll' trial h as cha nged me I na~
l(1 t d W,1V ~. Since I a m a b lack wom
Jnd I h av~ becn th rough thI S kllld o~ or d CJ I I ,1m ab le to look at my self ane say
m~ lile i ~ nwrc impo rt ant in te r m s ,of ~:~­
ing to h elp black p eop le III a n y way Ide th'
It's made me ll1(lk at the p n so n s an
e
w~y pea pic have b ee n ra il roaded , bee n
tr appe d ·In I' I'' h 1I. man eo n d I t 10 n 5 ahn d .
trea ted less th an h uma n be ing,s. It
as
I me fec i th a t thi s is w here I m needed
mac e '
I the most
I'
a nd where I G lIl h e lp m y p~ op e
PNS: W hy dl) yo u thi nk so m a n y peo p e
rallied to your defe nse?
I
LITTLE : p ()L) r bl acks und ers tood w ha t
ch
h i t'"· not "50 muin
was gl) ing t Ilrou!!,.
w heth er they ucl ie ved I was gu tlt y or
nocent , It wa s th a t they saw what th e sys.
d to m e They saw
tem Wd S tr y in g to a
.
th a t if nn om' h elp ed m e that they w0u ld
se nd me to th e gas ch amber w ith o u t even
tr y in g tll find out the true fac ts,
P NS: What do yo u think the current
' t" mpod 0 1 this country IS, speCi flca ll Y
W1I 1 ,.
' t 'es a n d
w hi te a ttitud es abo ut m lnnrJ I
cri me?
I.I TTLE: I thin k racis m is on th e in crea se
in th is cnun t ry,
I' vc heil rd some white off ici a ls say th at
pour peo p le - li k e from the community
th a t I cO Tll e h o m - are the ones that are
cr im ina ls , the ones that need to. be su b jrctl'd tn ,11 1 the in huma n condltillns . In
pr i~o n <; , th,lt need to h e pu t away an d no t
turn ed I tH I ~('. They th ink all the cnmlll a is
. ~ t I ) h e le t loose an d w tll ta ke
,Ire !'. (lIn
<, ver th e vV(l rld .
Id I'k t
f'NS: Ml,<; t b l.lck women wou
l eO
ItI'M ,I rcr ~"T1il l message from yo u.
.
e
1 n TtF ' I h url' th a t b lack women w tl l b
.lbll' to t;Jke my ca se a nd use it a s an ~x­
dmp\e, no t on ly for themselves but °i~
their ch ildren . Fo r once they can say
h.1 S h ee n proven that a b lack woman ha s
d I ight to defe nd hehelf and that . sh e
lh)('~n ' t have to s ubmit to a man beca use
'
I· 'te ~I'll she h as a r igh t t() stand u p
Ill'"W
II
, " "
.
h
.t
If II it evl'f h ap pen s aga lll , s e
Il)r l cr ~l' '
f'
rs
wi ll h I;' ,1 h ll' tl' ~ ay th Jt fo u r or lve yea
. by th e l1;Jme of j oa n LIt tle
,I ~:') . •1 W l)I1lJIl
h
o.; t""d up tl'l' h er r ight c; and proved t a t
~I ll' \\' ,b rit: h t ,Inc! th ey co u ld b~ ~~o ~~~
;\nd sh e (.1 11 S.lY, \\'hy can 't
~.1111l' t h i n h ~
l " 'I'III ;,, !I! ['<" 'ifi, ,\i,',I':' S"'·;' i(,'
~, . ! t,.\.It; I ' t·' ~ lJ- 5

11

A Cartoonist's Free Speech Battle
A ft er his, sy ndi ca tor cancel ed his comic
., trir in 1970 , O 'Ne ill helped form with
"evl'ra l ot h er ca r t O () 1ll's ts a "~ rnup call ed
thl' A ir Pira tes, H o led up in a Sa n Fra n cist<' wa rehou se, they le t loose s nm ~ un Jl'rg rllund co mi c b OI)k s in which Mi cke y
I M' . - a" w ell as Pluto , Ba mbI
,lil t
IIlnl e
·
d ' ac tivities
,1 nd va fl (1 l1 ~ bu gs - ' en gage III
.,h ,'c king tn the ir o ffi cia l purv ey ors. Th ey
t""k LS D , enj(l yed sex , ta lked ab o ut the ir
r re iuJi ce~ a nd sh ;J mef ul d eed s .
I
" It was sa tire a nd pa rod y o n t~ e s~x u a
m:sbt' hav io r n l a n e ntire gen era ti o n , exr Ia 'ill S, ON el' II . " It wa~. also a m ora ls bu s t

SAN FI?A NC /SCO , Scp t , 2 (PNS) - . .
ca n go a ft er God, the V irgin
Ma ry , vo u ca n bou nce of t eve ry ra? b l, g()
a lt er Bill y G ra ha m - b ut yo u ca n t draw
t h e Mo u se," lame nt s car tl )O nl s t B n a n
ONe ill , curre ntl y perso n a n o n !!,rata ill the
Wo nd erful Wo rld o f D isn ey,
ONeill 's ba ttle w ith M ickey Mo use be g ;:lIl fi ve yea rs ago w hen , as the crea tor of
the nationa ll y sy nd ica ted ((l mlC s tn p .Odd
\3{ldk in s, he dec ided to pa rod y D is ney

- " You

characters.
. .' h
A nd the ba ttl e is s till co nt n1UlIlg, Wit a
c(lnlrlln ta ti nn in fede ral co u rt sc h eduII~~
thi ~ fa ll over th e sa nct it y of the W0 r s
m(ls t faml)U ~, car too n cha rac ter.
" It 's sta rt ing to bo th er m e a lo t, n o,~
being ab le tll pa rody th a t st u p id m o ~r :
O ' Nei ll grum b les. " \3u t I find myse III
.,
Fede ra l
h
thl' s trange pos iti on were
It s a
cr im e if I do ."

" n D is ney ."
P' k
T he ir w nr k was cut ~ h l lrt b y q,. III e r tp n m a n w h n ca me ti l the c;tudlD do o r
wi th a sum mp ns. Wa lt D is ney Pro du cti l'n s h J d fil ed s uit , Cllmpl a inin g th a t th e
Ai r Pi ra tes we re co mpl' tin g unf a irly , in -

, If D\~'1'
I<E:€I'S fillS
v\' .. 1-' \"1.-

MP>'f(f. ~
~U..
of \~ .. ~

W-\~\I'~E.
~(.

..

~p'V\~ ..

· u e of City of San Fra nCISco
rece n t Iss
, n all. az in e ,

THAT MOUSE , AGA IN
At s ta ke , Fo r hi m , is th e right to make
fu n of anyt hin g in a n y way , a v ita l pa rt
of hi s freedo m of speech . "Pu tt in g so meth ing o ut of bo un ds fo r ridi cul e is th o ught
po li ce ," he says.
O ' Ne ill arg u es th a t M ickey Mo use has
lo ng since transce n ded cop yr ight law b y
b eco min g a m o d e rn fo lk m y th . M ickey
Mouse h a s even b eco me pa rt of the la n g u age : A mi ckey m o u se co ur se, t o
s tud ent s, is a pu sh ove r , So ld iers ca ll VD
f ilm s m ickey m o u se m ovies. Mi ckey
mouse h as become a n a dj ec ti ve im p ly ing
tri v ia lit y a nd s h odd in ess.
NO -NO'S
T he sacrosa ncti ty of the Mo use h ad led

-a/!f"

I L \ O'Ne ill 's parody of Mickey Mous e for

fr in gin g on Cllpy r ight a nd tra de m a rk, ru in ing th e D i ~ ney re put a ti o n , Th e mult imilli !1 n J o ll a I' cn mpa n y cl a im ed d a mages
of $700 ,000 fro m the Pi ra tes, w h o a t the
ti ml' ~ ( ln let i mf's lacked m o n ey fo r a decen t
mea l.
A fe d era l cu urt orde r ubseque ntl y Forh.lde the [> ir .Jte~ to con tin ue th eir pa rody.
A ll co ri es llf th e firs t two iss ues we re
~c i /e d and la ter s h redd ed , says O'Ne ill.

II~II
afJ~M
I [')~r!11
A V
t" n in

m

IR \ O 'Ne ill 's parody o f himself for ~ecent

aca 10
Communist S aigon

iss ue of Cit y of Sa n Francis co magazrn e.
By Jo hn Lewa ll en
>.<S:-«':';'-'hXC<:;:~~;;

OA KLAND , Sep t. 17 (PNS) -

$33,500,000
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
:~

$33500000 unclaimed scholarships,
grants, al'd s, and
fel~~wshi~S ;anging from $50 to $10,000, Current ~ist 50\~~~se
sources researched and compiled as of Septem er ,
'

Ov

UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS

,

369 Allen Avenue, Portland, Maine 04103
,
·
$1295
plus
$100
for
postage
and
handling,
I am enc IoSlng.
'

o

(Check or money order -

,

i

iJ

PLEASREENRTUSLHISTYOOUFR
CUR
UNCLAIMED SCHOLARSHIPS
SOURCES TO:

Mu ter Ch l ,oe
Inte rb l nk No .

:;:;

l

apprOlt_I:_:.I_~_!robeIOW'

Expirltlon Olle [
MonthlYe l r
L..
_ _ _ _ __

il :
~.~::

out

~

i.::;:

~~:

no c~sh , please.)

II yo u w , s h to use your charg e card :

Pl eoas e ." "

I

C re d it
C l r" No . L.- - - - - - - - -

Name
Address

CitY

· ..
·
.. .. . . ... .........
State
.. Zip
M~i~eresidents ptease add 5% sales tax,

O ' Neill to d o the se ries in the Firs t place.
''I'd ust'd C hris t as ea rl y as '64 . G o d w as
in th e re a ll the tim e, a vo ice coming fr o m
th e sky , m ess in g thi ngs up. I'd used (Ly n don) j o hn so n . Bu t th e r e w e re th ese
no -n u 's abo ut the Mo use,"
He co ns ide red th e wh o le Di s ney w o rld
tha t ha d sa tura ted hi s mind as a ki d: It
was a wo rld w ith o u t sex o r sex o rga n s,
w here eve ryo ne was cute but ha rdl y in noc u'ous, Cer ta in cha rac ters seem ed to
pe rson ify e thni c a nd sex is t ste reo ty pes:
Sy lves te r S h yster was the greed y Jew.
Zeke Wo lf wa s th e bumbling, s tupid
so uth ern w hite. Do n Jo li o was the Mex ica n. M inni e was th e sill y gi rl. cl ea rl y less
im po rt a n t th a n M ickey.
O nce up o n a time M ickey M o use ha d
been inn oce nt , pe rh aps, as we ll as cute.
But he ha d co me to s tand with so m e sin is te r a lli es . In a 1950 s trip he h a d ca rr ied
a m ac h in e g un , fo r in sta nce, w hil e o n a
m iss ion fo r the C IA . Even the Di s ney
firm h ad ch a n ged co urse - o n ce fa m o us
for na ture Film s, it was n ow tr y ing to put
am use m ent pa rks int o na tural w ildern ess
a reas.
Wa lt D isn ey Prod uc ti ons a rg ued in its
de m a nd Fo r a n injun cti o n aga in s t th e
P ira tes th a t they h a d indul ged in "per ve rt ed " a n d "g ro tesque" mi suse o f D isney
cha racte rs a nd h ad portrayed th em in a

L:,:x'~:"''''';:;'>'<s:<~~;:''':'':~':'':'':'::W'«:«$:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::_;. : :;:,:v:":':«~~:':':::~::::::~:;::': ;' ' ' : ;:~: ;:~;~:~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:~~~:~';:):;::>:;:;e;:~w.,

A t a tim e w he n most A m e ricans in Sa igon we re sc ra mbli ng a b oa rd d e pa rting
a ircraft, Joe Hu ghes o f P itt sburg h , Pa.
wa s w in g ing b lithe ly int o w h a t see med to
be a h o loca ust. " It's incredib le to say th a t
in Ap ril o f 1975 I we nt to Vietn a m fo r a
vaca ti o n , " Hi g hes, a 34-yea r- o ld soc ia l
wo rke r , says. "B ut as it tu rned o u t , th a t's
w ha t it was. "
j oe Hu ghes, w h o stayed on in Sa igon
u n til mi d-A ugus t, we nt there to v isit his
brot her. Dick H ughes h as headed the
S hoes hine Boy Fo unda ti o n since 1968 .
T he o rga ni zat io n takes ca re o f s tree t chil d re n se pa rated from th eir homes by wa r ,
D ick H ug hes wa n ted to s tay in South
V ietn am to ma n age eight h o uses of chil dren in Sa igon a n d Da na ng, a nd was n 't
worr ied a b o ut hi s sa fety af ter the Pro vi siona l Revo luti o nary Governm ent (PRG)
took OVI'L He wa nt ed joe to take a fi rs t hand luok , then !!,U ba ck to A m erica a nd
a ~~ ur(;' their pare n ts that he wa s a ll righ t
in Scl igo n .
" M(ls t Saigun pcople jlls t w ent abou t
thei r b us incss ," Joc says of the PRG takellVcr , "w .J itin g tll l' events tll tclke th e ir

O n Ap ril 30 , the Sa igo n po li ce s ta ti o ned
in th e co rner by the Hughes' a p a rtment
diJn 't s h ow up For wo rk, The cease-fire
was a nn o un ced th a t m o rning. At a bout
noo n the PRe' fo rm a ll y took o ve r the
gove rnme nt of So uth Vietna m .
" Th ere was i n cessa nt s h oo tin g th a t
day ," j oe Hu g hes reca ll s, "beca use the
A R VN so ldi ers ha d take n o ff their uni fo rm s, throw n th em do wn in the s treets
w ith th e ir gun s, a nd go ne ho m e, Kids
we re p ick ing u p the ir a uto ma tic r ifles a nd
e mpty in g th e cl ips int o the sky ,"
Sh o rtly th e reafter , the Hu ghes bro thers
wa tched th e No rth Vi e tn a mese A rm y en te r thei r ne ighborh oo d. "T hey ca m e in
w ith ~ h e i r wea p o ns lowered , w ith flo w ers
o n th e ir tanks a nd jeeps, " Joe H ughes
says. " They po lit e ly asked peo pl e fo r di - '
rec ti o ns , a nd even o b eyed tra ffi c sig na ls .
Loca l res ide nt s wa tched the m a pprehen ive ly , For yea rs people had been to ld by
the ir gove rnm e nt tha t the co mmunists
wo ul d brin g a b lood b a th to Sa igo n ."
T h e Nor t h Vi et n a m ese so ld ie r s go t
a lo ng v ery well wi th tne Hu ghes b ro thers.
"T hey a ll w a nt ed to ha v e their p ic ture
take n s ta nding w ith m e , to send ho m e to
Ha noi ," Hu gh es sa ys.
No rth V ie tn a m ese tr oo p s we re li ke
co un try b um pk ins in Sa igon , a n d we re
easy ma rks for the s ha rk s of th e b lack
marke t. " T hey p ut espec ia ll y hi gh va lue
o n wa tc hes ," Joe sayd . " [ took p ic tu res of
a ho ut eigh t sl, ldie rs, eac h s ta nd in g w ith a
w,l tch s hllwing nn hi s arm, It was the

"deg ra ding, lewd a nd o ffensiv e m a nn er
ca leu la ted to . "d egra de a nd disp a rage a ll
th a t Di s ney has d o ne. "
O 'Ne ill m a int a ins there's no th ing po rn ugra phi c in his pa ro d y. M ice a nd bu gs
we re simpl y give n the sex ua l o rga n s Di sney ha J d e ni ed them , a nd we re a ll owed
to ac t as mi ce a nd bugs na tura ll y wo uld ,
"On its highes t level. pa rndy ex tends
co mm ent a ry beyo nd th e orig in a l work to
the premises o n w hi ch th e o r ig ina l is
based ," a tt o rneys fo r the Pira tes a rgu ed ,
D is ney cl a imed th a t u ns uspecting bu y e r s co ul d h ave co n f u se d th e Pir a tes'
comi cs wit h a uthe nti c D isney p rod u cts,
b ut O 'Ne ill p o ints o ut th a t th e co mics
we re draw n fo r a sm a ll undergro un d m a r ke t, w ith n o intent to expa nd to o th er
D isney- li ke item s .
A m o n g th ose w h o h ave ag ree d t o
tes tify in co urt fo r the A ir P ira tes a re
co lumni sts Ni cho las vo n H offm a n , C ha rles
McCa b e a nd Art H o ppe, a nd N a ti o na l
La mpoo n Fo unde r M ich ae l ODo no hu e.
It may seem funn y th a t M ickey Mouse
a nd Plut o a re go ing to co urt. But th e re's
no thing funn y to O ' N eill a bo ut th e iss ue
a t s ta ke - copy rig ht ve rsus pa rod y .
,

Rasa G Listaitis is all ed it or of Cit y of Sail (
F,-all cisco m agazin e w ll o writ es freq uently
for Pacific News Service alln th e Was h i IIgton Pos t ,

sa me wa tch in each pi ct ure !"
Vie tn a m ese wh o had wo rked for the
o ld reg im l' were req ui red to a ttend re edu ca ti o n cl asses. " I h a ppened upo n a
co upl e of these cl asses a t the A ir V ietna m
office," Hu g hes says, "G roups o f SO o r 60
peopl e we re si tting toge ther , w ith a PR G
di scuss io n lea d er. It a l\ seemed quite lowkey.
" A pa rti cipa nt in o ne described w ha t
h a ppened. The P R G lea d er sa id , 'Yo u
wo rked fo r th e A m erica ns a nd the N gu ye n
Va n T hi e u gover nm e nt, w hi c h was
aga ins t the inte rests of the Vietna m ese
people. Yo u ha ve to admit th a t, a nd w o rk
w ith us n ow . T hi s is a tim e of reco nc ili ati o n , no t rep ri sa l. W e have to m ove forwa rd toge the r to buil d the co untry. "
A ft er a ppl y in g fo r a nd rece iving a n ex it
v isa in Jun e , Hu ghes was n o t abl e to ge t a
Hig ht o ut of Sa igo n until A ugus t , w hen
Ai r Fra nce b ega n o pera ting three fli g ht s a
week. O n A ugus t 12 , H ug hes headed
ho m e .
" A yo ung V ietn a mese w h o ha s worked
wi th D ick to r seve n years to ld him , 'I' m
glad , as yo ur fr ie nd , th a t yo u are leav ing
Vie tn a m now, I k now tha t w hen Vietn a mese see YO ll , a n A meri can, it awake n s a
fee lin g o f Jepe nd e n cy i n th em , and
a rouses the fa lse be lief th a t th o usa n d s of
A m e ri ca ns mig ht co m e back aga in , Now
is the tim e For Vietn a m ese to b u ild their
ow n li ves wi th o ut o ut side he lp or in terfe r ence , li ke a fami ly gett ing over a tra gedy .'"

12

September 2S 1975

13

1

AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHN WOO

An Evergreen Dictionary
b y Michael Michelletti & G. H. Kaufman
Th i~ gu iu e. des igned for the new and / or confused Evergree ne r, as the two are neither mutually exclusive or inclusive. has bee n created with the best of intentions . Armed
with th is too l o ne should be able to function as well a s, if
not be tt er th a n. a ny given Evergreener. This g uide is divi J ed int o two ca tegories ; good words and bad words ; as
a ll uua lis tic split bra in dysfunctional organisms are. In no
W<lV sho uld the two catego ries be confu sed .
For a sta rt :
LOll eliness is a bad w o rd because it implies insecurity .
ill ::. e[ lll"ity is a bad word ; however its opposite, security, is
al so a bad wo rd becau se it implies selfishness which is a
)So ,)J wo rd beca use it implies independence which is a go od
wo rd beca use it impli es a lack of dependence which is a bad
\.\·o rd beca use it lea ds to lo neliness which leads to . . . w hat e,,('r.
I . Ag,\Sress il'e; bad word , as applied to actions of white
ma les.
2 . A gg rcss ive; good word , helpful when tr ying to realize
fe min ist Th ird W orld sep a ra tist gay Marxist anti-burea u cra ti c goa ls.
3 . Ell erg y; good w o rd , as in alterna tive. Al so as in " I
d o n' t kn ow if I wa nt to put energy into thi s relationship ."
-t. Higll ; good wo rd , upon occa sio n a s in altitude. Gen ercll ly associa ted with energy as in he / sh e puts o ut high en e rgy. Al so rhe prod uct of the Ala ska Supreme C o urt's m ost
recent decis io n .
5. Spin t ; good wo rd, linked cl osely w ith meta ph ys ics . No t
tl) be con fu sed w ith reli gio n .
6. Religio ll; b ad w o rd , see politics.
7. Po litics; b ad wo rd , th a t w hi ch the avo wed a bse nce of
affirms.
8. Ecosys tem; good wo rd , that whi c h we are a ll a par t of
b u t ~ o m e h ow still fee l we're entitled to disavow. Also fan cy
wo rd fo r wh ere yo u a re . Or aren't.
o. Defi ne ; b ad w o rd , to develop a demiurge divinati o n,
not to be co nfu sed w ith metaphysics.
10 Magie; good word , often associ a ted w ith energy . ca n
be found in associa ti o n w ith cli ck .
11 . Click ; good wo rd , th a t whi ch tw o peo ple may d o.
12 . Rela tio ns hip ; good wo rd, th a t which tw o or more
peo ple are.
13. O ly rnp ia; bad wo rd (try findin g a dece nt cup o f coffee
a t 3 a. m. , yo u' ll kn ow wh y).
14. Dorms / Mods ; bad wo rd , try ge tting sleep th ere a t 3
a . m.
15. Me llow; good w o rd , what you 're not if yo u' re up in
O ly m p ia a t 3 a.m. a nd looking for coffee .
'16 . Farm ; good w o rd, that which is not ASH, the M ods,
or Dorms. Upon occas io n includes do mesti c a nimal s; e .g.,
Jog'>, ca t'>.
17 5traigll t ; ba d wo rd , no t a<; in rul e r (we ll no t exactl y ).
Sho uld not be co nfu sed w ith th e o ppos ite of cro oked .
.18 . M onog amy; bad wo rd , th a t w hi ch no o ne wa nts, but
a lway,> winds up as.
10 CO lllll litH/ ent ; bad wo rd , th e process o f be in g m o noga mo u".
20. E,lrt iz Sl1 oes: good wo rd, a n a prio ri phenome no n (see
Ka nt. F(l unda ti o ns of th e Me ta physics o f M o ra ls).
21 Wll(H /sto,'e; gou d wo rd , sac red mythica l heatin g de vi ce
"ttllml''> n() t fo u nd o n farm s. No t to be included w ith reli -

22 . Vegies ; good w o rJ , th a t which is not meat. Often
fo und in co njuncti o n with nuts and cheeses.
23 . Mu shroom; good word , like woodstove is sacred and
no t to be included in vegies. Is magical rather than mythical.
24 . Avacado; good w ord, see Earth Shoe .
25 . Dependent ; b ad word , that which commited individuals
a re.
26. Grow th ; good w ord , that which ceda r and fir do . Hu mans have occasio na ll y been known to do same . (At about
the speed o f cedar. )
27. Food Stamps; good wo rd , ca n be exchanged for vegies.
Or av aca dos.
28 . Po l Lll ck ; good w o rd , tha t which is no t "eat before you
com e. " Does no t include mea t (see vegies).
29 . Tes ts; ba d wo rd , What' s?
30 . Coac hes / Atlzletes; bad w o rd , Who's ? (see also fairy
tal es . )
31. Saga ; bad wo rd , not to be confused with adventure , alth o ugh foo d co nsumed there o ften is. Also not to be confused with vegies. Or for that matter, meat.
Special N o te: Similarity with and / or to coffee is purely
cn incidenta l a nd shoul d no t be viewed as the intentions of
ma nagem ent.
32 . Perso ll ; goo d w o rd , neut er (7 ) for human beings (Fema le or male ).
33 . AlterllatioJe; good w o rd , see al so .
34. Califo rllia ; ba d wo rd , pla ce where fruit s a t Evergreen
" ri gin a te (see a lso a vacado ).
35 . Relatio llship; bad w ord , lea ds to n lo noga my, should b e
a pproac hed with ca uti o n .
36 . Yog urt ; good wo rd , used in combination with cantalo upe, cher ry p ie, a v aca d o, Orange Julius or all of the
a bove. Occ urs in m a ny fl avo rs, though plain is most
CO mmL)n .
37. Co-o p : good wo rd , pl ace in which , in the company of
o ne's pee rs, o ne ca n simult a neou sly obtain yogurt and acco unting skill s.
38 . ROil 'S ; good v-.:(Jrd, pl ace yog urt can be acquired withou t accountin g skill s.
39. Spro uts; good w o rd , ha ve been known to grow . Al thou g h th ey neve r make it into cedar or fir , they have been
k now n to make it into hum a ns (see also vegies).
40 . Up p er Dowll er ; good word , can be related to high
tho ugh inclu sio n w ith the A laska Supreme Court decision
sho uld be avoided .
'
41. Dow ll Jacket : b a d wo rd . try wea ring o ne once it starts
l a inin g .
42 . 511it: good word . as in ge tting one's togethe r. Sh o uld
not be co nfused w ith asso rted unplea sant chores found in
agra ri a n e nt erpri ses . Also tha t whi ch the Alaska Supreme
Co urt has ruled con stitutional. (The la xa tive people have
bel'll rei ieved . )
43. Dogs; ba d word , fo und a t la rge running do wn the deer
a nd oth er friendl y inh a bita nt s of the Evergree n Forest s.
Sh() uld be co nt a in ed a t a ll tim es.
44 . Lib crated ; goo d w ord , mu ch li h th e Holy Grail its
goodness is in the p ursuit (see M o nt y Pyth o n).
EPIL OG Ui: :
Now th a t yo u have bec n thoroughl y acquainted with the
offi cia l TESC voca hul a ry, y()U a rc now cd rable d es tabli sh in g nlll rc mea nin gfu l a nd dee per rela ti()n ships with the
people aro.und yo u . S mil e a~ y()U tred u the pa th of spiritu a l
non -commit ted inJ epl' nti ('nt C<H 'rll' r.l tiv (' a ltern J ti vl' growth .
(J\n d wa l c h (lill I ", -; lu):',. )

by Owens Sat tenThi te
Why were helpful friends so easy to
find during orientation week?
"We hired friends, " answers John Woo,
orientation coordinator, for the Office of
Student Development Programs.
"We tried to get knowledgeable people
where others could meet them, " Woo
said.
The people Woo refers to are returning
students, hired to hang around and be
helpful. They were scattered around the
campus plaza at "We Care" tables
dispensing registration aid and information . In the residence areas, they wore
yellow armbands over helping hands .
In the past , Woo said there were two
camps in the Evergreen student body. In
one camp were the new students who
crept carefully along locked in a pre-set
registration process. In the other camp
were the returning students who were
familiar with the nuances of TESC and its
registration process.
Woo said that students have the best
insights for other students and this year
orientation organizers made the most of
the experience of returning students .
Individual relationships and individual
initiative are very important at Evergreen,
Woo said, and we made every attempt to
get students in one-on-one situations, not
only with other students, but with faculty
members and representatives from campus services and activities.
In addition to "hired friends," orientation activities included a potluck dinner
and a dance that gave sttdents an
opportunity to get acquainted before the
orientation and registration pro ces se s
began .

491-9600

student into account during pla nn ing.
"We build orientation around regis tration," Woo said , because registrati o n is
foremost on the minds of stude nt s during
the initial week .
In the past , there was no o rien ta ti o n
week and all registration was done by
mail. But there were problem s w ith th ai
system . For one, Woo said, the turn ove r'
rate in programs was high be cau se
students often found the mailed cou rse
descriptions often made no allowances fo r
the personal fattors .
"r1
Many students are attracted by the'
apparent freedom at Evergreen , Woo sa id ,
0. and once they get here they find freed om
g= means increased personal respo nsibi lity
~
and initiative.
:To
"It takes a lot of hustle to get th ings
done at Evergreen, " sa id Woo, who
should know as he is putting the finishing
touches on his B.A . degree aft er th ree
The academic fair allowed an opporyears at Evergreen.
tunity to sit and talk with faculty
For a new student, not briefed in the
members about the tone and direction of
informal as well as the formal o rder a t
coordinated studies programs. To increase
Evergreen, the registration process a nd
co ntact between students and faculty and
Evergreen in general can be a ha rro w ing
to insure that each was aware of the
experience at best. At worst it can lead to
needs of the other, the more advanced
a student being placed in a program does
prog rams required faculty signatures.
not fit his educational goals .
An academic advisor and a!=ademic
Woo said that new s tudent s we re
deans were on hand to discuss students'
encouraged to take full advantage of the
e ducation goals and to help identify
ample time (five day s ) a ll o tted for
programs or contract sponsors to fulfill
registration and reach a clear unde rsta ndthose goals.
ing of the opportunities and resou rces
Representatives from student activity
available .
gro ups were available at "CAB Stands" in
Woo feels the efforts of th e o rga ni ze rs
the College Activities Building .
were rewarded a nd his feelin gs are bo rne
W o o said the orientation orga nizers
out by new s tudent s wh o ex pr essed
t oo k the person a l psycholo g y . of the
surprise at the relative ease of registrati on
in light of the dive rsity of educa tional
offerings at Evergreen .

a.

IIGOOD TIMES"

491-9600

AWASAKIINC.
The Best in Service, Parts & Accessories

3725 S. Pacific Ave.
Olympia, W ash.
,



";"

~

¥

. ~-i'; :

12

September 2S 1975

13

1

AN INTERVIEW WITH JOHN WOO

An Evergreen Dictionary
b y Michael Michelletti & G. H. Kaufman
Th i~ gu iu e. des igned for the new and / or confused Evergree ne r, as the two are neither mutually exclusive or inclusive. has bee n created with the best of intentions . Armed
with th is too l o ne should be able to function as well a s, if
not be tt er th a n. a ny given Evergreener. This g uide is divi J ed int o two ca tegories ; good words and bad words ; as
a ll uua lis tic split bra in dysfunctional organisms are. In no
W<lV sho uld the two catego ries be confu sed .
For a sta rt :
LOll eliness is a bad w o rd because it implies insecurity .
ill ::. e[ lll"ity is a bad word ; however its opposite, security, is
al so a bad wo rd becau se it implies selfishness which is a
)So ,)J wo rd beca use it implies independence which is a go od
wo rd beca use it impli es a lack of dependence which is a bad
\.\·o rd beca use it lea ds to lo neliness which leads to . . . w hat e,,('r.
I . Ag,\Sress il'e; bad word , as applied to actions of white
ma les.
2 . A gg rcss ive; good word , helpful when tr ying to realize
fe min ist Th ird W orld sep a ra tist gay Marxist anti-burea u cra ti c goa ls.
3 . Ell erg y; good w o rd , as in alterna tive. Al so as in " I
d o n' t kn ow if I wa nt to put energy into thi s relationship ."
-t. Higll ; good wo rd , upon occa sio n a s in altitude. Gen ercll ly associa ted with energy as in he / sh e puts o ut high en e rgy. Al so rhe prod uct of the Ala ska Supreme C o urt's m ost
recent decis io n .
5. Spin t ; good wo rd, linked cl osely w ith meta ph ys ics . No t
tl) be con fu sed w ith reli gio n .
6. Religio ll; b ad w o rd , see politics.
7. Po litics; b ad wo rd , th a t w hi ch the avo wed a bse nce of
affirms.
8. Ecosys tem; good wo rd , that whi c h we are a ll a par t of
b u t ~ o m e h ow still fee l we're entitled to disavow. Also fan cy
wo rd fo r wh ere yo u a re . Or aren't.
o. Defi ne ; b ad w o rd , to develop a demiurge divinati o n,
not to be co nfu sed w ith metaphysics.
10 Magie; good word , often associ a ted w ith energy . ca n
be found in associa ti o n w ith cli ck .
11 . Click ; good wo rd , th a t whi ch tw o peo ple may d o.
12 . Rela tio ns hip ; good wo rd, th a t which tw o or more
peo ple are.
13. O ly rnp ia; bad wo rd (try findin g a dece nt cup o f coffee
a t 3 a. m. , yo u' ll kn ow wh y).
14. Dorms / Mods ; bad wo rd , try ge tting sleep th ere a t 3
a . m.
15. Me llow; good w o rd , what you 're not if yo u' re up in
O ly m p ia a t 3 a.m. a nd looking for coffee .
'16 . Farm ; good w o rd, that which is not ASH, the M ods,
or Dorms. Upon occas io n includes do mesti c a nimal s; e .g.,
Jog'>, ca t'>.
17 5traigll t ; ba d wo rd , no t a<; in rul e r (we ll no t exactl y ).
Sho uld not be co nfu sed w ith th e o ppos ite of cro oked .
.18 . M onog amy; bad wo rd , th a t w hi ch no o ne wa nts, but
a lway,> winds up as.
10 CO lllll litH/ ent ; bad wo rd , th e process o f be in g m o noga mo u".
20. E,lrt iz Sl1 oes: good wo rd, a n a prio ri phenome no n (see
Ka nt. F(l unda ti o ns of th e Me ta physics o f M o ra ls).
21 Wll(H /sto,'e; gou d wo rd , sac red mythica l heatin g de vi ce
"ttllml''> n() t fo u nd o n farm s. No t to be included w ith reli -

22 . Vegies ; good w o rJ , th a t which is not meat. Often
fo und in co njuncti o n with nuts and cheeses.
23 . Mu shroom; good word , like woodstove is sacred and
no t to be included in vegies. Is magical rather than mythical.
24 . Avacado; good w ord, see Earth Shoe .
25 . Dependent ; b ad word , that which commited individuals
a re.
26. Grow th ; good w ord , that which ceda r and fir do . Hu mans have occasio na ll y been known to do same . (At about
the speed o f cedar. )
27. Food Stamps; good wo rd , ca n be exchanged for vegies.
Or av aca dos.
28 . Po l Lll ck ; good w o rd , tha t which is no t "eat before you
com e. " Does no t include mea t (see vegies).
29 . Tes ts; ba d wo rd , What' s?
30 . Coac hes / Atlzletes; bad w o rd , Who's ? (see also fairy
tal es . )
31. Saga ; bad wo rd , not to be confused with adventure , alth o ugh foo d co nsumed there o ften is. Also not to be confused with vegies. Or for that matter, meat.
Special N o te: Similarity with and / or to coffee is purely
cn incidenta l a nd shoul d no t be viewed as the intentions of
ma nagem ent.
32 . Perso ll ; goo d w o rd , neut er (7 ) for human beings (Fema le or male ).
33 . AlterllatioJe; good w o rd , see al so .
34. Califo rllia ; ba d wo rd , pla ce where fruit s a t Evergreen
" ri gin a te (see a lso a vacado ).
35 . Relatio llship; bad w ord , lea ds to n lo noga my, should b e
a pproac hed with ca uti o n .
36 . Yog urt ; good wo rd , used in combination with cantalo upe, cher ry p ie, a v aca d o, Orange Julius or all of the
a bove. Occ urs in m a ny fl avo rs, though plain is most
CO mmL)n .
37. Co-o p : good wo rd , pl ace in which , in the company of
o ne's pee rs, o ne ca n simult a neou sly obtain yogurt and acco unting skill s.
38 . ROil 'S ; good v-.:(Jrd, pl ace yog urt can be acquired withou t accountin g skill s.
39. Spro uts; good w o rd , ha ve been known to grow . Al thou g h th ey neve r make it into cedar or fir , they have been
k now n to make it into hum a ns (see also vegies).
40 . Up p er Dowll er ; good word , can be related to high
tho ugh inclu sio n w ith the A laska Supreme Court decision
sho uld be avoided .
'
41. Dow ll Jacket : b a d wo rd . try wea ring o ne once it starts
l a inin g .
42 . 511it: good word . as in ge tting one's togethe r. Sh o uld
not be co nfused w ith asso rted unplea sant chores found in
agra ri a n e nt erpri ses . Also tha t whi ch the Alaska Supreme
Co urt has ruled con stitutional. (The la xa tive people have
bel'll rei ieved . )
43. Dogs; ba d word , fo und a t la rge running do wn the deer
a nd oth er friendl y inh a bita nt s of the Evergree n Forest s.
Sh() uld be co nt a in ed a t a ll tim es.
44 . Lib crated ; goo d w ord , mu ch li h th e Holy Grail its
goodness is in the p ursuit (see M o nt y Pyth o n).
EPIL OG Ui: :
Now th a t yo u have bec n thoroughl y acquainted with the
offi cia l TESC voca hul a ry, y()U a rc now cd rable d es tabli sh in g nlll rc mea nin gfu l a nd dee per rela ti()n ships with the
people aro.und yo u . S mil e a~ y()U tred u the pa th of spiritu a l
non -commit ted inJ epl' nti ('nt C<H 'rll' r.l tiv (' a ltern J ti vl' growth .
(J\n d wa l c h (lill I ", -; lu):',. )

by Owens Sat tenThi te
Why were helpful friends so easy to
find during orientation week?
"We hired friends, " answers John Woo,
orientation coordinator, for the Office of
Student Development Programs.
"We tried to get knowledgeable people
where others could meet them, " Woo
said.
The people Woo refers to are returning
students, hired to hang around and be
helpful. They were scattered around the
campus plaza at "We Care" tables
dispensing registration aid and information . In the residence areas, they wore
yellow armbands over helping hands .
In the past , Woo said there were two
camps in the Evergreen student body. In
one camp were the new students who
crept carefully along locked in a pre-set
registration process. In the other camp
were the returning students who were
familiar with the nuances of TESC and its
registration process.
Woo said that students have the best
insights for other students and this year
orientation organizers made the most of
the experience of returning students .
Individual relationships and individual
initiative are very important at Evergreen,
Woo said, and we made every attempt to
get students in one-on-one situations, not
only with other students, but with faculty
members and representatives from campus services and activities.
In addition to "hired friends," orientation activities included a potluck dinner
and a dance that gave sttdents an
opportunity to get acquainted before the
orientation and registration pro ces se s
began .

491-9600

student into account during pla nn ing.
"We build orientation around regis tration," Woo said , because registrati o n is
foremost on the minds of stude nt s during
the initial week .
In the past , there was no o rien ta ti o n
week and all registration was done by
mail. But there were problem s w ith th ai
system . For one, Woo said, the turn ove r'
rate in programs was high be cau se
students often found the mailed cou rse
descriptions often made no allowances fo r
the personal fattors .
"r1
Many students are attracted by the'
apparent freedom at Evergreen , Woo sa id ,
0. and once they get here they find freed om
g= means increased personal respo nsibi lity
~
and initiative.
:To
"It takes a lot of hustle to get th ings
done at Evergreen, " sa id Woo, who
should know as he is putting the finishing
touches on his B.A . degree aft er th ree
The academic fair allowed an opporyears at Evergreen.
tunity to sit and talk with faculty
For a new student, not briefed in the
members about the tone and direction of
informal as well as the formal o rder a t
coordinated studies programs. To increase
Evergreen, the registration process a nd
co ntact between students and faculty and
Evergreen in general can be a ha rro w ing
to insure that each was aware of the
experience at best. At worst it can lead to
needs of the other, the more advanced
a student being placed in a program does
prog rams required faculty signatures.
not fit his educational goals .
An academic advisor and a!=ademic
Woo said that new s tudent s we re
deans were on hand to discuss students'
encouraged to take full advantage of the
e ducation goals and to help identify
ample time (five day s ) a ll o tted for
programs or contract sponsors to fulfill
registration and reach a clear unde rsta ndthose goals.
ing of the opportunities and resou rces
Representatives from student activity
available .
gro ups were available at "CAB Stands" in
Woo feels the efforts of th e o rga ni ze rs
the College Activities Building .
were rewarded a nd his feelin gs are bo rne
W o o said the orientation orga nizers
out by new s tudent s wh o ex pr essed
t oo k the person a l psycholo g y . of the
surprise at the relative ease of registrati on
in light of the dive rsity of educa tional
offerings at Evergreen .

a.

IIGOOD TIMES"

491-9600

AWASAKIINC.
The Best in Service, Parts & Accessories

3725 S. Pacific Ave.
Olympia, W ash.
,



";"

~

¥

. ~-i'; :

14

September 25, 1975

Registration Dialogue
by Bob H e rr o n
I ta lked to a few people as they waited
in front of th e Lecture Building to register
for contracts. My question wa s, "What is
yo ur impr ess i o n of th e r eg is tr a ti o n
process?"

DU li ca ll Tilistietlnva it e, junior.
'This is my fo urth co llege. . . I we nt
to L. S.U. , w hi c h was m ass edu ca ti on a t
its wors t . T h en I we nt to Tulane , my
fa ther had go ne there. . . family traditi o n . . . expe nsiv e . .. didn't know what
I wan ted . I diu so me thinking a nd resea rc h a nd decided to a tt end Evergreen.
Wh il e wa itin g for accep tance, I a tte nded
Humbo ldt S tate in Arcata, Ca lif. "
And regis tratio n ?
"As orga ni zed as t hey poss ibl y cou ld
have made it. You 'd have to be la zy not
to be a ble to make it . . . m aybe lazy is
t he w ro ng word. There's he lp e ve ryw he re !

It 's after on e o 'cl oc k a nd m ost p eo ple
have been waiti ng for a t leas t a n h our ,
first in clu sters o n the g ra ss , or on the hot
pavement o ut s ide of th e reg is tratio n building , w hen th e uoors are opened a nd the
c rowd swa rm s forward . So far , the co m me nt s I'v e rece ived have been so m ewhat
favorab le. Now in the cru sh , I p ose my
question agai n .

Cu rl N elso n . fresil ll1 all , O lymp ia.
"So me kind of round-a- round. "

At two o'clock, I wandered over to the
cash ier's office af ter congratulating my se lf on m y s uccessfu l escape from th e
crowd sce ne at reg istra ti o n s. Th e re I
posed m y qu es tion to a number o f o th er
people.

CLI 1'1 1I l' 1I L1/'r/. ;lIllior. trall sfer stu dellt
fro II I til l' A lll cricLlIl Co llege of Barcelona ,
Spa ill .
" I ha ve had a lot of problem s with reg My L:tCu lt y a d v iso r has not been
here Sl) I have had tt) re ly on th e o pini o n ~
o f ot hers in o rder to arrange a co ntract.
A lso , I rece ived n o ass urances th a t 1 ~ou l u
ge t the program th a t I wa s int e rested in ."
Desp it e th e gr ieva nces I e nco untered ,
ve ry few peopl e wou ld offe r a n y a lt e rna c
ti ves to th e proced ure we prese ntl y have.
O ne excep tion was the co mm e nt s of D o ug
S to ll , se ni o r transfer s tude nt.
"We had a muc h better pwcess at For i
S te ila coo m Co mmunit y Co ll ege. Tim e
bl ocks we re a ll otted b y se ni o rit y and ar riv ed with yo ur reg istrati o n ca rd . Y()L1
s im p ly a rri ved at th e' reg is tr.1f's off ice a t
the g ive n tim e a nd YC' L1 were rt'g istered . I
don ' l reca ll a n yo ne hav in g to wa il llver
15 rninu tes. "
i~tra titln .

Renzo Difuria , freshmal1.
Registration?
"Smoo th . No probl e m s at a ll. Go t exac tl y w h a t I wa nt ed ."

lalla Loft . freshmal1 , Ta co ma .
" It \ b e tt e r th a n I thought it would be .
tho ug ht it wo uld be more co n fus ing."

Barb WoottOI1 , fres hmall , Seattle.
" It 's rea l good
. except o ne thi·ng .
O h yea h , they to ld me th ey were
s upposeu to leave ope nin gs. "
In g ro up co ntrac ts?
"Yea h . But th e fa cult y a lot of tim es
. u iun ' t save many spaces. "
Cou ld yo u g ive m e an exa m p le?
" There were o nl y s ix openi ngs left in
' S h ape~ to Come .' I looked aro und a nd
uecide d o n somet hin g e lse."
I gue~ <; it (c han g in g cont ra c ts ) wo n 't
c han ge your li fe?
" Maybe
(Pau~e)

MI ke /cw el . 0 11 ieal )c from Hamp shire
C,) II,)o\ (' . A l11ll/l rst . 'Ma ss.
"N o prob lems a t a ll . a s far as I ca n te ll.
It ~ gllllL' ~ m,'oth l y ."
I ),'I",/'{/ Ciare . freslmlall . Malibll , Calif.
" A ~ (,II' a ~ I ca n ~ ay, it 's pre tt y c razy
but Ihen . <111 regi~trati()n is ."

HII, I,

S: I '.~l' / l'

/ r, 's /lllil/ll . Yakilll a.

S, \ t.H II ' ~ li ke an y oth e r regi ~ tration."
S Ill' ~ hl' lI)':f: l' d he r ~ h()lI l dl'r ~. " O h we ll , it 's
C: , 'I 1l' l ' n 'II\' ~ 1l1 "I l\ h'"

Meet Maggie,
Parking Fees
There is a new pu zz le a t Evergreen ca used
by th e reins ta tement of p a rkin g fee s. T he
fees were es tab li shed durin g Everg ree n's
first yea r, but were dr o pped b y the Boa rd
of Tru s t ees in 1972. Th e fees w e r e
re-es tablished thi s year a t the ra te of
Si25.00 pe r year , SilO.OO pe r qu a rter , a nd
25 cents pe r day. Parking at ni g ht a nd o n
weeke nd s w ill be free . The new p o licy is
esse nti a ll y th e sa m e as th e o ne three
years ago w ith th e exception that Hou s ing
res id e nt s w ill be ab le to park free in Lo t F
and the mods park ing lot, a nd there will
be fr ee parking fo r vis itors .
A ccordin g to D ea n Clabaugh , Administrative V ice Presiden t for Bu s iness there
are severa l rea so n s fo r the re in s ta tement
of the fee s. First was to prov ide m o ney
for th e mainte nance of the park ing lo ts.
Mone y to do repav ing , repa inting of
lin es, etc. . ca nn ot co m e o ut o f th e '
co ll ege's Ge ne ral Fund , thu s the lots mu s t
b e se lf-suppo rting . Seco n d was to cut
down o n va n da li s m by providing m o ney
to hire a full-tim e sec urit y pe rson for the
Band C lot s durin g the day , a nd to
provide for in creasin g sec urit y in the F lo t
durin g the la te nig ht a nd ea rl y morning
h ours. Third
was 10 provide for
ass is ta nce with car s ta r ts, turnin g off
lig ht s, e tc.
C labaugh expec ts the p a rking fees w ill
ge ne rat e a pprox im a te ly Si4 ,000-5, 000 a
yea r , excludi n g th e sa lary o t the fu ll -tim e
sec urit y person . Part of th e proposa l
p la ns for stu dent e mplo yees for securit y
during the day in the lots .
S tude nt opinion o n th e parking fees is
va rie d. So m e feel the fee s are jus tified if
b e tt e r protec ti o n is pr ov:ded aga in s t
va nd a li ~m a nd th eft of ca rs . Others don' t
li ke th e fee s, a nd h ave been bu s il y
thin k ing of wa ys to avo id paying th e m .
And so , peHking tees a re a gain crea ting
d iscu ss io n on Ih £' Everg rl:'pn campu ~.

MASSOTH
Auto Parts
&

MACHINE
SHOP
2521 East 4th Ave.
943-1190
Engine Rebuilders
Best Equipped Machine
Shop in Olympia
?..
-::;
n Q
,---.'
-" ~

15

September 25, 1975

the Great Geoduck
by Boh Herron
I located Maggi e s tand in g in R e d
Sq udre ges turing to the pa ss ing c rowd
while int erm itt e ntl y h o is ting a megaphone
to he r lips to croon ou t a gree ting or to
bell cH.... th e a nn ou n cement of so m e
fo rth coming event. An a ttrac tive Geoduck , I thought. with a s mile to war m
e ve n a n oyster's hea rt. I asked her:

"T o be a t rave ling inform a tion ce nt e r
a nd , in ge neral , to be th e campus joker "
'

How are JJ eop le reacting to YOIl ?

"Ex trem e ly we ll! You see, for perfec t
s tra nge rs o n campus it see m s to be eas ier
10 ta lk to a nut th e n to talk to th e peop le
at the We Care ce nte rs. It' s g rea t, I love
it' And I mi g ht add th a t I app rec iate the
a pprec iation.

C0 1lld it be assumed th at Geo du cks are
a fr iendly v ariety of mollusk?
"Oh , certa inl y ! Certa inl y ! In fact, m os t
. definitely! "
Doesl1 '/ this co lltradict til e image o f a
co llege mascot?

"Well , let 's put it thi s way, thi s co ll ege
contrad icts the im age of m os t co ll eges so
it is on ly appropriat e that its masco t
co ntradi c ts th e image of mos t m ascots!"
She concluded thi s exclamat io n with a
series of oqt landis h c hu ck les that were the
s ta ndard introdu ctio n a nd ' co nclu s io n to
a ll of her co mme nts.

How did yo u get th e jo b ?
"Very, very good qu es tion. Let m e
think .... I was s itting in Co lo ra d o o n m y
vacation when I go t a call from Jo hn Woo
(t he Orientati o n W eek co-ord in a to r) w h o
asked m e h ow I would like to be a G reat
Geod uc k. I was s tricke n wit h w h at yo u
mig ht ca ll 't he Rocky Mountain .... ig h ' at
the time so it was easy to accept."

What are til e duties of tl1 c job ?

Housing Check-in
By Ja ni ce Ki ng
There: was a g rea t a m o unt ~) t co mm oti ,' n a round th e dorm s a nd th e m ods thi s
weeke nd as the grea t H o u s in g C heck - In
llcc urred. S tudent s w ith backpacks , suit cases , bo x e~ , s te reos , gu ilars , pot s, pans
and parenl s in tow a rri ved fo r a year of

dllrlll li vi ng . Ttl s ludent s \\I f1\> hdu chec ked
in ('.lr li L'r il ~ ('l,tnl'd ch t I H l ll )~ h Ihe lll assf:'S
(1 1 Ifl!l ~l' ,n riv ing wou ld n(' v pr l it inlo a ll
Ihl' rtl llm~. Hll wl'\'c r, t' \'l·r. w ilh Ihi s see m In g l ~' hu ge Jlllllunl 0 1 pl'l) jl le , Ih ere Me
~Ii ll \, <1l <ln c i e~; a ll1l11s t a ll c,1 I',,'hi c h .1rl' in
I W " - ~ llIdt'nl ,;t lldi\l~ . Hllu "ing i ~ cll'pro xim a ll' lv GO perce nl h,ll , wi lh Ilwr(' ~ llldt'nt <;
l"pC:C Il'd 1(1 c hec k - in bdl 'I'(' l ilt' qu a n ('r
bl' g in ~. EVl'll a lt er Ih(' ~l' ~ tL1 ! klll ~ a rri ve' , il
i ~ e x pec ted Ihal Ihl'rl' w il! 1)(' ~ r , l( l' .I va rl ab le ill Ih l' dllrl11 ~ .
The 1-\ ()lI s in ),; o lh ee pldlllWI! .I \'M il'l v 0 1
dcti v ilie ~ Illr Ih i ~ y (' a r '~ ! h'·lk - in . On S li n (LI Y, hllL1 ~ in g r('s ident ~ hl'\\ll l~ h l I (\ "v e ~ llf
IHlI11Crn a d l' b read to Ihl' \{ ('fT( ',lI i,) 1l Pav ilill n Illr Ihl' " Fir ~ 1 Ld~1 S IIPl wr .·' D inne r
l'nll' ll .1i n!llen l w,, ~ p ro v l,,( ,d h\· VVick lin e .
I .Ill'r Ih.1l ev en ing re,; ici ,' nh 1'); ' Cl),; Jed <It ,1
( llurl Yclrd ddn Cl' 1(\ Ih l' 1ll11 ~ IC of <1 Sl',l tll e
g rllur , I'al c h w ('rk.
Thl' Ile w es l in Hou ~ in g 1{('n l,) 1 I ' l an ~ i ~
l lnil I.('d e,!n g. Inl roJ ul t'd i,lll' In ~, llmnl(' r ,
th(' l " nl l' pl wa ~ deve l' )rc 'cI II' ,llI o w ~ I u ­
d en t... more IleAibilit y in Chllll "ing ho w
,1I1d wilh w h')111 to li ve . FVl' n Iholl g h th e
lllnll'p i Wd S int fllducl'd ,I ,; hll rt time dgll ,
. il hd " proved p(1pu lar . ,l ~ d un it IPel se ca n
he Ie~~ ex rwn s ive Ihelll 1'l'); Uld I' ho us in g
rd l t'~. rill' i h ,\ ~ e wh l) \V ,w i II. Unil Leasing
i ~ s li ll a va ilclble , a nd ,I : tlll lt' nt em sti(1
"w il c h irom J reg ul ,) f ' lllll l rolc t In ,\ lm it
Ica ~l' .
Al so ne w Ihi s vea l' . i ~. Ih e C,"n mCln
Inn. W hJI wa s th e' o ld i)rllp - In C e nl e r is :
nn w a S iudeni Re ~ otJ rcc' \ "Ill (' r w here '
c(1 un se ling s laff a nd s lud " 1l 1 1ll ,1Il ,lgl'rS <In' .
ava il ab le tll he lp o ul wilh dnj' I'l'n hl el1ls .

14

September 25, 1975

Registration Dialogue
by Bob H e rr o n
I ta lked to a few people as they waited
in front of th e Lecture Building to register
for contracts. My question wa s, "What is
yo ur impr ess i o n of th e r eg is tr a ti o n
process?"

DU li ca ll Tilistietlnva it e, junior.
'This is my fo urth co llege. . . I we nt
to L. S.U. , w hi c h was m ass edu ca ti on a t
its wors t . T h en I we nt to Tulane , my
fa ther had go ne there. . . family traditi o n . . . expe nsiv e . .. didn't know what
I wan ted . I diu so me thinking a nd resea rc h a nd decided to a tt end Evergreen.
Wh il e wa itin g for accep tance, I a tte nded
Humbo ldt S tate in Arcata, Ca lif. "
And regis tratio n ?
"As orga ni zed as t hey poss ibl y cou ld
have made it. You 'd have to be la zy not
to be a ble to make it . . . m aybe lazy is
t he w ro ng word. There's he lp e ve ryw he re !

It 's after on e o 'cl oc k a nd m ost p eo ple
have been waiti ng for a t leas t a n h our ,
first in clu sters o n the g ra ss , or on the hot
pavement o ut s ide of th e reg is tratio n building , w hen th e uoors are opened a nd the
c rowd swa rm s forward . So far , the co m me nt s I'v e rece ived have been so m ewhat
favorab le. Now in the cru sh , I p ose my
question agai n .

Cu rl N elso n . fresil ll1 all , O lymp ia.
"So me kind of round-a- round. "

At two o'clock, I wandered over to the
cash ier's office af ter congratulating my se lf on m y s uccessfu l escape from th e
crowd sce ne at reg istra ti o n s. Th e re I
posed m y qu es tion to a number o f o th er
people.

CLI 1'1 1I l' 1I L1/'r/. ;lIllior. trall sfer stu dellt
fro II I til l' A lll cricLlIl Co llege of Barcelona ,
Spa ill .
" I ha ve had a lot of problem s with reg My L:tCu lt y a d v iso r has not been
here Sl) I have had tt) re ly on th e o pini o n ~
o f ot hers in o rder to arrange a co ntract.
A lso , I rece ived n o ass urances th a t 1 ~ou l u
ge t the program th a t I wa s int e rested in ."
Desp it e th e gr ieva nces I e nco untered ,
ve ry few peopl e wou ld offe r a n y a lt e rna c
ti ves to th e proced ure we prese ntl y have.
O ne excep tion was the co mm e nt s of D o ug
S to ll , se ni o r transfer s tude nt.
"We had a muc h better pwcess at For i
S te ila coo m Co mmunit y Co ll ege. Tim e
bl ocks we re a ll otted b y se ni o rit y and ar riv ed with yo ur reg istrati o n ca rd . Y()L1
s im p ly a rri ved at th e' reg is tr.1f's off ice a t
the g ive n tim e a nd YC' L1 were rt'g istered . I
don ' l reca ll a n yo ne hav in g to wa il llver
15 rninu tes. "
i~tra titln .

Renzo Difuria , freshmal1.
Registration?
"Smoo th . No probl e m s at a ll. Go t exac tl y w h a t I wa nt ed ."

lalla Loft . freshmal1 , Ta co ma .
" It \ b e tt e r th a n I thought it would be .
tho ug ht it wo uld be more co n fus ing."

Barb WoottOI1 , fres hmall , Seattle.
" It 's rea l good
. except o ne thi·ng .
O h yea h , they to ld me th ey were
s upposeu to leave ope nin gs. "
In g ro up co ntrac ts?
"Yea h . But th e fa cult y a lot of tim es
. u iun ' t save many spaces. "
Cou ld yo u g ive m e an exa m p le?
" There were o nl y s ix openi ngs left in
' S h ape~ to Come .' I looked aro und a nd
uecide d o n somet hin g e lse."
I gue~ <; it (c han g in g cont ra c ts ) wo n 't
c han ge your li fe?
" Maybe
(Pau~e)

MI ke /cw el . 0 11 ieal )c from Hamp shire
C,) II,)o\ (' . A l11ll/l rst . 'Ma ss.
"N o prob lems a t a ll . a s far as I ca n te ll.
It ~ gllllL' ~ m,'oth l y ."
I ),'I",/'{/ Ciare . freslmlall . Malibll , Calif.
" A ~ (,II' a ~ I ca n ~ ay, it 's pre tt y c razy
but Ihen . <111 regi~trati()n is ."

HII, I,

S: I '.~l' / l'

/ r, 's /lllil/ll . Yakilll a.

S, \ t.H II ' ~ li ke an y oth e r regi ~ tration."
S Ill' ~ hl' lI)':f: l' d he r ~ h()lI l dl'r ~. " O h we ll , it 's
C: , 'I 1l' l ' n 'II\' ~ 1l1 "I l\ h'"

Meet Maggie,
Parking Fees
There is a new pu zz le a t Evergreen ca used
by th e reins ta tement of p a rkin g fee s. T he
fees were es tab li shed durin g Everg ree n's
first yea r, but were dr o pped b y the Boa rd
of Tru s t ees in 1972. Th e fees w e r e
re-es tablished thi s year a t the ra te of
Si25.00 pe r year , SilO.OO pe r qu a rter , a nd
25 cents pe r day. Parking at ni g ht a nd o n
weeke nd s w ill be free . The new p o licy is
esse nti a ll y th e sa m e as th e o ne three
years ago w ith th e exception that Hou s ing
res id e nt s w ill be ab le to park free in Lo t F
and the mods park ing lot, a nd there will
be fr ee parking fo r vis itors .
A ccordin g to D ea n Clabaugh , Administrative V ice Presiden t for Bu s iness there
are severa l rea so n s fo r the re in s ta tement
of the fee s. First was to prov ide m o ney
for th e mainte nance of the park ing lo ts.
Mone y to do repav ing , repa inting of
lin es, etc. . ca nn ot co m e o ut o f th e '
co ll ege's Ge ne ral Fund , thu s the lots mu s t
b e se lf-suppo rting . Seco n d was to cut
down o n va n da li s m by providing m o ney
to hire a full-tim e sec urit y pe rson for the
Band C lot s durin g the day , a nd to
provide for in creasin g sec urit y in the F lo t
durin g the la te nig ht a nd ea rl y morning
h ours. Third
was 10 provide for
ass is ta nce with car s ta r ts, turnin g off
lig ht s, e tc.
C labaugh expec ts the p a rking fees w ill
ge ne rat e a pprox im a te ly Si4 ,000-5, 000 a
yea r , excludi n g th e sa lary o t the fu ll -tim e
sec urit y person . Part of th e proposa l
p la ns for stu dent e mplo yees for securit y
during the day in the lots .
S tude nt opinion o n th e parking fees is
va rie d. So m e feel the fee s are jus tified if
b e tt e r protec ti o n is pr ov:ded aga in s t
va nd a li ~m a nd th eft of ca rs . Others don' t
li ke th e fee s, a nd h ave been bu s il y
thin k ing of wa ys to avo id paying th e m .
And so , peHking tees a re a gain crea ting
d iscu ss io n on Ih £' Everg rl:'pn campu ~.

MASSOTH
Auto Parts
&

MACHINE
SHOP
2521 East 4th Ave.
943-1190
Engine Rebuilders
Best Equipped Machine
Shop in Olympia
?..
-::;
n Q
,---.'
-" ~

15

September 25, 1975

the Great Geoduck
by Boh Herron
I located Maggi e s tand in g in R e d
Sq udre ges turing to the pa ss ing c rowd
while int erm itt e ntl y h o is ting a megaphone
to he r lips to croon ou t a gree ting or to
bell cH.... th e a nn ou n cement of so m e
fo rth coming event. An a ttrac tive Geoduck , I thought. with a s mile to war m
e ve n a n oyster's hea rt. I asked her:

"T o be a t rave ling inform a tion ce nt e r
a nd , in ge neral , to be th e campus joker "
'

How are JJ eop le reacting to YOIl ?

"Ex trem e ly we ll! You see, for perfec t
s tra nge rs o n campus it see m s to be eas ier
10 ta lk to a nut th e n to talk to th e peop le
at the We Care ce nte rs. It' s g rea t, I love
it' And I mi g ht add th a t I app rec iate the
a pprec iation.

C0 1lld it be assumed th at Geo du cks are
a fr iendly v ariety of mollusk?
"Oh , certa inl y ! Certa inl y ! In fact, m os t
. definitely! "
Doesl1 '/ this co lltradict til e image o f a
co llege mascot?

"Well , let 's put it thi s way, thi s co ll ege
contrad icts the im age of m os t co ll eges so
it is on ly appropriat e that its masco t
co ntradi c ts th e image of mos t m ascots!"
She concluded thi s exclamat io n with a
series of oqt landis h c hu ck les that were the
s ta ndard introdu ctio n a nd ' co nclu s io n to
a ll of her co mme nts.

How did yo u get th e jo b ?
"Very, very good qu es tion. Let m e
think .... I was s itting in Co lo ra d o o n m y
vacation when I go t a call from Jo hn Woo
(t he Orientati o n W eek co-ord in a to r) w h o
asked m e h ow I would like to be a G reat
Geod uc k. I was s tricke n wit h w h at yo u
mig ht ca ll 't he Rocky Mountain .... ig h ' at
the time so it was easy to accept."

What are til e duties of tl1 c job ?

Housing Check-in
By Ja ni ce Ki ng
There: was a g rea t a m o unt ~) t co mm oti ,' n a round th e dorm s a nd th e m ods thi s
weeke nd as the grea t H o u s in g C heck - In
llcc urred. S tudent s w ith backpacks , suit cases , bo x e~ , s te reos , gu ilars , pot s, pans
and parenl s in tow a rri ved fo r a year of

dllrlll li vi ng . Ttl s ludent s \\I f1\> hdu chec ked
in ('.lr li L'r il ~ ('l,tnl'd ch t I H l ll )~ h Ihe lll assf:'S
(1 1 Ifl!l ~l' ,n riv ing wou ld n(' v pr l it inlo a ll
Ihl' rtl llm~. Hll wl'\'c r, t' \'l·r. w ilh Ihi s see m In g l ~' hu ge Jlllllunl 0 1 pl'l) jl le , Ih ere Me
~Ii ll \, <1l <ln c i e~; a ll1l11s t a ll c,1 I',,'hi c h .1rl' in
I W " - ~ llIdt'nl ,;t lldi\l~ . Hllu "ing i ~ cll'pro xim a ll' lv GO perce nl h,ll , wi lh Ilwr(' ~ llldt'nt <;
l"pC:C Il'd 1(1 c hec k - in bdl 'I'(' l ilt' qu a n ('r
bl' g in ~. EVl'll a lt er Ih(' ~l' ~ tL1 ! klll ~ a rri ve' , il
i ~ e x pec ted Ihal Ihl'rl' w il! 1)(' ~ r , l( l' .I va rl ab le ill Ih l' dllrl11 ~ .
The 1-\ ()lI s in ),; o lh ee pldlllWI! .I \'M il'l v 0 1
dcti v ilie ~ Illr Ih i ~ y (' a r '~ ! h'·lk - in . On S li n (LI Y, hllL1 ~ in g r('s ident ~ hl'\\ll l~ h l I (\ "v e ~ llf
IHlI11Crn a d l' b read to Ihl' \{ ('fT( ',lI i,) 1l Pav ilill n Illr Ihl' " Fir ~ 1 Ld~1 S IIPl wr .·' D inne r
l'nll' ll .1i n!llen l w,, ~ p ro v l,,( ,d h\· VVick lin e .
I .Ill'r Ih.1l ev en ing re,; ici ,' nh 1'); ' Cl),; Jed <It ,1
( llurl Yclrd ddn Cl' 1(\ Ih l' 1ll11 ~ IC of <1 Sl',l tll e
g rllur , I'al c h w ('rk.
Thl' Ile w es l in Hou ~ in g 1{('n l,) 1 I ' l an ~ i ~
l lnil I.('d e,!n g. Inl roJ ul t'd i,lll' In ~, llmnl(' r ,
th(' l " nl l' pl wa ~ deve l' )rc 'cI II' ,llI o w ~ I u ­
d en t... more IleAibilit y in Chllll "ing ho w
,1I1d wilh w h')111 to li ve . FVl' n Iholl g h th e
lllnll'p i Wd S int fllducl'd ,I ,; hll rt time dgll ,
. il hd " proved p(1pu lar . ,l ~ d un it IPel se ca n
he Ie~~ ex rwn s ive Ihelll 1'l'); Uld I' ho us in g
rd l t'~. rill' i h ,\ ~ e wh l) \V ,w i II. Unil Leasing
i ~ s li ll a va ilclble , a nd ,I : tlll lt' nt em sti(1
"w il c h irom J reg ul ,) f ' lllll l rolc t In ,\ lm it
Ica ~l' .
Al so ne w Ihi s vea l' . i ~. Ih e C,"n mCln
Inn. W hJI wa s th e' o ld i)rllp - In C e nl e r is :
nn w a S iudeni Re ~ otJ rcc' \ "Ill (' r w here '
c(1 un se ling s laff a nd s lud " 1l 1 1ll ,1Il ,lgl'rS <In' .
ava il ab le tll he lp o ul wilh dnj' I'l'n hl el1ls .

,' ..

'

48

Intercity Transit

QJ

-= COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Welcomes
-

~the l

Volume IV Number 1

........

Budd
I n l tJ f

September 25. 1975

}

"

o

. ....



~,."

~

,

'"

C
~

\

({

[1
/



fr. A

."

Il'

~
f

.

~
~f

.... 1' •••

"
L "d

~~'! ".,,-, m ~

,"

l

(.)

bus 'o,He

;-

.<J '" 1

legend

intercity transit

C

10'

tumwa 18f' - ruddell rd .

dlVlO"'" a t
II n betnel - boolevard rd

,"

lill y rd . - 8th ave " 8.

c ollege - downtown

t 40 COLLEGE
DOWNTOWN
LEAVE
5th &
14th 5.
3rd &
O . V. T .!.
CAPITOL CHERRY BATES

CA..Y.."...

~ - 8325

LAICEY

4V1 - 12lO

T\.IifWA fER

J6 7 - 646&

MOTTMAN RD.
«< BLK . LK .

HARRISON &
DIVISION

ELLIOTT IlD .
& D IVIS ION

COO PER I'NT . &
KA ISER RD .

T . E.S . C.

COOPER PNT . &
KAISER RD .

ELLIOTT RD .
& DIVISION

7 :35
8 :35
9 :35
12 :05
2 :05
3 :05
5 :05

7: 40
8 : 40
9 : 40
12 : 10
2 : 10
3 : (0
5 : 10

7: 45
8 : 45
9 :45
12 : 15
I : 15
3 : 15
5 : 15

7 :50
8 : 50
Q: 50
12 : 20
2 : 20
3 : 20
5 : 20

7 :55
8 :55

8 : 00
9 :00
10 :00
12 :30
2 : 30
3 :)0
5: 30

8 :05
9 :05
10 :05
12: J5
2: 35
3 :35
5: 35

7 : 15"
7 : 20
7 : 25
7 : 30
8 : 15 "
8 : 25
8 : 30
8 : 20
9 : 25
9 : 15"
9:20
9 :30
11 :45
11 :55
11 : 50
12 : 00
1:45
1 :55
1 : 50
2:00
2 : 45
2 :55
2 :50
3 : 00
4:45
4 : 55
4 :50
5 : 00
7:00 " Sout h SoJlnd Cent.,

~ :55

12 : 25
2 : 25
3 : 25
5: 25

ARRIVE
HARRISON ...
5th ...
DIVISION
CAPITOL
8 : 10
9: 10
10 : 10
12 :40
2: 40
3 : 40
5 :40

8 :15
9: 15
10 : 15
12:45
2 : 45
3 :45
5:45

" 8US DOES NOT RUN ON SA TURDA YS
BUS RUNS TO T .E.S.C. ONLY DURING THE AC ADEMIC YEAR ; DURING SIl EAKS, BUS WILL " DEADH EAU " AT
f. LLlOTT 1l0. & DIVISION ST .
C ALL 866-6300 FOR CHANGE IN SCHWULE

REGISTRA nON: ADVANCING AROUND US AGAIN

l-AI<£S
With TESC Clmrll ~ Se rv icl' C<lrJ
Adulh
l~ - I S '· l'.lI' ~
l ' mlt-I" C' "('.1 r~

1St
2S (
1St
II ~ FI

[)

Schedules of all routes
can be obtained at the
Information Center. in . the CAB.

W ith another Orientation Week almost over, John Woo's draw ing
a ptly illustrates s tudents' fru strati o ns, Long lines scra mbled dire f
sea rching for a progra m , an advisor, a n obscure room .' or a Fi Aid ch~~~n~~
beCtlrnl.ng th e rul e, not the exception, to Evergreen 's mode of registering
Se I11ln..lrS star t next week .. . w e h ope yo u f'In d yourself In
. the program
.
yo u
w.ln ll'd (or a reaso na ble facs imil e ther:?ot) .... a nd happy beginnin g of the yea r .

)
Media
cpj0093.pdf