The Cooper Point Journal Volume 5, Issue 9 (January 13, 1977)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0137.pdf
Title
Eng The Cooper Point Journal Volume 5, Issue 9 (January 13, 1977)
Date
13 January 1977
Description
Eng The Governor Steps In; Questions for Evans; What This College Needs Is a List of Salaries; PRESS REACTS; EVANS STEPS UP; FACULTY' COMMENTS; STRAIT ARROW; THE REAL ~ FIRST BABY; FORUM The Dan Evans Search Cornrnittee; RAY BLASTED; TWO BOOKS FOR TESC; Music for Women Only;
Creator
Eng Groening, Matt
Eng Miller, Pamela
Eng Kirby, Janine
Eng Walkere, Robert
Eng Taylor, Bill
Eng Esteb, Richard
Eng Stroh, Peg
Eng Gaither, Pegguy
Eng Burnside, Dave
Eng Speer, Peter
Eng Mosqueda, Richard L.
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng Pocorny, Brad
Eng Haeck, Phil
Eng Kormondy, Lynn
Eng Burns, Charles
Eng Jacobs, Carrie
Contributor
Eng Groening, Matt
Eng Judd, David
Eng Pokorny, Brad
Eng Sutherland, Brock
Eng Shore, Stan
Eng McCartney, Kim
Eng Weinman, Lynda
Subject
Eng Women
Eng Music
Eng Governance
Eng Evans, Dan
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Time Magazine
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng Washinton State
Eng Thuston County ,WA
Eng Olympia, WA
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 12 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1977
extracted text
Volume 5 Number 9

The Evergreen State College

Olympia, Washington 98505

- - - NOTE

Jan 13,197?

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The Governor Steps In
by Matt Groening

CAMPUS HOUSING

One thing for sure: we're .not in
business to make money.
Low Rates

Free TV-FM Cable

No De~sit Phone

Fully Furnished

Free Utilities

Closest to campus

Come live at our place.

D

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\

aniel J. Evans, former governor of the state
by a day, is on campus today, January 13,
to begin prepara tions to take on the presidency of Evergreen in July, Evans was enthusiastically appointed president by the Board of
Trustees on Tuesday afternoon after the Presidential
Selection Advisory Committee recommended him for
the position unanimously on Decembel' Z2 .
Evans will be on campus regularly until February 28
to plan for his new job with President Charles J. McCann, whose resignation is effective June 30 . A commitment was made by the trustees to the Presidential
Search Committee to arrange a public question-andanswer session between Evans and Evergreen students,
which is expected to take place before the end ~f February .
The search committee's recommendation put an end
to months of speculation and rumors that Evans was
interested in the ' presidency. The only surprise was
how quickly the search committee made its recommendation. Evans was chosen by the committee during its
first and only meeting on December 22.
Since its beginning Evans has been associated with
the college. During his first term as governor, Evans
sought the establishment of another four-year state
college, and he was on hand with a bulldozer and
hard hat for the ceremonial groundbreaking of the library, which was named after him. Evans was also
present at Evergreen's Dedication Day in 1970, which
happened to coincide with the nationwide anti-Vietnam War May Day protests. The Republican governor
wore a black arm-band. On May '19, 1973, Evans
showed up in jeans and rappelled by rope from the
top of the 122-foot clock tower as part of the recreation center dedication. He praised the college then for
"the opportunity it offers the individual to remain individual and develop along.individual lines."
The selection of Evans has ~n criticized by some
newspapers in the state, and state Senator A. L. "Slim"
Rasm!JSlC!n has requested that ' the Senate Education '
Committee investigate the possibility of a "conflict of
interest" 'in the Board of Trustees" appointment. Evans
appointed all fiw ~embers ,of the board when he was
governor. '
'
,
The seneral feelins ort campuS about Evans is one
' of happinesa and .-eJief, althqU&h there is 'criticism by
some students and a few, faculty about the process in

which he was picked . The sentiment most typically
expressed is, " He'll be great for the school."

R

um ~ rs of the impending resignation of President Charles J. McCann were already in
circulation during the summer of 1976 , A
former dean confided to the COOPER
POINT JOURNAL in July that McCann would leave
the college by the end of the coming school year , and
he said that Governor Evans was McCann's possible
successor,
McCann had privately informed the Board of Trusor possibly earlier, the Board discussed with Evans his
aVjlilability for the presidency . Evans apparently declined to make a decision. Had he accepted, the trustees would have unanimously. approved his appointment and there would have been no Presidential Selection Advisory Committee.
Critics have speculated that Evans did not want to
accept in September because of the risk of bad public
reaction, and that a search committee process was designed to defuse potential trouble , Evans said in a press
conference in December that he had wanted to meet
the selection committee to insure that the faculty, staff,
and students wished him to come to the college. "And
I certainly would not have been willing to accept the
responsibility at Evergreen if there wasn't enthusiasm
on their vart," he stated.
On September 15,'1976, over a year after he had informed the trustees of his decision, McCann announced
publicly his resignation, effective in June, 1977. (At a
boardt meeting on Dec. 9, 1976, Trustee and search
committee chairman Herb Hadley maintained that
"the Board .. . upon knowledge just prior to Dr. McCann's announcement of his pending resignation, has
considered people who may be excellent for the position. ")
.
During October and No'vember theol'ganization of
the Presidential Selection Advisory Committee was
planned. Procedural problems were ironed out and on
December 9 the trustees approved the creation of a
IS-member search committee to begin recruiting a
new president.
Members of the committee were Chairman Herb
Hadley, and Trustee Thomas Dixon; faculty members
William Brown, Linda Kahan, and ~Ine Mimms;
Admi(listrative Vice Presidenl , ~ 'Clabaush;AIIociate Dean of Ubrary ServlCIi Dave Carnahan; Affinnative Action Officer Rindetta Jones; clauified .taff

.

members Helen Hannigan and Ben Wo lfe ; sludents
Colleen Hunt and Bud Cook; Evergreen graduate
Anne Lewin ; and community representative Mark
Hoehne ,
The approved pr.Qcedures called for the cnmmi ttee
to recommend six of 'the " best qualified ca nd idates tor
president." Minimum qualifications fo r tlll: nc\\' pres ident inclu ded: a "background of signa l ac hievem ent ,
knowletlge of and ability to wo rk with pr " l:ll ems tha i
colleges and universit ies will face in the next ten year"
successful high-level administrative experience , prl1 \'cn
ability in public and legislati ve relations , pote nti al iN
fund-raising. and an underst and ing of and sy mpa lhv
for. Evergreen 's philosophy . goals, and modes of in·
struction."
The committee was also' instructed to review Ever·
green's Affirmati;'e Action policy and to take "whatever steps are necessary" to secure qualified minority,
candidates in its search, This was approved by Evergreen's Affirmative Action Officer Rindetta Jones.
who was also a voting member of the search committee ,
Seventeen thousand seven hundred dolla rs was allocated to the committee to aid in its search and a December 22 introductory meeting was scheduled.
A much-criticized "short circuit" clause was also in
the board's charge to"the committee . It said the committee could immediately go to the trustees with a
recommendation if it discovered a person "eminently
qualified for the position" - which, of course. meant
Evans. And the committee could. be ·even further
short-circuited, a college spokesman admitted to the
press, because the job would go to Evans immediately
if he accepted it before the committee met on December 22.

A

few students at the December 9 board meeting were critical of the search committee .
Student Joe Dear said, "I would like to
express concern that I have and that is as to
whether the Presidential Search Committee is the 'Dan
Evans Search Committee' .and how this will be perceived by the Ever~ community. I have heard ru.mors, and t~ tend to run around the community .
The cause of my concern is this. If the students, and
, it's probably the whole school, perceives that this is a
" .... tum to ".,. 6

3

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plnlO]
' .:

Captivating
To the Editor:

1 am an inmate at the Monroe
State Reformatory for Men at
Monroe, Washington. However,
when I was living in Olympia I
read your newsletters that you
distribute and now that I'm in
prison I would still like to continue reading your paper. I can't
remember the name of the paper
but it comes from Evergreen College. Maybe you know what I'm
talking about. I just want to keep
up on what's happening. I don't
have any money and would appreciPte it if you would put me
on the list for a free subscription.
Also if you can find room in
your paper I would like you to
print in it that I would like to
have some free-loving and goodnatured women to write me
while I'm locked up. It's such a
strain living among only men and
not having any contact with any
females. I like to talk about all
things. So I hope you can fill in
this favor for me. Looking forward to hearing from you.
Peace to the staff I
Dave Burnside
Monroe State Reformatory
for Men
Monroe, Washington
P. S. Be sure to use my number
(251928) when writing.

Robert Walker

Women
To the Editor:
An open letter to the Women's
Center. Meg Christian, and Olivia Records:
I was looking forward to your
concert last Sunday evening. I
arrived with four of my good
friends to find a sign on the door
which excluded two of them from
attendance because they happen
to be men . That it was t6 be a
concert for women ONLY was
not well-publicized . I feel that
this reverse chauvinism is not
constructive. Women have been
repressed in the past but so have
men who have been expected to
live up to certain standards of
masculinity. Some women and
some men have gone through
changes. Others have a lot yet to
learn. I think that through music
much can be shared about growing, changing, breaking out of
roles . Meg Christian 's songs,
which I have heard on record
are enthusiastic proclamations of
these things. I am sad that Meg
was not willing to share them
with all people . Instead of stirring
constructive actions by your concert and through your words, for
many of us you have placed anger and disappointment. Must
feminists remain separate from
others, from men, for their words
to be strong and open, for their
goals to be realized, for their
work to be done? For these reasons I regret not being able to attend the concert.
p'amela Miller

concert. What is this Bull Shit?
Is this attitude really helping
women and men get along together in -this world or is it just
creating a separate society for
women to learn to hate and resent men more and more?
My goal for the sexes in this
life is to enrich communication
and understanding betwe~n myself and other womep and other
men so we can all live and grow
to be free r and happier individuals. I don't understand how my
male friends and acquaintances
are ever going to be really aware
of what women are struggling for
if closed off from this kind of
event involving what is to me
one of the most effective avenues
of communication: music.
I'm sorry and hurt. I decline
from attending Sunday's concert.
It takes two to "Tango."
Regretfully,
Janine Kirby
(Editor's note: For another reaction to the Meg Christian /
Teresa Trull concert, see the review on page 11 of this issue.)

Women
To the Editor :
An Open Letter to the Women's Center:
My watch stopped the other
night. What time you got?
Yours,
Bill Taylor

Men
Women
To the Editor:
Re : Meg Christian / Teresa
Trull concert jan. 9.
I really felt saddened and enraged while listening to an interview on KAOS tohight when
Meg Christian said that she preferred that men' not attend their

To the Editor:
An Open Letter to Tom Thacker
of the Men's Center:
Don't pull on my coat no
more. "You had what you had
before you tried to get it . . ."
Yours
Bill Taylor

Leaf Me Alone
To the Editor:
I am appalled at the use of
gasoline-guzzling machines to
blow leaves off sidewalks and
drives. What is the reason for
this? Is the noise alone worth the
"clean" effect this has?
I t seems to me that this is one
step too far. Why not just let the
leaves fall where they do. I think
it would only add beauty to a
good campus.
Richard Esteb

Elevated
Discourse
To the Editor:
It was nothing personal, you
understand, just an innocent attempt to raise the consciousness
of a few people here at the college toward energy awareness.
We'd tried it before at the University of Washington with a
mythical character we christened
Mitak Megawatt, admonishing
folks to be more careful of their
use of energy. Remember Good
Neighbor Nuke? We had Mitak
hovering above the light switches
over the water faucets that
dripped hot water down the
drain, and next to the elevator
buttons. I thought it might be
nice to resurrect the old guy and
put him back to use here at the
noble Evergreen, realizing, of
course, that the level of consciousness here is so high that I'd
only be addressing a few souls
out of two thousand. 1 even
changed Mitak's message a bit to
make it more reasonable, softer.
Use the stairs whenever possible.
I'm sorry to report that Mitak
is dead in LAB n. His lifespan
was about an hour on floors one
and three, and about four hours
on floor two. Someone found

this message offensive enough to
tear him from the doors, rip him
in pieces, and crumple him in the
nearby ashtrays. In a basement
confrontation, a faculty member
(who shall remain anonymous)
tried to bombard me with facts
about the mythical energy problem, saying that our consumption
of gasoline in automobiles and
energy in such things as elevators
made very little impact on the
eventual lifespan of fossil fuels,
that industry was the real culprit
and all our conservation would
mean nothing in the long run.
After delivering this message, he
pressed the button and rode the
elevator from the basement to
the first floor. I hope someday
his body forgives him his arrogance. Perhaps the people that
control industry began by always
riding the elevator when they
could have walked, always taking the car when they could have
bicycled, and always relying on
some form of mechanical, electrical. motor driven device when
their bodies cried for use.
As for our anonymous faculty
member's allegation that industry
is the main culprit of energy
abuse in the U.S., the most recent Science magazine (December 3, 1976) report on the subject
lists transportation as utilizing
25 % of the gross energy (excluding fuel exports) and automobile travel as roughly half of
that amount. As anyone with an
automobile can verify, much of
the travel done by car is trivial.
Homes utilize another 25 % of
the gross energy, most of that
going for heating. Industry of
various sorts utilizes 30 % to
40 %. During the "energy crisis"
of 1973, it was shown that by
cutting the consumption of fossil
fuels through more prudent automobile use by only 10 % to 15 %
was enough to make a significant
impact.
It was missing the point to
suppose I was naive enough to
think that more Spartan elevator
usage would save the world. The
point was that elevators for most
people, most of the time, are absurd uses of energy, especially in
three or four-story buildings. If
people are asked to think about

what they're doing more often
instead of taking our energy consumptive life-style for granted, it
might do some good.
Peg Stroh

This Is a Lecture
To the Editor:
I was sitting in Lecture Hall
One the other day feeling sorry
for myself when I decided to take
action. No one, I believe, should
have to go through the misery 1
must endure every week. Hence
this letter, which perhaps will do
some good.
A GUIDE TO LECTURERS:
1) DON'T RAMBLE
2) MAKE A POINT
3) DON'T BORE
4) DON'T WASTE OUR TIME
5) BE PREPARED
6) IS THIS LECTURE NECESSARY7
If these six simple points were
to suddenly appear on every
blackboard in the school, we'd
get some action . I have done my
part - now you do yours.
Name Withheld by
Desperate Request

Kittie Litter
To the Editor :
I've about had it I Every time I
even mention Kittie Carlisle,
people grimace and act as though
I've sinned. My Godl What has
she ever done to deserve such
treatment1 I'll admit she's rarely
ever correct on her guesses, but
that's no reason to condemn her.
Even that slut Peggy Cass misses
occasionally.
Miss Carlisle dresses well, always has her hair looking nice,
and seems like a charming lady
in general. I like her. I would
even be proud to have her spend
a weekend In my home.
Peggy Gaither

Glaciers Galore
To the Editor:
The Pacific Northwest, land of
volcanoes and wet snow. The
Cascades are not only notable
for their rainfall, but for extensive winter snow cover, too. Everyone knows about our rain.
The western slopes of the Cascades have rainfalls of between
80 and 100 inches yearly. ("That
ain't nothing," the' Olympics say .
With over 150 inches a year, they
got the Cascades beat hands
down.).
But how many folks know
about our snow? This year there
is quite a fuss about that white
stuff. 'Cause we haven't seen
much of it. In a lot of ways our
snowfall is more important than
our rainfall .
Seventy-seven percent of the
total glacier area in the U. S.
south of Alaska is found in our
Washington state. The North
Cascades and Mt. Rdinier are
definitely the prime stockholders
in this business . Mt. Rainier
alone holds 34 square miles of
ice (850 sq. km .). And with good
cause. The largest total snowfall
of anywhere in the world occurs
on Mt. Rainier. A couple years
back she pulled 1,121.4 inches of
snow out of the skyl Quite a
celebrity , 01' Tahoma.
The Cascades have the most
glaciers, densest and most magnificent forests, and least disturbed wilderness in our contiguous states. Their contrasts can
be quite sublime, with a range of

subtle and strong earth colors
emanating from the great variety
of vegetation, the dark forest
shadows, the myriad rock formations of the alpine regions.
Did you ever realize that you
are smack dab in the midst of all
this wonderful country7 The hills
are barely hours away from campus. The snows are a'comin'. A
winter wonderland awaits the
adventurous ones. Take a break
and pull the stakes. Hike the
trails and swim the lakes. A little time is all it takes. A world of
wind and snow awaits.
This plug for the Cascade
mountains has been brought to
you by The Evergreen Alpine
Club.
Peter Speer
Co-director

No Person is

an Island
.r

To the Editor:

Re: CPj Vol. 5, No.8, Dec. 2,
1976, "You Must See 'Hearts and
Minds'"
"What life has taught me I
would like to share with those
who want to learn ... Until the
philosophy which holds one race
superior and another inferior is
finally and permanently discredited and abandoned; that until
there are no longer first class and
second class citizens ' of any nation ; until the color of a man's
skin is of no more significance
than the color 'of his eyes; that
until the basic human rights are
equally guaranteed to all, without regard to race; that until that
day, the dream of lasting peace,
world citizenship and the rule of
international morality will remain in but a fleeting illusion to
be pursued, but never attained;
and until the ignoble and unhappy regime that now holds our
brothers in Angola, in Mozambique, South Africa in sub-human
bondage, have been toppled utterly destroyed; until that day
the African continent will not
know peace. We Africans will
fight, if necessary, and we know
we shall win as we are confident
in the victory of good over evil,
of good over evil."
- A speech by H.LM. Haile
Selassie I in California, 28 Febru-

ary 1968. Similarly applied to
Indochina we can clearly see that
what truth is is PEACE, for no
man is an island, no man stands
alone.
Richard L. Mosqueda :

Dear Jimmy
To the Editor:
It has come to our attention
that you did not print our previous letter that was submitted to
you more than several weeks ago,
thus proving yourselves to be the
bourgieois running dog lackeys
of the ruling class that your really
are.
A word of warningl You lickspittle mongrels better print this
one or the consequense will be
severely severe I
Beginning of letter to be
printed:
An open letter to PrezidentElect Carter:
Dear Sir (or Jimmy):
Death to the fascist insect that
preys upon the life and blood of
the glorious oppressed people.
All death to the sleezy, slimy
bourgieois degenerate pig culture
which controls the people. All
power to the international protletariat that can see you as the
running-mongrel-dog lick-spittle
pawn of the ruling class thet you
are. We want the follOWing demands met as soon as you take
office. If you really are a man of
the people (you sexist Iexpletives
deleted]), then you will take heed
and meet our demands.
1.) OUTLAW RACISM! Kill
all white babies that are born in
the United States I Close down all
Kentucky Fried Colonel Sanders'
stands! Give all black people machine guns and atomic bombs!
2.) OUTLAW SEXISM I Castrate all males over the age of
ten. Cut off one breast each on
all women. Give all men vaginas
and all women testicles. Give all
women machine guns and atomic
bombs.
3.) WE WANT SOCIALISM!
All power to the people!
Those are the three big ones. If
they are not carried out, you will
be the one . that suffers, pig. All
power to the glorious vanguard.
Name Withheld

A Note to the Reader
This issue marks a change in staff on the COOPER POINT
j0l!RN.AL .. Jill Stewart, who was editor for three quarters
~ndmg m December, 1976, has graduated and is now applymg to graduate school.
Stepping up to the editor's position is Matt Groening, formerly the Features/Managing Editor. He was chosen in December by the Board of Publications. The new Features Editor .is Stan Sh?~e, who has worked for the paper before in a
variety of posllJons. Second in command, as Managing Editor, is Brad Pokorny, who was formerly a news writer and
photo editor on the JOURNAL.
New to the staff is Production Manager Lynda Weinman
who is responsible for many of the details of layout and
graphics which go into the JOURNAL.

I"

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

Questions
for Evans

GET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS AT

The decision of the Board of Trustees to appoint former
governor Dan Evans to succeed Evergreen President Charles
McCann has received two distinct types of criticism from
two distinct groups. Faculty and students have complained
about the method of Evans' selection, while members of the
outside community have complained about an apparent conflict of interest.
The charges of "cronyism" and conflict of interest can b:
disposed of most readily. Those who raise this complaint
claIm that because Evans appointed the members of the
Board of Trustees, their appointment of him as president is
suspect. The Daily Olympian, Shelton Mason County Journal and State Senator A. L. Rasmussen of Tacoma are among
those who have voiced disapproval on these grounds.
It is true that Evans appointed the Board of Trustees . but
during his twelve years as governor he made hundreds of
appointments affecting not only higher education but a lm ost
all segments of the state government. Likewise, Evans has
had his hand in countless budget decisions, pronouncements,
and legislative. maneuvering that leave little of the present
state government free of his fingerprints . He was governor ;
it was his job.
If Evans had decided not to take a position in Washington
state, there would have been no controversy. But give n his
decision to stay within the state, problems seem inevitable .
Certainly the Board was not acting out of political considerations. It seems unlikely that Evans could not have found a
more prestigious or better paying job if he had wanted. His
willingness to serve as Evergreen's president was welcomed
by the Board not because they owed it to him , but because
he has shown himself to be extremely popular within the "
state, and an able and intelligent adm inistrator.
Those who criticize the Boar.d's action as political are no
doubt motivated by political considerations themse lves . We
can only hope that this petty partisanship is forgotten soon
and does not affect Evans' term as president.
The second complaint about Evans. that the selection
process was shoddy and unfair, designed to choose him
alone, deserves more attention. The selection process was
unattractive: secretive, hasty, and unrepresentative. Those
who defend the selection process argue that in this case the
ends justify the means: Evans was such a perfect choice that
there was no need to follow the usual rrocedures. It may be
true that Evans was the best choice for the job, but under
the present circumstances no one will really know , since he
was allowed no real competition .
But the arguing over the selection process is now - if you
WIll pardon the expression - largely academic .
The president's job has three parts: public relations, administration, and educational policy. Everyone knows that
Evans is a PR godsend, and it can be assumed that he is at
least a fair administrator. What no one knows at this point
- because the selection process was so hasty - is what
Evans believes the school should be academically.
If Evans had been a normal candidate for the presidency,
he would have been asked many, many questions about his
educational views . (Well, better late than never, we always
say .) Evans should come to campus, make himself availabie
a.t a public meeting, and let Evergreeners ask him some questIOns.
Our suggestion for the first question : Would Evans allow
the circumventing of college hiring policy the way it wa s
CIrcumvented to hire him?

EDITOR
Matt Groening
MANAGING EDITOR
Brad Pokorny
FEA TURE EDITOR
Stan Shore

HENDRICKS

PRODUCTION
Lynda Weinman
The COOPER POINT JOURNAL is published weekly 'or the student. 'acuity
and stall
The Evergreen State COllege, Olympia, Washington 98505. Viewl ex:
pressed are not necessarily those 01 The Evergreen State College. AdvertisIng material presenled herein does not necessarily Imply endorsement by this newspaper.
Ollices are located In the Co!lege Activities Building (CAB) 306. New& phones :
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0'

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Olympia, Washington

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WESTSIDE CENTER
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BUSINESS MANAGER
David Judd
ADVERTISING
Brock Sutherland
SECRETARY
Kim McCartney

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plnlO]
' .:

Captivating
To the Editor:

1 am an inmate at the Monroe
State Reformatory for Men at
Monroe, Washington. However,
when I was living in Olympia I
read your newsletters that you
distribute and now that I'm in
prison I would still like to continue reading your paper. I can't
remember the name of the paper
but it comes from Evergreen College. Maybe you know what I'm
talking about. I just want to keep
up on what's happening. I don't
have any money and would appreciPte it if you would put me
on the list for a free subscription.
Also if you can find room in
your paper I would like you to
print in it that I would like to
have some free-loving and goodnatured women to write me
while I'm locked up. It's such a
strain living among only men and
not having any contact with any
females. I like to talk about all
things. So I hope you can fill in
this favor for me. Looking forward to hearing from you.
Peace to the staff I
Dave Burnside
Monroe State Reformatory
for Men
Monroe, Washington
P. S. Be sure to use my number
(251928) when writing.

Robert Walker

Women
To the Editor:
An open letter to the Women's
Center. Meg Christian, and Olivia Records:
I was looking forward to your
concert last Sunday evening. I
arrived with four of my good
friends to find a sign on the door
which excluded two of them from
attendance because they happen
to be men . That it was t6 be a
concert for women ONLY was
not well-publicized . I feel that
this reverse chauvinism is not
constructive. Women have been
repressed in the past but so have
men who have been expected to
live up to certain standards of
masculinity. Some women and
some men have gone through
changes. Others have a lot yet to
learn. I think that through music
much can be shared about growing, changing, breaking out of
roles . Meg Christian 's songs,
which I have heard on record
are enthusiastic proclamations of
these things. I am sad that Meg
was not willing to share them
with all people . Instead of stirring
constructive actions by your concert and through your words, for
many of us you have placed anger and disappointment. Must
feminists remain separate from
others, from men, for their words
to be strong and open, for their
goals to be realized, for their
work to be done? For these reasons I regret not being able to attend the concert.
p'amela Miller

concert. What is this Bull Shit?
Is this attitude really helping
women and men get along together in -this world or is it just
creating a separate society for
women to learn to hate and resent men more and more?
My goal for the sexes in this
life is to enrich communication
and understanding betwe~n myself and other womep and other
men so we can all live and grow
to be free r and happier individuals. I don't understand how my
male friends and acquaintances
are ever going to be really aware
of what women are struggling for
if closed off from this kind of
event involving what is to me
one of the most effective avenues
of communication: music.
I'm sorry and hurt. I decline
from attending Sunday's concert.
It takes two to "Tango."
Regretfully,
Janine Kirby
(Editor's note: For another reaction to the Meg Christian /
Teresa Trull concert, see the review on page 11 of this issue.)

Women
To the Editor :
An Open Letter to the Women's Center:
My watch stopped the other
night. What time you got?
Yours,
Bill Taylor

Men
Women
To the Editor:
Re : Meg Christian / Teresa
Trull concert jan. 9.
I really felt saddened and enraged while listening to an interview on KAOS tohight when
Meg Christian said that she preferred that men' not attend their

To the Editor:
An Open Letter to Tom Thacker
of the Men's Center:
Don't pull on my coat no
more. "You had what you had
before you tried to get it . . ."
Yours
Bill Taylor

Leaf Me Alone
To the Editor:
I am appalled at the use of
gasoline-guzzling machines to
blow leaves off sidewalks and
drives. What is the reason for
this? Is the noise alone worth the
"clean" effect this has?
I t seems to me that this is one
step too far. Why not just let the
leaves fall where they do. I think
it would only add beauty to a
good campus.
Richard Esteb

Elevated
Discourse
To the Editor:
It was nothing personal, you
understand, just an innocent attempt to raise the consciousness
of a few people here at the college toward energy awareness.
We'd tried it before at the University of Washington with a
mythical character we christened
Mitak Megawatt, admonishing
folks to be more careful of their
use of energy. Remember Good
Neighbor Nuke? We had Mitak
hovering above the light switches
over the water faucets that
dripped hot water down the
drain, and next to the elevator
buttons. I thought it might be
nice to resurrect the old guy and
put him back to use here at the
noble Evergreen, realizing, of
course, that the level of consciousness here is so high that I'd
only be addressing a few souls
out of two thousand. 1 even
changed Mitak's message a bit to
make it more reasonable, softer.
Use the stairs whenever possible.
I'm sorry to report that Mitak
is dead in LAB n. His lifespan
was about an hour on floors one
and three, and about four hours
on floor two. Someone found

this message offensive enough to
tear him from the doors, rip him
in pieces, and crumple him in the
nearby ashtrays. In a basement
confrontation, a faculty member
(who shall remain anonymous)
tried to bombard me with facts
about the mythical energy problem, saying that our consumption
of gasoline in automobiles and
energy in such things as elevators
made very little impact on the
eventual lifespan of fossil fuels,
that industry was the real culprit
and all our conservation would
mean nothing in the long run.
After delivering this message, he
pressed the button and rode the
elevator from the basement to
the first floor. I hope someday
his body forgives him his arrogance. Perhaps the people that
control industry began by always
riding the elevator when they
could have walked, always taking the car when they could have
bicycled, and always relying on
some form of mechanical, electrical. motor driven device when
their bodies cried for use.
As for our anonymous faculty
member's allegation that industry
is the main culprit of energy
abuse in the U.S., the most recent Science magazine (December 3, 1976) report on the subject
lists transportation as utilizing
25 % of the gross energy (excluding fuel exports) and automobile travel as roughly half of
that amount. As anyone with an
automobile can verify, much of
the travel done by car is trivial.
Homes utilize another 25 % of
the gross energy, most of that
going for heating. Industry of
various sorts utilizes 30 % to
40 %. During the "energy crisis"
of 1973, it was shown that by
cutting the consumption of fossil
fuels through more prudent automobile use by only 10 % to 15 %
was enough to make a significant
impact.
It was missing the point to
suppose I was naive enough to
think that more Spartan elevator
usage would save the world. The
point was that elevators for most
people, most of the time, are absurd uses of energy, especially in
three or four-story buildings. If
people are asked to think about

what they're doing more often
instead of taking our energy consumptive life-style for granted, it
might do some good.
Peg Stroh

This Is a Lecture
To the Editor:
I was sitting in Lecture Hall
One the other day feeling sorry
for myself when I decided to take
action. No one, I believe, should
have to go through the misery 1
must endure every week. Hence
this letter, which perhaps will do
some good.
A GUIDE TO LECTURERS:
1) DON'T RAMBLE
2) MAKE A POINT
3) DON'T BORE
4) DON'T WASTE OUR TIME
5) BE PREPARED
6) IS THIS LECTURE NECESSARY7
If these six simple points were
to suddenly appear on every
blackboard in the school, we'd
get some action . I have done my
part - now you do yours.
Name Withheld by
Desperate Request

Kittie Litter
To the Editor :
I've about had it I Every time I
even mention Kittie Carlisle,
people grimace and act as though
I've sinned. My Godl What has
she ever done to deserve such
treatment1 I'll admit she's rarely
ever correct on her guesses, but
that's no reason to condemn her.
Even that slut Peggy Cass misses
occasionally.
Miss Carlisle dresses well, always has her hair looking nice,
and seems like a charming lady
in general. I like her. I would
even be proud to have her spend
a weekend In my home.
Peggy Gaither

Glaciers Galore
To the Editor:
The Pacific Northwest, land of
volcanoes and wet snow. The
Cascades are not only notable
for their rainfall, but for extensive winter snow cover, too. Everyone knows about our rain.
The western slopes of the Cascades have rainfalls of between
80 and 100 inches yearly. ("That
ain't nothing," the' Olympics say .
With over 150 inches a year, they
got the Cascades beat hands
down.).
But how many folks know
about our snow? This year there
is quite a fuss about that white
stuff. 'Cause we haven't seen
much of it. In a lot of ways our
snowfall is more important than
our rainfall .
Seventy-seven percent of the
total glacier area in the U. S.
south of Alaska is found in our
Washington state. The North
Cascades and Mt. Rdinier are
definitely the prime stockholders
in this business . Mt. Rainier
alone holds 34 square miles of
ice (850 sq. km .). And with good
cause. The largest total snowfall
of anywhere in the world occurs
on Mt. Rainier. A couple years
back she pulled 1,121.4 inches of
snow out of the skyl Quite a
celebrity , 01' Tahoma.
The Cascades have the most
glaciers, densest and most magnificent forests, and least disturbed wilderness in our contiguous states. Their contrasts can
be quite sublime, with a range of

subtle and strong earth colors
emanating from the great variety
of vegetation, the dark forest
shadows, the myriad rock formations of the alpine regions.
Did you ever realize that you
are smack dab in the midst of all
this wonderful country7 The hills
are barely hours away from campus. The snows are a'comin'. A
winter wonderland awaits the
adventurous ones. Take a break
and pull the stakes. Hike the
trails and swim the lakes. A little time is all it takes. A world of
wind and snow awaits.
This plug for the Cascade
mountains has been brought to
you by The Evergreen Alpine
Club.
Peter Speer
Co-director

No Person is

an Island
.r

To the Editor:

Re: CPj Vol. 5, No.8, Dec. 2,
1976, "You Must See 'Hearts and
Minds'"
"What life has taught me I
would like to share with those
who want to learn ... Until the
philosophy which holds one race
superior and another inferior is
finally and permanently discredited and abandoned; that until
there are no longer first class and
second class citizens ' of any nation ; until the color of a man's
skin is of no more significance
than the color 'of his eyes; that
until the basic human rights are
equally guaranteed to all, without regard to race; that until that
day, the dream of lasting peace,
world citizenship and the rule of
international morality will remain in but a fleeting illusion to
be pursued, but never attained;
and until the ignoble and unhappy regime that now holds our
brothers in Angola, in Mozambique, South Africa in sub-human
bondage, have been toppled utterly destroyed; until that day
the African continent will not
know peace. We Africans will
fight, if necessary, and we know
we shall win as we are confident
in the victory of good over evil,
of good over evil."
- A speech by H.LM. Haile
Selassie I in California, 28 Febru-

ary 1968. Similarly applied to
Indochina we can clearly see that
what truth is is PEACE, for no
man is an island, no man stands
alone.
Richard L. Mosqueda :

Dear Jimmy
To the Editor:
It has come to our attention
that you did not print our previous letter that was submitted to
you more than several weeks ago,
thus proving yourselves to be the
bourgieois running dog lackeys
of the ruling class that your really
are.
A word of warningl You lickspittle mongrels better print this
one or the consequense will be
severely severe I
Beginning of letter to be
printed:
An open letter to PrezidentElect Carter:
Dear Sir (or Jimmy):
Death to the fascist insect that
preys upon the life and blood of
the glorious oppressed people.
All death to the sleezy, slimy
bourgieois degenerate pig culture
which controls the people. All
power to the international protletariat that can see you as the
running-mongrel-dog lick-spittle
pawn of the ruling class thet you
are. We want the follOWing demands met as soon as you take
office. If you really are a man of
the people (you sexist Iexpletives
deleted]), then you will take heed
and meet our demands.
1.) OUTLAW RACISM! Kill
all white babies that are born in
the United States I Close down all
Kentucky Fried Colonel Sanders'
stands! Give all black people machine guns and atomic bombs!
2.) OUTLAW SEXISM I Castrate all males over the age of
ten. Cut off one breast each on
all women. Give all men vaginas
and all women testicles. Give all
women machine guns and atomic
bombs.
3.) WE WANT SOCIALISM!
All power to the people!
Those are the three big ones. If
they are not carried out, you will
be the one . that suffers, pig. All
power to the glorious vanguard.
Name Withheld

A Note to the Reader
This issue marks a change in staff on the COOPER POINT
j0l!RN.AL .. Jill Stewart, who was editor for three quarters
~ndmg m December, 1976, has graduated and is now applymg to graduate school.
Stepping up to the editor's position is Matt Groening, formerly the Features/Managing Editor. He was chosen in December by the Board of Publications. The new Features Editor .is Stan Sh?~e, who has worked for the paper before in a
variety of posllJons. Second in command, as Managing Editor, is Brad Pokorny, who was formerly a news writer and
photo editor on the JOURNAL.
New to the staff is Production Manager Lynda Weinman
who is responsible for many of the details of layout and
graphics which go into the JOURNAL.

I"

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

Questions
for Evans

GET YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS AT

The decision of the Board of Trustees to appoint former
governor Dan Evans to succeed Evergreen President Charles
McCann has received two distinct types of criticism from
two distinct groups. Faculty and students have complained
about the method of Evans' selection, while members of the
outside community have complained about an apparent conflict of interest.
The charges of "cronyism" and conflict of interest can b:
disposed of most readily. Those who raise this complaint
claIm that because Evans appointed the members of the
Board of Trustees, their appointment of him as president is
suspect. The Daily Olympian, Shelton Mason County Journal and State Senator A. L. Rasmussen of Tacoma are among
those who have voiced disapproval on these grounds.
It is true that Evans appointed the Board of Trustees . but
during his twelve years as governor he made hundreds of
appointments affecting not only higher education but a lm ost
all segments of the state government. Likewise, Evans has
had his hand in countless budget decisions, pronouncements,
and legislative. maneuvering that leave little of the present
state government free of his fingerprints . He was governor ;
it was his job.
If Evans had decided not to take a position in Washington
state, there would have been no controversy. But give n his
decision to stay within the state, problems seem inevitable .
Certainly the Board was not acting out of political considerations. It seems unlikely that Evans could not have found a
more prestigious or better paying job if he had wanted. His
willingness to serve as Evergreen's president was welcomed
by the Board not because they owed it to him , but because
he has shown himself to be extremely popular within the "
state, and an able and intelligent adm inistrator.
Those who criticize the Boar.d's action as political are no
doubt motivated by political considerations themse lves . We
can only hope that this petty partisanship is forgotten soon
and does not affect Evans' term as president.
The second complaint about Evans. that the selection
process was shoddy and unfair, designed to choose him
alone, deserves more attention. The selection process was
unattractive: secretive, hasty, and unrepresentative. Those
who defend the selection process argue that in this case the
ends justify the means: Evans was such a perfect choice that
there was no need to follow the usual rrocedures. It may be
true that Evans was the best choice for the job, but under
the present circumstances no one will really know , since he
was allowed no real competition .
But the arguing over the selection process is now - if you
WIll pardon the expression - largely academic .
The president's job has three parts: public relations, administration, and educational policy. Everyone knows that
Evans is a PR godsend, and it can be assumed that he is at
least a fair administrator. What no one knows at this point
- because the selection process was so hasty - is what
Evans believes the school should be academically.
If Evans had been a normal candidate for the presidency,
he would have been asked many, many questions about his
educational views . (Well, better late than never, we always
say .) Evans should come to campus, make himself availabie
a.t a public meeting, and let Evergreeners ask him some questIOns.
Our suggestion for the first question : Would Evans allow
the circumventing of college hiring policy the way it wa s
CIrcumvented to hire him?

EDITOR
Matt Groening
MANAGING EDITOR
Brad Pokorny
FEA TURE EDITOR
Stan Shore

HENDRICKS

PRODUCTION
Lynda Weinman
The COOPER POINT JOURNAL is published weekly 'or the student. 'acuity
and stall
The Evergreen State COllege, Olympia, Washington 98505. Viewl ex:
pressed are not necessarily those 01 The Evergreen State College. AdvertisIng material presenled herein does not necessarily Imply endorsement by this newspaper.
Ollices are located In the Co!lege Activities Building (CAB) 306. New& phones :
866·6213,866-6214 . Advertising and business : 866·8080. Latialll policy: All letters to the editor must be received by noon Tuesday lor that _k'a publication .
Letters must be typed, double-spaced, and 400 warda or lasa. The adltolll reaa",a
lhe right 10 edit lor content and style. Namea will be withheld on requeat.

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Lee Anderson
Physics
2050.00
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Art
1261.00
Bob Barnard
Chemistry
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Gordon Beck
Cinema
2294.00
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Economics
1565.00
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Visiting Faculty
2294.00
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Mathematics
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Geography
2050.00
William Brown
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Communicatio'1s
1804.00
Richard Cellarius
Biology
2050.00
Nancy Allen Chambers
Literature
1804.00
Don Chan
Music
1804.00
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Art
1565.00
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Biology
1804.00
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Literature
1962.00
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Philosophy
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Science
2050.00
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Language
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Rudolf Martin
James Martinez
Earle McNeil
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Maxine Mimms
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Carol Olexa
Charles Pail thorp
Mark Papworth
Lynn Patterson
Joye Peskin
Gregory Portnoff
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Thomas Rainey
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Gilbert Salcedo
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Pete Sinclair
Neils Skov
Robert Sluss
Leroi Smith
Matthew Smith
Oscar Soule
Paul Sparks
Jess Spielholz
Greg Steinke
Susan Strasser
James Stroh
Fred Tabbutt

Donald Finkel
Psychology
1565.00
Tom Foote
Toumalism
1804.00
Russell Fox
UrbAn Planning
1565.00
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Robert FrankIe
Visiting FAculty
902.00
Henry Freund
Law
1498.00
Ted Gerstl
Behavioral Science
1804.00
Robert Gottlieb
Music
2294.00
.;.M:.:.a:::r=;;ret;.,:GTn:..:·b::.s:::k:.::o:..:v'___________..Ji:0;;:u::..:m.::a:::l;::is::.:m.:...-__________-=2~050~.~00;.
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Biology
2050.00
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PolitiCal Science
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MathemAtics
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Architecture
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Design
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SOciology
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Biology
2522.00
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Dance
1320.50
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Visiting Faculty
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Communications
2050.00
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EXEMPT STAFF
The list of college employees' salaries
on these pages is the first of a series of
articles the COOPER POINT JOURNAL
will print under the general title WHAT
THIS COLLEGE NEEDS. Articles in preparation will detail the salaries of aU student employees and the finances of Evergreen's Board of Trustees.

Adjunct faculty are teachers contracting with the
college to teach one or two short courses.

ADJUNCT FACULTY
Mary Benson
Roberta Brown
Paula Casey
Lee Chambers
Keith Clark
Michael Coolen
Patrick Feeney
James Frost
Roger Gentry
Marita Herrera
Esther Hou
James Johnson
Gary Kamarat
Helena Knapp
Michael Layton
, Ronna Loewen
Kathleen Meighan
Donald Meyer
Thomas Mumford
Robert Naon
Michiko Takeda
Catherine Thompson
Kenneth Wilhelm
KelY1ttth Winkley
Ben Wolfe

220.00
396.00
220.00
220.00
220.00
210.00
220.00
300.00
220.00
468 .00
213.33
260.00
396.00
440.00
300.00
780.00
210.00
220.00
220.00
220.00
210.00
210.00
440.00
270.00
220.00

John Aikin
a er AI en
Judy Annis
Kathleen Atwood
Phillip Briscoe
ovana Brown
Dave Carnahan
Robert Carr
Dean Clabaugh
Christine Cody
oan Conrad
Rita Cooper
Arnold Doerksen
Steve Ehrmann
Les Eldridge
John Eoff
Suzanne Feeney
Rita Grace
Michelle Hayes
George Hom
Will Humphreys
Jean Jacob '
Rindetta Jones
Maureen Karras
Rob Knapp
Ed Kormond

1990.00
1855.00
1305.00
1530.00
1000.00
2277.,50
1995.
2625 .00
2790.00
1055 .00
780 .00
1425.00
1590.00
1467.25
1880.00
1916.66
1905 .00
1225 .00
1220.00
1775 .00
2515 .00
Acting Administrative Assistant _ J/.
900.00
Affirmative Action Officer
1590.00
Coordinator of External Credit
1035 .00
Academic Dean
2004 .00
Provost
2970.00
ministrative ecretary
1040 .00
Admissions Counselor
1125 .00
Acting Director CO-OP Education
1335 .00
Coordinator Career Planning and Placement
1455.00
Coordinator 0 Technical Services
1455 .00
Charles J. McCann
resi ent
3655 .00
Doris McCarty .
Bookstore Manager
1590 .00
Mary Moorehead
Coordinator of Academic Information
1220.00
Frank Motley
Head of Reference Services
1445 .00
Virginia Nichols
Secretary
710 .00
Carola Norton
Assistant Director Wash. Comm . for Humanities 1265 .00
William Oliver
Executive Director Wash. Comm. for Humanities 2000 .00
Willie Parson
Academic Dean
2515 .00
. Doris Reid
Administrative Secretary to the Vice President
1215 .00
Gear e Rickerson
Catalo in Librarian
1064 .00
7.7.~~~~~----~~~~~~----------------~~ .
William Robinson
u get
cer
1530.00
Katherine Sherman
Coordinator Academic Affairs
1666.67
Lois Smith
Program Assistant
853 .00
McDonald Smith
Security Chief
1360.00
Susan Smith
Coordinator of User Services
1560 .00
Pete Steil berg
Director RecreatIon and Campus Activities
1640.00
Larry Stenberg
Dean of Enrollment Services
2250.00
Malcolm Stilson
Reference and Periodical Librarian
1610.00
Shirley Strawn
Administrative Assistant
1000.00
Robert t
r
Director of Facilities
2210.00
Daniel Swenson
Coordinator Business Affairs
1583.
Ernest Thomas
Director Third World Coalition
1395.00
Laura Thomas
Financial Aid Counselor
1125.00
Greg Vermillion
Director of Admissions
1625.00
David West
Construction S ecialist
1500.00
Eleanor Waston
1 5 .
William Winden
2548 .00
Kenneth Winkley
2300.00

t:$l
Complete Hoir Core Center for
Men & Women

1"('-'''' -

~_.".aIiO

. . . . Hood \II ......... Hood

c.....

_ .""

Olympia '
Fish Market
Lo n & Pat Hogue
208 W . 4th
35'7': 62 62

HOUSE OF

115 East 5th

Olympia, WA
98501
352- 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

2289.00
2014.50
1550.00
1971.00
1271.00

Next Week: More Salaries

Shoes for the Sol

CURIOUS
ABOUT EMPWYMENT &
GRADUATE SCHOOL
PROGRAMS IN THE
NVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
& PLANNING?

Shakti shoes and boots

Wednesday. Jan . 19, 1977
9 :00 a .m. - 3 : 30 p .m. in Lib .
3112 1Board Room

• l..'lJR 'IAUHllR5 A.Rl (;UARANUH' ~\."'R AS l QNG AS \,('U "'.-... WN '(,UR (.&oR .
It ... ~, IHINu 13\,..... 1:.$ WR\."'IN":; WITH 0UR MUHURS . ~ NEVf GU.\RANTHD
\ ,u" ll~ \\Illl 8l l"5 1 M l H' HI USfl'~ l'"l' ~"'N51"ll~ TlO" ( H~Ruf
ur\,."I~rR~~lNTA.TlI,)N0~ oj "ll"sur (;UAR,A,NTH APPlIH ........ Nll f.... . .
.--__.......:..:\I:::Uf.:..:H"-'i~R~ 1""'5.1 "lU:I:' R'r U~ ",,,,~ AN't .: AR "A A.Ot I"" "Mt:RI(A.

INIUllATIO..

2522.00
1565.00
1804.00
1320.00
1804.00
1565.00
1565.00
1804.00
1804.00
1804.00
2050.00
2050.00
1804.00
2005.00
1804.00
1804.00
2050.00
1565.00
1804.00
1804.00
2294.00
2050.00
1565.00
2050.00
1565 .00
1804.00
2294.00
1804.00
1565.00
2050.00
2050.00
1804.00
2050.00
1565.00
2050.00
1804.00
2050.00
2294 .00
1565.00
1565.00
1804.00
1498.00
1261.00
1804.00
1261.00
1320.50
2294.00
1804.00
2050.00
2294.00
2050.00
2294 .00
2294.00
2050.00
2294 .00
2050. 00
2050.00
H20.50
2050.00
1804.00
2522.00

.

FACUL TY ON LEA VE

GET INTO SOMEONE '5
PANTS
...

Psychology
Literature
Biology
Art History
Biochemistry
Art
Sociology
Biophysics
Biophysics
Inorganic Chemistry
Anthropology
Philosophy
Economics
Visiting Faculty
Literature
International Relations
Humanities
Corrections
Sociology
Biology
Social Science
Philosophy
Art
Economics
Sociology
Philosophy
Anthropology
Anthropology
Theater
Psychology
Literature
History
Applied Science
History
English
Literature
Oceanography
Biology
Psychology
Political Science
Biology
Art
Visiting Faculty
Music
History
Geol08Y
Chemistry
History
Oceanography
Humanities
Political Science
theAter
Philosophy
English
Art
Biology
Theater
Visiting Faculty
Management
History
Physics

Needs Is A 'L ist
Salaries

Morning workshops on Job
Market. Job Search, Resumes.
Applications and Interviews.
Afternoon workshop on Graduate School Information &t individual interviews available
with Professional representatives.
FOR REGISTRATION INFORMATION CONTACT:
Career Planning &t Placement
(Lib. 1213 - 866-6193.)
(Registration will be based on
a fj~t come basis)

$38.95

to $44.95

True Grits
C. C J1 c roll~

r .' , tio.,s al

. n 'asoH.1hJ t"' ! .ri,,~ :-

Telephone 943-3235
Open 24 hours
Fridays and Saturdays
6 a.m ..-10 p .m . M - Th

-t(~
sb:.
.

. ?09 Trospt'r Rd .. off Capitol
(\", .,. the fr~t' way in Tumwater .

-

. w..talde Center
357-8779

We've MOVed to
Westside Center

352-0720

Iffi (Q) (Q) I['~ '

10 to 6
Mon. thru Fri.
12 to 6
Sat.

Monday - SoIturday,

9 :30 - 8:00

$28.95

;--.-."

,

Birkenstock sandals

4

5

* E.J'. Grocery *

WhatThis College
Of

and Tole Shop

Hours : 8 a. m. - 11 p.m .

Tole painting •
Supplies • Classes
• Party, block ice.
Slushy • Beer • Wine
• Picnic,

party supplies
J82J Harrfaon 357-7133

Richard Jones
Don Jordan
Linda Kahan
Hiro Kawasaki
Jeffrey Kelly
Stan Klyn
Lowell Kuehn
Betty Kutter
George Kutter
Kaye Ladd
Eric Larson
Mark Levensky
Russell Lidman
Ronald Manheimer
David Marr

FACULTY

~R~ic~h~a~rd~A~I~ex~a~n~de~r__________~L=i~te~r~at~u~r~e______________~2~05~0~.~00 ~auIMa~h

First program of a series on KAOS

4 p.m. Jan 17th
1 5t Program "Why Baha'i?"
Informal discussions
every Saturday B p.m.

P .O. Box 962, Olympia 98507
866-3883 or 352-3436

352-7113
11.\110/ (·.\Io/E
F()10/ ~IE:-'; .\:-';IJ \\'( )~tE:-';
.I'EIo/S():-';.\L1ZEI> STYU:,\(j
• ('( 'S~I ETI!' (',\10/ E
.( · ()~II'LETE

Lee Anderson
Physics
2050.00
Susan Aurand
Art
1261.00
Bob Barnard
Chemistry
2050.00
Gordon Beck
Cinema
2294.00
",Mc=:;i~ch:..::ane:..:.1~BeFu..
g ________________C;:.:.:-he::.:m:.:.:.::.isc.::try,;z-____________-;1.;804;.:.:'';;00
Priscilla Bowerman
Economics
1565.00
Robert Bowin
Visiting Faculty
2294.00
Richard Brian
Mathematics
2294.00
Geography
2050.00
William Brown
-::C:=a~ri~e...:C;::a==b<i-l:::..e_________________A:,,;:.:n;:,:th;:,:r..::o.t:.p..::o;..:I0:.llg~y----------_;1.::;32~0~.~5~0
Craig Carlson
Communicatio'1s
1804.00
Richard Cellarius
Biology
2050.00
Nancy Allen Chambers
Literature
1804.00
Don Chan
Music
1804.00
~u;:.;d::.;e;-=C::.;h'i'-u::.;k;,;w-=u'__:--____________TA~·.::;can=":,,,rS:.;tud;;::
· .:..:i~es;.....________-=I.;34.,;;;1.:.;;OO
Step anie Coontz
omen s tu les
1320.50
Beryl Crowe
Political Science
2050.00
Natalie Crowe
Psychology
1804.00
Thad Curtz
Literature
1565.00
~F.:..:ra==nk-,;:;:-:::;D-=a'7rr:..:o:..:w,,--______________-;V~is::.;i:..:ti~ng<>....:.J;c.::a.:.:cu:::l;:,ty<--________-=1c;:8~5O;;.~00
Leo Daugherty
Literature
2050.00
Margaret Dickinson
Art
1565.00
Elizabeth Diffendal
Planning
1565.00
George Dimitroff
Mathematics
2050.00
.;.C::a::.ro:::.I~Y",n;.-'D~o:::.bb:::s=:-____________-;U.,;r..::b;:.an:..:....:P....:I:::anc.::n.::i::.:nQ.g________~I~804~.c.;;OO
Larry Eickstaedt
Biology
1804.00
Peter Elbow
Literature
1962.00
Cruz Esquivel
Philosophy
1804.00
Betty Estes
Science
2050.00
Susan Fiksdal
Language
1320.50
...RFo::;:be=-rt-:.F;;:i:;::lm=e:::r:....---------------..;S;;::c::,.:ie:Qn=c::le~------------~2C;:0;:5O;;.'==00;'

Rudolf Martin
James Martinez
Earle McNeil
David Milne
Maxine Mimms
Alan Nasser
Mary Nelson
Charles Nisbet
Carol Olexa
Charles Pail thorp
Mark Papworth
Lynn Patterson
Joye Peskin
Gregory Portnoff
David Powell
Thomas Rainey
Jacob Romero
Gilbert Salcedo
Sandra Simon
Pete Sinclair
Neils Skov
Robert Sluss
Leroi Smith
Matthew Smith
Oscar Soule
Paul Sparks
Jess Spielholz
Greg Steinke
Susan Strasser
James Stroh
Fred Tabbutt

Donald Finkel
Psychology
1565.00
Tom Foote
Toumalism
1804.00
Russell Fox
UrbAn Planning
1565.00
.;B;::a:;.;rb::,:a:::r..:;a,;.Fc.:.r=anklr;:::.:::e______________...,V;..,I5;::
· :,:.it;:;in:llgc.:f',;.::a::c.::uT.lt~y__________~9O;:2;:.'==007
Robert FrankIe
Visiting FAculty
902.00
Henry Freund
Law
1498.00
Ted Gerstl
Behavioral Science
1804.00
Robert Gottlieb
Music
2294.00
.;.M:.:.a:::r=;;ret;.,:GTn:..:·b::.s:::k:.::o:..:v'___________..Ji:0;;:u::..:m.::a:::l;::is::.:m.:...-__________-=2~050~.~00;.
ames u n
Education
1804.00
Burt Guttman
Biology
2050.00
Jeanne Hahn
PolitiCal Science
1804.00
Matthew Halfant
MathemAtics
1565.00
~A;;.n;,;d~r,:;,ew:.:...:Hr.=:anf=m:.::an~--_---------Lan::;::.:.:Jj~t:;:a:Qge=------------~2~050~.c;:00;.
Phil Harding
Architecture
2050.00
Rainer Hasenstab
Design
1804.00
Peta Hende~on
Anthropology
2050.00
Steve Herman
Biology
2050.00
Mary Hillaire
SOciology
2050.00
Don Humphrey
Biology
2522.00
Margaret Hunt
Dance
1320.50
Ronald Hu~t
Visiting Faculty
1373.50
Communications
2050.00
Virginia Ingersol
~W~in.:..:if::.r~edr.Flng~r~a.::m~------------~p~sy~c~h....:o~lo~g~y'----------__~2~2~94~.~00;.
Bernard Johansen
D:1nce
_2050.00

Nancy Taylor
Peter Taylor
Charles Teske
Kirk Thompson
Andre Tsai
Willi Unsoeld
Jack Webb
Sid White
AI Wiedemann
Ainara Wilder
Barry Williams
York Wong
Ron Woodbury
Byron Youtz

-

I
--

LIFE TIME GUARANTEE'
FACTORY MUFFLER
REPLACEMENTS
GLASS-PA-CKS T DUALS - HEADERS, TAILPIPES. EXHAUST PIPES
CUSTOM EXHAUSTS. SHOCK ABSORBERS
FOR
DOMESTIC. FOREIGN, TRUCKS, BUSSES

1\ MINUTE

.

'• . '.
~ . . tr~"t·

~

923 E. STATE
COANEA STATE & QUINCE

YELLOW & BLA CK BLDG

.

Bill Aldridge
Marilyn Frasca
David Hitchens
AI Leisenring
-Lynn Struve

Sociology and EdUCAtion
Art
History
Mathematics
History

WESTSIDE CENTER

• Open every day

-

i iiiii

UJ!~mJ~~~S
$5

r----------------943-8632

,' ',. .."":\. .; ... .. ,. 'l::..~~Jl.
MVt ·' ::. ""'~· ~.,......--"'ll'l'II",,~::rIllIII1IIIII
. · · .... . .· ,_~.J.J~u~~,.-

between Rainbow and Salvation Army

e

10·7 Sunday
9·9 Da

EXEMPT STAFF
The list of college employees' salaries
on these pages is the first of a series of
articles the COOPER POINT JOURNAL
will print under the general title WHAT
THIS COLLEGE NEEDS. Articles in preparation will detail the salaries of aU student employees and the finances of Evergreen's Board of Trustees.

Adjunct faculty are teachers contracting with the
college to teach one or two short courses.

ADJUNCT FACULTY
Mary Benson
Roberta Brown
Paula Casey
Lee Chambers
Keith Clark
Michael Coolen
Patrick Feeney
James Frost
Roger Gentry
Marita Herrera
Esther Hou
James Johnson
Gary Kamarat
Helena Knapp
Michael Layton
, Ronna Loewen
Kathleen Meighan
Donald Meyer
Thomas Mumford
Robert Naon
Michiko Takeda
Catherine Thompson
Kenneth Wilhelm
KelY1ttth Winkley
Ben Wolfe

220.00
396.00
220.00
220.00
220.00
210.00
220.00
300.00
220.00
468 .00
213.33
260.00
396.00
440.00
300.00
780.00
210.00
220.00
220.00
220.00
210.00
210.00
440.00
270.00
220.00

John Aikin
a er AI en
Judy Annis
Kathleen Atwood
Phillip Briscoe
ovana Brown
Dave Carnahan
Robert Carr
Dean Clabaugh
Christine Cody
oan Conrad
Rita Cooper
Arnold Doerksen
Steve Ehrmann
Les Eldridge
John Eoff
Suzanne Feeney
Rita Grace
Michelle Hayes
George Hom
Will Humphreys
Jean Jacob '
Rindetta Jones
Maureen Karras
Rob Knapp
Ed Kormond

1990.00
1855.00
1305.00
1530.00
1000.00
2277.,50
1995.
2625 .00
2790.00
1055 .00
780 .00
1425.00
1590.00
1467.25
1880.00
1916.66
1905 .00
1225 .00
1220.00
1775 .00
2515 .00
Acting Administrative Assistant _ J/.
900.00
Affirmative Action Officer
1590.00
Coordinator of External Credit
1035 .00
Academic Dean
2004 .00
Provost
2970.00
ministrative ecretary
1040 .00
Admissions Counselor
1125 .00
Acting Director CO-OP Education
1335 .00
Coordinator Career Planning and Placement
1455.00
Coordinator 0 Technical Services
1455 .00
Charles J. McCann
resi ent
3655 .00
Doris McCarty .
Bookstore Manager
1590 .00
Mary Moorehead
Coordinator of Academic Information
1220.00
Frank Motley
Head of Reference Services
1445 .00
Virginia Nichols
Secretary
710 .00
Carola Norton
Assistant Director Wash. Comm . for Humanities 1265 .00
William Oliver
Executive Director Wash. Comm. for Humanities 2000 .00
Willie Parson
Academic Dean
2515 .00
. Doris Reid
Administrative Secretary to the Vice President
1215 .00
Gear e Rickerson
Catalo in Librarian
1064 .00
7.7.~~~~~----~~~~~~----------------~~ .
William Robinson
u get
cer
1530.00
Katherine Sherman
Coordinator Academic Affairs
1666.67
Lois Smith
Program Assistant
853 .00
McDonald Smith
Security Chief
1360.00
Susan Smith
Coordinator of User Services
1560 .00
Pete Steil berg
Director RecreatIon and Campus Activities
1640.00
Larry Stenberg
Dean of Enrollment Services
2250.00
Malcolm Stilson
Reference and Periodical Librarian
1610.00
Shirley Strawn
Administrative Assistant
1000.00
Robert t
r
Director of Facilities
2210.00
Daniel Swenson
Coordinator Business Affairs
1583.
Ernest Thomas
Director Third World Coalition
1395.00
Laura Thomas
Financial Aid Counselor
1125.00
Greg Vermillion
Director of Admissions
1625.00
David West
Construction S ecialist
1500.00
Eleanor Waston
1 5 .
William Winden
2548 .00
Kenneth Winkley
2300.00

t:$l
Complete Hoir Core Center for
Men & Women

1"('-'''' -

~_.".aIiO

. . . . Hood \II ......... Hood

c.....

_ .""

Olympia '
Fish Market
Lo n & Pat Hogue
208 W . 4th
35'7': 62 62

HOUSE OF

115 East 5th

Olympia, WA
98501
352- 7527

STUDENT
DISCOUNT

2289.00
2014.50
1550.00
1971.00
1271.00

Next Week: More Salaries

Shoes for the Sol

CURIOUS
ABOUT EMPWYMENT &
GRADUATE SCHOOL
PROGRAMS IN THE
NVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
& PLANNING?

Shakti shoes and boots

Wednesday. Jan . 19, 1977
9 :00 a .m. - 3 : 30 p .m. in Lib .
3112 1Board Room

• l..'lJR 'IAUHllR5 A.Rl (;UARANUH' ~\."'R AS l QNG AS \,('U "'.-... WN '(,UR (.&oR .
It ... ~, IHINu 13\,..... 1:.$ WR\."'IN":; WITH 0UR MUHURS . ~ NEVf GU.\RANTHD
\ ,u" ll~ \\Illl 8l l"5 1 M l H' HI USfl'~ l'"l' ~"'N51"ll~ TlO" ( H~Ruf
ur\,."I~rR~~lNTA.TlI,)N0~ oj "ll"sur (;UAR,A,NTH APPlIH ........ Nll f.... . .
.--__.......:..:\I:::Uf.:..:H"-'i~R~ 1""'5.1 "lU:I:' R'r U~ ",,,,~ AN't .: AR "A A.Ot I"" "Mt:RI(A.

INIUllATIO..

2522.00
1565.00
1804.00
1320.00
1804.00
1565.00
1565.00
1804.00
1804.00
1804.00
2050.00
2050.00
1804.00
2005.00
1804.00
1804.00
2050.00
1565.00
1804.00
1804.00
2294.00
2050.00
1565.00
2050.00
1565 .00
1804.00
2294.00
1804.00
1565.00
2050.00
2050.00
1804.00
2050.00
1565.00
2050.00
1804.00
2050.00
2294 .00
1565.00
1565.00
1804.00
1498.00
1261.00
1804.00
1261.00
1320.50
2294.00
1804.00
2050.00
2294.00
2050.00
2294 .00
2294.00
2050.00
2294 .00
2050. 00
2050.00
H20.50
2050.00
1804.00
2522.00

.

FACUL TY ON LEA VE

GET INTO SOMEONE '5
PANTS
...

Psychology
Literature
Biology
Art History
Biochemistry
Art
Sociology
Biophysics
Biophysics
Inorganic Chemistry
Anthropology
Philosophy
Economics
Visiting Faculty
Literature
International Relations
Humanities
Corrections
Sociology
Biology
Social Science
Philosophy
Art
Economics
Sociology
Philosophy
Anthropology
Anthropology
Theater
Psychology
Literature
History
Applied Science
History
English
Literature
Oceanography
Biology
Psychology
Political Science
Biology
Art
Visiting Faculty
Music
History
Geol08Y
Chemistry
History
Oceanography
Humanities
Political Science
theAter
Philosophy
English
Art
Biology
Theater
Visiting Faculty
Management
History
Physics

Needs Is A 'L ist
Salaries

Morning workshops on Job
Market. Job Search, Resumes.
Applications and Interviews.
Afternoon workshop on Graduate School Information &t individual interviews available
with Professional representatives.
FOR REGISTRATION INFORMATION CONTACT:
Career Planning &t Placement
(Lib. 1213 - 866-6193.)
(Registration will be based on
a fj~t come basis)

$38.95

to $44.95

True Grits
C. C J1 c roll~

r .' , tio.,s al

. n 'asoH.1hJ t"' ! .ri,,~ :-

Telephone 943-3235
Open 24 hours
Fridays and Saturdays
6 a.m ..-10 p .m . M - Th

-t(~
sb:.
.

. ?09 Trospt'r Rd .. off Capitol
(\", .,. the fr~t' way in Tumwater .

-

. w..talde Center
357-8779

We've MOVed to
Westside Center

352-0720

Iffi (Q) (Q) I['~ '

10 to 6
Mon. thru Fri.
12 to 6
Sat.

Monday - SoIturday,

9 :30 - 8:00

$28.95

;--.-."

,

Birkenstock sandals

7

noon at
ot; ice:
College
to head

a press c n
"If the Evergreen ta: e
board of trustees asks me
the college I will accept."

PRESS REACTS
The appo in cment of Governor Dan
Evans to Evergree n's presidency received a gener .lllv warm reaction from
loca l newspaper ~, but more than one
ed it o rial noted a possible conf lict of interest.
The Seattle Post-lntelligencer ran an
article full of favorable reactions from
ot her co llege and uni '/ersity presidents
and , in a sepa rate ed :torial praised the
ch(lice " Li ke Amy Carter a nd lemonaJe . like gin and vermouth , like ham
n e~;g s , Governor Dan Evans and Evergree n State College seem meant for
rac h o th er ... " The editorial did not
mak e clear whether it was Evergreen
",'hich was lemonade-like and Evans
",h 0 was like Amy Ca rt er or vice versa , but no matter.
The Lacey Leader, noting the P -I edit<'rJal. ag reed that the choice of Evans
\\' <1 5 a "natu Ja!. " They also praised Evan s a s a ma:1 of " high quality , dedica tit," and ex )'er ien ce. "
T ''''' new;papers , the Shelton Mason
Cou nty Journal and the Daily Olympian IVe re less impressed with thE"
, i", icc' . All of the present Board of
TJ""I f'es were appointed by Evans ; as
,J '·,·,ul!. hiS selection as president rai sed
th o j,"s'ibility ot' conflict o f interest.
The Shelton Mason County Journal

- which is usually fair with Evergreen
and tough on elected officials - ran a
satirical article about Evans's job transfer. " In no more time than it takes to
say' incest' he I Evans I was offered the
presidency of The Evergreen State College," the article sta ted , It then went
on to list Evans's "qualifications,"
Among these were: "He is loyal - ask
Richard Nixon, He is on a first name
basis with Jimmy Carter. He's a nice
guy."
With startling vindictiveness, the
Daily Olympian attacked both the
choice of Evans and Evergreen. The
newspaper has lo ng been a bitter foe of
Evergreen's experimental program.
"The naming of Evergreen's library
after the governor raised an eyebrow
or two around the state," a December
23 editorial groused, "as will his hiring
by a board of trustees, all of whom are
Evans's appointees. While this may not
constitute conflict of interest, it smacks
of flagrant cronyism,
"
, This appointment," the editorial concluded , "if it comes to pass,
promises no benefit to the taxpaye rs of
this state who already have invested
nt'arly $100 million in The Evergreen
State Coll ege and have yet to find out
.'xac tl y what they have bo ught for
their money. "

continued from page 1
kind of 'set up' - that I Evans is I the person that's going tl) be picked, then it doesn't appear that this selection process is fair. It doesn't appear that many candidates have been reviewed, that Affirmative Action has
been applied in the process, and I think this could
have a very disruptive effect on the community, , ."
Trustee Herb Hadley's reply: " . . .'Is this a Dan
Evans Search Committee? ' I have been terribly honest
and I can honestly say, without any hesitation, it was
a unanimous decision of the Board to contact the
Governor, relative to his availability . I can honestly
say that the Governor has not indicated his willing ness to serve, and can say no more than that. That's
the truth. I'm proud to be able to say it. There's nothing hidden, That's not Evergreen philosophy. "
The committee and its procedures were approved
with minor changes by the Trustees,
Evans was still evasive about his plans in early December. He said he was considering an "exotic" position, but wouldn't say more. "I have neither accepted
nor rejected" the offer to be Evergreen's president, he
said.
In early December the trustees asked potential search
committee members one at a time what they · would
think if . the committee's operational procedures were
set aside and Evans was just offered the job. Trustees
Hal Halverson and Herb Hadley pushed this idea
strongly. Some potential committee members did not
like the idea at all.
On December 20 in the evening Evans called Herb
Hadley to say he wanted the job. Hadley called student committee member Bud Cook the following evenmg (December 21), and told him of Evans' phone call
the night before. Hadley expressed concern that Cook
and Hunt (the other student member) might think
they were being railroaded by such a surprise move .
The December 22 meeting was full of surprises. A
reporter from the COOPER POINT JOURNAL was
barred from the meeting, which began a little after 10
a.m. The members began by introdUCing themselves,
Bud Cook was the first to speak and he said he was
afraid that the committee was no more than a rubber
sta mp for the trustees' decision made months earlier.

A few other committee members agreed at first. Then
Ben Wolfe and ,Helen Hannigan introduced a printed
survey of the staff in which 7S % favored Dan Evans
for president.
Two other potential candidates were brought up at
this time. One was a black administrator from the
Chicago area and the other was a prominent black
legislator from the south. The faculty member and exempt staff member who brought up the names tabled
them in favor of Evans,
The committee discussed Evans until almost noon.
Herb Hadley and Tom Dixon insisted that the decision had to be made that day , Just before noon it was
suggested that Evans meet the committee that day ,
and Hadley left the room and returned quickly to say
that Evans would be coming soon, "The Governor for
the first time in the history of the state answered his
own phone," Maxine Mimms said later.
Evans arrived around 1 :00 p,m . and talked to the
committee until around 3: 30. Questioning went around the table and many subjects were raised.
Four maior points were brought out in Evans' favor
during the day :
First, it was estimated that enrollment would increase by 1,000 students because of Evans' association
with the college, The faculty liked that because it
meant they would be released from irksome recruiting
duties.
Second, it was projected that hundreds of thousands
of dollars in funds would be contributed from various
sources if Evans were president.
Third, Evans' state record in Affirmative Action is
one of the best in the nation for a state governor, and
with two anticipated administrative resignatio!).s at
Evergreen coming in the next year, the committee was
satisfied that Evans would take special moves to have
women or minorities fill these positions.
Fourth , Evans is committed to improving the image
of Evergreen within the state. The committee agreed
that Evergreen's reputation out-of-state was good, but
th at its local reputation was quite poor. Evans convinced the committee that he had the connections and
the know-how to improve Evergreen's image.
Evans informed the committee that he had been of-

fered positions at other colleges, He told the committee he did not want to commit himself to such specif ics as faculty and hiring policies until he actually began to work with President McCann, He admitted a
lack of knowledge in certain areas, such as problems
in working conditions at Evergreen.
When Evans left the room Ben Wolfe almost immediately proposed that Dan Evans be elected unanimously . The two student members were the only dissenters, and after much pressure, they gave in and
voted yes. Some faculty members on the committee
suggested the students were playing "crybaby" roles
by not going along.

A

fter the meeting some committee members
asked Colleen Hunt if she were afraid of
p~ysical Violence from students unhappy
With her vote. Hunt and Cook were astonIshed by this concern.
At the crowded Board of Trustees meeting on Tuesday, January 11, Evans was approved. Bud Cook read
a statement of protest to the board, which received
applause from members of the audience .
Asked at a December 23 press conference about
change at Evergreen, Evans said, " ) think one of the
attributes of Evergreen since its inception is that they
have not been static. They have changed and they
have tried new things. And occasionally when they
don't work very well, they back off and try something
else. But I believe Evergreen has lived up to the charge
it was given when it was started. And that is to be a
different kind of college . . . I think Evergreen has
been immensely successful. If there is a problem right
now, one which I think I can help alleviate , it is that
Evergreen has a national and even an international
reputation , well understood and respected by higher
educational experts all over the country and in other
parts of the world . I am not sure that the Evergreen
story is as well known or as well understood in out
own state, among the community leadership, among
some of those who are providing counseling and di rection to students in high school. But I think that
o nce the story is told, we are going to have to bar the
doors ."

FACULTY' COMMENTS
Faculty reactions to the Evans selection
centered on the process, not the man. In a
meeting optimistically scheduled in lecture
Hall 5 Tuesday, January 11, at noon ,
about twelve members of the faculty gathered to discuss their feelings about the December 22 selection committee meeting,
Richard Jones , a member of the selection committee, described the beginning of
the meeting, the stack of papers awaiting
them , and the sudden word that Evans
was interested in the job. " It was remarkable that we could call the Governor at
12:01 and he could be here by 1:00," he
said , Jones defended the committee's
speedy recommendation, citing its fear of
losing so qualified a candidate. "With such
an exceedingly good bird in the hand," he
quipped, "we didn't need to go around
beating bushes." He went on to say how
fully Evans satisfied his questions about
his qualifications to head an educational
institution.
Linda Kahan, also a committee member,
added tnat the Evans recommendation was
clearly the most practical decision . "It
would have been a farce to search for anyone else, say to round up five other candidates, when we know the Board of Trustees would choose Evans anyway. "
Tom Rainey was critical of the process
and voiced three concerns. "First," he said,
"when only one person is examined, yo u
really don't know if he is best. Second, in
the process of sea rching , some evidence
may have come out about Evans that may
have ca used second considerations. And .

third, o n the face , there's a clear violation
of affirma'tive action."
Richard Jones responded by stating that
Rindetta Jones, the college affirmative ac ·
tion officer and a se lection comm ittee
member , said that Evans did not represen t
an affirmative action violation . Her feel ing , he reported , was that Evans ' affirma tive action record was so good, he cou ld
help the co llege's program more than an y ·
one else might .
Questions were raised about the poss ibility that the Evans decision would se t a
bad precedent , all o wing people in the fu ture to skirt process and hire other apparently exceptional people with ou t fa ir antI
careful deliberation .
Richard Jones sa id , " The ma jo rit y sa"
Evans as a gift from heaven ."
. Other questions were raised abou t the
desirability of so meone with more exper ience in alternative education than Evans .
Richard Jones said he fo und Evans su rp rlS'
ingly well-informed abou t the co llege and
its experiment.
Linda Kahan no ted t hat the community
probably wouldn ' t want a person of idea s
to come in and change things to his or her
way. " Merv Cadwallader had a lot of
ideas, and they fought him every step ."
she said. "The question on m y mind wa s :
Is he goi ng to be a good president or not 7
I felt sat isf ied. I think he's goi ng to be a
terrific preside nt ."
The meeting closed with jokes about
how quickly Evans arrived. a nd t eac h er~
wandered back to th eir normal activities.

RAI HTARR

by Stan Shore
"I so metimes have the Chinese
view of what we can do ... that
we a lm ost have to give up on

. hi , generation and concentrate
J~ the next one .. . "
- Governo r Evans, July 1976
It th e <lbove quotation seems
IlWrl' philosop hical than the re/11 "rk s of most average politicians
1. 1 , t ~teme nt
ba sed on a 1974
V",t tn Main land C hina) it is bee .HISt· Daniel Ja ckso n Evans has a
r"l' utatiL'n for being more than
, lJ\ ,lv erage poli ti cian.
His most
t'Jlduri n~ /tickname-, "S traight Ar -

r ow," refers to his integrity
through twelve years as governor
of Washington and eight years in
the state legislature.
Evans, 51, is a lifelong Republi ca n - but a liberal Republican,
one of th e very few left. In June
1974 , while Richard Ni xo n was
on a final image-bolstering trip
to Egypt. less than two months
before he was forced to resign,
Evans called for "amnesty" for
Nixon. This action alone linked
Evans with the Watergate cover ups in some people's minds, despite the fact that Evans obviously had no connection with
the national crimes.

In so me ways , the poorly timed
amnesty cal l was typ ical of
Evans's activities in the nati ona l
a rena: honest. si nce re , and politically ill-advised. He endorsed
Rockefeller, for instance, just before the Republican National
Co nventi on chose Nixon in 1968.
Eva ns was born October 16,
1925 in Seattle, and went to
Roosevelt High School there . His
parents were better off than most
during the Depression; his father ,
an engineer. During high school
Evans won his first elective office : vice-president of the sophomo re class, and became an Eagle

Scout. In his yearbook , a lo ngside hi s name. it s written, " Da n
wants to climb Mo unt Everest."
After graduat in g from hi g h
~c hool in 1943, he joi ned th e U.S.
Naval Reserve, and se rved a s an
Ensign aboa rd a n aircraft ca rri er
in th e Pacific. In 1946 he returned
to civ ilian life and the University
of Washington where he picked
up a B. S. in civil engineering by
1948, and an M.S. in 1949.
It was about thi s time that
Evan s first became involved in
politics. At a friend' s urging ,
Evans became a Republican King
Co unt y ca ucus member , suppo rting presidential ca ndida te Harold
Sta ssen over the even tual nom inee Thomas Dewey .
In 1951 he wa s recalled to ac tive duty to fight in Korea. He
served as an opera tions off icer at
the rank of Lieutenant, and was
la ter an aide to Admiral William
K. Mendenhall at the peace negotiatio ns in Panmunjom .
Evans - so the story goes told his boss that he was going
to quit the Navy and run for
public office back in the States.
Mendenhall wanted Evans to stay
on, but Evans replied: "The political business at ho me is a dirty
business and I think I can clean
it up ."
In 1956 Evans was elected to
his first public office, State Representative from the 43rd district
in Seattle. At the time the 43rd
was a so lidly conservative Republican district, and throughout
his term as State Representative,
Eva ns had a reputation for being

a co nse rva tive Republi ca n him self
In 1959 . Dan Evans marrieJ
Nancy Bell. and ha s si nce had
three children with her: all boys
now bet ween the ages of 10
and 16.
By 196') Evans had risen to the
post of Republican Fl oo r Leader
of the Hou se, a job which he
held unt il he wa s elected Governor in 1964. He fought a tough
campaign aga inst incu mbent Alber! Rosellini , who was running
fo r his third term. At the time
Evans was not much of a politi(al extrovert, being described as
having the public charm of a
"cold halibut " and earning the
nickname "Old Gluefoot" because of his ina bility to socia lize
with crowds. Even recently the
Governor ha ~ been described as
an " introvert ," " bookish," and
someone who is "cool as ice
when under pressure ."
He won the governorship in
1964, again in 1968, and became
the only governor in the state's
history to be elected to a third
term in 1972. In fact, Evans has
never lost an election.
Once Evans became governor,
he seemed to shift from a conservative to a more liberal stance,
advocating - most controversially - a state income tax, something which he had campaigned
only months earlier against.
In 1965 Evans gained national
attention, and dismayed local
conservatives, by inviting the
John Birch Society to leave the

Republican Party. "There's no
p lace in this party for fa lse
prophets, phony philosophers,
the professional bigots or destroyers. " At the time, in the
wake o f arc h- co nservat ive Barry
Go ldwater's presidential nomina tion and defeat , the Birch Society
wa s still a major force in the Republican Party. Evans 's stand
firmly a ligned him with the lib era l Rockefeller-lindsay branch
of the party.
In 1967 the state legi sla tu re
ma ndated the building of a new
four-yea r college in Washington.
Evans made the first and all subse quent appointments to the
Board of Trustees. He also had a
hand in insuring that the embryo nic college - which, of course,
was to be Evergreen - would be
an "alternative" school.
By 1968 Evans had gained
enoug h prominence within the
party to be Keynote Speaker at
the Republican convention . Evans
endorsed Rockefeller just before
the convention, but it was already clear that Nixon would be
the nominee. The los Angeles
Times commented on the keynote speech, saying "The consensus among veteran conventiongoers was that he delivered perhaps the best keynote address of
recent years . Devoid of political
cliches, it delineated sharply
America's current troubles."
In the speech , Evans voiced
disapproval of the Vietnam War,
but did not go so far as to advocate a unilateral withdrawal of

troops. "To have entered the war
by the path of error," he said,
" does not mean that we can now
leave thro ugh the door of defaul I. "
Time magazine featured Evans
o n its August 2, 1968 cove r as a
resu lt of hi s participation at the
Republican Nati o nal Convention.
In an article titled , "Loner from
Olympia, " Time praised Evans
as one of a new breed of Repub licans.
During Evans's second term , a
major reorga nization of th e state
government was undertaken , resulting in a super-department of
Social and Health Services (the
people who give out food stamps,
and in the first Department of
Ecology in the country.
The governor has long had a
Ken nedyesque reputat ion for
physical fitness and a concern for 0
the environment. He jogs regularl y, skis, and mountain -climbs.
In 1971 Evans became involved
in the only real scandal o f his
administration , when some liquor
control board members were accused of accepting excessive gifts
from liquor manufacturers,
Ever-witty Evans stated: 'Tm
taking the Fifth . . . " as he
showed an empty liquor bottle to
the press.
During his third term, many
people thought , Evans paid more
attention to national politics than
to state issues, With the ouster of
Spiro Agnew, and then Richard
Nixon , there was almost continual speculation thilt Evans would

be offered either the Vice-Presi dency, or, later, a Cabinet post.
In the summer of 1973, after a
three -week vacation on Orcas
Island , Evans surprised everyone
by returning to Olympia with a
beard . Despite the small storm of
controversy the hair caused,
Evans kept the beard well into
1974.

During the same year, Evans
became chairman of the National
Governors' Conference. According to Argus' magazine, Evans
was one of the most active chair men the conference had had. He
reorganized the staff structure of
the conference, giv ing it more
lobbying power in Washington.

He also campa ign t·J for .1 ":'-lew
Federali sm " - th e 'dea th" t q " t ~ '
sho uld share in Ih.. c' ecis ion
making P OW,'f of the na tio na l
govern ment. It wa ,; an Idea that
had been ta in ted in the ci\'i l righ ts
stru gg le b y it ; ident ificati o n with
segrega ti on ;. nd the South . and
re-tainted bv Pres ident :'-l\'(on ',
decep ti ve enJorsement llt It. Stil l
Evans won the epit het " the )::,)\ .
ernor's g0\'ern Or" for hi S supp,' r:
of the states .
As ea rly I S 1972 E\'.:Ins wa say ing that It he didnt co ntinu l'
a career in po liti cs he w l1uld lik e
to be a co ll ege o r universi ty pres·
ident. Throughout Evergreen ',
hi sto ry , Evans has been a strong
adv oca te of the co ll ege in the
legislature. In May 1973 Evan s
ce lebra ted the opening of the
new Recrea tion Ce nt er in a rather
unort hodox m anner . He rappel led
down th e face of the cl(lck tower
(see photo), setting a precedent
for the dedicatio n of new bui ld ings w hi ch ha s been difficult t0
fol low.
For months before he finall y
agreed to accept the job publicly
o n December 24 , It was rumored
that Evans was intereste d in Ev ergreen 's presidency . The po sition was finally unanim o usly of fered to him by the presidential
search co mmittee on Dece mber
22 (see accompanying stories).
In a sta tem en t to repo rters
Eva ns said , " It would be a tre mendous chal lenge to me .
to
ha ve so mething to dig int o as ex citing, as interesting as The Everg reen State Co llege."
In the five month interim be fore assuming outgoing President
C harl es McCann's duties in June
1977, Evans plans to mo ve to
Ta co ma, possibly get a grant to
write about government, and
take a vacation in Europe .

8

~

THE REAL

BABY

by Brad Pokorny
Each January the Daily Olympian holds a First Baby of the
Year contest . The first child born
in Thurston or Mason County
wins a number of prizes donated
by local merchants. Two dozen
diapers, a case of Gerber's strained baby food, a pair of infant
auto seats, a free wheel alignment, a rocking chair and a
baby's high chair, a transistor
radio, a case of Pepsi-Cola, and
two free steak dinners for Mom
and Dad complete only part of
the list that the lucky tot receives.
At 8:55 a.m. on New Year's
Day, Eric Dean Roberson was
born at Saint Peter Hospital, the
first child of the new year. The
hospital promptly reported the
birth to the Daily Olympian.
Twelve hours later, at about
8:30 p.m ., Nicole Schuneman
was born the second baby of the
year. This, too, was reported to
the Daily Olympian.
The first baby's mother, Vicki
Roberson , 27, is not married. Nicole's parents are . The Daily Olympian has a policy of not
printing information about children born out of wedlock, so Nicole Schuneman won the contest.
A birth announcement with Eric's
name was not even printed.
"( don 't care about the prizes,"
says Vicki Roberson, the first
baby's mother, "I just want my
baby to have the credit that he
was the first baby born."
The community was quick to
react. KAOS-FM broke the story
of the Daily Olympian's confusion, and the local chapter of the
National Organization of Women
began putting pressure on the
Olympia newspaper to change its
policy. Karen McAndrew, CoPresident of Olympia NOW said,
"The recogni'tipn of the first birth
is a symbolic .o ne, and the marital status of the mother has nothing to do with the joy of a new
child coming into the world."

~~~~:~:~:~;~:~:j:j:j:i~i:i~:~:~:~:i:~:~:~:i:i:i:i:i:~:i:~:i:i;j::;:~:i:i:::~:i:i:j:i:~:~:J:j:::::;::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:~~~~
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FIRST

~y

Phil Haeck and
Lynn Kormondy

On Tuesday, January 4, the
Daily Olympian reiterated its
policy on unwed mothers, but
they admitted that a baby had
been born before the arrival of
Nicole Schuneman, and they
promised to duplicate the gifts.
But they did not print the real
first baby's name.
Readers wrote letters to the
paper, but the publisher, James
E. Lewis, refused to print them.
Linda Roberson, the mother's sister-in-law, called New York and
reached an executive of the Gannett News Service, of which the
Daily Olympian is a member,
who said he knew Lewis, Ms,
Roberson related the story to the
executive, and he told her he
would call Lewis and mention
the problem to him. He was dismayed that the Olympian would
not print the letters to the editor.
Last Sunday, January 9, the
Daily Olympian ran two letters
in favor of giving Eric Roberson
" his due credit. But his identity
, was still not revealed, His ' name
was, however, mentioned in Big
Bear, California, among other
places, for the Associated Press

had run the story on its national
wire .
McAndrews continued her dia logue with Lewis, trying to win
for children born of single parents in Thurston and Mason
Counties the right of acknowledgment. She says, "We were
talking, going around and around, when ( said, 'I'd love for
you to tell me why you have that
policy on unwed mothers,' And
he said something to the effect
'A bastard is a bastard.' Yes, he
did use that word ." It was re ported that Lewis feels <IIFlajority
of the community stands essentially the same way.
Monday evening, in a brief telephone convers<:tion wi th the
COOPER POINT JOURNAL ,
Lewis said, "As far as I'm concerned, there is no controversy.
We've printed our statement and
that's it. " When asked how much
community pressure it would
take to make the Daily Olympian
change its policy, he replied , "No
idea. "
Ms . Roberson still has not received any of the gifts promised
by the Daily Olympian.

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The Dan Evans
Search Cornrnittee
FORUM is a column of commentary on issues of interest to the
Evergreen community. The column is open to any individual or
group on campus. Address all correspondence to FORUM, the
COOPER POINT JOURNAL, CAB 306.

SUN.MATS AT 11:00
Jan 13 . 15

FORUM

"A ROMANTIC, MYSTIC,
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people In their
twenties and
thirties. This
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suspended
In the air,
splnnlng-A
MARVELOUS
TOY."
-Pauline Kael,
The New Yorker

On December 22 the Evergreen Presidential Search Committee
met for seven hours, including a question-and-answer session with
Governor Dan Evans, and voted unanimously to approve Evans
as the next President of this college . This important. decision was
made by a committee representing students, facuity, staff, administrators, area community members, and the Board of Trustees, or
so it seems.
The facts as stated above are essentially true, but presented in
that simple form they obscure a more important and fundamental
fact underlying the decision to accept Evans and most other significant choices made at Evergreen. The decision-making process
at Evergreen involves two groups of people : those who make decisions and those who are affected by decisions.
The recent discussions and re-evaluation of the campus governance document by the COG III DTF has made abundantly clear
that all decisions are subject to consideration at the administrative
level and administrators are directly responsible to the Board of
Trustees (all of whom, inCidentally, were appointed by Dan Evans).
On the other side of the coin, those affected by decisions at Evergreen are the people who study and work here. They are students,
faculty, and staff, including administrators.
This basic relationship between the governed and the governors
is often obscured by a campus governance system in which the decision-makers ask the people affected for input through committees and DTFs. The process for selecting a new president was a
significant example of a decision being made by the Trustees. while
the people who would be affected by that decision were handed a
role that was deceptively important.
To bear this out, let us follow the presidential selection process
from the beginning. On September 15th President McCann announced during a meeting with faculty that he would resign after
this academic year. Academic Dean Will Humphreys asked some
faculty members to meet with McCann about his successor . McCann called the Board of Trustees, asking about the Presidential
Search Committee. The Trustees replied that they had not yet considered the involvement of the community in choosing a new president. They had already offered the iob to Evans, but because he
didn't accept immediately, the Board decided to set up a Search
Committee like the one they had in 1967.
During the first week of October, the faculty elected six people
to meet with the Trustees about the search committee. The staff
followed a similar procedure. On November 18 Trustees Herb
Hadley and Tom Dixon met with some students from the Wednesday Student Forum, This was the first time students were given an
idea of their role on the Presidential Selection Committee (maybe
a mistake that they didn't have their own idea of that role earlier),
Also on the 18th, Trustees met with representatives of faculty and
staff to discuss composition of the committee and the procedure it
should follow. Rough drafts of selection procedures for a new
president were handed out for comments from the community,
The Wednesday Student Forum publicized the opportunity for
students to become involved in the presidential search. On December 1st the Forum heard students discuss why they were interested in serving on the Presidential Search Committee. Six students
with concerns for open hiring, academic development, and humane
institutional structures were selected to meet with the trustees.
On December 8th, Trustees Halvorsen and Hadley met individually with two student representatives suggesting that the search
be set aside and they go downtown to meet with and offer the job
to the governor. This was reported to other students who on the
following day attended a Board of Trustees meeting and confronted
the Board with the question of offering the job to Evans without
completing the search process.
Herb Hadley candidly answered that the Board had already
asked Evans and, had he accepted, there would have been no
search committee . The Board went on to finalize the make-up of
the search committee and the procedure for choosing the new president, adding a "short circuit clause," That clause providing that if
an outstanding candidate made himself available, the committee,
by a majority vote, could forward that name to the Board of Trustees for approval.
On December 22, the "short circuit clause" was utilized, and
even the student members of the Search Committee bowed to the
pressure of an intense meeting with high officials. The students
were expecting to be involved in a long and important search and
evaluation process. When the Search Committee finally met, they
were confronted by the Board of Trustees moving 90 mph with
their candidate, Evans. Under those circumstances, it was difficult
(particularly for students) to cast a dissenting vote . So in the end,
Evans received unanimous approval.
The first and last meeting of the Presidential Search Committe~
happened in the Board Room of the college while the great majority
of the college community was away on vacation. This is symbolic
of the reality that the decision to select Evans as the next president
was made without the real involvement of those people who will
be affected. We don't deny that Evans may have a positive impact
on some aspects of Evergreen's business, but we insist that his selection was arbitrary, and further, the actual decision-making was
hidden by the belief that the Search Committee would have an important function .
About the authors:
Lynn Kormondy is a second-year Evergreen student . 'Phil Haeck
is a third -year Evergreen 's tudent.

RAY

BLASTED

Chants of "Supertanker, SUMPrtarlk
thundered under the Capitol dome yesterday a5 Dixy
Lee Ray, the new governor, wound up her inaugural
address a few yards away in the House Chambcr~ .
The protesters, largely Evergreen students, shouted in
cadence and distributed a mimeographed plea to con tinue to bar the large tankers from Puget Sound . Ra y
ignored the demonstration, and skirted the issue in her
speech, promising to deliver a special statement on the
issue in the near future.

State of the Art • • .for $895
SAE
GENESIS

SONY
SONUS

We at m.b. audio have done something really incredible for those of
you who have always dreamed of a truly professional sound system
but could never justify paying a price in four fi.gures. Consider an SAE
Mark 30 pre-amplifier with .03% distortion, an SAE Mark 31 B power
amplifier with 50 watts per channel, a Sony PS-5550 turntable with a
high definition Sonus Red Label cartridge and Genesis Physics Model
2 speakers. A $1,130 system in limited quantities for $895 , , , that/s a
$235 savings, or 20% discount.
We believe in accurate sound reproduction and believe that you
deserve the best sound for your audio dollar,

COME IN FORA
DEMONSTRATION

$895
HURRY!
QUANTITIES
LIMITED

The name is Earspeaker . - not headph one . The
reference sound of the SR ·44 is compa ra ble to
$200 Electrostatic headphones The Stax SR ·44
Electret is

$85.00

OPEN SUNDAYS

12 - 5

,-.

~
.....

"

-.....
J

f
I

m .b . _10

[

t
N

:.: "'il


!

p -- ~

.' .,.,.'
In Lacey Center 491-0991
4422 8th Ave. S.E. Lacey

8

~

THE REAL

BABY

by Brad Pokorny
Each January the Daily Olympian holds a First Baby of the
Year contest . The first child born
in Thurston or Mason County
wins a number of prizes donated
by local merchants. Two dozen
diapers, a case of Gerber's strained baby food, a pair of infant
auto seats, a free wheel alignment, a rocking chair and a
baby's high chair, a transistor
radio, a case of Pepsi-Cola, and
two free steak dinners for Mom
and Dad complete only part of
the list that the lucky tot receives.
At 8:55 a.m. on New Year's
Day, Eric Dean Roberson was
born at Saint Peter Hospital, the
first child of the new year. The
hospital promptly reported the
birth to the Daily Olympian.
Twelve hours later, at about
8:30 p.m ., Nicole Schuneman
was born the second baby of the
year. This, too, was reported to
the Daily Olympian.
The first baby's mother, Vicki
Roberson , 27, is not married. Nicole's parents are . The Daily Olympian has a policy of not
printing information about children born out of wedlock, so Nicole Schuneman won the contest.
A birth announcement with Eric's
name was not even printed.
"( don 't care about the prizes,"
says Vicki Roberson, the first
baby's mother, "I just want my
baby to have the credit that he
was the first baby born."
The community was quick to
react. KAOS-FM broke the story
of the Daily Olympian's confusion, and the local chapter of the
National Organization of Women
began putting pressure on the
Olympia newspaper to change its
policy. Karen McAndrew, CoPresident of Olympia NOW said,
"The recogni'tipn of the first birth
is a symbolic .o ne, and the marital status of the mother has nothing to do with the joy of a new
child coming into the world."

~~~~:~:~:~;~:~:j:j:j:i~i:i~:~:~:~:i:~:~:~:i:i:i:i:i:~:i:~:i:i;j::;:~:i:i:::~:i:i:j:i:~:~:J:j:::::;::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:~~~~
~~~ S·T·R·E·T·C-H YOUR HEALTH cAR·E·DOL.LA~s··AT···)~

1
~

SEA MART DRUGS

iii

~

IiiiJiiiiiJiJiJiJiJiffriJiJ!IfIiii!ffJJJJfJJJJJJ!JJJ!J!J!Jttt!Jrrttt!J!f!J!ffJJfJfJJJt!J!fift!!!~

FIRST

~y

Phil Haeck and
Lynn Kormondy

On Tuesday, January 4, the
Daily Olympian reiterated its
policy on unwed mothers, but
they admitted that a baby had
been born before the arrival of
Nicole Schuneman, and they
promised to duplicate the gifts.
But they did not print the real
first baby's name.
Readers wrote letters to the
paper, but the publisher, James
E. Lewis, refused to print them.
Linda Roberson, the mother's sister-in-law, called New York and
reached an executive of the Gannett News Service, of which the
Daily Olympian is a member,
who said he knew Lewis, Ms,
Roberson related the story to the
executive, and he told her he
would call Lewis and mention
the problem to him. He was dismayed that the Olympian would
not print the letters to the editor.
Last Sunday, January 9, the
Daily Olympian ran two letters
in favor of giving Eric Roberson
" his due credit. But his identity
, was still not revealed, His ' name
was, however, mentioned in Big
Bear, California, among other
places, for the Associated Press

had run the story on its national
wire .
McAndrews continued her dia logue with Lewis, trying to win
for children born of single parents in Thurston and Mason
Counties the right of acknowledgment. She says, "We were
talking, going around and around, when ( said, 'I'd love for
you to tell me why you have that
policy on unwed mothers,' And
he said something to the effect
'A bastard is a bastard.' Yes, he
did use that word ." It was re ported that Lewis feels <IIFlajority
of the community stands essentially the same way.
Monday evening, in a brief telephone convers<:tion wi th the
COOPER POINT JOURNAL ,
Lewis said, "As far as I'm concerned, there is no controversy.
We've printed our statement and
that's it. " When asked how much
community pressure it would
take to make the Daily Olympian
change its policy, he replied , "No
idea. "
Ms . Roberson still has not received any of the gifts promised
by the Daily Olympian.

LakewoOd Thealre ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
lakewood Center. 588·3500

CHOSEn onE OF THE TEn BEST FILms OF 1978
-,
BY JOHn HARTL, SEAnLE TimES

STA~!~:!

NiTdy

Y!

':00

AlAiN

TANNER~

GlRNIVAL
THE BEST IN FUNK AND DISCO

Jan 18 - 22

CLFAR LOGIC
Arm Wrestling
Sat. Jan . 22 4 p.m .

$1.00 PITCHERS
EVERY WED
LADIES NIGHT
THURS

bAit woo will ~ 2~ iN -rItE yEAR 2000
"HIGHLY COMIC.
A terrifically
Intelligent, witty
comedy. The enffre
cast is splendid."
-Vincent Canby.
New York Times

"As light as a
feather and as
spry as a
squirrel and
sometimes just
as nutty."
- Stewart Klein.
WNEW ·TV

The Dan Evans
Search Cornrnittee
FORUM is a column of commentary on issues of interest to the
Evergreen community. The column is open to any individual or
group on campus. Address all correspondence to FORUM, the
COOPER POINT JOURNAL, CAB 306.

SUN.MATS AT 11:00
Jan 13 . 15

FORUM

"A ROMANTIC, MYSTIC,
UTOPIAN COMEDY .••
abollt the seventies
lunatic fringe of
"
people In their
twenties and
thirties. This
film stays
suspended
In the air,
splnnlng-A
MARVELOUS
TOY."
-Pauline Kael,
The New Yorker

On December 22 the Evergreen Presidential Search Committee
met for seven hours, including a question-and-answer session with
Governor Dan Evans, and voted unanimously to approve Evans
as the next President of this college . This important. decision was
made by a committee representing students, facuity, staff, administrators, area community members, and the Board of Trustees, or
so it seems.
The facts as stated above are essentially true, but presented in
that simple form they obscure a more important and fundamental
fact underlying the decision to accept Evans and most other significant choices made at Evergreen. The decision-making process
at Evergreen involves two groups of people : those who make decisions and those who are affected by decisions.
The recent discussions and re-evaluation of the campus governance document by the COG III DTF has made abundantly clear
that all decisions are subject to consideration at the administrative
level and administrators are directly responsible to the Board of
Trustees (all of whom, inCidentally, were appointed by Dan Evans).
On the other side of the coin, those affected by decisions at Evergreen are the people who study and work here. They are students,
faculty, and staff, including administrators.
This basic relationship between the governed and the governors
is often obscured by a campus governance system in which the decision-makers ask the people affected for input through committees and DTFs. The process for selecting a new president was a
significant example of a decision being made by the Trustees. while
the people who would be affected by that decision were handed a
role that was deceptively important.
To bear this out, let us follow the presidential selection process
from the beginning. On September 15th President McCann announced during a meeting with faculty that he would resign after
this academic year. Academic Dean Will Humphreys asked some
faculty members to meet with McCann about his successor . McCann called the Board of Trustees, asking about the Presidential
Search Committee. The Trustees replied that they had not yet considered the involvement of the community in choosing a new president. They had already offered the iob to Evans, but because he
didn't accept immediately, the Board decided to set up a Search
Committee like the one they had in 1967.
During the first week of October, the faculty elected six people
to meet with the Trustees about the search committee. The staff
followed a similar procedure. On November 18 Trustees Herb
Hadley and Tom Dixon met with some students from the Wednesday Student Forum, This was the first time students were given an
idea of their role on the Presidential Selection Committee (maybe
a mistake that they didn't have their own idea of that role earlier),
Also on the 18th, Trustees met with representatives of faculty and
staff to discuss composition of the committee and the procedure it
should follow. Rough drafts of selection procedures for a new
president were handed out for comments from the community,
The Wednesday Student Forum publicized the opportunity for
students to become involved in the presidential search. On December 1st the Forum heard students discuss why they were interested in serving on the Presidential Search Committee. Six students
with concerns for open hiring, academic development, and humane
institutional structures were selected to meet with the trustees.
On December 8th, Trustees Halvorsen and Hadley met individually with two student representatives suggesting that the search
be set aside and they go downtown to meet with and offer the job
to the governor. This was reported to other students who on the
following day attended a Board of Trustees meeting and confronted
the Board with the question of offering the job to Evans without
completing the search process.
Herb Hadley candidly answered that the Board had already
asked Evans and, had he accepted, there would have been no
search committee . The Board went on to finalize the make-up of
the search committee and the procedure for choosing the new president, adding a "short circuit clause," That clause providing that if
an outstanding candidate made himself available, the committee,
by a majority vote, could forward that name to the Board of Trustees for approval.
On December 22, the "short circuit clause" was utilized, and
even the student members of the Search Committee bowed to the
pressure of an intense meeting with high officials. The students
were expecting to be involved in a long and important search and
evaluation process. When the Search Committee finally met, they
were confronted by the Board of Trustees moving 90 mph with
their candidate, Evans. Under those circumstances, it was difficult
(particularly for students) to cast a dissenting vote . So in the end,
Evans received unanimous approval.
The first and last meeting of the Presidential Search Committe~
happened in the Board Room of the college while the great majority
of the college community was away on vacation. This is symbolic
of the reality that the decision to select Evans as the next president
was made without the real involvement of those people who will
be affected. We don't deny that Evans may have a positive impact
on some aspects of Evergreen's business, but we insist that his selection was arbitrary, and further, the actual decision-making was
hidden by the belief that the Search Committee would have an important function .
About the authors:
Lynn Kormondy is a second-year Evergreen student . 'Phil Haeck
is a third -year Evergreen 's tudent.

RAY

BLASTED

Chants of "Supertanker, SUMPrtarlk
thundered under the Capitol dome yesterday a5 Dixy
Lee Ray, the new governor, wound up her inaugural
address a few yards away in the House Chambcr~ .
The protesters, largely Evergreen students, shouted in
cadence and distributed a mimeographed plea to con tinue to bar the large tankers from Puget Sound . Ra y
ignored the demonstration, and skirted the issue in her
speech, promising to deliver a special statement on the
issue in the near future.

State of the Art • • .for $895
SAE
GENESIS

SONY
SONUS

We at m.b. audio have done something really incredible for those of
you who have always dreamed of a truly professional sound system
but could never justify paying a price in four fi.gures. Consider an SAE
Mark 30 pre-amplifier with .03% distortion, an SAE Mark 31 B power
amplifier with 50 watts per channel, a Sony PS-5550 turntable with a
high definition Sonus Red Label cartridge and Genesis Physics Model
2 speakers. A $1,130 system in limited quantities for $895 , , , that/s a
$235 savings, or 20% discount.
We believe in accurate sound reproduction and believe that you
deserve the best sound for your audio dollar,

COME IN FORA
DEMONSTRATION

$895
HURRY!
QUANTITIES
LIMITED

The name is Earspeaker . - not headph one . The
reference sound of the SR ·44 is compa ra ble to
$200 Electrostatic headphones The Stax SR ·44
Electret is

$85.00

OPEN SUNDAYS

12 - 5

,-.

~
.....

"

-.....
J

f
I

m .b . _10

[

t
N

:.: "'il


!

p -- ~

.' .,.,.'
In Lacey Center 491-0991
4422 8th Ave. S.E. Lacey

10
11

TWO BOOKS FOR TESC
get your
radio
stereo

by Stan Shore

ta~deck

ana TV
at

Yaros
Electronics
JIm and Rosa Yemm 357-7845
357-3942
Across from the bowling alley

Sitting here at the COOPER
POINT JOURNAL Book Review
desk can get boring: there just
aren't that many books of local
interest published . I mostly just
sit around and smoke. .
But yesterday the wind blew ~n
two little publications that will
be of inordinate ' interest to present and future Evergreen stu dents. Published by the office of
College Relations, I am referring,
of course, to the 1977 - 79 Catalog and the 1977 - 78 Supplement.
.
Reading the catalog is always
fun. (Is your picture in it? Does
it really describe Evergreen? All
the outdoor pictures show sunshine.) Still, this year's catalog

4th St at Pacific &,......".
Martin \tVay"943'5914
r/ , . .

The very modern story of two rustlers and
the unorthodox detective hired to catch
them Full of girl s and pickup trucks . Thi S IS
not you r ordinary western . It's a live ly enter.
)eff Bridges , Sam Watersta ..
lnm g tl" Irn starrtng
ton and Slim Pi ckens. Directed by Frank
Perry Rat ed R.

good thru
Jan 20th

4520 Pa cifi c
456-6300

a nd supplement are special because they show in the m ost concrete form yet the results of the
Long -Range Curriculum Planning
DTF which met last year.
Instead of the old, largely arbitrary division of programs into
Beginning, Divisional, Intermedi ate and Advanced, the college
now has
.
Beginning, Annual and Interdisciplinary Specialization programs.
The Annuals programs are the
least self-explanatory. They are
designed to be experimental or to
fulfill special, transitory, needs.
Like all Evergreen programs once
were, these Annual programs will
be redesigned from scratch each
year.
Each of the nine areas of specialization has four or five programs, most of which, like the
very successful FONS (Foundations of Natural Science) - will
repeat from year to year.
The new catalog is the bestlooking one yet , although some
people may consider it unduly
slick . Like most catalogs, ours IS
optimistic, if not deceptive. We
wan t minority students at Evergrt'en. To attract them, we print
a disproportionate number of
photographs of non - whites. The
result was considered deceptive
by student April ' West , who
wrote an 'angry letter to Dean of
Enrollment Services, Larry Stenberg, and sent a copy to our office.
But , like an employment resu-me , the catalog is supposed to be
optimistic, sunshinier than real
life. Another instance of this is in
the "sample student" listing of
courses of study. It's a regular
feature in our catalogs. a substitute for course requirements and
a reassurance to those who a re
confused by~ policy of no t
askin g for declared majors. This
year five of the eight sample stu dents listed were said to be from
Washington high schools. This is
a percentage of about 62.5. In
fact , only about 16 % of Evergreen's incoming students are
from state high schools. Th,s IS a
continuing problem for the school
and no doubt the optimism in the
catalog was meant to be something of a self-fulfilling prophecy.
StilL it might be considered de ceptive .
The Supplement - which is a
listing of next year's offerings is quite concrete . If it isn't in the

supplement. it won't be at Evergreen . Although I will not be
around, I have still chosen a fav orite program for myself. It's
called, "14,000 BC (A Program
in Increasing Imagination)" and
will be coordinated by Susan
Aurand.
The reason I like this basic program is its absurd program description, from which I quote :

ood

"Very few people today know
anything about this topic. Even
the people who know something
about it know almost nothing
about it. It is quite probable that
no matter what happens now or
in the fu ture no one will ever
know very much about this topic

That's the spirit, I say .

Readin"~

ADING is a column listing books and articles which members. of the
staff have found especially useful, entertaining, lor
.
rt t From time to time GOOD READING will feature short comme~tar es
ImpoItems
an . on literary mailers. We we Icome s uggestlons and Ideas
for thiS
rtt ("Add
littlecolto
and
umn from our readers . Adde parum palVO, megnus acerws e .
lillie and there will be a great heap.")
"Pinball's Back," by Mike McEVEN COPYCATS GET THE
Clintock. A handy guide for the
BLUES DEPARTMENT
.
used pinball machine buyer. Did
"South Richmond was a neIghyou know you can check a maborhood of mouse holes, lace curchine's "mileage" by reading its
tains Sears catalogs, measles ep'game counter? "As with a car odemi~s, baloney sandw iches - and
dometer. if the number Is unreasonmen who knew more about the carably small , you can figure it has
buretor than they. knew about the
passed the 100,000 mark ." Popular
cli toris. "
Mechanics. January 1977, page 100.
- from Chapter 8 of Even
"Sizing Up the Graduate
Cowglrts Get the Blues, by
Schools" by Wil li am Flanagan.
Tom Robbins (1976)
"What sc'hOOIS you attend shou ldn't
"Two generations of Americans
determine how successful you beknew more about the Ford coil than
come." Ah, but they often do. Here
the clitoris, about the planetary
is a short article rating the academsystem of gears than the solar sysic quality and employment value of
tem of stars."
the top grad schools in the country.
- from Chapter 11 of Cannery
New York. January 10, 1977, page
Row, by John Steinbeck (1945)
64.
" b
"How Movies Are ' Made',
y
PERIODICALS DEPARTMENT
Susan Rice. Susan Rice was a film
"Playboy Interview: Alex Haley"
critic for M&M a few years back,
Author Alex Haley details the inbut she decided she could make
tense twelve years of research that
better movies than the ones she rewent into Roots, his book whIch
viewed so off to L. A. she went to
traces the true history of his family
becom~ a big-time screenwriter.
from the lime his great-great-greatNow she's back. and boy, is she
great-grandfather was captured by
pissed off. Media and Methods, DeBritish slave traders in Africa,
cember. 1976. page 40.
through plantation life in the sout h,
"High On War," by Michael Herr .
to the present day. Playboy, JanA movi ng account of a war correuary 1977 , page 59.
"
spondent's nightmares while coverAlcheringa: Ethnopoetlcs, A
ing Vietnam . " But of course we
First Magazine of the World's Tribal
were intimate," Herr writes. "I 'll tell
Poetries." Essential reading for apyou how intimate: they were my
prentice poets . This issue explores,
gun s." Esquire , Janu ary 1977 .
among other things , Black oral trapage 82.
ditions in the Americas . New Senes
"The Lonely Guy Apartment," by
Volume Two, Number One. Se pBruce Jay Friedman . Hilarious
tember 1976.
household hints for the 9isorgan"The Evolution Of The Guitar's
ized slob , by one who knows. ReUse In Pop Music: Brtef Version ....
quired reading for dorm dwellers
by Frank Zappa. " All of you sensIwith Food Service contracts. (See
tive guitar fans who actually get off
also "The Lonely Guy Cookbook."
on our current pseudo-academic
Esquire, October 1976.) Esquire,
era of polished efficiency had betJanuary 1977, page 71 .
ter read another article." Guitar
"Nuclear Politics: The Case of
Player Magazine, January 1977,
Karen Silkwood," by Howard Kohn.
page 34 .
The coverup of the investigation of
"The Working Woman." by Letty
the death of a plutonium worker ,
Cotlin Pogrebin. A long and useful
with sinister implications . Must
Iist of books and resources. Ladies'
reading . Roiling Stone, January 13,
Home Journal, December 1976.
1977, page 30.
page 58 .

CoGgp~~ ~~INT JOURNAL

Music for Women Only
by Karrie Jacobs
Music by women and for women is the main product of Olivia
records , a Los Angeles-based col lectively-run firm . It was started
in 1973 by ten women whose
goals were to make women's music, to provide talented womanoriented musicians with access to
the recording industry and control over their music , to provide
training for women in all aspects
of the recording industry, and to
provide jobs for large numbers.of
women, with reasonable sa lanes
and in unoppressive situations.
The Olivia collective currently
.consists of eight women, two of
whom, Meg Christian and Teresa
Trull, appeared in concert last
Sunday night on the Evergreen
campus.
The concert was sponsored by
the Evergreen Women's Center,
which was responsible for putting
out the necessary advertising for
the event. Unfortunately, in all
the promotional material that
was distributed, there was no
mention of the artists' desire to
perform to an all-female audience. This omission, due to the
legal stickiness of the situation,
and to oversight, caused a great
deal of confusion and annoyance
among the men and many of the
women who set out to attend the
concert and encountered the following sign at the library lobby
entrance :
"Men, Please Read This.
"Men exclude women in order
to protect, assert, and maintain
their power. Women exclude men
to claim a little space for ourselves and to carry on the struggle to take control, not of men's
lives, but simply of our own. The
men who genuinely support our
struggle will, of course understand and accept this - to do
otherwise is to assert their power
over us,
"So men are asked not to come
tonight." ,
Although men were not actually prevented from attending the
concert, very few chose to come
in. A number of women who
were upset by the separatist pol icy at the concert also decided
not to attend. One woman, who
was part of a small crowd that
gathered at the doors, said, "This
is the kind of stuff that hurts
things more than it helps. "
That statement seemed to represent the consensus of opinion
among the people, both women
and men who stood outside try ~
ing to decide whether they really
wanted to go to the concert or
not.
Meg Christian and Teresa Trull
have been touring the Pacific
Northwest, starting in Vancouver

iO

Address all correspondence relating to the GOOD READING column
Arb~~r
Elegantlarum. COOPER POINT JOURNAL. CAB 306. The Evergreen tate
lege. Olympia. Washin ton 98505.

CREf\TURES FROM A DISTANT

Gf\Lf\~Y

THE

EMERGE FROM
GGs ....

f'

d

B. C. and heading towards California. Most of their appearances
have been at women's community coffee houses and similar
places, where the policy of excluding men would not draw
much fire. They prefer to play to
all -w oma n audiences, and feel
that "open" concerts are only
valid as a way of outreach where
it seems necessary.
In a statement by Meg Christian and Holly Near on the subject of women-only concerts ,
they discuss the reasons for such
an attitude. "Women," they say,
"must have an opportunity to
come together to develop our
culture as part of the process of
taking control of our lives . After
a long time of having our needs
denied or ignored, we are affirm ing a culture which puts women
first. "
Christian and Near go on to
say, "Men represent our oppression .. . sexism. For women who
have been raped, beaten, deserted, fired, misled, manipulated,
discriminated against, had their
children taken away, etc., the
man at the concert may trigger
her pain even if he is the nice~t
guy in town. We want women s
concerts to be the most open,
unoppressive, liberating evening
possible."
.
Any confusion or antagoms~
that might have been present In
the audience because of the women-only policy was soon spirited
away by the warmth and sparkle
in Trull's and Christian's stage
presence. Both have strong vOic.e s
and are talented guitarists. Chflstian graduated from the University of North Carolina with a degree in music, as a gui~ar maj.or.
Her musical and claSSICal gUItar
background came through in her
performance.
Trull displayed some interesting talents during the c~nce~~,
one of which was yodeling. I
grew up learning to yode!," said
Trull, "and that's how I learned
to sing." Just to show off, she
yodeled her way through the
lonesome lovesick Blues, Trull
also did a kazoo solo, to take the
place of a missing back- up band,
during the Margaret Sloan song,

i

I'd like to Make love With You .
It might not have been quite up
to Maria Muldaur's or Jean Shepard's kazoo standards, but it was
up there.
In an introduction to what was
perhaps the angriest song in the
concert, Trull talked of Inez Garcia and Joan Little, and the need
for physical defense in a physical
situation. " There is violence done
against women every day that's
real violence, and to call self-defense violence is really wrong."
"When they s!ab us in the back
Give me a knife and watch
me use it, "
said the song, and indeed, Teresa
Trull is a woman of action. She
told of her participation in what
she termed a "dyke squad ," which
routed flashers from the local
laundromat and pursued burglars
with baseball bats, in her North
Carolina home town.
Trull is a self- taught lesbian
feminist musician, who had been
playing with various folk groups
and on her own for a number of
years . She toured clubs in upstate
New York and Pennsylvania after a stint as a truck driver in
N. C. It is only recently that she
has come to think of music as a
profession. She became a part of
Olivia Records seven months
ago , after some friends of hers
sent Olivia a tape of her music.
Trull now works full-time with
Olivia and is now on her first
tour as an 0 livia artist. Her album , The Ways a Woman Can
Be will be available in March.
Meg Christian has played music all her life and never considered being anything but a musician. She went to Washington,
D.C. after she graduated from
college and played on the nightclub circuit there. In 1973 she
gave up her nightclub career to
play women's music and became
involved in the formation of Olivia records . She has an album,
I Know You Know, on the Olivia label and is due to release an other one this year.
Meg Christian and Teresa Trull
are just two of many women who
spend their lives making women's music. Music that according
to Christian, "speaks honestly
and realistically about women's
lives."

'All ,

CI.

Students: 1096 discount
on ALL art sappliea

FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday , January 14
.
SMILE (1975) If you mIssed the
censored TV showing a couple of
weeks ago cr didn't catch thiS mOVie
when it played in Olympia last
month, you may want to take In
Michael Ritchie's flawed but funny
story of a stupid beauty cont,:sl.
This is the last word on the Smiley
Button mentality . Presented by the
Fridav Nite Film Series, LH One, 3,
7, and 9:30 p.m .
Saturday . January 15
FOVA FILM FEST The Foundat ion of Visual Art s coordi nate d
studies program presents a lively
bunch of underground movIes. The
films include : "Oh Oem Watermelons, " which is considered by
some an underground claSSIC , but
its satire on racism is out of date
and is only embarrassing now .
"Off{ On" is the "strobe" film . Unfortunately that is not saying much .
Probably the most notorious ~OVI~
in the series is "Pornografoilles,
which despite its reputatIon IS really
nothing but another piece of slimy
porno trash. The idea is good , at
least in your imagination (think o f ,~
naked version of "The Gong Show)
but the actual ity is ug ly, unfunny ,
and humiliating for audience and
performer. The other movies sC h ed ,~
uled ("Catching the ASIan Carp,
"The Divine Miracte ," "The Offhanded Jape," "Necrology," and
"PhySical Fitness") are much bet ter and except for the Him cnt lC i z~d. the showing shou ld be entertaining. LH One , 7 and 9 p.m. $1.
Wednesday, January 19
THE MAN IN THE GLASS BOOTH
(1975) Edward Anhalt adapted Robert Shaw's play about a guilt-ridden,
megalomaniacal millionaire whisked
Irom his New York penthouse to
stand trial in Israel for Nazi war
crimes. Thi s American Film Theater
presentation was directed by Arthur
Hiller. Maximi lian Schell gIves a
thundering performance as Arthur
Goldman I Commandant Dcrf . Presented by the Academic Fi lm Series . LH One, 1 :30 and 7:30 p.m.
FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
KING KONG The big ape still has
no genitals. Olympic Theatre, 3573422.
THE ENFORCER Clint EastWOOd
with a big gun again . Also: FREEBIE AND THE BEAN A confused
piece of violence . State Theatre,
357-4010.
RANCHO DELUXE A disappOinting movie about modern -day calt lerustling. starring Jeff Bndges , and
written by Thomas McGuane , who
wrote the screenplay for the even
more repugnant "Missouri BreakS:"
Feminists will be infuriated by thIS
movie. The Cinema. 943-5914 .

MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
Thursday, January 13
OLD-TIME SQUARE DANCE wit h
live band and caller. All dances patiently taught. Fourth floor library .
7 : 30 p.m. 50 cents donation.
Sunday. January 16
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANC·
ING with teaching. Beginners welcome. CAB mall. 7:30 to 10 p.m .•
or later.

RADIO AND TELEVISION
Friday , January 14
CRUSTY 'S COOP Crusty is back
and he's crust ier than ever. Tonigh t
the old geezer presen ts "The Blue
Angel" with Marlene Diet ri ch (19301 ,
and four student fil ms. Live music.
and the Case of the Missing Chicken cont inues . Channel 6 Icablevlslon). 11 p.m .
Sunday , Ja nuary 16
NEW YORK PHILHARMONI C
BROADCAST Symphony No . 7. by
Mahler . KAOS-FM , 89 .3, 3:30 0 m.

ART
IN TACOMA
50 OUTSTANDING PHOTO GRAPHS, a jUfled exh ibit Starts
January 7 and continues throughout the month. The Si lver Image
Ga llery , 727 Co mmerce SI. Thurs . .
Sun. 12 - 5 p.m .. or by appoint me nt .
ON CAMPUS
RECENT WORKS BY BILL
RADES 3-D collages, photos. drawings, and paint ing s. Library Art
Gallery , through January 30.
REST EASY, DEAR READERS I
THE STUFFED ALBINO SQUIRRELS ARE BACK TO TORMENT
YOU IN A BRAND-NEW YEAR
FULL OF SURPRISES AND LAFFS
- HOT AND SPICY. PERT AND
SAUCY. SOFT AND SQUISHY THE WAY YOU LIKE 'EM .
THE ALL-NEW 1977 STUFFED
ALBINO SQUIRREL CONVERSATION STOPPERS REVISITED
"You 've been elected secretary of
th e committee."
" Hare Krisna. Hare Krishna . ho
ho ho .
"I know where you' re coming
from ."
"I killed a man once.
" Evergreen? Isn't that a community college, or somet hing ?"
"I just discovered something very
interesting about myself. "
"You musl change yo ur life ' "
"Hey, stupid, that's a beehIve
you're peeing on."
"I'm going to hold my breath until you apologize ."
"I've got fleas."
"In a previous life I was an Indian
princess
"Pick a card, any card."
"Was it something I said?"
"Jesus Christ, you gOlla change
your toothpaste."
"Quit torturi ng yoursel f."
"Want me to tell you something
I've never told anyone in my whole
life? "
Joe Bemis Gallery of Bores. open
24 hours. Our Motto: "Sweets to
the Sweet."

New & Used Rec_ords
Tapes
Concert Tickets

I{ECORP'CO
Westside Center 357· 4755

10
11

TWO BOOKS FOR TESC
get your
radio
stereo

by Stan Shore

ta~deck

ana TV
at

Yaros
Electronics
JIm and Rosa Yemm 357-7845
357-3942
Across from the bowling alley

Sitting here at the COOPER
POINT JOURNAL Book Review
desk can get boring: there just
aren't that many books of local
interest published . I mostly just
sit around and smoke. .
But yesterday the wind blew ~n
two little publications that will
be of inordinate ' interest to present and future Evergreen stu dents. Published by the office of
College Relations, I am referring,
of course, to the 1977 - 79 Catalog and the 1977 - 78 Supplement.
.
Reading the catalog is always
fun. (Is your picture in it? Does
it really describe Evergreen? All
the outdoor pictures show sunshine.) Still, this year's catalog

4th St at Pacific &,......".
Martin \tVay"943'5914
r/ , . .

The very modern story of two rustlers and
the unorthodox detective hired to catch
them Full of girl s and pickup trucks . Thi S IS
not you r ordinary western . It's a live ly enter.
)eff Bridges , Sam Watersta ..
lnm g tl" Irn starrtng
ton and Slim Pi ckens. Directed by Frank
Perry Rat ed R.

good thru
Jan 20th

4520 Pa cifi c
456-6300

a nd supplement are special because they show in the m ost concrete form yet the results of the
Long -Range Curriculum Planning
DTF which met last year.
Instead of the old, largely arbitrary division of programs into
Beginning, Divisional, Intermedi ate and Advanced, the college
now has
.
Beginning, Annual and Interdisciplinary Specialization programs.
The Annuals programs are the
least self-explanatory. They are
designed to be experimental or to
fulfill special, transitory, needs.
Like all Evergreen programs once
were, these Annual programs will
be redesigned from scratch each
year.
Each of the nine areas of specialization has four or five programs, most of which, like the
very successful FONS (Foundations of Natural Science) - will
repeat from year to year.
The new catalog is the bestlooking one yet , although some
people may consider it unduly
slick . Like most catalogs, ours IS
optimistic, if not deceptive. We
wan t minority students at Evergrt'en. To attract them, we print
a disproportionate number of
photographs of non - whites. The
result was considered deceptive
by student April ' West , who
wrote an 'angry letter to Dean of
Enrollment Services, Larry Stenberg, and sent a copy to our office.
But , like an employment resu-me , the catalog is supposed to be
optimistic, sunshinier than real
life. Another instance of this is in
the "sample student" listing of
courses of study. It's a regular
feature in our catalogs. a substitute for course requirements and
a reassurance to those who a re
confused by~ policy of no t
askin g for declared majors. This
year five of the eight sample stu dents listed were said to be from
Washington high schools. This is
a percentage of about 62.5. In
fact , only about 16 % of Evergreen's incoming students are
from state high schools. Th,s IS a
continuing problem for the school
and no doubt the optimism in the
catalog was meant to be something of a self-fulfilling prophecy.
StilL it might be considered de ceptive .
The Supplement - which is a
listing of next year's offerings is quite concrete . If it isn't in the

supplement. it won't be at Evergreen . Although I will not be
around, I have still chosen a fav orite program for myself. It's
called, "14,000 BC (A Program
in Increasing Imagination)" and
will be coordinated by Susan
Aurand.
The reason I like this basic program is its absurd program description, from which I quote :

ood

"Very few people today know
anything about this topic. Even
the people who know something
about it know almost nothing
about it. It is quite probable that
no matter what happens now or
in the fu ture no one will ever
know very much about this topic

That's the spirit, I say .

Readin"~

ADING is a column listing books and articles which members. of the
staff have found especially useful, entertaining, lor
.
rt t From time to time GOOD READING will feature short comme~tar es
ImpoItems
an . on literary mailers. We we Icome s uggestlons and Ideas
for thiS
rtt ("Add
littlecolto
and
umn from our readers . Adde parum palVO, megnus acerws e .
lillie and there will be a great heap.")
"Pinball's Back," by Mike McEVEN COPYCATS GET THE
Clintock. A handy guide for the
BLUES DEPARTMENT
.
used pinball machine buyer. Did
"South Richmond was a neIghyou know you can check a maborhood of mouse holes, lace curchine's "mileage" by reading its
tains Sears catalogs, measles ep'game counter? "As with a car odemi~s, baloney sandw iches - and
dometer. if the number Is unreasonmen who knew more about the carably small , you can figure it has
buretor than they. knew about the
passed the 100,000 mark ." Popular
cli toris. "
Mechanics. January 1977, page 100.
- from Chapter 8 of Even
"Sizing Up the Graduate
Cowglrts Get the Blues, by
Schools" by Wil li am Flanagan.
Tom Robbins (1976)
"What sc'hOOIS you attend shou ldn't
"Two generations of Americans
determine how successful you beknew more about the Ford coil than
come." Ah, but they often do. Here
the clitoris, about the planetary
is a short article rating the academsystem of gears than the solar sysic quality and employment value of
tem of stars."
the top grad schools in the country.
- from Chapter 11 of Cannery
New York. January 10, 1977, page
Row, by John Steinbeck (1945)
64.
" b
"How Movies Are ' Made',
y
PERIODICALS DEPARTMENT
Susan Rice. Susan Rice was a film
"Playboy Interview: Alex Haley"
critic for M&M a few years back,
Author Alex Haley details the inbut she decided she could make
tense twelve years of research that
better movies than the ones she rewent into Roots, his book whIch
viewed so off to L. A. she went to
traces the true history of his family
becom~ a big-time screenwriter.
from the lime his great-great-greatNow she's back. and boy, is she
great-grandfather was captured by
pissed off. Media and Methods, DeBritish slave traders in Africa,
cember. 1976. page 40.
through plantation life in the sout h,
"High On War," by Michael Herr .
to the present day. Playboy, JanA movi ng account of a war correuary 1977 , page 59.
"
spondent's nightmares while coverAlcheringa: Ethnopoetlcs, A
ing Vietnam . " But of course we
First Magazine of the World's Tribal
were intimate," Herr writes. "I 'll tell
Poetries." Essential reading for apyou how intimate: they were my
prentice poets . This issue explores,
gun s." Esquire , Janu ary 1977 .
among other things , Black oral trapage 82.
ditions in the Americas . New Senes
"The Lonely Guy Apartment," by
Volume Two, Number One. Se pBruce Jay Friedman . Hilarious
tember 1976.
household hints for the 9isorgan"The Evolution Of The Guitar's
ized slob , by one who knows. ReUse In Pop Music: Brtef Version ....
quired reading for dorm dwellers
by Frank Zappa. " All of you sensIwith Food Service contracts. (See
tive guitar fans who actually get off
also "The Lonely Guy Cookbook."
on our current pseudo-academic
Esquire, October 1976.) Esquire,
era of polished efficiency had betJanuary 1977, page 71 .
ter read another article." Guitar
"Nuclear Politics: The Case of
Player Magazine, January 1977,
Karen Silkwood," by Howard Kohn.
page 34 .
The coverup of the investigation of
"The Working Woman." by Letty
the death of a plutonium worker ,
Cotlin Pogrebin. A long and useful
with sinister implications . Must
Iist of books and resources. Ladies'
reading . Roiling Stone, January 13,
Home Journal, December 1976.
1977, page 30.
page 58 .

CoGgp~~ ~~INT JOURNAL

Music for Women Only
by Karrie Jacobs
Music by women and for women is the main product of Olivia
records , a Los Angeles-based col lectively-run firm . It was started
in 1973 by ten women whose
goals were to make women's music, to provide talented womanoriented musicians with access to
the recording industry and control over their music , to provide
training for women in all aspects
of the recording industry, and to
provide jobs for large numbers.of
women, with reasonable sa lanes
and in unoppressive situations.
The Olivia collective currently
.consists of eight women, two of
whom, Meg Christian and Teresa
Trull, appeared in concert last
Sunday night on the Evergreen
campus.
The concert was sponsored by
the Evergreen Women's Center,
which was responsible for putting
out the necessary advertising for
the event. Unfortunately, in all
the promotional material that
was distributed, there was no
mention of the artists' desire to
perform to an all-female audience. This omission, due to the
legal stickiness of the situation,
and to oversight, caused a great
deal of confusion and annoyance
among the men and many of the
women who set out to attend the
concert and encountered the following sign at the library lobby
entrance :
"Men, Please Read This.
"Men exclude women in order
to protect, assert, and maintain
their power. Women exclude men
to claim a little space for ourselves and to carry on the struggle to take control, not of men's
lives, but simply of our own. The
men who genuinely support our
struggle will, of course understand and accept this - to do
otherwise is to assert their power
over us,
"So men are asked not to come
tonight." ,
Although men were not actually prevented from attending the
concert, very few chose to come
in. A number of women who
were upset by the separatist pol icy at the concert also decided
not to attend. One woman, who
was part of a small crowd that
gathered at the doors, said, "This
is the kind of stuff that hurts
things more than it helps. "
That statement seemed to represent the consensus of opinion
among the people, both women
and men who stood outside try ~
ing to decide whether they really
wanted to go to the concert or
not.
Meg Christian and Teresa Trull
have been touring the Pacific
Northwest, starting in Vancouver

iO

Address all correspondence relating to the GOOD READING column
Arb~~r
Elegantlarum. COOPER POINT JOURNAL. CAB 306. The Evergreen tate
lege. Olympia. Washin ton 98505.

CREf\TURES FROM A DISTANT

Gf\Lf\~Y

THE

EMERGE FROM
GGs ....

f'

d

B. C. and heading towards California. Most of their appearances
have been at women's community coffee houses and similar
places, where the policy of excluding men would not draw
much fire. They prefer to play to
all -w oma n audiences, and feel
that "open" concerts are only
valid as a way of outreach where
it seems necessary.
In a statement by Meg Christian and Holly Near on the subject of women-only concerts ,
they discuss the reasons for such
an attitude. "Women," they say,
"must have an opportunity to
come together to develop our
culture as part of the process of
taking control of our lives . After
a long time of having our needs
denied or ignored, we are affirm ing a culture which puts women
first. "
Christian and Near go on to
say, "Men represent our oppression .. . sexism. For women who
have been raped, beaten, deserted, fired, misled, manipulated,
discriminated against, had their
children taken away, etc., the
man at the concert may trigger
her pain even if he is the nice~t
guy in town. We want women s
concerts to be the most open,
unoppressive, liberating evening
possible."
.
Any confusion or antagoms~
that might have been present In
the audience because of the women-only policy was soon spirited
away by the warmth and sparkle
in Trull's and Christian's stage
presence. Both have strong vOic.e s
and are talented guitarists. Chflstian graduated from the University of North Carolina with a degree in music, as a gui~ar maj.or.
Her musical and claSSICal gUItar
background came through in her
performance.
Trull displayed some interesting talents during the c~nce~~,
one of which was yodeling. I
grew up learning to yode!," said
Trull, "and that's how I learned
to sing." Just to show off, she
yodeled her way through the
lonesome lovesick Blues, Trull
also did a kazoo solo, to take the
place of a missing back- up band,
during the Margaret Sloan song,

i

I'd like to Make love With You .
It might not have been quite up
to Maria Muldaur's or Jean Shepard's kazoo standards, but it was
up there.
In an introduction to what was
perhaps the angriest song in the
concert, Trull talked of Inez Garcia and Joan Little, and the need
for physical defense in a physical
situation. " There is violence done
against women every day that's
real violence, and to call self-defense violence is really wrong."
"When they s!ab us in the back
Give me a knife and watch
me use it, "
said the song, and indeed, Teresa
Trull is a woman of action. She
told of her participation in what
she termed a "dyke squad ," which
routed flashers from the local
laundromat and pursued burglars
with baseball bats, in her North
Carolina home town.
Trull is a self- taught lesbian
feminist musician, who had been
playing with various folk groups
and on her own for a number of
years . She toured clubs in upstate
New York and Pennsylvania after a stint as a truck driver in
N. C. It is only recently that she
has come to think of music as a
profession. She became a part of
Olivia Records seven months
ago , after some friends of hers
sent Olivia a tape of her music.
Trull now works full-time with
Olivia and is now on her first
tour as an 0 livia artist. Her album , The Ways a Woman Can
Be will be available in March.
Meg Christian has played music all her life and never considered being anything but a musician. She went to Washington,
D.C. after she graduated from
college and played on the nightclub circuit there. In 1973 she
gave up her nightclub career to
play women's music and became
involved in the formation of Olivia records . She has an album,
I Know You Know, on the Olivia label and is due to release an other one this year.
Meg Christian and Teresa Trull
are just two of many women who
spend their lives making women's music. Music that according
to Christian, "speaks honestly
and realistically about women's
lives."

'All ,

CI.

Students: 1096 discount
on ALL art sappliea

FILMS
ON CAMPUS
Friday , January 14
.
SMILE (1975) If you mIssed the
censored TV showing a couple of
weeks ago cr didn't catch thiS mOVie
when it played in Olympia last
month, you may want to take In
Michael Ritchie's flawed but funny
story of a stupid beauty cont,:sl.
This is the last word on the Smiley
Button mentality . Presented by the
Fridav Nite Film Series, LH One, 3,
7, and 9:30 p.m .
Saturday . January 15
FOVA FILM FEST The Foundat ion of Visual Art s coordi nate d
studies program presents a lively
bunch of underground movIes. The
films include : "Oh Oem Watermelons, " which is considered by
some an underground claSSIC , but
its satire on racism is out of date
and is only embarrassing now .
"Off{ On" is the "strobe" film . Unfortunately that is not saying much .
Probably the most notorious ~OVI~
in the series is "Pornografoilles,
which despite its reputatIon IS really
nothing but another piece of slimy
porno trash. The idea is good , at
least in your imagination (think o f ,~
naked version of "The Gong Show)
but the actual ity is ug ly, unfunny ,
and humiliating for audience and
performer. The other movies sC h ed ,~
uled ("Catching the ASIan Carp,
"The Divine Miracte ," "The Offhanded Jape," "Necrology," and
"PhySical Fitness") are much bet ter and except for the Him cnt lC i z~d. the showing shou ld be entertaining. LH One , 7 and 9 p.m. $1.
Wednesday, January 19
THE MAN IN THE GLASS BOOTH
(1975) Edward Anhalt adapted Robert Shaw's play about a guilt-ridden,
megalomaniacal millionaire whisked
Irom his New York penthouse to
stand trial in Israel for Nazi war
crimes. Thi s American Film Theater
presentation was directed by Arthur
Hiller. Maximi lian Schell gIves a
thundering performance as Arthur
Goldman I Commandant Dcrf . Presented by the Academic Fi lm Series . LH One, 1 :30 and 7:30 p.m.
FREE.
IN OLYMPIA
KING KONG The big ape still has
no genitals. Olympic Theatre, 3573422.
THE ENFORCER Clint EastWOOd
with a big gun again . Also: FREEBIE AND THE BEAN A confused
piece of violence . State Theatre,
357-4010.
RANCHO DELUXE A disappOinting movie about modern -day calt lerustling. starring Jeff Bndges , and
written by Thomas McGuane , who
wrote the screenplay for the even
more repugnant "Missouri BreakS:"
Feminists will be infuriated by thIS
movie. The Cinema. 943-5914 .

MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
Thursday, January 13
OLD-TIME SQUARE DANCE wit h
live band and caller. All dances patiently taught. Fourth floor library .
7 : 30 p.m. 50 cents donation.
Sunday. January 16
INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANC·
ING with teaching. Beginners welcome. CAB mall. 7:30 to 10 p.m .•
or later.

RADIO AND TELEVISION
Friday , January 14
CRUSTY 'S COOP Crusty is back
and he's crust ier than ever. Tonigh t
the old geezer presen ts "The Blue
Angel" with Marlene Diet ri ch (19301 ,
and four student fil ms. Live music.
and the Case of the Missing Chicken cont inues . Channel 6 Icablevlslon). 11 p.m .
Sunday , Ja nuary 16
NEW YORK PHILHARMONI C
BROADCAST Symphony No . 7. by
Mahler . KAOS-FM , 89 .3, 3:30 0 m.

ART
IN TACOMA
50 OUTSTANDING PHOTO GRAPHS, a jUfled exh ibit Starts
January 7 and continues throughout the month. The Si lver Image
Ga llery , 727 Co mmerce SI. Thurs . .
Sun. 12 - 5 p.m .. or by appoint me nt .
ON CAMPUS
RECENT WORKS BY BILL
RADES 3-D collages, photos. drawings, and paint ing s. Library Art
Gallery , through January 30.
REST EASY, DEAR READERS I
THE STUFFED ALBINO SQUIRRELS ARE BACK TO TORMENT
YOU IN A BRAND-NEW YEAR
FULL OF SURPRISES AND LAFFS
- HOT AND SPICY. PERT AND
SAUCY. SOFT AND SQUISHY THE WAY YOU LIKE 'EM .
THE ALL-NEW 1977 STUFFED
ALBINO SQUIRREL CONVERSATION STOPPERS REVISITED
"You 've been elected secretary of
th e committee."
" Hare Krisna. Hare Krishna . ho
ho ho .
"I know where you' re coming
from ."
"I killed a man once.
" Evergreen? Isn't that a community college, or somet hing ?"
"I just discovered something very
interesting about myself. "
"You musl change yo ur life ' "
"Hey, stupid, that's a beehIve
you're peeing on."
"I'm going to hold my breath until you apologize ."
"I've got fleas."
"In a previous life I was an Indian
princess
"Pick a card, any card."
"Was it something I said?"
"Jesus Christ, you gOlla change
your toothpaste."
"Quit torturi ng yoursel f."
"Want me to tell you something
I've never told anyone in my whole
life? "
Joe Bemis Gallery of Bores. open
24 hours. Our Motto: "Sweets to
the Sweet."

New & Used Rec_ords
Tapes
Concert Tickets

I{ECORP'CO
Westside Center 357· 4755

Volume 5 Number 9

The Evergreen State College

Olympia, Washington 98505

- - - NOTE

Jan 13,197?

TRIM

GEf uP "''''060
APPf"'RIINU.!
'~---

N6T~

<;TEEL-'1

G/'.ll.,'
NOIE RESOLUTE
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NC

<;;:u 8.snl'1JTE. s. \

The Governor Steps In
by Matt Groening

CAMPUS HOUSING

One thing for sure: we're .not in
business to make money.
Low Rates

Free TV-FM Cable

No De~sit Phone

Fully Furnished

Free Utilities

Closest to campus

Come live at our place.

D

I
J

\

aniel J. Evans, former governor of the state
by a day, is on campus today, January 13,
to begin prepara tions to take on the presidency of Evergreen in July, Evans was enthusiastically appointed president by the Board of
Trustees on Tuesday afternoon after the Presidential
Selection Advisory Committee recommended him for
the position unanimously on Decembel' Z2 .
Evans will be on campus regularly until February 28
to plan for his new job with President Charles J. McCann, whose resignation is effective June 30 . A commitment was made by the trustees to the Presidential
Search Committee to arrange a public question-andanswer session between Evans and Evergreen students,
which is expected to take place before the end ~f February .
The search committee's recommendation put an end
to months of speculation and rumors that Evans was
interested in the ' presidency. The only surprise was
how quickly the search committee made its recommendation. Evans was chosen by the committee during its
first and only meeting on December 22.
Since its beginning Evans has been associated with
the college. During his first term as governor, Evans
sought the establishment of another four-year state
college, and he was on hand with a bulldozer and
hard hat for the ceremonial groundbreaking of the library, which was named after him. Evans was also
present at Evergreen's Dedication Day in 1970, which
happened to coincide with the nationwide anti-Vietnam War May Day protests. The Republican governor
wore a black arm-band. On May '19, 1973, Evans
showed up in jeans and rappelled by rope from the
top of the 122-foot clock tower as part of the recreation center dedication. He praised the college then for
"the opportunity it offers the individual to remain individual and develop along.individual lines."
The selection of Evans has ~n criticized by some
newspapers in the state, and state Senator A. L. "Slim"
Rasm!JSlC!n has requested that ' the Senate Education '
Committee investigate the possibility of a "conflict of
interest" 'in the Board of Trustees" appointment. Evans
appointed all fiw ~embers ,of the board when he was
governor. '
'
,
The seneral feelins ort campuS about Evans is one
' of happinesa and .-eJief, althqU&h there is 'criticism by
some students and a few, faculty about the process in

which he was picked . The sentiment most typically
expressed is, " He'll be great for the school."

R

um ~ rs of the impending resignation of President Charles J. McCann were already in
circulation during the summer of 1976 , A
former dean confided to the COOPER
POINT JOURNAL in July that McCann would leave
the college by the end of the coming school year , and
he said that Governor Evans was McCann's possible
successor,
McCann had privately informed the Board of Trusor possibly earlier, the Board discussed with Evans his
aVjlilability for the presidency . Evans apparently declined to make a decision. Had he accepted, the trustees would have unanimously. approved his appointment and there would have been no Presidential Selection Advisory Committee.
Critics have speculated that Evans did not want to
accept in September because of the risk of bad public
reaction, and that a search committee process was designed to defuse potential trouble , Evans said in a press
conference in December that he had wanted to meet
the selection committee to insure that the faculty, staff,
and students wished him to come to the college. "And
I certainly would not have been willing to accept the
responsibility at Evergreen if there wasn't enthusiasm
on their vart," he stated.
On September 15,'1976, over a year after he had informed the trustees of his decision, McCann announced
publicly his resignation, effective in June, 1977. (At a
boardt meeting on Dec. 9, 1976, Trustee and search
committee chairman Herb Hadley maintained that
"the Board .. . upon knowledge just prior to Dr. McCann's announcement of his pending resignation, has
considered people who may be excellent for the position. ")
.
During October and No'vember theol'ganization of
the Presidential Selection Advisory Committee was
planned. Procedural problems were ironed out and on
December 9 the trustees approved the creation of a
IS-member search committee to begin recruiting a
new president.
Members of the committee were Chairman Herb
Hadley, and Trustee Thomas Dixon; faculty members
William Brown, Linda Kahan, and ~Ine Mimms;
Admi(listrative Vice Presidenl , ~ 'Clabaush;AIIociate Dean of Ubrary ServlCIi Dave Carnahan; Affinnative Action Officer Rindetta Jones; clauified .taff

.

members Helen Hannigan and Ben Wo lfe ; sludents
Colleen Hunt and Bud Cook; Evergreen graduate
Anne Lewin ; and community representative Mark
Hoehne ,
The approved pr.Qcedures called for the cnmmi ttee
to recommend six of 'the " best qualified ca nd idates tor
president." Minimum qualifications fo r tlll: nc\\' pres ident inclu ded: a "background of signa l ac hievem ent ,
knowletlge of and ability to wo rk with pr " l:ll ems tha i
colleges and universit ies will face in the next ten year"
successful high-level administrative experience , prl1 \'cn
ability in public and legislati ve relations , pote nti al iN
fund-raising. and an underst and ing of and sy mpa lhv
for. Evergreen 's philosophy . goals, and modes of in·
struction."
The committee was also' instructed to review Ever·
green's Affirmati;'e Action policy and to take "whatever steps are necessary" to secure qualified minority,
candidates in its search, This was approved by Evergreen's Affirmative Action Officer Rindetta Jones.
who was also a voting member of the search committee ,
Seventeen thousand seven hundred dolla rs was allocated to the committee to aid in its search and a December 22 introductory meeting was scheduled.
A much-criticized "short circuit" clause was also in
the board's charge to"the committee . It said the committee could immediately go to the trustees with a
recommendation if it discovered a person "eminently
qualified for the position" - which, of course. meant
Evans. And the committee could. be ·even further
short-circuited, a college spokesman admitted to the
press, because the job would go to Evans immediately
if he accepted it before the committee met on December 22.

A

few students at the December 9 board meeting were critical of the search committee .
Student Joe Dear said, "I would like to
express concern that I have and that is as to
whether the Presidential Search Committee is the 'Dan
Evans Search Committee' .and how this will be perceived by the Ever~ community. I have heard ru.mors, and t~ tend to run around the community .
The cause of my concern is this. If the students, and
, it's probably the whole school, perceives that this is a
" .... tum to ".,. 6
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Media
cpj0137.pdf