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Part of The Paper, Volume 1, Number 13 (April 28, 1972)
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Work-release
"would relieve the strain on the
county jail to a degree," Sheriff
Redmond noted. It would also be
beneficial for those prisoners who
could qualify for it, be added.
The sheriff stressed that each
and every prisoner would be
carefully evaluated before being
allowed to participate.
Thurston County's old juvenile
facility possibly can be made
available
for
the
proposed
A
prisoner
work-release
program for Thurston County jail
prisoners
is
now
under
consideration.
Sheriff
Don
Redmond reported Monday.
Judge Frank Thorp, District
Justice Court, met with the
sheriff early last week to discuss
initial p^ans. Other officials will
be consulted over a period of
time.
A
work-release
program
for county prisoners
program. Redmond expressed the
hope that the community will
participate in the planning and
administration of the program.
Work-release for the county
jail could take several different
forms, he noted. "Perhaps the
most practical and popular would
be to have the prisoners work
eight hours a day, and to have
them stay in a decent facility
overnight and over the weekend,"
Redmond proposed.
Participants in the program
would earn wages, save some
money and perhaps learn a trade.
They would be required to pay
certain expenses, such as room
and board. "Everybody would
gain something under a system of
that type," the sheriff noted. All
reactions to and suggestions for
the proposed program from
concerned agencies, interested
organizations and the community
in general be submitted in writing
to Jail Superintendent Dwight
Caron, Post Office Box 1937,
Olympia. Interested individuals at
Evergreen are exploring the
possibility
of
college
involvement,
perhaps
for
academic
credit,
through
Counseling
director
Lem
Stepherson,
3238A
Evans
Library.
college
•i t-Vi* ||
VOLUME 1, NUMBER 13
CPA
By CHARLES STEVENS
A major question to be
resolved in planning for future
growth of open space areas-how
do we got about preserving the
natural areas of Cooper Point, and
how badly do we really want to
preserve them?
These were the concerns
tackled by the Cooper Point
Association at its Tuesday night
meeting.
Three different types of
open space concern them; 1) the
p e r s o n a l o p e n area of a
homeowners yard; 2) open space
within a development, reserved
section; and 3) public open space
such as parks, bike trails, and foot
paths.
There are. always costs to
preserving open areas, and one of
these is the property taxation
e x p e n s e . W h y leave land
undeveloped and not realize any
revenues from it, if that land will
be taxed as heavily as if it were
developed to its full extent?
Del Pettit, Thurston County
Assessor e x p l a i n e d to CPA
members that the Open Space
Taxation Act of 1968 provides
land owners with a way to
preserve their open land and not
be penalized by the tax structure
for leaving it undeveloped.
If a land owner promises not
to develop or alter a piece of
property, his land will be assessed
under the act at current use value
rather than at marketable, or
potential value. The difference in
property tax could be as high as
$200 per acre each year on land
that was bought for $10,000 an
acre.
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON 98505
APRIL 28, 1972
goals
This is a sizable incentive to
many land owners to declare their
land as open space.
Such strategy is fine for
preserving open space within a
single land owner's property, and
even common open areas within a
large residential development. But
what about securing public open
areas-the public parks and trail
system that Cooper Point need?"
When it comes down to
footing the bill ourselves for the
costs of open space, we will soon
find out how serious the people of
Cooper Point really are about
preserving the natural-ch3rcErr«r c*
the area.
Even giving away land to the
county for use as public open
areas is difficult, «i because the
county is hesitant to take on the
extra expense of maintaining
these areas.
An alternate method being
explored by the Cooper Point
Association is the creation of a
local park district to administer
these areas. The citizens of
C o o p e r P o i n t would tax
themselves to maintain, and thus
retain control of the local public
areas.
Cooper Point Association's
monthly membership meeting
took place Tuesday evening, April
18. Their
preliminary
comprehensive plan, including
strategies for preserving open
space areas .'was * presented at
that time. In addition, members
plan to see many loose ends tied
together for completion of the
f i n a l p l a n a n d ordinance
amendment in June.
POOL OR SCHOOL-Ye O/de Poof Hall and the Hatch Cover Inn are well under way on the
first floor. Ten cents for coffee or tea and 50 cents an hour for pool.
Paper planning
Members of "The
Paper"
Co-operative decided at their
weekly evaluation and planning
session, April 21 to cease weekly
publication of "The Paper" May 5
for this quarter.
Plans for the co-operative for
the remainder of this quarter are
to publish a paper next week and
then concentrate their efforts
toward an end-of-the-year edition.
This issue scheduled for June 3
will include a wrap up of events
and activities in Evergreen's first
year.
The
staff
is
reserving
approximately one-half page of
space for each program. Program
coordinators and faculty are urged
to prepare for such coverage by
supplying the co-operative with
information on program activities
during the year and/or pictures.
Each program will be contacted in
the near future by members of
"The Paper" Co-operative for
planning this coverage.
Deadlines for this issue have
not yet been confirmed, but
submission of feature material.
photographs and untimely articles
should be in as soon after May 5
as possible.
Current members of
"The
Paper" Co-operative that may be
contacted
for
additional
information on this special issue
are:
Bruce
Brockmann,
Contracted Studies; Joe Campo,
Michael Miller, Jerry Vermeire, all
in
Casaulty,
Freedom and
Chanced
Kit
Pagel,
Human
Development; and Lester
L.
Leahy,
Communications
and
Intelligence.
An audio/visual 'yearbook'
Evergreen will have an unusual
sort of "yearbook" this year. An
audio/visual essay is being created
as a project by Mary Wolever and
Ross Carey.
Presented in rough draft form
at the end of the year, the
collection will be polished up
during the summer and then be
placed in the Library as an
informal record of TESC.s first
year of operation.
Creators of the yearbook need
everyone's help in doing this.
Slides, color photos, and color
films of students, faculty and
staff activities during the first
quarter and early second quarter
are needed. Black and white
photos of important subjects not
available in color will also be
used.
Especially needed are photos
of
program
campouts,
workshops, internships,' offbeat
activities (Mickey Mouse ears on
the tower clock; Mole men on the
prowl) and events such as the
Christmas happening; boogies and
art shows.
Ross and Mary have been
taking their own slides and films
since the middle of Winter
quarter
they
are
looking
particularly for material from the
beginning of the year up to that
time.
Those wishing to help with
Evergreen's
first-year
annual
should mark their material with
name, address and telephone
number. Containers of slides or
other film, prints as', vyell as
negatives, may be left with Ross,
Residence Hall A-822, (753)
4705; or Mary, Modular 319-B,
(753) 7358.
In addition, submissions may
be left in campus mailboxes with
notes sticking out the end of the
box for Ross, the on-campus
mailman.
•
Material can also be left in a
collection box outside 3603C
Evans Library, a third-floor
room in thel Computer wing
marked "Photo Essay."
Once
material
has been
duplicated, all originals will be
returned within two weeks.
On-campus submissions should be
promptly
returned via the
individual's mailbox, so correct
addresses and telephone numbers
with each entry are essential.
Off-campus contributors will
receive their negatives or other in
person
through
academic
programs.
Items used in the Evergreen
yearbook
will
include
phc^o^credit for the contributor
at the end of the essay.
McDermott, McDermotf who?
By KENBALSLEYAND
JERRY VERMEIRE
Jim McDermott is running for
Washington State governor. Who
is Jim McDermott?
A lot of people will be asking
that question in the coming
months as his campaign gathers
steam. McDermott is a child
psychologist who recently has
taught at the University of
Washington. He was the first
Democrat
elected
to
the
legislature from the 43rd district
in Seattle.
In
a
recent
newsletter,
McDermott
commented
on
activities. Or lack of same, in the
1972 Special Legislature. One
real reason tax reform has not
come about, he felt, is that after
vested interests work over the
system to suit their purposes,
they lost interest in working for
general tax reform to provide
equitability for everyone.
He noted a case in point:
House Bill 45, which allowed the
lumber industry a tax exemption
for "unprocessed logs" shipped
to
Japan. This tax break
represents a subsidy to foreign
industry, he stated, with local
treasuries losing $1.4 million
annually.
In the area of economic
recovery, McDermott cJVed as
"very responsive" actions th\six
bond
issues authorized
lSy
legislators for final decision by
the voters in November. These
deal
with water
pollution,
development of water supplies,
parks and recreation, social and
health
services,
community
college construction and public
transportation.
The transportation measure,
which he particularly favored,
provides money to establish a
"personal" rapid-transit system
for major cities in the state. This
would
be
a
rubber-tired,
c o m p u t e r i z e d ,
electrically-powered, on-demand
"alternative to the flow of
concrete which has been choking
our cities," he continued.
Another favorite of his, the
college construction measure, will
productively fill leisure time
caused by job losses through
technology,
a
"re-creative
opportunity for 'recycling human
resources'," he added, "making
learning more than just a means
to an end."
• McDermott also expressed
concern for personal rights and
its application in Senate Bill 146,
which sets up a criminal
information division within the
Washington State Patrol.
The legislature, he felt, rather
than the head of a state agency,
should have more control in
determing the content and use of
collected
information.
The
individual, he insisted, should
kpow what information about
Mm is kept in all public records.
Finally, McDermott saw House
Bill 223, making restricted
hitchiking legal, as another
significant step in protecting
individual rights.
Those interested in learning
more about Jim McDermott and
his gubernatorial effort should
contact
Roger Stephan, on
campus at extension (753) 3349
or off-campus at Route 15, Box
562
(Sunset Beach Road),
352-5227.
Denny
Heck,
943-3775, will also provide
information on
McDermott's
campaign.
Gulf OH spends
$20.000,000 ayear
which isused in
support of a war
A independence...
don't buy Gulf products!
?T. if you buy Gulf gasoline you help
to finance an immoral war!
Dont buy Gulf
Angola is a small colony on the west coast of Africa. Angola is a repressed colony of
Portugal, much the same as the United States was a colony of England in 1776. Since 1961
Angola has been fighting for her independence from Portugal, the world's last remaining
colonial power Angola's right to freedom is supported by the Untied Nations as well as
the United States. This war is a costly war in terms of Angolan lives. Thousands of Angolans
have died in their fight for freedom and over 500,000 have been forced to become refugees.
The war is expensive in terms of dollars, also. Portugal's annual military budget is
approximately 50% of her total budget. The Portuguese government currently has 150,000
troops in Africa. The Gulf Oil Corporation financially supports this Portuguese war
through its annual payment of $20.000,000 for oil rights in Angola.
If you buy Gulf petroleum products you contribute lo the financial support of this war
against freedom.
Working Members of The Paper Co-operative
Michael Miller
Shore plan
Bruce Brockmann
Chris Ness
Jerry Vermeire
Joe Campo
Kit Pagel
Lester L. Leahy
Staff
Ken Balsley, Charles Stevens, Bob Turnage
The Paper is published weekly as a co-operative effort for the
students, faculty and staff of The Evergreen State College, Olympia,
Washington 98505. Editorial comment contained herein does not
necessarily represent the views of the TESC community but rather
those of the individual author. Advertising material presented herein
does not necessarily imply endorsement by this newspaper.
Newspaper offices are located in 3217A TESC Library, campus
extension 3189, unrestricted telephone 753-3186.
Thurston Action Committee's
shorelines study group, which
next meets at 8 p.m. Thursday,
May 4, in the Evans Library, has
been asked by Thurston County
Planning Commission to develop
guidelines for county application
of the state's Shorelines Act.
This citizens' committee meets
the first three Thursday evenings
of each month in the south east
corner of the third floor Library.
All .'are weTftome to attetid\the
sessions and become involved in
the new project.
>AGE TWO The Evergreen State College THE PAPER April 28, 1972,
IT'S A GIRL!!! Valena Whitman with new arrival Varita
Antoinette Wright, born three weeks ago next Sunday.
Future contract
"Whole System Earth: Content
and Context for Future Planning
and Education", a group contract
with Lynn Patterson, is getting an
early start. Those interested in
joining the group effort, as
described
in
the
recently-published
Evergreen
Catalog
supplement,
should
obtain a questionnaire from
program secretary Chris Cody,
2414C Evans Library.
Once
completed,
the
contract
queries should be
directed to Patterson's office,
2415C
Evans
Library.
An
announced meeting in early May,
after all the questionnaires are
gathered, will afford all potential
participants to discuss aim and
direction of the group contract,
according to Ms. Patterson.
Religious rode
Wilson McKinley, a "Jesus
Peoples'" rock
band
which
performed
for
Evergreen
audiences yesterday, will remain
in the area through Wednesday.
The Spokane-based group will
perform -tonight, April 28, at
Mission Creek Forest Camp, then
travel to Tacoma tomorrow for
an 8 p.m. concert at the Magical
Opera House.
Saturday's
appearance
in
downtown
Tacoma will be
repeated Monday evening at the
Court "C" Coffee House. The
May 1 show begins at 8 p.m. at
914 Broadway at Market Street.
Institutional tours will include
Monroe Prison on Monday
afternoon,
Washington
Correctional Center in Shelton on
Tuesday evening, and Faith
Temple Wednesday evening.
Fish feat
Thanks to at least two all-night
efforts by students preparing
bread for Dedication Day, the
community
meal
was
a
resounding success, according to
Food
Services director
Bill
Kenworthy.
Students baked bread, helped
cook salmon in an open pit
behind the Library and stood by
for any and all odd jobs, he
recalled. "I want to make certain
that everyone knows I really
appreciate
their
efforts,"
Kenworthy said. "It was a lot of
Letter
To "The Paper":
I would like to make a couple of
minor corrections in the April 21,
1972 issue of The Paper. In the article
relating to housing on page two, the
seventh paragraph should have read
"Burke reports that a floor manager
will be assigned to each floor, when
possible, and a maintenance manager
will be assigned to the modular units."
The reason for the corrections is
because, in some instances, a floor
manager is responsible for two floors;
and, because of a lack of funds and a
lack of need, we can only hire and only
need one maintenance manager for the
modular units.
, Gerald G. Burke
Director of Housing
fun-and it wouldn't have been
possible without their help."
Evergreen
Food
Services
prepared
salad
for
the
complimentary meal, as well as
providing butter and honey.
Kenworthy
co-ordinated the
day's general activity as well as
preparation for the meal.
"Hopefully the community
can get together again for such a
feast," he concluded, then
reflected, "no, it's too much
work!"
again
There will be another Blossom
benefit, in the form of a swap
meet and boogie, this Saturday,
April 29, at noon. This event will
take place outdoors, weather
permitting. Featured bands for
the benefit are Sky Church, the
Melodious Funk Jug Band, and
Tom Crawford and the Boys in
the Band. Another feature will be
free organic food, provided by the
Olympia Food Conspiracy Co-op.
An admission fee of 25 cents for
buyers and $1.00 for traders will
be charged.
Candidates
"Black views'
Evergreen contract student, Al
Thierry, premieres tonight, April
28, as an executive producer of
"Black
Views"
on
KTNT
Television, Channel 11, at11 p.m.,
The i new' monthly half-hour
television series, dealing with
activities and problems of
Tacoma's Black community, is
patterned,
after
National
Education Television's "Black
Journal."
Tonight's
first
production
marks the first local program
series aimed at Tacoma's Black
community. A joint effort of
KTNT's
Public
Affairs
Department and the Metropolitan
Development Council (MDC) of
Tacoma, "Black Views" becomes
a tangible portion of Thierry's
work as director of the joint
Tacoma
Model Cities-MDC
Minorities Journalism Training
Program.
The April 28 premiere includes
a look at the city's low-income
housing problems, a firm report
on Hillton Children's Clinic in
Tacoma and a display of thythm
by the Stanley Elementary
School African Drum Group.
Next month's "Black Views"
installment, set for Friday, May
26, will take a comprehensive
look at drug problems in the
community and efforts to solve
them.
>
Thierry
joined
MDC as
assistant information director last
October, with no previous
television
or
journalism
background.
Under
MDC's
employee career development
program, he was soon enrolled in
Evergreen's Contracted Studies
program and began receiving
college credit for on-the-job
public
relations
learning
experience.
Thierry
and his sponsor
Howard Shuman, MDC director
of education and a former Seattle
television newsman, approached
KTNT in November with their
idea for a local series about the
Black community. Television
officials
enthusiastically
responded, offering not only air
time
but
also
production
assistance, including film and
video tape, and use of a film
cameraman, director and studio
crew.
Problems discussed on "Black
Views" should be of interest not
only to Blacks but to the entire
community, Thierry noted.
A repoYt on 16 chief executive
hopefuls, and their efforts and
positions leading up to the 1972
Presidential Election, is now
available at the Information
Center. Located just inside The
Library Group's second-floor
main entrance, the center is open
Monday through Friday from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m.
Included within the timely
report, according to Dave Groves,
are President Richard M. Nixon's
policies toward Indochina as well
as the environment and other
domestic issues.
Major
candidates'
environmental
and domestic
records are also featured, along
with their biographies.
Journalism workshops
Layout and Design, and
Editorial writing are the topics of
the two up coming journalism
workshops according to Peter
Robinson, contracted studies
faculty, and
The
Paper
Co-operative. Layout and Design
will feature Sidney Morrell,
publisher . of "The Lacey
Leader" at 7 p.m., Wednesday,
May 3 in the board of trustees
room,
Library
3112. The
Robinson is planning a group
workshops are open to all contract next fall for about 15
interested students.
people to work intensively on the
Henry Gay, editor-publisher of establishment or re-establishment
"The
Shelton-Mason County .of a campus newspaper for
Journal" will speak on editorial Evergreen. Anyone interested in
writing at a workshop planned participating in this contracted
for May 11. Gay recently won an studies program for next fall is
award for the best editorial in the urged to attend the workshop
state, along with several awards next Wednesday or contact Peter
for humor writing.
Robinson.
Population Dynamics bombs
By KEN BALSLEY
Shades, of
"THX
114".
Population Dynamics was here.
This time the radicals were out
radicaled. Dr. George Denniston
and Martha Kent Willing were on
campus Tuesday to give a lecture
and conduct a seminar on future
world collapse due to over
population,
the
need
for
population control, methods of
control available and methods
needed in the future. What they
had to say shocked some of those
attending the seminar.
Willing and Denniston were
representing a group called
Population
Dynamics
which
provides a counseling service for
those wanting birth control
information,
abortion,
vasectomys and sterilizationi.
The lecture commenced with
Willing stating the goals of
Population Dynamics and at the
same time plugging her new book
"Beyond
Conception:
Our
Children's
Children."
Dr.
Denniston using graphs and
charts and quoting from the Club
of Rome report, predicted future
world
collapse would
be
irreversable within 20 years
unless trends were not brought
under control, foremost of which
was population.
It was at the seminar following
the lecture that it became clear
that Population Dynamics was far
more radical than any other
population control group. They
recommended
removing
tax
incentives for the production of
children, refusal of welfare grants
for more children, open abortion
and sterilization on demand and
free contraceptives for all. These
ideas in themselves were not
extremely radical, but Willing
said these ideas alone would not
bring population under control
quickly enough to avoid world
doom. "Legislation is needed",
she said, "that would limit all
women to the production of two
children with forced isterilizationi
after the birth of the second
child. In cases where a woman
manages to escape sterilization, at
the birth of the third child or any
future children, these children
would be isterilized. as well as the
mother."
Dr. Denniston said that 1.2
children per family is the leveling
of population control. Legislation
would act as a form of mutual
coercison.
"No woman would risk the
enforced sterilization 'of her
third child," said Willing. "It is
for that reason that very few
people would violate the law."
When asked if this doesn't
violate the freedom and the rights
of the individual D'r. .Denniston
replied,
"The
population
explosion risks the very rights of
all."
Anyone who disagreed with
their outlook was called a
Pro-Natalist, a term which was
later defined as being for more
children and pro-birth, a term
that is used in a derogatory sense.
Why is the pressure so great in
the United States when it is
countries
like India where
population is growing out of
control? Denniston said that each
American child uses as much
resources as nine Indian children
and pollutes as much as nine.
"No Indian child will grow up to
be president of Dow Chemical
company and pollute the whole
world," he said. "No Indian child
will use DDT."
When asked if the American
policy towards sterilization was
not racist in its outlook Willing
said, "It is not racist. Minority
women come to our clinic
wanting to limit the size of their
families. The poor and the
minority suffer most from
increased population. It is the
industrialists and the capitalists
who want more children for the
machine, for a large labor pool
and more consumers. A race is
never going to breed itself to
superiority. What we want is
quality and not quantity." She
went
on
to
say; 'The
employment
hassel due to
pollution controls is overpalled
by world collapse. We've reached
the watershed, from here on out
every child is a disaster. It will be
a far more humane world when
there is fewer children."
Martha Willing has a BA from
Bryn Mawr, an MA from the
University of Washington in the
fields of biology and philosophy.
She is the mother of four sons.
The Evergreen State College THE PAPER April 28, 1972 PAGE THREE
i
Housing projects
NASA sets goals
Open to all members of the
Evergreen
community,
the
college's new Native American
Student
Association (NASA)
plans an organizational meeting
today, April 28, at 1 p.m. Set for
the NASA office, 3209A Evans
Library, the session is open to all,
especially those with questions or
comments for the group.
Those presently belonging to
the native American group, as
well as prospective members,
should plan to attend this
afternoon's session. Association
representatives intend to present
their
newly-established
"Statement of Purpose" to aM in
attendance and then to the entire
Evergreen community.
Put in writing "to make
faculty and students more aware
of the numerous opportunities
presented" by the association,
the group's statement speaks of
"a need to organize to achieve
certain goals."
Association members feel that
"our heritage and culture is of
utmost importance to ourselves,"
the
statement
of
purpose
continues, "and also must be
recognized for
its possible
contributions to our country,
state
and
the
Evergreen
community."
The significance of "native
American ways" is best evident in
the result
of the "little
attention.,.paid to the teachings
of our (native American) elders,"
the association notes in pointing
out
the
consequences of
pollution,
discontent
is
overcrowded communities and
general lack of harmony.
"In short, our goal is to
educate, inform or "turn on"
society, this Evergreen and
Olympia society in particular, to
the basic, logical process of life as
taught by our elders," the
statement emphasizes.
'Government'
within
the
association will follow a tribal
council form, with all decisions
reached through consensus by the
membership. One tribal council
representative,
again
by
consensus of the other council
members will act as spokesman
for NASA.
Already Veterans' of three
association meetings, members
have
almost
completed
a
bibliography on books dealing
with
Indian
affairs. When
finished, the book listing as well
as other information will be
available to all.
In addition to more than 40
books already ordered, the group
will be obtaining tapes, records
and other resource material on
the history, music and culture of
native American tribes.
Those
wishing
additional
information on Evergreen's new
group may contact NASA at
campus extension (753) 3148 or
stop by the third-floor Library
association office.
Year in Mexico
Weekly planning sessions for
next year's program, "A Year in
Mexico," continue every Monday
at 1 p.m. in 1419C Evans
Library. In addition to the
regular meetings, a Spanish
language workshop has also been
scheduled as part of the program
preparation.
Evergreen
community
members interested in checking
out
this program in the
formulation stage are welcome to
attend the Monday sessions as
well as the language workshops.
A "final determination" of
housing
projects
to
be
undertaken with a $14,000
construction
refund
was
announced Tuesday. The decision
was reached on the basis of a
listing of preferences among
campus
housing
residents,
gathered by Nancy Stevens, and
Tabo Chuku, former resident
managers, and Resident Activities
director Lou Ellen Peffer, none
members
of
the
original
Disappearing Task Force.
According
to
the
"mini-survey" of a portion of
on-campus residents, the number
of which was not specified,
installation
of
radio
and
television cables ranked first on a
list of four printed choices.
Following
preferences were
soundproofing material around
corridor doors; locks on shared
bathroom doors and opening
kitchen windows in Residence
Hall A; and graphics on doors.
Cable installation "in the Class
A Buildings" will take place this
summer, housing director Gerald
Burke decided from the response.
In addition, he reported that the
housing office would seek funds
to
accomplish
the
other
objectives listed.
Attending this week's final
meeting was Tony Wilkins, the
only representative of the original
nine-member DTF. Others were
Angela Jackson, Danny Henry,
Bruce Roth, Peffer, Chuku,
Stevens and Burke.
Earlier projects suggestions
collected by the DTF included
construction
of bike sheds,
instruction booklets for modular
furniture, portable refrigerators,
approximately $400 worth of
lumber for residents to construct
"anything" for outside areas and
window-restraining devices to
prevent wind damage. Restriction
of the refund money to
construction areas ruled out a
number of such proposals.
107
Penny poems
"Penny Poems and Prose", and
reasonable facsimiles thereof,
began appearing in the Library
cafeteria this week, under the
auspices of cheap culture for
diners.
For a mere penny per page.
Evergreen community members
may relax with the latest edition
of the single-sheet offering,
produced by Doug Kahn. A
subsidiary of the "Oh To Fly By
Night
Press",
the
daily
undertaking features works of
contributors for the enjoyment
of all.
If one day's offerings fail to
please, Kahn noted, the following
edition will feature entirely
different submissions.
Potential contributors should
contact Kahn at Residence Hall A
812B, (753) 4793, or leave their
Minimal editing is the rule, he
assured, "except, of course, in
instances of watered-down Rod
McKuen."
I am going to teach at Evergreen
next Fall and would like to lease
some rural property with two
houses on it, beginning this June.
I would be grateful for any leads
or suggestions. We will visit
Olympia May 11. Please write to
Thad Curtz, Cowell College,
UCSC, Santa Cruz, CA 95060.
Hot Popcorn
Machine
Good Music
Latest LP
System
(Rather than
jukebox)
THROUGH TUESDAY:
"Ryan's
Daughter ";
Saturday, April 29, Kids
Matinee; "Smiley Gets A
Gun" and three cartoons;
Pool
Pinball
Machines
Sandwiches
Refreshments
STARTS WEDNESDAY
"Ten Commandments"
ALL WEEK
'The Godfather"
Visitors are also encouraged to
attend.
Program descriptions for "A
Year in Mexico" may be obtained
in 1413C Evans Library, campus
extension (753) 3965; further
information is available from Con
Case at (753) 2118, Elena Perez,
943-7657, or Dennis Friedman at
943-2440.
BEER
WINE
POOL
107 N.Capitol Way
Olympia, Wa.
DELI ACCEPTING FOOD STAMPS
DELICATESSEN
NOON TO 5 P.M. MONDA Y THRU FRIDA Y
1100 EVANS LIBRARY
WANNA' MAKE YER' OWN?
VISIT
VINO-FINO
WINE & BREW SUPPLIES
TYPING
EVERYTHING FOR THE AMATEUR BREWER
357-5916
Evenings
308 SOUTH SOUND CENTER
"ON THE MALL" in LACEY
PHONE 456-8988
Noon 'till 9 — Mon., Thurs. & Fri.
Noon 'till 6 - Tues., & Wed.
10'till 6
-Saturday
YOUR CONVENIENCE
Westside Speed Wash
7274 WEST
HARRISON
14 Ib. wash
30*
Unclassified
FpR SALE: Maytag Washer and
Dlryer. $108 for the set. In good
shape
for
older
set. Call
352-5353.
1949 CHEV PICKUP for sale,
$300. Paul Kent, 943-4230
•63 BUICK SPECIAL convertible
for sale, $50; lovea1car for
s o m e o n e m e c h a n i c a l ; call
Marlene. 352-7323.
OPEN 8 AM
to
Dry
10 PM
10*
Space below donated for personal ads for the Evergreen
Student Community by Westside Speed Wash.
FOR RENT: One person to share
cost_{47.50 per pers.) on House
View property on Cooper Point
through summer - Call , Dennis
Barker, 943-6089.
FOR SALE: Garard Turntable
with new beveled diamond needle
c a r t r i d g e , Heathkit amplifier;
Patty A l l e n , (753) 3137 or
352-9889 after 6.
FOR SALE: size lOVz Raichle
climbing boots, heavy; excellent
condition, $40 (will dicker); call
(753) 3778.
WANT TO SUBLET or Vent for
sumnl^r: country or waterfront
house,"pref. furnished; Christine,
Now
,(753) 261" days or 352\-2348
eves.
' \l at 3307C Evans Library.
PAGE FOUR The Evergreen State College THE PAPER April 28, 1972
Would Be Time to Open Your New Account
SOUTH SOUND NATIONAL BANK