The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 10 (January 19, 1978)

Item

Identifier
cpj0169
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 10 (January 19, 1978)
Date
19 January 1978
extracted text
8

District Medic Program Cut Back
by Nancy Ann Parke
Because the Mclane Fire
District'• Medic I unit (Aid 9)
has suffered a $70 thousand cut
in annual funding, Evergreen
community memben )'lill now
have to pay a baseftt of $50 for
private ambulance service when
they need emergency transportation to •SL Peters Hospital.
Thunton County commisaion-er Marj Yung deleted the $70
thousud In salary subsldatlon
from Aid 9 as of January 1. The
cotrimissioner asserts the· cut
was based on statistical evidence
from the Emergency Medical
Services Board (a county advisory committee under the supervision of the Commi11ioners
Office) which showed the program was not "cost effective."
The Mclane Aid 9 was one of
four Medic units In Thurston
County. According to ·EMS
statistics, Aid 9 responded to
only nine percent of all incoming
calls• to the entire ·Thurston
County Medic I system, and
therefore was not functioning as
efficient]y as the other three
emergency treatment units.

On the basis of these statistics,
EMS counseled the Commissionen Office to place thm, of the
four Mclane-based Emergency
Medical Technicians in outlying
areas of Thurston County, which
had no mobile treatment services
to date.
THE BIRTH OF THURSTON

COUNTY'S MEDIC I
"Mobile treatment units were
the first Innovation in emergency
transportation to the hospital
since ambulances advanced from
hone and buggies to the
automobile," according to Joe
Bushnell, Mclane firefighter and
licensed Paramedic.
Medit I began in Thurston
Co.unty with four mobile treatment vans. Lacey and Olympia
units were staffed by Paramedics
(persons trained in Airwave
Management and certified to

give such treatments as I. V
therapy.)
Tumwater
and
Mclane

treatment

units were

staffed by Emergency Medical
Technicbns (persons trained to
provide first-aid and stabiliution

until Paramedics arrive.)
EMS coven eeventy-five percent of the funding for both
Paramedic and EMT positions.
The dty or fire district picks up
the ·rest. This Is because It was
approximated that three-fourths
of the time thee persons would
be out on aid calls, while one
quarter of the time they would
be Involved with fire department-related work.
As explained
by
Paul
Peterson, Asst. Chief of the
Mclane Fire departmfflt, "The
thought was that eventually they
would take the two aid units and
try and upgrade those people'
skills, and eventually have mott
units."
The aid unit in Tumwater was

subsequently made into a Paramedic unit, however, the Aid 9
unit was not upgraded because it
was the consensus of the EMS
that Mclane did not receive
sufficient em,rgency-related calls
to warrant such a more.
Prior to the January 1 cut-

back, the Mcl.ane unit had two
men on duty at all times. Aid 9
has now dropped back to one

EMT on constant
duty, in
addition to supervisor Peterson

who works an eight to five shift.
When staffed with four persons

the

unit

transported

patients to St. Peters in life
threatening situations, or in cases

such as a head injury where
there was insufficient data available to make a complete
evaluation. With only one maft
on duty, this is now impossible.
Petenon illustrates the dilimma by explaining that the EMT
on duty has an aid hat in one

hand, and a fire hat in the other.
INHER£11ITDANGER
Community members of the 41
square mile Mclane district have
leser chances of surviving in life
threatening

situations,

such as

cardiac arrest, than do persons
. who live in a district covered by
Paramedic-staffed mobile treatment vehicles. Chances of up-grading Aid 9 to Paramedic
stature are now greatly reduced,
due to the recent cut by the
County Commissioners Office

and the counsel of EMS.
Paramedics are certified to
provide more extensive treatment

than EMTs, especially in cases of
heart attack. severe trauma, and
severe blood loss. They are
trained to make use of ElectroCardiogram Machines, and administer lifesaving cardiac drugs.
The heart attack victim has a
fifty percent ~hance of surviving
if Cardiopulmonary
Resuscitation is utilized within three
minutes of the attack. According
to Bushnell, after seven minutes
the attack victim's chances are
virtually zero.
In the Mcl..ane area, several
minutes elapse between the time
that Aid 9 arrives on the scene
of an emergency,
and the
moment when the Paramedics
arrive. An example of this taken
from an yfficial report of Aid Q
files verifies such a lapse :
On January 17 at 6:46 p.m.,
Aid 9 and Medic IV were
dispatched to an injury/accident
at the intersections of Cooper

~ TbeCooperPoiat

lglJouroal

You won't find a flashy neon sign over our door but.
Right now, beginning Winter Quarter, there are
a limited number of vacancies available in almost
all types of Campus Housing Units~ It's just the right
time to move into a warm, comfortable abode
and forget about commuting in the pouring rain
and slippeTy snow. With such conveniences- as
central laundry facilities and community kitchens,
there's no need to venture out in those
chilling winter storms. And if you find yourself
in need of a· bit of the ol' summertime warmth, the
college's Olympic size pool and saunas are
just a short walk away.
To take advantage of these vacancies, drop in
at The Housing Office in room 220 of Building A
or call us at 866-6132.

~CAMPUS HOUSING

Come Live At Our Place.

n.EII
•wS...CaiJaae
Olpapla.M-

Vol. 6, No. 10 January 19, 1978

Veteran Status In Question
A series of dealings between
Evergm,n and the U.S. Veterans
Administration has jeopardized
the eligibility of military veterans
on campus for full-rate G.J. Bill
payments.
The controversy was precipttated by a 1977 V.A. ~lion
called "The Twelve Hour Rule,"
which requires veterans enrolled
In college to carry at ltast U
quarter hours of credit and have
at least U hours of scheduled
class time per week in order to
qualify for full time "resident
status" benefits.
Evergreen and several other
claimants, including Spokane
Community College, filed suit
against the V.A. on October 15,
19?7 at the U.S. District Court,
Eastern Washington District in
Spokane to challenge the "twelve
hour'' regulation. Ev~malntains that, due to the unusual
nature of its curriculum, veterans
enrolled here should not be sul>ject to arbitrary clase time
quotas set by the V .A.
A similar suit Instituted last
year at the U.S. District Court in
Michigan by Wayne State Univenlty was 1ucnssful in striking
down the "twtlve hour'' rule.
The judge. there ruled that the
V.A. has no authority to promulgate such a regulation, but
this decision is Inapplicable
outside the district in which it
was handed down.
In light of the "twelve hour''
regulation, Fran Lynch, Educational Liaison Officer of the
Washington State Veterans Administration Regional Office, and
Elmer Clausen of the Washing-

ton State Approving Agency
(which is contracted by the V.A.
to approve college curricula for
benefit-,,liglbility) met with TESC
offidals last fall to define the
college's curriculum according to
V.A. eligibility standard&. They
formulated a set of guidelines
that allowed vets at Evergreen to
qualify for full-rate benefit• by
satisfying either "resident training" or "practical training" requirements. They then forwarded the text of their determinations to the National V.A. Office
in Washington. D. C.
The V.A. National Office
contacted the State Approving
Agency on Dtcember 19 and informed it that the Evergreen
proposal had been denied because c,;,llegeofficials should not
have particfpated In the approval
decisions. The D. C. Office further informed the State Agency
that vets at Evergreen had
appan,ntly been receiving ben~
fits they didn't daerve, and accordingly that the Agency would
have to redefine all of Evergreen'• curriculum; vets enrolled
at the college would then have to
be recertified on an individual
basil before February 1, 1978.

The State Attorney General

Point Rd. and Golf Club Rd. At

~

presenting Evergreen in Spokane
also started pushing for a ntar-

future trial date at this time.
On January 10 representatives
of the Regional V.A. Office met
with TESC President Dan Evans
and other college offidals, and
presented them with a letter
stating that the majority of instruction offered at Evergreen
meets only the "in~ependent

study" classification of the G .I.
BUIbenefit system. They informed
the officials present that they
had been instructed to reduce. as
of February 1, the payments to
all veterans enrolled at Evergreen
to a "tuition and fees" level until
the reclassification process is
completed.
Evergreen and the State Approval Agency are now working
to reclasaify the college's curriculum so the State Agency can
consldel; \I for reapproval before
the Febru'My 1 dndline.
A hearing on Evergreen's suit Is
now scheduled for Jlinuary 27 at
the U.S. District Court In Spokane: a hearing which had been
scheduled for January 16 was
postponed by the presiding
judge, but he instructed tht V .A.
After receiving this notice
to refrain from reducing payClausen informed TESC officials ments to vets at Evergreen befon,
of the National Office decision, the cue had been heard in court.
and told them t would be ,Tbe judge also advised Evergreen
"nearly lmpoulb e logistically" to tell Its V.A.-financed students
to comply with it. In response, not to drop out.
Evergreen amended iu suit
The Attorney General rep~
against the V .A. to seek a sentlng Evergreen expects to ol>temporary Injunction against the tain a temporary injunctloh
February 1 deadline and acldreso against the February 1 reclassifithe "pattern of . hatra11111ent"it cation deadline at the January 27
perceived in the V.A.'s conduct. hearing in Spokane.

6:48 ~d 9 arrived on the scene.
M,<iic." IV arrived at 7 sharp.
Privare carrier (National Ambulance) arrived at 7:13 p.m.
In a life or deaith situation, the
extra twelve minutes it could
take for Paramedics to reach the

patients(s) could make the cru•
A Paramedicstaffed unit based at the Mclane
cial difference.

station could reach a heart
attack victim in its district much
more quickly than the Olympia
Medic IV unit.

STUDENTS SHOULD
STILL CALL
Students

and Mclane

com-

munity memben should still call
the Aid 9 unit immedi4tely if
thett is any chance a situation
warrainti medical
attention.
Peterson points out that the
EMT on duty has radio contact
with Paramedics, and a private
ambulance will roll automatically if the initial call is of a
serious ruitutt.
There is still a lot a..nEMT can
do to stabilize the patient in the
extra minutes it will take a
Paramedic unit and/or private

ambulance to arrive. The aid
number on Campus Is 866-3333.

Off-campus,
491-2233.

the

number

is

Gary Ru... 11. Lieutenant and
. second-in--command of Campus
Security, hopes that students will
"touch base" with friends who
could provide them with transpo rta ti on to the hospital in
non-emergency situations. Security is unable to do this because it

has only seven full-ti.!"" employ•
ees, and can not dtspene
members to the hospital.

staff

Russell advised that planning
ahead could save students a lot
of money. ln addition to the
base fee of $50 for private
ambulance service, the patient
will have to pay $1.50 per mile.
and the cost of any nec-essary
medical supplies, such as oxygen
which runs $10 each time it's

used.
Many students who don't have
insurance will find themselves in
a 'financial bind if they require
ambulance service. The TESC
business office estimates that
only thirty-five percent of Evergrees students carry one of the
two policies offered through the
college. although some may be
covered under their parents' or
spouse's plans.
Insurance plans available to
Evergreeners are offered through
Group Health and United Pacific. Group health will cover an
entire ambulance fee, but it
should be approved before you
take the ride. The 24 hour
number to call is 4.S0-1700.
United Pacific will cover $35
of the total ambulance costs.

DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN
AID9 AND
COMMISSIONERS omCE
There are some discrepancies
arising from the Mclane Medic
Program funding cut by the
County Commissioners Office.
While Commissioner Yung states
that the Mclane
unit was
inefficient because it covered
only nine percent of incoming
calls to the entire Medic I
system, Peterson's statistics reflect a definite need for the
four-staff-member team.
Chief Peterson contends that
the Mclane Aid 9 unit responded to 463 calls last year. 297 of
which were in the Mclane
district. In defense of Aid 9 he
adds, ''The whole concept when
the program began was if you
saved just one life, then the
whole thing was worth it."
Commissioner Yung told this
reporter that she has suggested
alternative methods of funding
for the continuance of the Medic
program in this area. Rather
than
funding
the
program
through a county-wide levy, she
proposes that Mclane ask for a
special fire district levy, in the
hopes thait the district's residents
would be willing to spend a few
extra dollars to reinstate the
program.

She adds, "I happen to live
out there, and I would respond

to that.''
Peterson states that letters
have been sent to the County
Commissioners both by his office
and TESC wC\ich have not
gained any response. It is his
feeling that residmts of this area

are already paying for the Medic
t ◄l

1d .. ,_.,

2

Lette~llilllOOilllLetters~llilllll@illl
RUBY STAR
Editor's note:
I've receiued numerous complaints this wef?k regarding the

lieadline.

""DOUBLE TROUBLE""

which aµpeared above a letter
m our last issue amw,mcing

the

fo,-mation of 01e Lesbian Caucus.
Apparently
many of the CPf's
rt•ade,-s interprPted the headline
t1s
mea,w1g
I consider
the
Womens Cent"r a,id the Lesbi:m

your fatheis shoes and put
ovaltine in his coffee. I bet in
high school no one would go out
with you and you had zits on
your nose. I bet you watched
Ozzie and Harriet too much and
read Playboy under your covers
with a flashlight. Just what kind
of a macho pinko are you
anyway7 Double trouble indttd.
A concerned reader

Caucus sources of trouble. On
tlu.> contrary
I took it from a
lrne m the letter that reads:

we chose to remain within
t/11'

Womens

C£>nter addressing

our doublP oµµression as Lesbian
1,•omen
My aµolog1es to any•
1me w/10 was offended

Down
With
Fried Foods

Untitled
To the Editor:
I was glad to be informed of
the Lesbian Caucus· existence
through the CPJ. However I
resented your titling the article
"Double Trouble". That would
seem to mean that you see both
lesbianism and feminism as
inherent threats. Do you7
Sincerely,
Linda Bookey

Tc• the Editor:
Dear fnends of The Evergreen,
Recently I had the pleasant
opportunity

to visit your unique

campus Though l didn't talk to
many folks of your land, the
ones I came into contact with
retl'Kted the same sort of feelings
I was impressed with while
wandering around campus. It's
refreshing for me to observe a
space of learning that attempts
to meet the challenges of a
changing universe by architectual
blending facilities into a most
fertile land. No doubt the wood
nymphs and legions of Pan take
delight in your attempts
to
co-exist.
Keeping a character with a
creative angle, I would like to
otfer helpful suggestions. How
about getting out of the unhealthy food business by offering
less fried foods and plastic
throw-a-ways and offer vegetable and/or meat sandwiches
using whole grain, unrefined
products. Seems like a step in a
positive direction. Also, I noticed sprinkler systems in some of
the gardens. It sttmed as if the
forest was thriving well on the
rainfall of the area - so how
come sprinklers?
Take ·care of our planet,
Tom Doran

9 Point
Paladium

let's Have
Some Support,
Please?
To the Editor:
I feel that the title of the letter
I wrote for the January 12 issue,
where I attempted to explain to
nonparents about parenting and
children in general, may have
misled some people. It was titled
.,Mind Your Own Business", but
I felt my point was more "Lets
Have Some Support, Pleaser If
your idea of support is coming
up to a parent having a hard
time and saying, "Can I do
something to help7". or even a
sympathetic comment like, "It's
okay, they all do it sometime,"
then that's great. If your support
takes the form of keeping your
own counsrl. then that's fine,
too. That way, instead of a
generally nasty feeling spread
around, the parent feels better
(we're never sure we're doing the
right thing, nasty glares just
confirm the feeling). the kid fttls
better because the parent is
coping with them better, and the
person offering the support feels
good because they did something
really neat.
Martha D. Spier

To the Editor:
I know your type. Yes I do. I
bet you beat your mother with a
baseball bat. I bet you greased

How To Write letters To
The CPJ
Type thftn. Double-spaced, If poaible. Try to pt
to the point and stick to it. U you Aft unabwto ltk:k
to the point, at least try to be funny. U you can't lie
funny, be crazy. U you can't be crazy, be brief.
Jlw moat lffectlve letten mab one or two polntl.
S1snyour letter, then mall it to the COOPERPOINI'

JOURNAL,TI.

Stam Collep, CAI 305,
Olympia, Wa 98505. l.ettas mu.t be ,«ei-Sby IIOOII
Tuaday to be considerid for that Wftk'• publk:atioll.

Ete,ll(WII

The (Sputtering)
Evergreen Experiment·
by Douglas P. Scrim a
The Evergreen State College
has been an ongoing (sputtering)
experiment for the past seven
years. The faculty are among the
best in their respective fields.
The school's philosophy has a
refreshing quality which puts it
apart from othei institutions of
higher education. Yet each year
the future of this sanctuary of
alternative education becomes
bleaker and bleaker, and this
year seems to be no exception.
A recent report on television
station KING further accentuated
the bleakness of this old "holdover from the sixties." It was the
report which singled out Evergreen's declining enrollment as
opposed to any of the other
Washington State collet;es with
the exception of the University
of Washll\gton. It was the report
which depicted the great apathy
among the school's faculty after
interviewing one less-than~nergetic member. It was the report
done by the same reporter and
cameraman who have since ~n
seen roaming the campus.

So if the report is correct, I
have to ask why the faculty
have become so disillusioned
with that same process they
supported so enthusiastically just
seven yean ago. This now brings
me to the second part of Evergreen's problem and a part to
which the student body must
begin addressing
itself. The
second part of the problem, as I
see it, has to do with all of us
enrolled as the school's studfflt
body.

t

Jan 27 & 28

JR. CAOOILLAC
Feb 1-4

on the faculty and begin taking
some of the load upon ourselves.

2410 w Harrison
357-4191

We have to begin realizing that
we no longer nttd to be spoon
fed, and if there is an occasional
faculty member who still beUeves
we must, then we have to take
that spoon and prove we can
handle the task. This doesn't
mean we abandon our groups; it
means we all work together at
sharpening our group skills. We
are here to sharpen and broaden

CURIOUS ABOUT EMPLOYIIENT ANO GRADUATE SCHOOL
PROGRAMS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES I PLANNING?
Sign up today lor Envlronmental Sciences & Planning Job &
Graduate School Information Dey.
Wednesday, January 25, 1978. 9:00 p.m ....J·JO p.m in Library
3112/Board Room.

FORMAT: Morning workshops on Job Market, Job Search.
Resumes, Appl/cations
and lnter·dews. Afternoon workshop on
Graduate School Information and Individual Interviews available with
professlonal representatives.

FORtJM
Are we allowing the faculty to
be revolutionary in their teaching methodology,
or are we
confining them within the structured walls of academia7 One
thing that can be heard around
the campus is that we aren't
being prepared for the "real
world" and th.at we are being
nurtured within the confines of

skills and convictions that may
be utiliud
in assisting the
community; that may be utilized
in assisting a transnational revolution.

If Evergreen is to work, we
must be willing to take and share
the responsibility and prove to

" ... how many of us 'radical-greenies' have ever considered
Evergreen as the real world, and that we have a moral obligation
to educate that outside world in· order that they too may realize
why we are the 'real thing' and not they?"

•r i I

I

Bulletin

BriardCC@mmmIDl\llmDl~
lbJmiilll@'.

TO PARTICIPATE: Reglatar today ln the Career Planning and
Placement Office, Library 1214. Interviews wlll be aulgned on • first
come, first l8f'V9d basis.
TO PREPARE:
~ortt~.
on ~Y,

An ESTATEl'l.ANNINOIEIIOWI
CUfflflt tu Sawt affect truata,
probat•, wt111, )Oint tenancy, Ntate

on how

and lnh•rltanc• taxH, community
property 111,-,11,
u-•llana/llpe,
a,)d --.liltpplng.1will,
be conduct.ct by Warren Vadman,
CPA; Frank Owen ■, attorney; and
Bob Frazier, Truat Officer at TESC on
Januory a and Flbruory 2. $15 por

-•

121 por

_,.,.._

lo ,....,... admlulon.

Novall1t VICKI DliAHAII FRIEND
-.
ct,aptor from her ,_
bookl,
FALLQAIIEI on Thuraday, January
111th,8:00 p.m. at tho Gnu Doti. Alao,
IRJAN llcLAUQHLIN, an EvergrHn
atucloot,will pootry. Me. Fr1end
will''-'•
,._ worbhoJ''"'-Ulll'f
111thIll 4 p.m. In the CAB Coif•
houN, Rm.. 104. 8f>onby the
Cant• tor Ute,ature In P9ttormanoe.

Coll -KAOI

=~

TIIE GRAY PANTHEQ -

As I see it. the problem isn't

much that Evergre,en's enrollment isn't as high as it should
be. That is a problem in itself,
but for this school it isn't any
different than the enrollment
problems of other 1tate colleges.
In my estimation the prob~
is
that Evergreen is a challenge to
the status quo of what a college
oujjllt- to be. The faculty have
introduced revolutionary content
into the curriculum by musing
to test and grade students.
so

As George Lakey describes in
Strategy for a Living Revolution,

'The point is clear; by putting
into practke now the ideals of
one's profession, one would be
putting a test to the status quo
- does it count on hypocrisy
and myopia to survive7 Cu, it
tolerate profHSionals 'doing their
thing' as it ought to be done l" In
other words. the philosophies
being developed at sputtering
Evergrttn are a challenge to the
philosophies
of a sputtering
capitalist system and regressive
state within that sputtering
system.
I've heard it argued that once
a college becomes an established
institution, it is very difficult for
that school to be removed from
the educational system, -but thil
is not the point I am questioning
here. The qu .. tton deals with the
way education will be realized at
The Evergrun
State College.
Suppose that reporter was right
about general faculty ap,,thy. It
still remains that despite the
employment statiotics which illuminate the school's great succus in prep,aring student, for the
job market, faculty must be
willing to continue at Evergreen'•
high energy level.

some utopia only to be dismembered upon venturing outside the
campus walls. Yet how many of
us "radial.grttl'ries"
have ever
considered Evergreen u the real
world, and tfiat we have a moral
obligation to educate that outside world in order that they too
may realize why we are the "real
thing" and not they7 Or how
many of us have complained
that our campus has become too
structured and .that 10me day we
will just be another standard institution? Yet again how mu,y
of us have demanded
more
program content, or more testing, or even a covenant which
neatly outlines the roles which
students and faculty will play7
Or how many of us continue to
remain involyed with issues
which may 1-iave ari ■en and
developed into student unrest
after th• initial rush of exdto,ment has dimmedl
This is
10mething required of any good
revolutionary movement, yet we
1tudents always seem to vanish
while some faculty· remain and
"bum-out."
What hurts is that we will
never have to realize
the
consequences. Evergr'ftfl
won't
change to any substantial degrtt
before we all graduate, but what
about those who come after us
even, maybe, our children?
' How will they ever learn about
the social injustk.. they fttl7
How will they become better
able to undentand them and
know from which d;"fflion they
rully come7
We have to accept the fact
that they won't uni ... we quit
putting so much of "the heavy"

the community, if not through
internships, through community
commitment that Evergre,en really isn't all those evil things being
spread about the Capitol or in
the Daily Olympian. While we
become accepted, we should be
acting as educators
and let
community residents become ac•
tive students just as we have.
And this isn't some utopian
dream : its feasibility has been
demonstrated by succtssful and
documented Khoo! lnfemships
and community commitment.
We all reallu that the world ii
suffering from social injustice,
yet we haven't ottmed to reallu
the ootential of Evergreen as a
revolutionary educ.ational center.
If The Evergreen State College
fails and becomts another runofthe-mill state college, it would be
becaUle the ltate wu able to
strib back In an effort to hide
the truth. If that happens now, It
would be because we were
unable to develop the holistic
capacity to confront that opptts-sive institution with the truth
and grow. But If the change were
attempted some time after we
instill a community awareneu
about our campus and about the
reality of social injustice, it may
start an incident in which the
forces of the revolution come
together to .. 1abl11hEvergreen H
a center for learning experiences
which would act as an example
for other ln1titution1, and this,
in tum, would add strength to
the whole movement again,t
social injwUce. To quote once
more from the Strate&)' for a
Living Rrvolution, "The institutions which educ.ate us in false
v.iilues of materialism and nationalism must be supplanted."

REPRESENTATIVES INVITED: Office ol Community Development,
Thurston Regional Planning Councll, U.S. Fish and Wlldllfe ~ice,
Depar1mentof Ecology Weyerhaeuse<Company, U.S. National Forest
Servlca, F.rlends of th1 Earth. Pike Place Market Merchants
Auoclallon
Nadonal Oceanic and Atmoepherlc Administration, Unl\191"91tv
of W~lngton Institute tor Environmental Studktl. UfM\Wllty or
Washington Collage of Archlt.cture and u,ow\ Planning, Portland State
Unlveralty Graduate Program of Urban Stucnes.

S11111~tall"III

Invited

IIIKI KIIEIIUII

:::r
'-J1~~.~~
CENTl!R, 114 N. cotumbla,Januo,y 21
at 10:00 p.m. Everyona walcoma.

362-ZMIII.

WATEIHD lo< Nie. 0.-

ltad

motttNa and ,._ wtth dolt< ltaltrwn.. Brand naw. ('Ytt11 mblea ,....,y
lo< t,.,.lll)Ol11ng.
Off.,. .,_ 185, oolt

naada angll"INf91 KAOS 11

looklng fOf people lklUad In etactronlca. Two poaltlona.,.. avaUat>tafo, 15
hra/wNk atartlng It 13.0!/hr. For
mora tnformauon, contact Daw Rauh
It K.A06,... I 5217. KAOS II alao
looklng tor voluntHrl
to fill tha
pooltlona of A-Q
U■IWIIAN,
PUBLIC HIIVICI DIIIECTOII, and

Ol'l'ICE/OPERA'IIONIIIAIWIIII.
They oro1.,_t
(Obo that offor lot•
of opportunity to and ,_,. In
tha radto 1Udk>n. Again, contact Dive

RoullotKAOS,-7.

off.,. lndMdual couneellng, the New
Evargrffnera' Group, • computalv•
•t.,.• group, and lntonnatlonlrefarral
to otymple community rNOUl'ON. Fo,

-Help Wanted-

Information call 81!18-8151.

Here we go again. The CPJ
has undergone a substantial
change in staff since the Fall
Quarter.\
We still have a core
crew up here but· haven't been
getting many submissions .from
outside sources, which are you.
We need articles (serious, features, reviews, opinion ... ), arty
photographs,
and yes, even
lett~rs. Please, if you have any
ideas or skills you want to contribute to the CPJ bring them to
our office in CAB 306 anytime
but Wednesdays.

SuggHtlon1 and nomlnat1on1 are
needed fo, a 1tudant and • faculty
mambaf who WIii pa,Uclpata In DAN
EVANI'INAUGURATION.
Contact the
ll"IV'NtltUN CommlttN through 0Nn
Clabaugh'• office. Ceremonlaa ara
aohadulad fo, February 29.

THE FEMI~
KAIIATI UNION, on
orotnlzatlon ot women tachlng women
karate and Nlf-defenla,
wlll hotd four
c• Ill TESC Wlntor Ouortor:
-•
noon, CAC 202; Tuoodey, 5:30,
CAC 307; ~.
5:30, CAC 307; and
F~,
1:30, CAC 307. TIie ooot 11 $30
per quarter
any OI all cluaN. Cljl,
357-4078 Of' 352-88::28fOf mor. Informa-

'°'

tion.

81111-11107.

An ,ICUIIIIIICAI. FOIIUII ON lftDWl 'nllATY ~ wlll bo 011ln -ton at tho Loni of Llr. Lu11,...,
Cilun:111:1119-190th 81., January 24,
7-10 p.m. Second In I Hrlaa of
ton.ma, thla 9'11Wit wlll Include a 1llda
pr111111n1at1on,
VOICESPIIQII THI
CRADI.DOAIIDand g-1
~For more Information calf Amy
Hogaplan Ill &32In _le,
,

Tha Rat co-o,
In S.attla II
conducting a Nrlaa called ..YOUR
GUIDI 10 TIii OUTDOOM,• Ctlntoo
lnchMIII:Januory 19, ~ IN
TIii LANDOf TIii AZTECS;ond Jar>.
uory 21, COI.D WUTIIEII l'lll9T AID
P-IIIS,
TIie Co,op !" -ed
Ill
152!>-11thAw,. Cllnk.a ... frN. fo, lnform1tlon, oall Pam Oranatt'O"),

MUii NII Ill M FOIIDVAN. lntariof paneUnct,carpet. new bfakel,

Nbullt clutch and Cll'but9t0t". 1100

01

belt offar; call 88&-8115 and INYI •
rnaeeagafor Burt,« ooma to ASHe&.

IIIHT, bulldlng212 If tnt-ted In tho
' ltudont flreilghtor program. Studor1t1
choNn rwoet\19ffN room and bOMI on

-··

Plcl< up • U■IWIY OIIOUP QUQ.

TlONNAIIII
Ill the llbrary c-tatton
diNk
It tha Information Cent• to let
ti_,_..,_
whllt you thlnlc -.1
their
goals and olljeot,-.
Try to rwtum

°'

queattonnalrw to t~

circulation dMk

or tnformotlonCentor by 5:00 p.m.,
F-y, Jonuory 20.

IIODIL

avotlal>le lmole),

--·
RolN
tlabfe. Call~;

ASH CENTIII, L103 Alhtrw Apt1., on
fl"III'.'4od•-Y•
January 11
and Moll10. ,,.. -.
seo ""'
paraon and 175 per coupla, 15
fo, 1tudant1. can. ll&-t145 to, Information. Aleo aponrorad by tfta
Compua Mlnl1tryIll a of YOGA
WOIIKIHOl'lltotaMpt-.onal•
••--Y•
January 211and
Meroh 15 Ill TIie Alh Cent.-. Coot la
$15 por .,.,...,_ Again,for .._ton,

ooll-45.

SUGOEITION
due to
lnaufflclant funding, that EMPLOYEE
SUGOl!SIIONAWAIIIIII
ouggeaUona aubmltted aft« Deoembar 1,
1m, wttt not bo -od
fo, p<OCNOtng

llndawlld.

Changed modlum1, muat NII ACAYUCI In plnt1 of Vlfk>ua cotora and
H.I.R.D.I., on organtl.1111on
WOO<lng ptlcN. Alao one gallon of GUIO
to -t
antmaloxptoftatlonlouch M
Ind CANVA&Dalx foot and tour foot.
hunting, vlvl1actlon, Ind llvHtock
Call Kevtn 9G6333.

Aof PRAYER
ANDIIIDITATlONWORKIHOl'II
Illbolngoffby
the E-lofV,_ c.n,pua MlnlatryIll TMI

THE E II P L D Y 11

AWAIID8IIOAIID hllll -•

Contac1 tho lloUNI flill DIPAIIT•

35U333.

production) wttl on organtzatlonlll
,,_,nu on TUNday, January 2A, at s
p.m., tn Library 2123.

Attend a Job and Graduate School Preparation
January 23, 4 p.m. In the Clteef' Resource

-

<111y1 or

Mk fo, and
Mu. nego-

AIIERICAH YOUTH ~.
INC. 111
olftring frN utaratura abOut noeteung

and the mor•than-4,500
world-wide
locaUonawhafa mambarlcan atay fo, u
tittle M S2.50 to $3.50 por night. AYH
allO offara a fokllr of sni)lannad,
4-e
tripe through Europe and tho For
Ellt. Fo, lnfbrmaUon write to: Anne
COynor, Tra'IIIIllllpt. ~.
Amortcan
Youth Ho1tela, Inc., O.laplana, VA
22021.

EDITOR

BUSINESS MANAGER

John K..,.J,

Nathankl Koch

MANAGING EDITOR

PRODUCTION MANAGER

Mandy McFarlan

Dana ulah Squlra

FEATURES EDITOR

SECRETARY

Nancy Ann Park"

Joyce Baka

THE EVIIIGIIIEN
ITATE CO°LLEOI
SKI SC11001. 11 offorlng _,
to 1tuden1a, ataff, fa CU 11 y
Ind
communltymembera.
CHUCK
-LTON,
tho dlrwoto<,aoya they'll bo
lkllng al CIIYSTAI.IIOUlffAINagain thl1
-•
'"THE ~EMIERSIii RESORT IN
THE NonhwHt.,. S..1lon• begin In
January, and IMlon• .,.. hafd on afthar
WodnNdayoo<Saturdays. Fo, a b!ochuni

or

lnformotlon,go by the College
AactNtlon Canter, room 302 or call,
mon,

-.:JO.
Thi• IJanuory 21 and 22) 11
IELf HYl'NOIII WOf1<oho!>
will be
oflarad II tha 1econd worklhop
-by tho COUNIIUNO CINTIII dut1ngWin,_ Quanor. TIie feo 11
$15; algn Ill> by January19. Hypnoo111
WIii ba taught to paopla who .,.
Nik.Ing waya to control anxiety. The
CounNllng

c.n..

11 located at Lib

-Aleo tho -tor. In AUIIITIYaNIII FOIi WOIIIN,
-~and-1111
--•
TIie CounooflngCentor afao

The lldlng II all9ody QIN\. and
ChuokNYI, "our progtam prom!- INiy
profNalonll lnatructlon end a Grat llma
fo, .. 11"Thin~ lkllng and Ngl1t• aoonflratcome, first Nf\l'ad.
Thi CPJ announoament1 daadllna 11
5 p.m. F~
for IUCCNCflng Thu,-Y
IMUM, All announcement, ahould ba
lubmlttod typed and doubleto
tho CPJ offtoe, CAB 308, o, tho CPJ
fflllllbox In CAB 305.

ADVERTISING MANAGER
Grq Hutcheson
Tilt~
f'OINT JOUtlNAl 11,pMlaJIN .....,,. tor._
............ ......,,
and ...,, •
Oollatt,Oty,npla, Warf .........
v.... -,......
... ftOl I
rftJ 'ltloaa of Tilt lcupw: 11111Cllilal- Mu a .... .._

n. , ..........

111'1111
pcwaeW..,.... ln._Collogll
_. M4:
___

_._All•----_.,._,-·
.............

.................

-----

_

••.....,

aaew:attl,-Na
__

_,.ICA ■ )

,....................

....._...,,......,_..,._._.__..,tX
---be-

..-po11oy:

...

.,._, .

_...,._
M-

III.UIIIIN9

ta

4

I

by John Keogh

Farmhouse

Tht> larmhouse has been under
c.nm,lructmn since the sprina of
t07S and is presently unenclost'li Bec,m~e some ut tht> wood

concerned about the farmhouse
presented arguements pertaining
to the building's future. Strecker
contended
that it should be
closed in as quickly as possible,
while the students maint.1ined
that the project is primarily a
learning tool and should stay
under student control. On the
basis o( this discussion the Board
decided, pending approval by
the Evergreen Council, to charge
a DTF to determine the follow-

c1lready uSt'd

ing;

The Evergreen
Council on
Wedn("Sday, January 18 consulted with

members

of

the S&A

8nard on .i DTF the Board
char~ed recently lo study problem, rel.lied to Evergreen's part1Jllv hu1\t oridn1c

in

farmhouse

its construction

the
\-.t•,1thl'1 D1rectnr of Facilities
Rltb Strecl(•r hac; proposed that
\·vt•r~reen hire a pnv.1te contrac11,r
l\l
t1n1-.h
budding
the
m.1v

~u<.1.11n damage

1) the locus ol accountability
1
tor the project's budget. complet1on, and adherence to building
n•dcs
2) a timetable
for enclosing
and completing the farmhouse;
31 the best course of action
dvadable (or providing academic
support to interested students:
4) the desirabilitv of student,
versus contractor control of the
project, and;
5) an accurate history of the
farmhouse.
The Board also decided to
recommend
that the DTF be
composed of: one person from
the Office of Facilities;
one
student involved with the organic farmhouSt" project; one Academic Dean: one member of the
S&A Board. and one randomly
selected
member
each from
Evergreen's faculty, staff, and
student body.

from

-.1ructure

A ~f('UP 1..-..tstudents interested
m the rwiect, however insist
th.11

student

work

on

the

l.trrnhouse has been hampered
b\ a lad. ot academic support
Thev organized this tall to try
,1nJ ,.:(ln\'lnce the Academic
!1t'.1n, tc, provide them with an
,,n ,1~ht c;uperv1sor so they could
n•-.umt' com.tructu.m of the build1n~ dunnj! Winter Quarter.
The students interviewed sev•
l'r,11 ..arrenters
interested
in
,urerv1smg student work on the
tarmhouse
and chose one to
fl'n,mmend to Evergreen·s ad•
m1n1strat1on But. according to
\lichael
Baron.
one of the
...tuden:s involved they were told
that Stred.er and the administratH,n wanted to contracl the job
,1,
11 could bt> completed quickly

Farmhouse Finances
Members of the Farmhouse
DTF will probably consider the
project's financial status in their
efforts to resolve the conflicts it
has spawned. Originally financed
during th, fall of 1974 with $20

S&A Meeting
-\t a meeting of the S&A
H1,Jrc.l tin \'\lednesday, January
: l Stred.,t>r and several students

Charged

DTF

thousand in S&A funds, the
farmhouse project has a remaining budget of about $8 thousand.
According
to Darrell Six of
Facilities, it would cost approximately $26 thousand to have the
building completed by private
contractors: $17 thousand would
be needed for materials and S9
thousand for labor.
Six cautions, however, that
may be inaccurate. "One of the
things l really don't know for
sure is exactly
how much

material is already down there,"
he says.
In Six's opinion it would be
inadequate to merely have the
farmhouse enclosed by a con·
tractor, ~ause,
"We still need
some heat in there; without it
you'd still have deterioration of
the structure even if the envelope
was completed."
Students
interested
in the
organic farmhouse as a learning
tool are now organizing
to
demonstrate their cofflmitment to
the project. Says Michael Baron,

THE ORGANIC

·FARMHOUSE

MUSIC

"This
is a great
hands-on
opportunity to learn the skills
involved with construction, design, alternative energy systems,
drafting, engineering,
business
management, environmental impact assessment,
architectural
history,
the philosophy
and
politics of building. and other
related subjects."

GNl~WSPOETRY Thur..dav jdnuJn·
TIM McKAMEY
Fr•dJy & S.iturd,w

l.inuarv 20 21

On~inal ln]i

It looks
the other,
will soon
purgatory

JO

Open rt>.:1d1nl{ All r()('h
weln,me to \h,trl' v.-1:h u,

as though, one way or
the organic farmhouse
be rescued from its
in the rain.

GILA

Thur<,dav

\\'"mt'n.,

)<UJ!,H

l.inu.irv 2o

rau b.in<l

! dur1t' 1-.nutwn

ldnt'

th,ttm,m

B.irb,u.a
:-.tnrt'nP Sue Robt-rt~

l'erformaQ.c.es begin at nine pm
A one dollar cover will Le asked
to support the performers.

GNU DELI is located

in

downtown

Olympia on the
corner of West Thur~ton
Avenue and Capitol Way

(;.Q.[
·-

-~-

~

-.s·----·=-_i!

---~~;~-~
·:_-:_:~~~~~~:.:~

Teachers at all l(•\·els

- .:--::--_:~------=::;=-~-

- ------------.::;._
. -- -=-=--.::~----:-.

-

--·-- - -----:. --:.-

Foreign and
Domestic Teachers
Box 1063

~

---

Vancouver.

Washington

98660

DENNY'S AUTOMOTIVE
service and repair
free pickup and delivery
357;5175
2643 martin way
olympa, wa. 98506

Potte.J H~YO$~Aloe.Ve.-rA p1.....rs
-Bulk He:,b6,Tc•,Sfic.c)
.5._6.,10.,.·,",s

C&C MARK-IT PHARMACY
10% off on any vitamins
510 4th ave
943-0500

% mon-fr,

9-5 sat

coupon expires feb 1st

I.PINMONEYSHOP

The Herb Cotta~e.

when youre shopping be sure to visit

C.
of~n

w..1,J,y
/1

-.1,..._

n..-o"~"5o.t-wr-J.,.y
r"

l,,flm

Loc....f&.I ., t H... C>\c{ or Ray.,.,olcJ1
~t 1701 N. Towc.r, C.•l'lfl"'u.11",IUo..
1at.-o
art

HOW TO COMPILE
A CREDENTIAL FILE
Learn what Credentlal Flies
are and bow to use them
in this Senior Seminar
Date: Tueada7, January 24
Time: S:30-5:00
Place: Career Resource
Center, Library 1213

bring your clothing, books, artwork to sell
on consignment
60% return on selllng price
75% return on student artwork
phone for details
tues-sat 10-4
sunday 1-5

352-0753

7


American Notan
white girl sucked black milk
cause her mamma's chest too white
in her mamma's ladie's chest she felt dark pink
dark pink filled with black cows milk
black cow mamma's milk
dat girl growed strong
out-growed black cow mamma
mamma's chest too white
her mamma's ladies chest been chewed and dried
so she say
blqck cow mamma go buy yourself a new dress
and cook my suppa with your black cows milk
am your little white sister
i picks black berries in the sun
they stain my mouth and hands
stained indigo
and it don't rub off
you go take your
black
berries
back
to africa
knowin where your origin lies
where does little white sister
take her dulled black teeth
little white sister stained indigo
searches out her darkness
and it all goes back
little white sister in stickery patch
lain barren by the sun
it all
goes
back

A

.,,.,,.
New home of Tony's Bar and Grill 7

1

already
i can feel the wieght of your head
like the crevass between by breasts
like sand
already mon san michele the chanting of drums
turn to fire
already
i am your twin
ex-tr acted
already twice
i've seen africa as your tooth
already annihilated africa
when i was nine
i read a book
black beauty
trodd i ng from hell to hell
stall to stall extracted yes by fire
it was a sad book
black beauty
it was a sad book
and i never finished it
leslie lohman staub

Design Team To Present

Cinderella As PsuedoSocialist Little Annie Fannie
With Subtitles

TESC Loses
.State Funds
by Mandy McFulan
The Evergreen State College
must return $180 thousand to
Washington State because its fall
enrollment figutts did not meet
the state-set quota of 2,671
fuU-time equivalmcy students.
The college fell short of that
figure by U7 F.T.E. students.
Administrative Vice President
Dean Clabaugh
is currently
negotiating with the Executive
Office of Fiscal Management to
determine how much money, in
addition to the 5180 thousand,
will have to be returned to
appeaM! the· Governor's savings
plan. Governor Ray will take
action on this plan to offset any
state revenue loss resulting from
the repeal of the food tax.
All Evergreeners will f..,J the
loss as the money is being
subtracted from a wide variety
of sources. Perhaps the most
hard-felt loss is from specific
program fund cuts. Academic
Dean Willie Parson was responsible for deciding how much
money would come out of each
specific heading under the academic budget. Panon, who was
unavailable for comment, took
funds out of each area without
shutting any operations down.
For some programs this quarter, this means a curtailment of
activities; others can function
normally on the right budget.
Foundatlom of Natural Science
has lost more than on~third of
its program budget. FONS students will not be ablt to do
several
planned
experiments
which require expensive chemicals. It will also be impossible
for those stucknts to receive all
of the duplicated written material which would have been used
in seminan.
Maxine Mimms, coordinator
for A Soparat•
Reality,
a
program of 118 students, says
that becaUJe the program overspent last quarter by $1,740;
they are suffering a penalty this
quarter. They don't, according
to MID)ms, get any money. She
describes"Reality" faculty members as "bad managers,
but
superb
teachen."
Sina
no
money would mean no Xeroxing,
no long distance phone calls. no
films, etc.. the four faculty
memben have come up with
other plans. Some money will
come from faculty pockets; the
rest will be requested from black
agencies in Tacom<i and from
Indian tribes (the program has a
relatively large amount of third
world students.) This could be
an indication that u long u
Evergre,,nen are willing to learn
and to teach, Evergreen can

survive if it has to, on a
shoestring.
With under-enrollment causing
cutbacks, It is ironic that for the
fint time in the history of the
college, according to Registrar
Walker Allen, Winter Quarter
enrollment may be higher than it
was in the fall. (Winter's figures
aren't solid yet.) Allen f<1!1sthat
this increase may be attributed
to a higher retention of students
rather than to an influx of new
students. But even with the
increase, Evergree:n's enrollment
figures don't come close to
entitling· the college to the full
amount appropriated
by the
Legislature.
Before state appropriations an
made for colleges, an enrollment
forecast is required. To determine their figures, the Offiae of
Fiscal Management looks at a
school's enrollment pattern over
several years. They then make a
projection and submit it to the
college where employees who
work closely with enrollment can
decide, based on their own
information, whether or not they
agree with it. The President of
the college receives OFM' s and
internal predictions and then
s/he either agrees or disagr<1!1
with the OFM figures.
If the President does not
concur with OFM, s/he asks that
office for a revision. If no
agreement is reached, separate
projections can be delivered at
Legislative budget hearings. Final
enrollment projections att then
decided and funding formulas
are applied to that data. Right
now. with a possible winter
student increase, it look, as if
Evergreen isn't folJowing previous pattern,.
Last year the aMual average
projection for 77-78 of 2,671
F.T.E. students was~
to by
OFM and President McCann. To
hit that target, this would have
required an increase of 316
F.T.E. students.
Strangely enough, while Evergr<1!n struggles to meet seemingly
high enrollment goals, the Unive.nity of Washington is overenrolled by 1500 studento. A
legislative committee is studying
the U to find out why. (The
othe.r four institutions wen close
to their respective targets.)
Although Evergr<1!nwill have
to mnit funds to the State,
Assistant Academic Dean Rob
Knapp says, 'We should continue to work hard on enrollment because lf we gain students
it will benefit our political po5it Ion by showing thtm (the
Legislators) that we are getting
10.ne.where."

CAB II Report

film's acceptance of ,ocialism as
a universal panacea it's as simplistic as the old Hollywood
Kathy Tippel is based on the
" ... Nobel Prize notT\inated me--- movies were in their espousal of
Truth, Justice and The American
moirs of Neils Dorf£." The movie
Way. There are only three types
suffers from a split personality.
of characters presented:
Bad
In this film Ms. Dorff shows
Guys. Good Guys, and Kathy
sentimental and ideological atTippel. You can tell the Bad
tachments to socialism and the
Guys because they are ugly or
working class. But her own
cowardly or shallow or brutal
character is fiercely individualcapitalistsand/or capitalist dupes.
istic and a direct result of that is
They are used essentially as stage
her successful strugg]e to gain a
props for Kathy Tippel to react
position for herself in the upper
against. They stand up and fall
class.
down like so many two dimenKathy Tippet is a failed attempt
sional cardboard cutouts. The
to tor~
rKonciliation between
Good Guys, (socialisti), are even
these seWimage-s. In this life
less intriguing and are also made
summary she tries to show that
of cardboard. The only character
her life has order and meaning.
allowed to have a real life is
Her downfall is her failure to
Kathy Tippel.
negotiate successfully the eternal
The character she is supposed
problem of the split between
to
represent is ptteisely defined
who you thlnk you are and who
about halfway through the
you really are. The mistake is to
movie, when an Aritst has her
look for proofs on the outside
pose as the leading figure for his
instead of building them up from
painting of The Revolution. She
the interior life. To acapt and
is painted as a kind of Joan of
work within the bounds of thi5
Arc of the Proletariat leading the
seeming contradiction is to begin
working class in armed rebelto understand the function of the
lion. In her hand she waves a
artist in society. To not underbloodied sword. The camera
stand it is to end up with a film
zooms in to show the fat aristolike Kathy Tippet.
crat whom she has just beheadThe mov~ ls really just an exed.
tended .... y in wisll fulfillment.
Opposed to this ideologic,al
It has about as much relationship
paragon is the Kathy-.l'.iPJ!el
to reality as a Busbee Berkely
portrayed by Monique van de
musical. Which is not necessarily
Ven. She is the type of vibrant
a bad thing. Once you underWonder Woman who made
stand the true context of an obHollywood famous and whose
j«t: you can see more clearly
chief aaseta are physical. The eswhat it has to offer. What we
sence of the persona has been
have for consideration here lS a
expn!S&ed perfectly but in an
1940's Hollywood movie about a
entirely different context by, of
beautiful working class girl
all people, Joe Namath in the
suffering through lint gear of the
title of his autobiography
"I
Industrial Revolution and at the
Can't Wait Till Tomorrow 'Cause
end marrying a fairytale prince
I Get Better Looking Every
filmed in Amsterdam with its
Day." This is narcissism personicontemporary assumed socialist
fied and glorified.
value syste.m and its compldely
Imagine a feat·ure length movie
unrestricted sexual ethic. I know
all about wonderful YOU. YOU
that sentence doesn't work too
exhausted with work but still
well but then neither does the
smiling bravely: YOU making
movie.
The key phrase is " ... a56Umed others cream their jeans with just
a nod and a smile: YOU leading
socialist value system." In the

by R. J. Sawatzki

1•

Ccwllittwdfralllpop 1
1 program, and should not have
to use a special fire district levy
to reinstate
Aid 9 to full
capacity. In addition Peterson
believes that a slight increase of
three to six dollars (to come
from a county-wide levy) could
provide other areas with an
adequate medic system.
SUBSTANTIAL LOSS

Regardless of where the levy is
to come from, it ii obvious
residents of the Mclane district
will suffer unless the. Medic
program is reinstituted. Peterson

is asking the County

Commissioners to hold an open meeting
to inform the public of events
which have transpired.
ln the meantime,
persons
interested
in reinstating
our
Medic I program, either through
a county-wide or fire district
levy, should
write to the
following address:
Thurston
County Commissioners Offiae,
Courthouse Annex, Room 24,
Olympia, WA 98501.
Fine programs such as this one
can bt easily discarded and
shelved behind dosed doon if

The design team will talk to
How about a tavern in the
S&:A Board members about their
Campus Activities Building?
recently published recommendaThe CAB Phase II team will
tions for improvement of existing
present a formal report to the
facilities and the possibility of
S&A Board on the results of
new additions. As stated in the
their Fall Quarter efforts next
report, team objectives have
Wednesday. January 25, at 10
the workers to overthrow the
been,
a.m.
in
Library
2204.
The
team's
capitalist pigs in glorious living
1) To develop the program
report will analyz~ the needs 0£
color! That's the frame of referand
design for an expansion of
persons
using
the
CAB.
ence for this character and van
the existing facilities to meet the
This meeting will determine
de Ven is perfect for the part.
needs of the users of the
the "philosophy of process" in
All she's doing is projecting an
building.
relationship
to
funding
of
the
idealized version of herself. Her
2) To analyze building techproject,
according
to
Steve
face and body express magnifinologies and energy conservation
Francis,
Executive
Secretary
of
cently the feeling of being alive
methods in terms of life-cycle
the S&A Board.
and desirable and strong-willed.
costs.
Wednesday's
open
meeting
afIt's not so much that she expects
3) To analyze the cost estimate
fords
students,
staff,
and
faculty
a lot out of life as that she d~
of the proposed expansion in
a
chance
to
effect
the
procedure
mands it and will shoot to kill if
relation to the proposed budget,
and the extent to which CAB
necessary to get what she wants.
establishing priorities as requirPhase
II
will
be
funded.
The
When she throws
a brick
ed.
'
redesign project should be comthrough a window, kicks her
Proposec! items in the plan of
pleted
by
the
fall
of
1979.
mother in the stomach, or stuffs
special interest to Evergreen
Existing time tabl~ slate the
a whole chocolate bar into her
students include: a Pub, hostel.
completion
of
preliminary
degr<1!dymouth the entire line of
performing space, and enclosed
signs
for
thlS
spring.
Construcher body expresses shttr, de--TV and game rooms.
tions
is
expected
to
begin
in
the
fiant, animal joy. It's an honest
Students, faculty, and staff
winter of 1979, and the proposed
sensual pleasure to be allowed to
members interested in responding
time
or
completion
for
the
watch. In these occasional scenes
to proposals should atten<i Wedproject is sometime that fall.
the heart of a remarkable person
nesday's meeting.
is allowed to shine through the
obscuring clouds of socialist
dogma.
The final scene conveniently
tells the whole story of how the
movie fails. It is set in an opulent, enormous bedroom o( a
very, very, very rich man's
grand opening sat Jan 21
estate. On the wall hangs half of
Nells Dorff' s idea of herself, the
featuring express->. PumnP.an coffees, teas
oaintina of herself as Joan of Arc
a ....d f-'~'•rins
of the Proletariat still brandish212
west fo11rth
Ing the bloodied sword of insurolymma. w;ishington
rection. In the bed lays the scion
of the estate. like Kathy Tippel
q41_7,;,:.o
he is sympathetic to the plight of
new storr> ..,,...urs!
the working class. He has just
th-sat 11-10
participated in a march with
m-w 9-7 nm
t~
and was wounded by the
police. Kathy Tippel does not
now cut off this aristocrat's
head. She instead bends to kiss
his wound, then rises with blood
Any T-shirt
in the store only $5
on her lips and a gleam in her
eye. The frame frttUS and the
with this ad.
audience is told that later they
get married. No matter what the
audience is supposed to believe,
the bare reality of the situation
insists on recognition.
Neils
Dorff's two self images have
been brought together in the
same room but it is obvious they
will remain forever irreconcilable.

cafe

concerned individuals don't take
the time to address a need for
change. Presently five Evergrttn
students are taking the 81 hour
course to become EMTs. The
medical aid unit in this district
could eventually be upgraded to
Paramedic stature, and even save
your life.
States Russell, "Ifs a substantial loss in the community here.
Every time they roll they give us
a call at Security and we've had
a lot of n,sponses. They've done
a lot of good things for a lot of
people."

intePrnezzo

We also

have a complete
selection
of new and used records,
tapes.
posters,
cleaning
accessories
and
much more --all at the lowest prices
in town.
We have concert
tickets
now, too, and there Is no service
charge!
open 7 days

.

214 w. 4th
943-9181 coupon•••''"',..,,_.,1, ,are:
----------------------------···--·----····---------------------------

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cpj0169.pdf