cpj0006.pdf

Media

Part of The Paper Volume 1 Number 4 (January 24, 1972)

extracted text
Proposal
to the Evergreen Community
In view of the response that has been received from the
community on publication of the first three issues of 'The
Paper", it should be recognized that the community is
cognizant of the need of this form of communication. This
publication would include local and community events, but
also would cover world and national struggles, conflicts and
events. However, due to the lack of funds, it is impossible to
continue to fulfill this need.
It is recognized that there are interested people who have
had previous experience in all major aspects of newspaper
work and it is planned to exploit this knowledge and apply it
in educational workshops for interested community
members, with the intent of becoming members of the
Co-operative.
After numerous organizational and philosophical sessions
the following procedure for operation has been temporarily
adopted.
The proposal is:
(I) The newspaper will be published weekly, will be
tabloid size (9 7/8" X 14 5/8" per page copy), and will be a
base of eight pages.
(2) The staff organization will depart from traditional set
positions such as editor, manager, etc., and will be a
co-operative. The organization of which will allow each
member of the co-operative to experience all facets of
newspaper work.
(3) A working member of the co-operative is a person who
has performed a publishing function for; two issues of the
newspaper.

VOLUME I, NUMBER 4

(4) Working members should consist of students, faculty
and administration interested in working on the paper.
(5) In the functioning co-operative, all working members
will be required to attend weekly issue planning s~ssions and
will be trained through practice in publishing functions.
(6) Temporary individual functions ":'ithin the
co-operative will be decided upon by the co-operative. .
(7) A working editorial board will be established
consisting of working members of the co-opera:ive pres~nt at
the weekly planning session and/or representatives appomted
by them. (see no. 3 & 4) The editorial board ~eserves the .sole
right to decide what will be published, and will not submit to
any form of external censorship. Shall adhere to state laws
regarding libel and invasion of privacy.
.
.
(8) The co-operative hopes to receive contmuous
evaluation of the newspaper by · the TESC Community .. The
form of which is left to be decided later.
(9) Any organizational or philosophical changes of the
newspaper will be decided by working members of the
co-operative.
We recognize that the goal of this publication will be to
improve communication within the Evergreen Community by
providing a forum for the free expression of ideas and to aid
in social change through (but not limited to) advocate
presentations.
All money received from Student and Activity fees will be
deposited in "The Paper Co-operative" account and
withdrawn on a per-issue cost basis. With.drawals must have
the approva I of all account co-signers.

January 24 , 1972

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE, Olympia, Washington 98505

Wednesday: Costigan
Dr . G i o v a n ni C o s tigan,
University of Washington
professor and world champion
debater, will speak of
involvement to all interested
parties at Evergreen, Wednesday,
Jan. 26. Dr. Costigan, whose field
is Asian Studies, recently
renewed his debating fame from a
triumphant confrontation with
William F. Buckley, Jr., before
some 8,000 people at the
University of Washington.
Prof. Costigan intends to
discuss the pressing need for
student involvement in the
political arena from presidential

politics to city councilman.
Accompanying Costigan will
be Rick Ring, State Student
Co-ordinator for the McGovern
for President Campaign, with
which Dr. Costigan is also
afftliated.
Following his speech, which
will be at 2 p.m. in Lecture Hall
One, Costigan and Ring will meet
with members and
prospective-members of the
TESC McGovern Club to discuss
campaign strategy. The speech is,
of course, free and open to the
public.

In this issue

Film festival: Thursday
By FRANKIE FOSTER
Perhaps when you see the
words "student film", you think
of the assignment your high
school English teacher gave you
in your senior year; or maybe
you've never made a ftlm or seen
a good student film. And maybe
watching a movie gives you a
headache, and maybe you'd
much rather scan "Reader's
Digest" and watch TV . this

Thursday from 7:30 to ll p.m ..
But, if you did you'd miss more
than 20 films at Evergreen's very
first Student Film Festival. These
include a documentary film on
last year's Mayday
demonstrations in Washington
D.C. , a documentary on the
Satsop River Rock Festival, three
animated films each by a
different ftlm-maker plus an
incredible collection of comedy

and dramatic type films. All of
the feature films for the Jan. 27
extravaganza were created by
Evergreen film-makers.
It's hoped that the Festival,
set for Lecture Halll, will serve as
a organizing influence for
film-making in general. There will
be sign-up lists for an animated
film crew and future movie acting
roles.

• • •

"The Paper" Budget
PAG£2

Legislative Bills
PAG£6

Library
PAG£7

WashPIRG
PAG£7

The
Paper's
future


IS

YOU!

In case any of the Evergreen and offer to write articles, feature
Community really wonders why stores, etc., but we still need
no newspaper was published last more--many more--people!
week, there are two very short
Does the Evergreen
and not-so-sweet answers. First of Community really want a
all the newspaper co-operative newspaper? Do you want "The
did not have enough money, and Paper"? If you truly don't want
secondly the co-operative does one, at least tell us so; then we
not have enough people to raise can stop playing this game of
money and put out a paper all in "giving the 'people' what they
the same week imd still keep up really don't want", and get busy
on something worth while for
in their programs.
"The Paper" is still alive, . you and us. At present, all we
however, for the time being at have got from this community is
least. There are between six and an underwhelming amount of
eight people putting out his Apathy!
paper. We have no administrators
Many of the articles in this
and no faculty members on our paper are not at all what we
staff, even after the many would like them to be. They are
and recurring requests that we shallow and journalistically weak,
have published in "The Paper"
but this is all we are able to do
Students at least responded--we
until we get some of you people
have had a few people come in to help us.

Budget sought
1. Salaries: 60 units/week, $1.80/unit (20
issues)

$2,160

2. Office and copy supplies

250

3. Art materials, T squares, photographic
supplies (bulk 35mm Tri-X, Polariod film
and developing.)

400

4. Style guide, dictionaries, etc.

50

5. Roller blade paper cutter, developing
tank, bulk film loader.

95

6. Central Stores account-file folders,
copy baskets, etc.

80

7. Bulk rate postage

.,

.

100

8. WATS

50
200

9. Typewriter rentals from Ron Hoffman

forum

meets
Redistricting and women's
rights legislation will be the two
topics of this week's Legislative
Forum beginning with coffee at 9
a.m. tomorrow, January 25, in
the council chambers of the
Olympia City Hall.
Lois North, a second-term
King County legislator, will
provide an informative
background on redistricting
beginning at 9:30 a.m. She will
also give a legislator's view on the
importance of redistricting and
what will happen if the legislature
is unable to meet the
court-imposed deadline for
establishing the new boundaries.

Gisela Taber, executive
director of the Washington State
Women's Council, will use the
second half of the Forum to
discuss the unique legal
ramifications of being a woman
in the state of Washington. She
will also explain the bills now
before the legislature concerning
women's rights . These include a
community property law and an
equal rights amendment to the
state constitution. Both are
executive request bills.
Baby sitting at a nominal fee
will be provided for those
attending the Tuesday Forum at
the First United Methodist
Church Legislative Forum,
sponsored jointly by YWCA,
ECCO, AAUW, and LWV, is a
series of non-partisan weekly
meeting held during each
legislative session to keep the
public informed on the issues
being considered by the
legislature.

by The

campus extention 3189. Someone
should be in the office from 3 to
5 p.m. each week day.
Again, due to the lack of staff,
if no one is in, leave a note, or
call 753-2960 in the evening and
ask for Cam, Bruce or Joe.
Deadlines for "The Paper" are
set and articles should be
dropped in Room L3216 in
plenty of time for the week's
issue. Feature articles should be
in by Wednesday noon, and news
articles by noon Thursday
If you just have the
information and don't want to
write the article, please come in
or call, at least one day before
the dealine and talk to someone
in the office, hopefully between
3 and 5p.m.
Let us all hope that we can
keep communications open.

Paper

11. Lacey Leader-composition, headlines,
veloxes, ad layout. $175 per issue

3,500

Mason County Journal, Shelton-print
2,000 copies of eight-page paper. $70 per issue.

1,400

1 2.

200

News services

13. Private auto in state for copy runs,
newspaper pickup, etc., at 1Oc per mile

100

14 Equipment
waxer
two-page light table (made at TESC)
clerical desk
camera (polariod)

20
100
200
50

15. Reserve for unanticipated expenses

100

l6.R~~ve~~~~~~~~~-.~~~~am~~~~·­

typesetting equipment
70

17. Repay Pete Steil berg

150

18. Outstanding debts

Dummy and layout sheets, advertising
nd statements, letterheads and

legislative

As it is now we are trying to
get advertisers, composing
advertisements, billing advertisers
(late), writing stories, laying out
the paper, correcting, proofreadin
and shuttling the copy back and
forth to Shelton and Lacey to get
it printed.
There just is not enough time
in one week to do all of this, not
with the size of the staff that we
have. It is obvious to us now, that
people expect a weekly paper;
and unless there is a weekly paper
that news of Evergreen can not
be covered adequately.
If you have any little talent,
even if it is just that you can
cheer up a distraught staff,
please.,.please come in and see
us--we need you.
We are located in the library in
room 3216, phone 753-3186 or

40

TOTAL EXPENSES Advertising revenue
will be used to compensate for
unanticipated expenses .

$9,815

tudent fees board
meets today at 4
An entire quarter has passed
and student organizations have
had to operate without money.
Many people hoped that the
student Services and Activities
fees board, which met last week,
would finally be ready to allocate
funds from the $37,000 made
available by the Board of
Trustees.
However, the fees board had
not yet prepared an effective
procedure for hearing and
deciding on funding proposals.
The two-and-a-half hour meeting
ended chaotically with no one
sure about receiving money.
Students were reminded at the
meeting that the $37,000 is not
student money, but is controlled
by the trustees, and any decision
made by the student board is
subject to fmal veto by Larry

PAGE 2 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE January 24,1972

Stenberg, dean of Developmental
Services.
The fees board heard
supportive statements on the first
ten proposals submitted, but
would not make any decisions
until they had refined the
allocation procedures.
Some groups that have asked
for significant portions of the S
and A funds are:

Indian Center ........ $2,900*
Organic farm .......... $1 ,500
FM Radio ............ $4,500
Faith Center .......... $7,500
Theater People ........ .$5)00
Yacht Club ........... $3,200
Entertainment ......... $4,100
MECHA ............. $6,000
Black Student Union .... $7,200
"The Paper" ........... $9,500

*All figures are rounded to the
nearest hundred.
If only these 10 groups are
granted~ their full requests, the.
student fees board would need
nearly $50,000. Obviously the
board has its work 6ut out to
trim the budget proposR_ls to fit
the $37,000 available.
An interim decision to grant
each group $500 to meet
immediate needs may be
instituted until final request
problems can be solved.
There also may be legal hassles
confronting the board with
constitutionality of using state
money to finance religious groups
or for such things as a bail bond
fund.
The student board will
continue its hearing today at 4
p.m. in 3121.

Tax reform rally

support for tax reform for a
"magnificent" representation of
stude 'n ts, faculty and
administration.
Tuesday morning plans
include a 40-piece band from SPC
and University of Washington to
complement the presentation by
students of petitions supporting
immediate tax reform by
constitutional admendment.
Their own rendition of "When
the Saints Go Marching In,"
scheduled as legislators file into
work, should set the rally's
tempo.
"Washington's legislators are
attempting to dodge this issue
because of the election year,"
Arlene notes.
The trek to Olympia makes
good political sense from any
direction she observes:
"Everyone is now mindful of the

-

A college-based effort to push
statewide tax reform will end its
preliminary "mushrooming out
of control" with a rally
tomorrow morning in front of
the Capitol Building. A.ccording
to Arlene Hinderle of Seattle
Pacific College, those planning to
attend look for a massive turnout
by members of the Evergreen
community, especially its 1)00
pioneer students.
Ms. Hinderle, an SPC senior,
has seen the student movement
grow from the
frustrated
attempts of too few fellow
collegiate planners. To her the
Jan. 24 in-person gathering, as
the Legislature convenes at 10
a m., will culminate the first
phase of telephone calls to

legislators as well as letters and
petitions seeking better tax break
for education.
Then, she reports, student
supporters of equitable taxation
plan to lobby, and then some, for
the remainder of the Special
Session and work up to a vote of
the people in November. They
have good reason, she recounts,
since 19 school levies failed last
year and the state's three
largest--Seattle, Spokane and
Tacoma-- are expected to go
down in 1973.
Although the TESC
community first heard of the
grassroots tax reform movement
just last week, Arlene hopes the
campus' proximity to the rally
site will couple with widespread

new youth vote, and our
participation in this work within
the lawmaking system shows
commendable responsibility on
our part--how can we lose?"
Petitions to be presented to
leaders of the Senate and House
of Representatives have lately
been "flooding" back to leaders
of the movement. In the past few
months, they have been
circulated throughout the state,
primarily through 800 music
instructors reached by the
Washington Public School Music
Educators Association.
Since musical programs are
first to suffer when levies fail, the
group has long sought the "fair
and equitable" tax reform
package mentioned in the
petitions.
Included in the form's
wording is a pledge "to support

the necessary constitutional
admendment in November, 1972"
for a decision on the matter by
the state's voters, including those
newly enfranchised teenagers and
twenty year-olds.Evergreen and
other local participants should
arrive in the rally area by 9:30
a.m. tomorrow, ideally with signs
and placards,
promoting
immediate tax reform. Seattle
and Tacoma- area students, as
well as representatives of Jaycees,
churches and businesses, plan to
arrive at that time in car pools.
Once
the
political"confrontation" is
completed, members of the
visiting task force may visit the
TESC campus to view the new
state educational addition and
discuss future systematic
procedure.

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

Monday, January 24
Drama Club, 7:30 p.m., 3rd floor of
Library, near Room 3221 ,
Dance: Noon to 1:30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby.
Pride and Shame Exhibit: . Library
Ref-erence area, regular library hours.
Evergreen Political Action Group: 6 p.m.,
Library 3215.
Beginning Ballet: 7:30 p.m., outside
cafeteria.
The Evergreen Film Society Presents: A
program of shorts, including early films by
Roman Polanski, Richard Lester, and
Francois Truffaut; plus a kinetic art ftlm, an
animated cartoon, and several others.
Showings at 7 and 9: IS p.m. Lecture Hall
One. Admission 75 cents.
St. Martin's Intramural Basketball
Tournament: 6 p.m., Capitol Pavilion,
Lacey.
Services and Activities Panel meeting: 4
p.m., Library 3121.
Film Co-op: Noon to 1 p.m., Library2129.
Tuesday, January 25
DTF on Act vities Calendar: noon,
Library 3237.
DTF on Dances, Concerts and Speakers:
2 p.m., Library 1506.
Students In Meditation: 7-9 p.m., Library
3234
Cooper Point Association meeting: 7:30
p.m., Environmental Design Lounge, 2nd
floor, Library.
Jazz Dance Club: Noon to 1:30 p.m., 2nd
floor Library Lobby. Open to all. $1.00 per
lesson.
Beginning Ballet: 7:30 p.m., outside
cafeteria.
Legislative Forum (sponsored by
Evergreen College Community.
Organization): 9 a.m. to noon, Olympia City
Hall Commission Chambers.
Contracted Studies meeting: 10 a.m. to 2
p.m., Library 1401
Dance: Noon to 1:30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby.
The Pride and the Shame Exhibit:
Library Reference Section, regular library
hours.
Film Co-op: Noon to 1 p.m., Library
2129
Joint Public Legislative Hearing: Senate
and House Higher Education Committees.8
p.m., House Hearing Room Two. Bills to be
considered: HB 2 and SB 15 (free tuition for
children of Southeast Asia POWs) and SB
1 57 (deferred increases in tuition for
institutions of higher education).

SPECIAL NOTES:
Health Office open from 10 a.m. to 6
p.m. every day.
Film Co-op open every day from noon to
1 p.m., Library 2129.
Dancers: Classes in modern dance daily,
noon to 1:30 p.m., 3rd floor library lobby.
ALL WEEK:
(Through Jan. 28) The Pride and the
Shame Exhibit by Japanese-American
Citizens League and the State Capitol
Museum. Second floor Library Reference
Section during regular hours.
Student Voter Registration Drive
(involving registration at convenient
locations and dorm canvassing) if
arrangements can be finalized. Information:
Susan Noonan D-303, (2564) or Craig
Stewart (491-5886), both representatives of
Washington Vote.

Wednesday, January 26
Evergreen Political Action Group:
Professor Giovanni Costigan. University of
Washington, 2 p.m., Lecture Hall One.
Basic Mountain Climbing Seminar
Number One, 8 a.m., (for location, contact
Pete Steilberg, 3185).
Young Life: 4 p.m., Library 1401.
President's Council meeting: noon to 3
p.m., Library 3111
Photography Interest Group: 7:30 p.m.,
Communications and Intelligence Lounge,
2nd floor of Library.
Volleyball: 7 p.m., Washington Junior
High School Gymnasium, Olympia.
Legislative Hearing: Subject: College and
University Salaries. House Office Building
431, State Capitol, 3-5 p.m.
Dance: Noon to 1:30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby.
The Pride and the Shame Exhibit:
Library Reference Section, regular library
hours.
Women of Evergreen meeting: noon sack
lunch, Library 2614.
Film Co-op: noon to 1 p.m., Library
2129.
No Learning Co-Op meeting this week.
SPECIAL:
Professor Giovanni Costigan,
University of Washington Department of
History. Lecture at 2 p.m., Wednesday,
January 26, Lecture Hall One. Sponosred by
Political Action _Group.

Thursday, January 27
The Very First Student Filmakers Film
Festival: 7:30 to 11 p.m. (or so). Lecture
Hall One. Admission 50 cents.
The Pride and the Shame Exhibit:
Library Reference Section, regular library
hours.
Dance: Noon to I :30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby, noon. Featuring Master
Leon Auriol.
Table Tennis Tournement: Single
Steilberg, 3185.)
Thurston County Red Cross Blood
Drawing: 10 a.m. to noon, Health Office.
Evergreen Public Events and Exhibitions
Interest Group: Brown bag lunch, noon,
Library 4004, everyone welcome.
Film Co-op: Noon to 1 p.m., Library
2129.
SPECIAL:

Very First Student Filmmakers Film
Festival: Thursday, Jan. 27, 7:30 p.m.,
Lecture Hall One. Admission 50 cents. Don't
miss it!

Friday, January 28
The Pride and the Shame Exhibit (last
day): Library Reference area, regular library
hours.
Dance: Noon to 1:30 p.m., 3rd floor
Library Lobby.
College Forum: 2:30 to 4 p.m., Library
3112 (agenda open).
Film Co-op: Noon to 1 p.m., Library
2129.
The Evergreen Film Society Presents:
When Worlds Collide (science fiction film
that won and Oscar for special effects). 7
and 9:15 p.m. showings, Lecture Hall One.
Admission 7 5 cents.
WashPIRG meeting: 9 a.m., Room 3319
(possible speaker from state agency).
Gestalt Encounter Group: 3 to 6 p.m.,
Library 3319.
Saturday, January 29
Basic Mountain Climbing Seminar
Number Two in main Library Lobby.
(Details Pete Steilberg, 3185 .)
All-College Cross Country and Road
Running event: 10 a.m., main parking
Jot. Soccer: Woodruff Playfield, 12:30
p.m.
Sunday, January 30
Soccer: Woodruff Playfield, Olympia,
12:30 p.m.

January 24, 1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 3
--------~----------------------~----------------------~----------

More chemical bombs

More defense
An important item in Nixon's
1972 budget is an increase in
defense spending "because of a
need to proceed with new
weapons systems" ... "for a
generation of peace." Amid the
controversy of extreme
wastefulness of the military on
weapons procurement, Nixon is
now asking Congress to increase
funds for the military-industrial
complex lost over the past three
years

VIEWPOINT

More chemical research

State-of-the-Nixon
President Nixon was plugged
in last Thursday to deliver the
state-of-the Union address. In his
ambiguous speech he emphasized
his "advances" in foreign policy
and blamed Congress for stalling
his "most important social
legislation in a decade."
However, Nixon ignored the
problems of minorities, women,
unemployment, poverty, the
environment, health and child
care, and the plight of the
American farms and cities, among
others. He received severe
chastisement in a Democratic
party reply on Friday.

• kle cell and the pill
Ramparts reports that birth
control pills may be dangerous to
large numbers of black women.
Recent articles in medical
journals indicate that women
with sickle cell anemia or the
sickle cell trait may develop
blood clots if they take oral
contraceptives.

the co-operative

staff
Cam Musgrove
Chris Ness

Lester L, Leahy

There's a fascinating item in
the new defense budget, about
$130 million for chemical and
biological warfare research and
weapons procurement.
This is only a bit less than the
military had in 1969 before
President Nixon renou need the
use of biological weapons, even in
retaliation; it was his "initiative
toward peace."
The Army gets $50.8 million
of it for weapons procurement,
twice as much as last year More
than half of that will pay for
"smoke munitions," white
phosphorous antipersonnel
bombs which explode into
names.
Biological
research has
dropped 28 percent since Nixon's
pledge, to $13.2 million. Funds
for chemical warfare are raised to
$29 million in fiscal 1972, to
finance a search for new lethal
and inca pa ci tat in g chemical
agents, dispersion techniques and
defenses.

Ninety-eight percent of the
people who have this disease of
the red blood cells are black.
People with the disease suffer
elongation of the red blood cells,
which starves the blood of
oxygen and causes blood clots.
They rarely live beyond the age
of 30.
The U.S. government has given
very little money to research and
development of a cure, even
though I 0 percent of the blacks
in this country now suffer from
the disease and at least 30
percent carry the trait--a form of
U.S. genocide.
The Ramparts quotes several
doctors from medical journals
who "felt that oral contraceptives
acted as agents precipitating red
blood cell sickling, which in turn
produce blood clotting."

Joe Campo

Bruce Brockmann

Organic farm
"The Paper" Co-operative Library Room 3216,
206-753-3186 (SCAN 8-234-3186), campus extension 3189.
"The Paper" is published for Monday afternoon distribution on a
hand-tomouth, issue-to-issue basis, in lieu of regular, rational funding
from the students, faculty and administration of The Evergreen State
College, Olympia, Washington 98505. Editorial comment expressed
herein does not necessarily represent the views of the TESC
community, since this intended community newspaper is still not
certain if it has even been accepted on such a basis, but rather those of
the individual author. Advertising material presented herein does not
nec~ssarily imply endorsement by this newspaper. Pending completion
of the College Activities Building, newspaper offices are located in
1!- ibrary Room 3216, campus extension 3186.

The organic fam1 needs your
compost. Put vegetable mat.er
into the dumpsters located at the
dorms and mods. They could also
use some tools. If you are
interested, the farm people have
drawn up a book list for organic
farming and are asking for help
f r 0 m p e 0 p 1e w h 0 h a v e
b a c k g r 0 u n d s in anima 1
husbandry. The farm on Lewis
Road is open daily to 4 p.m.

PAGE 4 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE January 24,1972

The big push in chemical
weapons development is behind
the XM 687 155mm binary
weapons system, in which two or
more toxic agents are combined
en route to the target, to become
a lethal compound. The military
can adapt this chemical bomb to
cur rent delivery systems, like
field howitzers, which makes it a
money saver.
The Army plans to replace
existing chemical stockpiles with
the binary weapons system, at a
cost of about $1 billion.
Increased research and
development of weapons,
particularly chemical weapons,
comes at tin1e when the use of
antipersonnel bombs and
chemical agents being unloaded
on Indochina has reached a level
as high as under the Johnson
administration.
Saturation and antipersonnel
bombings, including the new
seven-and-a-half-ton command
vault bomb, can effectively
destroy every living thing within
a mile radius, and maim and
injure anyone within three miles.
More than 1,500 tons of bombs
are dropped on Indochina daily.
The U.S. has replaced most of
its ground troop operations with
an elaborate ''electronic
battlefield" composed of vastly
superior air power, a network of
expensive sensors to detect
"enemy" movements, and a
sophisticated computer system.
Involvement in Indochina has
changed to a war by U.S
computer against the people of
Indochina.

a

Notes from Greenie
These notes come from
Greenie, who is really a very
strange bird. A member of the
family "Great Greencrestcd
Grubgrabbers", he looks at
institutions with his head cocked
to one side and a wry grin upon
his beak.
Today Greenie wonders if you
are happy both with the
dog-in-the-living-unit decision and
with the way it was made?
Democracy, right? 300 yes, 15 no.
So the decision is, "No". Right?
That's fair right? Yeah, that's
democracy all right. All power to
the people ... the right people, that
is.
Well, anyway, Greenie suggests
that if you are happy with that
decision, write a little note about
what you like about it and send it
to Gerald Burke with a note

Political Action
Group meets
The Political Action Group
will meet tonite at 6:30 in 3215
to make final budget refinements
and to plan activities to involve
more students in social and
political projects. Everyone is
urged to attend.

suggesting that it go in his
portfolio. And also include a
carbon copy for Charles McCann
to read (he's president, you
know, and his carbon should be
sent to the President's Office)
And if you didn't like the
decision? Well, read the preceding
paragraph and figure out for
yourself what you ought to do.
That's the Evergreen way ..... !

Sex Center
Right now, a limited amount
of information is available on
campus concerning sex-related
topics, like medical problems
involving contraception.
It may be worthwhile to start
a sex center to provide both men
and women with information of
birth control methods, perhaps as
a counseling service for sexual
problems, to aid in liberation
struggles of women, gays and
straights to improve
communications in the
community of these struggles, or
any number of sex related
problems and interests.
Ideally this sex center would
work in conjunction with the
women's group on campus and
share resources. Also any funding
might come from S and A fees.

As long as talk of The Evergreen State
College has captured the imagination of
student and staff alike, so too have
discussions of its date of death. With regret,
many are now giving it an inevitable life
span of three or four years, before it
becomes "another state college."
It seems that, while the concept of
Evergreen is ready for the educational
world, those within higher education have
not prepared themselves for Evergreen's
heady cha ll enge. By the time attitudes are
realigned to accomodate the opportunity -and res[)onsibility -- of TESC, the dream
will have eased into an apathetic demise.
Three or four years of attempts by
faculty members to relate, to present
meaningful approaches to higher educat ion
will seemingly have been dissipated. The
opportunity
-- and
responsibility -presented to an initial 1,1 00 "pioneers"
and subsequent students will seemingly
have been wasted.
Why?
Discounting inevitability, a major factor
in the fal l of Evergreen's grand design may
well prove to be community members'
inability or unwillingness to convert from
concepts imposed by previous educational
environments, in essence to give the infant
dream a fighting chance. Prejudgement of
The Evergreen State College wi II eventua ll y
make it so.
On a much smaller scale, TESC's mere
stripling
"The
Paper"
has
already
experienced such apparent unwillingness to
try a free form of communication.
The only reason a first edition appeared

Help yourself
last year, some have complained, is that a
few frustrated and bullheaded community
members chose to "railroad" it to
completion.
Wherein just might be the answer.
Now that tangible evidence exists of the
benefits
of
a
community-wide
communications medium in the form of
these first four editions, those bullheaded
activists see a foundation settling into
place, complete with a somewhat hazy
direction. It's going to be easier now to
rally the community to assist with this
widespread form of information dispersal,
they believe, now that a rough idea of this
communication form exists.
The newspaper's situation seemingly can
he related to Evergreen's short I ife span,
~:1ould one choose to believe that too great
a wealth of discussions, memorandums,
plans and procedures have effectively
stifled the possibility of overcom1ng
previous educat ional syndromes. Perhaos a
few
more
bullheaded
individuals,
effectively placed, would be in order.
At this po int, since a Student Fees
Hearing Board is still
setting procedure
and The Evergreen State College, Inc.
would rather not consider just yet

Coffee house?

LETTERS

To all concerned:
There should be a coffee house on
campus or off for the benefit of TESC
students, Olympia High School
Students and people of the Olympia
area. A place for music, poetry,
theater, files, calmness, relaxation,
good vibes, plus a cup of coffee, tea,
or hot cider would be really fine. This
must be possible someway with
people joining together on 3 project
beneficial for all.
I've been helping trying to get
something going. Through lists over
150 have signed that they want a
coffee house. People seem willing to
help operate, decorate, co-ordinate
music contracts, and get together a.
coffee house. Over fifty talented
people signed that they were willing
to play music, jam, read their original
poems, and do drama. Guitarist ,
piano players, singers, harmonica
players, trombonists, and a strip teaser
are all ready and waiting to perform.
What's missing
A place. The
library is no good. One contractor
controls all food services. The
concrete vault we call a library
doesn't really provide an atmosphere
for a coffee house anyway. I could
again ask the organic farmers who
occupy a TESC building on Lewis
Road or the Day Care people on
Driftwood Road--why not a coffee
house?
Somebody out there must have the
solution. Otherwise things will
continue without a coffee house. It's
that simple.
Jonathan North

All letters to The Paper Co-operative are welcome. Such
contributions will be printed as space allows.
In order for letters and guest editorials to be printed, each must
carry the full name as well as the address and local phone number of
the author. Unsigned letters or those submitted with pseudonyms
will not be printed, although names will be withheld on request.
Ordinary correspondence must be typed and limited to 250 words
or less. The Paper Co-{)perative reserves the right to edit for matters
of libel.
Contributions may be submitted to the newspaper office in
Library Room 3216.

branching into the newspaper publishing
business, these first four issues, are being
brought to TESC through the courtesy of
advertisers.
Like Peterson's Foodtown in Westside
Center, they all are graphically proving that
"we think you're great" by picking up the
tab right now for a sorely needed
communicat ms medium. Like Westside
Speed Wash, who will see a good many
Evergreen laundry loads pass before
realizing a profit on their public service
advertisement, all of them want to be a
part of this beginning effort.
Now that it has begun, "The Paper" staff
looks for that ini~ial acceptance, by
patronage of these pioneer advertisers or
mere mention that their involvement is
appreciated, by redirection from passive
consideration to active involvement, by
offers of assistance -- in whatever form -from those able and wi IIi ng to assist.
"The Paper." 1s anything but the
egotistica l brainchild of one or two
individuals. A healthy number of Olympiu
community businesses have already proven
that point. It can also be proved,
unfortunately
quite
absolutely,
by
community
rejection of the
infant
news[)aper.

Notes on Cooper Point
To: "The Paper":
"nearly approved a rezoning
I write this to correct several errors
ordinance to allow unplanned
that appeared in the January 10
residential development of the
a r t1 ere on tile -c·ooper -··p~
o ""
•n
~,,...
~ -;»i!""'e~a!';t
cle!!iaf!!c~
re~
sp:i;•,o*"'•··.-----..J,.._"""'"_ .....a.._ _~ll@lio. .~llill!!!!lll
Association.
It is unclear what the "unorganized
The Peaceacres incident did not
confrontation with the county
prove that the Thurston County
commissioners" in the opening
Commissioners "are willing to give in
paragraph refers to, but the Cooper
to economic pressures for rezoning
Point Association is attempting to
with little if any advanced planning."
establish a relationship of trust and
First of all, the December 16 rezone
co-operation with the local county
request was to the planning
officials; not an air of confrontation.
commission, not the county
The Association believes that the
commissioners. The meeting, in fact,
commissioners and other officials,
although pressured from many angles,
was a near model of participatory
government, with the dialogue flowing
are sincerely attempting to translate
directly between the developers of
the wishes of residents into useful
governmental guidelines. The best
Peaceacres and the residents of the
area, with the planning commission
attitude we can assume is that of
acting as little more than interested
assistant officials in reaching this goal,
by-standers.
rather than taking a negative,
At no time have the commissioners
reactionary role which benefits
no-one.
Chas Stephens
The Evergreen Environment

MECHA says NO!
Tn "The Paper":
No one asked MECHA if they
thought "The Paper" should be
continued or not, but MECHA
usually doesn't wait to be asked
before it expresses itself.
Should "The Paper" die just
because it says it Iike it is,
regardless of opposition to the
views it presents--views which
come from us, the students? Hell,
no!
"The Paper" was appropriatod
some "seed money" and then
told that its short life was coming
to an end.
Maybe "The Paper" isn't
everyone's favorite for
tran~itting and receiving news;
but, let's face it, it's the only one
we have at this time. If you as a
student can sit beck and watch

"The Paper" die, then you are
watching yourself die!
MECHA wasn't asked, so it is
asking you to support "The
Paper" by expressing your
opinion to President McCann,
administrators, faculty, students,
etc.; because, if you wait to be
asked, it may be too late!
MECHA
(Note from "The Paper": We
appreciate MECHA's statement
of support; after producing three
issues, we're relieved that we've
been noticed. Incidentally, we
haven't: received the "seed
money" yet, because of several
technical difficulties, but soon ...
A Iso, !ather than a direct
revelation that our short life was
over, it seems we're being ignored
to death! But last week's
newspaper wasn't printed because
we ran out of advance advertising
revenue, which is a bed way to
run a newspaper, anyway!
Thanks, MECHAI

January 24,1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 5

Check bills before they are lawl
During this special session of
the legislature many bills and
measures have been introduced
that may be of special interest to
members of " .t he Evergreen
Community".
Because of our nearness to the
"seat of power", we have the
opportunity and the obligation to
make our voices heard.
There is a special toll free
number available to state
residents to use. You may find
out the current status of all bills,
committee meetings time and
places, and may have your
message relayed to any member
of the legislature you wish.
The number is l-800-562 6000
You may wish to speak out for or
against the following bills:
HB204, King, D-Everett, Provides
that state laws on the age of
majority may not be used to
deny public assistance to persons
between 18 and 21.
HB-53 . Shera, R-Tacoma,
Provides a no-fault auto insurance
system, excluding drunk drivers,
stolen cars, and other
exclusions .I

SJR 1 06 and HJR61, Bailey,
D-South Bend and North,
R-Seattle, Amends Constitution
to provide equal rights regardless
of sex and martial status.
HC R6, and SC R3, King,
R-Vancouver and Metcalf,
R-Mukilteo, Suggests that schools
use education , police power, and
other programs to eliminate drug
abuse in schools.
SB79, Atwood, D-Seattle,
Provides that irreconciable
differences between spouses are
grounds for divorce, without
regard to fault.

HB127, Conner, D-Sequim,
Establishes a state lottery with
proceeds going primarily to the
education fund.
HB75 - Marzano, D-Tacoma,
Allows the Department of Motor
Vehicles to furnish insurance
companies with information on
certain types of driving violations
as well as accidents.
HB17 6, Lysen, D-Shelton,
Prevents state residents from
being required to serve in
undeclared wars outside of the
United Sta.tes.

SB132, Fleming, D-Seattle,
Restricts insurance companies
from canceling or non-renewing
policies, except for certain
reasons.
SB133, Fleming, D-Seattle,
Prohibits discrimination in
in&urance transactions on the
basis of race, creed, color, or
national origin.
SB136, Atwood, R-Bellingham,
Allows use of initiative and
referendum at county level.
S B13 8 , Fleming,
,D-Sea ttle,
Provides that no liquor licenses
be issued to clubs which
discriminate on the basis of race,
creed, color, or national origin.
HB198, Kuehnle, R-Spokane.
Allows publicity in cases where
juveniles are accused of
committing crimes.

SB8l, Day, D-Spokane, Allows
schools to use their facilities for
feeding elderly persons.

HB177, Hubbard, Requires the
state to pay costs of appeals to
higher courts for persons unable
to pay.

SB9l, Holman, R-Bainbridge
Island, Permits minors to obtain
contraceptive devices without
parental signatures under certain
circumstances.

HB170, Lysen, D-Shelton and
Maxie D-Seattle,
includes.
students between 18 and 21 years
old in the definition of child for
public assistance purposes.

HB198, Kuehnle, R-Spokane,
Exempts vehicles registering for
highway use from registering as
all-terrain vehicles, and allows
certain weapons to be carried on
aTV under certain
circumstances.

HB13l, Chareete, D-Aberdeen,
Limits legislators to terms
totaling twelve years.

HBl84, Julin, D-Seattle, Extends
sales and use tax to motor vehicle
fuel.

SB130, Francis, D-Seattle, Lowers
the legal age to purchase liquor to
18.

HB207, Newhouse, R-Mabton
and Haussler, D-Ornak, makes
numberous changes in liquor
control laws, extenl::ling beer and
wine retailer's licenses and
providing a discount of 2%% for
unbroken case lots, and 7%% for
Class H license holders.
HB215, Conway, R-Olympia,
tightens regulations on rock
fe·stivals, requiring proof of
promoter's financial
responsibility and substancial
property damage insurance, and
requiring a statement from the
Department of Ecology.
HB217,
Maxie, D-Seattle,
defines rights of tenants and
responsibilities of landlords,
requiring landlords to keep
residences in good condition and
providing recourse for grieved
tenants.

These are only a few of the
many measures introduced during
this special session Persons
desiring further information
should call l-800-562-6000 and
request such.
Also take this opportunity to
visit your representative in
person. You've got the vote, use
it.

CF & C weathers promising quarter
Evergreen's Causality,
Freedom and Chance
Co-ordinated Study program, as
luck would have it, has
experienced in its participants "a
lot more diversity than I had any
reason to hope for, and that's
good." Coming from CF&C's
co-ordinator Will Humphrys, the
recent assessment was realistically
promising of students and faculty
on a broad-base, "I was worried
that I might get a very
homogeneous group," he
recalled,"'where everyone would
be from the same background,
same high school, and same level
of education:' That hasn't been
the case and Humphrys is
thankfuL "I didn't think it would
be a fair test of the program to
have a group of people who were
much the same in their outlook
and orientation," he said.
One advantage the Causality
program has vver others,
Humphrys pointed out, is its .
ability to encompass a larger area.
Most students can find an area of
interest within the program on
which to base a career.
Differences in the Causality
program from when it was first
conceived reflected "mainly in
what we couldn't do because of
technical hangups: things not
being here, or the library not
being opened."· The Program
d•irection hasn't changed except
by a consensus of the faculty.
"We don't lay anything on the
students unless all five of us are
sure that's what we want to try
and push, Humphrys said.
Will had much to say on the
decision making process within
the coordinated studies groups.
He felt that the coordinated
studies program has to be faculty
run, because you are trying to

hold a group of people together
with different interests and
different objectives. "I think
we've fallen down in having
meetings where students could
say what they wanted to have
happen", he said. "We seldom
hear the complaints directly. I get
it by having the faculty coming
to me and saying 'hey, the
students in my group want', and I
say'alright Monday morning lets
talk about it.' Its a bad way to

his own education for the most
part. I can't hold you responsible
for whether someone else gets
anything out of Evergreen or
not."
A majority rule setup would
change a persons role as a student
in a very radical sense, he feels. In
that under majority rule a person
should be held accountable for
what he does to another person,
"but there is no way to hold you

accountable if you're a student."
Under the evaluation scheme
contracted here the
administration has a "handle"
and a certain kind of control over
what the faculty does, he said.
"We can be held responsible for
decisions that we make, and that
wouldn't be the case if students
made the decisions."
What happens if a student
really has a gripe about whats

'Computer' explains
paper wage - salaries
The item of salaries mentioned
in the budget proposed by "The
Paper" Co-operative is not
"nor mal" salary system. The
total amount requested, $108
weekly, will be used for payment
of co-operative members on a
novel wage-salary system.

Will Humphrys
proceed. The students don't see it
happen and don't realize their
complaints are being discussed."
He doesn't like the
situation either, whe~e decision
on what a program does are made
in a mass meeting of a hundred
people and the people with the
loudest voice can shout everyone
down. If the majority wanted to
do a certain thing then the
minority would be forced to go
along with it, and that isn't good
either he said. Will stated, "A
student comes here and he's on
his own and he's responsible for

The $108 each we,ek is broken
down into 60 units. representing
hours, of $1.80 each.
At the close of each issue,
members of the co-operative who
have worked in the publication
areas of the paper turn in their
total number of hours per week
in each of the publication fields.
Each of these totals is then
computed with that field's
respective hour ratio value
( e x a m pIe : 5 h o u r s
copyreading/proofreading 5
hours; 5 hours typing :::; 2.5
hours).
Total ratio hours for each
member is then totaled, resulting
in the total hours to be paid for
that week. This number of hours
is always considerably larger than

60; therefore, a ratio is set up
between the total number of
hours to be paid and the 60 units.
This ratio is then multiplied with
the total number of hours for
each person, yielding the number
of units each member of the
co-operative worked.
The number of units for each
member is then multiplied by the
value of one unit ($1.80), which
gives the portion of the $108 to
which each member is entitled.
Don't worry about our poor
bookkeeper going crazy with all
this work--the computer has been
programed to take care of it all.

going on in the Causality
program, he was asked? "The
first thing they should do," he
said, "is raise it with the faculty
and say'S top It', If they don't get
any satisfaction there they can go
to the academic deans who are
independent of us so they don't
have any particular axe to grind.
If a delegation goes down to see ·
Dean Cadwalder and says 'Hey,
the Causality faculty are
unreasonable, we've talked to
them and haven't gotten any
satisfaction; what are you going
to do about it?', then he's on the
spot to do something. If he
doesn't, then you send a note to
the President and say that the
deans won't back up the students
demands."
Will felt that it would be a
very effective system if the
student would use it. He would
like to see the mechanism tried,
although "I don't want to be the
test case," he stated.
His plans regarding next year
are uncertain. He may work in
another coordinated studies
program under a different
coordinator, although he would
like to work in contracted
studies. He felt that with his
varied background in Math,
History of Science, History of
Philosophy and Music Theory he
could be much help.

Records, Tapes, TVs, Stereos

4th & CAPITOL WAY



10 to 5:30, Mon.-Sat.; 10 to 8, Fri.; 12 to 5, Sun.

PAGE 6 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE January 24,1972
----~--~--~~--------------------------------------~----~~------~--~--------~~

Lo,al WashPIRG forming
In the 1960's, persistent but
long ignored social problems
came to the public eye. Poverty,
racism, malnutrition,
environmental destruction and
consumer fraud surfaced. The
emergence of these problems
created unparallelled awareness
and concern among the general
public. A new determination to
right the wrongs developed. But
as the search for solutions
proceeded, we encountered new
obstacles: the public and private
institutions entrusted with power
and responsibility for solving
these newly recognized problems
seemed mired in unresponsiveness
and inefficiency. We learned that
nutritious foods and safe
effective drugs were
not
guaranteed by the existence of
the Food & Drug Administration.
We learned that the War on
Poverty was submerged in
bureaucratic inefficiencies and
the endless red tape of
government agencies.
In the late 60's and early 70's,
these realizations gave rise to a
new kind of organization: the
citizen public interest group. The
move to give voice and power to
the public interest is based upon
the belief that long-range

interests of the average citizen
will continue to be neglected by
decision-makers until private
economic decisiems which have
an impact on the public welfare
are , thoroughly studied and
discussed; government policy
takes into consideration the views
and needs of more groups in
society; and new methods are
developed to insure consideration
of the public interest in private
economic decisions and
government policy.
Students were far from
immune to the problems and
challenges of the 60's. They came
to colleges and universities
equipped with a high level of
social awareness, eager to learn
how to deal competently with
the forces of social injustice_
Their expectations were met with
disappointment. Students quickly
discovered that the educational
process did not encourage or
train them to grapple with real
problems affecting real people, or
provide direction for seeking
positive social change. As a result,
many students found themselves
leading a schizophrenic existence:
their responsibilities as students
seemed totally removed from
their responsibilities as concerned

citizens. The student movement
remained tied to the cycles of
academic life. Activities occurred
when exams and vacations did
not. Staying power, a crucial
factor in any attempt at social
problem-solving, was sadly
lacking.
The 60's produced an
abundance of student energy and
idealism without a viable
methodology. Because the
structures, tools and continuity
needed to identify and address
manageable problems were not
available, this energy flowed into
massive, crisis-oriented social
protests--the futility and
inhumanity of Vietnam, the
violence of racism, the
destruction of our life support
systems. Although
demonstrations and sit-ins did
focus attention on irresponsible
act i vi te s conducted in the
public's. name but at its expense,
that form of action did not
achieve the goal of eliminating
the problems.
The problems of the 70's will
be different from those of the
60's but no less pernicious.
Racism, no longer announced by
a "whites only" sign, lies buried
in such things as institutionalized

hiring and promotional practices.
To unearth, verify and deal with
these less tangible problems
required
a new kind of
inter.,riisciplinary cooperation,
expertise and commitment. The
methods of social change used in
the past will not answer the needs
of today or of the future. We
must evolve new techniques, new
tools, new strategies. We are just
beginning to find many o,f these
at Evergreen. Unfortunately,
most of them deal only with the
individuals themselves and do not
incorporate any large numbers of
people necessary for social
change. Student public interest
research groups are one possibly
way for us to form ourselves into
an effective group for social.
change.
The Washington Public
Interest Research Group will be a
cooperative statewide effort of
college and university students
from public and private
institutions to develop new
methods aad tools to deal with
problems of consumer fraud
(from aul·l repair practices to
food pricing and dating
practicn), environmental
protf'::tion (from resource
planning to inner city decay), and
corporate and governmental
responsibility as related to the
consumer and the environment.

efforts to effect positive social
change have suffered from
diffusion and lack of direction,
.the Washington Public Interest
Research Group will provide a
focus for students to join in
concerted action on problems
which concern
Evergreen's
next group meeting will be at 9
a.m. Friday, Jan 29., in room
3319.

107

TAVERN
BEER
WINE
POOL

Hot Popcorn
Machine
Good Music
Latest LP
System
(Rather than
jukebox)
Pool
Pinball
Machines
Sandwiches
Refreshments

Recognizing that past student

107 N. Capitol Way
Olympia, Wa.

Library open,
Members of the Evergreen
community who are hung-up on
books (and aren't we all?),
rejoice! The TESC Library is now
50 per cent open and openly
welcomes shelf browsers in need
of printed pages to fill their
befuddled minds.
Half of the shelves on the
third floor of the Library
building, where the Library is
conveniently located, opened late
last week to book browsers and
other known education freaks .
The place is still under a little
bit of that gray cloud called
inventory, so the remaining half
of the third floor is still "off
limits," for a short time at least.
Do not lose heart, however,
the library does have a system to
retrieve the books from the now
"off limits" shelves upstairs. The
only problem in this system is
this: you have to find the call
number of the book you want.
The means to the information is

~

'\\G

\\~

the micro-film readers. If you
haven't used a film reader yet, go
the library and try using one.
They are a charm!!!
If you are gifted with speed
vision or steel eyeballs the
micro-film readers will present no
problem. But il you are like the
rest of us, it might take a little
perserverence to get your book.
Don't lose heart, though;
surely that book is worth it. Who
knows, you may find these rigors
valuable training in your
profession--if it happens to be
reading numbers off a train
travelling at 100 miles per hour.
If you are still bound and
determined to get a book or just
want to look around and talk to
someone, the library hours are set
up very good for you late night
people: Monday - Thursday, 8
a.m. to Midnight; Friday 8 a.m.
to 9 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. to 9
p m ., and Sunday I p.m. to
Midnight.

LEVEL

Free Parking

·A

~/Qj

One Stop Shopping
Open 7 Days A Week

·-

SeA MART
SH0 P PING 14J#Ir.6e&
'

-

500 Capitol Way, Olympia
.,..·._
·""' .. ·._........._,....._.,..._..J....___

~

/A

library services loans equipment
Media Loan in Evergreen's
Library may well prove to be the
TESC community's undoing. But,
as one sage put it, "what a
beautiful way to go."
Card-carrying Evergreeners can
obtain a wealth of audio-visual,
and photographic
cinema
equipment, from super-8 and
16mm cameras and projectors to
battery-operated video tape
cameras and recorders. The
Library, acting for the college,
purchased equipment for all and
now maintains and loans this
variety of material as a resource
service.
Every member of the
Evergreen community has equal

access to the vast array of
projectors, recorders, editors,
cameras and accessorites, states
the Library's Position Paper No.
8. Conditions are that borrowed
equipment must be used only for
"learning situations" or
credit-related purposes. If
necessary, a competitive rental
program in the future may allow
college-related groups to "use
1 o a n e quip men t in
money generating activities," the
position paper continues.
Although extended. loan
periods can be arranged in
advance for field trips and
retreats, the usual guaranteed use
period is 24 hours from the time

that Media Loan director Yves
Duverglas and his assistantshave
an Evergreener sign his or her life
away.
"'Which brings avid readers of
this article to the potentially bad
news--responsibility for the
loaned equipment. Although an
optional damage insurance policy
exists with faily high premiums
and base deductable amounts, the
borrower is obligated to replace
lost or stolen equipment.
As several members of the
Evergreen community will attest,
the Library intends to collect
suchdebtsrapidly,sincenoother
funds for replacement equipment
exist.

January 24,1972 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE PAGE 7

Sharepickers

Fun city?
By KEN BALSLEY
If you are a stranger to our
fair community, no doubt you
have experienced some
difficulties in finding appropriate
and pleasant place to reaJax
"downtown". This is intended to
help you in selecting the right
place, if you venture
"Downtown" for whatever turns
you on.
Bus rides are free, for the rest
of January, so your
transportation problems are over
(for one more week, anyway) as
soon as you get downtown or to
the West side. Bus schedules are
available from the drivers or at
the Evergreen Library
Information Center.
To make certain that you have
a minimum of future.
transportation problems, stop by
the Info Center, second floor
Library lobby, to sign the bus
petition for service from town to
the campus. The new Olympia
bus commissioner wants to
reconsider the possibility of a
route to Evergreen, and intends
to bring the matter before the
February commission meeting.
He needs our input. ·
EATING:
All of our Drive In's offer the
same fare, cheap and poor, with
few exceptions . You have
probably become familiar with
"Bob's Big Burgers", on Harrison.
The food is of poorer quality
than most, but he is making an
effort to obtain the students
business and even offers on
campus delivery for a small fee of
25 cents. If the food quality
improves, then by all means avail
yourself of the service and help
support one of the newer Drive
In's in the Olympia Area.
The "A & W" on Legion Way
has good Drive In food for the
price. Check it out.
There are two "Rib Eye"
restaurants in the Olympia Area.
One on the East Side at the end
of Fourth Ave, and one in
Tumwater. Their main advantage

is that they are open 24 hours.
The food is of moderate price
and moderate quality. There is a
50 cent booth charge, so if you
just want to drink coffee and
talk, forget it.
"The Divot" on Black Lake
Blvd, offers good food, good
service and a moderate price.
Their Cheeseburgers are 80 cents
but are of good size and will will
you up. One order of fries is big
enough for two. Try one. They
close at 10 p.m. on weekends.
Unless you are amply
endowed with an unlimited
supply of funds, avoid such
places as "The Governor House",
"Jaccaranda", "Tyee", "The
Evergreen Inn", "Golden
Carriage", and the "Falls
Terrace". If you are celebrating
and feel that you must splurge
then I recommend "The Golden
Carriage" for good food, and
"The Governor House" for
atmosphere, although at the
"Governor House", unless you
are appropriately dressed your
seat will be at the rear behind the
potted plants.

and because of this, they check
I.D. closely.
The "Melody Lane" in Lacey
has only one thing going for it,
"The Mud Bay Blues", probably
the best "Boogie" band in the
area. They start at 9 p.m. on
Friday and Saturday nights, and
the price of booze is jacked up
when they start playing. I.D. is
not checked as close but is still
checked. A few other taverns in
passing. "B.J .'s" has folk music
on Tuesday nights. "Al's" out in
Nisqually has cheap prices and
doesn't check I.D. as close as
others. The G.I's from Fort Lewis
like it. Stay away from "The
Brotherhood'' and the "Eastside
Club"; lumberjacks and
longshoremen. All of the taverns
offer beer, wine, and pool.
Jukebox selections are poor in
most cases. Unless you are a good
pool player, find out how much
you are playing for, it is usually
two bits. Beware of the old men
on the pool table, most of them
are hustlers.
Most of the "Cocktail
Lounges" offer live music. Two
of the best are at the
"Japcaranda" and "The
Evergreen Inn", but the price of
drinks are to high to warrant a
trip to them.

DRINKING AND
DANCING: It is hard to
separate the two, but I will try ,
There are probably only three
taverns worthy of mention. "Ali
DANCING:
Baba's" on Fourth Ave. is the
The only place to dance in the
newest tavern in town. It offers area if you are under 21 is at the
Pool, Drinking, and Dancing, all "Green". Their bands are mostly
in separate areas. They have live poor, sometimes fair, and
music only on Sunday nights , If occasionally good. Any age can
"Fast Company" is ptay1fTgt'l'y It get in, but you must be 18 fo get
out. They jack their prices up to out again and avoid paying twice.
50 cents a schooner and 2.00 a If you don't mind competing
pitcher when the music starts, so with "Teenie Boppers", "G.I.s"
try and be there before 7:30p.m. and occasional Sheriff
I.D. is required and is usually harrassment, go .
checked at the door.
St. Martins Pavilion and KGY
"The 107 Tavern" on Capitol sometimes book a halfway decent
Way has a different atmosphere band. If one comes that you care
for this town. It aims its appeal at about try it out.
"Long Hairs" and the "Hipple"
Well, there is your guide. I will
type. There is no band and no make no apologies for it. I have
dancing but there is FM music at partaken and participated in all
all times. It has taken much that I wrote about. If further
harrassment from the local P.D.. • information is desired, see me.

Mason Williams has once again
deviated from his normal popular
and classical guitar routine in his
latest effort entitled,
Sharepickers, (Warner Bros., WS
1941). Sharepickers confirms this
writer's suspicions, which began
with Williams' previous album,
Handmade, that the author of the
Infamous "Classical Gas" is
gradually switching over to a
mixture of blues-grass and
popular guitar from the more
poetic· contemporary music
evident in his flowering on the
Smothers Brothers and his first
four albums.
Another apparent deviation is
that this album is more of
Williams' concert style than any
other albums outside of
Handmade, in that a good deal of
the material is performed by the
back-up crew. Bill Cunningham

performssome excellent
renditions of some traditional
fiddle tunes, and Rick Cunha,
both a guitarist and vocalist, adds
a few interesting original
folk-blues compositions.
Unfortunately and noticably
missing from this album is pianist
Bhen Zanzarone from New York
City, who in the past has
complemented the group
superbly with a kind of Elton
Johnish stytt:. Williams himself
adds only a few new cuts to the
album, typified by "Here I Am
Again", which has the definite
folksy blues-grass influence in
lyrics and melody most decidely
brought out by Cunningham's
good twanging on the dobra. All
in all, it's another good album: .
but for this writer, not enough
actual Williams material.
-.Craig Apperson

Westside Speed ·Wash
1214 WEST HARRISON

OPEN

8 a.m. - 10 p.m.

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

Unclassified

Sight Point Institute Is an
experimental summertime community
of scholars which Is being set up by a
group of Reed College students. It will
be located on a farm on the coast of
Nova Scotia, and In essence will be a
small community of no more than 25
students who have gotten together to
live and study with one another
during the summer In a free and
Informal atmosphere. If you are
Interested in coming, write to Alan
WIH-""'" liiOIII i.*IUo, Raed Colleaa,
Portland, Ore. 972.02.

FOR SALE: Two 4-foot gro-lux
mounted on heavy plywood sheets
complete with extension wiring, extra
starters and sockets for four more
tubes If desired. All practically new
and selling for $30, the price of the
starters alone. See John, Oorm A-Rm .
812C, 7534794.

January 24, "Toklat"; January
25, Community Concert (By
Rental); January 26 -· February
6, "Lady and the Tramp" and

I THINK I WENT OUT THE
THI RO FLOOR WINOOW'
By MARVIN WAYNE WRIGHT
There was two of them, one In
the room with me. One was In
the hall keeping the others
occupied while the one In the
room bared her fangs and dealt
the blow to my back and
laughed, "Too sensitive," with a
knife. I was hurt - not mortally,
just superficially. I think part of
It hit my heart, not bad though . I
was lucky to get up. I think I
went out the window. I was
lucky to get up at all . It was a
third floor window! I lose again!
Off the team for good!

January 22 -· January 29, "Light
at the Edge of the world" and

"Mercenary''.

"Pollfax".

We all forget about bringing
our books back, but...
there are a few that are important enought to remember. The library is
missing volume 15 of the Encyclopedia Brittanica, volume 16 of
Collier's Encyclopedia, and Programmed Learning: a Bibliography by
Hendershott.
Taking these reference books out of the library is a little like borrowing
someone!; left front tire, (and no, we don't have a spare) so anyway we,
and especially the rest of the people who use the library, would
appreciate the return of these items.
We kind of like books too, so we understand, and no, you won't get a
black star next to your name, and we won't present you to a firing
squad; well, maybe a few lashes with a cat- o -nine... (bring them back,
please?)

Clyde Beatty
(bring 'em back alive)

I.IMAIV
MOM U07

·~

..

for The Library Group
P.S. "The Foundation Directory," too.

Now Would Be Time to Open Your New Account
a paid political advertisement

SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK
PAGE 8 THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE January 24,1972