The Paper, Volume 1, Number 8 (March 10, 1972)

Item

Identifier
Eng cpj0010
Title
Eng The Paper, Volume 1, Number 8 (March 10, 1972)
Date
10 March 1972
Description
Eng Page 1: Rite of Spring Evergreen's jubilee;
Page 1: Schedule;
Page 2: Precinct Caucus Reports;
Page 2: Precinct Reports;
Page 2: Fees Schedule;
Page 2: Senate Cuts Evergreen State College Budget 5 Million;
Page 2: Opinion Article: Response!;
Page 2: Opinion Article;
Page 3: Happenings;
Page 4: State Liquor Monopoly Unnecessary;
Page 5: Costigan Voices Various Views;
Page 5: Liberal Development;
Page 5: American Liberalism;
Page 5: Mcgovern vs. Nixon;
Page 5: Youth Involvement;
Page 5: The Liberal Vote;
Page 5: Student Registration;
Page 6: Campaign Issues (continued page 7);
Page 6: Give Evergreen a Chance (page 7);
Page 6: From the Blossom Patch;
Page 7: March Moratorium?;
Page 7: Protection Agency;
Page 7: Student Vote Returns;
Page 7: Media Asks Prompt Return;
Page 7: (advertisement) Olympia Theater;
Page 7: (advertisement) Capital Theater;
Page 7: 'Little Orphan Abbie';
Page 8: Letters: U.S. Farce;
Page 8: Letters: Ideal?;
Page 8: Letters: Communicate!;
Page 8: Letters: Costigan...;
Page 8: U.S. Resisters;
Page 8: Dear Readers;
Page 9: Vewpoint;
Page 9: (Cartoon) [Military Dissenters];
Page 9: Thank You, Trustees! Trust Us;.
Page 9: Staff Credits;
Page 10: Crime Prevention Commission Seeks Interns;
Page 10: The People did This': Angela out on Bail;
Page 10: Resident Tuition Non-...;
Page 10: "Paper" Deadlines;
Page 10: (Cartoon) [Men with Top Hats in Formation];
Page 11: March for Cooper Point;
Page 11: Library to be Depository;
Page 11: Transportation DTF;
Page 11: (Cartoon) [Government];
Page 12: Ananda Marga Yoga;
Page 12: Learning Group Resourceful;
Page 12: (Cartoon) Our Service May not be for Everyone [Sunnyview Nudist Camp];
Page 12: Travel Contracts;
Page 13: Draft Counseling;
Page 13: Photoimage-Manacled Hands;
Page 13: FM Radio;
Page 13: Guides at Evergreen;
Page 13: Organic Farm Needs;
Page 13: Spring Fun;
Page 13: (Photo) House of Bondage;
Page 13: (advertisement) Hendrick's Rexall Drugs;
Page 13: (advertisement) The Music Bar;
Page 14: (Cartoon) The Evergreen Game;
Page 15: Bloodletting in Casuality;
Page 15: From Great Geo Himself;
Page 15: Photo Displays;
Page 15: United Creativity;
Page 15: Environment and Society;
Page 16: Moles;
Page 16: Ecotactics;
Page 16: Army Films;
Page 16: (advertisement) South Sound National Bank;
Page 16: (advertisement) Disc n Deck;
Page 16: (advertisement) Bob's Big Burgers;
Page 16: Westside Speed Wash;
Page 16: Unclassifieds
Creator
Eng Balsley, Ken
Eng Turnage, Bob
Eng Vermeire, Jerry
Eng Brockmann, Bruce
Eng Apperson, Craig
Eng Long, Ngo Vinh
Eng Sampson, Tom
Eng McConnell, Karen
Eng Stephens, Charles
Eng Alexander, Pam
Eng Unsoled, Devi
Contributor
Eng Ness, Chris
Eng Leahy, Lester L.
Eng Campo, Joe
Eng Senn, Diane
Eng Brockmann, Bruce
Eng Musgrove, Cam
Eng Pagel, Kit
Eng Miller, Mike
Eng Balsley, Ken
Eng Stevens, Charles
Eng Turnage, Bob
Subject
Eng Elections
Eng Legislation
Eng Moles (Animals)
Eng Organic farming
Eng Yoga: Liquor Prices
Eng Decriminalization of Marijuana
Eng Draft Resistance
Eng Voting
Eng Tuition
Eng Vietnam War
Eng Crime Prevention
Eng Yoga
Eng Travel Contracts
Eng Bloodtyping
Eng Costigan, Giovanni, 1905-1990
Eng Sampson, Tom
Eng Unsoeld, Devi
Eng Argenells, Jose
Eng Chan, Don
Eng thompson, Carrilu
Eng Adams, John
Eng Jackson, Henry
Eng Mcgovern, George
Eng Speer, Rick
Eng Youtz, Bernice
Eng Vanderman, Mary
Eng Wagness, John
Eng Taylor, Jack
Eng Crocker, Bob
Eng Van Der Croft, Bart
Eng Swift, Nick
Eng Skinner, Jody
Eng Ice, Steve
Eng Calof, David
Eng Holm, Ed
Eng Stephen, Rodher
Eng Russell, Larry
Eng Spielholz, Hannah
Eng Unsoeld, Willi
Eng Layton, Carol
Eng Willis, Marlene
Eng Lewis, Henry
Eng Wolf, Hal
Eng Conway, Floyd
Eng Dreyer, Carl
Eng Wilk, Dick
Eng David, Joe
Eng Chaplin, Charlie
Eng Freeney, Jill
Eng Kerr, Gene
Eng Dunning, Bill
Eng Smith, Jack
Eng DeFord, Gene
Eng Delado, Medardo
Eng Gilllis, Robert
Eng Mead, Jim
Eng Osborne, diane, LaParade, Larry
Eng Painter, Christi
Eng Petrich, Joe
Eng Pruske, Jim
Eng Irwin, Mey, Swain, Tim
Eng Kahn, Doug
Eng Chan, Don
Eng Jehu, Kristy
Eng Buckley, William
Eng Roosevelt, Theodore
Eng Roosevelt, Franklin Delano
Eng Wilson, Woodrow
Eng Mcgovern, George
Eng Noxion, Richard
Eng Nader, Ralph
Eng Wallace, George
Eng McCarthy, Eugene
Eng Muskie, Edmond
Eng Lindsay, John
Eng Donohue, Ken
Eng Wilcox, Stephen
Eng Yarbrough, Debbie
Eng Abbot, Thomsen
Eng Ross, Michael
Eng Peffer, Lou-Ellen
Eng Newton, Nor
Eng Brockway, Mariel
Eng Dobbs, Carolyn
Eng Steinberg, Larry
Eng Youtz, Byron
Eng Bernard, Robert
Eng Hitchens, Dave
Eng Stepherson, Lem
Eng Brian, Dick
Eng Barringer, Bob
Eng Stone, Chipper
Eng Gonzales, Arturo
Eng Duverglass, Yves
Eng Peterson, David
Eng Johnson, Laurel Lee
Eng Anderson, Jack
Eng Hoover, J. Edgar
Eng Hearst, Randolph William Jr
Eng Finbhbar, Paul R.
Eng Cate, J.
Eng Collins, Walter
Eng Johnston, Lee Otis
Eng Sinclair, John
Eng Nguyễn Văn Thiệu
Eng Qua, Tran Van
Eng Ngo Ba Thanh, Kissinger Henry
Eng Tausend, Fred
Eng Bond, Julian
Eng Davis, Angela
Eng Aranason, Richard
Eng Regan, Ronald
Eng Magee, Ruchell
Eng Jackson, George
Eng Bales, Bruce
Eng Moor, Howard
Eng Ryan, William
Eng Hansen, Julia Butler
Eng Holly, Jim
Eng Kling, Robert E. Jr.
Eng Stilson, Malcolm
Eng Reynolds, Maryan E.
Eng Ross, Marc
Eng Stevens, Nancy
Eng Winhie, Bill
Eng Stephens, Charlie
Eng Peterson, Jack
Eng Rao, Acharya Dharmendra
Eng Anandamutijii, Shrii Shrii
Eng Buchwater, Charlie
Eng Barclay, Esther
Eng Riggins, Steve
Eng Martin
Eng Gail
Eng Chang, Dan
Eng Esquivel, Cruz
Eng Teske, : Cadwallader, Mervyn
Eng Moffatt, Susan
Eng Alexander, Adrienne
Eng Nichols, Dick
Eng Cole, Ernest
Eng Roth, Bruce
Eng Costello, Carol
Eng Parsons, Willie L.
Eng Darwin, Charles
Eng Wolfe, Hal
Eng Durkin, Martin
Eng Lewis, Harry
Eng Pollack, Sidney
Eng Browning, Tod
Eng Kubrick, Stanley
Eng Disney, Walt
Eng Altman, Robert
Eng Antonioni, Michaelangeo
Eng Anderson, Linday
Eng Wesler, Haskell
Eng Foster, Frankie
Eng Snyder, Gary
Eng Little, Charles E.
Eng Johnson, Camille
Eng Euar, Laur
Eng Hartung, John David
Eng Livingston, Mike
Eng KAOS.
Eng Liberation News Services . Delphi Valley Review
Eng National Convention
Eng The House Of Representitives
Eng Channel 9
Eng Sky Church
Eng The Paper
Eng McDonald Douglas Corporation
Eng Washingtion Jr. High School'
Eng St. Martins
Eng Able Company
Eng Asphodel Fields Theatre proplr
Eng The Evergreen State College
Eng Navy Seals underwater Demolition Team
Eng National Defense Reserve Fleet
Eng Springfeild Rifel
Eng Adam Wind
Eng University of Washingtion
Eng Sidewinder
Eng Delphi Valley Review
Eng Amplified Vision
Eng Seagrams
Eng League of Nations
Eng United Nations
Eng Basic Liberation of Smokers and Sympathizers of Marijuana (BLOSSOM)
Eng National Commissionon Marijuana and Drug Abuse
Eng Attorney Generals Office
Eng Capitol Theature
Eng Olympic Theatre
Eng Walt Disney
Eng Hearst Newspaper
Eng The United States Government
Eng Augsbury Publishing House
Eng The Seattle Times
Eng Us Supreme Court
Eng Southern Confrence Educational Fund
Eng National Association Of Black Students
Eng Liberation News Service
Eng Thoi Bao Ga
Eng Vietnam Resource Center
Eng Saigon Army
Eng Seattle Crime Prevention Advisory Commission
Eng California Supreme Court
Eng Cooper Point Association
Eng Jefferson Junior High School
Eng Olympias Wanderer's Scoiety
Eng Amanda Marga Yoga Society
Eng Learning Resources Group
Eng Los Angeles Times
Eng US Department Of Agriculture
Eng Rodale Books, Inc.
Eng Seattle Zoo
Eng The Ways and Means Committee
Eng Walt Disney
Eng United Creativity
Eng Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.)
Eng Disc N Deck
Eng South Sound National Bank
Eng Westside Speed Wash
Eng Bob's Big Burgers
Format
Eng application/PDF
Language
Eng eng
Place
Eng The Evergreen Stsate College
Eng Olympia
Eng Washingtion State
Eng Minnesota State
Eng New York State
Eng Oregon State
Eng Seattle
Eng Capaigning
Eng Wisconsin
Eng California
Eng Eugene, Oregon
Eng Vietnam
Eng Laurel, Mississippi
Eng New Orleans
Eng Washington D.C.
Eng Philadelpha
Eng Patna, India
Eng Corvallis, Oregon
Publisher
Eng The Evergreen State College Board of Publications and members of the Evergreen community
Extent
Eng 16 pages
Temporal Coverage
Eng 1939/1971
extracted text
Rite of Spring
Evergreen's
jubilee

VOLUME 1, NUMBER 8

and Water groups, symbolic of the
four elements of the Greek
universe. Each of these four
groups has the purpose of divising
rituals, theater, music, and various
other celebrations for the Rite of
Spring. Not limited to the
Evergreen Community, artists,
craftsmen, and interested
outsiders from the region are
invited to participate in this event.
Other interesting happenings will
include live music and a
spectacular Ritual/Happening on
the Spaceship Ananda I.

The Rite of Spring, conceived
and organized by the Man and Art
Program, will occur at the end of
this quarter on the 15th, 16th, and
the 17th of March. "The theme of
this event is a celebration of life
through a display and
manifestation of the arts as a
living process. The concept of no
audience, only participants, is
stressed.
In the spirit of the event, the
Man and Art Program has
subdivided into Earth, Fire, Air,

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

Hopefully, the Rite of Spring
will enable the entire community
to come together as a
group--inspiring us to ask and seek
more of ourselves. It will be a
time of dedication and
consecration to our common
origin, the earth, and our common
destiny, a living community.
The Rite of Spring will be held
on the first three floors of the
library building. For more
information, call Jose Argnelles
(3965), or stop by the Man and
Art program on the first floor:

Olympia, Washington 98505

March 10, 1972

Schedule
and John Adams present folk
music.
6:00 p.m. - Poetry reading
sponsored by the Delphi Valley
Review, 1st floor lobby.
TUESDAY, MARCH 14:
8:00 p.m. · Don Chan presents
8:00p.m. ·Spaceship Ananda I
The Jazz Ensemble and the passengers assemble at 1st floor
Chamber Singers, 2nd floor lobby. lobby, take off on 2nd floor
lobby.
RITE OF SPRING CALENDAR
MARCH 14- 17

,.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15:
9:30 a.m. · New Moon Dance
followed by Dragon Flight. (A
chase of the Dragon of Apathy
throughout the halls of the
building ending with the killing of
the dragon.), 1st floor lobby.
7:00 p.m. · 'Musaic Visions',
s Iide-tape-lyrics (vocal and
illustrated)-·total stimulus project,
1st floor lobby.
8:00 p.m. · Spaceship Ananda
!--passengers assemble at 1st floor
lobby, take off on 2nd floor
lobby.
After the Ananda I there will
be folk music by Carrilu
Thompson and John Adams in
the Ananda I.

THURSDAY, MARCH 16:
12:00 noon·Carrilu Thompson

FRIDAY, MARCH 17:
12:00 noon - Puppet Theater,
2nd floor lobby.
At sunset -- Sunset Dance
(Conclusion), outside of the 2nd
floor lobby, out on the bricks.
SPECIALS:
Costuming is part of the
festival.
New Age Bazaar · arts and
crafts; anyone who has anything
to trade or give away as well as
buy, trade or receive is invited
to come, each day, Wednesday
through Friday, 1st floor lobby.
Student Art Show · 4th floor
gallery, Wednesday and Thursday.
Open Stage · all artists in
region are invited to participate,
2nd floor lobby, Wednesday
through Friday.

In this issue
State liquor store
Angela on bail

• • •
PAGE FOUR

PAGE TEN

Interview- -Costigan

BlOSSOM
Photo by Bruce Brockmann
AH SPRING! A semi-secluded spring beckons to vacation-fevered "Rite of Spring" participants
just off the walkway between the Adams Road residence hall complex and Parking Lot F.

PAGE FIVE

PAGES/X

Crime prevention interns

PAGE TEN

Preci net co ucus reports
By KEN BALSLEY
in order to find out a bit of although the 125 page book of
It was the first time I had ever information about my precinct "Robert's Rules of Order" was
attended a Precinct caucus and I committeewoman. They were a close at hand in case a conflict
went as much out of curiosity as young couple; they've lived in the arose.
for the desire to participate in the Olympia area since June.
Our young precinct
political system. I became aware . Desiring1 to participate in the committeewoman, a McGovern
of the precinct caucus by way of political system they found that supporter, was elected as delegate
the local media as well as having their precinct had no chairman. to the county caucus. She
been contacted personally twice Since the husband works for the received seven votes. A Henry
by McGovern supporters, once by State of Washington and is barred Jackson supporter received four
mail from McGovern supporters from holding a political office, his votes, and myself, a Muskie
and twice by telephone from wife assumed the job as supporter, received one vote, my
McGovern supporters. Finding out temporary precinct chairman.
own.
the location of my Precinct
Voters began arriving at 8 p.m.
0 u r Jackson supporter was
Caucus was considerably more until there was a total of twelve elected as the alternate delegate
difficult. I called the Thurston present, including four Evergreen by a vote of six to five with one
County Democratic chairman. He students. There was about fifty abstension. I voted for the elderly
was unable to give me the registered voters in that Westside Jackson supporter because I felt
location. The county auditor was precinct and the makeup of the the precinct should reflect the
unable to help either. It was not meeting did not seem to reflect views of the minority. He was
until two days before the caucus the makeup of the precinct. The rather pleased that he had won
date that I read of the location in McGovern machine had done its over the McGovern supporters.
the local paper. The day of the job well.
A long list of national, state,
caucus I was contacted by my
Our temporary chairwoman and local issues then confronted
precinct committeewoman, who was elected permanent us. While there was considerable
happened to be a McGovern
chairwoman and to my surprise discussion and some disagreement,
supporter, and was given the exact
I found myself volunteering to be the voting on the issues generally
location.
caucus secretary.
followed the liberal line. The
It
was
an
informal
meeting
McGovern supporters had done
I arrived a little before 8 p.m.

~~~~~~rr~~~~r~~~~r~;;;;~~~=~=;=}}f~{=~=~=~=~=~=}~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~==========================

·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·=·==:===============================================================================:===:=:===:

Fees

their work well.
I came away from the meeting
impressed with the George
McGovern machine. It had
worked hard and was functioning
smoothly. Henry Jackson will not
go to the National Convention
with all the Washington State
votes.

Predn(t reports
By BOB TURNAGE
Broadway precinct
Thanks to a heavy turnout
from the Mods, 2 McGovern
supporters, Evergreen student
Rick Speer, and Mrs. Bernice
Youtz were elected delegates to
the Democratic county
convention. Elected as alternates
were 2 more McGovern
supporters, Mrs. Mary Vandeman
and student John Wagness.

Sched uIe ·:=~:·=.:.:=~=.=:~=·:.·=~=-.·=~=:=·=.~.=~= ~:·=:~=·=·=:~= =.=·= = =:=·~=·=~-=~ =.;=·.=·= .~=-=.·=·~.=.:= =.~-~-.-~=;=.:=.~=·~ .=·=~: =·~=-~=-~=-~=·~=-~=-;= -~.·=.~=-~=·~=·;=~·;=~·.;=~-=~·;=~·=~·=~·=~·;=·;=,;=~:=~:=~:=~:=~-­
....=
..=
...

..

Student Accounts Supervisor John Moss and Registrar Perrin Smith
reports the following schedule will be in effect for Spring quarter
registration and payment of fees.

First Class Day .................................... March 27
Tuition and Fees are due and payable on this day.

Registration Packets Mailed ........................... M:~rch 6

Sixth Class Day ..................................... April3

Exit Interviews ............ ... ..... . .. ·............ March 13-17

Last day for payment of tuition and fees without $15 late payment fee
charge. Payments postmarked April 3 will be accepted without penalty.

Students not returning for Spring Quarter are required to complete· an
exit interview as explained in the catalog.

Withdrawal Period With Full Refund Ends ................. April 3

Formal Registration Ends ............................. March 17

Late Payment Period Ends ............................. April 7

Late Registration/Exit Interviews .................... March 20-22
Students will be enrolled or interviewed on an exception basis with a
$15 late fee.

Failure to pay Tuition and Fees by this date will result in cancellation
of enrollment and forfeit of the Advance Deposit, without exception,
and without recourse.

Bills Mailed ....................................... March 26

Withdrawal Period with 50% Refund Ends ................ April 28

Bills will be mailed to the local address on file with the Registrars office
as of March 24.

Last Day of Classes ................................... June 9

Senate cuts
TESC budget
5 million
The 1972 special session of the
Legislature has approved a
supplemental 1971-73 budget for
Evergreen in the amount of
$3,774,438 in additional
operating and capital funds. The
budget includes $415,313 in
supplemental operating money
and $3,359,125 in capital funds.
The capital money includes
$2,690,000 for part of the
Seminar Building, $259,260 for a
service road, $248,865 for work
on the College Parkway, and
$125,000 for design work on the
proposed drama-music-art
building.
The governor's office has asked
a supplemental appropriation of
$415,313 in operating funds and
$8,287,531 in capital construction

money. The House of
Representatives initially approved
the amount, however, the Senate
reduced the requested amount by
$5,053,406 ($3.8 million in
general fund money and about
$1.2 million in college-generated
revenues). This was the total that
had been earmarked for the
construction of phase IL of the
laboratory building.
The Senate di~ add $125,000 in
planning money for the proposed
drama-music-art building. In the
first analysis, the House agreed
with the Senate's cut of funds for
the second phase of the
· Laboratory Building and agreed to
the $125,000 addition for
pre-planning of the
Drama-Music-ArtBuilding.
Attempts at restoration of the
funds were made by Senator
Harry Lewis and Representatives
Hal Wolf and Floyd Conway, all
of Thurston County but without
success. College officials are trying
to determine exactly what effects
the fund cut would have on both
future enrollments and future

PAGE 2 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 10, 1972

academic programs oriented to
the second phase of the
laboratory building, which had
been scheduled for use in Fall,
1974.

Response I
OPINION ARTICLE
By KEN BALSLEY
My concern for the future of
Evergreen, at least in the sense as
we know it today, grows deeper
and deeper with each passing
moment. More problems,
roadblocks, and frustrations pile
up every day. Some of them are
only temporary setbacks and
some of them are insurmountable.
Recently the state legislature
was called upon to provide
additional funding to The
Evergreen State College. What was
the result? A request for funds to
hire more faculty for the coming
year was refused. Funds for
science laboratory equipment
refused. A request for funds to

provide architectural drawings for
a music and drama building was
cut fifty per cent. A five million
dollar request for Phase II
construction of the Science
Building was totally rejected. The
question must be asked. Why has
this happened? No doubt the state
of the state's economy and the
public's demand for economy in
government had something to do
with it, but I think the answer
goes deeper than that.

• * *
OPINION ARTICLE
by JERRY VERMEI RE
Two Sundays ago, a rap-up of
the recently completed state
legislative session was aired over a
local radio station. A strong,
common point of disappointment
was the failure to allocate
additional money for TESC.
Representative Lloyd Conway
of Olympia was disappointed that
while funds were allocated for
things we could have gotten along
without, money was taken out of
Evergreen College where it was

(Continued on~ 15)

Resolutions were adgpted
calling for campaign contribution
disclosures, citizen participation
in land-use planning, recognition
of Bangia Desh, guaranteed annual
income of $5500 for a family of
four, and that contraceptives and
birth control information be
allowed to those under 18 without
necessitating parental consent.
Consolidation of governments of
Olympia, Tumwater, and Lacey
was defeated. A pro-busing move
was tabled.
I believe the chairman, a
Jackson man, was surprised at the
outcome, but he (Jack Taylor)
had a gracious and philosophical
reaction.
*
* *
Plainview precinct
This is the area with the dorms
and accordingly students
outnumbered adults 3 to I. Bob
Crocker was elected chairman. An
all student, solidly McGovern slate
was elected with Bart van der
Croft and Ned Swift as delegates
and Jody Skinner and Steve Ice as
alternates.
Resolutions were passed in
favor of Cooper Point zoning
freeze to preserve area's rural
character, recognizing the
sovereignty of American Indian
tribes, decriminalizing pot, setting
Vietnam withdrawal date of March
1973. Also that a registered
Washington voter need not change
his registration to a precinct in
order to participate in a precinct's
caucus. A resolution for total
amnesty died due to poor
wording.
*

*

*

Butler Cove precinct

Over 20 .lho;MIIfld. mostty young
and old with few in between
age-wise. The group appeared to
be overwhelmingly of liberal
persuasion.
A McGovern supporter, Dave
Calof, and a Muskie supporter, Ed
HoI m, were elected delegates.
Alternates were Roger Stephen,
for McGovern and Larry Russell,
uncommitted.
Resolutions were adopted for
immediate Vietnam pullout,
contraceptives and such-like
information for minors without
parental consent, total amnesty
for war evaders, and support of
busing as a means of quality
education.
Butler Cove precinct will hold
pot-luck breakfasts every second
Sunday of the month.
*

*

*

Cooper Point precinct
35 voters showed up an
estimated 25 to 10 pro-McGovern
split. Several elderly but spry
citizens surprised the gathering
with McGovern endorsements.
A McGovern slate of two
delegates, Hannah Spielholz and
Willi Unsoeld, and alternates Carol
Layton and Marlene Willis, were
elected.
Resolutions were for campaign
fund disclosures, pro-busing,
equalization of education
financing through state
co-ordination, citizen
participation in land-use planning,
and equal opportunity on basis of
sex.

*



*

All in all the precinct caucuses
were an amazing spectacle of
political pageantry, pathos and
apathy·

FRIDAY, March 10:
The Film Society will present
"Vampyr" by Carl Dreyer. At the
regular times.
College Forum will meet in room
3112 at 2:30 p.m.
Film Odyssey is "The Rules of
the Game", on chanel9.
Dick Wilk from Computer
Sciences will be a guest speaker
for a luncheon to be held in room
L4004 from 12 to 1 p.m. The
topic : "Remote Job Entry", all
invited.
Indian Carving Workshop with
Joe David: Tool making in the
Set and Model Shop, Library
basement, 1 to 5 p.m.
Concert/dance with "SKY
CHURCH" (rock and roll), 9 to
12 p.m., 1st floor lobby,
admission $.25.
"We're legit again" planning and
procedural session for "The
Paper" at 7 p.m, in ''The (new)
Office" L 3217 ,

MONDAY, March 13:
Film Society will present ''The
Gold Rush", Charlie Chaplin.
Regular times.
Student Public Relations Interest
Group, meeting 11 :45 a.m., room
L3234.
Eveq;reen Political Action Group
meeting in room 3215 at 6 p.m.
Draft Counseling in room 3206,
NEW HOURS, 10 to 12 and 1 to

5.
Kung-Fu club will meet in the
third floor lobby , every Monday
from 12 to 1:30 p.m.
Services and Activities Board will
meet at 3:30p.m. in room 3112.
TUESDAY, March 14:
All faculty and Staff (ONLY)
Computer Services will hold a
workshop on how to use the
computer ... three more
workshops are scheduled for the
next weeks (each Tuesday). If
interested contact Jill Feeney at

ext. 3345.
Gene Kerr, of the McDonald
Douglas Corporation, will
speak-topic-"Remote Job Entry".
Noon in room 4004.
Cooper Point Assn. meeting:
7:30p.m. ED lounge.
WEDNESDAY, March 15:
Business Director's meeting 3
p.m. room 3103.
Women of Evergreen will meet
for a brown bag affair at noon in
room 2614.
Executive VP's staff meeting, 3-5
p.m., room 3121.
Group meditation and advanced
lectures in transcendental
meditation, room 3234, 7:30
p.m.
Volleyball: 7 p.m., Washington
Jr. High School, Olympia.
THURSDAY, March 16:
Exhibitions Interest group will
meet in room 4004, noon-brown
bag affair.
College Sounding Board meeting

in room 3112,8:30 to 10 a.m.
Women's Commission meeting in
the Women's center (L3225) at
7.p.m.
FRIDAY, March 17:
Last day of the quarter.
College Forum will be held in
room 3112 at 2:30p.m.
Kung-Fu to be taught, third floor
lobby, 12 to 1:30 p.m.
Representatives of G.E.
Timesharing will be guests for a
luncheon discussion of "Remote
Job Entry", noon to 1 p.m.,
room 4004.
No f!.lm from the Film Society.
NET Film Odyssey is "Intimate
Lighting", channel 9.
All college dance, featuring
"Springfield Life" and "Adam
Wind", 8 to 12 p.m. at St.
Martin's Pavillion. Admission $1
with lD and $2 GM, sponsored
by OVTI, St. Martin's and
Evergreen for St. Patricks' day.

***A series of short articles written for your information on happenings here on campus***
Jlelp Select Which Duplicate Books To Keep In The Library Collection.
The main part of the inventory of books in the library has been
completed and duplicate books have been sorted out of the collection.
We receive credit for these duplicates from Abel Company. Perhaps we
will want to keep some duplicates rather than get credit. We invite you
to be involved in the selection process of retaining desirable duplicates.
The duplicate books are shelved in Library of Congress call number
order in the caged area on the ; third floor of the library.
Com
ttematYte thtpHeates in -the tubjeot uoaa of )lOUr
interest. One week will be allowed for this selection process March
13-17, third floor cage of the library.
Shakespeare Readings. The Asphodel Fields Theatre People will present
Shakespeare readings from the histories at the college dedication April
21. Auditions for the readings were held yesterday and Wednesday.

BiU Dunning Paintings. Ten large "sensory input" paintings by Bill
Dunning, an Associate Professor of Art at CWSC, are on display in the
second floor reference section of the library. The display, continuing
until March 27, is open to the public without charge.

A Year in Mexico. Medardo Delado said "Sorry about this" to those
students that he missed last week when he had to leave early from the
A Year in Mexico meeting. There is another meeting scheduled today at
2 p.m. in Room 1413 (CAM area). This meeting will be mostly about the
student experiences while attending the program.
GiUis-Mixed Media. Six serigraphs (wall hangings), one water-colour,
one print and two drawings by freelance artist Robert Gillis are now on
display in the Ljbr_ary lobby until March 22.
Olympia Reserve Fleet Photo Essay. Six students in Communications
and Intelligence program have compiled a photo essay of the 29 ships
of the National Defense Reserve Fleet remaining in Olympia. This
project was arranged through the cooperation of Carl Johnson and his
crew of the Olympia Reserve Fleet. The project will be on display in
the library lobby during regular library hours from March 13-17. Those
C&l student who have participated in this project are Jim Mead, Diane
Osborne, Larry LaPrade, Christi Painter, Joe Petrich and Jim Pruske.
St. Patrick's Day Dance. A dance sponsored by OVTI, St. Martin's, and
TESC will be held March 17 at the St. Martin Pavillion from 8 p.m. to
12:30 a.m. Springfield Rifle and Adam Wind will be the featured bands.
Admission is $1.00 will college identification and $2.00 for those
without.

Dance Sky Church will be playing for a dance that will be in the first
floor lobby of the library on March 10 from 9-12 p.m. Admission will be
25 cents.

National Defense Student Loan Aid. To receive the National Defense
Student Loan Aid for Spring quarter papers must be signed at the
students accounts window March 13-17, checks will be available during
the first week of Spring quarter.

Banners of Jack Smith. An exhibition of 14 banners by Jack Smith will
be presented in the Iibrary March 13 to Apri I 1. Jack Smith is a
craftsman and elementary art specialist with the Bellevue Schools, and
has also taught at the U of W.

Concert. Mey Irwin and Tim Swain, a harpsichordist and lutist, will
present a concert on March 31 from 8-10:30 p.m. in the second floor
library lobby. Their concert will be complimentary and consist largely
of Baroque type music.

Daycare. The Daycare proposal will be heard, Monday, March 13 at
3:30 p.m. in Room 3120. Anyone interested in seeing daycare go

Jazz. A jazz group, Sidewinder, will perform on April 12, from 9 to 12
p.m. in the third floor lobby. Admission is free.

through is urged to come.
College Dedication. The official dedication of The Evergreen State
College will be April 21.
Olympia YMCA. The Olympia YMCA has announced that their fees
have been reduced for TESC students. The reduced rates are $ 10.00
for six months or 75 cents for a daily pass. Activities include:
swimming, hand ball, squash, basketball, weight lifting, volleyball, and
others.
One Generation After-Dachau. Photographs taken by special raiding
party of the Navy's Underwater Demolition Team are on display in the
second floor lobby of the library until March 24. The photographs are
unpublished photographs of the Extermination camp at Dachau. The
collection has been donated to the TESC Library by the Raiding party
leader Gene Deford, chief master diver.

Delphi Valley Review. A collection of poems written by the Open
Clique whose membership is open to all interested writers went on sale
last week in the library. The publication, The Delphi Valley Review,
sells for 25 cents and its purpose is to form a community of writers at
TESC. Interested writers can contact Doug Kahn at (753) 4793.
Concert. Amplied Version, a gospel rock band, will present a concert
April 25 beginning at 8 p.m. in the third floor lobby area of the library.
Admission is free.
Evergreen Musicians to Perform. The TESC Jazz Ensemble and the
Chamber Singers will present a free public concert in the second floor
lobby, at 8 p.m., on March 14. It will mark the first public appearance
of the Ensemble and the second for the Chamber Singers, who
performed during a pre-Christmas concert at the end of Fall quarter.
Don Chan is the director for both groups.

March 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 3

State liquor
monopoly
unnecessary
OPINION ARTICLE

and PHOTOGRAPHS

THE HIGH PRICE of relaxing diversions catches up with Evergreener Kristy
by BRUCE BROCKMANN

Jehu as she prepares for the long Spring break.

Washington's liquor prices are among the highest of all 50 states. The
state should get out of the liquor business.
Washington is presently one of the 18 states which have monopoly
control over the liquor business (Oregon and Idaho are two of the
others). One of the reasons is to control the distribution of liquor.

NO TIME like the present to work for modernization of Washington
liquor sales, "The Paper" reporter Bruce Brockmann concludes from a
study of state store operations.

PAGE 4 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 10, 1972

Although the system is probably more successful at controlling who
buys liquor than a free enterprise system might be, it is not possible to
control effectively who actually consumes the liquor.
The state control system apparently has little effect on curbing
alcholoism either. In Minnesota, a free enterprise state, the per capita
consumption was 1.85 gallons, in 1970, compared to Washington with
I. 77 gallons.
Right now about the only reasons the state is in the liquor bush;~~
are because of revenue and 'the problema whk:b would be c:te11tecU
system would be changed to free enterprise.
But there are so many reasons in favor of withdrawing from the
system that the loss of revenue and the problems in change·over look
minute.
First of all, the prices for liquor are higher in this state than any of
the other 49 states. Before a bottle of liquor hits the shelves of the local
Washington State Liquor Store, it is marked up 102 per cent.
The state pays $1.13 for a fifth of Seagram's 7-Crown 86 proof
blended whiskey and turns around and sells it for $6.20. The difference
is not all profit though. The federal government gets $1.81 in taxes and
the state pays 12 cents for freight for a total of $3.06. The rest of the
margin goes to a 15 per cent state sales tax, an additional 4 cents an
ounce tax, plus profit margin and additional incidental charges, all of
which add up to $3.12, 6 cents more than the state paid for it. The state
rounds the price to the nearest nickel and the cost to the customer
becomes $6.20. The price for the same item in New York, for example,
a free enterprise state, is around $4.50.
The same holds true for all hard liquor. The prices in Washington are
the highest in the nation and have been since the state added the
additional tax of two cents per ounce on July I, 1971. Washington, with
a markup of 102 per cent, is the nation's highest. Oregon is next with a
markup of 87% per cent.
The liquor industry in Washington is a major revenue builder as it
adds over $66 million in the state's treasury yearly ($32 million from
profits and $34 million in taxes).
Any people who do any traveling at all to other states buy liquor
and bring it back into this state, although it is illegal. This law is
practically unenforceable. No one knows for sure how much business is
lost when this occurs.
Washington's system of a state controlled liquor monopoly is
nothing unique as 17 other states also have the same or similar systems.
What makes Washinton's prices so high is the fact that the state relies
on liquor for a large income both from taxes and profits.
If this state were to switch from the present system to a free
enterprise system it could still raise over $34 million in taxes if it kept
the same tax structure. What it would lose is $32 million in profits
which in turn would go to private business. The change-over would pose
alot of problems, but evidence points to the fact that a free enterprise
system can raise revenue, will stimulate jobs and will be better for the
state's economy.

Costigan voices various views
A little over a month ago on Jan. 26 when Dr.
Giovanni Costigan was on The Evergreen State
College Campus many of Evergreen's students had
their first chance to hear this man speak. Since this
time and in a follow up to that presentation Bob
Turnage, a student at TESC, traveled to Seattle
and interviewed Dr. Costigan.
Costigan has been very active in encouraging
student participation in the political arena. He
continues to express his opinions on this topic in
the following interview, also expressing his views
on liberalism, Evergreen, McGovern, and the
possibility of William Buckley returning to Seattle.

liberal development
At first when Costigan was asked "What has
been the hallmark of American history and of the
American psyche?" he responsed with the
following:
It's a huge question, as you know. I should have
said from the political point of view, if we limit
ourselves to that, the chief theme of American
history has been the pursuit of individual freedom,
as in trying to gain rights. If this is true, and I
always thought it was, then I would say the
development of liberalism as being the chief
political motive of American history---the freeing
of the Negro, the freeing of women, the freedom
of the press and religion---and I always thought
that liberalism was the mainstream of American
history and now for the first time they tell us that
it's a bad word. I don't understand this reaction by
the far right trying to make out the liberals as
traitors. Now to this I would add just one thing.
Many people would agree to that, the liberals of
the 19th century believed on the whole that if you
let every human being follow his own interests, the
good of society would result. They thought free
enterprise would lead to a wide distribution of
wealth among everyone. But in fact, what
o e to fbri!SM'thf
happe ed lt y
that the weakest went to the wall; that the
strongest, who were more ruthless, survived. And
so, instead of having the widest possible
distribution of wealth you had huge corporations
controlling the national life more than the
government.
When the liberals were faced with this situation
they changed their minds and said that the
government must intervene. I mean previously
they'd said let the government keep its hands off,
let everyone work out his own destiny, what we
call laissez-fa ire, you know. But they shifted about
the turn of the century and especially under the
New Deal to say that liberalism also means the
social equality and social justice, not just
individual justice. So they intervened to try and
limit the power of the great corporations.
Theodore Roosevelt was the first to do this but
them much more so Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
You see that liberalism, which started out being
totally against the state as with Jefferson the
minimum of state intervention being the best, it
turned over to the realization that pursuit of the
individual was not enough. You also had to have
state regulation which I believe today is
inescapable. The conservatives say that liberalism
betrayed itself. I don't think so. I think it
modified itself. They(liberals) still want as much
individual freedom as possible. What they're trying
to regulate is not the lives of ordinary people but
the power of enormous wealth. Wealthy people
hate them because they identify their pursuit of
wealth with the well-being of society.

American liberalism
How about American history and the relation
of liberalism to world government?
Well, that is also true. I mean in the 19th
century most liberals believed that national
sovereignty was inevitable, that each nation should
seek its own well-being. But what happened was
the first World War. Europe almost committed
suicide. Out of the first World War and Woodrow
Wilson in this country came the idea that there

must be an international organization, a League of
Nations. It failed. Then they tried through
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the United
Nations. This is failing also. But whether it fails or
not, there must be something to take its place. In
other words, liberalism, to follow up your point,
believes now in the necessity of some international
organization which wasn't thought necessary in
thel9th century. Here too there's been a reversal.
But the goals of liberalism, that is the well-being of
mankind, remains the same.

McGovern vs. Nixon
When Costigan was asked to compare Nixon
and McGovern in the light of liberalism he replied
with: I think that Mr. Nixon is the mouth-piece
and the instrument of these enormous private
interests, corporative and military in this country.
He represents them and he puts their interests
ahead of those of the rest of the nation. They're
making gigantic profits out of the Vietnam War
and McGovern wants to tax them. McGovern as I
tried to say when I was down in Olympia,
represents more than any other candidate the
forty million people at the bottom--minorities of
all kinds; the poor, young people. students. who
have never had any power before. He is their prime
champion. And also with these underpriviliged
groups goes the consumer. No one speaks for the
consumer. He has no lobby in Washington. Now
Ralph Nader, who is the most powerful consumers
chapion. has come out for McGovern. He has not
formally identified himself with McGovern
because he feels from his own point of view that
he would injure his effectiveness by being for
anyone. But he has said, in his opinion McGovern
is the best candidate there is and McGovern would
work for Nader's objectives.
McGovern speaks for the largest single block of
·-~~~~XK~"-!IX'tion, which needi help mest bidly-a
has no protector. Nixon speaks for a tiny group,
the ten percent at the top who control almost all
business and who have always been Republican
and now they have the military to help them. This
may be over-simplified. I believe it's true.

youth involvement
What role do you think young people should or
will play in the upcoming election?
You probably know that 25 million people who
have never voted before and they're eligible for the
first time. That means II million people under the
age of 21. Eleven million.
Young people have been dissatisfied with things
rightly so. They hate the war. It was they who
were sent to fight and to die. And they hate this
m i I itary-industrial complex because it spends
money on weapons which they think should be
spent fighting poverty, providing education,
health, housing and other facilities. Every poll I've
seen indicates that young people, if they vote, will
vote against Nixon, and McGovern is the leader in
every college poll I've seen. The question is,''Will
they vote?"
I mean the absenteeism is very great among
adults and it will be fantastic to suppose that every
young person will vote. I wish they would but
they won't any more than their elders.
Furthermore of the young people that do vote, a
good many are going to vote for Mr. Wallace. The
more uneducated, I regret to say the more
ignorant, especially in the South, they will vote for
Wallace.
The college people, there are eight million
college students, eight ll)illion. And if even a
majority of them vote liberal this could have vital
influence on the election since Nixon was only
elected by half a million votes.
This is obvious. This is why I've been talking.
But to be successful in the Democratic
Convention seems terribly unlikely for McGovern.
I really don't know. The polls don't show that
much. The real test is the primaries, in Wisconsin,
Oregon, California, etc. I won't believe he has no
chance until I see how he does in the primaries.

the liberal vote
Do you · think he would consider running on a
separate ticket?
I don't want this. I'm disgusted frankly with
Senator Eugene McCarthy. I was all for him four
years ago but then he backed out and he's done
almost nothing in four years and now wants to be
a candidate and even talks about another party. I
mean if McGovern doesn't make it then I will have
to vote for the most liberal democrat there is and I
think he would also encourage people to do that.
But until we see the primaries, the polls are very
misleading. I do know that in college campuses
every single poll has shown McGovern on top
beating Nixon and Muskie and all the rest. Well
you will say this is only eight million, part of eight
million to be sure, but a vital part. One final thing,
if you believe in McGovern and you listen to these
people who say he has no chance to begin with,
what's the use of going on? They say this to put
him out. I mean part of their reason for saying this
is the chance to get rid of him.

student registration
There being many persons here on campus who
are working with the student voter registration
procedures, the question came up as to one of the
problems that they have encountered. That
question is what argument can be used with the
student who says he doesn't need to register
because there is no point in even voting. they must
not even know the difference between one
candidate being, if it's true, for the war and another
for ending it. I'm convinced that Mr. Nixon wants
to stay on in Vietnam and cut down as much as
he's orcecl to cut down. H,p's never promised to
have all troops out even in this last peace offer.
We've got six or seven bases in Thailand, enormous
bomber bases. There is the seventh fleet. I mean he
could take every last soldier out of Vietnam and
still continue the war by bombing the enemy,
costing four billion dollars a year. He's never
promised to stop that.
So it shouldn't be difficult to say to a student,
"Well is this important or not?" If you get a man
like McGovern and how it may be true of Muskie
too. Muskie's been forced into a more vigorous
anti-war attitude perhaps by McGovern and
Lindsay. But McGovern has now taken this strong
peace position. Is it difficult to say to
students,"doesn't it make any difference whether
you are for getting out entirely and getting the
prisoners back or keeping the thing going."

campaign issues
For those participating in this (student vote
drive) 'they've got to be non-p? tisan and they
can't discuss issues other than to vote or not to
vote. They have funding from too many
conflicting foundations.
This is like an escalation of the war, ridiculous.
I can understand someone saying you musn't
discuss candidates but not to discuss issues.
This is in my opinion a piece of hypocrisy. Now
I see the students in a different light. If they are
forbidden to discuss issues how can the students
vote?
It seem to me that this administration that you
speak of is betrying his trust. It should have the
issues discussed. I can see not the candidates
perhaps, that's another matter, but at least the
issues. Ar'e we for more arms spending or against
it? For the war or against it? For the minorities or
against them? Well I'm shocked to hear this.
When asked about the famous Costigan-Buckley
Debate and the possibility of William Buckley ever
returning to Seattle, Costigan replied simply:

(Continued on p:l98 7)

March 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 5

From

the BLOSSOM patch

The first copies of Initiative this game," said Debbie, "But we
264, which would call for a firmly believe that going through
"decriminalization" of marijuana, the system is the only answer."
are presently being distributed by Said Thorn, ''What people are
BLOSSOM (Basic liberation of actually saying when they sign
Smokers and Sympathizers of one of the petitions is only that
Marijuana)
across Washington they want to see the question put
state. With less than 5 months on this fall's ballot; even people
remaining before the July 7th who oppose marijuana should sign
deadline, BLOSSOM needs to them. Then we will be able to find
collect the signatures of 115,000 out how the public really feels."
registered voters. If they succeed,
Steve Wilcox, the founder of
then the state's voters will have BLOSSOM, feels that the
the chance to be the first ones to initiative will probably make it to
approve or disapprove a marijuana the ballots. "This is no longer
simply a youth issue," said
referendum.
A non-profit group, BLOSSOM Wilcox. 'What is involved here is a
currently has over 2500 members civil rights question; and we feel
scattered throughout the state,
with 30 individuals assuming the
responsibility of distribution in
their local areas. These 30 people
not only disserminate petitions
for signatures, but also attempt to
raise funds to support the
initiative campaign through the
sales of BLOSSOM patches
T -shirts, newsletter subscriptions
(From The BLOSSOM Patch) and
bumperstickers.
All work on the initiative is
being done by volunteers at this
point; funds for workers, postage,
printing and travel are desparetly
needed at once. Those wishing to
contribute may send donations
c/o BLOSSOM, PO Box 1951, or
224 E 4th, Olympia, 98501.
One of the major thrusts of the
initiative campaign will be realistic
drug education; most recognized
authorities on the issue agree with
decriminalization. What
BLOSSOM has to do now is see
that this information filters down
to the general voting population.
Once the voter understands the
issue, he should be ready to make
the only logical choice - for
decriminalization.
The three co-chairman of
BLOSSOM, Stephen Wilcox,
Debbie Yarbrough, and Thomsen
Abbot, have all put in long hours
of their free time to produce
Initiative 264.
'We are all completely new to

that it is unfair to prohibit the use
of a harmless substance like
marijuana."
Said Wilcox, "Even the
National Commission on
Marijuana and Drug Abuse has
come out in favor of
decriminalization; how much
longer will our laws continue to
make criminals out of average
citizens?"
BLOSSOM as an idea was
conceived in December of 1970,
but no organization actually
existed until March of 1971, at that
time a public hearing was held
concerning House Bill 588, a
marijuana penalty revision bill

With information and support
gathered m a session yesterday at
Evergreen, volunteers will hold a
state organizational meeting
Saturday, April 1, at the Olympia
headquarters. Set for
BLOSSOM'S office at The
Waterbed Place, 224 East Fourth
Street, the gathering will provide
a central point for collection of
completed initiative petitions.
In addition, volunteers expect
to assess the progress of the
initiative drive, which has been
on for two months.
Eugene, Oregon, will host the
following Saturday, a West Coast
First Joint Conference on
Marijuana De-criminalization.
Tentatively set for the City Hall
Chambers at 1 p.m., the April 8
session will involve s1ate initiative
workers from Washington,
Oregon and California.

PAGE 6 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 10, 1972



submitted by Rep. Michael Ross
of Seattle. "The fact that Ross's
bill simply died in committee
showed that the subject of
marijuana was much too
controversial for our state
legislators," said Ms. Yarbrough.
''We decided that the only way
to get the question answered was
by taking it directly to the people
through the use of the initiative
process, "said Wilcox.
"Initially people seemed to
think that we were real dreamers,
" said Abbott. "No one supposed
that a marijuana decision 'could be
made as soon as 1972, although
most of the people we talked to

were in favor of decriminalization.
Before Rep. Ross submitted HB
588, few people would have
foreseen that move, either," he
added.
''We definitely want people to
understand that we are quite
opposed to drug abuse; in fact, we
are not attempting to promote
marijuana use," noted Wilcox.
''We only wish to see that people
who use marijuana moderately are
not punished for doing so."
The full text of Initiative 264
has 3 main parts. The first part,
which accounts for the major
portion of the space, removes all
mention of the word "marijuana"
from existing state statutes. It
does, however, allow the State
Board of Pharmacy to continue
conducting programs on drug
education and abuse.
The second portion of the
initiative concerns paroling people
from state correctional institutes
who are presently serving
sentences for marijuana
convictions.
The last part of the text calls
for setting a gross misdemeanor
penalty on all advertisement of
marijuana. This will prevent
future promotion and
commercialization of marijuana.
Copies of the petition and
further information can be
obtained by contacting
BLOSSOM at 224 E 4th Ave,
Olympia. For organized groups
.wishing to hear ditcUIIloa- et the
issue, speaking engagements can
be arranged for a small donation
to cover travel expenses.
"Our main purpose in running
this campaign is to keep our
young people away from all
dangerous drugs; the unfortunate
fact today is that people who sell
marijuana often also have access
to the harder drugs, since they are
all illegal." said Abbott. "If
marijuana becomes legal, then w
feel that less people will b
tempted to use habit forminc
drugs," he added.

March moratorium?
Collective efforts of at least 14
Evergreen community members
have sped an all-<:ollege evaluation
toward completion this week with
a finish-draft "student
questionnaire" on the heels of an
evaluation sheet sent to faculty
members.
The earlier query, to be
completed by coordinated and
contracted study team members,
is due back for collation this
week. Students will receive a copy
of their four-page form in time for
completion and return later this
month.
Developed in lieu of a
suggested moratorium March I, 2
and 3, the revised approach
precluded everyone possible being
involved in a marathon evaluation
process at the expense of
academic scheduling. Use of the
two forms will facilitate
information gatherings and
dispersal "within the existing
academic framework and in the
ordinary course of business,"
noted Willi Unsoeld of the
Individual in America program.
TC\ accomplish a charge to
prepare this self-study procedure
determining Evergreen's academic
condition at this first year
mid-point, Unsoeld arranged a
Disappearing Task Force for
March Evaluations with Lou-Ellen
Peffer, Learning Resources
Center; Rod Newton, Individual
in America, Mariel Brockway and
Carolyn Dobbs, Environmental
Design; Larry Stenberg,
Developmental Services; Byron
Youtz, Space, · Time and Form ;
Robert Bernard, Communications
and Intelligence; Dave Hitchens,

Individual, Citizen and State; Lem
Stepherson, Counseling Services;
Dick Brian, Human Behavior; and
Bob Barringer, Computer Services.
Counselors Chipper Stone and
Arturo Gonzales were among the
wealth of the resource persons
tapped for assistance.
Unsoeld, Peffer, Dobbs,
Newton, and Brockway
hammered out the "student
questionnaire" in finished form
just Tuesday. From there, by
agreement, copies will go through
programs for complete coverage;
then results will be obtained by
computer readout in a workable
format for cross-referencing.
"We see the possiblity of many
first-year problems in common to
many programs, " Unsoeld
pointed out; "this should give us
the means toward a reasonable
end of sharing solutions."
Already Unsoeld's task force
has garnered the distinction of
calling the first community-wide
faculty meeting in Evergreen's
history last week, he observed, to
discuss student evaluations and
records with Registrar Perrin
Smith.
"This week's "Student
Questionnaire" covers
involvement in and benefit from
program activities, campus-wide
non-program oriented services and
activities, even student sharing of
learning, and ends with a
requested valuation of Evergreen's
varied offerings.
Administrative and other
non-academic functions within
the Evergreen community, such as
housing and food services, were
not included in the two-edged
evaluation process.

agency
A consumer protection office
under the direction of the ·
Attorney General's office is now
in operation at Evergreen. The
office is located in Library Room
3218 and is open Monday through
Friday from I to 5 p.m.
The functions of this office are
three-fold. One is to receive and
process complaints from student
who were subjected to unfair
business practices in the Olympia
community. This includes
landlord hassles, auto repair,
restaurant, housing, or just unfair
treatment by a retail store.
The second function will be as
a referral office. The office hopes
to gather information concerning
both the honest and dishonest
businesses. Using this information,
the office can refer students to
recommended businesses or
products.
The third is to advise students
engaged in consumer affairs. This
counselling should help students
be aware of the technicalities
involved with rental contracts,
warranties or fraudulant
advertising.
Any incidents of poor service
can be reported to the agency
office. According to Les Smith
and Dan Wilson, the office needs
student input to build their
referral files. They hope to
protect the students' consumer
affairs and to establish better
business relations with the
community.

This quotation is taken from
an earlier article which The Paper
ran in January on The Winter
quarter Student Vote internships.
Now as a result of these interships
to the Student Vote people are
returning to get more people to
work on this program during the
Spring quarter.
There will be a meeting for
interested persons Wednesday,
March 15, at 9:30 a.m. in room
L4004. This meeting will be of a
mainly information purpose, but
will also be used to assign
interested persons interview times.
It is not imperative but is
suggested that students who are
planning to apply talk to their
faculty members or contract
sponsors to make temporary
arrangements.
Representatives from the
Financial Aids office, the
Registrars office, the Housing
office, and recruiters from the
Student Vote Intern program will
be present at this meeting to

discuss any problems that might
arise.
Personal interviews will be set
up for the afternoon of that same
day and all of the next day. These
interviews are used by the Student
Vote people to get the best
possible people. All those that
qualify from the interviews will be
accepted by the Student Vote
people and no quota has yet to be
set according to David Calof.
Evergreen will assume no
expenses for the Student Vote
program. 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.
The students chosen by the
Student Vote program will
undergo an intensive three-day
seminar on voting right,
restrictions, etc. prior to going out
into the fields. This seminar will
be conducted by Washington D.C.
staff members of the Student
Vote program and will prepare the
student in not only the
intellectual sense but also the
techincal sense to cover any
special skills that will be required
of him.
Anyone having any questions
or definite interests should
contact Ken Donohue, David
Calef, or Jim Long in the Office
of Cooperative Education
(L3223).

(Continued from~ 5)
I don't know. I doubt that he'll ever come
back. This is a very small provincial place. He's a
New Yorker and New York. is half of the universe.
We are the provinces, why should he come out
here? They gave him $2000 for two hours work.
He collected the money and left.
You did it for love.
Well they did finally agree to give me something
but I didn't ask for it. But he's not likely to come
again. He took it very lightly. He didn't do any
work. He didn't do very well in consequence. His
own fault.

give Evergreen·a chance
The question, "What do you think of
Evergreen?" brought the following response from
Costigan:
Well I know unfortunately nothing about it
except for that one brief visit and what can I say?
It seemed a very wonderful opportunity. I was
proud of the state for spending so much money to
make this possible. The public has put millions
into them (new colleges). They're well appointed,
have good libraries, good facilities. I think young
people are extremely fortunate. But to ask me to
go beyond the curriculum at Evergreen or the lack
of it--1 was asking to find what I could, I think I
may have asked you-but obviously, I mean it's
very innovative, I understand, very revolutionary,
very untraditional.
But let it have a chance. I on the whole believe
in traditional methods. I think that if traditional
methods have survived for centuries there's
something good in them but I'm perfectly willing
to see something that's untried. My feeling is that
after a short time colleges like Evergreen will begin
to get back somewhat to what they now call a
more structured form of education.

Media asks
prompt return

Student vote returns
''We're very excited about this
enterprise (Student Vote Intern
Program)." Ken 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."

Costigan voices


var1ous
v1ews

Protection

Getting Together/LNS

[ll!!+M....I!J
THRU TUESDAY: "North
Country" Wed-Sun "Godzilla
vs. Smog Monster" 3/19-23
"Andromeda Strain" &
"Colossu~, the Forbin
Project" 3/24-4/4 Walt
Disney's "Bedknobs and
Broomsticks"

THRU TUESDAY: ..Paul
Newman and Lee Marvin in
"Pocket Money" & Candice
Bergen in "T. R. Baskin"
Wed-3/21 "Carry on
Camping" & "Lola" 3/22-28
"The Boyfriend" 3/29-4/1
"Such Good Friends" & "The
Desert"

Members of the Evergreen
community with media
equipment checked out over
deadline from the Library Group
should see to its immediate
return, Yves Duverglas.
Those considering the variety
· of articles available for checkout
should pay particular attention to
the amount of time given before
the item is due back, he added .
Duverglas, director of the
Library's first floor Media Loan
section , noted this week that too
many members of the
community are abusing their
"first come, first serve " privilege
by keeping th · equipment out
long after the check-in time. As a
direct result, he noted, other
community members suffer by
not being able to make use of the
medial materials.

'Little Orphan Abbie'
The Seattle-based Skid Road able to do a play of this nature in
Show is presenting the world advance of its production in New
premiere of "Little Orphan York."
Other performance dates are:
Abbie," an original play by
Seattle writer David Petersen: The Saturday and Sunday, March II
play, which is based on the · and 12; Friday and Saturday,
transcript of the Chicago March 17 and IB;and Friday and
Conspiracy Trial, opened at the Saturday, March 24 and 25.
Second Storey Gallery, 110 First Tickets are $2.00 if reserved in
Avenue South in Seattle. ''We advance and $2.50 at the door.
founded The Skid Road Show to Reservations and further
do serious theatre on a regional information are available by
basis,'' says Laurel Lee Johnson, calling Skid Road Show at
the company's artistic director, MA2-0251 or EA2-8340, or at the
"and we are very pleased to be Second Storey Gallery. Seating is
limited so reservations are advised.
March 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 7

we preserve our 1st Amendment rights?

LETTERS
U.S. farce
To "The Paper";
The 1972 race for the Presidency
to lack the credibility that it
should hava. llllhile the candidates use
the public as pawns in speech-making,
great issues go wanting and
unpublicized. Publicity on important
i ssuas such as the population
explosion, di~elosura of the Pentagon
Papers and Jack Anderson Papers,
prison reform, and black economic
recovery, have bean pushed aside as
non-vote getting issues. Publicity on
these issues is needed and the
importance of the 1972 election to the
future of the United States should be
straaad. Why have we, the public, not
demanded of the candidates who may
represent our nation that they address
thernselva1 to issu81 rather than to
corporate interests? Can we as citizens
allow air pollution to cost an average
family in the U.S. $800 yearty, while
the oil companies that polluted Santa
Barbara are spanked with a $500 fine
for devastating thousands of lifa forms
in the ocean channel? Can we allow the
explosion of drug addiction to
continue? As J. Edgar Hoover
investigates blacks and anti-war
protaltors, who for the most part
realize that Laos and Thailand are the
heroin distributors of the wortd and
that our CIA is allowing this to
continua, we criticize any attempt by
reporters to - k the truth in citizen
spying by the FBI.
Can we help our own state in
allowing freedom of information in
government, operations or shall we let
the recent House Bill 534 introduced
by Rabie, Charette, Ross, and Bledsoe,
fall by the wayside as baing "too
liberal". Recant issues of the NYork Times Book Revi- have been
revealing in relation to governmental
secrecy. In a report by I.F. Stone, he
indicates that closer American and
Soviet relations may be towards the
Soviet side of tyranny and that
political repression of humanitarians
are now in mental hospitals in the
Soviet Union for expressing ideas of
freedom. I.F. Stone says that
indications are that the U.S. is heading
in the same direction with the
attempted censure of n-spepars and
educators. Jack Anderson, who
recently exposed the U.S. role in the
lndianJPakistan conflict was severely
criticized for allowing supposedly top
secret information to be leaked out,
wrote that 20 million documents are
cl-ified top secret and the majority
protect the bureaucrats and safeguard
our leaders from public scrutiny. The
policy of our government is to usa the
power of information to control the
flow of news to the people by cutting
the news -'It the source. He states that
"The government's power to censor
the press was abolished so that the
press would remain forever free to
censure the government. The press was
protected so that it could bare the
secrets of government and inform the
people." Can it be said that repression
and sacn~ey is a necessary outcome of
the population explosion in U.S. or can

-ms

U. S. resisters
Tex.(LNS)··Aithough the
establishment press has shown
increased interest in amnestyfor
draft resisters in Canada and
Sweden, there has been
considerably less discussion of
those draft resisters in federal
prisons across the country.
One of the earliest and most
militant black resisters against the

William Randolph
Hearst Jr.
Editor-in-Chief of the Hearst
Newspapers says "At the very least the
American people deserve to hava the
bad news emphasized as strongly as the
good and hopeful ~s is. And it
should be presented to all of us with a
maximuln of reality and a minimum of
optimism. Burying the tough stuff in
small print way down in the report
helps nobody but our enemia1.
Issues involving the environmental
crisis seem to have lost their impact
Iince candidates have not stressed these
issues in their race to the Presidency.
U. S. Federal and state governments
spent 525 million dollars to clean up
the water systems of the nation but
now, 4 years later after this money
ventura, these water systems are mora
polluted. (These statistics come from
the Earth Care Manual by R. Paul
Fimhabar Augsbury Publishing House,
Minneapolis, Minn. 1971.) An
indication of the ecological damage
done to our environment is the sale of
lands to private owners who must
pledge to preserve the vanishing species
of their land or they will not be able to
buy it. This land usa is an outcome of
industries who have not allowed for
the costs of preserving their resources
from refuse and who have failed to
educate themselves as to the
complexity of the ecological
relationships their industries ware
affecting. Hopefully the President and
candidates will pledge in their speeches
to devote mora than .005% of the GNP
to the protection of our environment
and to the environment of all other lifa
forms.
Because the President continues to
paint a favorable picture of economy,
the war in Vietnam will again be an
issue in 1972. Reports from the
Washington Post of Jan. I, 1972
indicate that the U.S. could remove all
remaining troops from South Vietnam
and still maintain 36,000 man who
would be 811ignad in Thailand and the
Phillipines with the air force to.protect
troops in bombing raids. This means
that besides Viatnamization and a
remaining 35,000 U.S. troops who
would bomb North Vietnam, our
money would be spent el.-hera in
bolstering the Cambodian and Laotian
troops who would then continua dying
so that U.S. Gl's could come home to a
country tom apart by secrecy.
-Name withalcl by request.

Ideal?
To ''The Paper":
Brothers and Sisters,
Over the past three weeks ''The
Paper" has become "the only"
succ:assful means of communication at
Evergreen. Its contributors write what
they believe, students read it, and soma
""PlY in letters like this one. This is a
oesult of the contributors'
determination to gat a rise out of the
student lumpan proletariat no matter
what.
I believe the ideal newspaper should
print the facts, ideally, just the facts,
but Evergrean is not the ideal we were
told it would be, so let the punishment
fit the crime. The facts are that
whoever wrote that part in the catalog
about the realization of the Evergreen
ideal baing up to the students wasn't
kidding us a bit. The people who sat up
this college left the mark of their
consciousness all over in the form of
ready-made structure encroachments

Vietnam war, Walter Collins, is
now one-fourth the way through
a five year sentence in this Texas
facility. Since the U.S. Supreme
Court has rejected his appeal,
Collins hopes for release before
November, 1975 rest on a new
appeal against the army's failure
to explain that he could apply for
CO discharge after induction or
on some form of amnesty.
Collins, a 26-year-old activist
in the black liberation movement,
lost his student deferment in
1966, soon after he began
organizing against the Vietnam
war. After being given the wrong
information when he applied for

PAGE 8 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 10, 1972

upon the academic freedom of avery
student and the Nao·Empire
architecture which encroaches upon
our aesthetic freedom.
The bureaucratic behemoth has
hidden the prison bars of traditional
education beneath the padded walls of
the Evergreen ideal and only the
clanging of our cups against thoso bars
can be justified until the change is
made to real freedom.
For this reason alone I can accept
the slanted approach evident in ''The
Paper," but when will the mass of
students act in their own interest?
When will they realize they have
nothing to lose but tradition-bound
assignments and grading scales; nothing
to gain but their own free will.
Students of Evergreen, you think
you left "the curve" back at the last
school you attended, but competition
is right behind you, waiting to see you
fail in this rat race .•.
Now is the time for synthesis and
understanding. We must not fail.
J. Cate
Communications & Intelligence

Communicate!
To ''The Paper":
''1\jo feeling of community hare."
"No communication between
programs!" "There's no
communication at Evergreen."
These seem to be observations of
the multitudes , . . but there is no
longer any excuse for a communication
gap. A dearth of information is
available now at the information
center, located on the second floor of
the library building. And,
unfortunately, a small percentage of
tha students are making usa of the
material baing supplied.
I've also heard complaints from
various students concerning the
narrowness of their program is doing
something you're interested in?
Communicate with other program
members; tall 'um what you think of
their seminars, lectures, or films! OK.
One hang-up. Certain programs aren't
contributing to the board. (As Human
Behavior , Human Development,
Po I i tical Ecology). All it takes is
someone to pin up the program'•
activities for the - k .
Thera's a job and internship bulletin
board, along with rides, housing, and
student services information.
Recreational and musical events are
publisizad. DTS'!I in action, legislative
news, woman's n-s. plus proposals
for faa allocations are all items made
available to the student body .''The
Paper, the newspaper, and weekly
happenings on campus, are obtainable
at the Information Canter.
Make usa of these cr-mmu11ication
vehicles. For inclusitm in weakly
Happenings publication, sane meeting
notices to room 3114.
An excellent "save our campus"
exhibit has been there for all to see
over the past week. The photography
and ideas were vary affective, and I
hope most students took the time to
see and think and feel about someone
else's comments, but I hope it goes
beyond that. It's a critical mutter and
we can all usa the information center
to keap up on our campus's master
plans for the futurw and find out how
we can help keep Evergreen REAL.
Name withheld by request

his CO, he showed up at his
induction center twice and passed
out anti-draft literature.
He was later indicted on six
counts of refusing induction and
convicted of five. Coli ins received
two five year sentences, to be
served concurrently, and a $2000
fine.
Collins appealed the
conviction on the grounds that
the board was all-white and
improperly constituted. Of the
five board members, only one
lived in the area that it served and
the chairman lived in another
country ·· in direct violation of
the Selective Service Act.

Costigan ••
To ''The Paper":
It doesn't take much looking
around to see that soma of the
most asinine political rhetoric is
coming out of Evergreen that one
can possibly imagine. The basic
reference here is toward the
recent talk given by Professor
Giovonni Costigan, and the
manner in which he was built up
before and after his speech.
A number of weeks previous
to Costigan's visit to Evergreen,
little posters began popping up,
stating that the great Giovonni
Costigan, "who recently defeated
journalist William Buckley in
front of over 8,000 people" in a
going to come
public debate, on down from Seattle to give a
lecture. The introduction of
Costigan also exclaimed that
Buckley had been crushed in
debate, and still further, the last
issue of ''The Paper" had an
article adamantly proclaiming the
same.
It is without a doubt that this
sort of i rrasponsibla rhetoric
belongs in the political garbage
can, and not spread all over the
campus of Evergreen. To say that
Costigan defeated Buckley in
debate is an absurdity, as the
format of their so-called dabate
was so loose that it turned out to
be nothing lass than the throwing
of personal quips back and forth.
to say that anyone defeated
anyone elsa in what was just a
series of personal character
slashas under the facade of a
legitimate debate is to leave a bad
taste in the mouth of anyone
even vaguely familiar with formal
debate.
Undoubtedly the
aforementioned comments will
prompt a good deal of other
similar rhetoric that will be an
attempt to write these
observations off as having been
writ111n by soma conservative
protege of Buckley and his like;
however, it should be known that
.....r in the l81t - - - l o .,....
in another paper at another
institution, this writer blasted a
certain Spiro Agnew for the exact
same reason.
Hance, it should be realized
that this is not an attack upon
any particular political ideology,
although it may appear to be so
linea it is taking away a little of
the praltiga of "the local liberal",
as the Seattle Times referred to
Costigan, and is, in essence,
blasting the '1ibaral factions
which sponsored the U of W Prof
to talk at TESC.
Navar let it be said that
irresponsible rhetoric is the sola
produce of any one political
group, but that all seam to,
unfortunately, participate with
equal vigor. Despite this basically
ideologically unbiased view,
however, this writer will probably
hereafter be referred to as "that
Bircher," ate., just as the
reference was directed in tha way
of a "redic..Jib" last year. Sanity
in politics, where are youu?
Craig Apperson
I.C.S.

But like Lee Otis Johnson and
John Sinclair, Walter Collins was
a troublemaker who had to be
put away. As early as 1962, he
was involved in sit-ins in the
South. He later worked in voter
registration drives across the deep
South in places like Laurel,
Mississippi. In 1966, he began
organizing resistance to the
Vietnam War in the black
community of new Orleans. Since
then, he served as a staff member
of the Southern Conference
Educational Fund (SCEF) and
Southern regional director for the
National Association of Black
Students (NABS).

Dear readers
If you've come looking for
"The Paper" office (to submit
articles, letters or gripes) and all
you could find was the F.M.
Radio office, just peek over your
shoulder and we'll be there. That's
right, we've moved (or been
moved) across the hall and now
our new office is in Library Room
3217.
P.S. Although we've moved,
our phone numbers are still the
same, that is, 3189 if you're calling
on campus and 753-3186 if you're
not.
Love,
The Staff

VIEWPOINT
By NGO VINH LONG
LIBERATION News Service
(Editor's note: While many
people more or less assumed that
Nixon's latest peace proposals had
to be unacceptable to the
Vietnamese, a lot of them just left
it at that without bothering to
examine the plan closely. In the
following article, Ngo Vinh Long
takes apart what may have
appeared to be one of the most
generous elements of the
proposal--the offer to have
President Thieu step down and
then hold a new presidential
election.
Ngo Vinh Long is a Vietnamese
student living in the United States
who writes regularly for Thoi Bao
Ga, a newsletter published by the
Vietnam Resource Center, 76a
Pleasant St., Cambridge,
Massachusetts 02139. The
newsletter provides excellent
material on developments in
Indochina, including analysis like
this article and translations of
articles from the Vietnamese press
attacking the U.S. role. The
Resource Center also provides
speakers. Write to them at the
above address for subs or more
information.)
President Nixon's eight-point
plan has been called "very old
wine in a new colored plastic
bottle" by many Vietnamese. The
bottle may seem pleasing as well
as flexible to American eyes but
the content is still the same. In
fact, even the dramatic offer for a
new presidential election in South
Vietnam is nothing new.
To many Americans, Mr.
Thieu's agreement to submit to a
new internationally supervised
election "within six months of an
agreement" and to resign one

month before that election takes
place may seem to be "both
generous and farreaching." But
Presid~nt Nixon's intention here is
not only to maintain the Thieu
regime and undo some of the
embarrassment caused by the last
bloody election farce when many
pe6ple in the opposition were
killed and horribly beaten, but
also to cause damage to the
Vietnamese revolutionaries.
First of all, Nixon knows very
well that there are 1.1 million men
in the Saigon Army, 4 million
persons in the so-called
Self-Defense Forces, and close to
200,000 combat, service, and
secret pol ice who are under
Thieu's control. They would all be
forced to vote for Thieu and get
votes for him.
One of the ways that this could
be done, as in the last election, is
through economic pressures.
Besides drawing their monthly
salaries from the Americans, the
Vietnamese soldiers also have to
buy their daily supply of rice
from the Americans through the
Thieu government. This is because
about 60% of all the crops in
South Vietnam have been
destroyed by American chemical
defoliants and bombs (according
to Deputy Tran Van Qua,
chairman of the Committee on
Agriculture at the Saigon Lower
House).
South Vietnam has had to
import on an average about I
million metric tons of rice a year
from the United States. By
threatening to cut off their food
supply or their monthly pay, or
both, the Thieu regime hopes that
it can manipulate these people.
Since there is supposed to be a
general ceasefire throughout
Indochina in the meantine, any
military uprising could be termed
enemy sabotage and dealt with
severely.
Secondly, Nixon knows that
one month is not an adequate
period for effective campaigning
by opposition candidates,
especially when there are about
200,000 political prisoners who
are still in jail and when the
chairman of the Senate, one of
Thieu's most effective henchmen,
i s i n I i n e t o ' 'ass u rn.e

administrative responsibilities in
South Vietnam." This is not to
mention the fact that the Lower
House and the Senate are under
Thieu's forces.
Since the last election, several
thousand people who have
protested the one-man election
farce have been thrown in jail.
Most notable of these people are
Madam Ngo Ba Thanh, Chairman
of the Women's Committee for
the Right to Live, and Huynh Tan
Mam, president of the National
Student Union of South Vietnam.
Thirdly, Nixon knows that in
order to participate in such an
election the Vietnamese
revolutionaries will have to
surface, and therefore would
expose themselves to assassination
by the Thieu regime and
American-paid agents. This idea of
challenging the revolutionaries to
an election so as to make them
expose themselves and then
eliminate them was first proposed
semi-publicly by Professor Samuel
P. Huntington of Harvard
University in 1968 in a paper
entitled "Accomodation in South
Vietnam."
Since Huntington's and
Kissinger's offices at Harvard were
next to each other and since these
two professors were in the same
department, it is most likely that
some of Huntington's ideasrubbed
off on Kissinger.
Fourthly, and most
importantly, by saying that
"President Thieu will announce
the elements of this election,"
Nixon knows that there is no way
the other side can accept such an
election proposal without
committing political suicide.
Thieu and his regime have been
installed and maintained by the
American government through
military and economic means
contrary to the will of the
Vietnamese people.
To agree to Nixon's proposal
that Thieu and his regime should
play any part in the election at all
(let alone to "announce the
elements of this election" while
Thieu's henchman, the chairman
of the Senate "would assume
ad.m inistrative responsibilities"!)
would mean that the National
Liberation Front in effect

recognizes the intervention of the
United States in the internal
affairs of Vietnam as legitimate
and that the United States does
indeed have the right to take part
in settling the affairs of the
Vietnamese people.
In fact, to most Vietnamese,
the problem is not whether there
will be an election, but how to get
the United States to withdraw
completely from Vietnam militarily and economieally - so
that the Vietnamese people can
take care of thier own affairs.
It is quite clear from even a
quick survey of press and politica'
currents in their country that a
majority in Vietnam would never
accept even this most "generous
and far-reaching" of Nixon's
peace proposals. Why, then, did
Nixon make it?
The answer was given by Nixon
himself in his TV address:
"If the enemy rejects our offer
to negotiate we shall continue our
program of ending American
involvement in the war by
withdrawing our remaining forces
as the South Vietnamese develop
the capability of defending
themselves. If the enemy's answer
to our peace offer is to step up
their attacks, I shall fully meet my
responsibility as
Commander-in-Chief of our armed
forces to protect our remaining
troops."
Since Nixon delivered his
speech, high American officials,
including Kissinger himself, have
been talking about increased
enemy attacks and the possibility
of a second Tat offensive.
In other words, President
Nixon and his advisors seem to be
preparing the American people for
an American escalation while
blaming the whole thing on the
other side. Also, by diverting the
American people's attention to
the military situation, the Nixon
administration is trying to cover
up the political situation in South
Vietnam where most groups are
demanding that the United States
should withdraw from their
country immediately, totally and
unconditionally, and cease all
support · economic or political for the Thieu regime.

Thank you, Trustees! Trust us.
the co-operative
Working Members of The Paper Co-operative
Chris Ness
l.es1er L. Leahy
Joe Campo
Kit Pagel

Diane Senn
Bruce Brockmann
Cam Musgrove
Michael Miller

Staff:
Ken Balsley, Charles Stevens, Bob Turnage

l

"It f/..Q..fl§ frighten one. It is the special file on dissenters. "

~~

The Paper is published weekly as a co-operative effort for the
students, faculty and staff of The Evergreen State College, Olympia,
Washington 98505. Editorial comment contained herein does not
uecessarily 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 3217A TESC Ubrary, camP.us
extension 3189, unrestricted telephone 753-3186.

~-The
Mllitant/LNS
March 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 9

Crime prevention commission seeks interns
l

By TOM SAMPSON
reaching for "law and order" as
American is in the midst of a the voters just did in naming a
dilemna. 43 per cent of all tough cop as their choice for
Americans say they stay off the Mayor of Philadelphia.
streets at night because of their
In the years ahead, American
fear of crime. 35 per cent of must make a choice on how it will
American citizens say they do not deal with crime. It may choose
speak to strangers any more the tools of wire tapping,
because of their fear of crime. The electronic surveillance, preventive
criminal justice system is in a state detention, capital punishment,
of inertia. It does not deter, does and a national police force.
not detect, does not convict, and
The Seattle Crime Prevention
does not correct. It is slow to Advisory Commission is searching
make even those changes that for alternatives to that type of
everyone agrees are necessary. repression in dealing with crime.
Perhaps the most damaging The Commission suspects that the
expression of that inertia has been causes of crime have roots much
the failure of police, court, and wider than "leniency",
correctional officials to recognize "Permissiveness", or Supreme
how little they know and how Court decision.
The Commission states that
important to America it is for
them to know more.
until we deal with the
Recently, two cops were fountainheads of crime - slums,
gunned down in New York, racism, poverty, unemployment
another two in Washington, D.C. and idleness, decrepit, dirty, ugly
Tension is rising in the big cities, unsafe, overcrowded housing,
and the frightened majority is alchol ism and narchotics

addiction; anxiety, fear, hatred,
hopelessness, and injustice; we
will still have crime and we will
fail as a people.
The philosophy behind the
Crime Prevention Commission is
that everyone is affected by crime
and therefore everyone should be
informed and concerned about
crime prevention. The chairman
of the Commission, Mr. Fred
Tausend, is a brilliant lawyer. He
doesn't own a gun; lives in an
integrated neightborhood; and is
determined to find alternatives to
repression in dealing with crime.
Tausend says, "The Seattle Crime
Prevention Commission can be a
catalyst for change in society. It
has the opportunity to serve as a
model for other cities throughout
the nat ion." Tau send's main
interests are in the areas of law
reform, prison reform,
community-based corrections,
consumer protection, drug abuse,
youth and delinquency, controls

The people did this'

Angela out on bail
ByKARENMcCONNELL
PALO ALTO, Calif. ( LNS) --With
a broad smile and a big fist,
Angela Davis walked out of the
North County Courthouse jail
into a light rain after 16 months in
jail. It was several hours after
Judge Richard Arnason set her
bail at $102,500 -- something her
supporters in this country and
around the world have been
demanding by petition and letter
since she was first denied bail in
June.
The decision came four days
after the Calif. Supreme Court
abolished the death penalty and
the classification "capital crime"
passed into Calif. legal history.
The decision has shaken the state
judiciary system and the state
hierarchy from Gov. Reagan on
down has condemned it.
The California Correctional
Officers Association (an
organization of prison guards) has
begun a drive to put a state
constitutional amendment
reinstating the death penalty on
the November ballot. They will
need 520,806 signatures to put
the amendment on the ballot.
The ·decision means that
Ruchell Magee and the San
Quentin 6 no longer face the gas
chamber. Ruchell --charged with

murder, kidnapping and
conspiracy in the August 1970
Marin County escape attempt--was
originally Angela's co-defendant.
The San Quentin 6 are -charged
with the deaths of three guards
' and two white inmate-trustees in
the aftermath of the murder of
George Jackson.
Arnason had denied Angela's
bail on the basis of a California
law which prohibited the release
of those accused of capital crimes
where "proof of guilt was evident
or the presumption great". When
capital punishment was abolished,
bail became a matter of judicial
discretion and Arnason granted
bail.
After the state court ruling on
the death penalty, Marin County
DA Bruce Bales said that there
might not be any point in
prosecuting the San Quentin 6
since they can no longer get the
death penalty.
.
In a press conference the day
after her release, Angela referred
to Bales' comment as evidence
that the judicial system is only
concerned with revenge. About
her own release · from prison she
said, "I see this as a people's
victory, the people did this. The
people have struggled around
conditions in prison. They have

struggled around the repression
which prevails in the prisons in
this country, and it was because
of the atmosphere that was
created by those struggles that the
Supreme Court could abolish
capital punishment, and that bail
could evPntually be made
possible.'"
Defen·se Attorney Howard
Moor added, "Our struggle is not
to get justice from the court, but
rather to bring justice to the
court."
Angela has been named as
counsel in her own defense along
with a team of defense lawyers.
Now that she is out on bail she
will have fewer restrictions
preparing her case--although her
activites are still restricted. She
must have the presiding judge's
permission to participate in public
rallies and must observe all court
orders--including the December
1970 order forbidding her to
discuss any aspects of the trial in
public.
Jury selection begins on
February 28. Prospective jurors
will no longer be disqualified if
they are against the death penalty
and Davis considerers this a
victory-a pro-death jury if often a
pro-prosecution jury.

After weeks of experimental
study, primarily by trial and error,
"The Paper" staff has decided on
a Friday Morning press run to
obtain maximum benefit of each
week's limited "free" time.
Deadlines for a smooth flow of
copy have been set at noon
Tuesday and 9 a.m. Wednesday
of each newspaper week.
Due Tuesday will be opinion
articles, letters and feature
material. News stories and

photographs must be at "The
Office", Library 3217, by 9 a.m.
the following day.

:
·
;
'

''Paper''
deadlines

on guns, police -community in productive political, economic,
relations, and citizen awareness and social participation in the
and involvement.
community; and, in some cases
Tausend believes that students add to their monetary income.
can play a direct role in changing
Whether Al!lerica choose
society. For that reason he has repression or reason in dealin
asked that students interested in with the problems of crime in the
doing research of a relevant nature years ahead is up to us. We can
be allowed to intern with the prevent nearly all of the crime
Crime Prevention Commission. now suffered in America - if we
The students who decide to work care. Our character is at stake.
with the Commission will be
Those students interested in
making a direct contribution to working for the Crime Prevention
the criminal justice system. These Commission should contact either
students will be pioneering an Mr. Sampson or their student
experiment, which if successful, activities coordinator.
will serve as a model for similar
(Tom Sampson is an Evergree
crime prevention groups State College student who wa
throughout the nation. These recently appointed Director of th
students will help change the Seattle Crime Prevention Advisor
focus of crime prevention from Commission. He formerly worked
repression to reason. In addition, as a legislative intern in the United
they will have an opportunity to States Senate; committee clerk in
actualize their abilities; learn the State Legislature; served as a
about other life styles; increase summer volunteer in the South
their personal growth and under Julian Bond. He can be
developement; involve themselves reach in Seattle at MA3-7520)

Resident
tuition
non-•••
The decision by the legislature
to give the vote to the 18 year old
has presented to the colleges and
universities a grave economic
problem. This problem being: Is a
student who came from out of
state but is now a registered voter
in this state to be considered an
out-of-or in-state resident?
Nonresident tuition is greatly
higher than that of resident, and if
the colleges and universities lost
the out-of-state tuition fees it
would present quite a economic
problem for the institution.
Recently a court case came up
that may tend to add to the
action on this issue. In Kansas
City, Kan. a local court ruled that
a college student who is registered

in a specific town becomes a
full-resident of that town,
thereby making it impossible to
require him to pay nonresident
tuition.
District J4dge William Ryan,
who handed down the decision on
this case, based his decision on the
18-year-old vote. He stated that
the 18-vote destroys the old
traditional theory of an
18-year-olds dependence on hi
parents, within which is included
that his resident is that of his
parents.
It seems certain that many
out-of-state students will be
setting up residency in that stat
in which they are attendin
school, presenting their schools
with a new economic crisis.

In all cases, however,
contributors should submit
material as soon as available,
rather than pushing deadline
times.
Remaining policy will be set at
a special newspaper meeting
today, Friday, at 7 p.m. in ''The
Office".

Guerilla/LNS

March for Cooper Point
By CHARLES STEPHENS
The roads on Cooper Point
have seldom experienced as many
waffle-stampers, Army boots,
tennis shoes, and polished oxfords
as last Saturday when the Cooper
Point Association sponsored its
"March Fourth for Cooper
Point", a four-mile hike from
Westside to TESC. The purpose,
besides providing an enjoyable
weekend activity, was to
emphasize the need for an open
space system in the area. The
route was planned to give an
overview of many of the potential
trail and open space sites on the
Point, including the new high
school site, the Kaiser Valley and
the College Parkway.
Fifty-three people turned out
to make the trek from Jefferson
Junior High School to the
Evergreen Library, including

oldsters, youngsters on bicycles,
students, young couples with their
children strapped to their backs
"papoose style", and even a
couple from the Olympia
Wanderer's Society, who knew
little about the Association but
explained, "We never pass up a
good hike."
With the beautiful weather,
pI easant surroundings, and
convenient "pit-stops" along · the
way for cookies and punch, many
hikers began to feel that this sort
of activity was a tempting
proposition for every weekend. It
was refreshing to travel through
the area at something other than
40 or 50 miles per hour, for then
one begins to notice the Scot's
broom, Madrona trees, cedar
stands, and all the other things
worth providing for with open
space.

FANS OF THE FOREST from Olympia join Evergreen community members for a Saturday
trek for "open space consciousness" in the Cooper Point Peninsula area.

Library to be depository
TESC's Library has been
designated by Representative Julia
Butler Hansen of Washington's
Third Congressional District as a
U.S. Government Publications
Depository, it was announced last
week.

Photos by Pam Alexander
A TREK THROUGH THE WOODS, sponsored by the
Cooper Point Association, demonstrates the beauty of the
Olympia area as viewed at a relaxed walking pace.

Transportation DTF
Are you troubled over the
parking lots blossoming
throughout the campus, the huge
stadium lights over these lots,
your automobile gulping gallons
of gas, the traffic congestion
encountered while traveling along
Overhulse Road?
The problem of the
automobile is one of those
real-life problems which should
be tackled by any real-life
learning institution such as
Evergreen . The problem does not
just involve smog in Los Angeles,
freeways in Seattle, or noise in
down-town Detroit. It involves
the effects of the automobile on
our own enviroment -- The
Evergreen State College.
But it is unrealistic to declare
war on the motor car without
providing a workable alternative.
It is hoped that students, faculty,
staff, and administrators sincerely

concerned about this issue would
choose this DTF as the vehicle
through which to input their
ideas. We'll meet each Monday
night at 7:30 p.m. in the C&l
lounge.
Perhaps the solution is a
system of many small buses.
Maybe we should ' think of coordinating a plan with the
Olympia Transit system and the
surrounding Cooper Point
community. This may take the
form of a private company, or a
school funded service or even a
transit co-op. These are some of
the possibilities that the
Alternate Transportation DTF
will investigate. For more
information come to the meeting
Monday night or contact: Marc
Ross (Political Ecology), Nancy
Stevens, Bill Winhie, Charlie
Stephens, Jack Peterson (The
Evergreen Enviroment).

Word was received by Dean of
Library Services Jim Holly from
Robert E. Kling, Jr.,
Superintendent of Documents for
the U.S. Government Printing
Office.
The designation means that
Evergreen may now directly and
automatically rece1ve, without
charge, any of the estimated
24,000 titles printed each year by
the
federal
government--everything from
various agency bulletins to
statistical abstracts, census
materials, reports of House and
Senate proceedings, the
Congressional Record , etc. The
materials then will be made
available, along with other parts
of the collection, to Evergreen
library users, including students,
faculty, staff, and the general
public in the college service area.
Under federal law, each U.S.
Senator and Representative is
allowed to designate two I ibraries
as Government Depositories. The
State Library in each state· is
automatically designated as a full
depository library. Evergreen now
becomes a partial or selective
depository, which means college

library officials now may select
printed materials judged to be of
most use to the institution and
the surrounding population.
"We will soon receive a
complete listing of all printed
materials available from the U.S.
Government, which is the world's
largest publisher," Malcolm
Stilson, Evergreen's Chief of
Library User Services and
Documents Librarian, said. "We'll
select those that best support
both our programs here and also
of general interest to the
community--perhaps half of the
24,000 yearly titles, many of
which are printed in multiple
volumes. And, as time goes by, we
can add additional titles to
respond to campus and
community demand or subtract
items that might not be needed."
Evergreen's library now has a
capacity for 250,000 volumes and
an ultimate capacity of more than
1,000,000. An initial area of
twelve 30-foot rows, or 5040
running feet of shelving, has veen
reserved for documents in an open
stack area on the third floor of
the building.
Plans call for classifying and
cataloging all major documents
and placing the balance in a
separate collection under the
Superintendent of Documents
classification scheme, with
cross-referencing to the cataloged
materials.
Endorsed by State Librarian

Maryan E. Reynolds, Evergreen's
government documents
depository status will have a
number of advantages, "even
though we're in close proximity
to the State Library", Library
Dean . Holly said. "Our operating
hours--99 per week--are longer,
meaning that residents of the
co II ege service area, including
state employees who work during
the day, will have increased access
to the government materials. The
documents .also will become
readily available on campus to our
stu dents and can ' be made
available to other public libraries
on a loan basis as they now are
from the State Library. In the
long run, it also will mean savings
in collection costs for necessary
items we otherwise might have to
purchase.
"With out the assistance of
direct and automatic mailings
from government sources, it
would be increasingly difficult for
us to supply the background
materials which the educated
student and citizen of today needs
to make informed judgments.
"And, the saving in time
relative to the automatic receipt
of government publications, as
opposed to piece-by-piece
selection and ordering, will allow
us to offer a higher quality of
reference service without an
appreciable increase in staff:"

March 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 11
'

,,,

.

'I

• t

~

I

' .

--

Ananda Marga Yoga
An Olympia unit of the
Ananda Marga Yoga Society has
been formed and is open to all
interested. Based in Patna, India,
the organization has become
international. Those interested
should take notice of the
following three items.
There will be a group
meditation every Wednesday
evening at 6:30 in room 2510 in
the library. A potluck dinner will
follow. This is open to
everyone.
On the 24th, 25th, and 26th of
this month, there will be a retreat
at Millersylvania State Park. Keep
your eyes peeled for notices.
There will be a slight cost for
food, etc. This should be quite a
high event.
Watch for notices announcing
the arrival of our teacher, Acharya
Dharmendra Rao.
The founder of Ananda Marga,
Shrii Shrii Anandamurtijii, has
trained thousands of spiritual
teachers who are constantly
traveling around the world
teaching the technique of
meditation to all that are willing
to listen. We on the West Coast
are most fortunate to have a
teacher who is stationed in
Corvallis, Oregon. Although he
came to America to pursue an
agricultural study to take back to
India, Dharmendra spends all his

0

m

Sunny View
t..U.IDIST CAMP

spare time traveling up and down
the coast turning people on to
Ananda Marga Yoga. He has
promised to come to Olympia to
teach meditation as soon as we get
a group started. The instructions
will be free.
"The ideology of Ananda
Marga always points to the
Cosmic as the only means of
uniting all mankind and abolishing
the bandages of mankind. All
other ideals or "isms" are divirsive
in their tendencies. In Ananda
Marga, the Cosmic Entity is the
source and central idea, and
Cosmic Brotherhood will be the
natural and final result."
Meditation serves as a vehicle
by which an individual becomes
more and more aware of his/her
true self. It is through meditation
that one finds the key to the door
of Cosmic Brotherhood.
But it is the belief of Ananda
Marga that meditation must go
hand in hand with selfless action
in the service of humanity.
Through meditation, we becomes
more successful in our encounters
in the world, and likewise, selfless
action boosts the success of our
meditation.
If you have any questions
concerning the Ananda Marga
Yoga Society, contact Charlie
Buchwalter in D-304, 3224.

Our
Service
May Not
Be for
Everyone

Travel contracts
Definite plans are now being
laid for a one year program of
cu ltu ra I studies abroad. This
information was received last
Friday from Cruz Esquivel,
faculty sponsor of the program.
Esquivel went on to say that a
student planning committee had
already drafted a proposal and
was now at work revising it based
upon suggestions from Deans
Teske and Cadwallader.
As it now stands, however,
students will leave for Europe to
pursue their individually designed
programs in September of this
year.

,_

Explaning
some of the
criteria that have been suggested
by the planning committee, Cruz
said, ''They are concerned about
attracting serious students, not
tourists." To help accomplish this
goal the committee is asking that
any student interested in the
program develop a personal
statement of purpose for going
abroad. "We really want you to
know what it is you hope to
accomplish during your stay in
Europe."
The statement should be
delivered to Cruz's office no later
than March 31st. Cruz explained,

''There are an awful lot of details
to iron out and we need to know
exactly how many people are
going. We also need help to get it
all done."
Another demand students must
make of themselves is for
proficiency in the language of the.
country to which they are going.
"We have the resource people,"
Cruz said, "to help students learn
Soanish, Italian, French, Greek
and German. Total immersion
sessions are starting spring
quarter. It would be very hard to
consider anyone for the trip that
could not demonstrate some
language proficiency.'
Cruz went on to say, ''The
student planning committee has
scheduled a whole group meeting
on April 3rd in Lecture Hall 4 at
2:00p.m. to discuss the remaining
tasks and plan for September.
This meeting is crucial to the
success of the program and if you
plan to go, your attendance is
essential."
There are sign-up sheets in
Room 1501 and also in Cruz's
office, Room 1410.
"Again, I must stress," said
Cruz, "March 31st is the deadline
for submitting your statement of
purpose."

PAGE 12 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 10, 1972

TAKING ADVANTAGE of Learning Resowces Group's diversity of educational aids, an
Evergreen community member catches up on program material.

learning group resourceful
By KEN BALSLEY
A relatively little known and
commonly misunderstood portion
of the Evergreen Community is
the Learning Resources Group.
When it is thought of at all it is in
the context of teaching people to
read and write. It is generally
assumed that people who are
deficient in math or English
utilize the facilties. Such is not
the case.
"A student can come out of
high school without any
deficiencies," said Lou-Ellen
Peffer, coordinator, "but does
that mean that he has all the tools
he might need to answer the
questions they're asking in
Poli1k:al Ecology, Envi(onmentat
Design, or in the Causality
program. That would assume that
someone is a super student."
The Learning Resource Group
is designed to fit in with
Evergreen's concept of education.
It is arranged to help the student
develop the kind of skills
necessary to operate at Evergreen .
"It means learning to read
critically," says Ms . Peffer. "It
means to read, to some extent,
with seminar discussion in mind.
Is there any difference between
the way you read for a seminar

and the way you read for a test?"
The Learning Resources Group
has much to offer the student.
Under Esther Barclay a student
can get an evaluation of his
present reading skills and then
work on improvement through
the use of programmed materials.
With Ms. Peffer's help, group skill
workshops and individual tutoring
programs can be worked out.
Steve Riggins is the man to see for
the student who wants to learn
the process of developing
self-paced learning programs. Gail
Martin is the person wo see for
those interested in Essay Writing,
Creative Writing, Journal Writing;
or Language Skill development.
Dan Chang is in charge of Math.
How do students find their
way to the Learning Resources
Group? "Lots of people who are
concerned with Math come
through referals," say Dan Chang.
"Sometimes it's an indirect route
from faculty to faculty."
Sometimes a student realizes he
needs help in a particular area and
searches the Learning Resources
Group out on his own.
"Students are not going to
have all the diverse skills they
need to examine all the kinds of
questions that are being asked,"

says Ms. Peffer. ''That's what
we're involved in, teaching
common threads of study for the
kinds of questions being
asked,' Remedial skills are not
what the Learning Resources
Group is totally concerned with.
Says Dan Chang, "Remedial
doesn't make a whole lot of sense
here because Evergreen doesn't
define a starting point, so there is
no level from which to develop a
reference point."
Members of the Learning
Resources Group have
encountered some problems.
Some equipment was late in
arriving. The tutoring program
never developed to the extent is
should have. One problem Dan
Chang has with the ftUdents he is
working with is that seminar work
comes first. The rest of the work is
crowded in when time permits, so
students haven't come along as
quickly as they chould have.
Visit the Learning Resources
Group in 2608-2613. Drop down
to the first floor to the reading lab
(Room 1308) and take advantage
of the equipment ready to be
used. Rest assured that what
problems that existed have been
worked out and members of
Learning Resources are ready to
help.

Draft counseling
Within the scope and training five students in the field
responsiblities of the Draft on draft counseling so that the
Counseling Office is counseling in existence of draft counseling on
not only conscientious objector campus will become a
c:r1d student deferment areas, but self-perpetuating service. These
also in the areas of: career students are being trained
m iII i tary service planning, predominantly through counseling
enlistment, military referals, sessions so as to assure their
veteran related fields, and any competence in dealing with the
other military related areas, topics and problems that arise.
according to Sue Moffatt of the
Office hours for the service are
Draft Counseling Office on the presently Tuesday and Thursday
TESC campus.
from I to 5 p.m., Wednesday from
Both she and Adrienne 9 to 12 a.m. and by appointment.
Alexander, coordinator of the These hours can and will be
service, have been operating the extended if the use of the service
on campus service to present. merits it, according to Sue.
They are now, however, in
The use of the service has not

been as great as was expected to
date, but now that the lo1fery has
been drawn, use is expected to
increase, and Sue adds, 'We don't
bite II"

Guides at Evergreen

For the past few Mondays, a volunteering their time to speak
group of about ten concerned ,to civic clubs or to whomever else
students have gathered to seek wants to invite speakers from
ways of informing the outside Evergreen. Receiving immediate
community and any other priority is a project to invite state
interested parties about what is congressman on campus for a
happening at Evergreen . legislative seminar. Opponents as
Anyone interested in FM
Spirited-on by Information .well as proponents of Evergreen
radio-specifically on aspects of
Services Director, Dick Nichols, meeting with studehts should
programing, taping, etc. or
the Student Public Relations make for an interesting and
anything to do with radio
Interest Group has several plans in productive session.
business-please have your ideas or
the works to enhance
Last week a Los Angeles Times
suggestions with Carol in the
understanding and allay false reporter visited Evergreen. One of
information center. Your
impressions that some may have his first contacts with Evergreen
cooperation will be appreciated.
of our school.
students was a 30 minute
interview with the Public
Forthcoming developments
''The service is a response to
Relations group. The reporter was
and meetings notices will be
numerous requests received from
told that more personal
posted around the campus.
high schools, community colleges,
involvement and planning is
service clubs and other
characteristic of Evergreen more
organizations," Nichols said. ''The
so than in traditional schools. This
idea is to give groups a chance to
individual responsibility is
see our new campus and talk with
inherent in co-ordianted and
carpentry tools; and anything else our volunteer guides about contract studies as well. Asked if
that you think might be of use. Evergreen's programs and the teachers were undergoing a
You can further help the Farm activities. The tour service is not learning experience as originally
and the environment by set up to handle individual planned, the students replied that
separating your garbage and either visitations because of manpower many seminar leaders were
limitations."
taking it to the Farm or dumping
keeping well up on topics outside
it in one of the big, green,
The group held a first and very their own field but many others
specially-marked receptacles. The successful community seminar at were too bugged down with
Farm can also utilize woodash, so
Perrin Smith's house last Friday administrative work to find time
if you have a fireplace, bring the evening. Through informal chats, to do just that even though they
remains to the Farm.
both neighbors and students alike want to very much. Most agreed
Anyone interested in either
benefited by gainia greater that they have done a great deal
joining the Organic Farm or
understanding of each other. of valuable learning at Evergreen,
helping in other ways should
Similar gatherings are planned but a definite problem arises in
contact Evnvironmental Design.
trying to categorize that learning.
regularly for the future.
Recruiting a greater diversity Learning should not be put into
of students is another objective I ittle categories, but interests
. the group is emphasizing. Already, should be given an opportunity to
a few high schools have invited expand into a meaningful
Evergreen student representatives educational experience. This is
to talk to thier students. Another indeed happening.
The group meets fNery Monday
function of the group is to act as
tour guides for visitors to our for lunch at 11:45 AM in Library
campus. Also, members will be Room 3234, and all interested
people are invited.

FM radio

Organic farm needs
More information is coming in Environmental Action Bulletins.
on Evergre~n·s Organic Farm. There are also many magazines
Suggested readings for those who specializing in organic farming
plan to participate on the farm that offer subscriptions.
are: ''The Basic Book of Organic
For those who can't actually
Gardening", "Living the Good work on the farm but sympathize
Life", and "Grow Your Own". with its purpose, there is also the
Before the farming can begin, a opportunity to help. The Farm
basic knowledge of it is needed. needs different types of tools,
These books are available in the specifically; spade-D handle;
bookstore, in limited quantities. •spading ford-O handle; shovel-0
Free pamphlets can be obtained handle; shovel-long handle;
by writing to such places as the manure fork-0 handle; hoe; rake;
U.S. Department of Agriculture, hand trowel; hand fork;
Rodale Books, Inc. or pick-maddox; wheel barrow;

Spring fun
Planning is being made for a
late Spring Festival which will end
Evergreen's first year. The festival
is supposed to be a total
community endeavor with
students, faculty and staff
involved in a wide variety of
activities, many of which will flow
from year-long work in various
study programs.
The program, as of yet, doesn't
have a name. Anyone interested in
helping to plan the festival can ..
contact either Bruce Roth
(Library 3204, ext. 3199) or Carol
Costello, (Information Center,
ext. 3625).

HENDRICKS REXAIL DRUGS
Westside Shopping Center
Olympia, W•h._
Open Seven Days A Week

Prescriptions
Postal Sub-station
Hallmark Greeting Cards
Russell Stover Chocolates
Complete Drug Store Service
Bank Cards Honored
Large Selection Of Posters

Complete Selection of
Contemporary & Classical
Records & Tapes
Stereo Equipment
Amplifer, Speaker Components

HOUSE OF BONDAGE, a book by black South African Ernest Cole, is the source of these
two pictures. Left: These two blacks were armsted for being in a white area illegally. Above:
After the miners have gone through the administrative procedures, they wait at a railroad
station for transportation to the mine. The identity tag on tht? man's wrist shows shipment
of labor to which he is assigned.

117 South Sound Center"On Till' .\fall"
Olympia,Wn.98501

491-2922

March 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 13

The Evergreen Game

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PAGE 14 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 10, 1972

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Bloodletting



Causality

By KEN BALSLEY
Did the students in the
Causality, Freedom, and Chance
program represent a cross-section
of the world's population? That
was the question to be answered
this particular day. One of the
methods to be used in order to
answer the question was blood
typing.
It is well kn<lwn that all human
blood is of fc. 1r types. That is
Type A, Type B, Type AB and
Type 0. While the percentages for
the types has not been worked
out world wide, the percentages
for the English Population is as
follows: 42.2% have A type
blood, 8.7% have B, 3.2% have
AB, and 45.8% have 0. The
method of determinization is
fairly simple. The different types
agglutinate, or clump when mixed
with a particular antigen. Two
circles are drawn on a slide with a
wax pencil. To one circle is added
antigen A, to the other antigen B.
All that is needed then is a drop
of blood. If the blood clumps
only in anti·A then that person
has A type blood. If it clumps in
anti·B then he has B type blood.
If it clumps in both then he is AB,
and if it clumps in neither, he has
type 0.

Response!
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2)
vita II y needed. It will mean
curbing the entireprogram for at
least two years, he said.
Particularly vehement on the
subject was Representative Hal
Wolfe of Yelm. 'While we all are
sharing the growing pains of our
new Evergreen College, we in the
legislature believe it should have
its opportunities." As for his
personal opinion, "The senate
reacted to long hair, to co-ed
dormitories, to dirty newspapers
on college campuses. It's an
over-reaction by senators who are
taking out all of their insides on
the youth of this state." He
sincerely doubts whether the
youth of this state will be able to
relate whatsoever to Senator
Martin Durkin who gutted the
Evergreen budget of $5 million in
the Ways and Means Committee.
Because it is very innovated and a
predominately liberal arts college
presently, Evergreen will be
delayed that much longer from
becoming a balanced campus.
Another staunch supporter of
Evergreen, Senator Harry Lewis of
Olympia, pointed out that the
$3,500,000 taken from general
funds ($5 million total) served as
an expedient budget balancer for
the Senate Ways and Means
committee to enable them to
finance other projects. He .
questioned the necessity for and
iliMdidnmin~~ncemeasure

up to the need at Evergreen.
'Why pick on Evergreen?" he
as ked. The answer I ies in
Evergreen having a very small
representation--one senator, and
two representatives, with no
strong alumni to apply pressure

WILLIE PARSONS of Causality, Freedom and Chance program draws blood from a willing
participant in a comparative experiment with blood types.
When the blades were broken
out, the blood began to flow .
Down the fingers it dripped, onto
the arms and onto the floor. Some
occasionally found its way to the
slides. Some sturdy, strong

for the school.
So it would appear that
Evergreen is not totally without
support in the legislature.
However, more and stronger
voices will evidently be needed to
attract the kind..of attention our
college deserves.

From Great
Geo himself

looking people couldn't bring
themselves to wield the blades and
had to have it done by someone
else. Some weak, frail looking
individuals used the blade on their
fingers as though it was a common

occurance in their life.
The result tended to bear out
the percentage figures. An
attempt was made to work out
the RH factor but failed because
of faulty serum.

• •
United creat1v1ty
After the apparent death of
the "Film Society" by monetary
starvation, a student film
distribution, projection, and
production organization known
as "United Creativity" has taken
it's place with some pretty drastic
changes. The film schedule is as
follows:
Sidney Pollack's · _ ·"They
Shoot Horses Don't They?"
May 4th
Tod Browning's "Freaks"

April 6th
Stanley Kubrick's '2001, a
Space Odyssey" and Walt
Disney's "Alice in Wonderland"
together.
April 13th
Robert Altman's "Brewster
McCloud"
April 20th
Michaelangelo Antonioni's
"Blow-Up" and "Zabriskie
Point" together.
April 27th

By DEVI UNSOELD
Once when the world was very
young, the Great Goeduck looked
down from his giant sandpit in the
sky. And what he saw was not
good. ·~hat has happened to
the division of night and day," he
wondered, peering through the
murky air. "And the separation of
land and water? The oceans are
either paved over or full of
garbage."
But then his roving eye was
caught by a spot of green tucked
in amongst the gray hills of earth.
He peered closer and then his
face lit up with pleasure. He could
see some horrible cement box-like
buildings but there were tiny
figures clambering around on
them, bodies hung from the
rafters in rope slings, some
bounced down the building sides
like rubber balls, others wedged
themselves in cracks, doing
pullups from window sills; and
their laughter rose and spiralled in
the air. He could see the mud and
the cement and the feelings of
despair, anger and loneliness, but
there was a Iso a feeling of
excitement that ran bouncing
through the gray halls laying it's
electric fingers on whoever it
came upon. People were tying on

Photo displays
Media Loan Department,
Library l 302B, currently houses
the second of a series of nine
professional photographic
dis pia ys , complete with an
informal workshop by the Pacific
Northwest artist respon sible each
visiting collection.
Media Gallery , as the
photographic exhibition area will
be known, featured last week the
work of Jim Lommasson up to a
scheduled seminar Wednesday,
March 1, from 2:30 to 5 p.m.
The Portland photographer met
fo discuss his work as well as
offer criticism and advice to
Evergreen's myriad of

one gnarled old pine tree a flag
flapped a I ittle. The Great
Goeduck smiled as he looked at it
a little closer. There was a
goeduck printed on it along with
the words, "OMINA EXTARES."
"Maybe things aren't so ~d
after all, " he thought as he
grinned a little at the weak,
foolish, glorious doings of man.
Then he turned back to more
important things.

picture - takers and other
interested community members.
In the middle of this first
workshop, and in the eight
remaining through June , the
professional's photo exhibit was
replaced with examples of
participants' efforts for
discussion and display until the
next week-long showing prior to
a workshop. At present. the
second exhibit has been displayed
since Tuesday.
Evergreen's new Media Gallery
will be open for viewing by all 8
a.m . to 5 p.m. weekdays
throughout the academic year.

The winter quarter in the
Causality program has been
mostly concerned with evolution
and genetics. Drosophila
melanogaster, or fruit flies, are
being bred in the laboratory for
the purpose of predicting what
future generations will look like
when bred with other types. Fruit
flies have a large fertility rate and
short gestation period so the
results will be known before the
end of the quarter. While
studying the theory of evolution
according to Darwin and his
supporters, two fundamentalists,
sometimes known as Jesus Freaks,
were invited to give the Bible's
theory of evolution. Originally
scheduled to last two hours, the
discussion lasted six.
Movies shown or scheduled to
be shown included such classics as
"Male Dominance in a Baboon
T, oop", "Miss Goodall and the
Wild Chimpanzees", "The
Mountain Gorilla", and even
"Inherit the Wind."
To wind up the quarter, the
Causality program will celebrate
with a field trip to the Seattle Zoo
to see the primates.
All things considered it has
been an interesting, exciting, and
rewarding quarter for members of
Causality, Freedom and Chance.

May lith
Linday Anderson's "If... " and
Haskell Wesler's "Medium Cool."
together.
May 18th
This date is at the moment
undecided. However, the film will
probably be "Z" or "Putney
Swope".
United Creativity are the
people that pulled off the
Student Film Festival last
January. They will probably be
the ones that organize the
Student Film Festival this coming
May. "United Creativity"
Director Frankie Foster told The
Paper recently that the first fifty
series tickets will be &old with
free admission to both days of
the "Second Student
Film-maker's Film Festival."
However, he added, that since the
lecture hall only holds 300
people that they would probably
limit it to 300 tickets. And for
showings where there was extra
room separate admissions would
be one dollar per show. The series
tickets will be on sale starting
Monday, March 13th, and
continuing after vacation in the
cafeteria during lunchtime. The
series tickets which include all of
the mentioned films costs six
dollars.

Environment and society
Friday, March 10 at 11:30-a.m.
in Lecture Hall One, a special
interest seminar of political
ecology students will be
presenting a uniquely different
way of looking at world systems,
both in part and as a whole.
Energy and nutrient flows will be
broadly outlined to give a basic
understanding of just how and

what runs the earth. Basic realities
such as work-power inputs and
outputs will be presented in
several models. And lastly, the
limits of growth that the world as
a finite planet is beginning to
realize (in economics, population,
industrialization, pollution) will
be presented; a simulations
research project just completed by
a team at M.I.T.

March 10, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 15

Moles

staying at the same distance
below the soil surface all the
while. The mole is fairly fussy
about the type of soil he tunnels
through--it cannot be too sandy
or loose, or the tunnels will
collapse. His favorite soil is soft
and moist, with plenty of humus.
The mole constructs two types of
tunnels. The surface funnel is
used for food foraging, while the
deep tunnel ( 6 to 24 inches
below the surface) is the mole's
"winter quarters." Mole hills
result from soil dug out from the
deep tunnel and piled in a mound
at the surface. Moles, digging day
and night to provide their own
Ian dsca ping to an area, are
indefatigable workers. Their rate
of digging can reach 12 to 15 feet
per hour in ideal soil.

The arrival of spring on the
Evergreen campus also heralds
the arrival of a matrix of
underground tunnels and surface
dirt mounds which are the mark
of one of western Washington's
most common mammals--the
mole. Although moles dig the
year round, they are particularly
active on damp, cloudy days in
springtime. However, unless your
dog or cat snares one and
presents you with the prized
catch, you will probably never
see a mole for they seldom
venture above ground.
The mole is a fascinating case
study of how an animal is
adapted for life in an
underground environment. His
stout body is tapered at both
ends, streamlining him for
running either forwards or
backwards in his tunnels. In
response to these "switch-engine"
activities, the mole has evolved a
velvety coat of fur (soil will not
cling to it) which can lie forward
a I most as easily as other
mammals' fur lies back.
The mole's world is one of
darkness and eyes are of little use
to him. His eyes are tiny organs
so reduced that the mole can
barely distinguish light from
dark. Instead, he relies
on sensitive nerve endings on his
snout and hands to guide him
through his passages.
The hearing system of the
mole is another adaptation to his
particular environment. Sounds
t ravel much better through the
soil than through air , and the
mole has taken advantage of this
fact. He senses with his whole
body those vibrations traveling
through the soil which most
animals hear. This "sense of
hearing" is so acute that a mole
can hear the vibrations produced
by an earthworm several yeards
away.
The mole digs with powerful ,
spade-like front feet, while his
strong hind limbs "dig in" to
keep the animal anchored while
raising dirt upwards with his
body. With short fore arms
protruding directly from the
body , the mole appears to swim
through the soil. He seems to
have a well-developed sense of
direction, for he is able to follow
up and down hills and ravines,

~ ,,

,,,,

Naturally, then, the mole is
also a hearty eater. He consumes
the equivalent of about one-half
his own weight in food daily.
Being of the order Insectivora
(rather than a rodent, as is often
mistakenly believed) the mole's
favorite foods are insect larvae,
ants, slugs, worms and beetles.
The coast, or red-footed, mole
(Scapanus orarius), the species
most common around the
campus, also occasionally
munches on flower bulbs. The
mole has such an insatiable
appetite that even when fatally
trapped he will eat earthworms
offered to him.
Man, with his scissors-jaw trap,
is the mole's worst enemy. Living
underground , the mole is free
from such common predators as
hawks, although snakes
occasionally pursue him through
his tunnels. The mole's low
reproduction rate (three young
per year) also indicates that
natural predators are few. The
breeding season occurs from late
February to early March.
Home owners often become
aggravated with the little animal's
antics under their beautiful,
well-kept, well-fertilized lawns.
But many farmers recognize the
value of the mole in working over
the soil and killing crop pests
such as cut worms and the
Japanese bettie . Moles are a vital
part of the campus natural
community . They are also
fascinating little critters to study.

Ecotactics·

-0'
..

A very wise man once said,
"Pessimism has no survival value,
nor hate, nor elitism, nor
puritanism." Doing the following
small tasks will help to insure a
quality survival for man:
Demand that laws be passed so
the technology that has polluted
the environment can be used to
repurify it.

*

*

*

*

*

*

Think of waste as something
that can be used in another form.
Listen to what California poet
Gary Snyder advocates: "You
can't be serious about the
environment without being a
revolutionary. You have to be
willing to restructure society."

*

*

*

Charles E. Little, founder of
the Open Space Institute, looks
at conservation humorously, " ...
And in the windows of WW I
hung the banners of the blue star
families, with boys at arms
overseas. Now we could have
green star families if the old man
gets his vasectomy and rides a
bike to work instead of that
4,000 pound Super-Polluter
Eight."

Demand that manufacturers
produce cars powered by steam
or electricity. Urge legislators to
pass laws that regulate pollution
of the air, water and soil, and
conserve natural resources.

*

*



115 w. 5th
10 to 5:30, Mon.-Sat.; 10 to 8, Fri.

1707 W. Harrison

352-4751

PAGE 16 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE March 10, 1972

*

*

*

*

*

Urge educators to involve

* to * the * following
Writing
addresses will provide you with
helpful hints on ecology,
conservation and survival:
Ecology Action
Box 9334
Berkeley, CA 94709
Black Survival
4957 Delmar Blvd.
Union-Sarah
Gateway Center
St. Louis, MO 63108
Students for Oregon's
Environment
421 SW lith Ave.
Portland, OR 97205
Project Survival
Municipal Building
Seattle, WA 98404
206-583-5746

Army films
The Individual, the Citizen and
the State is sponsoring the second
half of the Sixth Army Film
Festival today from 1:00 to 4:00
in Lecture Hall 3. The films,
which are supplied by the U.S.
Army Media Service, include these
films: "Trigger Squeeze Ml Rifle ";
"Know your Enemy--The Viet
Cong"; The Army's "The Line is
Drawn"; "Memorial
Activities--Part V··Disposition of
Personal Effects"; "The Bridge";
''Military Stevedoring--Part
VI - -Vehicle Loading and
Stowing"; "Integrity"; and
"Invasion of Crete by the German
Army".

•trlt

Now Would Be Time to Open Your New Account

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK

Westside Speed Wash
1214 WEST HARRISON

OPEN 8 AM to

10 PM

~~~. ;;~~~] I~
FOR SALE, 16' fiberglass Lugar
daysaller, dacron sails, trailer.
motor, $1,850, contact Ronder at
943-8930.

~52-9655

*

Organize non-violent direct
action techniques, such as fairs
and displays in city parks.
Displays may demonstrate
pollution problems and stimulate
people to become involved in
workshops on pollution solving
tactics.

Unclassified
Moved to

*

If you avoid driving cars on
restricted areas of beaches, you'll
be helping save clams, oysters and
other sea life. Avoid littering,
especially glass bottles on streets;
broken glass breaks through tires
and causes flats.

junior and senior high school
classes in studies of the physical
environment. Classes could
include projects directed toward
improving the environment.

FOR SALE, Size 101/z Ralchle
climbing boots, heavy, excellent
condition, $40, call 753-3778.
BABYSITTER
or both of our
month and l'lz
transportation,
Camille
943-5267.

NEEDED, either
children, ages one
years, can provide
contact ward or
Johnson at

Space below donated for personal ads for the Evergreen
Student Community by Westside Speed Wash.

WANTED BOOKS, inmates at
McNeil Is. would really
appreciate books of all sorts,
drop them by the MECHA office,
(Man & Art).
WANTED BOOKS, Have any
books to rid yourself of, give
them to the Third Eye, kids there
want to read, contact Joan
753-7082.
HELP WANTED, need structural
engIneer who cooperate with
building a dome, contact John
David Hartung, C & I, home
943-8893.

Clean the flower beds, trim
the fruit trees and grapes
FOUND, a little black dog, it's
going to get bigger, needs a good
home, has a choke chain, contact
Ann lev at 352·5047.

WANTED, a used aluminum
frame pack and used down
sleeping bag, contact Janet at 753 ·
·3271.
FOR SALE, Head Killy 210cm
Sklis, used, no bindings No. 35,
contact Steve Botkin, 753 -6814
between I and 4, 1707 E 9th,
Olympia (eastside) .

HOUSING NEEDED, P lace to
stay for one guy, preferably
away from Olympia, on Sound
have transportation, will share
reasonable rent, contact Laur
Euer at 352-5803 or
943,4110
and leave message.

EQUIPMENT NEEDED, would
like to borrow an R.F. signal
generator, some where around
100 me •• so I can calibrate one
that I have, contact MIke, Ed,
491-5948.

WANTED HOUSING, 2 bedroom
apt., house, or trailer, wanted
April 1, call 943-8696.

RIDE NEEDED, to San
Francisco, after the Rites of
spring (March 18), contact Carrllu
at 753-2625, will help with gas.

WORK WANTED, Can do
electronics repairs at reasonable
cost, contact Mike Livingston,
ED, Rt. 5, Box 491, Oly.,
491-5948.

WANTED PAINO, cheap, don't
care Is some keys are broken o r
If looks beaten, contact Chuck
at 943·5293.

HOUSING RENT, room to rent,
$60/mo., 31/z miles from college,
an Athens Beach Rd. off Cooper
Pol nt Rd.,
quiet & peaceful,
Contact Mrs. Jackson evenings
352-1692.

WANTED HOUSING, need jUst
enough for one, preferably alone,
like It In the woods or on the
point, If you know of a place call
Claudia at 943-1858.

ROOMMATE NEEDED, one
person to share a nice large house
on the water, male or female,
$47/mo. contact D. Slansky In
IIA, 1307 E Bay Dr., Oly.
Source
Eng US-WaOE.A.1973-01
Is Part Of
Eng The Cooper Point Journal
Media
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