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Identifier
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cpj0005
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Title
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The Paper, Volume 1, Number 3 (January 10, 1972)
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Date
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10 January 1972
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Description
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Eng
Page 1: Student Fees Board;
Page 1: ed Participants Plan Structures on Campus;
Page 1: College is Accreditation Candidate;
Page 1: Help Yourselves;
Page 2: Letters: Food Service;
Page 2: Letters: MECHA Salutes Bill;
Page 2: Letters: Grass, Anyone?;
Page 2: Letters: Todos Tapodos (mental irregularity);
Page 2: Residents want Planner for Cooper Point area;
Page 2: (Cartoon) From Last Supplement W.E.C;.
Page 2: Staff Credits;
Page 2: Legislative Forum Tomorrow;
Page 3: Evergreen Sets Student Art Show;
Page 3: Transcendental Meditation;
Page 3: Happenings;
Page 3: Film Co-Op Opens Noon Daily in l2129;
Page 3: Learning Workshop Seeks Aid, Support;
Page 4: Nationwide Voter Registration;
Page 4: ACLU seeks Bill Readers During Session;
Page 4: Mecha en Acclón;
Page 4: Hopi Prophet Will Speak;
Page 4: (advertisement) Capitiol Theatre and Olympia Theater;
Page 4: (advertisement) Disc n Deck;
Page 4: (advertisement) Sea Mart Shopping Center;
Page 4: (advertisement) South Sound National Bank;
Page 4: (advertisement) Westside Speed Wash;
Page 4: Unclassified
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Creator
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Buchwalter, Charlie and Norton, Gary
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Brown, Richard
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Bill
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Moffat, Tim
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Tello, Francisco
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Contributor
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Brockman, Bruce
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Campo, Joe
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Leahy, Lester
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McDougall, Jennifer
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Martin, Don
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Mason, Mike
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Meyers, Andy
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Musgrove, Cam
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Ness, Chris
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Wright, Marvin
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Wilson, Peter
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Subject
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Fees, administrative--Washington (State)--Olympia--Evergreen State College
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Buildings--Environmental engineering
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Evergreen State College--Accreditation
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Transcendental meditation
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Food waste
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Labor unions--Controversies
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Grass, Günter, 1927-2015
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Minorities--Cultural competence
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Art--Exhibit--Washington (State)--Olympia--Evergreen State College
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Advertising, Newspaper
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Donohue, Ken
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Evans, Daniel J., 1925-
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McCann, Charles J.
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Stenberg, Larry R.
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Maharishi Mahesh Yogi
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Grass, Gunter
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Kenworthy, Bill
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White, Sid
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Dickonson, Peggy
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Dexter, Bill
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Steilberg
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Peter
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Wallace, Robert K
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Davis, Sofie
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Leveille,Rock
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Miller, Charles
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Barner, Gorge Jr
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Savage, Carolyn
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Stewart, Craig
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Roberts, Dick
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Moore, Tim
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Arneson, Thomas
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Noonan, Susie
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Renouard, Joe
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Nevel, Stephen
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LeRoy, Eric
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Hansen, Marsali
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Altman, Jancie A.
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Shultz, Tim
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Olson, Cynthia
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Unseold, Regon
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Storset, Mark
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Lewis, Chad
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Rodriquez, Jose
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Perez, Elena
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Tello, Francisco
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Valdez, Carmen
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Farias, Jesus
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Sanchez, Benito
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Banyacya, Thomas
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Prophet, Hopi
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Accredited Institutions of Higher Education for the Federation of Regional Accrediting Commissions of Higher Education.
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American Civil Liberties Union.
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Northwest Association of Secondary and Higher Schools
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New World Foundation
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Rockafeller Brothers Foundation
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Stern Family Fund
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Jacob Caplan Fund
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Leonard and Sophie Davis Foundation
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Format
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application/PDF
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Language
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eng
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Publisher
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The Paper Cooperative, The Evergreen State College
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Extent
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4 pages
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extracted text
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Student
fees
board
VOLUME I NUMBER 3
Evergreen's process for
allocating student Services and
Activities fees money will begin
this month. An eight-member
student board has been randomly
selected and will soon be ready to
consider requests for funding
from the approximately $40,000
in the S and A fund .
Early last year a DTF of eight
students was assembled to draw
up a proposal for the allocation
of student funds. Their finished
and adopted proposal has not
been without
controversy.
Selection of the DTF was
disputed on the grounds that
students had no voice in it and
that it may not hilVe fairly
It has been suggested that this
represented different segments of
procedure is not the most
the community.
The idea of random computer efficient way to allocate the
selection of the eight-member funds. It is generally agreed that
the process is open for evaluation
board was challenged by minority
and change, but could involve
groups on campus because they
bureaucratic tangles.
feel they can not be fairly
Terms of the t ir st eight
represented by someone outside
their own racial, ethnic or members will be staggered--three
sitting for three months, two
cultural group.
As a result, the computer has sitting for two months and three
been programmed to select a for one month. From then on a
board member's term will last
percentage of minority
three months, so there won't be
representation. This may not be
the best solution, but it at least is one massive turnover.
Now that the machinery is
a recognition of the fact that
simple random selection does not · finally rolling, funding requests
can soon be submitted. There are
meet all human and community
no requirements for the manner
needs.
in which they need to be made,
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
but the board may set some.
In the meantime proposals
should be in narrative form and
develop the following points:
assessment of need or interest,
development of the porposal,
actual functioning of activity and
an evaluation process. An
itemized budget and time
schedule for expenditures should
be included.
Anyone interested in receiving
Sand A fees may want to contact
Pete Steilberg or Larry Stenberg
for assistance in developing a
proposal. Also,everyone is invited
to attend a meeting for further
information on the procedure at
4 p.m. Wednesday Jan. 12, in
Room 1420.
January 10, 1972
Olympia, Washington 98505
College is
accreditation
candidate
ED participants plan
structures on campus
EXPERIMENTAL
STRUCTURES
By Charlie Buchwaiter and
Gary Norton,
Environmental Design
A group of Environmental
Design students have taken steps
toward the establishment of an
on-campus
experimental
structures area. this area will
enable members of the Evergreen
community to design, build and
live in their own structures.
People want to build domes,
zomes, yurts, tipis, A-frames as
well as more regular box-like
structures (perhaps out of
recycled materials.) It is believed
that
such
endeavors
are
educationally valid and should
therefore be located on campus.
The only stipulation is that all
structures be nonpermanent. This
is for three principle reasons:
I) As we are concerned with
the complete design cycle, we
must realize that occupancy is
not the ultimate end. The cycle
continues through dismantling
the structures.
2)
An
individual
must
disassemble his/her structure
after a determined time span to
enable subsequent groups to
participate in a similar project.
3)
Temporary
structures
preclude inevitable obsolescence.
The students first step was to
prepare a proposal including a
general statement and a tenative
timetable leading toward actual
construction. Th~ steps included
were 1) site determination, 2)
land-use
survey,
3)
developmental plan of the area,
4) research into various designs
and
the
procurement
of
resources,
and
5)
actual
construction .
Completing the first step, they
have found seven possible sites,
all situated in the western and
norther parts of the campus. The
site chosen is an area off Lewis
Road directly west of the
Library, within easy walking
distance. This site, formerly used
by a cement company, was
chosen because of its many open
areas, variety of terrains, good
but
most
access
routes,
importantly, because it was felt
that it would improve the quality
of the land.
An important part of the
project will be the assemblage of
a coherent, indepth, attractive
presentation to be submitted to
the TESC Board of Trustees, as
any move to alter the existing
campus lands must be approved
by the Board.
Anyone interested in taking
part in any or all of the stages of
the Experimental Structures
Project should either sign up on
the bulletin board in the
Jnfnm: Jtion area or contact
En•.rironmental D~sign.
TESC has been approved as a
candidate for accreditation in the
Northwest Association of
Secondary and Higher Schools,
aocontm. &o President Charles J.
McCann.
In a letter to McCann, the
association's executive director
said: "Candidates for
accreditation will be listed in the
1972 issue of Accredited
Institutions of Higher Education
for the Federation of Regional
Accrediting Commissions of
Higher Education.
Candidates usually qualify for
federally sponsored programs,
the director noted. Also, the
Veteran's Administration treats
candidates the same as fully
accredited institutions
"For students transferring to
other institutions, we recommend
that their transcripts be evaluated
as if from a fully accredited
institution," he observed.
It is almost unprecedented for
a new college to advance to
candidate for accreditation after
only one quarter of operating its
instructional program, according
to McCann. ''This is a real tribute
to our faculty, staff and students
and to the long hours that have
gone into the planning of the
coll••e duli~ tba last four
years," he said .
Evalutations for full
accreditation usually occur after
a school graduates its first major
group of students. In Evergreen's
case, this should happen within
three years.
Evergreen received
correspondent status in June,
1968, following an official visit
by a team from the association.
In September, 1971 , the college
completed an analysis report as
part of the candidate for
accreditation procedure.
A three-member association
team visited the campus on Nov.
3 to conduct a general evaluation.
The evaluation team reviewed
the college's organization, general
purposes, finances, physical
plant, library, administrative
structure, instructional staff,
educational program and general
policies and programs relating to
students.
Help yourselves
One of the original objectives of this paper is to
improve communications between programs
within the college. However, since we are
understaffed, we have not been able to gather
information on such things as special interest
groups, weekly program activities and evaluations.
First, we are asking for input from each
program - by faculty or students - to stimulate
interest and participation in program activities.
Second, we need more people to write, draw
and photograph for the paper. If you are
interested please come to our weekly planning
session tomorrow at 3 p.m. in 3216. We need
community support!
MECHA salutes Bill
Food service
LETTERS
I would like to inform the
Evergreen students of the present
food service at our school. I feel
that something should be done
about the waste of food. I used to
work as a pot washer at food
services and they wasted a hell of
alot of food. Keep this in mind
also, I only worked on weekends,
and one Sunday I could recall
them throwing out 160 pieces of
half chickens. Which could have
been used by the students or
hungry people anywhere. I feel
they could sell food at 1/2 the
price and make a clear profit
rather than giving it to the garbage
cans. If interested in doing
something about it, contact me at
horne or at school (C.A.M.I
program.
Richard Brown
Build. A. RM 607
All letters to The Paper Co-operative are welcome. Such
contributions will be printed as space aUows.
In order for letters and guest editorials to be printed, each must
carry the fuU name as weD as the address and local phone number of
the author. Unsigned letters or those submitted with pseudonyms
will not be printed, altholllh names will be withheld on request.
Ordinary correspondence must be typed and limited to 2SO words
or less. The Paper Co-operative reserves the right to edit for matters
of libel.
Contributions may be submitted to the newspaper office in
Ubrary Room 3216.
When
some MECHA memben
approached Mr. Bill Kenworthy, of the
snack bar food service, on the question
of union and non-union lettuce we
were pleasantly surprised to hear that
Bill was well up on the lettuce issue.
He assured us that he was doing what
he could to respect the cause of the
Chicano and the union struggles. Well,
words and promises have been made
before and quite frankly, we had the
feeling that "the road to hell Is paved
withgoodintentlons:'surprlsel Today I
went to the snack bar to have a
hamburger and was about to refuse
lettuce when Bill walked up from
behind and assured me that It was
union lettuce and quite testy. He was
right and it even made me feel good to
know that the man is trying and more
important, doing it. Thanks Bill I
Grass, anyone?
To the staff of The Paper
I am interested in finding other
people on campus who want to get
together for the purpose of discussing
the writings of the German novelist
and playwright Gunter Grass. Grass is
the author of The Tin Drum, Cat and
Mouse, Dog Yean, and most recently,
Local Anesthetic.
Besides being a consummate stylist,
Gress has managed to produce a
literature which is "German" in the
way Joyce's writing is Irish: humorous,
critical, reflecting a sense of the
collective mind of postwar Germany,
with a care and undentanding that is
rare In any modem literature.
Get a hold of these books if you
haven't read them, of it you have,
contact me in Library room 2503.
Grass is also a poat, a sculptor and a
politician. Interdisciplinary Grass.
Tim Moffat
Environmental Design
Todostapodos
(mental
irregularity)
Ignorance was the most outstanding
character that the board of trustees
was able to display at their debut
appearance at the TESC campus in
their last meeting. The large group of
minorities present weren't the least
surprised as to · the darkness that
baffled the brightest of the trustees.
Such trite cliches as "We undentand
your problems" seemed to foam from
their erratic mouths.
The govemor must have been having
a nightmare when he chose the present
board of trust- or perhaps their
similarities to each other resulted in his
neanightad judgement. The trustees
should have the knowledge and
foresight to produce some ·kind of
meaningful solutions to the student
problems but they are so busy patting
each othen ass that thay can't see
above their belts. If the board
continues trucking blindly you can
assure yourself that they will run into
a dead end when thay travel the
problem saturated street of the
Minority.
Francisco Tello
Residents want planner
for Cooper Point area
Determined to avoid another
unorganized confrontation with
the county commissioners,the
Cooper Point Association (CPA)
met last Wednesday to feel out
public opinion on a development
plan proposal for the point.
The association's interim board,
headed by Bill Dexter, Cooper
Point resident and lawyer,
proposed the hiring of a full time
planner who would draw up a
comprehensive development plan
for the point.
According to the CPA, the
county doesn't have the time or
money to produce a plan that
would "accomoda te growth on
that
is
reasonable
terms
consistent with the character of
the earth."
However, CPA believes that
the Peaceacres incident proves
the commissioners are willing to
give in to economic pressures for
rezonin~
with little if any
From Last Supplement W.E.C.
staff
Bruce Brockmann
disapproved of having the CPA
planner in the courthouse,
contending that this would
jeopardize CPA control over him.
However,
residents
were
assured that the planner would be
a CPA employe and would only
be using survey materials and
public records provided by the
county.
The biggest debate was on how
binding the completed plan
would be on the commissioners.
Several disagreed with the
optimistic
view
that
the
commissioners would accept it,
and called for organized legal and
political backing.
The immediate need of raising
the $15,000 was stressed by Ron
Clark, resident and professional
planner.
"If we don't come up with a
good plan, sometime this year
uncontrolled
individual
development will start," he said.
Legislative Forum tomorrow
the co-operative
Joe Campo
Lester Leahy
Jennifer McDougall
Don Martin
advance planning.
Last
November
the
commissioners nearly approved a
rezoning ordinance to allow
unplanned
residential
development of the Peaceacres
plot south of campus. Little
information was provided by the
developers
on
density,
transportation, or open spaces.
The ordinance is under a stay of
execution
but
will
be
reconsidered
by
the
commissioners in February.
In the meantime CPA wants to
take the positive step of aiding
the commissioners in planning
point
development.
They
approved a proposal to raise
$15,000 to hire the planner.
This planner would translate
of the
development
ideas
residents into one plan and would
contract for services provided by
the courthouse,
Several present at the meeting
Mike Mason
Andy Meyers
Cam Musgrove
Chris Ness
Marvin Wright
Peter Wilson
The Paper is ~ublished weekly as a co-operative effort for the
students, faculty and staff of The Evergreen State CoUege, Olympia,
Washington 98SOS. Editorial comment contained herein does not
necessarily represent the views of the TESC community but rather
those of the individual author. Advertising material presented herein
does not necessarily imply endorsement by this newspaper.
Newspaper offices are located in Library Room 3216, temporary
campus extension (7S3) 3188.
Should state politicians be
to
disclose
their
required
campaign expenditures? Should
all donations made to elected
office-holders be part of the
public record?
These are a sample of the
questions which will be raised at
the first session of the Legislative
Forum at 9 a.m., Jan. ll, in the
Olympia City Hall.
Legislative Forum, sponsored
jointly by the League of Women
Voters,
Evergreen
College
Community
Organization,
YWCA, and the American
Association
of
University
Women, is a series of weekly
meetings held during each
legislative session to keep the
PAGE .2 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE January 10, 1972
public informed on the issues
being
considered
by
the
legislature.
In
addition
to
the
court-imposed
necessity
of
redistricting the state, this special
session of the legislature was
called by Governor Dan Evans
because there are several issues
which the governor feels should
not wait another full year before
being
considered
by
the
legislature.
This executive-request bill
package will be presented to the
Legislative Forum by James
Dolliver, administrative assistant
to Governor Evans, at next
Tuesday's Forum. Some of the
topics to be included in ' tlie
discussion will be economic
recovery, tax reform, governmental
reform, and people-participation
type bills such as campaign
financing. Dolliver has agreed to
stay for a question and answer
session
following
his
presentation.
These sessions are free and
open to the public and will be
held on successive Tuesday
mornings in city hall beginning
with coffee at 9 a.m. followed by
a 9:30 opening. The meetings last
until 11:30 or sometimes 12:00
when
discussion
is
lively.
Babysitting at a nominal fee will
be provided at the First United
Methodist Church
----------------------~--------~-------------------------~---------------~--~--~~--------~
Evergreen sets
student art show
A special Evergreen student art
show will be held Jan. 18 and 19
in the second floor lobby of the
library. Students are invited to
enter their favorite art
works--paintings, sculptures,
textiles, ceramics, jewelry, crafts,
etc.-prior to the exhibition by
taking the items to Room 3125.
Two of the entries will be
chosen by a faculty-student jury
for inclusion in the 1972
Governor's Invitational
Exhibition of Washington Artists,
·scheduled Feb. 6 at the State
Capitol Museum in Olympia and
in the Evergreen Art Gallery (4th
floor, Library).
governor. And, one of the 32
student entries will receive the
first Donald G. Heard Purchase
Award, a $100 prize offered by
Evergreen in memory of the late
faculty member who was killed in
an October 28 highway accident.
Don, a sculptor and painter, had
been with Evergreen only a short
time as a member or' the Space,
Time, and Form Program.
The Governor's Invitational
show, sponsored by the museum
in cooperation with Evergreen,
will be held from 2 to 5 p.m.
Feb. 6. Formal ceremonies and
presentation of awards will be at
the museum. Professional and
The Invitational Exhibition, student art works will be
the major show of the annual · displayed at both the museum
Governor's Festival of the Arts, and the college.
w i 11 i n c 1u de works b y
Further information about the
professional artists in Washington special exhibit at Evergreen and
and, for the first time, works by the february 6 showings may be
students from the 16 public and obtained from Faculty Members
private four-year colleges and Sid White and Peggy Dickinson or
universities in the state.
from Director of Recreation and
One of the 33 professional Campus Activities Pete Steilberg.
entrants will receive an Award of Interested people should sign up
Special Commendation from the at the information center.
Film Co-op opens
noon daily in L2129
Because
many
students,
faculty and staff at Evergreen are
interested in photography, a film
co-op has been organized to help
counter the exceptionally high
cost of film and materials.
The co-op is run on a total
non-profit basis. Membership
contributions are a minimum of
five dollars and are used as initial
capitol to buy film and supplies
at the lowest possible price.
These supplies will then be
available to members of the co-op
at cost plus any shipping charge,A
member may at any time cancel
his membership and will be
refunded his initial donation in
either cash and/or supplies. In
short money is being pooled and
buying in · large quantities,
therefore attaining the lowest
possible cost.
So far they have bought 35mm
(b&w, and color), super 8 (b&w,
and color) and a small supply of
photographic paper. As more
people join their stock will
expand to meet any individual
needs.
Film will be distributed and
memberships will be taken from
12 to 1 p.m., Monday through
Friday in Room 2129 in the
library. "Because no one is
making any bread and we all are
very busy (more interested in
taking pictures than selling film)
help will be appreciated at any
time." According to a co-op
spokesman, if you have any
questions about the co-op and
would like to see our prices
please come to Room 2129. We
need all the help and members we
can get."
Learning Workshop
seeks aid, support
A newly organized project
called Learning Workshop, which
is affiliated with Thurston Youth
Services Society, is in need of
ideas , energy, materials and
special skills.
Not yet funded the group
would appre cia t e an ything
Evergreens could do o r
contribute for the fledgling
e ffort. The Oly m pia-area
workshop will open today, Jan.
10, and will be open Monday
through Friday afternoons and
evenings. Essentially the service
will be used by high school-aged
people although many older and
younger are expected.
Participants will be starting out
with a sexuality discussion group,
then a cooking orgy, rascism
workshop, auto machanics
workshop, crafts workshop,
organic gardening project,
beginning guitar and whatever
happens along.
The workshop sounds like it
could be a great thing, the type
of activity anyone would have
enjoyed if it had been available in
high school. Those eager to give
somebody th e o pp or tunity
should call Jane t Stein at the
workshop 943-8035, to see what
can be done. Her number at
home, if the phone has been
reconnected, is 943-9656.
Transcendental meditation
Transcendental Meditation, as
taught by Maharishi Mahesh
Yogi , is a technique practiced by
over 100,000 students in the
United
States
alone.
SIMS--Students'
International
Meditation Society--is a rapidly
growing campus movement that
describes TM in this way: "TM is
a natural technique which allows
the conscious mind to experience
increasingly more subtle states of
though until the source of
thought, the unlimited reservoir
of
energy
and
creative
intelligence, is reached."
This
simple
technique,
practiced twice a day in 15 to 20
minute periods, serves to improve
all areas of life by alleviating
stress, strain, and suffering in the
individual.
Students
who
meditate report that their studies
improve as they seem to have
more energy and greater peace of others. These results distinguish
mind. The movement has also this state from the common
attracted
housewives, states of consciousness such as
businessmen and professional waking, dreaming , sleeping, and
people who all report beneficial altered states of consciousness
as
hypnosis
and
results from practicing the such
· conditioning. Further research is
technique.
Robert
K.
Wallace, being carried out concerning the
physiologist at Harvard Medical effects of TM on high blood
hypertension
and
School, has been doing in-depth pressure,
research on the effects of TM, treatment of drug abuse.
and has published his findings in
As more and more studies
the "Physiological Effects of conclude surprising, good results,
Transcendental Meditation" in more and more people begin the
Science; March 1970. He proposes technique. And everyone who
that an individual actually begins (anyone who can think
learn
this
process)
experiences a fourth state of can
consciousness as he practices TM. experiences immediate results.
This
state,
called "restful
SIMS is offering introductory
alertness,'' is defmed by specific lectures
on
Transcendental
physiological changes such as Meditation at Evergreen tonite at
reduced
blood
pressure, 7:30 in lecture hall No, 5, and on
decreased cardiac output and Thursday, Jan. 13, at 1:00 p,m, in
increased skin resistance among lecture hall No. S.
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
Ski School meeting: 7:30p.m., Lecture Hall
3.
ALL WEEK
Sign-up for Men's ·Intramural JSasKetoaH
Library Room 3204, Deadline S p.m. January
14.
Monday, January 10
The Evergreen Film Society Presents: "War
Game" and Universe (winner ofl8 international
awards), Lecture Hall 1 (gold), 7:00 p.m. and
9:15 showings. 7S cents. All welcome.
Introductory lecture on the technique of
Transcendental Meditation as taught by
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi: 7:30 p.m., Lecture
HallS.
Drama Club: 7:30-9:00 p.m., 3rd floor
bibrary-bobby ne:u Room 3-22:1.
Dance Club : 12:00-1:30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby.
Computer Workshop, 8:00 a.m. to S:OO
p.m., Library lS06 (Carl Brown-- 3920-for
details).
Evergreen Political Action Group: 6:00p.m.,
Library 3215.
Learning Co-op General Meeting: 4:00 p.m.,
Library 2614. All welcome.
Yoga Club: 7:30-9:30 a.m., Library 1S06C.
Beginning Ballet: 7:30 p.m., outside
cafeteria.
Tuesday, January 11
Yoga Club: 7:00-9:00 p.m. , Library 1506C.
Beginning Ballet: 7:00 p.m., outside
cafeteria.
Jazz Dance Club: 12:00-1:30 p.m., 2nd floor
Library Lobby, $1.00 per lesson, open to all
men and women of Evergreen.
Ski Film: New "K-2" (Bruce Roth for
details, phone 318S).
Fencing Class: ll:30 a.m., 2nd floor Library
Lobby.
Dance Club: 12:00-1:30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby.
Essay writing workshop (Learning Co-op), 10
a.m. to 12:00 noon, Library 2614
DTF on Entertainment at Evergreen: 3:00
p.m., Library 3237 {Cip Garcia student
chairman)
Newspaper planning meeting, 3 p.m., Library
Room 3216, We need your help.
Wednesday, January 12
Meeting of Services and Activities Fees Panel,
4:00p.m., Library 1420 {all urged to attend).
President's Council meeting: 12:00-3:00
p.m., Library 3111.
Women at Evergreen: Brown bag lunch,
noon, Library 2614.
Dance Club: 12:00-1:30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby.
Photography Interest Group: 7:30 p.m.,
Communications and Intelligence Lounge,
2nd floor of library.
Volleyball: Washington Jr. High School
Gym , 7:00p.m.
Public Lecture State Rep. William Chatalas,
Seattle Democrat {33rd District). Topic: "The
Nisqually Delta." 7:00-9:00 p.m.
LAST
DAY
TO SIGN UP FOR
COEDUCATIONAL BOWLING. DEADLINE
5:00p.m., Library 3204
Thursday, January 13
Yoga Club: 7:00-9:00 p.m., Library lS06C.
Beginning Ballet: 7:30 p.m., outside
cafeteria.
Young Life Meeting: 4:00-6:00 p.m., Library
1401.
Dance Club: 12:00-1:30 p.m., 2nd floor
Library Lobby.
Fencing Class:
11:30 a.m. , 2nd floor
Library Lobby.
Introductory · Lectures on Transcendental
Meditation: 1:00 p.m., Lecture HallS and again
at 7:30p.m., Lecture Hall 5.
Sounding Board meeting: 8:30-10:00 a.m.,
Library 1420.
Friday, January 14
The Evergreen Film Society Presents:
"Psycho" (Alfred Hitchcock chiller). Lecture
Hall 1 (gold), 7:00 p.m., and 9: 1S p.m.
showings. 7S cents. All welcome.
Yoga Club: 7:30-9:30 a.m., Library 1506C.
College Forum Meeting: 2:30 p.m., Lecture
Hall4 (blue).
Faith Center Meeting: 1:00 p.m., Library
1420.
Dance Club: 12:00-1:30 p.m., 2nd floor
Library Lobby.
Sign-up for skiing at Crystal Mtn.,
3204. (Lessons start Jan. 15.)
LAST DAY TO SIGN UP FOR MEN'
INTRAMURAL BASKETBALL. Deadline
p.m., Library 3204.
Saturday, January 1S
Soccer: Woodruff Park Field, Olympia,
12:30 p.m.
Skiing at Crystal Mtn.
Sunday, January 16
Opening of "The Pride and The Shame''
Japanese-American Citizens League exhibition,
2nd floor Library Reference Area, 2: 00-S: 00
p.m. Continues through Jan 28 .
Soccer: Woodruff Park Field , Olympia,
12 :30 p.m.
Skiing at Crystal Mt.
January 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE . PAGE 3
(all from the Individual, Citizen
and State Program); Marsali
Hansen, and Janice L. Altman
(both from the Individu.al In
·America Program); Tim Schultz,
and Cynthia Olson (both from
the Causality, Freedom and
Chance Program) Regon Unsoeld
(from the Human Development
Program); Mark Storset (Man and
Art Program); and Chad Lewis
(Human Behaviour Program).
The students will undergo an
intensive three-day training
seminar prior to beginning their
field experience. The seminar, to
be conducted by Washington,
D.C., staff members of Student
Vote, will be designed to
familiarize the students with
organizational methods and
procedures, election laws of the
states in which they will be
interning, and skills necessary to
their development as effective
interns.
After those sessions, the
students, along with 1 5 interns
from a handful of other schools
participating in Student Vote's
first project, will be dispersed
into several of the 50 states,
where they will complete two
voter registration projects, each
of about six weeks length.
"The in terns will go into
various areas under the direction
of paid professional Student Vote
field supervisors and organize and
complete voter registration
projects," Director ·of
Cooperative Education Ken
Donohue explained. "After each
project, the student interns will
write an analytical paper,
describing the problems
encountered, levels of success,
the attitudes of people toward
the Democratic process, etc. In
other words, a very full report.
Meanwhile, they will have had a
chance to learn how the elective
Nationwide
voter
registration
Eighteen students will
participate as interns in a
newly-created nationwide voter
registration program, receiving
full academic credit for their
working/learning efforts.
The students, will comprise
more than half the total of
collegians in the initial effort of
the new Student Vote
organization, headquartered in
Washington, D . C. and
coordinated by Director Rock
Leveille.
Student Vote is a nationwide
program in which interns are
placed in the field to organize
and direct voter registration
drives which, hopefully, will
occur in all 50 states during the
Winter and Spring college terms.
Although efforts will concentrate
in areas of high-population
density and containing large
college and university
populations, the voter
registration drive will be
addressed to all age levels.
A non-partisan organization,
Student Vote is funded by
MECHA
en
•
I
OCCIOn
Hopi prophet
will speak
.
The Contemporary American
Minorities program will present
Thomas Banyacya, a Hopi
Prophet, this Wed., Jan. 12. The
times and places where he will
speak will be posted on the CAM
bulletin board. It is hoped that he
will be able to stay here for the
entire day but this has not yet
been confirmed.
voluntary contributions and by
grants from the New World
Foundation, Field Foundation,
Rockefeller Brothers Foundation,
Stern Family Fund, Norman
Foundation, Jacob Kaplan Fund,
and the Leonard and Sophie
Davis Foundation.
The 18 Evergreen students
were selected during a December
31 interview conducted in
Olympia by the West Coast
Student Vote Coordinator, Janet
Bennett of Portland. Candidates
were picked from the list of
students who previously had
made application for
politically-connected internships
through Cooperative Education
Program.
Evergreen interns include:
Charles Miller, George Barner, Jr.,
(both from the Political Ecology
Coordinated Studies Program);
Carolyn Savage, Craig Stewart,
Dick Roberts, and Tim Moore (all
from the Environmental Design
Program); Thomas Arneson,
Susan Noonan, Joe Renouard,
Erik LeRoy, and Stephen Nevel
The special session of the
Washington State Legislature
opens today, Jan. 10.
Encompassed in the many bills
that will be considered this
session are many that may have
provisions opposed to-- or
supporting--the civil liberties of
American citizens, but the
American Civil LibertiesUnion
does not know which bills take
which stand as yet.
Since the Supreme Court of
the United States is passing out
of the Warren era into a more
represive position; the ACLU is
shifting its national process from
the courts to the Legislative
process.
The local chapter is in need of
bill readers to read the proposed
laws that will be presented to the
legislature. These readers will
refer any bills of questionable
content to the lawyers employed
by the ACLU.
There is also a need for
lobbyists. Anyone interested in
assisting in reading or lobbying
for legislation coming up during
this session should get in contact
with Torrie (CAM) at 3965.
I.IIRAIV
NH* U07
Now Would Be Time to Open Your New Account
SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
Westside Speed Wash
1214 WEST HARRISON OPENDAILY
e
4th & CAPITOL WAY
Ba.m. -10p.m
S!JaCe. Below Donated For Personal Ads For The
10 to 5:30, Mon.-Sat.; 10 to 8, Fri.; 12 to 5, Sun.
******************************
Evergreen Student Community By Westside Speed Wash.
\\~
lEVEL
,b~l~
Free Parking •
One Stop Shopping
Open 7 Days A Week
·-
/A
SeA MART
Mon.· Tues: "Diamonds are Forever."
Starts Wed: "Big Doll House" and
"Student Nurses"
ACLU seeks
bill readers
during session
Records, Tapes, TVs, Stereos
'""a..
Mon.- Tues: "Murders in Rue Marge'
& "Return of Count Yorga." Starts
Wed: "Greatest Story Ever Told"
working on new program ideas
for the coming year which may
result in a more productive
minorities studies. The members
have also been doing some public
relations work in Olympia and
surrounding
communities.
Presentations have been made to
several of the schools and plans
are underway to schedule civic
group presentations.
Briefly, these are some of the
things MECHA is into. They wish
to take this opportunity to solicit
any input from anyone wishing
to learn more aobut MECHA and
its objectives.
MECHA (Movirniento Estudiantil
Chicano de Aztlan) elected its
officers for 1971-1972 school year
in a meeting before the Christmas
holidays began. The following
persons were elected to hold
office in MECHA: Chairman Jose Rodriquez, Vice-Chairman Elena Perez, Secretary - Francisco
Tello, Treasurer- Carmen Valdez,
Public Relations - Jesus Farias,
Sounding Board Rep. - Benito
Sanchez.
MECHA has been active in the
past month with various issues
particularly with admission and
recruiting policies. They are
process works from the local to
the national leveL"
Evaluations for credit will
differ somewhat because our
Student Vote interns come from
several different Coordinated
Studies Programs," Donohue
explained. "Many of these
programs have built-in internship
options for interested students.
The Student Vote project carries
particular relevance to a number
of programs because of its direct
relationship to their group
studies.
Evergreen will assume no
expenses for the Student Vote
program, outside of some costs
incurred in contacting
prospective candidates-mostly by
long distance telephone--to set up
the internships during a holiday
period in which the college's
student literally were were
scattered throughout the
country. The Student Vote
organization will pay all travel
costs associated with the
internship program and will
provide students with food,
lodging and $20 per week in
pocket money for the entire
quarter.
"We're very excited about this
enterprise,"Donohue said. "If the
program continues-and I think it
will-we will be placing more
student interns during Spring
Quarter. These internships are
right in line with one of
Evergreen's basic objectives--to
make the learning conditions
resemble the 'real world' in which
students must function when
they leave college."
SHOPPING .,...n~
500 Capitol Way, Olympia
__,~·.
•'
.
~·
.
_......._,........_....,._.},,
Unclassified
1955 CHEV, 2 door, 327 cu. ln.,
air shocks, 5 new tires, stick on
floor, Needs some work on
windshield wipers and hood.
Contact Rick Brown at Minority
Affairs, Library first floor.
ALL SCHOOL BOOGIE! Friday,
Jan.• 14, 9:30 p.m.-12:30 a.m., 75
cents, cafeteria, Sky Brothers - a
f our
piece
rock
group.
Out.-ageous music and vocals, all
kinds of music.
WANTED:
ROOMMATES
to
share a 3 bedroom duplex, wall to
wall carpeting, fireplace, kitchen,
unfurnished. Located on Oyster
Bay, approximately 8 miles from
campus
(Need
own
transportation). 550 acres of
surrounding woods and bay, barn,
garage. Pets allowed. 2 friends
(female) may share a room-- then
rent would be $38.50 month, If 1,
then $50. Contact Sue Dennis or
Leslie Thayer, (753) 2564, D 303.
RIDE WANTED. Ride from
Summit Lake or vicinity dally,
starting winter quarter. Will be
glad to share expenses. Jane,
(753) 5789, Mod 3CJ A or C/O
f>olltlcal Ecology.
WANTED
TWO
MELLOW
ROOMMATES, male, to share
rent In large two bedroom duplex.
$25 month. Inquire 1015 State
Street, Olympia, or leave message
at 35 2-111 9.
T.:l
]:L\lh_~Gll.RRh.T
!IT.
::tJ:I
C\ I RC
lanuar:.v .0. 9'1
-
Source
-
Eng
US-WaOE.A.1973-01
-
Is Part Of
-
Eng
The Cooper Point Journal