The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 12 (February 2, 1978)

Item

Identifier
cpj0172
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 12 (February 2, 1978)
Date
2 February 1978
extracted text
I

a

The Vets Case

Judge Rules
''No Jurisdiction''

IN OLYMPIA
MUSIC

KEET JE TIPPEL (CATHY TIPPEL,
1975) BaHd on lhe Nobel Prize
nominated men'l<Hra of Nefla Dorlf.
Takes place at the lum ol the century
In Amsterdam. Starring Monique van
de Ven as KeelJe Tippet. (The Cinema,
9'3--5814; thru Tuesday, 1/31).

ON CAMPU~
u1c:1tirne coun1ry dancmo?

1rs sull

l\aopenmg every Wednesday at 8 P m ,
with hve band and calle1 on the hrst
!loo1 ot the Ub,ary bu1ld1ng ··A1tve and
K,clon·
Oonat•ons appreciated
A.I pm on January 27, Evergreen's

a

E.11:plonu1onsin Twentieth Century
Mus•c· sponsors FOOTNOTE, a Los
Angeles u,o wh,ch moves between
senous

contemporary

music,
culminating

humOf•
in

Journal

OH, 0001 Geofge Buma ~ya God.
.John Dem« la a supermarket manager. Directed by car1 Reiner [WHERFS
POPPA?). (State,367-"610).

ous sketches. 1azz & ballet ctance. and
mul11med1a ellec1s.

by Barbara Swain

n.

a

hne per1ormance The Olympia show
will include
"MULTIMEDIA
PAE•·
LUDES." performed by composer/comedian and dancer BILL MOULTON,
an ensemble m tango, and jazz and
modem dance mterpretatlona bV P1PER,
PICKRELL and JOHN STEINMETZ.
Adm1ss,on S2 50, uckets at the door
tine Communications
building). Contact faculty member Dr Greg Steinke,

THE DIEP
(1977) A
couple
(Jacquellne Blee.et and Robert Shaw)
on their honeymoon go acuba diving
off Bermuda and dog paddle Into
ancient Spo,,lah gold and o modem
cache of millions of dOlllf'8 worth of
fflOfl)hlne. Almoet half of thll adven-ture 1to,y, from the bestseller t,y Peter
Benchly (JAWS), takes place underwater. Directed by Peter
Yates
(IULL.nTJ, Also starring Nick Notte.
(Start• Friday, 1 /'17 at the Otympic,

S66.f:i064 lor mOfe 1n1ormaU~

OUMI ANO THE MINANZI MARIMBA
ENSEMBLE will return 10 TESCon Fri•
ctay January 27 sponsored by the
Volleyball Club The ensemble recenlly
ou1 out an LP on the "Voyager" label
An evening ol trad1t1onal and contemparary Alncan music. guaranteed to
-.eeo you dancing from 8 p m to 1
1 m
on the 4th floor ol the Ubfary
owld1ng Those w1shmg to consume
neer 01 wine should bung propel' I D
Tickets S2 m advance and S2 50 at the
.Joor Advance 11ckets available at
Rainy Day Records, Budgel Tapes &
Records and The Music Sar. tnc

CAPTAIN COYOTES presenls CHILD
January 26-28 For two nights only,
\January 27 28) COYOTES will feature
RUBY STAR, formerly of BLACK OAK
ARKANSAS (along w11h CHILO) On
February 1 JUNIOR CADILLAC picks
UP the b1\hng lhrough February 4 2410
W Hamson 357-4191
GNU DELI hosts GILA. an acoustical
entirely
ol
1azz band comprised
women. on Thursday. January 26 On
January 27 and .28. "e1eran guitar
01ayer LARRY HANKS wlll oller "folk.
and 1l'len some " HANKS Is reputed 10
tie one ol lhe Nor1hwesl's finest
singers •• Corner ol West Thurston
A\enue and Capitol Way 943-1371
GRAPEVINE conlinues to spottlght
DEBBIE DODGE tor "mellow, conversational music" 1hrough January 28 4500
Lacey Bv S E 491-7878
THE GREENWOOD INN features lhe
91oup NATURAL HIGH on January 26.
27 The management says, "We prefer
to call 11 con1emporary sounds 101
oanc1ng
On January 30, JORGEN
KRUSE & COMPANY resumes with
more con1emporary
sounds. 2300
Evergreen Parit Ofive. 94l-.a00.
RED KELLY'S, renowned tor !inf
iaz.z, h1ghtighls regulars FREDDIE
GREENWELL ton sa:xophone). WILLY
HOBART (on trumpet),
and JAN
STENTZ (one ol the Nor1hwesl'a l\nesl
"ocallsls).
on Friday, January 27
Saturday. January 28 15 "Big Band
N1ghf' a1 RED'S. BILL RAMSAY (on
saxophone) w1tl join the regulw banO
members, along with other surprises
3501 Cap,tol Bv across from lhe
brewery 357••975
RICHARD'S ROUNDHOUSE conlinues w1tt'I SMYLE, a disco band~
1hrough ~ebruary 4 4110 Market
Square. Lacey 456-2222
The OLYMPIA SYMPHONY OR ..
CHESTRA presents 1I& second concer1
01 the 1977-78 season Sunday, January
29. at 7 p m 1n the Tumwate, High
School Perlorming Ar1s Center. Ticket&
$2 aidults, S1 students
IN SEATTLE
THE SEATTLE OPEM production ol
MUSSOAOSKY'S g,M,t opera, 90fUI
OUOONOY, begin a January 2lS at THE
OPE,tA HOOSE. FNtured In the lltled
role will be NICOLA OHIUIELEV.
Other Auulan lang~
perlormanc;ee
are slated tor January 28 and February
1. 2 Enghsh language per1ormancn
(OtOAGIO TOZZI will sing BORIS) on
Febfuary 3. 5
JOHNNY MATHIS will pertorm In
cancer! at THE OPERA HOUSE,
January 27

by Nancy ,Ann Parkes

PETE'S DRAGON Starring Helen
Reddy, Micky Rooney, Red Buttons,
Shelley Winters and Jim Backus.
Plrt~lly animated. From Walt Disney
Productions. (Cepltol, 357-7161: thru
Tueeday, 1/31).

IN SEATTLE
STROSZEK Written and directed by
Weot German Herzog (EVERY
IIAN FOR HIMSELF AND GOD
AGAINST ALL, 1975). An ex-convict,
., o&clmanand a proaUtute travel from
Bertin to Wlaconaln to begin • new
lite. Starring
Bruno S. as the
ex-convict Stroazek. (The Moore EgypUan ThNter, 2nd and Virginia, Seattle,

IN OLYMPIA
APPLEJAM FOLK CENTER hosts
PEACE. BREAD AND lAND on Friday,
January 27 The threesome plays "intricate 011g1na1s,blues and contempor•
ary songs rn a most uniQue and
polished way
S1 50 On Saturday,
January 28. APPLEJAM presents BODIE WAGNER and LARRY HANKS In
concen Bodie sings hobo. cowboy,
and tram songs 1n actd1t1onto ~ing a
r,ne yoaeller Lany sings tradllional
Arne11canmusic and songs of Wooche
Guthrie Mah11naReynolds, Leadbelly.
ar,o otner folk ar11s1s $2 Localed a1
\l'le YWCA 220 E Union Maln act at 9
t rn M1no1swelco,Tie

Esquivel Resignation
Forced

367-3'122}.

TUESDAYS AT EIGHT presenls I~
EVERGREEN CONTEMPORARY ENSEMBLE. m the rectlal hall of TESC's
':.;immun1cat1ons building. January 31.
[l1rected by Greg S1emke Evergreen
•acuity mernbe, S1 general public, 50
students

822-~.

On Monday, January 30 at 8 p.m.
THE SEATTLE SYMPHONY OACHEsTRA pruents
MOZART: REQUIEM,
The Lnt Worll ol the OrNt ......
al
THE OPERA HOUSE. RAINER MIEDEL.
Music Dlreclor and Conductor, Choral
Preparation by ROBERT SCANDRETT,
with ASHLEY PUTNAM, (soprano),
ERNST HAEFLIOER (tenor), CLAUDINE
CARLSON (meuo-soprano), and JOHN
WEST \bas5) Tickets S7.50. S6. an<l
$5 '47-4736
For those ot you whO mourn the
passing ol STAR WARS from Otym•
p,a·s State Theatre, 1ake heart. MUSIC
FROM OUTER SPACE, (A STAR WARS
concert) comes to the SEATTLE
CENTER COLISEUM Thursday, February 2 at 8 p.m. The extravaganza to be
performed by the SEATTLE SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA w1II taature HtCHAHU
BUCKLEY as Conductor and RAINER
MIEDEL as Music Director For lickel
infonnation call 62.....,.971.
ERIC CLAPTON AND HIS BAND will
appear with PLAYER at the SEATTLE
PARAMOUNT THEATER on Sunday,
February 5 at 8 p.m.
Here's your chance to see B.B. KINQ
pe1torm Detore a small crowd. On
Monday, February e, the TROJAN
HORSE will tealure KING for two
shows, 8:45 and 11 30 Tickets are
$6.50 and $7 50 and can be purchased
at 1he TROJAN HORSE, 415 Lenora
Olympia residents can send checks 10:
TrojanHorse. 415 Len0fa, Seattle, WA
98121. An advance phone call is acM&able 624--88-48.
The flamboyant
foursome
THE
MANHATTEN TRANSFER returns 10
Seattle for e concert at THE OPERA
HOUSE on Tuesday, February 7 at 8
p m The band's moat recent album Is
entitled PASTICHE. Tickets avelleble
t"rough the Bon Marche and usual
suburban outlets.
KZAM lnvlles you to an evening with CHtcK COREA & HERBIE HANCOCK
in concert, Saturday, Fet>ruatY 11, at 8
p m al the PARAMOUNT NORTH
WEST THEATER. Ticket& are S7.50, $8
and SB 50 (reser'led Hating),
and
a'laltable ln Olympta at Budget Tepes &
Recoros

IN OLYMPIA

COLLECTORS' GALLERY, 2103 W.
H■rTlton Ave., la exhibiting a ahOw by
RICHARD KIRSTEN called "The Forces
II" unlll March 4. For ln!ormatlon cell
352...771.
IN SEATTLE
The Artists Gallery, 919 East Pike
Street, wlll preview recenl photographic works by KIM STEELE at an evening
reception, 5 to 9 p.m. Wednesday,
February 1. 322-0111 or 324-0400
The "OEOAOE SEGAL: PASTELS
AND SCULPTURE" exhibition continues through February 19 at the See.tile
Art Museum, Volunte9f' Peltl/Seattle
Center. 447 ◄710.

DANCE
IN SEATTLE
A new dance troupe celled, "'DANCERS" will make Ila llrat Seattle
appearance at the Opera House Tuesday, January 31 at 8 p.m. The 14member company la directed
by
DENNIS WAYNE and lunded
by
actress JOANNE WOODWARD. Tickets
are a'lailable at the Bon Marche and
lhe usual suburt>an outlets.

LECTURES ANO READINGS
ON CAMPUS
The Cent..- tor Literature In Pef'tor•
mance present• an open Nllldlng with
teetured readers GERALDINE llcOOW·
AN and WENDY SCHOFIELD Thuraday,
January 25 at the CAB Coffeehouse
(rm. HM) at 8 p.m.
TESC Faculty member OR. ELIZA•
8£TH KUTTER wlll lecture on, ~E
MEANING OF RECOMBINANT DNA
RESEARCH" In the aecond "Tuesdays
al Eight" presentallon, January 24 at 8
p m In the Communications BulkUng
Recital Hall.
JOHN ROTHMAN, noted San Francisco w• lecturer, will apeek on the
topic: "'8EOIN AND SADAT: IMPLICATIONS PAST ANO FUTURE"' Thursday,
January 25 at 7:30 p,m. In LH 11.

ART

ON CAMPUS
Wor1il.sby Pac:IOc Nonhwest artl1ta

MARGARET
THOIIKINSand ANDREW
KEATING wlll be leetured In a tfflnt
exhibit at The Ev«grNn State CoUege
Ubfary Gallery thrOugh February 5. A
~ec:tlon ot paintings from Thomklna'
"Retroepectlve Exhibit" and KNtlng'a
"Color x..-ox," a Nf1ea of xerox•reproduoed collages, are ahowlnQ In the
Library Gallery from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Monday throuoh Thurtday; e a.m. to 7
p.m Friday; 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, and
1 10 9 p m Sunday.

TIIEATER
IN SEATTLE
MARCEL MARCEAU, the French
mime genloua, will be performing at
!he Seattle Opera HOUN WednNday,
February 8 at 8 p.m. Ticket• ar•
11Vallabl• at the Bon Marche end the
usual auburben outlet•.

MISCELLANEOUS
RAtMCAL WOMEN, the oldest ~
~lz.atlon
In the
country;
will hold a conference
entlUed, •A DECADE OF SOCIAi ..,FEMINISM" on the weekend of J.,u,ary
27, 28 and 29 at the Admiralty Aeaoft
In Port Ludlow, Washington. Spelkera
include MYRA TANNER and JAN!T
McLOUD. For lnlormatlon, phone 532·
1815, 632-7""9, 0< ~-

cLallst women's

DERSU UZALA (1975) U.S. premiere
lhowlng, Directed by Aklra Kurosawa
(SEVEN SAMURAli Grand Pnzo Winner at the Ninth Moecow FIim Featlvel
and 1975'1 Academy Award tor Best
F~
FIim. Engllah aubtltl•.
(Hal·
vard Exit, Brdway. and Roy, SeatUe,

352-.a4n,
,

·•i .1••1

,

1

d

_,

•,_,._,.

JULIA a static adaptation ot a story
taken trom LIiiian Hellman's PEN'fl..
MENTO (1973) thill falls to penetrate
the depth of the wrltet'a feeling• for a
dear chlldhood friend. So the 1Cf1pt la
beefed up with acenea showing
Hellman'• {Jane Fonda) fruatrated
FILMS
attempts at writing THE CHILDREN ..
HOUR and her relatlonahlp
with
Dashiell Hammett (Jason Robards).
ON CAMPUS
OlrectOf Fred Zlnnemann la tkllled at
recr"Ntlng the suapenN of Hellman's
JEDER FUR StCH UNO GOTT
Journey Into Nazi Germany to detlver a
GEGEN ALLE [EVERY IIAN FOA
package for the r•latanoe rno¥ement.
HIMSELF AND GOD AGAINST ALL,
The pity la thal Jane Fonda and
1975I In the early 19th-century a man la
vaneau Redgrave are not giver\ the
found on a lquat9 In Nuremberg, He
opportunity
to fully develop their
cannot apeak and can bar9ty stand.
charaet.,.. within AMn Saroent'a llmlt•
The only clue to hla kientlty ta • pe;pe,- ed ec,-npllly.
(Guild 45th, 2115 N.
that glYN hla name .. Kuper Hauler.
45th, S-ttle, e.»-3353.l
He la taught to speak, to Ned and
wnte and then la myatertoualy mun:ler·
ed. 88Nd on a ,.i hlatoriclil lncktient.
TIIE TURNING POINT Rou
Stamno Bruno S. u Kuper HauNt.
direct• Arthur l.Autent'I fllltulent story
Oliecled
by
Werner
Herzog
of two women·, long,,term fnendahlp
(STIIOSZEK). (L.actun, Hall 1, Friday
and rivalry. Anne Bancroft pLlya an
1m only, 3:00, 1:00 and 9:30, 7Sc).
aging ballerina who ta ,-chlng
the
point where ahe can't aucceaafully
compete tor lead parta with lhe
THE HISTORY IOOK: ,Alffll 4, I, I
compenv'a VOUn<Mf CMnCIW9.Shlt1ey
(1975) and D£N LANGE KEDJAN (THE
MICLalne la her tliend who lan't abl•
LONG CHAIN, t972) TIIE HISTOIIY
to r■ aolv• the tacl that ah• qull
BOOK 18 the coUecttw uoe for nine
dllnelng to marry and l'IIIM a family. If
short tllma .which dramatize a Marxist
one can bNr lhe women'• obllgatory
Interpretation of the IUt !500 years of
cet f~t and a sappy romance b9t'#Nn
hlatory. The HrlH
WH orlglnally
the
Auaalan
dancer
(Mikhail
produced by Janntk HMtnJII and LI
Baryohnlko,) and MacLatno'otalented
Vllatrup tor the Dllnlah GowmffW't
beUer1nadaughter, thil danOe aequenc>FIim Ottlce end the techn~ue o1 the
M proottde thl tllm't moet exciting
mma teeture a combination of vertoua
momenta. 8eeuttful and 1mprNal¥tly
kinda of an\maUon with l~lon
filmed, they teetu,. a.yshnlkOV" wlth
too,(-•·
Int-),
Suanne Fenell, Pet.er Martina, Martine
primarily to, child,..,,
DEN LANGI
Van Humel and oth..-1 from th•
KEDJAN 1, the story of the conevuer
American Ballet Theatre. (Varsity
lion of lwo bulldlnga
tor U.S.
Walk~ln, 4329 Untveralty Way N.E.,
companlaa
In Bombay,
India. It
SNttla, 632-313'1 .)
dHcrlbea how female conatructlon
WOtkera are brought from South lndla
1100 Dl.._tor Bemardo Bertotuccl'a
10 work tor atatvatlon wagea. The
women.,.. teft stranded In Bomba'f'• (LAST TANGO IN ,AAISJ tour hour and
fM minute film. SWTing Robert De
alums when the wont la flnlahed.
Niro, Gelard O.pardlel,
Dominque
B&W. (Lecture Hall 1, Monde'f1130 at
Sanda, Burt Lancuter, and Oona.kt
7:30 p,m. and TueedaY 1131 It 12:00
Sut-■nd. (Se,on GablN,
N.E. 50th
p.m.)
and -••
SNttle, 632,IS20I.

HEIIECOIIU
KUflONEKO
(1961) Written and
dl-od by Kanoto Shindo. A 12th
century JapaneN woman and her
20---otd
dallgh ....~ln-,_ ~
and by • bond ol -·
lat•,
the ladef' of the ewnufal la
mauled to death by I Nductlve woman
who 1Nefflbtee h\1 vlctlm. Glntokl, the
11u ■-><1 ot tho ....gift rotumo
homOInd mNII tho apl"ta ol hlowife and mother who have bffn
Pf9Ylng on paulng umural.
He 11
by hlo -•
to got rid
ot the ghoat1. (L■eture Hall 1,
Wednnday 211 only, 1 :30 & 7:30
p.m., fl'N.)

MA. JORDAN(194t)
7013 (Edward
Everett

Meaaenger

-)lo-•to--•o

cotlee1 ooulo.Ho tho m1.- ol
1endlng bOxlng
champion
Joe
Pendleton (Robert Montgomery) to
fifty _.
botcn hta tlmo.

-Joo

lo dl--3
taken

_,od,
AoH

log,_ __
, It
thot hto body hM boon

from

the

plan•

crHh

and

With ~ Aolno. (Tllo

Bud Movie

WMhtngton

In Pl~

-1:n

Pelace,

8q..,.,

c:au..-

El pwww tittlla
Oli,apla, M "50II
Vol. 6, No. 12 Feoruary 2, 1978

3rd and

-ttle,

I

I
I

I

l

The Cooper Point Journal
learned Monday, hnuuy
30,
that former faculty member Cruz
Esquivel was forced to resign
from TESC because college
officials discovered that his
degree credentials had been misrep~nted.
Esquivel's Curriculum Vitae
(resume) to Evergreen lists a
Bachelor of Music Composition
degrtt from the University of
California,
and his Faculty
Application
lists an MA in
Philosophy from the University
of San Frai,cisco. In addition,
Esquivel notified Provost Ed
Kormondy in January of 1977
that he had completed requirement■ for his Ph.D. at the Union
Graduate School-West.
The Rlcords Department at
USC was closed this week.
""However, a U.S.F. Records
Department official told the CPI
that E■ qulvel had not been
awarded an MA from that institution. E■quivel attended USP for
four full seme■ten, and USP
Records officials were unable to
comment on why the degrft was
not awarded.
Ben Davia, Director of Union
Graduate School-West, explained
that trarucrlpts are ttquittd for
matriculation, and to hiJ knowledge Cruz E■quivel had obtained
neither a Muten or a Bachelors
degrft. Although E■quivel had
completed his doctoral dissertation, Davi■ said that he had not
completed other ttqulrementa at
the in1titution and thtrtlore had
not bftn awarded a Ph.D.
Evergrftll olflcial■ •tnued that
there were legalities involved
which made it ntcuaary
for
them to ult for E1quivel'•
ruignation. According to Administration 10urces, TESC could
not under any circumstancH
continue to employ Esquivel
with the knowledge that his p,.._
sented degree credentials had
bftn fraudulent. Officials al■o
deny that the rnignation had
any relatlon■hip to put confrontation■ with E■quiwl regardIng hi■ teaching method■.
Esquivel'• handwritten ruignation submitted to Kormondy's
office on Dt«mber 19 ■lated
simply: ''Please accept my resignation as of the end of Ott-.
1977."
Kormondy n,plied on December 20, "I acknowlodge your
letter of resignation for penonal
reason ■ dated Decem\,er 19, 1977
and effective the end of Dt«mber. In view of the resignation,
no further action ia indicated on
the l"'rt of the College .... "
TESC official■ for ■ome reason
failed to investigate E■quivel'■
credential■ at the time of his
application. An undilclooed Administrative sourct explained
Tue,d.,y that Evergreen had been
unexpectedly informed by U. G.
W. of di■crepenci.. conCffning
E■quivel'■ degrea.
Btn Davis, director at U.G.W.
related that th(■ wu not the
case. He ■aid the only correo-

pondence between TESC and
U.G.W. concerned Esquivel's
enrollment in the doctoral program.
In a congratulatory
letter
dated January 27, 1977, Provost
Kormondy requested that Es•
quivel have an official statement
addre,sed to him by one of the
officers of the Union Graduate
School for personnel ,files. A
subsequent letter from Kormon•
dy to Esquivel dated July 29,
1977 reads:
"In checking on a number of
things, I note that my request of
January 27 for an official stat~
ment relative to receipt of your
degrft has not yet been received.
On the ba1i1 of the information
you provided me in your memo
of January 19, I issued your
contract letter for Fall '77 on the
auumption that the degrft was
awarded, and hence advanced
you from exptrlenct Jevel.13 to
14. If thlt is not the case, then
the contract letter which wu
iosued on June 12 i1 not v&lid,
and the wary would revert to
$18,510. Plea1t advise."
Esquivel's disstttation was approved by a Doctoral Committee
which included two Evergreen
faculty members, Don Jordan
and Erik Larson. According to
Lanon, the dissertation wu a
treatise on educational psychology viewing contemporary U.S.
social problems from a Native
Amfflcan Perspective, and focus-ing on phil010phy and metaphysic■. To Lanon'a knowledge,
there was no known problem
with certification. Btn Oavls Is
in the process of calling a ■pecial
mtttlng of the Doctoral Committee to review the problem■
conctming Esquivel'• Cfftiflcation.
Adminlltratlw l'ftconoeming the E■quivel Issue were
extremely guarded. Evergreen
Pre1ldent Dan Evan, did acknowledge that E1quivel wu
uked to N!llgn. The mignatlon
WU proceued through the Offla,
of the Provo■t, and Ed Kormondy Is unavailable for comment
until the end of February btca111t
he Is in Poland.
President Evan■ explain■ the
circumstances surrounding Esquivel'■ n,signation: '1 think you
can understand how difficult it Is
to, to really say anythins, to do
what I'd like to do, to live him
the beat opportunities
to do
something el ■ewhere. But I wu
not directly involved in the con•
tact; it was between the Provost,
which i■ the way it should be on
any kind of academic situation.
Obviouoly I wu notified lmmed(ately, and ultimately have the
decision-making authority, but,
this is the kind of thing I really
believe ought to be left to the
academic admlniotratlon of the
college, and certainly, except in
a most unusual circumstanc-e, I
would aupport the deci1lon1
made. And I think the decition
under the circum■ tanca had 'to
be made In that way."
Academic Dean WOI Humphl'tYI initially dtnled ha~
any

knowledge of Esquivel's reasons
for resigning. In addition he said
that he didn't know if the college
had asked for the resignation.
When asked if he were aware of
any problems with Esquivel's
degree credentials he replied in
the affirmative, and indicated
that there were problems with
those credentials although he
declined to comment further on
the matter.
Several college officials con•
firmed the events surrounding
Esquivel's resignation, although
they cautiously preceded their
remarks with, "off the record."
These sam• officials expressed
concern over the effect publicity
would have on Cruz, and on
outsiden' impressions of TESC.
The CPI staff was strongly di..
couraged from disclosing this
issue, although several false
rumors related to Esquivel',
resignation have circulated the
campus and the credential ■tory
was known -&ndrevealed to the
CPI by more than one 90\IJ'Ct.
An important qunt:on con•
ceming who's responsibility it is
to chtck and confirm faculty
credentials arist1 from this lituation. Whm askedif the college is
rtSponsible for a routine check
of potential faculty member ere•
dentials, President Evans said:" I
think that it ought to be. Sometimes it's not euy to fully inves-tigate. I think that the tendency
in the past, not here, but
everywhere is pretty generally to
. auume that the resume it as it's
presented u an accurate portrayal of a faculty member's pall experience, especially when it's
-coupled with experience else•
whett which all indicates a background that'■ prttty much as he
says. I gueu it's, a raume in
some respect• it like an income
tax n,tum, you depend on the
honaty of the penon contributing the facto. I don't think it Is
common practitt for any institution to go clear back to the very
beginninp of ••ch faculty member and try to go back through
and verify."
c...1111uoc1
... ,..,

Veterans at Evergreen )lave been left hanging on a cliff. An
attempt by TESC to resolve-at least temporarily-the
contra-.veny surrounding veterans' benefit payments at a hearing in the
U.S. District Court in Spokane January 31 was thwarted when
students from Spokane Falls Community College, co-claimants in
the suit, dropped their case. As a result, Evergreen·s day in court
was cancelled. the case was moved back to Olympia, and Evergreen veterans are faced once again with an uncertain financial
future.
In the joint hearing with six Spokane students, Evergreen sought
a temporary injunction to restrain the Veterans Administration
from reducing benefit payments to student veterans on February
1. The eligibility of veterans at both institutions to receive benefits
has been threatened as a result of 1977 V .A. regulation which
limits ful1 rate G.l. Bill payments to veterans carrying 12 quarter
hours credit and scheduled for 12 class hours per week.
U.S. District Judge Marshall Neill dismissed the motion upon
the withdrawal
of the Spokane students, however,
and
recommended that Assistant State Attorney General Richard
Montecucco, Evergreen's legal counsel, schedule another hearing
in the Western Washington Court District.
Evergreen's complaint against the V .A. stems from a chain of
events following the issuance of the "12 Hour Rule" last spring.
Last August the V .A, received an anonymous letter maintaining
that Evergreen veterans did not comply with the regulation, and
that they were "ripping the V.A. off."
During the fall the State Approving Agency (a State agency
contracted by the V.A. to approve college curricula for benefiteligibility) conducted a "compliance survey" to determine whether
Evergreen veterans remained eligible for the maximum funding
under the new regulation. A proposal which enabled TESC
veterans to qualify for full rate benefits was drawn up by Ever•
green and the Agency and forwarded to the National V.A. Office
in Washington, D. C. In the meantime, Evergreen filed suit on
October 15 to challenge the 12 Hour Rule.
The issue blew up on December 21 when the State Approving
Agency, in light of a V.A. order, notified Evergreen that the proposal had been dmied. The V.A. maintained that Evergreen
veterans did not qualify for benefits and that in order tor them to
continue receiving payment, the Agency would have to redefine
Evergreen's curriculum and recertify the vets on an individual
basis before February 1. ln response, Evergreen amended its suit
against the V .A. to 1ttk a temporary injunction against the
deadline and protest the V.A.'s attempt to "dictate curriculum.''
The V.A. charged in a January 10 meeting with Evergreen
President Dan EvaN that ~ ,mjority of Evergreen'• curriculum
fell under ~ "independent study" cluoificalion, and henct,
pending completion of the reclassification proctSI, payments to all
TESC vets would be cut back to tuition and ltn. While the 12
Hour Rule effects veterans nationwide, Montecucco fttls the V.A.
is "selectively harrassing Evergl'ftn'.' He contends that the V .A. is
"dosing its eyes to violations of the regulation elsewhere in the
state" and is "attacking Evergreen because of it, unique or
non-traditional program."
A5 the battle wages on between Evergreen and the V.A .. 340
TE5C veterans have been left in s111pense awaiting either the
outcome of still mother court hearina or a response from the
V.A. to the recertification effort. While all are threatened by •
pot•nlial cut-back in payments February 15, those who entered
Evergreen Winter Quarter are in a particularly difficult situationnewly enrolled veterans have been unable to obtain any funding
from the V.A. Alter l"'Yins tuition and enrolling in the "Nuclear
PoWl!r Issue" program (which meeta from 4 to 8 houn per day),
Steve Weekly discovered himoelf ineligible for benefits and wants
to know hit ■tatus ■o he can "bail himself out before it's too
late." Wttkly, along with two other Evergreen wterant, Edward
Seaman■ and David Columbuo, hu filed a separate suit against
the V.A.
Whatever the outcome of the V .A. controveny, TESC veterans
should have word ■oon regirding the fate of future benefit paymenta. Judge Neill ttqu .. ted that ljRother hearing be ■cheduled
before th• February 15 dudlint. Evergrttn officials further anticipate a rnpon.,e from the V.A. regarding the reclassification of
curriculum and recwtification of individual veterans in the near
future.
Until then7 The only advia, the Evergreen Office of Veterans'
Allain can offer to TESC vetl Is to "sit tight."

,

~

~

2

Poln1 -

Folwuo<y 2, 1971

~~Point

-

F-

2, 1171

)

Rental Agencies:

LettersQ)IPJlll1llll@l1llLette:rsCO@)lll1llll@l1ll
N,NN, A~
U.SU~L..,
'S<~~T"~

IT:

Flu News
To the Editor:
Dear Readers·
Health Services has treated a
large number
of flu cases
through the wmtry month of
January. For those ot you who
have not exenenct>d this upper
respiratory

infection

the symp-

toms are· headaches. dizziness,
sore throat, congested ears &:
nose. fever (102° - 104"). chills.
aches and pains in the joints,
coughing up white mucus and
swollen glands. Nine out of ten
oi the throat cultures taken for
students show these symptoms to
be caused by a virus. Viruses are
constantly
mutating
to new
torms which your body can
quickly manulacture antibodies
agamst

Whtie at Evergreen you can
6-8 virally related mfec-t1ons a year This number 1s increased over the general public
Jue to the steady influx of new
,md returning students from all
over the country
There ts little we can do for
vou 11 you have the flu other
than reassure you that, although
painful. the in1t1al symptoms are
not fatal. If your glands are
wvollen 11 means your lymph
w<,lem 1s working well to nd
v11ur body of the virus The
lever is even a des1r.able symptnm that y<1urbody 1s mobilizing
11!> detenses tu fight thl' infection.
There are several things you can
<lo to assist m this struggle.
DnnL. .at least two quarts of
water a day Avoid coffe-e, black
tea alcohol. smoking anything
and slay away from milk products because they tend to cause
mucus
You can take Sudafed 30mg.
lnr the stufty head and dizziness.
Sudafed can be purchased without a prescnption and should be
taken as directed. Rob1tussin Expectorant may be helpful fo1
your cough Aspirin and Tylenol
are beneficial for your aches,
pain.s and fever.
There are many natural alternat1vt>5to using over the countn
med1cat1on to treat the-sf symptoms. such as herbs and other
natural foo<l substancn. If you
are 1ntert>5ted m using natural
cllternat1ves, we have a list
posted on the door of Health
Services including instructions
for p~parat1on
The, following
E.')(pt><t

symptoms
do need medical
attention if they persist:
(l)
High fever lasting more
than three days.
(21 Coughing up of thick yellow, green or bloody
mucus.
(3) Ear pain.
(4) Sharp pam in the sides of
chest on coughing (not the
frequent early raw central
chest pain that accompa•
nies a cough).
Health Services is open to help
you Monday through Thursday
from 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. and
appointments should be made to
avoid a long waiting period.
After 5:00 p.m. and Friday
through Sunday, there is a referral hst posted on the front
door of the clinic. The list include-s local physicians, chiropractors. naturopaths, etc.
Sincerely.
The Health Services Stafl

Help Defend
TESC Nuke
Protesters
To the Editor·
On November 25. six of us
from Evergreen participated 1n
civil disobedience at the Trojan
nuclear power plant sixty miles
~outh of Olympia. This action
represented our strong feelings
about nuclear power. We believe
that it is too dangerous
a
technology for people to use and
we feel threatened by a nuclear
plant anywhere near us. The
dangers include constant exposure to low levels of radiation
during normal "safe" operation
of a plant as well as the
probability of nuclear accident
releasing huge amounts of toxic
radioactivity against which there
is no known protection.
We took part in a peaceful
stoppage of Trojan's operation.
Along with 128 others we sat in
front of Trojan's
gates and
blocked entrance to the plant
with our bodies.
We were
arrested for second degree criminal trespass.
Our• trial will
hap~n probably in March. We
want, in our mass trial. to bring
the issue of nuclear power to the
courts. We are asking for the
5upport of other Evergre-eners

We will be sponsoring
an
evening of music February 10,
8:00 p.m. in first floor library
lobby to raise money for our
legal defense. Featured Friday
night will . be a Nuclear Power
singing group from Seattle.
Shelly and the Crustaceans, plus
two local wo~en guitari5ts and
singers, The Round Town GirJ,.
Tickets will be on sale in Cab, at
the Duck House and at the door.
Two dollars buys a ticket for
two, or a dollar fifty for one.
We thank all who come for their
support.
Miles Sherts

Effective
Kill Results
To the Editor:
Last week's CPJ article about
Greenpeace was a textbook example of the emotion filled propaganda by which Greenpeace
subsists.
The issue that first comes to
mind is the concern with the
way Harp seals are harvested. In
the article we are presented with
a graphic of baby harp seals,
eyes 50 innocent and wide. Who
could possibly hurt one of these
cute little critters? How cruel it
would be to ··club to death"' (a
term well used by the author)
one of these darlings.
In the harvest of fur pelts the
quality of the skin determines ifs
value to fur buyers. Clubbing is
an excellent method of harvesting furs. combining effective kill
rt>5ults with very little or no
damage to the pelt.
I find it difficult to believe Dr.
Rowsells' contention that some
of the pup5 in the 1975 harvest
were skinned alive. You would
think it would be difficult if not
impossible to get a high quality
pelt from an animal that was
kicking around
and moving
during it's skinning.
I support the strict conservation of natural resources. We
must insure ad~uate numbers of
not only harp seals, dolphins.
and whales, but also tuna, salmon, and other marine products.
To the author: In saying in
your article. ". . . to come between animals of endangered
species and the men who Sttk lo
kill tMm", you are implying
only men kill animals of en-

dangered species. I object to this
sexist allusion.
Like many religious organizations, Greenpeace owes it's existence to it's manipulation
of
American middle class guilt.
The author sums it up in the
first line, ••
. Our name
suggests a dream ... •• Well put.
William R. Hucks

I Am Furious
To the Editor:
Friday night after the Minanzi
Marimba dance I discovered my
coat and plaid jacket were stolen. To say the least I am furious.
Hitching home that cold night
and not having another coat. it
made me bum to think someone
ripped me off.
l have always felt comfortable
putting my things in a corner at
Evergreen events, trusting in the
character of the people here.
Maybe some more traditional
practices should happen like
checking in and out coats. I
would hate to see this happen,
but more and more I see people
violating the social contract that
enables us to trust each other
I'm not some publicly irresponsible corporation
that you
can feel justified in ripping offI'm broke too and losing my
coats sets me back $60 bucks.
Your actions will come back to
you. I suggest you reconsider
and return my coats to security.
don't be a lightweight
Carolyn Meyer

Social Advances
To the Editor:
On Tuesday. January 24th I
attended the film "Men's Lives"
and participated in one of the
group discussions that followed.
The film was a fairly accurate
description of what it is like to
grow up as a male in this society
and the discussion that followed
was one of the most refreshing
events that I've encountered
while at Evergreen. Finally, some
concerned individuals of both
sexes got together and bounced
the problems of sexual roles off
of one another The result was
an extremely
enjoyable
and
educational experience. I would
like to tip my hat to those
people who were open enough to

share their feelings and insights
during that discussion.
They
showed a willingness to co-operate and understand which is seldom. if ever, seen from some of
the "more progressive" members
of the Evergreen community who
so strongly promote an attitude
of separatism.
Grouping into
isolated camps is a dead end
street. Why don't we all lower
our defenses a bit and begin
workK\g together to create some
real social advances?
michad c. hansen

by Mand~arl!Vli~~~~!
Rental agencies have a reputation in Olympia similar to that
of used car lots because of an
organization called Home Sft_k.
en. Home Seekers· l"ttffltly kept
lists of houses, apartments and
duplexes for rent in the Olympia
area. Customers we.re charged
$40 to look at and use their
listings. Home Seekers disappeared from Olympia
about
three weeks ago. Its phones were
disconnected and its office abandoned. U you recently employed
their service, call 753.t>210 to
report a brtach of contract.
The Consumer Protection ~
partment
of the Washington
St.ate Attorney General's Office
is currently
investigating
the
Home Seekers disappearance to
determine whether or not a
lawsuit will be necessary. Dick
Hubbard of the Seattle Attorney
General's Office says that th,
company may have violated the
Consumer Protection
Act of
Washington State. Complaints
against Home Seekers by former
customers are being filed at the
Attorn~y· General's Office in
Seattle where the investigation is
taking place. No one at either
the Olympia or the Seallle office
cares to comment further on the
investigation at this time.
To many homeless people who
must eventually pa.y a deposit
and first month's rent, $40 is an

est§sP.n~~!e~~h?.nguage.
He did
of a federally funded agency to
not want to put out any money
help people find homes would be
until a concrete rent-agreement
beneficial.
was reach~. The man was not
led to believe that a suitable
Right now Homelocators
is
boyse would definattly be found
trying to maintain
a good
and no.deal was made.
reputation.
~ new branch is
planned for Seattle, but, with a
If you are looking for a place
suit in progress there against an
to rent, first try the places with
agency called Home Mart, Home
phone numbers listed in the
Index, there is also a bad
paper. If you don't have any
r~utation for rental agencies in
luck there and can't wait until
Seattle. Some of the people who
the right place com., along, you
ran Home Mart, Home Index
may want to try a rental agency,
have disappearfil. The suit was
In such a case, here are a couple
filed against them for false and
of guideline!
which may be
misleading advertising.
helpful:
When I entered the Homeloca1) If someone tells you that
ton office, a man accompanied
their office can definately find
by three small children was
you a place that you will like,
explaining to Bruce Pennington,
remember that this is nearly an
a Homelocators employee, his
impossible promise to keep with
desperate situation: "I (:an not
something as risky as a house.
wait any longer, I'll pay you
2) If they do not make it clear
when I rent the place." Th• man
exactly how much you are
apparently had seven children
expected to pay and that even
and nowhere to live, and had
after you have paid you may not
been refused because of the
be successful in finding a home,
children. His problem was comdo not do business with them ..
pounded by a limited knowledge

To the Editor:
I am a first year student in
Nature. Society and Design program. We were given a project,
the theme being "Mysteries of
the Heart." Essentially we were
to design a well "traveled area on
campus. A classmate and I chose
to decorate the public elevator in
Lab I building. Materials includ·
ed a black and white contact
paper with images of Greek
goddesses naked from the waist
up. We were careful in choosing
this paper to best coordinate the
theme. We put the paper up only
to return the next day finding a
unique response. Our Greek
goddesses had be,,n rip~d beyond repair. Up in the nght
hand corner was a message.
Lesbians Unite.
We want to make "certain
People" aware of the difference
between Art and Sexism as we
see it. This black and white
paper reminded us of historic
art. Some of the best artists
including Michelaelangelo have
painted nudes. We didn't see any
sexism in the Greek goddesses.
This episode seems a matter of
sensitivity coming out in forms
of destruction.
Dear Sisters, you have given
us your opinion loud and clear.
That's what art is all about any•
way. I can't say we were flattered by the particular response but
are glad for responses. We only
hope that when your sensitivity
strikes again you may hesitate
and think more objectively.
Yours truly,
Tracy Beytebiere
P.S. The pro1ect was a success
nevertheless.

intePrnezzo

212 west fourth
943-7668

1st poetry reading!!!
feb 3 8 pm
floyd skloot (co editor chowder review)
feb 4th musician's open m,ke
8-10 pm

m-w 9-7 pm

th-sat

11-10

unbearable surcharge. , A large
percentage
of rental agency
customers are young people and
people in low income brackets. If
time is not a factor, then for 20
cents a day one can pick up a
newspaper and wait for the right
home to be advertised. But for
those who need to find a place
as soon as possible, extensive,
updated Tental listings can sttm
like a necessity at almost any
cost.

Olympia
'Pottrry
&.'ArtSuPP!_y.
Inc.
1822 W. J--larri.sori_,

we are finally ready to begin our pottery classes. the
first quarter will run from january 30 through march

25. the fee will be $35. classes in beginning polterv I &.
II and advanced pollery I &. II arc offered for additional information call 943-5332.

HOMELOCATORS

A Thoughtful
Gesture

cafe

An organization called Home-locators.
which hu been in
business in Washington for two
years, provides rental listings for
a charge of $25.00. After paying
that charge, the customer is
entitled lo use the service as
many times as necessary for one
year.
Homelocators takes out ads in
the Daily Olympian
which
describe homes by size, rent and
sometimes general location. On
each of their ads is the word
"fee". Phone numbers are purposely withheld and only available through Homelocators.
Homelocators wiUingly showed this reporter their January
30th listings, which numbered.
more than 100. About one--fifth
of these had been either crossed
out or stamped, "Sorry Rented".
There were 12 Homelocators
advertisements in the Daily O on
the day of my visit to their
office. Of those, five had already
been rented and seven were
available.
According
to the
Tacoma Central Office Manager,
Denis O'Brien.
the ads are
changed two or three times a
week. O'Brien explained that it is
difficult to keep up because some
homes are rented as soon as the
ads come out.
A young
woman
named
Amber (no last name given) who
was in the Homelocators office
(a friend of the man behind the
desk) said that she once worked
at Home Seekers under a Kelly
Richardson.
She said Home
Seekers
used a "hard
sell
approach"
along with false
advertising to get customers. She
also claimed that Richardson
ripped her off by holding b,,ck
her pay for six months, that she
worked eleven hours a day with
Home Seekers. From her operience with the rental bu1ineu,

If

W(

don:t'filWe
it;~

wi[[.3et it.

DENNY'S AUTOMOTIVE
2643 martin way

ELECTRONICTUNE UP

Candidate Interviews Scheduled

Three applicants for fuU time
faculty positions at Evergreen
will be interviewed on campus
during the week of February 6
through
10. Alfred Arkley,
whose specialty field is public
administration,
will be interviewed at 10:00 a.m. on Monday, February the 6th.
On the following day at 10:00
a.m., David Firth will be inter-

Come in and try a natural

viewed. Firth lists his primary
interests as plant/soil/science.
The third applicant to be interviewed will be Guy Adams,
who5e field is public administration. Adams' interview is scheduled for 10 a.m. on Wednesday,
February 8. For further infonnation, call Eileen Humphrey at
866-6295.

RAUDENBUSH
MOTOR SUPPLY

perfume essence and we will
give you a 10\\\discount.
You might like it!

113 WEST 5th AVENUE

~LI•

ll<IS AlJ F()" DISCOUH~

LAST CHANCE
TO GET IMPORTS
AT PRICES LOWER THAN DOMESTIC! DOMESTIC:
$5.79,
IMPORT
RECORDS IN STOCK: $5.75. WHEN
WE REORDER OUR PRICES GO UP
SO GET YOUR IMPORTS TODAY.

AT LAST.

A~~Wttt
Mlc:Sn'Oht.February 4. 1971

we install new non-resistor plugs, points, condenser,
& rotor. we set dwell & timing & adjust carburetor
to factory specifications

WE HAVE
REILLY & MALOWEY-

0

on.,-EltPNt

$34 95 most 4 cylinders

943-3860
412 CHERRY

AT LAST

4

,,..

~

PointJoumot Fobrwo,y
2, 1171

2

Alternatives
by Karrie Jacobs

Nobody is planning on turning
Red Square into a huge solar
collector, or at least not at last
report: however there are numerous less ambitious projects in
the \vorks under the auspices of
the Energy Systems: Convent aona I and Alternative
group
contract. St1.tdents plan to draw
l,n energy from home-made
methane. wind. and the elusive
NlHthwest sun. among other
1hm~~ to fuel the projects that
they are w0rking on this quarter.
The program was developed
bv !acuity members Stan Klyne
anJ Byron Youtz in response to
.i growing interest among Ever~reen students and faculty in the
rroblems of energy conversion.
) 0utz explained that it is useful,
given the urgency of the energy
problem, for Evergreen to have a
regular program to study energy
alternatives. This is the first year
such a program has been offered
on a large scale. although there
have been numerous individual
contracts in previous years, and
) outz stresses that it will not be
the last.
Atter gaining a background in
baste engineering. thermodynamlCS heat transfer. calculus and a
J11tle socio-economics. the students have immersed themselves
m the problems of taking their
pro1ects off paper and making
them work. To this end contract
mt>mber-sare setting up instruments to ~ather significant data:
.1 hot wire anemometer
which
measures wind speed electrically.
a cup anemometer which measures wind speed mtthanically,
and a pyronometer which measures all incoming sunlight (insolation l. The information gathered from these devices helps
determine the local effectiveness
of various alternative
energy
sources.
One student, Gila Osheroff, is
working in conjunction with si.x
students from outside the program on a solar grttnhouse at
the Organic Farm. When asked
what the difference was betwttn
a solar
greenhouse
and a
traditional gretnhouse (which
would seem to be a solar device)
Osheroff explained that most
greenhouses are inefficiently de-signed and need a great deal of
supplemental heat to keep plants

alive. The Org~nic Farm greenhouse will have less glass than
the traditional variety. Its north
wall will be solid concrete and
there will be a solar collector on
the south side. The concrete will
act as insulation,
and rock
storage areas inside the greenhouse will hold the heat. Plans
include having a woodbuming
sauna adjacent to the greenhouse, both to keep Organic
Farm workers happy and to supplement the power of the sun
during 'the drearier months. The
foundation for the greenhouse
has already been laid although
the designs are not scheduled to
be complete until the beginning
of March.
Another student, Kelly Walcott. started work on a project
involving a greenhouse in what
he termed an "integrated cottage
system." His original idea was to
have a house connected to a
greenhouse in which the heat
from the house would supplement
the greenhoust>'s heat and vice
versa. He scaled the project
down a bit lo co(lcentrate on a
greenhouse which is dependent
on heat from methane produced
by compost, and sunlight to
keep it warm. Of course the heat
from the sun encourages the
composting process, whch also
produces fertilizer for the plants.
The edible parts of the plants
return to the compost pile by
way of the human digestive
system while the less tasty leaves
and stems get thrown directly
back into the heap. Walcott
touted the advantages of having
a system which does not depend
•.,,lely on any given factor.
Three students in the contract
are working on a way to use
wind power to supply good tele-vision reception to the Quinalt
Indians in Queets. The tribe
currently runs a T. V. repeaterstation, which amplifies the
signals from Seattle stations, on
a set of batteries t~t are re,..
charged periodically by a gas
generator. Students Bill Coan,
Dwight O'Quinn and Bob Costello are going to moniter the
wind and eventually design a
windmill to replace the gas
generator.
Chances are that none of the
individual projects being undertaken in the Energy Alta-natives
contract will be terribly conspicuous to the Evergrttn community as a whole. but an event
is in the works which 5hould
induce most Evergreeners to give

,,_cyf£
..UZ !:~i..U!!~:
Six Years At Evei--r88Jl.-... _·

To Puget Power

The Energy Alternative contrad'• pyrometer slt1 hJahatop La
alternative energy po55ibilities a
little thought. An exposition
called Energy Northwest
is
scheduled to take place on
campus May 5, 6, and 7 in conjunction with the national Sun
Day celebration (see box on this
page). The event is being
brought about largely through
the efforts of Energy Alternatlve'5 students and is intended to
"encourage individual and community awareness and human
welfare specifically through appropriate and thoughtful energy
use.
Conference planners hope to
illustrate that alternative energy
sources can provide viable options in the Pacific Northwest,
and elsewhere. Display1, workshops, films, seminars,
and
speakers will present a wide
range of energy possibilities, and
cultural evmts wiU round out
the weekend. Local inventors,
gadget..... and· build.... will be
invited to display their warn,
and it is hoped by the plannen
that the Energy Northwest exposition will bring in the Olympia and lower Puget Sound community in addition to Evergrfttler,,

The S and A Board hat provided the project with five
hundred dollan, which should
get the conference
off the
ground. At least the plannen can
afford an office and a telephone
number (-190)
which anyono,
intettSted in participating In the
planning of Energy Northwest
can call to get further infonnation.

r----------------------------A

TA'leel,

V V•

~

Wednesday May 3 has been
delcattd Sun Day by a Washington D. C. based coalition that
consi1ts of a wide variety of
community leaden from all over
the country. The goal of Sun
Day's network of events is to
"accelerate the transition to renewable energy, hopefully by a
massive fllucation campaign ... "
Thi5 celebration of 10lar power
and of all forms of alternative
energy can be readily compared
to Earth Day, proclaimed nearly
a decade ago. However, Dusky
Rhodes, a representative from
the Sun Day Coalition who wu
at Evergreen Tuesday, January
31 to speak with the Energy
Northwest planning group, no
longer views the comparison _.,
apt. 'We-.topped using the comparison to Earth Day," she
stated, ''becau1e we expect it to
be bigger and to bring a lot of
people Into the coalltlon, Earth
Day centettd a
lot on the
campuses, and while we expect~
the campuses to do a lot for Sun
Day, there 11 also • lot
happening in citJn with commu•
nlty groups, consumen, labor
unions, churches, civic groups
and that kind ol thing."
Sun Day was conceived by
Omni• Hayes, one of the prime
movers in Earth Day who now
works for the World Watch Institute. He took his idta to
Environmental Action, which is
the outgrowth organization of
Earth Day, and several people
then, wen, enthused enough with
the proposal to start devoting all
their energies to it. They wrote
up a funding proposal that fell

Cruz Esquivel

THE HARDER THEY COME
WED THE 1st TO THE 7th
FANTASTIC
ANIMATION
FESTIVAL
THE 8th TO THE 14th

4th St at Pacific&~
Martin Way·943-5914

Of

1

Sun

..
Days

into the hands of the Washington Post, which subsequently ran
an article on Sun Day. Thi5 was
picked up by the UPI and soon
the newly formed Sun Day coalition was getting encouragement
and support from all over the
country.

Events planned for Sun Day
include a number of solar fairs
similar fo the E{lergy Northwest
expo1lti!ln being plan~ ~ at
Evergreen, toun ol solar lacilltiet, special exhibits, and teachins. In R.aliegh, North Carolina
then, will be a health food feast
for thousands ol people which
will take place after a sunri.te
c:eremony. In Seattle two arti5ts
an, building a unique sundial In
Gasworks Park: someone has- to
stand in its middle in order to
cast the time-telling 5hadow. Sun
Day is actually Sun Week, with
many events occurring the wttkend before Sun Day or lasting
the entin, week. In Philadelphia,
for example, then, will be a
seven-day celebration with the
focus on • different topic each
day.
Further information on Sun
Day can be obtained by writing
to, Sun Day, Suite 1100, 1028
Connecticut Ave. N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036.

Continued from pap 1
A similar question wu dittetfor Evergreen by faculty member
ed to Humphreys, asking if the
and former dean Rudy Martin.
faculty hiring committee should
Provo5t David G. Barry invited
be held responsible for checking
Esquivel to accept appointment
potential faculty members' cre-- to the Evergreen faculty as of
dentials, He responded,
September 15, 1971. On March
"No, there's no conditions in
10, 1912, Barry offettd Esquivel
the handbook right now which
a three-year contract to last
require that as part of the prothrough June 15 ol 1974 at a
cess. See, the typical college
salary rate of $15,000 per year.
placement resume for a college
An additionaJ three--ytar conteacher includes transcripts and
tract based on favorable review
everything t.l5e; it usually isn't
and evaluation was awarded Esntt'e5U.ry.,,
quivel on June 13, 1974, to
Asst. AcademiC Dean Rob
terminate as of June 15, 1971, at
Knapp explained further that it
S16,405 per year, On June 9,
would be ridiculous for the Insti1975, his yearly salary was intution to l'ftean:h every degree
crtased to $17,360, Another raiR
and certificate back to the date
by action of the legislature
of birth. Students, however, are
adju5ted E1quivel's Hlary to
required to ha.ye ln1titution1
$18,040 as ol July 1, 1976, and
forwa·rd complik
and sealed.
521,030 as ol September 15,
transcripts befor1 they can be
1977. At this time Esquivel was
admitted to TESC.
offtttd another thnee-year conIt would be a simple and Inextract by Provost Ed Kormondy,
pensive procedun, lor Evergtten
to verify the final degree listed
Esquivel was unavailable lor
on each transcript submitted by
comment on this issue u he was
prospective faculty.
out ol town and the CPJ had no
Cruz Esquivel was recruited
way of reaching him.

'With Cruz, the teacher and
the student are one and the
same. He was always available
to me when I nttded him, as a
friend as weU as a teacher." Leslie Chandler, TESC graduate
and a former student of Cruz
Esquivel.
Cruz Esquivel was perhaps
one of Evfrgreen's mo5t controvenial faculty members because
of his teaching methodology.
Many of the 5tudents who
worked with him talk of his
profound impact on their lives.
His quiet and philosophical
approaches
to learning have
helped others to delve deeper
into their personal motivations
and goals. Cruz Esquivel prov'ided students with an alternative within THE ALTERNATIVE.
Cruz's colleagues often questioned the "medicine-man" approach to learning he utilized in
his teaching. it is extremely difficult lor non-Third World persons to relate to many of the
ideas which Cruz shared with hi5
students, because the ideas are so
far removed from their own
cultural bounds.
. Faculty member Don Jordan
observn: "There's a very small
niche between the dominant
society and the Native American
society and a few of us have
managed to find out what that
niche is. and live within its confinet. It's a very loneQf place to
be because you're crucified from
both sides."
Cruz .mainly concerned himself
with the need5 of Native
American students heni. In a
past interview with the tPJ, he
told reporter Lisa Fleming:
'Tm interested in teachina

was willing to take thos, kind ol
students and work with them on
investigating those very abstract
areas, such as natural medicines,
natural forms ol healing, whatever those metaphysical or occult
things are. Occult not in the
negative sense, but occult in the
positive sense. He would take
those that wen, totally outside the
realm of academia, aod that's
where he got• most of his
flack . . . Cruz is a very outspoken person, he said what was
on his mind, he didn't beat
around the bush, and that's a
hard thing lor people to deal
with sometimes."
The philosophy Cruz adopted
in his lifestyle and teaching
began developing early in his
childhood. His early education
took place in the Jnuit mission
schools on the Colville Indian
Reservation. Esquivel left the
reservation when he was drafted
into the Korean War. He
returned to the reservation in
1964, as supervisor of the Youth
Opportunity Program sponsottd
by the U.S. Department Bureau
of Indian Affain,, Colville Indian
Agency, In this temporary job he
supervised the work of several
college youths at the Colville
Indian Reservation.
Cruz saw clearly that it is important to provide Native American and Third World students
with a learning environment to
which they are accustomed.
Some colleagues argued privately
that what Cruz provided students with was not in the line of
educational pursuit, did not fit in
with the goals and objectives of
this college, and should take
place out1idt of the institution.

" . . . Obviously, Evergreen does
not want any permanent commitment to Third World. people,
much less the chance to organize
and politic." - Cruz Esquivel
mainly things that an, Native
American, I can utilize what I've
IHmed In Western Philosophy
and apply it to Native American
thinking,"
Esquivel has been long concerned with the difficulties of
Third World and minority students at collegH nationwide.
Befort coming to the state of
Washington, Esquivel submitted
5"Vttal proposals to Califomla
Anemblyman Vasconcellos to
help integrate minority students
into state and other imtitutions.
One of these proposals called
for the waiving of all out-of-state
tuition and residency require• ments for Native Americans. His
basic rationales wen,, "(1) that
the aboriginal domain of the
Native American knows no state
lines; (2) to upgrade the repre-sentation of Native Americans
on all campuse5 throughout the
state."
Another of Esquivel'• proposals
to Assemblyman Vasconcellos
called for "A significant number
ol special admissions openings on
all state college campuses to be
reserved for Inmates and parolees
from penal institutions,
since
college as a parole plan would
provide a much-needed bridge of
nehabilitation betw .. n the penal
institution and the educational
institution." (Cruz demonstrated
a continued Interest in this area
by sponsoring the individual
contracts In Evergreen'• Ex-Oflenden program this Fall, a program he had helped to Initiate.)
Many of the contracts which
Cruz did a<npt from students
were abstract in compari10n with
those of other faculty mernben,
as well as far greater in number.
Jordan explains, "One of the
things Cruz would do for students, .. a lot of students an, off Into
50me really far out. metaphysi-

Ytt most Native American students have a great cultural diflettnct that wollld act as a barri)r towards their Involvement In
standard Evergreen curriculum.
Simply, they would not flt In, or
gain anything that would be of
value to them within their own
cultural groups. Jordan defended
this point well when he said,
'When you come off a raervation, how do you relate to
people who have almost totally
subjugated your people into a
defined anea7"
It is evident that Esquivel felt
the needs of Third World
students
at Evergreen
were
mclang,ettd by the attitudes of
the administration. This 11documented in a memo written to
Academic Dean Will Humphreys
on August 27, 1976 concerning
Cruz's request to be placed In the
contract pool :
" , , , I have patiently waited
lor Evergrttn to get off its dull
lor the last five years and offer
Third World people a permanent
commitment of an entire curricula In Black, Chicano, Native
American and Asian Studies.
This has not happened, and I
doubt that it will ever happen.
Obviously, Evergreen does not,
want any permanent commitment to Third World people,
much less the chance to organize
and politic. This is evidenced by
the lack of Third World faculty
and staff as well as students on
thi1 campus. . . . "
Esquivel expressed the same
type of discouragement when he
told reported Lisa Fleming,
"Everything I've proposed has
been pretty well 1hot down
, , , , I can't lw,t this system.
I'm tlttd of It. I'll be bouncing
around whn-e I'm needed."
Even those whom Cruz found
to be a sourct of consternation

had respect for his ability to
relate to students who otherwise
would have found attending
Evergreen difficult, if not impossible. When Asst. Academic
Dean Rob Knapp assumed the
deanship, he made a point of
finding out for himself what
Cruz was doing ~ause
Cruz
had a mixed reputation as a
teacher. Knapp was critical of
the large number of contracts
Esquivel took and the manner in
which they were written up;
however,
he also bestowed
praise upon the former faculty
member.
In typifying
what
Esquivel did well Knapp said,
"He worked with several different kinds of students. One
kind were bright, unconventional, independent 5tudents who
wanted to do things on their
own, and often they were
travelling completely around the
world, or were completely out of
touch with tht college. Cruz w.is
a kind of very loose contact
point for them who would make
sure that things didn't get too
out of line at home, ht was good
to talk to when they got back;
he didn't trouble them too much
about jumping through hoops,
These guys did good work, and
quite llkely would have had
trouble doing the same through
anybody else, . , , When they
said they wen, going to go paddling down the~ Amazon to
discover emeralds or somflhing
like that, if they didn't discover
the emeralds they had an interesting time and wrote lively and
perceptive accounts of what they
were doing."
Although Cruz's main involvement with student! was in the
area of individual contracts, he
was involved in a few major
programs which he felt were
important. One of th... was
Squashblossom (so named ~
cause the squHhblossom is regarded as a symbol ol hope in
the Native American culture), a
program devoted to organic
gardening. Cruz wrote of the
program:
"At the farm we get our exercise in the garden; it is also an
ancient form of meditation to
pick weeds and till the soil. Our
philosophy is implicit In the
action of producing and giving
away food to needy people and
In the process we produce food
for ounelves."
The program also incorporated
workshop!
in yosa, Native
American Mythology, herbal
n,wiclne, poetry and llteratun,
all pha... of organic prdening,
and Sufi bn,athlng.
Cruz also concerned hlmlelf
with tho poblem, of alcoholism
among Native Alllerl'cans. He
1.. 1s the traditional tneatmont of
the disoue alcoholics lace 11
Irrelevant to Indian people,
adding, " , .. If non-Indians
can't solve their alcoholism, wt
u Indian people should be
allowed to use our own tradi-

tional methods .
One of the ·issues that concerned Cruz most is the need for
Third World and especially Native American faculty members
at Evergreen. Those outside the
circle have a difficult time
understanding the need of Indian
students to relate to members of
their own peer group, who share
in the bond of their unique
cultural assets and difficulties as
a long-oppressed minority.
This viewpoint has been spoken against and even considered
reverse discrimination, yet the
American Indians have long
faced pressure from the dominant class. They have been
oppressed and corralled into
small areas of land. for years
their religions, educations, families, and natural resource rights
have been infringed upon by the
United States government and
thereby the majority of American people.
Native Americans as Evergreen
students deserve the right to
education as it fits their needs,
and not as others see fit without
considering their cultural backgrounds.
In considering
the
needs of Native Americans
within their own culture at Evergreen, the government would be
repaying a minute part of Its
debt to these oppressed people,
while enhancing the needs of
society at large.

Jordan observes: ."The linguistical factors, the cultural factors.
there are a lot of factors
involved. Being able to relate to
a peer from your own racial or
cultural group, very significant
among Native Americans because we still hold to our culture
in a lot of ways. Sure there's
been a lot of corruption within
the cultures. but still there's a lot
ol things there. And being able
to identify with a native American who is educated is very
viable because we do live in a
pluralistic society."
What will Cruz Esquivel do
now? In his own way he will
always be a teacher, he will continue to mirror the parts of
ourselves which find tranquility
through nature. In hi.> phihsophical ways he will leadpeop\e10
realizations they might nevf'r
make without him.

SENIOR EMPLOYMENT
SEMINAR
How To Conduct an Interview
Date: Tuesday, February 7
Time: 3:30 - 5:00 p,m,
Place: Career Resource
Center
Library 1213

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6

The COGpflf Point Joul'NI

Evergreen Under
EntertainmentJETI5llt®~ltcfilllTI5lTIIr11@TIJllt
CPE Scrutiny
Margaret Tomkins Paintings: A Critique
by Sarah Stranahan anq
William F. Cubbon
This here article is a blend of a
taped critique
we
did
of
Tomkins'
show and written
criticism and explanation. The
altempt is to show the spontana1ty, immediacy, and vitality of
verbal critique, while also filling
in the holes to keep the boat
dfloat

for

those

who

weren't

thrre.
Do you like these paintings? A
woman did them. It's thirty-three
years work. Large eroded bone
shapes Nice frame, dense colors,
maybe faces. A hole in the sky.
In

her

surrealist

work

(1943-

1946) she tries to energize the
surface with compulsive detail.
There 1s a lavish use of black in
her quasi-cubist
work (19561060). More of the reference to
Cubism thari the dimensional
quality a grid undemt'ath and
()II
fllp
Srrentific
analysis.
Wliere s the wheat J It's called
Genesis
Between 1956 and 1961 she
makes a jump into abstract
expressionism. In 'White Space
Out" we see the same energy for
the whole canvas,
but the
gesture is freed and strengthened.
The surface organization is still
tightly resolved. but there is
more movement
into
and
through the canvas. Wonder if
.-.he did drugs? It looks like
falling bird sh,t could i:,e a city,
o, a landscape Palette slash She
, ubs all over Fragments exploded wl11te grey ochre flesh.
hrnw,1 purple
some kmda red

Canvas exposed. it starts sticking
out. Rainy climate here.
The next three paintings,
dominated by reds, blues, and
greys, grow more violent and
personal. Like many abstract
expressionists, Tomkins incorporates color and decisive gesture to charge her paintings with
an internal force which transcends surface and form. The
content. while still present at a
descriptive level, (a witness, an
'assassination) is abstractt'd into
an emotional state which has its
source in the act of painting
itself. (Also known as artist,
open guts, and paint, style). It's
a space, more emotion/energy
than a place. You could put your
head into it. This one's called
''Assassination", Eowi! I just got
shot. Do you see black shapes
flying through the air? No. Do
you see it divided;
tension
pushed. cirde in the middle with
blue and black spinning round?
"Space Out". Dug in with
fingernails. It's like blood, blue
and red. There's always a strong
center. Love the comers. Witness
feels like a self,onfrontation.
It's
about a hard thing, there's a lat
of failure, the motions feel weak,
edges dissolve, age, mortality.
Up against the wall. The tension
is acute, yet unresolved.
A
'woman's
body divided
and
confused, overwhelmed by the
surrounding network. The head
is left hesitantly black.
The next work
we see,
"Contour"
(1971) and "Solar
Space" (1972) arf-less pers0nal.
The gestural style has been
replaced with large. well defined

configurations.~ The voh:age has
been turned up, and you've got
matte, flat. bright, don't-touchme colors streamin' around. A
regression to surface design7
Rourescent. It buzzes. Plastic.
Purely paint. The pop era W4S
upon us. Don't remind you of
outside. Rat as hell.
With "Triad"
(1976) and
"Equinox" (1975). Margarot'•
work once again has changed
and now seems influenced by
minimal geometric precedents.
The space is focused and relaxed,
angular, but not stiff. Cool,
deep, pastel colors contrast with
bright yellow and orange foregrounds, Depth has been restored. The movement is slow and
unified. Each color and shape is
:laimed; the paintings breath
!asy. One senses she is pleasing
,erself. It's pretty. so thick and
,n·ght and creamy. For a hard
>dged piece this is very soft.
.Everything is really found. In a
way the least stylized so far. No
space, yet itS the first piece you

could walk into. I've never seen
this color yellow before. It's femfinine. You say that cause it's
soft, lots of womm make hard
paintings. I would only push
that so far, it's so related to
work that men were doing. "It's
a hard logic to follow and the
girls get lost. I want to talk as
much as I want to."
Tomkins is a modern art
painter. She started with surrealism and kept up with the
developing
styles,
cubism,
abstract expressionism, pop, and•
minimal gwmetric. Like many
artists who aren't art historian/
philosophers her influences seem
more visual than analytical. This
is why we've made reference to
cubism, pop, minimalism, in her
work without labeling it as such.
Abstract expressionism being the
exception
where she clearly
embraced it's dictum. While the
developing school's imagery was
academically dictated (via New
York. mostly), many artists felt
free to divorce the visual styles
from the ideas behind them. You

Cl1\'t imagine a reference to a
mountain landscape (taboo) in a
stella geometric, hard-edge painting, where as Tomkins' ''Triad"
clearly alludes to one.
The final two paintings, "Passage" (1975). and "Section 24"
(1976). are the strongest and
most original paintings in the
show. Tomkins' husband 0ames
Fitzgerald, a sculptor) died in
1973. I can't help feel that
"Passage" contains a statement
that represents her own determination to keep on painting
and living. Her persistent and
continual development are: heartening. Although not a major
innovator, her work has integrity. A lot can be learned. The
strong driving emotions of her
earlier abstract
expressionist
work are now contained, controllt'd, and so much steadier.
Margaret Tomkins, you were
spacing out, but you htroe pulled
it together and given us some
soft things. Unrelenting. At this
point these paintings are doing
everything they have to. The
center has become what the
painting is about. Overlapping
forms suck you into a deep
folding space. A resonant space.
It's crystalized. A section of a
lifetime's work, the end makes
sense. I don't know if it's the
end, she'll keep finding it.
Remember how she scraped the
paint with a palette knife?
Maybe this is what was inside
one scrape. Maybe she'll go
inside here next, a new surface
for her to penetrate. We almost
can't hang on to any fonn or
edge. It' funny and I like that

I
I
I

I

by Steve Francis
"Approximately ten years after
it was created The Evergreen
State College is at a critical
point in its history . . Since
fall, 1974, Evergreen's full-time
enrollment has decijned and
while its headcount "'enrollment
showed steady growth through
1976, for the first time in fall,
1977 it declined.
Full-time
equivalent enrollment is now
only slightly higher than it
was in 1973."

So begins a preliminary report
of a study being conducted by
the Council for Post-Secondary
Education (CPE). The Council
for Post-Secondary Education is
comprised of nine citizen members appointed by the Governor
and seven representatives of different educational areas throughout the state. The Council is
charged with comprehensive planning for post-secondary institutions and administering financial
aid programs.
One planning
study they will conduct this year
concerns the future of Evergreen.
William Chance and Denis
Curry, two coordinators on the
Council staff, are conducting the
study and hope to complete it by
October of this year so that it
may be used in advance of the
regular legislative session which
begins in January, 1979.
The wording of the study
directive has created some controversy because of the apparent
conclusions built into it:
"Not more than $25,000 shall
be expended to study and make
recommendations on the curriculum and costs of The Evergreen State College. The study
shall determine the actions necessary to broaden the institution's
clientele base by introducing traditional undergraduate and graduate course offerings and reduce
the institution's total operating
cost per TTE !Full-time Equivalency I student to the average cost
per FTE student at the other 3
state colleges."
Patrick Callan, the Executive
Coordinator
for the Council
staff. visited Evergreen in December and assured people here that
the study would be broader than
this narrow directive. William
Chance and Denis Curry further
elaborate in their report, "the
statement calling for the CPE
study focuses on two elements:
curriculum and costs. However,
these can only be appreciated in
a larger context, one including
Evergreen's enrollment patterns,
its service areas, and its role and
mission." At a CPE student-fac•
ulty advisory committee meeting
on January 24, Chance said the
study may require a socio-economic analysis of Southwest
Washington, interviews with high
school students and counselors,

and surveys of present and graduated Evergreeners in an attempt
to determine why the enrollment
is declining and what measures
may be taken to reverse the
trend.
The ,preliminary report deals
w1th '""thepurposes' of the study, a
description of the curriculum,
and a general cost profile. It also
delves into past perspectives on
the follege, enrollment patterns,
and participation rates.
One of the major problems the
study will investigate is known
as the Evergreen Dichotomy: the
responsibility
of Evergreen to
serve the needs of Southwest
Washington balanced with the
responsibility to meet the needs
statewide for providing educational and institutional alternalives. These different responsibililies often come into conflict. A
six-year plan from the Council
stated that the resolution
of
Evergreen's
mission to serve
S. W. Washington "could undermine the Evergreen alternative
unless wayS are, found within
that institution
to effectively
accommodate regional educational needs within a nontraditional
structure."
In effect, by charging the
study, the legislature is calling in
an investigatory team from outside the institution.
This is
touchy ground, where institutional autonomy for resolving
the problem may be tread upon.
Of course. the final report is
only a recommendation and it is
not binding that the legislature
follow the recommendation. But
the study will be an extensive
undertaking by a non-partisan
research group and will undoubtedly play an important role
in any future decisions about the
college.
The preliminary CPE report
lays the groundwork
for the
study and is packed with statis-tics and graphs concerning Evergreen. For example, when discussing the need for Evergreen to
serve S. W. Washington
the
report noted that the number of
seniors from S. W. Washington
high schools has steadily d~
dined from a high of 395 in Fall
1971 to 65 in Fall, 1977. If the
school is responsible for serving
the southwestern
part of the
state, should that number be increasing instea~ of declining7 Ultimately,
the answer to that
question leads to this larger
question: What can be done to
attract those students and thus
serve the residents of this comer
0£ the state7
The preliminary report spends
a considerable amount of time
analyzing the cost of Evergreen.
The report calls into question the
assumption
that the unique
curriculum structure contributes
to the high tost of the college's

operation.
. .
. S t att~tics show that direct
mS t ructtonal CoSts (faculty salaries, program coSls, etc.) per
FTE student are in fact slightly
lowe, than the average of the
three Regional Universities. The
problem lies in the area of support coSls (administration, student services, plant operation,
etc.) Support costs at Evergreen
are 85% higher than the three
Regional Universities. Evergreen
is a school which, according to
the administration.
needs 4000
st udents to bring the cost/student in line with other schools
around the state. This is the crux
of the problem: how to bring
the enrollment up to a level
which, in the legislature's eyes,
makes it worth keeping open.
Perhaps the most difficult task
Curry and Chance will have is to
evaluate the more subjective
factors involved. In addition to
dealing with costs and participation rates, "efforts will be directed to a review of the comparative
effectiveness of Evergreen's educational modes, especially in
terms of their appeal to students
(actual and potential}." In other
words, the study will attempt to
determine the quality of education a student receives here.

Denis Curry
and William
Chance repeatedly state that they
will attempt to involve representatives of the college for information and comment. Just how
they will go about this and how
involved they will get remains to
be seen.
In conclusion. as stated in the
report, "the importance of this
study and the appropriations act
which directed its undertaking
cannot be stated too strongly." It
is not only the future direction
of Evergreen
that is under
question but also its continued
existence. Evergreen began as an
experimer\t. taken on and supported by the state. with the
belief that diversity of higher
educational opportunities is important and necessary. It would
be sad if the experiment failed
and a financial and curricular
noose began tightening around
the college's neck. It would even
be sadder if tlle experiment failed
without the participation
and
struggle, if necessary, of the
people living and learning within
its walls.
If you are concerned or have
the least bit of interest in this
study and the future- of this
college, please come to CAB 305
and talk to me about it. Come
and find out more at 12: 30 on
Wednesday. February 8 in the
Coffehouse. Copies of the report
will be available at the Information Center. The night is dark
and we're so far from home. Lets
not let this one slip away.

There wltl be an OVERNITE DREAM
RETREAT on Friday night and on
Saturday, February 10, for people who
want to share dreams. who wan! to
motivate
themselves
to
beco~e
dreamers, and who en1oy learning and
creating lrom dreams. II wilt be led by
Ed McOuaITie and the lee Is $1O or
trJl(Se.CaJI866--6151 to register.

The ABORTION SUPPORT GROUP
will be getting
together
again on
Tuesday, Febfuary 7 at 8:30 In LIB
3112. Women of all ages are Invited to
come lo talk, Of just listen. It's a very
informal and supportive group a1mosphere. The Abortion Support Group is
sponsored by the Women's Clinic and
will meet the first Tuesday of every
mon1h at 6:30 In the Board Room, LIB
3112. For more Information call the
Women's Clime at ~238
The Evergreen College Community
Organization
will host an informal
FIRESIDE CHAT with President DAN
EVANS on Thursday, February 2. at 8
p.m. In LIB -430J. Evans will discuss
his views on present and future goals
ol lhe college and answer question:"!
ECCO ls a community organization ol
more than 250 persons which was
created to promote open communlcallons
between
Evergreen
and its
neighboring communities. The fireside
chat Is free and open 10 the publlc.
I found MONEY ON KAISER ROAD
(Evergreen Parkway) near the corner of
Cooper Point and Kaiaer on Tuesday,
January 17. II you think It's yours, call
866-2821 and leave a message tor
Lawry. II It Is an emergency, call
Mercer Island, 1-232-5296.

II you are intef'ested in joining In
collective non-violent action to stop
Trident.
come to a meeting
on
Wednesday,
February
8. to share
ideas. lo learn about Trident, and to
prepare for a day of poUtical action on
May 22. The February 8 potluck starts
at 5:30 p.m., the meeting at 6:30 and
both wlH be held at 2102-26th N.W.
Galt Plto at 866-3313 or Nell or Tom at
943-9713,4for more lnformalion. or Join
the bike caravan teavlng from the toop
at 5:15.

Thursday FebrJ•ry 9
CRACE WHITELY Stongt vocals
on j.iu and folk tuMS accomJNnying htrM'lf on guitar

THE TESC BOOKSTORE

NON-SAJ

Performances begin at nine p.m.
A one dollar cover will be asked
to support the performers.
GNU DELI ia located ia
downtown Olympia on the
corner of West Thurston
Avenue and Capitol Way.

19:30-1:JO

2117lac Flflh A•Oly..... , 'W..,,.,,._

U2-0700

tH01
AO'OM"-Copllo4

SAFE TRAVEL IN AVALANCHE
COUNTRY, a sllde presentation by Don
Polinsky, Skt Mountaineering Advisor
tor the Pacific Northwest 01vis1on of
the Natlonal Ski Patrol on avalanche
path recognil,on,
route finding and
rescue equlpmenl and technique will
De held at the REI Co-op, 1525-llth
Avenue, Sea!Ue, on February 2 at 7 00
pm
The presentation 1s one 1n a
series offered by the REI CO-OP The
next presentation which 1s on CROSS
COUNTRY DOWNHILL will be held on
February 9 For further mlormation.
call Pal Granstrom al 323-8333.

The SERVICES ANO ACTIVITIES
BOARD w1tt meet on Wednesday, February 8, m L1b 3112 at 9 00 a.m On
the agenda 1s a discussion ol lundlng
Phase 11 ol the College
Activities
Bultd1ng and dec,s,ons on the process
for running 1he alloca11on meetings 1n
the spring Everyone welcome
The offices of COOPERATIVE EDUCATION and CAREER PLANNING ANO
PLACEMENT
w1H be offering
a
workshop on Wednesday, February 8
from 9 to 12 noon in UB 2204 to h1ghl!ght the important
s1eps students
should go through
when they are
planning an internship SubJects such
as inlormat1onal 1n1erv1ewmg for an
1n1ernship and how lo wme a resume
for an 1n1ernsh1p will be covered Alt
students are invited to attend To sign
up lor this workshop
call either
Cooperative Education al 866-6391 or
Career Planning and Placement at
866-6193.

THE FIFTH ANNUAL 20K GOLD
RUSH, a cross counlry ski race open
10 skiers ot all ages and ab1litles will
be held February 12, near Hyak Cross
Country Center, Snoqualmie Pass. The
entry lee Is S5.00 or $6.00 on the day
of the race. The winner receives a ski
trip to Norway. courtesy of REI Travel.
Medals will also be awarded
to
everyone who finishes
within
the
winner's time plus 50%. For lnformaUon and enlry forms, call Of visit the
REI C<Hlp, 1525-11th Avenue. Seattle,
323-8333. or wrile to REI CcH>p Gold
Rush, P.O B01e C-&8126, Seattle, WA
98188.

THE FAMILY CIRCUS THEATER
COLLECTIVE is presenting
a play
called VAUDEVILLE aboul low cost
housing and the pllght ol the senior
ci)lzen on Thursday, February 9 at 8
p.m. In the llbrary lobby. Tickets at the
door are $2, S1 fer senior citizens and
high school students.

A BLOODMOBILE UNIT will be on
campus Thursday.
February 2, to
receive donations. Volunteers from the
Puget Sound Blood Bank wlH be
located on the second floor ol the
Llb<ary Building lrom 10:00 a.m 10
-4:00 p.m. Health Servioes encourages
the donation ol urgenlly needed blood

The topic under discussion at the
Monday, Febf'uary 6th "brown oag··
lunch meeting of the Thurston County
Unit ol the Washington Association
For Social
Welfare
will
be the
CURRENT STATUS OF LOCAL PLANNING FOR IMPLEMENTING
THE
JUVENILE JUSTICE ACT OF 11n. This
act is ,cheduled to go lnlo eflecl on
July 1st of this year. The law places
major extra responslt>llltles
on the
Department
of Social and Heallh
Services, tnch.tdlng the obllgatlons· 1)
10 develop and submit guidelines !or
the disposition of cases and tor standards of securlly for juvenile ollenders,
and 2) to provide alternalives
to
detention In county detention tac111tles
tor dependen1 youlh.

TESC WOMEN'S BASKETBALL has
scheduled
weekly games through
February 15 for 7: '5 p.m. on Mondays,
and 6:30 p.m. on Wednesdays. These
are city league games which wlll be
played at Eas1slde and 71h Street at
the OLD WASHINGTON GYM

On February 7 the fourth 1n a senes
of nine ECUMENICAL FORUMS ON
INDIAN TREATY RIGHTS wUI be held
al the St Matthew Lutheran Church,
8330-2l21h S.W., Edmonds The even!
w!II Include shde oresenta11ons by the
United lndlans of All Tnbes Founda•
t1on and Cook·s Christian
Training
School For more information ot this
week's forum, call 788-1104

Even though we didn't gel any lhis
week. the CPJ slill ptans to carry a
"'paid classifieds" !isling. The charge
for classllled ads Is lwo dollars per
cotumn Inch, or thirty cents per llne. If
you have anything you want to buy.
sell, or rent contact the CPJ olllce.
CAB 306 (866-6213).

GPU
Friday & Saturd•y
Februuy J. 4
20th CENTURY MUSIC

GRADUATESCHOOL
RECRUITING
A represent.alive
rrom the
Wlllamette Unlverolty Graduate Sehool of AclmlnlatratJoa will be on campus to
speak with interested students by appointment.
Date: Thursday, February 9
Time: 2 - 6:00 p.m.

For more information
&
registration contact:
Lration contact:
Career Planning & Placement
Library 1214, 866~193

EDITOR

'BUSINESS MANAGER

John Keogh

Nathani•l Koch

MANAGING EDITOR

PRODUCTION MANAGER

Mandy McFarlan

Dano l•igh Squlru

. FEATURES EDITOR

SECRETARY

Joyce Baker

Nancy Ann ParkH

ADVERTISING MANAGER
Theoc,e

7

BulletinBoard(C@mmJ]ID

MUSIC

Thursday. Ffl>ruary 2
POITRY BENEITT For Di.;ma Prns
Rudings by Jo.iinna RusJ.

Ftlbfuery 2, 1171

Gr

Hutchnon

Media
cpj0172.pdf