cpj0146.pdf
Media
Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 5, Issue 18 (April 7, 1977)
- extracted text
-
Vol. 5 No. 18
The Evergreen State College
Scientific
Resear~
by Brad Pokorny
It is unusual for undergraduate students
to do original scientific research. Relatively few schools around the nation have the
facilities the faculty, or the desire to
encourage their students to get into the
laboratn~ and try to make discoveries.
At TJ,lrgreen, there are several ongoing
faculty projects that allow students to
ent ~r the lab, work on basic research,
~, perhaps, originate work of their
own. Three projects stand out: Betty
Kutter and Burt Guttman's work in
molecular biology, Richard Cellarius and
Jeff Kelly's work in photosynthesis, and
Mike Beug and Steve Herman's work in
environmental studies. All of these faculty
members have students work with them
on their grants, and all have helped
students write their own -- with excellent
success. Guttman said that students at
Evergreen manage to get more S.O.S. Student Originated Study - grants than do
a proportional number of students at any
other college in the country.
Bacteriophage T - 4
Under an electron microscope it looks
so mew hat like the lunar lander. T -4
bacteriophage are viruses that attack
bacteria, specifically the E. Coli bacteria.
These mechanistic viruses land on E. Coli
and inject a thin thread of DNA, the
molecule that codes all of the life
processes. The T -4's DNA takes over the
bacteria's metabolic processes and forces
it to make more T-4 viruses. T~e cell
produces until it bursts, scattering more
bacteriophage to infect other E. Coli .
Betty Kutter and Burt Guttman have
been using the T -4 bacteriophage in
genetic studies because the bacteriophage
is so simple. T -4's DNA has only about
200 genes, according to Guttman. Even
the simplest bacteria have several thousand genes. Each gene is a segment of the
DNA molecule that codes the manufacture of a particular protein . ·
Kutter and Guttman are studying the
genetic system of the T -4 bacteriophage
on a $68,000 grant they received from the
National Science Foundation (NSF) .
Different students have been working on
and off at the research, learning many of
the various lab techniques involved in
genetic study. "What we're doing here is
basic research," said Guttman . "The
philosophy has always been that the more
you learn about the universe, the better
the chance that you will discover some
practical benefits.
"Betty has had this lab set up for about
four years now," Guttman continued.
\
.
Student Andrea Dashe filters a1
photosynthesis.
''Students can come in here and start
working, and"w.it_hin a few months they
can develop the basic skills they need so
they can begin to do some more original
research on their own." Guttman said
that this type of experience was not
always so readily available at other
schools.
·
Diane Morton has been working with
Kutter on the T-4 research all year. She
has specifically been studying gene No. 42
on the T -4's DNA. Morton said that her
work with the T -4 research was ''an
important factor" in getting accepted at
the Molecular Biology Institute at the
Univedrsity of Oregon for graduate
studies. "It gave me an advantage over
other students in that I have worked on
actual research projects."
Guttman thinks that one advantage of
doing basic research early in a student's
education is the opportunity to find out if
they enjoy and have the aptitude for
research work.
Man-made Leaves
Photosynthesis is the process in which
plants use chlorophyiJ to capture the sun~s
energy and store it as carbohydrates and
tissue. It is a highly efficient process at
certain stages, producing energy at up to
35 - 40 percent efficienty.
Faculty members Richard Cellarius and
Jeff Kelly are working under a two-year
$132,000 NSF grant to determine how
chlorophyll traps light energy, and to see
The Tuition Bills Mo
by Karrie Jacobs
.After several weeks of mulling over
information gathered during two weeks of
hearings, the House Higher Education
Committee decided not to endorse any of
the proposed tuition bills that were in
question in February. Instead, they
gleaned choice sections of the existing
bills, softened the objectionable portions
to an extent, and came up with Substitute
House Bill 312.
The stated intention of 312 is to alter
the cost of tuition so that it "reflects" the
cost of instruction, rather than sliding
upwards in direct correlation to ·rising
educational costs.
UNCLEAR AND UNCERTAIN
The concept of tuition "ieflecting" costs
seemed a little unclear and uncertah . so I
spoke with two members of the House
higher Education Committee to try and
find out just what the committee meant
by that and why it was included in the
bill . Joseph Enbody, a Democrat from
Centralia, said, 'We thought that there
had to be some justification somewhere
for either raising or lowering the tuition."
Enbody's statement didn't really clarify
anything, so I spoke with Rep. William
Bums, a Democrat from King County. He
denied responsibility for that particular
portion of the bill, attributing it to Dan
Grimm. However, he did have some
thoug}us on the· issue. 'We tried to keep
from tying the cost of tuition to that of
instruction because we were unsure of
how to determine the cost of instruction,"
he said. "For example, is it the cost of
running the institution, building maintenance, grounds, etc., or is it just the cost
of paying professors and lab fees7 Then
there's the thing about teachers' salaries
being controlled by tuition. 0
The main differences between SHB 312
and previous bills seem to be in wording
rather than intent, with the exception of
the elimination of the controversial
~~Manpower Shortage Clause." Of course,
no matter how the wording of the bill is
altered to quell opposition to its passage,
no matter what adjustments are made to
appease angry students or cautious
legislators, 312's ultimate effects will be
the same as any of the previous bills
introduced into the legislature: it will
Washington 98505
April 7, 1977
1
b. At Evergreen
I would say that there were few , if any,
undergraduates that got the kind of
research experience that students are
getting on our project ."
Columbia Fluorides
to Harbor Seals
-
if it is possible to collect this energy and
transform it into electricity. The end
result might be some sort of man-made
leaves, green solar cells, that would be
twice as efficient as the present costly
silicon wafer cells. Cellarius said such a
device is a long way off.
About eight students have worked with
Cellarius and Kelly at various times since
the· project began last summer. One of the
(lifficulties in making chlorophyll trap
light energy, instead of just emitting it
right back out, has to do with the
distance between the chlorophyll molecules in the plant membrane. One
student, Andrea Dashe, has been working
on the spacing of the chlorophyll on the
artificial membrane that Cellarius and
Kelley are experimenting with.
"What I did," said Dashe, "was test a
number of . different lipids -- which are a
family of long-chained carbon molecules
- to see how they affected the spacing of
the chlorophyll dimers. [A dimer is two
molecules stuck together.) In doing this
we found that some of our results did not
iibe with other published findings . I hope
to produce a paper out of that research ."
Dashe said that it was rare tor
undergraduates to work as closely with
faculty as people do here .
Cellarius agrees that the opportunities
at other schools to do undergraduate
research are rare. ''I taught at the
University of Michigan for six years, and
The most wide-ranging research at
Evergreen has probably been done in
environmental science. Mike · Beug and
Steve Herman's Ecology and Chemistry of
Pollution (ECOP) coordinated studies
program, which began in the fall of 1973,
in some ways set the tone for student
projects dealing with the environment.
During that program, and since, many
students have received grants to do
original research. For example, just this
week students John Calambokidis and Jim
Cabbage learned that treir $15,100 grant
proposal to study the effects of chlorinated hydrocarbon residues (PCBs, DDT,
etc.) on the births of harbor seals in Puget
Sound has been accepted by the NSF.
Steve Herman helped Cajambokidis write
the grant and will serve as the project
advisor, but almost all the research will
be done by the eight students the grant
calls for. (Calambokidis is the student
project director.)
According to Mike Beug, Calambokidist
project grew indirectly out of other
student research that began in ECOP.
"When ECOP was runnin~." said Beug,
"we investigated the levels and effects of
fluorides along the Columbia River . We
investigated the eff~cts of lead and
cadmium from the smelters in northern
Idaho -- looking at soils, plants, and small
mammals. We had a group that studied
the effects of forest management practices
in insect outbreaks. We had another
g roup looking at the distribution of
polychlorinated biphenyls [PCBs 1in Puget
Sot;1nd . And that stuHy has lead into John
Calambokidis' grant to study PCB eftects
in harbor seals."
"Students have an outstanding opportunity here to do .individual research .··
Beug continued . " Unfortunately many
students attempt to start research before
they are proeerly prepared. And they
consequently wind up with an inadequate
breadth of J...nowledge in their field .
" The situation is at least partly
redeemed by the fact that some students
go back and fill in gaps in their
education, and / or learn how to dig out
material by themselves. And when this
happens, that's o~e of the most effective
things that we do at Evergreen."
Likely To ·s ucceed
...
raise tuition . If 3U is passed, the cost of
tuition for a full-time resident student a.t a
state four-year college will rise from the
present $507 to $564 during the 1977-78
school year, and will increase again to
$621 during 1978-79. Non-resident student
tuition would go from $1,359 a year to
$1,734 in the coming school year, and
would jump to $2,091 in }978-79.
Meanwhile,· the Senate has been
cooking up a tuition bill of its own. The
Senate Ways and Means and Higher
Education Committees have been holding
joint meetings to draft a yet unnumbered
bill which would adjust tuition bienially
to the cost of education.
Every new bill has a twist and this one
is no exception. It would set university
tuition at 25 per cent of the cost of
The bill contains a section that is
education with the service and activities
concerned with the need for adjusting
fee as a percentage of tuition. The 25 per
financial aid allotments to needy students
cent rate only applies to the two
in order to keep up with the climbing
universities. The other colleges would
tuition rates. The section states in part
base their fees on a percentage of the
that "needy. students no,t be deprived of
universities' fees. Four-year state colleges
access to their education due to increases
would pay 80 per cent of university
in educational costs or tuition anq fees,"
tuition .
and provides that a percentage of
These two bills may be the last in a
increased revenue due to tuition hikes be
long series of tuition hike moves, or they
channeled into financial aid funds .
might be the beginning of a whole new
312 is currently being held in cold
set. The sponsors of SHB312 hope to get
storage in the House Rules Committee
it throuWl the house unamended and the
until it gets called to the floor for
sponsors of the Senate bill have not yet
discussion. It probably won't get there 'till
had time to plan their strategy. It seems
next week because, according to Rep .
that whatever happens at the legislature
Bums, 'We've been very busy trying to
will turn up in our mail boxes in next
define..basic education."
_ ~_billing envelopes.
VoL 5 No. 18
The Evergreen State College
Scientific Reseal
by Brad Pokorny
It is unusual for undergraduate students
to do original scientific research. Relatively few schools around the nation have the
facilities the faculty, or the desire to
encourage their students to get into the
laborat.Jry and try to make discoveries.
At I vergreen, there are several ongoing
faculty projects that aJiow stu~nts to
enttt the lab. work on basic research,
~· perhaps, originate work of their
own. Three projects stand out : Betty
Kutter and Burt Guttman' s work in
molecular biology, Richard Cellarius and
Jeff Kelly's work in photosynthesis, and
Mike Beug and Steve Herman's work in
environmental stnrl ;~ All ~f •'-~- f~ - .h• •
members have
o n their grant
students write 1
success. Guttm
Evergreen man;
Student Origina
a proportional 1
other college in
Bact·
Under an ele
~o mewhat lik1
bac teri o phage
bacteria, specifi
These mechanis
and inject a tl
mo lecule that
processes. The
bacteria's metal
it to make me
prod uces until
bactenophage II
Bett y Kutter
been usang th
genet1c studies
1s ~o s1mple. T
200 genes, ace•
the s1mples1 ba
s.Jnd genes. E..c
DNA molecule
ture of a partiCI.
Kutter and (
genetic system
on a $68,000 gr.
Nati o nal Scie1
Different studert
and off at the r
the various lal
genetic study. "
basic research
philosophy has _ - , - -~-· --• uoc UIUR:
you learn about the uniwne, the better
the chance that you will discover some
practical benefits.
"Betty has had this lab set up for about
fo ur years now," Guttman continued.
CORRE
This Document Has I
To Assur
cutain staga, producing enersy at up to
35 - 40 peunt dfidenty.
Faculty members Richard Cellarius and
Jeff Kelly are working under a two-yea(
$132,000 NSF grant to dt>termine how
chlorophyll traps light energy, and to see
The Tuition Bills M
by ~Carrie Jacobs
After several weeks of mulling over
information pthered dwins two weeka of
hearings, the Houte Higher Education
Committee decided not to endone any of
the propoted tuition billa that were in
question in February. Instead, they
gleaned choi~ sections of the existing
bills, softened the objectionable portions
to an extent, and came up with Substitute
House Bill 3U.
The stated intention of 3U is to alter
the cost of tuition so that it "~ecta" the
cost of instruction, rather than sliding
upwards in direct correlation to ·rising
educational costs.
UNCLEAR AND UNCERTAIN
The concqn of tuition "reflecting" costs
seemed a little unclear and uncertain, so I
spoke with two member-s of the House
higher Education Committee to try and
find out just what the committee meant
by that and why it was included in the
bill . Joseph Enbody, a Democrat from
Centralia, said, "We thousht that there
ha~ to be some justification somewhere
for either raising or lowerins the tuition."
Enbody's statement didn't really clarify
anything, so I spoke with Rep. William
Burns, a Democrat from King County. He
denied responsibility for that particular
portion of the bill, attributing it to Dan
Grimm. However, he did have some
thoushts on the issue. 'We tried to keep
from tying the cost of tuition to that of
instruction because we were unsure of
how to determine the cost of Instruction,"
he laid. "For example, is it the cost of
running the institution, building maintenance, grounds, etc., or is it just the cost
of paying professors and lab fea7 Then
there's the thing about teachers' salaria
being controlled by tuition."
The main differmcti between SHB 3U
and previous billa seem to be in wonfin&
rather than intent, with the exception of.
the elimination of the controversial
"Manpower Shortaae Oaute." Of coutH,
no matter how the wording of the bill iJ
altered to quell oppoeltion to its passage,
no matter what adjustments are made to
appease angry students or cautious
legislators, 312's ultimate effecta will be
the same as any of the previous bills
introduced into the leaislature : it will
April 7, 1977
~dh
At Evergreen
I would say that there were few. 1f any .
that got the kmd of
research experience that s tudent s are
getting on our project "
Columbia Auorides
to Harbor Seals
und~rgraduates
The most wide-rangt.ng research at
has probably been done in
environmental science. Mike Beug and
Steve Herman's Ecology and Chemistry of
Pollution (ECOP) coordinated studaes
program. which began in the fall of 1973.
in some ways set the tone for student
projeds dealin& with the environment.
DwirlR that DT04ttllm. and sance . many
grants to do
1\p)e, ji..St thiS
okidis and Jim
$15,100 grant
s of chlonnatEv~rgreen
(PCBs, DDT.
-- CTION
3een Rephotographed
e Legibility
u~ouates to wor111. as CJO!ot'IY w•u•
facutty .. people do hen.
Cellarius agrees that the opportunities
at other schools to do undergraduate
research are rare . " I taught at the
Unaversity of Michigan for s1x years, and
:>st Likely To
raiH tuition . If 312 is ~ . the cost of
tuition for a full-time resident atudent at a
state four-year college will rise from the
praent $507 to $564 during the 1977-78
school year, a.nd w UI in<nase again to
$621 during 1978-79. Non-resident student
tuition would go from $1,359 a year to
$1,134 In the coming school year, and
w'ould jump to $2.091 in 1978-79 .
~ bill contains a section that is
concerned with the neflt for adjusting
fina.ndal aid allotmentJ to neflty atudentJ
in order to keep up with the climbing
tuition rates . The $«lion statf'l in part
that "nftdy stud~nt.s not be depriwd of
accas to their education due to in<nases
in educational costs or tuition a.nd fees."
and provides that a percentage of
in<nased rnenu~ due to tuition hikes be
cN.nneled Into fina.ndal aid funds.
312 ia CUil'ftltly being held in cold
atorqe in the House Rules Committ~
\llllil it gets called to the floor for
discuuion. It probably won't get there 'Ull
next w~k becaUM, according to Rep.
Burna, 'We've been very busy trying to
define baaJc education."
· seals an Puget
by the NSF
1lbokidis write
as the project
! ~arch will
e.nts the grant
tS the student
Calambokadis
out of other
a.n in ECOP
~.. sa ad' Beug.
a.nd effects of
bia Raver We
of lead and
r• m northern
rnt s. and small
p that stud1ed
·ment practices
had another
1Stnbut1o n ot
PCBs 1an Puget
lead mto John
:iy PCB eftect~
anding opporual re<.earch
Jnatel y manr
e~«arch before
!d. And thev
an inadequate
·ir field .
least partl y
redeemed by the fact that some students
to back and fill in gaps in their
education. and / or learn how to dig out
matenal by themselves And when thas
happens. that's one of the most effective
thangs that we do at Evergreen."
~ucceed
Meanwhile. the Senate has been
cooking up a tuition bill of its own. The
SeNte Ways and Means and Higher
Education Committees have been holding
joint m~tings to draft a yet unnumbered
bill which would adjust tuition bienially
to the cost of education.
Every new bill has a twist and this one
is no exception. It would set universit y
tuition at 25 per cent of the cost of
education with the service and activities
f~ as a percentage of tuition . The 25 per
cent rate only applies to the tw o
universitif'S. The other colleges would
b.-se their fen on a percentage of the
univenities' fees. Four-year state colleges
would pay 80 per cent of unavers1ty
tuition.
TheR two bills may be the last in a
long aeries of tuition hike mov~. or they
might be the beginning of a whole new
set. The sponsors of SHB312 hope to get
it throulth the house unamfl\ded and the
sponson of the Senate bill have not yet
had time to plan their strategy. It ~ms
that whatever happens at the legislature
will tum up in our mail box~ in next
year's billing envelopes.
Vol. 5 No . 18
The Evergreen State College
Scientific Re.sea.r
by Brad Pokorny
It is unusual for undergraduate students
to do original scientific research . Relatively few schools around the nation have the
faciliti~ the faculty, or the d~ire to
encour.1ge their students to get into the
laborat0ry a nd try to make discoveri~.
At r vergreen, there are several pngoing
faculty projects that allow students to
entt'I the lab, work on basic research,
~· perhaps, ' originate work ot their
o"" n. Three projects stand out : Betty
Kutter and Burt Guttman's work in
molecular biology, Richard Cellarius and
)eft Kelly's work in photosynthesis, and
Mike Beug and Steve Herman's work in
environmental studies. All of these faculty
members have students work with them
on their grants, and all have helped
students write their own -- with excellent
success. Guttman said that students at
Evergreen manage to get more S.O .S. Student Originated Study - grants than do
a proportiOnal number of students at any
other college in the country.
Bacteriophage T - 4
Under an electron microscope it looks
so mewhat like the lunar lander. T-4
bacteriophage are viruses that attack
bacteria, specifically the E. Coli bacteria.
These mechanistic viruses land on E. Coli
and inject a thin thread of DNA, the
molecule that codes all of the life
proc~ses . The T-4's DNA tak~ over the
bacteria's metabolic processes and fore~
it to make more T-4 viruses. The cell
produces until it bursts, scattering more
bacteriophage to infect other E. Coli.
Betty Kutter and Burt Guttman have
been usmg the T -4 bacteriophage in
~e net1 c s tudi ~ because the bacteriophage
1s so s1mple. T-4's DNA has only about
200 genes, according to Guttman. Even
the Simplest bacteria have several thousa nd genes Each gene is a segment of the
DNA molecule that codes the manufacture of a part1cular protein. ·
Kutter and Guttman are studying the
genetic system of the T-4 bacteriophage
on a $68,000 grant they received from the
National Science Foundation (NSF) .
Different students have been working on
and off at the research, learning many of
the various lab techniqu~ involved in
genetic study . 'What we're doing here is
basic research ," said Guttman . " The
philosophy has always been that the more
you learn about the universe, the better
the chance that you will discover some
practical benefits.
"Betty has had this lab set up for about
four years now," Guttman continued.
Student Andru Oashe filters ;
photosynthesis.
"Students can come in here and start
working, and within a few months they
can develop the basic skills they need so
they can l>egin to do some more original
research on their own." Guttman said
that this type of experience was not
always so readily available at other
schools.
Diane Morton has been working with
Kutter on the T -4 research all year. She
has specifically been studying gt>ne No. 42
on the T -4's DNA. Morton said that het
work with the T-4 research was "an
important factor" in gettmg accepted at
the Molecul.u Biology Institute at the
Univedrsity of Oregon fo r graduate
studies. "It gave me an advantage over
other students in that I have worked on
actual research projects ...
Guttman thinks that one advantage of
doing basic research early in a student's
education is the opportunity to find out if
they enjoy and have the aptitude for
research work .
Man-made Leaves
Photosynthesis is the process in which
plants use chlorophyll to capture the sun's
energy and store it as carbohydrates and
tissue. It is a highly efficient process at
certain stag~ . producing energy at up to
35- 40 percent efficienty.
Faculty members Richard Cellarius and
Jeff Kelly are working under a two-year
$132,000 NSF grant to determine how
chlorophyll traps light energy, and to see
The Tuition Bills Me
by KarrH Jacobs
After several weeks of mulling over
information pthered during two weeks of
hearings, the House Higher Education
Committee decided not to endorse any of
the proposed tuition bills that were in
question in February . Instead, they
gleaned choice sections of the existing
bills, softened the objectioru~ble portions
to an extent, and came up with Substitute
House Bill 3U.
The stated intention of 3U is to alter
the cost of tuition so that it "reflects" the
cost of instruction, rather than sliding
upwards in dl.rect correlation to ' rising
educational costs.
UNCLEAR AND UNCERTAIN
The concept of tuition "reflecting" costs
seemed a little unclear and uncertain, so I
spoke with two members of ~ House
higher Education Committee to try and
find out just what the committee meant
by that and why it was included in the
bill . Joseph Enbody, a Democrat frC'm
Centralia, said, 'We thought that there
had to be some justification somewhere
for either raising or lowering the tuition."
Enbody's statement didn't really clarify
anything, so I spoke with Rep. William
Bums, a Democrat from King County. He
denied responsibility for that particular
portion of the bill, attributing it to Dan
Grimm. However, he did have some
tho\llhts on the issue. 'We tried to keep
from tying the cost of tuition to that of
instruction because we wen unsure of
how to determine the cost of Instruction,"
he said. "For example, is it the cost of
running the institution, building maintenance, grounds~e ., or iJ it just the cost
of paying pro
rs and lab fees7 Then
there's the thing about teachers' salaries
being controlled by tuition."
The main differences between SHB 312
and previous bills seem to be in wording
rather than intent, with the exception of
the elimination • of the controversial
"Manpower Shortagt! Clause." Of coune,
no matter how the wording of the bill Is
altered to quell opposition to its passqe,
no matter what adjustments are made to
appease angry students or cautious
legislators, 312's ultimate effects will be
the same as any of the previous bills
introduced into the legislature : it will
April 7, 1977
cb At Evergreen
I would say that there were few. if any ,
undergraduat es that got the ktnd of
research experience that stu dents a re
getting on our project."
Columbia Auorides
to Harbor Seals
if it is possible to collect this energy and
transform it into electricity. The end
result might be some sort of man-made
leaves, green solar cells, that would be
twi~ as efficient as the present costly
silicon wafer cells. Cellarius :;.aid such a
device is a long way off.
About eight students have worked with
Cellarius and Kelly at various times since
the project began last summer. One of the
,lifficult ies in making rhlorophyll trap
h~t energy, instead of just emitting it
right back o{JI, has to. do wit h the
distance between the chlorophyll molecules in the plant membrane . One
student, Andrea Dashe, has been working
on the spacing of the chlorophyll o n the
artificial membr;:me that Cellarius and
Kelley are experimenting with.
'What I did ," ~aid Dashe, "was test a
number of different lipids -- which are a
family of long-chained carbon molecules
--to see how they affected the spacing of
the chlo rophyll dimers. lA dimer is two
molecules stuck together. ] In domg this
we found that some of our results did no t
iibe with other published findings. I hope
to produce a paper out of that research."
Dashe said that it was rare l or
undergraduates to wo rk as closely with
faculty as people do here.
Cellarius agrees that the opportun tties
at other schoo ls to do undergraduate
resea rch are rare . " I taught at the
University of Michigan for six years, and
,st Likely To
raise tuition. If 312 is passed, the cost of
tuition for a full-time resident student at a
state four-year college will ri~ from the
present SS07 to $564 during the 1977-78
school year, and will increa~ apin to
$621 during 1973-79. Non-resident student
tuition would go from $1,359 a year to
$1,734 in the coming school year, and
would jump to $2,091 in l978-79.
The bill contains a section that is
conttmed with the need for adjusting
financial aid allotments to needy students
in order to keep up with the climbing
tuition rates. The section states in part
that "needy students not be deprived of
accas to their education due to increases
in educational costs or tuition and fees,"
and provides that a percentage of
increased rnrenue due to tuition hikes be
~nneled into financial aid funds.
312 is currently being held in cold
storage in the House Rules Committee
until it gets called to the floor for
discuuion. It probably won't get there 'till
next week because, according to Rep.
Burns, 'We've been very busy trying to
define basic education."
The most wi de -ra nging research at
Evergreen has probably been d c01e m
-environmental science. MLke Beug and
Steve Herman's Ecology and Chemistry of
Pollution (ECOP) coo rdinated studies
program, which began in the fall of 1973.
in some ways set the tone for student
projects dealing with the environment .
During that program, and since. man y
students have received grants to do
original research. For example. just this
week students John Calambokidis and Jim
Cabbage learned that thir $15,100 gran t
proposal to study the eftects of chlonnated hydrocarbon residues (PCBs, DDT.
etc.) on the births of harbor seals in Puget
Sound has been accepted by the NSF.
Steve Herman helped Ca1-1mbokidis write
the grant and will serve as the project
advisor, but almost all the research will
be done by the eight students the grant
ca lls for. (Calambokidis is the student
project director. )
According to Mike Beug. Calambok1dis'
project grew indirectly out of o the r
student research that began in ECOP .
"When ECOP was runnin~ ... satd' Beug.
"we investigated the levels and effects of
fluorides along the Columbia Rtver. We
investigated the effects of lead and
cadmium lrom the smelter~ in northern
Idaho - looking at soils, plants. and small
mammals. We had a group that studied
the effects of forest management practices
m insect outbreaks. We had another
gro up looking at the distribution ot
polychlo rinated biphenyls IPCBs] in Puget
Sound. And that study has lead into John
Calam bokidis' grant to study PCB eftects
in harbor seals."
"Student!> have an outstandmg opportunity here to do individual research
Beug co n tinued . " Unf o rtunatel y many
students attempt to start research b~:elore
they are properly prepared. And they
consequently wmd up with an inadequate
brt'adth of knowledge in their field .
.. The si tuation is at least partl y
redeemed by the fact that some students
go back and fill in gaps in their
ed ucation, and / or learn how to dig out
material by themselves. And when this
happens. that's one of the most effective
things that we do at Evergreen."
~ucceed
Meanwhile, the Senate has been
cooking up a tuition bill of its own. The
Senate Ways and Means and Higher
Education Committees have been holding
joint meetings to draft a yet unnumbered
bill which would adjust tuition bienially
to the cost of education .
Every new bill has a twist and thts one
is n9 exception. It would set university
tuition at 25 per cent of the cost of
education with the service and activities
fee as a percentage of tuition . The 25 per
cent rate only applies to the tw o
universities. The other colleges would
base their fees on a percentage of the
universities' fees. Four-year state colleges
would pay 80 per cent of , univerc;ity
tuition .
:rhete two bills may be the last tn a
long series of tuition hike moves. or they
might be the beginning of a who!e new
set . The sponsors of SPiB312 ,hope to get
it throu!Ul the hou~ una"1ended and the
sponsors of the Senate bill have not yet
had time to plan their strategy. It !lftms
that whatever happens at the leg1slatu~
will tum up in our mail boxes in next
year's billing envelopes.
2
I
I
,.
I• • • • • • • • • • • • •
I Came,
Eyesore,
I Conquered
I YOUR
wont fade
w1th
helpaway
they However
Will topple
or bum
Do 11 ton1ght
The T n-<:entenn1al
No Growth Committee
Ed1tor. fur obv1ous reasons
th1s letter ~~ not srgned by an
md1v1dual Evenso, we hope that
vou deem 1t worthy ol space m
your publication
T" tlw Ed1tor
T1red of sleepless mghts spent
1\ 10~ awake mullmg the world
Pvtr 1n \OUr Irrelevant t1ny
mmd' bn t 11 a drag7 Stoned
agam' Well ~mce you're not
,(eepmg anywa} heres a chance
w U'>t' that t1me to beaut1fy our
n•ad<. and countrys1de to serve
tht publt< and to stJy l1t all at
thr '-dmt' t1me
C.rt out o t that bed don your
lu).(·'nleJ bt•ots thermal und~r
wl.'at htan ~weater and cap
Tu the Editor
and (,({AB A SAW Then head
l<>r thf' h1ll~ brother~ and s1sters
I want to make students aware
Thr n1!-:ht l all'
that we are 1n danger of lostng
Tht·r~, a tore(t nf b11lboards
nur rt>presentatton on the Proltn 1 n~ ••ur h1ghway' wa1tmg to 1 leso;lonal Leavec; Co mmittee The
l-,1'' thr e..Hth w1th a horrendous
t<1mm1ttt>e IS currently rev1smg
h.Jn); Th.tt hdlhoard vou ve been
the EAC (f:vergrt>en Admm dnvtn~>: hv tor vear~ need nut
l.,traiiVt' Cndel sechnn perta1nmg
, 1.tnd dO\ (1 •n)oll'r t<> msuh vour
to h<>w faculty and stilff leaves
''\t'' .Jnd I.Jnd,t ape !What IS 1t1
are granted and 1t has been
\lc[1.,nald, 11 , ,.,,ur l..md ol
"UAAhltd that ~tudents and staff
1l.n•
\\t•rt> ln0l..m)ollnr a lew
nu longer be a part of th1s
~''"d mt n
'i'"; ll'ltt·re't com·
~o:rt•ur
Dt-terml nln~o:
faculty
P"undtd <JU.trtnh
The hreat..
leaH.., may nnt wem c1 lruCial
''lltll'lrt~h' '•LI 'T II DO\.\'N
pro<t..,, ll>r ~tudent~ to lw c1 part
',, •II thr1ll n th• .1):011\ •I It
ot but 11 1., tn our mtert">t to
~ n.n, tht• m.ttt·nal tarultv want
H l ' don I lo~u~:h' rhl' I\ no
t•• 'tudv a., thl'v y..Jll rvrntuallv
.ttfn(c•'t t nl !Jr,llft• It I' d \'ldhlt•
tt•turn o~nJo pre,ent 11 tn u~
rla'1 .. r .1 lltltl .1~am•t romnwr
.,tudt·nh B"'tdr·-. .1 lt•t nt munt•y
1.1 ttl"'"'"'\ 1l\ Rtlll">••ards arr
" 'rwnt l11r lt•.J\t-' We mu.,l htlld
IPdh olll\ c "' prPii! llt'l hu,Jnl'''
"n to ,til tho deu.,oon makm~
ndthtr\ prJ<Intlt'~ E hmtnatm~
pm'\!'t WI' h,IVl' cJnU that din I
l>lilb".trd, .., .. , onh mal..t'' tht·
mulht Anv addllmn.tl \UAAE"t" ,·rH I ttc·r n)<!ht now' hut o1l"'
''""' "" r AC ri'V"It'"' c.1n ht'
dt•mt~n'l r.llt'' I h,ll WI' Ihe pt>op(t• r
nt• l11n~•·r .trcrpt o,ulh prollt ltr<.t
Kathy Pruttt
prh•rtlll''
357-6339
\tJT\ 1 /\ ltttll' but o,aler than
Current member of the
\'OJ
thonlo. Rttently on an
Prolt">•>~onal Leaves Committee
>\I I Amt'TI<c!n C11y 10 Oh1o 17
h11lhnard' lrll 10 IWO COnS('('\JIIVe
n1~o:hl\ It was .all the work ol
thrt't' nnrmally law ab1dm~t Clllll'n\ wht, were tired of Aml'n·
Don't Leave
The Leaves
Committee
I
tc~n U~llf">
S£'r1ously folks thts IS a
chan('t to c~pply that tcolog"al
rhttorl(' y<>u vt ~n spouting
Old b11lbnard~ ntver d1t and
A Recycle
Built For Two
To tht Ed11or
To ncyde ts to slow down the
destruction of thts pluet I
B«au~ recycling gns the g.ubage off the ground and back in to the system, this means that
lesser amounts of raw ~terials
will be n~ed to produce the
products we have now and will
be ne-eding apm I
Three of our main waste products - glass, paper, and alumi num - can be recycl~ economIcally. causing much less unnecessary damage to our earth I Aluminum can be recycled quite
economically, for when recycled.
11 requires far less energy to mat.. e
it usable again. Anyway , some
very beautiful places ue being
destroyed through mrning and
littenngl Paper will evmtually
cut us out of trees and green tl
constantly manufactured from
the raw materials. 1f we must
waste paper why not wute 11
constructively I RECYCLE I And
please recycle all your glass. if
not tust to make 1t safe for bikes.
bare feet , and little people I
The earth needs our support
now so that people after us can
have something to en toy I
At Evergreen recyclmg rs made
easy for you All you have to do
rs place your recyclable material-;
m th( closet o n your floor Just
look for a yellow recycled ~
cycling papt'r on the closet door
Organ1c matenals can also be
recycled Just separate and place
m the con tarner marked COM
POST nuts1cle each dc-rm butld
IOJI.
I hope many of yllu l·on~1der
I· ver$trt't'n a.ij. alternative
I and hv tt'<yrhng
~hool
a lw~tnmng t\
made at reah11ng wh:tt an alter
nattvr schnlll tou ld be
Dart~el Tolfree
Mind Field
To the Edttor
The Soundmg Board at rts
meetrng on March 2 drscussed
the possrble courses of achon
that are ava1lable to people who
want to make su~ that our next
Drrector of F;;acrltttes IS an
environmentally - minded pt'rson
The Sound1ng Board decrded
that the best course of action tS
for all these people to write to
the screening committee. whach
Dean Clabaugh has charged to
do a nationwtde !M!arch, and tell
them why it 1s important that
the person in thiS pos1tion be
environmentally - minded The
screening committee will also
hold open interviews of the
applicants, at which anyone can
participate tn questtonrng the
applicants and submit written
evaluations. Write a letter to the
screening committee before April
19, telhng them to submit only
the names of candidates with
excellent environmen~list "tr;;ack
records " A couple of the
screening committee members
are Steve Herman and Lynn
Gamer Also 54!nd a letter to the
one who will do the ;;actual
haring, Dean Clabaugh.
The Director of Facihties IS the
position imm~iately above the
Grounds Department , and 1t as
the Grounds Departmmt wh~
job it is to apply bloodes. cut
down trees. etc , tn its attempts
to make the campus beaut1ful.
The G rounds Department has
SEPA guidehnes to follow tn the
use of biocades. but it makes a
world of dtfference of the part1es
most rt>Spons1ble tnterpret these
~u1delmt'S accordmg to an envrronmentaltst v1ew ptllnt II
someone 1s h1red who doeo; not
understand the Importance of
hmthng and eventually pha!tmg
out tht> u<;e of b1oc1dt'S. u-; folks
who do wtll con<otantly be m a
~tllon reactmg to tht>1r mlc;takes
It wa~ a)<Oo potntt'd out that
the pt>r<;on who IS htred must be
one who has developed com·
mumcat1ons sk1lls and 1' of a
t"oopt>rattve nature The coupt'r
alive sort ts one who ,., sens1ttvt>
to the needs of the communtly
and will therefo~ be Wllltntt to
accept help rn maktng decistons
the communtly wants to be
mvolved m
Get together with your environmentally-minded fnends and
plan what you will say on your
letter Contact the Sound1ng
Board office Ub 3231 (866-6156)
for more 1nformatron. Your
opmton w1ll not be heard unl~
you vo1ce 11 As long as you are
silent you are powerless to affect
change.
Lyle Tribbett
A Stuffed
Albino
Popsicle
I
To the Editor :
E~ry once and awhjJe in the
course of human and other
events young swine like yourself
misquote or misinterpret the
;;actions of othea and a.ll it
news, or spelled backwards.
swm (Swedish news)
In your last edition you
arbitrarily and capriciously report~ that Joe Bemis and h11
Memorial Garden Royal City
Cryogenrc Blues Band were
scheduled to lay down some
unfrozen licks at eith~ Appl~
jam, The Golden Carriage, or
The Oregon Trail (I forget
whach). You further stated, and I
quote, 'The following .. "
Honestly now, wouldn' t lou
adm1t that you're foohng around.
here with something more than
JUSt a stuffed albmo popsiclel
Meanwhile we state employees
who have ~n eagerly anhClpatmg H1c; (s1d second commg or
orgasm are left tn line at the
Appletam Golden Carnage .
Sm1ttys Pancake Hou~ . or all
of the above warttng for Joe and
GodCll h1s drummer
If co mpassron 1s taught a
your neat school or tf you
learned tt tn Junior high or h1gh
school. leave Bem1s and the
Gardens as it Not only should
certam staff not be messed with
but further, the building blocks
of creation should be put away
when you' re not playing w1th
them or yourself
Yours 10 the Bowels of Bem1s.
The Washington Council for
Outdoor Recreation, Etc
and all other s~te agmcies
except OM
P.S. You're riot ~ally young
swine. you're cute
;
I
J
Letters(Q)~fiiiDfi©IIDLetters(Q)~fiiiDfi©IID
Withholding
War
Taxes
To the Edt tor
Thts 1s a fo llow-up letter to
my Forum column on war tax
rests tanf e I COOPER POINT
JOURN \l, March 10.)
government rules u.s with
and by our consent.
sullenly given. When
is wtthdrawn, our government must change or it falls .
Non-payment of war taxes ts a
classic and basic form of
nonvtolent action. We can withdraw our financial support of the
government 54 per cent (or $137
billion) of the U. S. Budget goes
to pay for wars past, p~nt ,
and future . It pays for the
proposed 244 B-1 bombers each
costing $91 mtllion . It pays for
the Trident Nuclear Submarine
Base in Bangor. Washington,
where on Trident submarine
costs 1.2 billion
lnstud of spendmg your
money on the military, it can be
given to an alternative fund, a
sort of ~If-imposed tax , and
spent on an organization which
encourages life and counteracts
war . I personally give my
refused telephone tax money to
the Environmental Dd~ Fund
(EDF) This is a nonviolent
protest of b~ quality. Nonviolence does not mean passtvely
sitting back and hoping that
things will change . lt means
meeting evil with love and
reconciliation. It means vigorously opposing the forces of
oppression and vtolence with
determined. persistent . and
effectiVe acts of nonviolent
resistance
Democracy stops when the
I
people acquiesce and fatl to J...eep
the government m ltne Restslance to illegtttmate authority
strengthens democracy War tax
res isters. by refustng to pay
federal taxes, are obeying the
law They are obeymg the laws
of the mternatlonal commumty
(Nuremberg Pnnctplesl. they are
obey mg the United States Constitution and they are obeying
the Untted NatiOns C harter
They are also obeymg laws ol
htgher c onsc ience
Dtd n o t
Thoreau fash1on the cornerstone
o f American reststance theo ry
out of his CJWn expenences as a
tax resister?
The War Res ts ters League
(WRU afftrms that war ts a
c nme agatnst humantty . We
therefore are determined not to
support any kind of war.
international or civil, and to
strive nonviolently for the
removal of all the causes of war.
I now quote from a very fine
so urce. The novehst Leo Tolstoy
once emphasaed the sound logic
of draft and w.ar tax reJection by
saying : " lf the people refuse to
render military service, if they
decline to pay taxes to support
that instrument of violence, an
army , the present system of
government cannot stand. Let
them go to pnson. The government cannot put the whole
populatton m pnson, and tf 11
could it would still be without
matenal for any army and
without money for its support"
On Mond.ay mght, April 11 ,
at 7 30 in LH One , Irwin
Hogenauer will speak abo ut
military spending. federal taxes,
and other related topics . lrwin
has an extenstve background in
war tax resistance and tax
resistance counseling. If you
would like mon: ;,,formation or
would like to help organize the
Evergreen WRL. call me during
the evenings or weekends at
~5126 . Love and thanks for
reading this letter
Paul Fink
Spring Fever
eve r yo ne not 1ced th a t
c;pnng ,., hrre7 O nly J week a~o
March wa ~ s t1ll blow mg stwnl(
and i had to shtver a nd bare my
teeth w htl c ndmg. i wa., very
su s pt c t o u ~ of thts wc1rm Wt'd ther
but toda y i felt confident m
lea vmg the bathrO{)m wmdow
open Spnng 1s here a~ 1t 11 has
been fo r the last three months
I thmk a n essa y o n spnng IS tn
order but what can one say7 It
would be enough for me to wake
you c1ll up that 11 as here, that
the c11r has changed and the
temperature warmed New lafe
has begun. rismg from the s01l
and putting colors where there
was none Let us consader when
11 began for it was o nly a week
ago. and be aware that thangs
are c hang1ng and nature ha s
suddenly awakened.
Dav id Wylae
B1 c \Il les, ca mpm g Pqul pmPnt
and clo th1ng
W oolnr h 2'5 per l Pnt o ft
Skt gear m PPr CPnt o ff
11 7 N Wa<ihtngton 357-4345
)ill Ste.wart IEdit o r [merit us I
FEATURES EDITOR
SECRETARY
Annette Rickles
Ja co b~
BUSINESS MANA GER
SQUIRRELS EDITO R
David Judd
Joe Bemis
.,-ted
Classes
Available
OiUAN
Hippies,
Le1sure Edu cation
f:vergreen College
866-6340 or
Academy of
Tat Ch1 Chuan
357 -3676
u
)')1 N\:'
:·::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::;::::::::::::0::::~:~:::::::::~:·:·:·:·:·:~:;:::::::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·····:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::~:
~ ~·~
Underwear,
and Humor
T o the Ed1t or
{)oy ~ \ (A}r
Re : St ufffli Albino Squirrel
Humor Test I COOPER POINT
JOURNAL. February 101
Anyone knows htppies do n't
wear underwear
~nO. C'f\~ th\~ CJ)~'f\
\'V\..
~Oy- ~
\0°/o dL~~O\)l\~ on~
~
;?,'
t
\).1\\\\_
~ ~·n\ ~ ~'\
~ ~-~
\Q- \o
~;:~:,~::F::~~~~
Phone 11 0 6 135 7-94 70
lllrd
BRAKE RELINING
49 e 95
4 ...............
tone
tlerb
1nd
and
Sat
•i•
~~~
:··.·:·:·:·:·:·:~:.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::~:::::::::::~:::::::::;:::::::::::?~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.;::::~:
SUPIR SIRVICI SPICIAi
11. <:3uc.1flw.9
iJ ,....;., i• ..itltll~
\\cuvs
stq> b'\ ~y- <t W\) of ~ ta\. ~ftl
Sincerely
A Representative
of the Lone Star
Cal - Aggies of
U. C Davts
Complete selection
I
PRODUCTION MANAGER
Brad Pokorny
The COOPER POINT JOURNAL It publl1/led wMkly fOf lhe tludenla, fecully
1nd , ..If of TM Everg!Mn s..te College, Oly~ . Wuhlngton 88506 VI-• ex
prMMd ere not necesearily thoM of The Everg!Mn State College AdYer1111ng me ·
teriel
~n doet not necesur11y Imply endor"Nment by lhl1 new1peper.
Offtc.t ere located In the College Ac:11vltlee Building (CAB ) 3011. N-• pllonn
&ee - 821~ . 8M·8214 Adver1111ng end bu1IMU · IM-8080. lettlfa pollc:y All let ·
ten to the edltOf mu1t be ~ by noon T~ fOf ttlet . . - · , publlaollon.
Letlenl mu11 be typed. doubl•· •peced. end 400 word• ~ l. .e . The ediiOB '""""
the right to edll fOf content and llyle N•""" will be withheld on ~11111 .
ly
of Spring gear
Brock Sutherland
Karrie
Ho~ '
a ne·w loca/z.on . f\/orthu•eJt
and imported crafts, pottery,
jeu,elry, baskets. can dlr f f'z"n e
art .
A~
ADVERTISING MA NAG FR
Matt Groening
MANAGING EDITOR
T <' 1he Edt to r
. . 111
coA~
EDITOR
All model Volkswogens
lnatall New Llnlnp or Pad•
Top up lrake Fluid
lnapect all wh. .l cylinders and m a ter
cylinder for leak•
lnapect all lrake Unea
Repack Front Wheel learlnga
Machine Drvma or Dlaca A. Needed
Offer bptru Apnl 30, I 977
Old Tim.,, Club and Military OIJCOunt VOid on
Q0
""' Sp«IOI
HANSON VOLKSWAGEN
~
•
.·------·-····-------··········--·-····· ···-······-------- -------------------------------------------------,.
S&A Survey
The time Ls rapidly approaching when tht S&A Board hu to decide who will get
money ~d how much. To help them decide, they are 10Udtlng the opbtloru of
students, faculty, ~d st&ff. The survey btlow, which wu written by the baud,
should bt placed In the bo• outside the Information Ctnttr In the CAB M&ll, or
placed In the S&A mallbo• In CAB 305. The deadline Is April 18.
AU. l\lb::rar 'e S.Wies
a> per oent a=Fl
1214 1h Harrtaon
943-8711
OPTIONAL (but quite us8ul) :
Student - - - - - Faculty - - - - - Staff - - - - Male - - - - - Female - - - - Sexual Orientation - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ethnic Group-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - CODES :
A. Acquamtance with activity :
I .-not acquainted 2-slightly acquainted 3-well acquamted
B Involvement
1- none 2-worked with 3-member
C Importance of group :
1--not important 2--little Import an ce 3--moderate import"nce 4 --very
1mportant 5-indispensible
A. Acauaintana
Activity
Alpine Oub
Asian CO&lition
Bike Shop '
8UJ Syet.e m
CAB Phue U
Cimpus Activities Blcfa.
10 to 6
Mon. thru Sat.
352-0720
Shoes for the Sole
Shakti shoes and boots
S38.9S
$44 .95
WNtalde Centef
357-em
Monday - Satulday.
8 :30 - 8 :00
Ltghtwetght and rugged. thts ts an all -purpose boot
Inner paddtng around ankles gtves stabtltty. support
and Lom fort whether worktnq or walktng
..
MANBARIN
HEJDIE
The only Mandarin
Chinese restaurant
in town.
LUNCH
Mon -Frl II »3 00
SMORGASBOARO
Mon -Frl II »2 00
DINNER
Sun •Thura 3 00-1 0 30
Frt 3 . 12 00
Sat • 00-12 00
~allons available Food oroers 10 go
a l s o - Am«fcan and YeQelatlan food
Ill NO CAPITOL WAY352-8856
Carea- Planning ~d
Placanent
Gamber Singen
Cofffthoua
Cooper Point Journal
Day Ut-e CmtaDuck Houa
ECOE Evergreen Council
on the Environment
EPIC
Equlpm.e nt Center
Faith Center
Folk Dance
Friday Nlte Rims
Gay Resource Center
Gig Commission
Hulth Services
Human Growth Center
Jewelry t.b
KAOS-FM
I..Gsuft Ed Workshops
MEOlA
Men's Basketball
Mm's Center
Men's Soccer
Men's Sports
Maiy Arts t.b
Poetry Center
Photo lab
PRESS
Rcc. Centtr
Recrution.al Sports
River Rata
Sdf-Hdp Lqal AJd
SA:A Board
Spuken Bunau
Thytre/ Oanq
U)AMAA
Womm 't Buketball
Women's Center
Women's Ginlc
Women's Soccer
Women's Softball
<lthtr - - - - - - - - - Other - - - - - - - - - -
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
2
3
1
2
3
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
2
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
C. Jmportancc
B. Involvement
3
3
3
3
3
3
1
1
1
1
2
3
1
2
3
4
5
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
J
3
3
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
5
2
3
3
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
4
5
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
5
5
3
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
3
1
1
1
2
2
3
1
2
3
1
2
J
J
3
3
1
2
J
2
2
3
3
1
2
1
2
1
2
3
2
J
3
J
1
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
2
2
2
3
3
3
2
2
l
1
1
I
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
3
3
1
1
1
3
J
J
3
3
3
3
J
J
3
1
2
3
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
2
2
2
3
3
3
1
2
3
l
2
2
1
2
1
2
3
3
3
3
J
3
J
2
J
3
J
3
3
1
1
1
1
2
J
1
2
2
2
2
l
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
3
1
2
1
2
1
2
3
l
I
2
2
J
3
3
3
J
3
3
3
J
3
J
3
1
1
1
2
2
2
3
3
3
1
2
3
1
1
1
2
2
2
3
3
1
2
3
1
2
3
1
1
2
2
3
3
2
2
1
1
1
2
1
1
3
3
3
J
3
3
3
2
2
2
3
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
I
2
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
l
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
l
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
J
1
3
1
1
J
2
2
2
J
5
3
3
J
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
5
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
J
•
s
3'
3
3
3
J
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
4
4
4
4
1
4
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
5
3
4
5
5
5
3
3
J
3
3
3
3
4
4
4
5
5
5
4
4
4
4
5
5
5
3
4
5
3
3
4
4
5
5
5
5
5
5
s
5
\Ne're new. Come in and
give us a try. We think
you'll like it.
.
---~-------------------------- ---------- - --------- - ---- · - --- -- -·-- ------- --- - - -- ---- -- - ----- - -- - -- --- --- -J
!.
Income Tu Prtprllaton
·~AadP.onM
PEACE CORPS
•
& VISTA
Representatives
on cantpus
Kathy Coolnba
357-7541 If busy, 352-7539
Also - Real Property Advice
Do you V\8rtt 1D learn
1D fly fish? For eDCpert
advice:
Q.YIVFIA
SF'CFCI SHF
We
. ...
APRIL 20& 21
lnteNieWrt~ fa' CM:i &&3 Peace CDps \dli'IIBBr
poai1ials and fa' VISTA \dt..r~~ar c:.panrgs In
the \1\estem United States. Contact
Plarrirg and Racer' a
irla I I Bt:i<::n.
career
tt~
Ub. 214 fa fu1har
Ueed llehlng teckle
Rod and reel repelr
71V E 41h A~~e
s
Pereon1 Interested In ENVIRON·
MENTAL EDUCATION we Invited to
an open dlacuaalon and 1oclal
gathering I potluck on Thurad.ey ,
April 7, at 6 p m. In a houae 1t
1821 Glle1 Roed. II II sponsored by
the Washington Environmental Ed·
ucallon Development Project For
detelll call 352-7202.
Announcements
The Human Growth end CouftMI.
lng Center will be aponeonng the
following worllahopa thll qUitter .
The lnt.MM Jounwl WOftlho9
Fecllltetor . Or. Frw~oea HeuiMn·
atemm, April 22, 23, 24 (Note To
ettend this ~hlp you mutt be
reglltered by April 8th)
Oreem Rellectlon . Feclllt1tor
Edw81'd Mc:Querrie, Two MUionl
April 1- Mey Z1 (Frldey) April 4-Mey
JO tMoncs.y)
~ Oreem Semlnet. Fecllltetor · Edwerd McOuerrle, April
7-Mey 26 (Thur.csey)
Creetlw MoolefMnt. Fecllltator
Wendy Schofield, April &-May 2:5
(Wedneadly)
Meditation end . a - t. Fecllltator . Betty ~. April 2-Aprll 23
(Siturday)
Stre11 Manegement 1nd RaWta·
lon. Fecllll atCf Ginny Ring, April
4, 5, 6, 7
Food In The Balance Of Ute.
Fecllltator Bernice RoNnltreleh,
April ~May 31 (TUIIday)
UndefsiMdlng &tlng latwrYIOf.
Fecllltatore · Tom Nufert & Judy
P1trlek, April 4-June 6 (Monday)
Undefstandlng Semlner Proceea.
Fecllltator Larry Maukaeh, April
13-May 4 (Wednetdaya)
Students , atall , faculty , and
community members are all
welcome to attend theM wontshops. For reglatrellon and Information contect the Human Growth
and Counseling Center , Library
3224, ~151
A OTF Ia being formed to plan
and dlecusa 1M Spftng Colloquium ,
tentatively echeduled lor May The
Colloquium Ia Intended to be an
all-campus event focusing on the
goels and performance ot Everg,_, Students Interested In being
on the OTF should call 866-6295
CALUOAAPHY will be llught at
three weekend workshops C1ll
866-MJO for mona Information
Supporters ol Bill 1189 - the Oay
are asked to
expreaa their auppon by calling
Aepreaent•ll~~e Mike tvlfdler'a offlee at 753-7884.
Humer~ Alghta 8111 -
E-v
atudent employee who has
a W""E on llle _ , come to the
Payroll Offic e Room L1118 to
complete a new 1m W""E form
The W-4E completed and signed lor
1976 will no longer be valid. We
cennot legally pay a atuoent
employee who haa not completed
the 1977 form by April 15, ton
A Coni-- On 1M Struggle of
Muleo-Latln Immigrant• will like
place on Friday , Apr il 8 , 10
a m .-noon In LH One. and 1 30-4
p m In the main lltnty lobby
s.mc.e
The
end Ac1MU.. FN
A " ' - OTF meets -v Thurlday
through May 5 from 3 to 5 p m In
Lib 3121
WOMEN'S CURRICULUM PLANNINO meetings will take place
Weoneaday , April 13 and every
Wednesday thefeelter, lrom 11 JO
a m - 3 p m , In the Women's
Center lounge (Lib. 3214)
GARDEN SPACE Ia available at
the Organic Farm Contect J im by
Sunday, April 10, at 1166-7:140
The EHVIAON MEfHAL ADVI SORY COMMmEE will meet on
Wednaday, April 13. at 1 p m In
LAB II 1250
Films and food to ralae money
tor the Nallu Amerleen Art
~ group contrect will be
ollered on Thureday , April 14, at a
loeetlon to be announced Choice
goodlea and Juices will be on sale
and edmlsalon to the films Ia 50
cents The shows w ill run from
noon - ~ 30 p m .. and 8 - 11
p m Ttle money g oes to pay
expeneea lor a trip to northem
Brit ish Columbia thla Querter Call
866-&316 lor more lnlorm•IIOfl
• Open every day
e
11) - 7 Sunday
9- 9 Dally
w ,E
TYPE
-Term papers
RGREEN COINS
AND
INVESTMENM..
PRESCRIPTIOI''" A
R tsumh
- Leucrs
~
BUYING
Sll VER
Thc:f.c:~
&&:
GOLD COLNS
1:11\lll. l ;\\1.
BJueMax
tx>LLARS
RARE COINS
COMPLETE
COllECTIONS
DRUGS
1
f'A"I~..,..I.a'Y..,...WA".B'A".IAFA"A".IYI1
~
§§
~
Oav• Wolson's
GAT
crs
off
PIZ.Z.A
PAJ\1.01\
ptzza
~~4046
PACIFIC
4158- 1680
:.harp ,blatk (larbon
nbhon) c hara uc:r~
-C hotu: of
1619 W . H01rrison 352 - ~
(across from Bob's Big Burgers)
WESTSIDE CENTER
-ln
with th .. coupon
402 Capttol Way
Olympia. Wuh.
- P t(a
753-11800
ltnc)
type
~ t\le~
(10 c hara cter~
or Eltte
per
(12 C P L)
- Comp leted w or k
DO L E
GAs0 ll NE TAN~-
cAp s
STOP GAS THEFTS!
FINEST QUALITY
LOCKING GASCAPS
gu.trantecd error-free
-Stored tn mcmorv for
ea:.~
rc v t :.ton
l;'-.. Larsbn
POWER TYPING
Save 50 cents
~~AV~.a~~~~~~~~--~
212 E
RAUDENBUSH MOTOR SUPPLY
/'.
•
866~6181
3138 Overhulse Rd
Lcgton
352-8870
6
Import Auto Repair
Ray Appoints A New Trustee
Cd'l Jo nn 1166-4779 also Arne11can mOdels
V. W. Volvo BMW Saab MG Fiat
'A 1M T
Cl.
Students: 10% discount
on ALL art supplies
R1>bert I Flower~ . a 34-year·
1>ld Seat tle banker was appomteJ bv Governor Dllo:y Lee Ray
\h>nddy Apnl 4 to replan.•
T1'm Oroton on Evergreen's Board
Ill Trustees.
DIXOn~ ~lx-yea r
trrm exp1red last mont h .
Flnwer~ 1s currently the asSIStdnt mana ger of 1ncome
pwputv mvestment at Washmg·
11'n 'l.lutual Savm~~ Bank He
hold\ a bachelor., o~nd master s
Jt>~rt.'<' from the Un1versny of
w.... hlngton wht>re he was a
b..J'>I..etball star He also worked
1n the U ol W ~rsonnel office
Flower\ '" a V1etnam veteran
and he served w1th the office ol
the governor at the Washington
S tate Multi-Service Center 1n
Seattle under Dan Evans
A s~culative a.rt1cle m Mon
days 1ssue of' the OaJiy Olympilln hmted that Governor Ray
m1ght be after control of
Evergreen's Board of Trustees,
maneuvenng to f1re Dan Evans
alter he becomes pres1dent Th1s
seems h1ghly Improbable to
mtell1~ent observers Even 1f the
C.overnor d1d Wl'>h to · cuntrol"
Evergreen s board there 1s no
law bmdmg a trustee to her
urders Eveq.;reen Admm1strat1ve
VJce-Prt">ldent Dean E ClabauKh
~a1d
I don t know of any way
1ha1 the governor cou ld con trol a
board member nn~e they' ve been
o~ppomted and confirmed
C.overno r Ray w11l have two
more b(>ard members to name
w1thin the next year She could
n · place Ray Mered1th . whose
ulnh rmallon was fr9zen m the
1\enate when ~he took office and
\ht> wall have to replace Janet
Tl,urtellotte Holmes whose term
w11l exp1re next March
Although Flowers could not ~
reached fc>r an mterv1ew th1s
week. admm1str.1tors seem to feel
that his appOtCitment was a good
one I m really pleased at that
appointment , sa1d Clabaugh "I
hope the governor's other appointments are as good."
The trustees are scheduled to
meet Apnl 21 next Thursday at
10 30 a .m m the Board room
L1b 3112
Women's Soccer
-
CENl'LF\
11-7 Jajl
~
..J,.
I~
2
?57-757?
On Saturday April 2. m the
openang game of the season,
Evergreen s Womtn s Soccer
Team defeated the Vashon Valkvnes. 2 - 1.
- Evergreen got off to a st rong
start w1th Heid1 Eh~n~rg scorm~ early on, asSISt~ by m1df1elder Milrti~ G uilfo1l In the
second half Amanda Sargent
scored on a break-a way. giving
Evergreen 1ts w1nn1ng goal
Returnmg soalkeeper Anne Stone
made ~veral spectacular saves
en<~blmg Evergreen to keep 1ts
lead
The W omen's team has ~n
practic1ng s1nce January . The
team 1s affiliated w1th the
Wash1ngton Stille Wo men's Soccer Assoc1at ion , DIVISIOn 111
The1r next game will ~ against
-onrl1'\1J Day ~
~v- - SPECIAL )h2~
the St>attle Comets. on Saturday
Apnl 9
on the Evergreen
rlayfield at noon
Compnsmg the team are seven
retu rn1ng players from last
season. Saturday marked the l.1st
game for one of them . Jan1
Stonmgton who has been partly
respons1ble for the orgamzatlon
of the team thl\ spring . For the
remaining 12 members of the
team this IS their first ~ason
w1th Evergreen. Most of thew 12
have never played soccer pr~
v1ous to th1s expenence
The team would welcome the
Evergreen community's c;upport
at their games and also in
upcommg weeks the team w1ll ~
~lhng soccer T-sh1rts to help
fund the costs mcurred dunng
the season.
"Between
Two Worlds"
Tonight
R1ver an mternat1onal mime
Juggler h reater, clown and
storyteller, will perform Between
Two Worlds on campus ton1ght ,
April 7, at 6 :30 and 9 :30 p.m.
in LH One. Donation is 75 cents
Accordmg to R1ver "We ha ve
arrived at a unique pomt m
h1story The future can be
whatever we can collectively
1mag1ne and e ffect1vely com municate. The means of communicatio n exist at all necessary
levels - collechve 1magmation 1s
developmg process
"lktween Two Worlds IS an
exam1nat1 o n of two potent1al
futures of thi~ planet .'' he
contmued "A t one extreme th1s
planet could become a parad1se
for all who now occupy 11 All
could possess real wealth Real
wealth IS the md1v1dual' ~ Immediacy of access to mformation
and expenence. not necessarily
measur~ m monetary terms or
control of accns to spa~ and
resources At the other extreme
we must acknowledge the possible end of this planet .
We can choose ou r future. It
matters what we can and do
imagme
The performance ~~ sponsored
by the C hau~auqua Product1on
Company
EASTER AT OUR STORE
IS ...
ALL $6 .98 LIST AL B UMS
WIT H THIS AD
$4.49
GOOD THRU AP R IL 13, 1977
EA STER BA SKETS
Conto1n1ng Hand ond body lo
lion and motchang scent. two
complex•on bars. plus o small
luHo sponge
$
3J5
Something Spec1ol
.'
WESTSIDE CEN TER 3'57- 4755
7
Arts and Events&rrtt
FILMS
ON CAM PUS
Froday A p111 8
INVASION OF
THE BOD Y
SNATCHERS (1956 80 m•n 1 Don
1 be put off the com•c book
title-thiS IS a SUbtle SCIPnC4-IiCIIOn
drama wh•Ch ts among the best o r
Its genre Betngs from outer space
rake over the m•nds and boO•es o!
small-town totks ano that s lUSt
tne t>eglnnmg Olrecteo ·by OtJn
S•egel W•tl'l INVADER S FR OM
MARS 11953 713 m1n 1 A o"'ba•
tun sc•-1• '''"' ab'lut atoe" '"''"""'
Also ELECTRONIC LAB YRINTH a
student him bV Georg,. Lu• 8\ wnf
tater based h•s full lengtr• mov•P
THX-1133 on 11 Present eo IJy tnP
Fnday Nile Folm Se11es LHOne 3
and 7 30 p m only 75 cents
Women On The Wall
by Kanie Jacobs
Wom~n on th~ Wall is a group
exhibit of art which encompasses
a wide range of talents. imaginations. and media. The spectrum
of art on display is as expansive
as the abilities of the 25 woman
artists involved . The exhibit ,
which is currently hanging in the
library gallery. came about
rn1tially through the o~
honal efforts of students Mary
Metzler and Nancy Lemoins,
who believed that women's work
was not being represented properly at Evergfftn. After securing space in the ga.llery, they
called a m~ting for women who
were interested in displaying
their artwork. A group of artists
came together at that m~ting
who selected and h~e art in
the show in a collective effort.
What resulted from this
process is an exhibit representing
the many forms of artistic
expression on campus. Painters,
potters , sculptors, sketchers,
etchers, w~avers, photographers,
and some group whom I've
undoubtably overlooked, all
have their creations on dlsplay.
There are f1ve photographers
represented in the array o f
women's art. The most strikmg
set of photographs in the show tS
a series of three e:nlltled "New
Eyes, .. by Susan Duane, showmg
a woman putting o n makeup m
a most dramatrc fashion The
D u a ne phot os ha ve a v er y
commerc1al look abo ut them , as
m advert1smg. o r like a movte
w.-tne.day, Apnt 13. 1en ·
GRADUATE SCHOOL PRACTI CE
' rESTING
8 00 a m - 12 30 p m
Law
School AdmiSSIOn Test ILSAn
Lecture Hell 5
1 00 p m 5 00 p m
Graduate
Recorcr Exam IGRE) Lecture Hall
on the late, late, late show
A bowl of eggs on an electric
range was the subject of a
photograph by Rebeca Horton .
The curves of the eggs. the bowl,
the stove coils. and the stove
itself - a relic from the days
when .appliances weren' t quite so
angular - m.ake a good design
picture. It has the same kind of
simple beauty as the photo that
Edward Steichen did for a soup
advertisement of a woman 's
hands peeling a potato.
Krystine Graziano's watercolor
paintings are finely detailed and
distinctly different from the
blurry impressionism that often
comes with watercolo rs . Her
painting, in shades of grey, of
inverted pyramids baJancing one
on top of the other, looks
suspiciously like the modem art
sculpture in the University of
Washington's Red Squ.are. It's
interesting to see a watercolor
that does not rely on color for
its eye appeal.
A nice piece of irony can be
seen in Mary Metzler's graphite,
charcoal , and grease-pencil
drawing of a group of angels
reflecting on a string of angel
paper dolls
Bits and pieces of a houseplant
o r a cactus are portrayed in
Lynda Barry's little graphite and
watercolor paintings. which look
a great deal like slightly-largerthan-life Ektachrome slides tack ed to the wall. In fact , the idea
of taking a piece of an object
and enclosmg t1 in a frame, out
o f co ntex t , IS a traditionally
ph o t og raph ic o ne rather than
one found m pamt ing
Mov ing fr o m t he seco nd
d1mension into the third, there
are a number of ceramic preces
Sitting about o n pedestals without name tags. only little s1gns
that say "Please do not touch".
The main thing that I have to
say about the pottery that is in
the exhibit rs that all I wanted to
do was touch it There was one
tea set in particular whose small
ro und cups alm o st demanded
that I pick them up to fet!l if
they were as perfectly made as
they looked. The temptation to
resist authority - the divine rule
of the 3x5 card - was strong.
almost overpowecmg, but I
reststed
The show tncludes a few
textile items that are standard
but Impressive all the same, and
a co uple of pieces that 1 found
unique. There is a ri chly
constructed rug b y Janine Vigus
whrch s hould never, ever be
trodden upon by muddy Vibr.am
soles.
A double-weave piece of soft
sculpture whi ch looks like a
set-up for a very confusmg game
of croquet is spr.awled out on the
noor Of the gallery. Its name IS
"Forho ld," and it was created by
Karen Richards o n . wh o ha s
another similar sc ulpture o n
dlsplay.
Women on the Wall, like any
student show , has its weak
pomts. but its best pieces m.ake
for an energetic exhibit It IS
certainly worth a v1sit to the
ever-popular library gallery to
lool over.
Wednesoay April t3
THE GOLD RUSH (t925t Charles
Chapltn s frozen nonh silent crass•c
about gold-prospec:t tng 1n Alaska
around t he tum of tile century The
snow scenes were shot tn Nevada.
and the film wh•ch tOOk •• months
to complete wa s one o f the
b•ggest commerctal successes of
the t920 s Chapl •n produced ,
wrote, d trecteo, and starred tn the
movie With PAGE OF MADNESS
(1 928) A J apa nese silen t mov•e
dorected by Tetno3uke Ktnug.tsa
Presented by the Academ•c Ftlm
series LH One . 1 30 and 7 JO p m
IN OLYMPIA AND TACOMA
THE CARS THAT EAT PEOPLE
and THE JAWS OF DEATH We
swear to GOd we di d not mllke lhts
up Lacey Drive-ln. •91 -3181
THE
LITTELEST
HORSE
THIEVES and WINNIE THE POOH
For the young at hean Capttol
Theater, 357-7181
THE CASSAND RA CROSSING
atarrlng Ric hard Harri s and Sopllta
Loren Olympic Theeter. 357-i"22
ROM EO AND JULIET
The
Cinema, tu-5914
THE HARDER THEY COME. an
excellent Jamaican m o v i e abo ut
Regg.a music Midn ight showtngs
o n Fri day and Saturday The
Cinema, 943-591 4
THE SON G REMAINS THE SAME
Home movies by Led Zeppetln State
Theater, 357--401 0 .
THE LATE SHOW. st arring An
Carney and Lily Tomlin Lakewood
Theater (Tacoma), 588-3500
MUSIC
IN OLY M PIA
Fnoay Apn l 8
TO M LI EBERMAN . i1 Qu11a"s
from M mnesola wt ll play ragt mw
and ~mg counlty biiJPS ana to~;
sonqs Also MIKE DUMOVICH
bluP!J mus•c•,H'
.tq tJ
P
1am FoH·
220 E. un ,
li p .,.
\A••· or~ welcomp s·
Salurday April 9
ERIC PARK 1t ~"~" Franc·~~"
(]U<Iilf player SI,Qt!l N il Oerforrr
Par~ ptars sltl:lP and t.ngerp•c~tn
gu•la• a,l:l s•ngs roluPS and ong1nd
comr,.os"•Ons
Apt>letam F ol '
Cl'nt!'• Doors t.oen at 8 p rr
Enterta•nm!'>nt srar~s ar 8 30
M mors welcome $ 1
Cr•ntM
CONFERENCES
ON CA M PUS
Fnday Aortl 8
CONFERENCE ON THE PLIGHT
OF UNDOCUMENTED WORKERS
Tn1s conference seeks to bnng ro
light the problems of undocumenl
eel workers
belltr known as
ollegal altens LH One and Library
'Obby 10 a m -4 p m
ART
ON CAMPUS
STUFFED ALBINO SQUIRRELS
ON TAIAL - PART II
(Our story so far Joe Bemi s ts
on trtal for crtmee ~~gatnst humanIty He hu ~ remoYeet from h is
cryooenlc tank, where ne had been
reposing at -100 degrees <*slus.
l o defend hlmaetf )
Proaecutlng
Attorney :
Mr
Bemis, do yoo deny that on March
7, 1969, you conspired to commit
an unnat ural act Involvi ng a atuHed
albino squirrel, a Slinky toy, and
the entire Thurston County dlapter
of the Daughters of the American
Revolution?
Mr. &.mla :
ProMcutlng Attorney : Look at
Exhibi t A, Mr Bemis How can you
atare cotd-bloodtldty at that pitiful
white rOdent statuette and not feel
some remorM about your sordid
.c1lvltles?
Mr. Bemla :
ProMCUifng Attorney : You make
me stck
Voice from the belcony : He' s
melting I
NEXT : JOE BEMIS IIEOS FOR
MERCY .
The ftnest
ouseplants
ve ry reasonabl y pn ced
Oly111pia
Greenhouse
I
The F.O.O.D. Co-op
15 p er ce nt mark up fo r memb er s
25 per ce nt mark -up fo r non -m emb er s
5
BRING 2 SHARP PENCILS AND
BE ON TIME
Stgn up at Car!!er Plann•ng and
Placemer>t library 12u, or tel&phone 8666193
Pllrta for all Jmported C8ra.
.
t
~o & Juliet
.
ll, I
620 E Legion
'J'M.¥M
SHOP MANUALS $7 95
healthy, inexpensive food
member owned and operatP.d
10-5 Saturdays
10-7 weekdays
12 1 N . Columbia (by Salvation Army)
Thts Ia a beautiful fil m, full o f youth and enervy with
Shakespeare's poetry set against the visual splendor ol
Renai ssance Italy D irec ted by Frances Zel flrall l
("Brother Sun, Slater Moon") Show tlmea. 7 and g 35
Ends Tues
Tha Hardar Thag Come
Filmed In Jamaica. the beat reggae movie 1tatrlng
Jimmy Cliff Midnight movie Friday and Saturday 11 50