The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 21 (April 27, 1978)

Item

Identifier
cpj0181
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 6, Issue 21 (April 27, 1978)
Date
27 April 1978
extracted text
AndEve
Saturday, AprU 22 at 8 p.m. In the
Temple Theatre. Ticket, are $7.00,
'6.50 and S.f.00 and are IMllable at
Allled Arte of Tacoma, flOOCommerce

MUSIC
ON CAMPUS
On Thursday, April 27, there wUI be
a benefit dance featuring the NO TOY
BOYS from 8 • 12 p m. In the CAB
Cafeteria (Saga) Proceeds wlll benefit
a Reclamaitloo and legal Rally a1 the
S.tsop Nuclear SIie. 10 be held on
June 24' S1 50

St., TIIOOma, WA IIM02.

THE

HURRICANE

by women. Friday night tllma at 3, 7

RIDGE

and 9:30, with a Sunday showing at

7:30. Admlulon la 75 cents.

Library tabby
Proceeds will "help
make the Energy Northwest Conference possible" Advance tickets can be
purchased al Rainy Day Records and
The Gnu Oelt !Of S2 00. S2 25 at the

Academic FIim Serles will be
ahowtng THE HUNCHBACK OF
NOTRE DAME (1923) starring Lon
Chaney. This film wu voted u one of
the four best of the year In 1923 by
The New Yortt Times. 'Why WU I not
made of atone. as thee?", Chaney asks
the gargoyle. Life is tough. Wednesday
at 1 :30, and 7:30 In L.H. 1, fret.

dOO<

cen

101

Aprlt 28, a benefit con-

the ENERGY NORTHWEST

CONFERENCE will be held al 8 p.m.
on lhe second floor of lhe library

Building Fea1ur1ng NO CAMHAILE
and THE HURRICANE RIDGE
RUNNERS with lrlsh and lradillonal
American music Advance tickets can
be purchased at Rainy Day Records,
and lhe Gn11Del! for $2

MORE NUCLEAR POWER STATIONS

Is a beautlfully photographed and
widely ecclalmed O.nlah documentary.
Thia tllm tracks the nuclear cycle from
power etatlon to reproceaelng plant, to
waste storage leclllty. On Tuesday at
L.H. 3, 3:30 p.m Free.
IN OLYMPIA

CAPTAIN COYOTES hlghtlghts THE
SEALS BROTHERSoY8f 1he weekend
2410 W Hamson 357--4191

The PUB TAVERN spottlghlS
STRANGE. OV8f the weekend 123 W
5th 75J.9945
RICHARD'S ROUNDHOUSEIMlures
SAUSOLITO through the weekend
'56-2222

IN TACOMA
On Sunday evening, Aprll 23, LINDA
WATERFALL wttl pet1orm in a benefit
concert IOf GREENPEACEat 7:30. The
concert wlll take pl1ce al THE CAVE,
Pacific Lu1heran Unl"V&ralty Ad'Vanoe
hcketa can be purchaaed at The ea.....
and PLU Information Center Proceeds
will benefit Greenpeace IM"ICMl'IOfs
to
Pf'OtectenciangMedspecies.

Evans To Refute
VA Test.imony
by Nancy Ann Parka
On Tuesday, April 18, the
VetoraN Administration launched its la- attack on Evergreen

an effort to increase support to the Commission on Human Rights
as a viable alternative to the Council.
The Washington
State Women's Council was created under
executive order by fonner governor Dan Evans on October 20.
1971. At that time, the 15-member council was directed to
"consider appropriate questions pertaining to the rights and needs
of women in contemporary
America and to make recommendations to the Governor and state agencies with respect to desirable
changes in program and law.".
Among the many achievements of the Women's Council was
the establishment of a ·'Roster of Qualified Women" in 1973. to
make recommendations
to the governor for the appointment
of
women to state boards and commissions. By 1976, 24 percent of
the appointees on state boards and commissions were women. in
comparison to only 13 percent in 1973.
The Council has also worked continuously
with other state
agencies by suggesting and commenting on proposed rules and
regulations;
evaluating programs and activities;
commenting on
apparent discriminatory
actions;
and serving on various task
forces and committees to represent women's nttds.

before the Veterans

Aflai"' Committee of the U.S.
House of Representatives.

Andrew H. Thornton, chief of
the VA's GI educational benefits
programs, asserted during that
hearing
that if Evergreen
is
successful in remaining exempt
from the '7welve
Hour Rule",

IN SEATTLE

ANNE HALL Is playlng with LOVE
A.NODEATH at the Broadway Theatre,
but wlll probably be In Olympla
by-and-by. 201 Broadway Eut.
THE ADVENTURES OF ROBINHOOD
(1938) at the Moore Egyptian Theater.
ErTol Flynn aa the good hood, Baall
ART

ON CAMPUS
On April 22, The TESC Gallery will
reopen with the NORTHWESTECCENTRICART SHOW. Through May 9.
Photo Prlntworks will present an
exhibit of MATT GRAGO photograph1
en1l!led, RENEWABLE RESOURCE
beginning Friday, April 1.t at a p.m.
The show Is comprised ol charact•
studies ol people dlrectly and Indirectly aseocialed with the "gyppo" logging
Conllnues through May 1.t,



IN SEAffiE
THE SENSOUS
IMMORTALS:
SCULPTURE FROM THE PAN-ASIAN
COLLECTIONwill remain at the Seattle
Art Museum through April 23. The
show features 175 pfecee from an
anonymous private collectlon. Who
owns it? Why la It anonymooe? Guese
for yourself at Volunteer
Park,

LECTURES AND l'OETRY

IN PORTlAND

OR. JANE GOODALL wtll speak on,
CHIMPANZEE CHILDHOOD AND ADO-

IOlogy, Unl.....,..ltyCollege, London. Dr,
Martin will dlecuaa, THE TOMI OF

Rathbone as the bad guy, OIMa de
Haviland aa Maid Marlon. Also

HOREMHE■ ,

showing Is CAPTIAN BLOOD (1936),

a"V■ llable

Errol Flynn aa a gentleman pirate, with
Bull Rathbone and Ollvla de Havtland
playing the obvloua rolea. Second and
Virginia Streets. 822-9632.

REGENT AND COMIIANDER~N-cHIEF OF T\ITAHKHAIIUN.
Tlcketa for Martin's talk, to be hetd In
room 130, Kane Hall, U. of W., wlll be

at the door.
lnfonnatlon call 447 ◄710.

For more

LESCENC£,Fridey, April 28 at 8 p.m.
In Portland'• CMc Auditorium. Goodall
la famous tor her tong-term, In-depth
study of wild chimpanzee, at the
Gombe Stream RHearch Centre In
Tanzania,and hu pubUlhed extenal...,.
ly. Tickets are S3 general ldmlulon
and $2.50 lor atudenta, and are
....,.llable at the CMc Audltortum, 222
S.W. Ctay, ~land,
Oregon, 97201

IN SEATTLE
A Contemporary Theatre, 709 First
A'19. West, 11 preeentlng HENRY ,V
PAAT I beginning May 11.

The concluding lecture In the Seattle
Art Museum's TREASURES
OF
TUTANKHAMUN aerlH will feature
OEOFFRF( MARTIN, lectul'9f' In E yp--

IN TACOMA
Allled Art, of Tacoma la preMntlng
the Seettle Reportory Theat8f'I ~
ductlon of MUCH ADO ABOUT
NOTHI NO, Friday, A rll 21 and

SPELLBO\IND (1MI). One ol ,,_.,
THEATER

Hltchcod( (um, conc.nlng peycholog~I themet. Thia one ha.I Gregory
Peck (Or. Edw■n:t1) taking over the
ldmlnlatraUon of a mental hoepltal.
Ingrid Bergman plays his ptychlatrlc
collNgue. who eoon r'Nllzes that Peck
la not the doctOf he pretends to be,
but lnateed may be an amneela "Victim
and m~rdenw. The drNm aequencn
were ataged by aurTNllet Sal'Vldore
DaJI. At The RoN Bud Movie Palace,
202 Third A"Venue South, PlonNr
Square, 682-1887.

similar

litigation

An exhi~t ol fiber acolpture by
nallonally recognized sculptor ELAYNE
LE'VENSKYare on show through April
29 81The Anlata Gallery, 919 Eut Pike
St. 322-9197.

certifications

on full-time

train--

ing at face value'.
The VA established
the
Twelve Hour Rule in the spring
of

1977,

requiring

veterans

enrolled in college to
minimum of 12 quarter
credit and have at lout
of clusroom time per
order to qualify for

carry a
hows of
12 houn
week in
full-time

Last fall, the St..te Approving
by
the VA to approve college
curricula for bl!hef!Hligil,ility)
conducted a compliance survey
to determine whether Evergrftn's
veterans should mnain eligible
for full funding under the new
ruling. MunwhUe, on October
15, TESC filed llult to contest the
Twelve Hour Rule.
Agency (which is con~

Wayne
Michigan

State
was

University
1Ucce11ful

in
in

striking down the new regulation
in

a

similar

suit

last

year.

Although the judge in that cue
ruled that the VA had no
authority

to

implement

the

ruling, the decision is inapplicable outside the district in whlch
it WU delivered.
Veterans

here spent

several

Evans

made

a

trip

to

Washington D.C. to meet with
Max Cleland, the director of the
VA. According
to Evans,
Cleland "had expru1<1!,. his
willingneu and deaitt to work In
manner"

with

Evergreen at that time.
Subsequently,
Evergreen
sought and obtained a temporary

• tire Paul McCartney
/
Catalogu
~ncluding the new
t'London Town"
. Reg 7.98 U.
Now 4.97

\ "1soonlale\,,R119h"Arch

injunction

against

a February

deadline which would have
lorceci'the college to reclusify its
curriculum

to

meet

approval

under the Twelve Hour Rule.
Judge Walter T. McGovern of
the U.S. District Court In
Olympia ruled that the VA had
to "pay full-time benefits to all
eligible

veteran,

at Evergreen

clauifled u full-time rHldent
students".
VA ARES ANOTHER ROUND

214Wast ith. H3·9181

On November 16. 1977, shortly after Referendum 40 had been
rejected by voters, Governor Ray asked the Women's Council to
prepare a ttp<>rt on the history, activities and accomplishments of
the Council from 1971 1hrough 1977.
& well as an end.Jesslist of past accomplishments, the Council
listed several crucial and yet-unmet needs of the women "'in this
state. Among them were a nttd for '"cri$iS centers" to house and
support rape victims and victims of domestic violffl«;
a need to
establish assistance programs for "displaced homemU.ers" entering
or re--entering the job market
and facilities
to provide
for
childcare: a nttd to establish and implement Affirmative Action
Programs "particularly
in small cities and rural communities";
a
nttd to enforce existing "equal credit opportunity
laws"; the list
goes on.
The council, unfortunately,
will not.

"residents status" benefits.

Dan

ll>sand tapeo

MR RAGS LTD

other

months in limbo as the battle
between the VA and the collep
administration continued. During
that period, Evergr,en President

447...f710.

JEANS $12.88

from

schools and ultimately the VA
would have to accept schools'

a cooperative

South Sound Center
10 9 Mon-Fri
10-6Sat
12 S Sun

methods to fulfill thos, needs. Ray has staled thal she will support

"the floodgates would be open to
EOUUS at The Cinema, starring
Richard Burton and Peter Furth.
943-591.t.
HIGH ANXIETY by Mel Brook.ea Is
stl/1 In town. Brookes plays the
director of the Pliyco-Neurotlc lnatllute
For The Very, Very Nervoua. LAUGHI!!
Al !he CapUol Theater, 357-7161.
GAUNTLET directed by
Clint
Eastwood at the State Theatre.
Shoot'em up In Lu Vegas. 357-t01~.

CAFE INTERMEZZOfeatures PEGGY
& MICHAEL with a pot pourri of piano
music and sa11rical skits tor three
shows on Saturday, AprU 22 1, 8, and
9 D m 212 W 41h, 943--7668.

La1ely Some1hing'salways happening al lhe GREENWOOD INN. For
inS1ance, At11tuoeAOJus1men1
Mour
lrom 5 • 7 p.m. Monday through
t-uoay This week, MAJAC conllnuea
to play nightly in 1he lounge. Loyd
Cooney says "I adjusted my attilude
at lhe GREENWOOD" 943-4<XX>

pwww~c.a&lllae

Olt
v- ,· ,. -No. 21.- A!Nt121, ,m

in testimony

TAVS GRANOLAJOINTS, & MISC
11nOlympia)
The APPLEJAM FOLK CENTER
presents J.B. FREEMAN with "songs
OI lhe 10ad"' on Friday, Aprll 21
BUCKDANCER'SCHOICE picks up the
01ll1ngon Saturday wllh string band
sound Located at the YWCA, 220 E
Union Main Acl al 9 p m . minors
welcome

The GNU DELI hosts pianists DAVE
BURGESSand JUDY COHEN on Aprll
21. 22. Burgess wHI perform works by
Bach, and contemporary Spanish
composers Cohen wUI play works of
Scriumann, Bethoven, Urigsoy, 6.
Bartek Performances begin at 9 p.m.
on bOth evenlnQs Comer ol Thurston
Avenueand Capl!ol Way, 943-1371.

~E

Friday NIie Films preaente CLEO
FROM FIVE TO SEVEN directed by
Angea Varda, u W.U aa five ehon•
fllma: PASSINO QUIETLY THROUGH,
MESHES IN THE AFTERNOON, TAKE
OFF, WHAT I WANT, and TIIA~E.
Alt of these fllma haw been directed

RUNNERS al 8 p m on the 2nd floor

On Fnday,

~Journal

ON CAMPUS

On Friday, Apnl 28 there wlll be a
benefit concert featuring NO COMMand

The Washington
State Women's Council, which served as a
catalyst in the passage of state equal rights l~islation
by the
Washington State Legislature, will close its doors as of September
1. Governor ~y announced the executive or<kr to phase out the
Council five months after the voters of this state ~istered
their
opinion on the matter.
According
to Communication,
director
Janet Smith,
the
governor's
decision
"was not an easy one".
In 1977 the
Washington
State legislature
granted agency status to the
Women's Council by a majority vote in both Houses. In July of
that year, however, a referendum petition
was filed with the
Secretary of State's Office
to abolish
the newly-authorized
commission.
Referendum
40, "Shall
a state women's
commission
be
established by statute1", was voted down by a 72 percent majority
last November.
During
a news conferentt
on Tuesday, the
governor said that she would have "circumvented
the law" if she
had allowed the Council to continue.
Public hearings will be held during the phase-out period to
determine the major needs of Washington women and the best

~ The Cooper Point
FILMS

OLD TIME COUNTRY DANCING? It's
51111happening
(yes, stlll
) every
Wednesday at 8 p m with a live band
and caller on !he lirat floor of the
library Oulldlng '"Allve and Klckln'"
DonaHons, donatior.s, donations

HAILE

Women's
Council
To Close

Last Tuesday's testimony beforo the Howe was precipitated
by a government appeal against
"the Evergreen decision", filed by
the U.S. Attorney's office on
April 6. In an interview with the
Journal on April 26, VA Deputy

Director of Education Charla L.
Dollarhide
explained
that
Thornton'• testimony had been
requnted by the HoUR Comm lttee,

and

constituted

however,

wu

not

informed of the testimony and
did not know of its occurana,
until the Seattle Post lntellig,:ncer published a rolated story the
following day. No one at Evergr,en
remved
copia
of
Thornton's testimony until April
26 (at which time the Evergr,en
Veterans A/fain Office remved
a copy from Repl'ORntative Don
Bonker, and not from the VA).
'1

tent

a

letter

to

Max

Cleland," said Evans after learning of the VA'• testimony before
the House, "expressing my real
disiappointment

and

concern

over the fact that a member of
his staff would testify in front of
a HoUIOCommittee, using material whlch had not even been
sharedwith the college."
According to Dollarhide, the
VA "had no rnponsibUity'' to
inform Evergreen of the testimony. "The Howe Committft
requested

the

testimony,"

he

said, "and if you want to know
why the college wun't informed
l suggat

you

contact

sufficient academic merit.

Thornton tatilied

only

three pages of a lS-page report
in-,,ted
at that time.
Evergreen,

representative of the type he felt
the VA should not support
becaUR they did not contain

someone

on that Committee."
Thornton's
testimony wu tt·
roneou1 1n several area, and
represented
a pertonal
and

effect

of

the

that, "The

court's

order

(tffllporary injunction prohibiting enfor<:ffllfflt of the Twelve
Hour Rule) is illustrated by the
following caHS in which the VA
must pay full-time hfflefits baaed
on tch.ool certification:

"A State Trooper, pursuing an
Evergreen 8.A. degree program
last term, w"u assigned 16 credits
for 'observing accidents'. In the
current term the Trooper Is being
asaigned 16 credits for going to
court."

According to Academic Dean
Will Humphreys, the contract
Thornton
referred
to in this
instance "says nothing
at all
about 'observing
accidents'
".

The Troqper' s academic program
actually involv .. juvenile courts,
and has no link with the courts
he must attend in his job u a
State Trooper. The student also
has a reading list which incorpora tu

close

to

20

book.a,

including such authon
u
Erilcaon, Carl Yung, Elizabeth
Kubler - Ron,
and
John
Steint,edr..

"The problem," says Humphffya, "is that they're trying to
makequalitative judgements hued on the draft contract only,
ignorlni other information such
a,

responses

of

the

faculty

qualitative jud1ement on his
part, rather than a clur translation of the data which he used to
1Upport his statements. Specifically, Thornton
cited lour

members and students to q...,..
tlons pOMd about contracts by
the academic duns, prior work
which would appear only in the

individual

students' and faculty memben'

contract,

a,

being

1tudent1'

tran1crlpt1,

and

the

fi.n.al evaluations
of the work
completed under the contracts."

Second on Thornton's list of
contracts which tht VA should
not facilitate by paying lull-time
benefits was a case in which,
according
to Thornton,
"An
individual
who does not have a

B.A. degree has been supervising
art classes al Evergreen for the
past two yean. He is CWTffltly
being assigned 16 credits
for
supervising his art class."
The student referred to in this
case is not supervising art classes
at Evergreen.
In addition
to
serving as an art consultant for
an Evergreen organization,
he is
auditing
a drawing
module,
compiling a comprehensive portfolio, keeping a written journal
of his work as an artist, and is
engaged extensively in producing
his own original artwork.
Thornton
discussed another
contract in his testimony to the:

house in which he purported: "A
teacher, whom we assume holds
a B.A.
or B.S.
degree,
is
currently punuing a second B.A.
at Evtrsreen
and
is being

assigned credit for his teaching
a"ignmenta."
Although this contract

student

hasattended three other colleges,
he does not hold a degroe from
any other institution,
and is not
teaching
at Evusreen.
The
breakdown
of his individual
contract
represents six quarter

houn for counseling

sir.ills;

four

quarter
hours
for
work
on
textbooks
in Native American
tribal history; one quarter hour
for readins comprehenaion;
and,
two quarte:r hours for Grant

writing.

ln his final example: Thornton
alleged, "One student received
credit
for touring
European
museums studying painting tech•
niques on his own, remaining in
contact with his faculty sponsor
by correspondence
during
the
quarter's enrollment period."
According to Humphreys,
although this student did enjoy a
quarter in Europe, he was not

registered al TESC while he was
abr~d.
Dollarhide

Thornton
House

said

the

contracts

discussed before the

"were

representativf

of

most of the ones" he had looked
at, totaling approximately
50.
WMn questioned as to where
the information
contained
in
Thornton's
testimony had orig-

inated, Dollarhide said it mighl
have come from the college,
although it was more likely to
have come
from
the State
Approving
Agency
compliance
survey.
None
of the
information
exchanged hands directly
between Evergrttn and Washington

D.C. Richard F. Murphy, S.at1le
regional director of the VA, told
the Journal that some: of the
information
may have come
from an audit his stt1H completed
last month concerning "a certain
program" at Evergreen. Murphy
was also r-Kently quoted in the
Seattle P.l. as saying that some
recipients of VA benefits at Evergreen received credit euentia.lly
for "remedia.l or tutorial work".
Although that audit was forwarded to Washington
D.C .. it
was not
sent to Evergreen
Contln\Md

on pa1e 5

2.

Tho C-

'°'"'.1oumo1April 27, 1ffl

Tho~'°'"'

Down On The Farm:
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Pressure To Sell Out
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•••

-

To the Editor:

This letter is an addendum to
the letter in last week's CPJ
concerning the removal of leaflets from bulletin boards.
I fully sympathize with the
trustration of having hours of
publicity work destroyed by
people who (I assume) don't
agree with what is publicized.
The Crabshell Alliance has
consistently been harassed over
the last three months with this
sort of fascist tactic. The first I
heard of it was when the posters
advertising Greenpeace Awareness Day were taken down.
Then it started happening to us.
It costs time and money to
advertise Crabshell's educational
events. We are struggling against
the half-truths and out and out
lies by which the nuclear
industry and the media have
convinced a majority of people
that nuclear power is safe,
cheap,. and needed as an energy
source. If you are one of the
those people and are removing
our leaflets, please come to our
next educational and let's argue
about it. Your present tactic is
undenninding free sptteh on this
campus.
Better active today than
radioactive tomorrow,
Diana Moore

Frankel's
View Correct
To the Editor:
RE: "An insiders view of the
Evergreen Council" Bravo Laurie Fu.nkel for an
exquisitely percq>tive essay from
inside Evergre-en's latest institutional model of community
erosion-the Evergrttn Council.
Promoted as "the key facilitator
of communication and coordination on campus", it has succeeded in communicating
to
many the apparent disinterest of
individuals who hold positions
of responsibility
within our
community. But "disinterest"
might be too light a word.
I wu
one of the main

contributors
to a proposed
comment on Article 2k of the
COG III document (see CPI.
March 2) which, in its present
form, is highly ambiguous.
Members of the Council spent
two months in deliberation on
'how to best set term lengths of
individual members of standing
committees. Representatives of
the administration consistently
demonstrated resistance to mod•
ifications which were largely
initiated by student members of
the Council. The final draft,
would have allowed for greater
participation
from all constituencies in our community in
serving on these committees.
Both Dean Cl•baugh and Les
Eldridge were obstinate in their
blind objections to commenting
on section 2k, even though the
act of commenting is a reaffirmation on another section of the
COG document,
"The Evergreen community
should support experimentation
with new and better ways to
achieve Evergreen's goals. Specifically, it must attempt
to
emphasize the sense of community and require members of the
community to play multiple,
TK'iproc.1.I,and reinforcing roles
in both the teaching/learning
process and in the governance
process." But an even more
unnerving result of these deliberations was the observation that
both Eldridge and Clab•ugh
se-emed to gain some kind of
weird pleasure in trying to
manipulate the meeting. Let's
ponder for a second on why
these guys act that way.
Perhaps it's ~ause
they are
keenly aware that the "student"
is a transitory species. It could
be due to the fact that we now
have a politician in the president's office. Maybe they have
just been hett so long th•• they
have absorbed too much concrete through simple osmosis.
Whatever the reasoning behind
their actions, they should understand that having Dan fill the
position of "head daddy figutt"
does not license them to mess us
over as they please. Dan should
have told them, before they
started representing him, that the
secrets to a good politician is the
ability to accurately reflect and
fulfill the nttds and desires of

o/:

100 HIUl~AI-\S

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Disappearing
Posters

t>J

C£/Jn/lE7E6S ot=

the community he or she serves.
It's not "how much" on'! can get
away with.
Laurie is right. Perhaps certain
changes are needed.
Stephen Rabow

Nontraditional
Poetry
To the Editor,
To: j-v I, s r, mg
Re: Nontraditional
poetry at
Evergreen,
There was a young poet
Who ttad lik• a be•tnik
Which is a hell of • thing to do
Cause what distinguished the
beats
Was that they used their own
spe«h
Why don't youl
Mandy Plume

Hypoglycemia
Research
To the Editor,
Have you thought that you
had "hypoglycemi•" but have
not been able to take a test to
verify ill Well now you have the
opportunity; research on hypoglycemia •nd a ttl•ted nutritional substanc,, (the Glucose
Tolerance Fi.ctor) is currently
being conducted at TESC. This
research will examine the role of
nutrition in the progression of
hypoglyamla to diabetes. We
are looking for students with
typoglycemia to volunteer to
take a five--hour glucose toler•
ance test. We ask that anyone
interested in finding out more
about hypoglyamia, the glucose
tolerance test and possibly volunteering to take the test to u,e
the computer and INV-ASK.ROOS. If you are not familiar
with the computer just ask
anyone at Computer Services or
the SPLU l•bs to help you. We
will be giving the glucose
tolerance test to a selected
number of enrolled students
during the remainder of this
quarter. If we find that you have
"hypoglycemia" we will offer a
number of nutritional suggestions baSfd on up-to-date re-

~,:I.II,?

.wi,J>P"

/41'~

search in this field which will

help you.
At present we can only test
enrolled students and do not
have any money to give to
volunteen. If you are diabetic
we will offer nutritional sugges-tions but will not give you a
test.
Thanlr. you,
Peter Nelson
GTF study group

Laurie Is Right
To the Editor,
re: an insider's view of the evergreen council :
i think if dean clabaugh gave the
council half a chance he might
find it helpful, not a hindrance
at all.
it's sad some administrators
don't give a shit about students.
laurie's insider view is 100
percent correct.
dana squires
another evergreen council
member

Alaska Vote
Soon
To the Editor,
On about May 10 the U.S.
House of Representatives
will
vote on the Alaska National
lntm,st I.ands Con,erv•tion Act
(HR 39). This will be the land
and conservation vote of the
century. Everyone's input-to
her or his representative
in
Congress-is vitol right now if
there is to be a proper balance
between development and con-RrVatin of our Alaska wildlands.
Thett will be a public meeting to
discuss the issues and •for people
to find out about the current
status of the bill on Wednesday,
May 3rd, •• 7,30 p.m. in l..ecture
Hall 5. A short movie-OM
Man's Alatka, set near Lake
Clark in the oouthm, Aluk.a
Range-will be shown. The vote
is imminent and a very fierce
b•ttle •mong all lntettated parties is in progress. Please attend
this meeting o~ contact me if you
wish to participate. Even if you

~

have very little time, you can be
effective.
Since...,ly,
Jim Gaw
3011 Lab 1
866-6726 (office)

Institutional
Self-Evaluation
To the Editor,
To the Evergreen community As· liaison person in charge of
Evergreen's efforts to comply
with Section 504 of the Rehabilitotlon Act of 1973, one of my
responsibilities is to conduct an
institutional self--evaluation. This
self--evaluation is used to determine whether Evergreen's policies or practices may discriminate against handicapped persons and to suggest recommendations to correct any discriminatory situations. The evaluation
will also be used to set priorities
for the acass to facililies and
possible supporting grant funds.
In order for the ..U~valu•tion
to be muningful, handicapped
individuals are strongly encouraged to participate
in this
proceH. Many activities that
non-handicapped people t•ke
port in an, taken·for granted
and the difflcultiet encountered
by the diubled
cannot be
perorived. If you an, • handicapped individual or an, inter•
ested in providing raourcn for
the handicapped and would lib
to portldpat• •ccording to your
•voilable time, pleue •ttend a
meeting in Science I.ab U, Room
1250, at 10,00 a.m. on May 3,
1978.

Dan Weiss
Asslstont Director
of F•dlities
Science I.ab U,
Room 1265, 866-6120

Never Bite
The S&A Board
To the Editor,
As a wtse wisepenon once
•said, "It ls unwise to incurr the
wrath of the Sa.A Bo•rd." or in
other words, ''Never bite the
h•nd that lttds you."
love,
Ms. Know-it all

by John Seward
"Now over there on your right
is the biggest chiclcm farm in the
state. They've got 500,000 layen
and they use tons of fttd every
day." A school bus had pulled
off the road in an obsa,..., port
of Thurston County. The ...,titt,l
Agricultural Extension Agent,
Bob McKay, was lecturing a
group of concerned citiuns on
the C\ll'ttnt conditions of local
farming. "It's not what we used
to think of as a poultry farm,
with a lot of hand work and
flies," he said. "It's an industry,
not a way of life. That's the way
it's getting to be." An older
woman sitting near Bob eagerly
grabbed the microphone from his
hand, "Look, I've lived in those
places and I've shoveled lots of
chicken houses In my day and it
STINKSII Believe me, it's one of
the worst memories of my
childhood-I'll go for efficiency
any time."
The day-long tour of loc•I
farms had been arranited by the
Thurston County Agriculture
Committtt,
a group that has
been studying the current problems and possible future of
county agriculture Jor nearly a
year. The committee was set up
last June to deal locally with
problems facing agriculture na•
tionwide.
Rapid population
growth in Thunton County has
been creating strong pressure for
development of existing farm
lands. The trend has been
growing
for years and is
expected to continue, with coun~
ty population projected to increase by 77 percent in the next
20 years. From the start, it was
clear to members of the committee that existing county regulations didn't adequately protect
faffl'lliiids"""'&gainst• consumption
for other u~.
The committtt is made up of
farmers, members of farming
organizations, repttsmtatives of
land development industries and
citizens from around the county.
Members include Evergreen Faculty Memben Carolyn Dobbs
and Niels Skov, and a number ol
Evergreen students working on
an academic contract have bttn
serving as staff researchen. The
committee is presently in the
final stages of it'• work, it hopes
to have recomendations ready
for the County Commission by
early summer.
Farming in Thurston County
has
undergone
substantial
changes over the last 30 yean.
Everg,ttn student Jim Kramer
released a study to the committee last fall noting • 65 percent
decreose in the amount of land
devoted to agriculture in the
county since 1940. At one time,
nearly 40 .,.rcent of the land
here was farmed: the figu..., now

stands at 14 percent. The trend
has been toward bigger and
Ins-fewer farms, but with more
acreage per establishment.
As all thl$ has been going on,
the overall output of local farms
has bttn 'increasing due to new
technology and a change in the
kinds of crops grown. Orchards,
berries and hay have been in
decline, while nurseries and
horticultural farms have been on
the rise. Another seeming con•
tradiction
in the committee's
information is that the number
of people employed in farming
has been incn,asing since the
'forties, especially in part time
work. Currently, about 2,500
Thurston County residents work
in agriculture during at least
some part of the year. At the
same time, the number of farm
workers who are members of
farm families has declined drastically-by nearly two-thirds, to
a current figure of about 1,000.
Farming as a family enterpriseseems to be going the way of the
dinosaur, while the bigger farms
are hiring more outside help.
Carolyn Dobbs told the tour
group, "One of our findings that
was somewhat suprising was that
farming is a much stronger
economic base in the county that
than we had assumed."
Macro--Biotk types, and others
interested in fresh produce will
be glad to learn that nearly 80
percent of the food grown in
Thurston County is marketed in
the Puget Sound atta. Much is
sold directly to consumers, for
example through the Olympia
Farmer's Market that operates
downtown during the summer.
But that doesn't change the fact
that the vast bulk of your
grocery bag's contents has been
shipped from in from 500 or
1,0CX>miles away. Figures aren't
available,
but it's clear that
without the internal combustion
engine our area's food supply
would run out in a few weeks at
the most.
The tour bus was filled with
perhaps 30 people, members of
the Agriculture Committee, some
county officials, and a few
miscellaneous others. As the bus
drove through the countryside it
passed by a residential development. McKay pointed to the
houses, calling them ranchettes:
'There's been some disregard for
the highest and best use of land
hett," he said, "and by that 1
don't mean housing, I'm talking
about agriculture, but then I'm
biased."
The bus pulled up at Medicine
Creek Gardens,
a 135-acre
spread owned by the Lyons
family. The furn grows rasberries, strawberries and veget~bles.
Harry LyoN talked to the group
about the operation. Then M,.

Lyons showed people the greenhouse where sttdJings were being
started. "'How do we perpetuate
thisl" she asked. "As a family,
our interest is to have this place
available to our children, but
maybe that's just an Idle dream."
The Lyons' form is located in the
northwest section of the county,
an area where development
pressu- an, especially heovy.
One difficulty people like the
Lyonses face has to do with land
value and taxation. When a
former finds the land he has
owned for 20 yean suddenly
loc•ted on the edge of an urban
area, the market value of that
land is increased many times and
so, correspondingly,
are the
taxes. Under a relatively new
stote program called The Open
Spaces Taxation Act, counties
are able to tax land according to
the value of its production rather
than at th• "fair" market value.
This can sometimes s.ave farmers
up to 80 percent of their tax bill,
but an alarmingly high number
of local farmers told the Agriculture Committtt this year that
they were either unaware of the
program, or didn't understand
how they could qualify for it.
McKay mentioned this program during the course of the
day, saying 'We've got to weigh
the value of less taxes to the
county over this type of land
use. Beside!i aJI the other factors,
the day will come when it'll be a
prime aesthetic resource for some
people."
One of the basic questions the
committee ·addressed itself to was
land use. An ideal scenario
would have high density housing
and industry on land ill-suited to
agricullure, with areas having
proper soil conditions remaining
under culitvatiofi. But the ideal
rarely becomes reality, and it
certainly hasn't in local development trends to date. During the
tour,
County
Commissioner
George Barner (an alumnus of
TESC, never noted for his
quotability)
was asked what
powen local jiP;overnmentha5 in
controlling the impact of development on farming.
"It's a
one-time thing. If you allow
unsound development to happen
in a certain area, it nts a
precedent. Now it's a matter of
coming up with the development
tools to document the threat."
When the group stopped for
lunch Barntr discussed some
larger land-use and environmental issuH with committtt members and local fannen. Everyone
seemed very enlightened and
articulate about the issues. Later,
Evergreen Student Jim Kramer
said, ''The difficulty with development in th~ past has been with
the last County Commission and
Continued on pap 6

Jou-

April 27, 1ffl

l

AFTER MAY 15TH
LA TIERRA WILL
BE LOCATED
DOWNTOWN AT
218 WEST
FOURTH
RESfNTLY
LOCATED AT
207 E STM AVE.

WNTOWN Ol YMPIA
352-0700

- Help Wanted The Publications Board is now
accepting applications
for the
positions of Editor and Business
Manager of the Cooper Point
Journal for Summer Quarter and
beyond.
Applicants
must be
students, and should apply at the
President's Office by 5 p.m.,
May 10.
Both of these positions pay
$3.05 an hour for 19 hours per
week, but will pay only on
alternate weeks during Summer
Quarter in accordance with the
Journal's biweekly publication
schedule. Students can also earn
academic credit for the work
involved by arranging individual
contracts.
The Editor's
job requires
strong writing skills and some
experience in journalism. Applications for this position should
include resumes, statements of
interest, and writing samples.
The CPJ Business Manager is
responsible for the paper's financial business. Applicants should
have bookkeeping
experience,
and should include resumes and
statements of interest in their
applications.
The Publications Board will
conduct interviews of applicants
for both eositions at 8:30 a.m.,
May 15.

• I

4

Tho~

Point -

Aprtl 71,

Dixy Doesn't
by Nancy Ann Parkes
During her first prns conference with the capitol pr65 corps
in
over a year, held Tuesday,
Apnl 25, Governor Dixy Ltt
Ray refuted allegations that she
was "trying to stack the Board of
Trustees" at The Evergrttn State
Collrge "with an eye towards
changing the leadership at that
college"

..Every board of rrgents and
rvt'ry board of trustees
is
m<lt"pendent and has the operating responsibility

and authority

under statute for that particular
n,llege or university," Ray said.
I have no!. repeat. have not
i1ven mstruct1ons

to any

mem-

her ol any board of regents or
hl,ard ot trustees that I have
app\,mted
On Monday, a reporter for the
A,;;o:;ociated Press had asked the
G1lVernor whether
her recent
.ippuintment
to
Evergreen's
Bt,.ird ot Trustees was indicative

on her part of an intention to
tire College President Dan
Evans Seattle and Olympia
Ne\'\'Spapers carried the AP story
\,n Monday and Tuesday, which
g.1ve the impression that Ray's
appointment to the Board was
calculated to gain control over
TESC. To the contrary, it is the
governor's responsibility to replace board members as they
vacate their posts.
Governor Ray designated Jane
B. Sylvester, who is already a
board member of The Evergreen
Foundation.
to replace Janet

• SALIS• PAITS
• IIPAIIS • ACCIHOl•S
Rea..gh Peugeot Cenrunon
,

MTrede-lns Accepteid
Terms Av••-tff

OPENMON -SAT 10 TO 6

M3-1H7

MANUSCRIPT &
TERM PAPER TYPING

Sl.50 per page

Peggy Harris

Ph 456-6022
after 5:30
and daring weekends.

Direct

CPE Head
Meets With

TESC Trustees

Holmes, whose tum on the
Board of Trustees expired re-.
cently. President Evans was
pleased with the selection of Ms.
Sylvester, who already has an
understanding of Evergreen from
her work with the Foundation.
The governor
would
not
comment on a question regarding Evans' performance
as
college president. "I don't think
it's appropriate
for me to
comment on the activities of any
president of any institution of
higher learning," said Ray, "in
one way or the other". She
quickly pointed out that she was
not singling out either Evans or
Evergreen. but would not have
commented on the performances
of any other state college or
university presidents if asked.
Also on the subject of education, Ray indicated that she had
no "specific" plans to institute a·
state-wide levy to raise revenue
for public schools, but noted
that an appointed task force is
currently studying various forms
of tax reform. The governor
stated that she would give strong
consideration to the committee's
recommendations before instituting any type of tax plan.
The governor's recently announced decision to phase out
the Washington State Women's
Council as of September 1 was
another issue raised at Tuesday's
conference. In November the
citizens of this state overwhel-

mingly turned down an initiative
to establish a state Women's
Commission. Those in favor of
the Commission
numbered
259,761, while thOS< who opposed the initiative
totaled
664,962.
"I do want to point out that
there was a general perception
that the Women's Council and
the Women's Commission were
really one and the same," Ray
explained. "It seemed to be quite

clear that continuing the Women's Council would be interpreted, and I think properly, as
an effort to circumvent the law."
Although the governor said it
was unlikely that she would
bring someone into her administration as a special assistant for
women's affairs, she noted that
"there are considerations being
given to programs to increase
support to the Human Rights
Commission". That commission

Games Computers
"Star date. 306. The Enterprise
has been destroyed, pleas, advise!'' A group of high school
students were on tour, filing
through Computer
Services.
Meanwhile, on another program... "A little dwarf has just
come around the comer, and has
just thrown a little axe, narrowly
missing your head."
Aside from the academic
activity going on in Computer
Services, there are nearly 60
game programs available on the
school's system. 'We have the
best computer games library I
know of-probably in the whole
country," says Chas Douglass of
Computer Services. 'We find it's
a very good way to get ~pie
interested in computers. A lot of
high school kids come in and
play-even
some grade school
kids on the simpler programs.
People might be afraid of
computers until they hear of

some game and come in to
play."
Games range from tic-tac-toe
to a simulated meeting with a
psychoanaly1t
to a full-scale
venion of WoAd War ill. "O...
reason we' re able to h.i.ve 10
many. is we h.i.ve free access to
the computer," says Douglass.
"If you had to pay for computer
time, it would probably
be
impossible. Some of our more
complex games can run for six
months."
Most of the games on the
system were either written or
translated from other systems by
Evergreen students. Douglass
explains: "It seems like almost
everyone who gets into computers starts playing other ~pie's
games and gets • bigger ond
better idea for writing a game
program. We keep the program
around to lure other people into
it."
Probably the most popular
game this winter was CML, a
program with an innocent appeal
to the despotic warlord in all of
us. The program was written in
1976 and hos ~ played only
about once a year since then,
because a game lasts approxi-

would have the proper authority
to oversee women's issues as welll
as issues of concern to minority
groups.
In an effort to ease communications with the press, Governor
Ray plans to hold conferences
twice a month. The conferences
will alternate betwttn mornings
and afternoons to grant equal
favor to morning and evening
newspaper editions.

Play

_ mately six months.
"CIVIL is one of the best
games ever written,"
says
Douglass. It tues plaa, ln •
world 1,000 by 1,000 units ln
dimension. Land consists of 100
or so islands. This winter about
SO people were ploying the
game. Initially, the 12 ployers
who have managed to survive
best from the last game become
the "House of lords". They vote
on all applications to enter the
new game. When oppro,red, the
player gets a country on one of
the islands. Each island usually
contains about twenty-five countries initi•lly. 'There tends to be
a lot of fighting at first," says
Douglass. "Then things settle
down a little and the people who
won start developing industry
and building ships to discover
new territory. It takes a lot of
time."
Although players deal with a
vast number of facton that have
been programmed into the game,
it isn't quite a perfect representation of reality:
there's
no
economy or weather to deal
with and the map of the CIVIL
world Is only schemotic. Still,
these are only details.

"The game takes a lot of
cooperation between players,"
Douglass observes. "Various alliances build up and then
disintegrate. In the annals of
CIVIL there's been some very
famous bock-stabs. It's happened
to me a number of timff. Some .
people take this very seriously,
and emotions can run pretty
high at times."'
At present, games circulate
freely between various computer
systems around the country. The
game referring to the dwarf come
from Stonford University, while
Evergreen regularly gets requests
for some of its better games. But
what about copyright
laws7
When Chas Dougloss, for example writes a game, wh.i.t right
does he have to it7 "Right now,
you can copyright • game, but
you can't patent it. There are
some new laws on the books
now that may clarify that • little
more." With the up-and~ming
home computer systems, Evergreen game afficionodos should
be hearing more about the issue
in the future, and you may well
be battling dwarves in your
living room.

JEANS $12.88

1\1'
~

-

wtll ...............

NewWwaAU
Thlt 1lolo planltC

Sound Center
Mon-Fri
Sat•
Sun

The new trustee has been
serving on the Evergreen Foundation since it was organized.
The Foundation
gets private
grants and gifts to eventually
build an endowment fund. Sylvester is uncertain about whether
she will continue on the Foundation, but she sees no conflict of
interest.
In a recent telephone interview

Conth_)uedfrom p•g• 1
''because it was not yet finalized."
Willie Jackson, one of two
coordinators
of the campus
Veterans Affairs Office, explains
that the allegations concerning
remedial credit were meaningless
because
"the VA will pay
benefits for remedial study to
those who qualify".
Jackson has also speculated
that the latest surprise attack by
the VA may be a last-ditch effort
to hold onto the legislation
which was already ruled unconstitutional in the Michigan case.
"It's rtally apparent
to me,
individually," said Jackson after
learning of Thornton's
testimony,
"that
through
Mr.
Thornton the VA is trying to lay
the groundwork to change the
legislation."
The VA's appeal of Judge
McGovern's temporary injunction will be heard by the Ninth
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeols,
but that is not expected to
happen for several months.
During the interim, President
Evans plans to takt action on
behalf of the veterans here. "I
have every intention of making

ntwM

wtth new com-

, poeltloM end t111proyliMtloM.

Her background includes wide
experience in public service. both
in King County. and state-wide.
She has served on the Seattle
Board of Freeholders, the Washington Council on Crime and
Delinquency and the Governor's
Council on Youth Employment,
among other organizations.
Ms. Sylvester's term as Trustee
began April 24 and will expire
on March 12. 1984.

an effort to appear in person or
to present written testimony to
the House Committee refuting
the testimony of the Veterans
Administration,"
Evans
said
Tuesday.
The former governor expressed
a deep concern that prospective
students may be scared off from
attending TESC in light of the
controversies between the college
and the VA. "No veteran should
feel 1he least bi1 hampered by
this lawsuit now going on. As
long as Evergreen certifies a
student's curriculum
to be a'
good full-time academic study
load. that will hold up in court 1
or anywhere else," Evans assured.
lie feels quite strongly that the;
government
should allow the
college to regulate
its own
academic standards and warned,
"If the government has no faith
in the major il\stitutions of our
country, then they're going to
end up as a suspicious watchdog
that
puts everyone
in an
adversary
relationship
and I
think ultimately really destroys
the confidence and the working
ability of people, one with
another."

I

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John Krogh

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Nathanirl Koch

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Nancy Ann Parkts

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11, 19
MICHELMICHE1EIT1

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10 9
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When a student suggested that
it might be politicolly expedien1
for the legislature to change
Evergreen into a traditional
school, Chance answered that
Evergreen students should have
"faith in the political system," as
various political views are held
in the legislature.

Ms. Sylvester has been associated with the school since it
began and before. ''I've seen it
when it was just a piece of
property, and then when it was
just a mud hole." she said.

with the CPJ Sylvester wos
hesitant about commenting on
Evergreen, saying "I haven't even
been to one meeting yet." She
did however emphasize that she
was committed to Evergreen,
saying "I like everything about
the place. I'm very pltased. I
think this is good for me, and I
hope it will be good for
Evergreen too."

cafe intermezzo

IEH:SDIIY,

own.M-

APRll.

:B£•11

students by moving learning
centers downtown.
Students
found the fact lh•t out of 1600
high school seniors attending
four-year public institutions of
higher education from the thirteen southwest
Washington
counties only 36 enrolled at
Evergreen to be misleading,
because this statistic does not
include the number of transfer
students from community colleges in the area, nor does it
account for the fact that people
in southwest Washington tend to
be conservative and do not feel
comfortable with alternative education.
Other points brought out at
the meeting were that Evergreen
as an institution tends to express
smug superiority in relation to
other colleges, that Evergreen
needs to have support of the
state legislature Jo that it can
build a reputation of academic
excellence instead of spending
time trying to insure its survival,
and that the public as well as the
institution
has to make the
commitment that Evergreen is
worth keeping.

Jane B. Sylvester of Seattle.
h.i.s been appointed by Gove.mar
Ray to the Board of Trustees of
TESC. Sylvester will replace
Trustee Janet P. Holmes, whose
term has expired.



Fal ARI'S NO CXJM.tllCA'.l'IlNS JOO AND

GIWllME

........-.

MR RAGS LTD

Students presen1 at the April
21 meeting suggested the following changes in Evergreen's curriculum: the establishment of full
time night studies for working
people, the odoption of forestry
and farm courses (Evergreen has
1,000 acres of forest and a farm).
adoption
of an engineering
degree program, and of other
special degree programs that
would fit in with the philosophy
of Evergreen. Chance ogreedthat
these suggestions and the possibility of founding a graduate
program should be examined.
Students also suggested solutions to Evergreen's underenrollment problem, including: trying
to overcome Evergreen's bad
press, convincing high school
counselors that Evergrttn is also
a school worth recommending to
high school .. niors, and trying
to attract more adult part-time

SIQi UP TalM'

---ot>4<--

Lt•.v•~o 5

with undermrollment is present
between Evergreen'• function ••
a regional state college and as an
alternative post-secondary Institution. Evergrem was originally
intended to be a traditional
college for residents of southwest
Washington. During the planning stages of Evergreen, amidst
the student unrest on campuses
in the late 1960's, the planning
committee was pushed towards
founding an alternative school.
This caused a basic contradiction
in Evergreen's role that has never
been resolved.

APRll. 17, Th-

TEASV RVKEN

n,,. old-

ClJMNMMA,11

by Laurie Frankel
At an April 21 mttting with
Evergreen students, Bill Chana,,
acting co-ordinator of the Council on Post-Secondary Education
(CPE), srated that Evergreen'•
role as an alternative college
should be evaluated during the
CPE study of the college. Chance
and Denis Curry, a mtmber of
the CPE planning and research
staff. will be working on the
study, which WH requested last
year by the legislature.
An
October 1, 1978 target date has
been set for completion of the
study.
The 1977 legislature Instructed
the CPE thot "Not more than
$25,000 shall be expended to
study and make recommendations on the curriculum and the
costs of The Evergreen State
College. The study shall determine the actions necessary to
broaden the institutions clientele
base by introducing traditional
undergraduate
and graduate
course offerings and reduce the
institution's total operating costs
per FTE (full time equivalent
studmt) to the average cost per
FfE at the other three state
colleges."
Chance explained Friday that
anyone looking at the study
mandate "is likely to conclude
that the outcome of the study is
pretty much pr=rdained," thot
the Senate is basically asking the
Council to !ell them how they
can "change the curriculum
without ever asking the question
of whether the curriculum should
be changed".
last o.c.m.ber the CPE pointed out in its preliminary ttp<>rt
that the Council "simply could
not answer the question of how
the curriculUm
should
be
changed without fint oddraoing
the question of whether the
curriculum should be changed."
Chance statrd Friday thot:
'We made that point for a very
simple reason and that is if you
subtract the overhead cost at this
institution from the direct instructional cost, In fact the direct
instructional cost at this school is
less than the instrudional cost at
the other three srate colleges.".
Evergreen's instructional cost·
per FTE student is Sl, 167, well
below the Sl,222 spent •t the
thrtt other irate colleges. However, the operational
cost at
Evergreen is Sl. 975 per FTE
student, ond this is much higher
than the not--qujte--$1,000 spent
at th• other three stote colleges.
Evergreen was originally designed for 12,000 students, and
though the plans were revised so
it could only accomodate 4,000
students ii is still 1,400 short of
this goal. Chance stoted th.at
essentially the college is overbuilt.
A basic conflict which ties in

Students

Sylvester Named New Trustee

CURIOUS
ABOUT OPPORTUNITIES
IN
ARTS&.
COMMUNICATIONS?

i11~

i..u,rrcQMW
l.ljU\

5

-~---71.1111

1871

SCKXL

M1IY Jro,

INFCH!,\TIOI

9 A.H.

M>ming """"8hcps

l\wllcatialll

'IO 3:)()

CM'.:

P.H.

- LIB Jill

al

and Intarviews.

• IG'H'!SmrATIVES INVI'IEl: KING TV,
Q:lrpany, Art.a Reeourcea Services,
lhiversity
of Waahingtal Graduats
camuu.catiai
and Art, KZAM,AM&
Seattle Peet-Intelligencer.
- 1:1,_t Roleasing CorparaUor,.

Floating 'lheatre
Cbmish Inatib.Jt.e,
llepart,tenta
of
fl-4, Ard/Or Gallery,

ea.rtl
at the Career
Library
14, 866~193.

'IO Pl\Rl'ICIPA'!E: Aegister

and

• Placement Offioe,
Inwill bo assi<p!(I or, a first cme, first
9erY8 basis,
Sbnenta
smuld make arrangements to be
present by 9 a.m. and remain throu,p,ut
the day.
'IO PIG'ARE: Attend

a special

Jcb and Graduate

SChool

Preparation lb:lcsrop or, Htnday, May 1 at 4 p, m. in
the career Resouroe Center, Library 1213,
AU., S'I'lllNl'S

WD.CO£

PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
Thomu Hood

Planning

Tho COOPER POINT JOURNAL le pubtl.,_.
-y
fa< tM •-•
-.ity,
ond ,1a11 of Tho E-,i,_,
State College, Otympo, w..,._
-- •·
PfNW1.,.
not NCIINWtly tt10M of The E.......,.
State Col ...
Ad10.tltJng fM•
1eM1p,Ne11IICI ~ doN not MONWtty lfflPY•.clcw••••I
by thla :.eMI; 4 .
Off- "" In tlw College -ttoo
•uttdtnV
(CAB) 301. .,i-:
--1211.
-lotng
and buol,_. .,i-:
-•IOIO.
I.at-. poflcy: All,.._
lo
tlle edllof muet b9 NOetwct by noon TUNdrily tor that ....-.
pubUcetlon. le:tw■
lftUel be typld, double•...-,,
MICI «IO WOfdl or leM. utlilfa
I
7 4 ..

-

bo odltod to,

•-

wtlt

6

Tho~

l'oln1JoumolAptl :17, 1111

KAOS Marathon Starts Tomorrow

by Lisa Fl•ming
Tomorrow (Friday the 28th)
marks the start of that great
extravaganza of the airwaves
known as the KAOS Marathon.
For ten days KAOS will feature
special broadcasts. trivia contests, on-the-air auctions, mandatory plugs for donations,
another edition of "Make It Or
Break It" with Steve Rabow of
The Saturday Morning Cartoon
Show" fame, according to Program Director Peggy Gallaher,
"big band music and basic

craziness.
Three-quarters of the KAOS
operating budget comes from
S&A monies, and it is up to the
station to raise the remaining
quarter on its own. This is done
through subscriptions
to the
station, sold for $15 and entitling
the subscriber to an original
KAOS T-shirt and subscription
to the monthly program guide.
But the major means of raising
money is the marathon. This will
be the third one held. The last
marathon, held in November of
1977. raised around $2,050, and
the KAOS crew hopes to top
that number.
But we purposely didn't set
an exact goal," says Greg Falk.en,
special programs director. "It
would be nice· to raise that
much, and wonderful to raise
more.

Falk.en is organizing a performance at the capitol campus for
the marathon on Wednesday,
May 3 at noon.
..It·s going to be a performance
more than a radio event," he
says. "It's to let people in town
know that there's a marathon
going on."
The basic format
of the
marathon caHs for special events
and shows on the weekends and
evenings, with weekday programing continuing as usual. The
station will change format on the
weekends, going to 24-hour
broadcasting.
On Saturday and Sunday
afternoons auction events will be
going on. Volunteers from KAOS have bttn soliciting support
from local merchants of the
tri•city area in the form of goods
and/or services donated to the
station. These will be auctioned
off to the highest bidders, or in
some cases, given away as
bonuses to new subscribers.
The list of donations is long
and wide-ranging. Among others
are 20 tickets to The Cinema, an
orange tree, 10 pounds of
mushrooms (standard, not psychedelic), an hour's plan• flight
over Olympia, dinner for two at
the Falls Terrace, and, a bottle
of waterbed silencer.
"I have no idea what the
silencer is for," sa s Karrie

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the record, literally, or to mal«
the record, in which caS<, th<'
pledger of th• largHI amount
wins the record.
"Last year, this terrible record,
"Fonzie for PttSident," was the
winnor," says Rabow. "I couldn't
believe it. We got more and
mon, calls, and someon• finally
pledged $6.25 and walked away
with it. I've been out scrounging
the Goodwill, and came up with
an old Anita Bryant■ing]e," he.
continues. 'Tm really looking
forward to th• rnponsos on that
one. There's also an old reljsous
on< about ''Th• Lullaby• of the
Virgins."
Rabow is also responsibl• for
the films to be shown on
Saturday, April 29, in !.«tun,
Hall Ono, to benofit KAOS.
KAOS Station Manqa Dave Rauhal work. They are "Jason and th• Argonauts" and "Beach Party"
Jacobs, station business manag<r.
KAOS dou, and asking for
(starring Ann•tt• Funicello).
''My pononal favorit• prize is
pledgn. According to Gallahor,
"] am convinced that the
fifty pounds of cl;,y."
money donated during this tim•
Evergrtt:n community still has a
According to Jacobs, rosponso
will bo <armarked to pay th•
sense of humor," said Rabow
has b•en good from local
monthly fee for th• phone lin•
when ask•d why he had a
merchants.
recently installed by the Leagu•
preference for those particular
"We know how to approach
of Women Voters to enable
films.
the businHs, and th•y hep
KAOS to braodcast City Comhearing about us." says Falken.
mission meetings live.
''Th• KAOS people are really
excited about the Marathon,"
'"They roalizo that w•'ro still
April 30 will bring a broadcast
Rabow observes. "It's a giant
here. that we havm't folded,
from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. by the
evaluation time, to see whether
that we have something to offer
Evergreen Christian
Center,
peopl• Ilk• the job w•'re doing."
with community radio."
hopefully reaching those listeners
"We need the money," says
The money raising will get
who "are comrades in Christian
Station Manager David Rauh. "I
underway with a trivia contest
life." according to Gallaher. On
want to emphasize how poor we
on Friday, April 28, from 9 to 12
May 3, those listeners who
are, and the service we give the
p.m. Trivia contests
are a
pledge a subscription will recommunity. One-third to onemonthly feature of KAOS, and
ceive, along with the T-shirt and
hall of th• peopl• who work
the concentration
of several
guide, an astrology reading over
here are non-students. We work
within the space of two weeks is
the air.
with senior citizens; we have
sure to delight thosr with
What promises to be one of
several blind programmen."
encyclopedic minds, a taste for
the highlights of the marathon
the absurd, or just with a sense
will bo th• April 29 edition of
of humor.
th• Saturday Morning Cartoon
KAOS
is
non-commerciaJ
On Thursday, May 4, r<proShow with Stove Rabow, ''Make
community radio, and is located
sentativn from the League of
It Or Break It" will bo the
at 89.3 on th• FM dial. A
Women Voters, and Olympia
feature. This show consists of
program guide giving further
Mayor Lyle Watson will bo on
Steve pl;iying uniqu• 45's, and
details of the marathon and
the air from 8 to 10 p.m.
listeners phoning in to vote.
• other upcoming programming
discussing what th•y do, what
Monoy is pledged •ither to broak should bo published on April :zl!.
eoniln...J
from paae 3
dressed the group. Murray had
people. Spmething's tran1pired
with city governments. Now we
gotten out of college and gone
out h•n, t~at's going to bo ttal
have some new commissionen.
right back to farming.
He
hard to tum around."
TJie Thunton County R<gional
inherited th• placo along with his
Lacey City Councilman Bob
PlanninM Commission .. pecially
brothor from his family, which
J•nson was talking to County
has seen a big improvement in
established
the farm in the
Commissioner Marj Yung as the
the past five yean. There wasn't
'twenties. "To me," he said, "the
bus rolled down the road; ''You
even any zoning in most of the
wont thing happening to far•
know anybody with over an acre
county until three or four yean
ming is when you drive around
of land is a potential dev•lopor.
ago."
th• stat• and see good agriculII th•y want to go that way,
After lunch, th• bus continued
tural land boing gobbled up by
they could tum their farm_ into
its circular route through the
industry.
I think the next
an A.T.V, park if they f•lt lik•
county. It eventually pulled up
gmeration will pay for this."
it," he said.
to a large dairy farm and its
When asked what he felt were
part-owner, Murray Weik, adthe major facton driving farmers
The tour dragged on for
out of business he cited rising
nearly seven houn. The school
land and supply costs, "But
bus seemed to cover nearly every
there's another factor: you have
bumpy back road. in the county.
to like it to stay in. I think the
In the lat• afternoon, ii drov• up
ones who're in it now will stay
Delphi Valley, reputedly the
in as long as they can." He
most scenic agricultural
area
boil•d things down succinctly
around. Finally, the bus pulled
whm he said, ''You want cheap
up lo the last stop of the day, an
food, and I want to make a
oyster farm on Totten Inlet.
living."
Little did th• group suspect what
After observing (and being
awaited as they got off the bus.
observed by) som• of W•ik's
The oyster farmer stood on a
stock, the group re-boarded th•
pil• of sh•lls and discussed his
bus. Soon it drove by more tract
concerns, but as he talked the
development. "Over there used
t.our members noticed that a
to bo th• largnt hog farm in th•
tabl• had boon set out, and lo
state," said the guide. "Th•y
and bohold, then, wen, oysl•nused to pick up the garbago from
more than could bo eaten in hall
Fort Lewis and fttd 10,000 hogs
an hour. If you want to know
with it. Now it's all been broken_
what the oyster farmer thinks,
down into a Jot of ranchettesask him, but the hogs are doing
all that space housing just a f•w
well.
Everyone knows
Budget Tapes & Records
has the lowest prices
You could eudy 1pend SS000.00
in town for albums.
But don't forget that
on rent during four years In school.
goes for tapes, tool
7.98 List sells for 5.99
Ever thought of buying your own home
everyday.
and getting your lnvatment back pltu?
4.97 on sale
Drop in!

TAKE TAPE
WHEREVER
YOUGO

,-.--------------....
Vaughn Marston

DON'S CAMERA
SEA MART CENTER
OLYMPIA, WASH.
943-1703

DON'S CAMERA
SOUTH SOUND CENTER
LACEY, WASH.
456-1635

Country Squire Realty
214 W. 4th Ave.
943-9181

301 W. 4th
357-9191

.w-

Communicating
I
1

'
I

Space Age Native Am•ricans
are l•arning to use t<chnological
advances to meet their special
needs and values, just as they
have always traditionally
adapted changes within their
cultural patterns. This was well
illustrated
recently at Crow
Agency in southeast Montana
during a demonstration project
in which TESC Faculty M•mbor
Lovern King (Creek/Cherokee)
and student Pila Laronal (Native
Hawaiian) actively participated
as Floor Director and Producer I
Director respectively.
On April 10. 12 and 14 Indian
nations teamed up with NASA
to utilize satellite telecommunication for two-way interactive
video and audio communications
between ground sites. The fourway hookup connected the Crow
Agency in Montana, the All
Indian Pueblo Council in Albuquerque, New Mexico; govern~
ment officials in Washington,
D.C., and California colleg<S

By Satellite

Humboldt Stat• at Arcata and
Sat<llil<) H an important tool
California Stat• Univonity at
for Indian peopl•. "By making it
long ~•ch.
ultimately pouibl• to roach n,.
The demonstration culminated
largest number of reservation,
a y•ar of planning by NASA and
urban and rural Indians with a
the Crows and Pueblos. One of
single broadcast, communication
the chief initiaton of the project,
by satellite represents the most
NASA •ngineer J•rry Elliot, an
exciting m•thod on the horizon
Osage Indian, sees the CTS
' for improving the quality of
,<~C~o~m~m~u~n~i~c:•~ti~o~n~•-T~oc~h~n~o~l~o~~~~A~m~r~icn


h

education and communication.''
According to Sam Windy Boy
Jr. of the Crow C<nlral Education Commission, the project has
three objectives:
Demonstrate capability of
inter or intra-tribal
communications.
Demonstrate two-way voice
and television communication between tribes and federal agencies.
Demonstrate two-way com•
munications between tribes
and community colleg~. forma I state un1vers1ty programs and other educational
institutions.
Aspects of these obiectives
were included in the several
hours of each day!> programming. The presentations gave the
Crow and Pueblo representatives
a rare opportunity to combine
concerns and discuss them face•
to-face with key government
officials. Some of those government figures participating were:
Alex Mercure, Assistant Secretary of the Dept. of Agriculture;
U.S. Senators and Representa•
lives from Montana and New
Mexico;
Governor
Thomas
Judge of Montana;
Special
Assistant to the Vice President,
N•lson Diaz: Dr. C.rald Gipp,
Director Office of Indian Education, HEW; and Forrost J.
C.rard, Assistant Secretary for

Bui
On Wodneoday, May 3, all IEI-

The bloodmobile unit will be on
campua Tueaday, May 9, 1978, to
receive donation ■. The procedure
lnc::ludea having your blood prneu,.
checked, hemoglobln level teated and

YICU AND ACTMTll!I PROPOSALS
for 1978-71 wllr-be preNnted. Come to
the CAB CoffeehouN
at 8 Lffl. and

bring food fo, a potluck.
THURCTON COUNTYRAPE RELIEF

blood typed.
Volunt..,.. from the Puget SOund
Blood Bank will be located on the
aecond flOOf of the Lllnty Bulldlng
from t0:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. A 1111of
guldellnea for btood donorl WIii be
posted on the Health Servtcee buli.tln
bowU anct at the lnfOf"fflltlon Center.
The pat two btood drawlng1 held In
October and February proved to be the
fflOlt luoceMful drtvel _.
held at
TESC. Health ServtON encotJl'IIOM you
to again take the time to oontrtbut•
your urgently needed blood.
Seo you therwl
Health Serttcee will be t,pOnlOrlng a

"STO~ IMOKING CLINIC"at TESC
with CIHHI
beginning WednHday,
May 9, from 3:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. In
the Health ServiON Lounge. There la
no fH for participant,,
program
ffl8tlrial1 and ln1tructora .,.. provided
without clllrge by the AmericanClnow

Soolety.

Faollltal<n WIii be Campue NurM
l'r1lctltlone, Judy Ubby and Mra. Carol
Gray of Olympla. The courH will
lnctude Hven (2 hour) claHH
on
Monday and woc1.-.y
lftomoont.
OatN echlduled tor cl .....
.,. May 3,
a, 10, 15, 11, 22, and 2◄ from 3:00
p.m. 10 5:00 p.m. Graduation wlll be
held May 2◄.
Pi..
contact Dwtene Herron al

HMlth Se<vlca (-1
fo, further
Information. Reglatratlon will begin
Monday, May 1, In Hlllth Se<v-,
Seminar 2110. We encourage
all
lnt8Nllted tmoklf"I to cont.act UI u
IOOfl II poalbte
due to the llmlted
clau alze.
SooYOUTherw?
IIAY DAY, the
holiday, la being

hlttorical WOtkn'
celebrated

by a

potluclc from 5:30 to 7:30 In the CAB

ColfllhouN. E._yone la oncoulllg<ld
to make touta to 8U00Mlful peopt•••
fflO'tWMf'ltl, to bring lnttNmenta and
alng aonga (aong -•
pn,vldod but

oddltlona.,.

~-

Fotlowlng the

potluck, the tllm M\Jnlon MaJda", a
documentary
uelng lntervlewa and
fto toll Jhl oto,y ot
__,
labo<o,ganl..,_ J,\' the thlrtlel,
will be 1hown In Lecture Hall 1 at
7: 30. The film will at10 be ahown
TUlldoy et _noon. Sponaorod by EPIC.
Student■

lnteneted In the aummer
group contract l'LANTS AND THIIR
UIU llloukl attan lnfonnotlnal
-ng
on TUNdly, May 2, at _,
In
Lab I, room 3033. For further
Information call Don Humphrey at
9872, or IN him at L11bI, 3001.
Competition
for
,uLetUQHT
GIIANTII opona May 1 . ,gnw,1o
are for graduate 1tudy or r'9IMrCh
abroad. F« mora Information oonta:::t
the C.Plannlng and ~t
Offlcl In Lib 121 ◄ (tllll)hono-13),

WIii hotd a Pf'8Nfltatlon and di.COUion
on rape pt11V9ntlontor womenwho run.
-Ing
WIii be on Monday, May

1, It 7:30 In the YWCAFrtendlhlp Holl
on Union Straet, Otympla.
A five-minute SPEED CHUI TOURNAMENT will take place at the Gnu
DIii Monday, May 1. Reglatratlon la
8:30 and 7:30, entry f• '1.
Pl-brtng chNt clockt and Nt1.
Free coffN and priZN. Round, WIii
ltaft at 7: 30.
A BENEFIT FOIi YVONNE WANIIOW
WIii be held thl1 Saturday, April 20, at
7: 30 In the 4th floor of the TESC
Library. WIM>W hu _,
f'1!htlng In
court for tlx part to defend herletf
and he, chlldren. The event lncludel
film, tinging, and dancing. Donations
acoeptod,I0-2.!50.
VoluntHrl
are needed
for the
-EN
OF COLORUNITEIconf•anoe being held et TE8C F-y and
Sltur.iay, May 19 and 20. Houllng lo
needed for peop~ attending, u well u
volunteer1 to run lhe conference.
Women', or men's help IC>Pf9Clated.
Contact Joyce Kllmo< 11 --..
o,
357-111078 or the Women'•
Center

~Hl2.
The Gay Aetource Center It eponaorlng two weekly rap groups. n.,.
wlll be I WOMEN LOVING-EN
GROUP on Tueeday at 5:00, end an
open QAY MEN'I GROUP Nch
Monday at 5:30. Both WIii be held In
the GRC lounge, Lib. 3212. Call
8M-e5oMfor moreInformation.
A PRE-OIIOASIIIC Cl.Ml lo being
offon,d
by the -··
COntof fo,
womenwho haw MYlf' had an oro,em,
fllrely hed an orgum, or are not eure If
they haYe. The due will run for fl¥e
lllrtlng May •• and wlll ,,_
T-ya
and Th..-ya.
A ,,..Olmlna,y
-.ting
WIii be held TUNdly, May 2,
at 111:30In Seminar 2110. All women
.,. encouraged to come.
A _..
1Ei.,
DEFENBE
WORwlll be held 811unll)',
April 29, from 10 Lm. to 1 p.m. at the
YWCA Frtendlhlp Hall In Olympll, 11d
by Rape Prevention,
frM. Call In
-

fo, f,w

KAO$ la atUI1ook1ng tor volunteers
with any amount of time avallable. The
Newt Department meets fN8f'Y Tunday
at 2:30 p.m. In CAB 203.
WANTED: COORDINATOR FOR THE
SERVICES AND ACTiVITIES FEES
REVIEWBOARD fo, the 19711-79flacal
year. Thia It a etudent lnternahlp
poaltlon requiring a yeat1 commltt•
ment beginning In July, 1978. Appllcetlona are due by Monday, May 1 . More
Information It avalleble In CAB 306.
THE MILITARY USES OF NUCLEAR
POWER, an afternoon dltcuulon, will
take place on Sunday, Aprll 30, at the
Gnu 0111, 2 p.m. PraantaUon1 and a
tllde ahow will accompany
the

dlacuulon.



Kathy

Luther,
a 1tuden, doing
.......ch with uh gtuea, need• • falrty
cJean IOUl'Ce of fireplace ·uh. WIii
clean your fireplace frN of charge.
Contact her at ~The WOMEN'S IO"
IALL TEAM
hal been having practice thrae tlmee a
week at Jeff8f"IOn Middle School on
~ Rd.; Sunday■ 2-◄ p.m., Wed.
&-7 p.m., Frt. ~7 p.m. WE NEED A
COACHII Call 888-6530
come to
~lea.

°'

THERE~A
DIFfEIIDICEI

O~pia 'Potmy.
&.'ArtS~.

Indian Affairs, Dept. of the
Interior.
Programming from th~ Crow
site was created and directed by
Pila Ltronal, who was assisted
by Lovern King. NASA supphed
technical assistance through their
unique Portable Earth Terminal,
a JS.foot bus designed as a
portable satellite communications
terminal. The project demonstrated the possibilities for using
space age technology to improve
communication
understana1ng
and solidarity between Ndt1vt
Americans todav
Copies ol the programs hd'-"
been requested by The Sm11
sonian Institute, and the oft1n·,
ot President Carter and \ 1:l
President Mondale, demonstr_,
ting the significance of this ne,...
method of communica11on
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UNDIIISTANIIING AND
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