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     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 1



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the - western front western Washington state college  Vol. 65  No. 30 
FRIDAY  February 23, 1973  TenCents  Bellingham, Washington  Cagers finish 
second in  conference  See page 10  A.S. votes to replacePublications
Council  A.S. would be  new publisher  The AS Board of Directors voted 
Tuesday to ceasefunding of the  Publications Council at the end of  Winter
quarter.  In the same motion the board  resolvedto establish a
Communications  Council through which the three college  publications, the
Western Front, Klipsun and Jeopardy, would be funded  and to which they
would be responsible.  The council would takeaffect Spring  quarter.  Under
present policy the  publications have been directly  responsible to the
Boardof Trustees  through President Flora and the student  publications
council.  However, during the pastseveral  months a question has been
raised about  w h e r e the P u b l i c a t i o ns  Council shouldreport.
The College  Services Council sent four separate  proposals on the matter
to the  All-CollegeSenate Thursday.  The four suggestions included 
reporting to the All-College Senate in  two proposals,both the AS Board and
 College Services Council, or becoming  departmentally related.  According
to theAS Board's motion,  the Communications Council would  develop a
statement of policy and  procedureaccording to a set of  guidelines
attached to the motion, and  the editors of the three publications  wouldbe
held responsible for carrying  out the policy.  The AS Board would be
responsible  for publication policyand allocation of  funds but not daily
editorial decisions.  The Communications Council could  appeal to the
All-College Senate any  decisions of the AS Board which it felt  were a
threat to the publications.  Theboard's position is that it cannot  legally
or morally "support a group  which does not choose to be affiliated  with"
the Associated Students.  Attending the meeting were more  visitors than
the board has had thisquarter.  Rodger Painter, managing editor of  the
Western Front, said the Board of  Trustees has delegated responsibility to 
the Publications Council, and this  responsibility cannot automatically be 
switched toanother council. He said the  AS Board would either be
publishing  separate publications or none at all.Rebecca Harris, AS Board
member,  repeatedly stated that the Associated  Students cannot fund a
non-AS group.  Board member Joe Hann said that it  is not fair to the
students, the college or  the communityfor publications to use  space and
equipment belonging to the  Associated Students and not be  affiliatedwith
them.  Publications fear that the AS Board  will censure them by
withdrawing  funds, Harris said.  BillDietrich, Publications Council 
member, said that they also fear censure  from Flora and others, and
thatfor  maximum freedom they may try to  initiate a subscription fee from
students.  An ad hoc committee ofthe  publications council is currently 
investigating the feasibility of a  subscription rate.  An a l t e r n a t
i v e to the  Communications Council would be for  publications to be under
a senate  council, in which casethey would no  longer be a student
activity, according  to AS board members.  The purpose of the
board'saction,  Harris said, is to establish publications  as a student
activity.  Chairman Kennedy requested that a  roll call vote be taken:
five- board  members voted for the motion, and two  abstained.  In response
to theboard's action,  Robert Thirsk, Publications Council  chairman, said
he didn't think the board  had theauthority to dissolve the  council.  He
said, "It's my understanding that  President Flora approved the by-laws 
for the Publications Council. And only  the college senate can change them.
The  board can'tarbitrarily drop the  Publications Council or establish a 
Communications Council in lieu of it  without theconsent of the Senate. The
 Senate is the only governing body that  can do that, other than the Board
ofTrustees."  Council re-opens  add!drop hearings  The Academic Council has
 voted to reconsider itsdecision  on implementation of the new  add/drop
rules.  Acting chairman Joseph  Crook announced March 6 as the  date the
council would re-open  discussion on the new rules.  The new add/drop rules
 whichwere approved last  quarter by Academic Council  has come under
criticism  because of its shortened drop  period and its requirement that 
80 per cent of all courses be  successfully completed.  The period
duringwhich  classes could be dropped would  be limited to the first five
days  of the quarter by the new rules.Under current rules, classes can  be
dropped until the end of the  sixth week. The new rules would  allow a
student to withdraw  from a class after the drop  period by taking a grade
of "W"  for the class.  A "W"would be considered  an unsuccessful
completion.  Grades of "F", "NP", "U" or  unconverted "K", whichstands  for
an incomplete, would also  be considered unsuccessful  completions, but a
"W" would  not betaken into consideration  in the calculation of the grade 
point average.  It would be required,  however, that 80 per cent of all 
courses taken be successfully  completed. Failure to maintain  an 80 per
cent ratewould lead  to academic probation and  dismissal in much the same
way  as will failure to maintain a 2.0grade point average under  existing
rules.  A major goal of the new  add/drop rules was to cause thestudents to
be responsible in the  classes they register for. In Fall  quarter 7,126
classes were  dropped,nearly half of which  were dropped too late to be 
added by students wishing to  take the class.  One side-effect of the 
decision to re-open hearings on  the add/drop rules was the  reversal of
Academic Council'searly implementation of the  "W" grading option. 
••-•  IT'S BLUNTED, 
just faking. Both  outdoorpractice.  ISN'T IT? Tony Selto checks the end of
his sword to make sure that Gary English is  FencingClub members were
taking advantage of the spring-like weather to get some  inside.  Kappa's
co-ed, andthey like it  An experimental co-ed floor was to last only
through Fall  quarter, but it's continuing.Residents say it's "natural"and 
easy to make friends. See pg. 6-7.  Airborne students learn geographyFour
students learned how to make a field trip meaningful  by planning,
participating in, and evaluating one. They flew  . into Canada, and around
Whatcom County. See pg. 6.  Health DepU diversified services  VDtests,
immunizations, child check-ups, Planned  Parenthood: these and more are
part of the WhatcomCounty Health Department's community services. See pg.
9.\



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     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 2



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£ Wesfe'ffi-Ffftrit ;¥Hda^^eBruafyl2^;fS73 
Self-study group elects  Kruse as new director 
GOODVIBES—Jean Kruse,. newly-elected self-study steering
 committee director, said she is frustrated withthe way the  program has
been handled.  The self-study steering  committee elected Jean Kruse as 
itsnew director Tuesday night.  She will replace former director  Harvey
Stone.  Kruse, former director ofHigginson and wife of the  director of
Nash, has been  f a c i l i t a t o r of numerous  self-study groups.  As
new director, Kruse said,  "My first priority will be to get  to everyone I
can in the program  and find outtheir feelings and  . frustrations."  .
Kruse's second step will be to  make a pamphlet, explaining  s e l f - st u
d y projects and  presenting it to the faculty.  Kruse will hold the
position  only five months. Even if thefederal grant is not renewed for 
self-study at the end of her term,  Kruse wants to establish "good 
vibes"about the program so that  it will continue. "It's a good 
educational process," Kruse said  "and I believe it's viable."  Even though
it's a good  Senate evaluation due soon  Faculty relations  major question 
by ALICE COLLINGWOOD  A new concept in college governance for  Western was
born almost two years ago, andits  progress will be reviewed soon.  The
All-College Senate had a slow childhood as  it was organizingitself and
learning about its  constituencies. Many are only now beginning to 
recognize.its maturity.  Thesenate was approved in principle by the  Board
of Trustees in June, 1971, and it is due for  review at theend of two
years. That review will  determine whether the board will allow it to 
continue as it is or changeits constitution.  If there is to be any
question of the senate's  effectiveness, some say it is likely to beaimed
at  the area of faculty-senate relations.  Some senators believe challenges
and  non-cooperationfrom the faculty could  undermine the senate's
strength.  Questions of the senate's powers in areas offaculty
concern—such as salary schedules,  grievances and tenure
and promotion—have arisen  sincethe senate was first
formed.  "The real problem is how to handle a small  number of things which
are notstudent concerns,  REFERENCE TO SALARIES-Senate  Chairman George
Gerhold said the line between which matters the senate can handle and those
 it can't are blurred.  such as faculty salary schedule,"Senator Robert 
Teshera of the geography faculty said.  Teshera, who is also a Faculty
Council member,said the question is who handles faculty affairs and  how
big that list is.  He thinks students probably want a voice in  tenure and
promotion, which they would have  were the senate to handle such matters,
but hedoesn't believe they are, or should be, interested in  deciding
faculty salaries.  Senate chairman GeorgeGerhold said the  dividing line
between which matters the senate can  handle and those which it can't is
a"very gray  area."  "This question has been' liffder debate ever  since
the senate was proposed," he said.Gerhold thinks one change that could be
made  in the constitution to clarify the senate's powers is  insection
4.61. It says, in part:  " . . . the Business and Finance Council shall 
appoint such committees asit deems appropriate  to conduct its business.
Among these committees  there shall be appointed aWelfare Committee  which
shall have as its main function to develop  and propose policies and
schedulesfor salaries and  fringe benefits throughout the College." 
Gerhold said union contracts cover most thingspertaining to faculty
employment and this  constitutional reference to salaries is a problem 
area.  SenatorBrian Copenhaver of the general  studies faculty believes the
senate constitution will  be approved by theBoard of Trustees if nothing 
intervenes between now and the time of the  review. He thinks one of
thethings that might  intervene is a faculty vote against the senate. 
Knute Skinner, chairman of the FacultyCouncil, said the council may poll
the faculty on  the senate in conjunction with a review of
whatrepresentation the faculty wants.  One provision of the constitution
allows the  four senate constituenciesto organize themselves  in any way
they wish, with recognized agencies to  represent and act for them.Teshera
believes there are three alternatives for  faculty representation:  -Let
the Faculty Council continueas a  "limited-purpose" body.  -Turn the
functions over to the faculty  members of the senate as a separate group. 
-Work through some collective bargaining  agency.  Senator Stanley Daugert
of the philosophyfaculty, one of the original planners of the senate,  said
if the senate structure is finally approved as  thecollege governing body
by the Board of  Trustees, the faculty still won't give up its powers. 
"The faculty isso jealous of its prerogatives  that it isn't going to let
the Board of Trustees tell  it what to do," Daugertsaid.  Teshera said he
doesn't think both the senate  and the Faculty Council will survive. He
thinks thesenate is firmly established as the college  decision-making body
and will continue in  existence.  CollegePresident Charles J. Flora thinks
the  senate has been effective in doing the job it was set  up to
do-"bringing together -the various  constituencies of the college" so
problems can be  discussed withmembers of all constituencies  present. 
Copenhaver thinks some of the positive points  the senate willhave when it
is reviewed are its  handling of such things as the Committee of  Inquiry
Report, administrative reorganization and  the affirmative action program
(for hiring women  and minorities). ;  "These point to aclear conception by
the  senate of its role in college life ana its willingness  to act," he
said. "The senateprovides a voice to  the administration and the Board of
Trustees that  they are acting like they respect."Flora said the senate
evaluation will be made  during Spring quarter and that he does not yet 
have in mind any amendments that he will suggest  regarding the senate
structure.  So far, he said, he is "pleased with the way it is 
developing."  But Daugert expressed a note of uncertainty.  "The.senate has
lost somepower and has been  challenged^ ignored and damned. It is hard to
say  how the review is going to go.''educational process, Kruse is 
frustrated with the way the  program has been handled.  Because of this,the
new  d i r e c t o r said that she  understands the faculty's point  of
view. "Nobody really  understandsthe procedure, or  the self-study model
for that  matter," she said.  "Not only is it a threat to  their
(thefaculty's) method of  education, it's so sloppily  handled, that it
makes a bad  impression," she said.About the self-study credit 
controversy, Kruse said,  "something's got to be done  about the way
creditsare dished  out."  "We must show faculty, as  individuals, what
concrete  results have come from  self-study-we need their help,"  she
added.  Former director Harvey  Stone is now program  consultant,
theposition he held  last year. "I'm going to need  him," Kruse said. "He's
a very  valuable person, and I'm glad  he's staying on."  PARKING LOT
INCIDENT-Western student Steve Kirsop has  been charged with thirddegree
assault following a confrontation  with security Feb. 4.  Student charged: 
driving car at cop  AWestern student was  booked on charges of third 
degree assault following a Feb. 4  confrontation withsecurity in  the Nash
Hall parking lot.  Steve Kirsop was driving a  friend home early Sunday  m
o r n i n gwhen security  patrolman, campus patrolman  Dave Doughty
approached his  car and asked foridentification  which Kirsop refused to 
produce. "I was dropping off a  friend who lives at Nash Hall and  Icould
see no reason for the  confrontation," he said.  Then to avoid any further 
hassle, Kirsop said hestarted to  leave the parking lot. The  patrolman
then stood in front of  Jhe car, blocking it after it was  inmotion, he
said. Doughty then  jumped onto the hood of the car  as Kirsop was moving
towards  the exit,Kirsop said.  T h e car t r a v e l ed  approximately 50
to 60 feet  when Kirsop's windshield was  smashedby the patrolman's 
flashlight, according to Kirsop.  Kirsop was "totally amazed  by the whole
ordeal." Heforesees a time when campus  patrolmen, whose job is to issue 
tickets and protect campus  p r o p e r ty , become police,  enforcing
actions that conflict  with the rights of the students.  He sees the
incident as a  "misunderstanding on the part  of both sides as to who had
the  right to do what."  Larry Daugert, aFairhaven  lawyer, has taken
Kirsop's case  and the trial date will be set  within a week.  Security
directorRobert G.  Peterson, told the Front that no  more information
concerning  the incident would be released at  this time.  Commissioners'
jobs open  Two openings for AS  Housing and Employment  Commissionerare now
available  to students carrying at least 12  credit hours.  Both are one
year positions  running from June 1973 to June  1974, and entail a training
 period during next quarter.  The salary is $120 per quareror $480 for the
12 month  period.  Some of the responsibilities  that concern the
commissioner  are:—coordinating efforts of all 
employees  —handling of all written  correspondence 
—checking alllistings for  discrimination and forwarding
 cases to the proper channels  — handling hiring and 
budgetary items  —keeping the office open for  eight
hours a day  —maintaining office supplies  and
services—writing the budget for the  following year and 
—interning under present  •
commissioner and training new  ones at the end of term in office.  All
interested applicants who  need further information  concerningthis
position and  wish to apply, should contact C.  T. Bensel, in Viking Union
217.



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     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 3



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Rrjday, February 23, 1973 Western Front  Jobs: are grads ready?  by BRUCE
HAYES  As graduationapproaches,  those students prepared in job  readiness
will have a better  chance of getting employmentthan those who are not. 
Louis Lallas, director of  Western's Career Planning and  Placement Center,
saidthat  "people who develop skills in  looking for a job are much more 
successful" in finding one than  people who don't have the skills.  Job
readiness includes letters  of application, resumes, and  interviewing
skills. "In today's job market,"  Lallas said, "those who are  landing jobs
are those who can  sell themselves. But . many  students are unprepared in
job  readiness."  In some cases, students have  no idea what theywant and
this  has to be determined.  Sometimes vocational tests are  given and
other times it's just a"matter of analyzing themselves.  You cannot look
for a position  if you don't know what your  goals are."When determining
his  employment needs, a student  often wants a job that will fit in  with
his "lifestyle."The  placement center provides  information about companies
 and industries, and what kinds  of jobs they offer.  Unlike students in
teacher  education, who are usually  "preparing for a specific  teaching
job,"students in the  arts and sciences are entering a  New rules stalled 
by Flora injunction  very broad field ofemployment,  Lallas said.  He
continued, "the basic  needs" of both in job readiness  "are still the
same."The center provides  step-by-step handouts, with  detailed
information, on the  requirements for jobreadiness.  Counselors at the
center are  available to explain the  requirements.  According to
thehandouts,  the first step of job readiness is  writing letters of
application and  resumes. Letters should betypewritten on clean white 
SV^-by-l 1 inch paper and should  be addressed to a specific person  in
orderto get proper attention.  The first paragraph of the  letter states
the reason for  writing to that particularcompany, and the second points" 
out specific qualifications of the  writer. The last paragraph is
aninvitation for further contact by  mail or interview.  Attached to the
letter should  be a one-page resume. Itshould  include personal data (name,
 address, etc.), career objectives,  education (since high
school),scholastic and extracurricular  information, employment 
experience, military status and  date ofavailability.  A resume serves many
 purposes. It can help a student  determine and define his assets  and
liabilities, it can project his  strongest qualifications and it  Faculty
Council declines  collective bargainingjob  The Faculty Council  "declined
the invitation" of  College President Charles J.  Flora to be consideredas
a  collective bargaining agent.  In other action the council  accepted the
bid of Whatcom  CountyPhysicians Service for  faculty health insurance, and
 recommended guidelines for  p u b l i s h i n ggrounds for  promotion at
its Feb. 15  meeting.  Flora is asking all bodies on  campus who are
potentialcollective bargaining agents if  they want to be considered for 
that job by the Board of  Trustees. TheFaculty Council  rejected the
suggestion, with one  member commenting 'that he  "could not think of amore
 inappropriate body to take on  this task."  Welfare Committee chairman 
Willard Brown said that the bid  of Whatcom County Physicians  Service
(W.C.P.S.) is $5 cheaper  than the only other reasonablebid, which was
offered by Blue  Cross. He said that W.C.P.S. has  also agreed to provide a
bid for a  major medical care program if  enough faculty members do not 
want the comprehensive plan.  T h e g u i d e l in e s for  publication of
grounds for  promotion call for including the  areas where the faculty
memberexcelled. They specify that  qualities which are evaluated as  merely
adequate not be listed.  Thus, if aperson is promoted  because of
excellence in  teaching, this would be noted.  But if that person
isevaluated as  adequate in research, this would  not be mentioned.  The
action is in response to  Flora'srequest for guidelines on  publication of
promotions.  Bach Mai fund drive  raises $ 4 6 3 in B'ham  A three-week
fund raising-campaign  in Bellingham has  raised $463 for the rebuilding of
 Bach Mai hospital inHanoi. The  drive, sponsored by the Human  Rights
Action Coalition (HRAC)  and local Vietnam VeteransAgainst the War, is part
of a  nationwide campaign headed by  Medical Aid for Indochina, Inc.  All
moneycollected goes  directly to the fund for  rebuilding the hospital
which  was destroyed by saturationbombing last December.  Organizers of the
drive see it  as an important step toward  what they call"popular 
responsibility." They believe  U.S. citizens, as well as the  government,
must take an active  rolein rebuilding Indochina.  "The war was an act of
our  government with out funding  and implied consent,"says Jeff 
Baloutine, a member of the  HRAC, "We cannot abdicate  total responsibility
to the  government for the rebuilding  effort ahead.  "With the Bach Mai
hospital  fund as the first step, people can  expresstheir goodwill to the 
people of Vietnam by sending  direct aid without depending  upon the
government todo  everything for us."  M e d i c a l Aid for 
Indochina,Inc., located in  Cambridge, Mass., has set a $3million goal for
the Bach Mai  fund drive. In the first month of  collecting, the American
public  donated$500,000. Baloutine  said, "Response in Bellingham  has been
quite gratifying."  can be part of hispermanent  employee record and
provide  additional information to the  employer.  The resume can resultin
an  interview. Interviews are usually  off campus, arid there is usually 
more than one interview for aspecific job.  A preliminary interview  d e t
e r m i n e s if further  interviewing of the candidate iswarranted. If so,
an in-depth  interview which covers the "life  history" of the candidate
and  relies heavily on past experiences  may be held.  The student's
knowledge of a  company and his own  background isimportant in an  i n t e
r v i e w . Also, many  interviewers feel that personal  appearance is
criteria that can  either win or lose a job for the  applicant.  ERA
battles  State Senate  The Equal Rights Amendment^  t o the U.S.
Constitution"  approved by Washington's House  of Representatives by a 78
to 19  vote; nowwaits for Senate  approval.  P r o p o n e n t s of the 
amendment, which would grant  equal, rights underthe law to all  persons
regardless of sex, expect  it to have a hard fight in the  Senate.  There
are 12women in the  House; two voted against it.  There are no women in the
 Senate.  To bring the amendmentto a  Senate vote, the Constitution  and
Elections Committee must  pass it and then it will be put on  thecalendar
for a vote in the  Senate.  Twenty-seven states have  approved the
amendment to the  U.S.Constitution; 38 are needed  to ratify it.  College
President Charles  Flora has granted an injunctionagainst recent decisions
of the  Academic Council on course  withdrawal, probation and  dismissal. 
Theaction came at Tuesday's  AS Board of Directors meeting  at the request
of Board  Chairman JimKennedy.  The rules adopted by the  Academic Council
would require  that all unwanted classes bedropped in the first five days
of  the quarter, and that students  complete 80 per cent of  quarterly
andcumulative units  or be issued a warning. The rules  further state that
if a "K"  (incomplete) is not converted by  the end of the following
quarter,  it would be counted as an  unsuccessful completion.  The
AcademicCoordinating  Commission will now review the  rules. If it supports
the  Academic Council rules, themeasure could still go before the 
All-College Senate, Kennedy  said.  In other business, the AS 
Boardapproved a motion by  student Linda Ballinger to  establish an ad hoc
committee to  prepare a studentposition on  faculty tenure and promotion. 
The committee, which is  subject to review by the AS  Board,will recommend
policy to  the Faculty Council.  Interview/:  for Editor  Klipsun  Edits
and manages thetwice-quarterly illustrated  student magazine devoted to 
contemporary campus and  community affairs and interests.  Overall
responsibility for  all staff and operations.  Interviews: TODAY at 3 p.m. 
for  EditorWestern Front  Responsible for all news and  editorial
operations and  policies on the twice-weeklycampus newspaper.  Supervises
staff of more than  50 reporters, photographers  and editors.  Interviews:
3 p.m. Friday,  March 2  .Applications deadline:  5 p.m. Thursday, March 1 
Submit letter of application and detailed resume of experience,  training
and other qualifications—together with references and 
othersupporting material—to:  Robert W. Thirsk, Chairman
Student Publications Council  Old Main 113.  These are paid positions, open
only to full time students in  good academic standing. For further
informationcontact  publication adviser or council chairman.  2 for I
clo//ified/:  10 MISC. FOR SALE  AlaskanMalamute pups for  sale, $35. Good
pets and  hardy workers. Call 676-3032  days.  Need your picturesfast?
Ban's  Camera Shop has 24 hour film  processing for both B W and  color.
108 E. Magnolia. At thedowntown terminal of the  college bus.  Kawai
classical guitar, very  mellow $35.00. Agfamatic II  35mmcamera $20.00. 
Yashickimat TLR $85.00.  734-1288.  Size 8V2 Le Trappeur boots,  wood skiis
and poles. All for  $45 or make offer. 733-0116  evenings. Elnora.  Camera
and darkroom  equipment. I want to sellas  well as buy misc. items. Anil. 
734-0404.  Screen house tent. 11 x I6V2  ft. Best offer. 7344992.  11CARS
AND CYCLES  1965 Jeep mail van. 5 huge  glass picture windows. Comp. 
rebuilt engine. Beenidle 6  mo., so needs some work.  $250. Don at
734-8039.  '64 Chevy Step-Van camper  for springtraveling. Good  running
cond. $700. Call  Susan at 733-0238.  20 FOR RENT  Females: Three
bedroomsof  five-bedroom hour renting  March 15. $50 each. Utilities  paid,
community kitchen and  living room. Twobathrooms,  two stoves, three ovens,
lots of  room. Only three blocks from  campus. Phone 733-9413 after  6. 
Students- Spring Quarter.  Quiet singles, kitchen priv.,  cable TV.
Utilities paid. From  $50,676-0491.1 or 2 people needed to share  large
house 2 blks from  campus. Fireplace, own room,  free meat. $50/mo. Call 
676-8528. Tom or Don.  30 ROOMMATE WANTED  Male roommate wanted.  Birnam
Wood apts.676-5646.  32 WANTED  Needed softball pitcher for  Lummi
fast-pitch team.  Contact David in VU 305 or734-8180.  33 HELP WANTED  Earn
$500-$ 1500 this spring.  The National Students Co-op  needscampus
coordinator.  Complete instructions  provided. Please act  immediately-
deadline for  response tothis ad is Feb. 28.  Write to P.O. Box 21588, San 
Jose, CA 95151.  40 SERVICES  Foreign Auto Repairs  Tune-ups Overhauls 
Free Estimates Righteous  Rates  EYE-BALL IT ENTERPRISES  1017V2 N.State
Street  10-6 Daily Motorcycles Too!  Professional typing. Phone  7 3 3-3805
evenings or  weekends. Excellent typist-fast, accurate.  50c page. Call
734-6983.  FREELANCE BICYCLE  REPAIR doesdependable  repairs and overhauls,
on all  manner of bicycles. 412 Ivy (2  blks. from WWSC.)
734-1950.9:00-5:30 Mon.-Sat.  50 PERSONALS  MEN-WOMEN-Work on a  ship next
summer. No  experiencerequired. Excellent  pay. Worldwide travel. Perfect 
summer or career work. Send  $2.00 for information:SEAFAX Box 2049-HH, Port
 Angeles WA 98362.  See Europe with a small group  of friends, not a mob of
 tourists. Munger Untours  733-0256.  60 NOTICES  G o i n g to Europe? 
Student/Faculty discountsavailable on purchase/lease/  rental of any car in
Europe.  Write Auto Europe, P.O. Box  728, Dept. SG,Mercer Island,  Wash.
98040 for a free  44-page brochure.  Experienced typist. Please call  Alice
L. Hitz at 734-9176.  Need help with resumes?  Resume booklets $4.95. 
Inquire: Paula. 701Vi N.  Forest.  Western Front classifieds  deadline for
Tuesday's paper,  Thursday noon; For Friday's  paper, Tuesday noon. Cash
only please. 35c a line, at least  two lines or 70c minimum.



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     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 4



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4 Western Front Fridays February 23,1.973  l/itality  Food  Center  Natural
Foods    Dietary Supplements fresh carrot juice daily  1230 Bay St.
733-3480  Food bank faces monthly crisis  Local donations  aren'tenough 
Come on by  for 31 flavors  of the world's  richest, most  delicious  ice
cream.  BASKIN-ROBBINS  ICG CREAM STORE  All 31 flavors hand packed!  Over
900 stores coast-to-coast.  ©1970, BASKIN-ROBBINS INC  THE
STEPHEN'S  619 E. Holly  733-9982  by ROB BALDWIN  Six days a week,
needypersons load  up with cereal, macaroni, canned fruit,  beans, milk or
whatever else is on the  shelf at theBellingham Food Bank, on  Gladstone
Street.  Since the Food Bank was first set up  in the basement ofthe
Salvation Army  building 18 months ago, volunteers have  waged a running
battle to keep the  shelvesstocked with food.  According to one Food Bank
worker  there is a crisis every month.  "We've neveractually turned anyone 
away, but volunteers have sometimes  had to go down to the store and buy 
foodwith their own money."  Relying at the beginning on  donations from
churches and private  citizens, thedemand for food grew to  the point where
the Food Bank's board  of directors opted to join the SeattleNeighbors in
Need, a food relief  organization funded through a grant by  the federal
government. A monthly  shipment supplies the bunk of the  bank's food. 
According to one of the bank's  coordinators, BeaTodhunter, the Food  Bank
served over 900 persons last c  month. ^  "Every day it seems like people
3come in that have never been here k3  before. We try to give them a
balanced ^  diet, but we're alwaysrunning out of  lt;a  things like meat,
milk and eggs." aq  "Some people think people just live  off the FoodBank
without trying to  feed themselves. There are a few we feel  are doing
this, but most are n o t ."  Each Food Bank user's name goes  into a
confidential file along with such  information as whether or not
theyreceive unemployment compensation,  food stamps, social security
payments, a  pension, etc. and thenumber of  children in the family. This
is used to  estimate the bank's need and keep track  of who is using its
services.  All age groups use the Food Bank  according to Todhunter. A lot
of men  RUNNINGBATTLE—The Food Bank tries to provide a
balanced diet for people  who come in, but it is alwaysrunning out of
supplies. Some volunteers help stock  the shelves by buying food with their
own money.\IKI\G WUNCPY  The college laundry has lower cost per student
than any other laundry in  town. Howabout our every day low price for dry
cleaning? Just 2 dollars  for 8 lbs! Drop in at the bottom of the hill-and
give us a spin.  Wash 30c Dry 10c  1300 Ells St  between the ages of 50-65,
who are  unemployed andnot old enough to  draw social security, use the
bank.  "Some kids over 18 without jobs  come to the Food Bank. They can't
live  at home because their parents would be  docked on their welfare
checks. It's atough row to hoe."  Local churches and individuals  donate
food and a little money and one  recentneighborhood canvassing drive, 
organized with the help of the Army  Reserve personnel and trucks, netted
40  boxes of groceries.  But the Food Bank runs out of  supplies every
month and this June theNeighbors in Need federal grant will run  out,
dperiving the bank of its major  supply of food.  Another bankcoordinator,
JoAnne  Cross, hopes for a renewal of the grant  on either the state or
federal level.  "We'vesent letters to Jackson,  Magnuson, and Meeds and
we're still  encouraging people to talk to theirlegislators in Olympia, but
we have  nothing concrete. We're the most  hopeful about Magnuson; he
wasresponsible for the grant in the first  place.  When asked if larger
food drives and  church contributionscould make up for  the loss of
Neighbors in Need support,  Food Bank workers said it was possible  butnot
probable. Similar banks in  Ferndale and Lynden operate on the 
contributions of the town's people and  churches alone, but the larger 
Bellingham community doesn't seem as  responsive.  Todhunter thinks ifthe
grant is not  renewed, and local contributions fail to  make up the
difference, the bank will  have tobegin strict inspection of all 
applicants and start turning some away.  Suggestions to avoid this
havebeen:  asking each person in Bellingham to  donate one dollar to the
bank; asking  each church inBellingham to donate  five dollars per month;
and organizing  city-wide paper drives.  The Food Bank staffis determined 
to provide their services to anyone who  needs them. As one worker said, 
"We'll operateany way we can."  House passes  19-year-old  drinking bill 
(The Senate Rules Committee  bottled this bill Wednesday. For  the second
time, by a 7-6 vote,  they chose not to send it to the  floor.)  The bill
to lower the drinking  age to 19 has been approved by  the Washington State
House of  Representatives. Themeasure  passed after an amendment to  the
bill increased the minimum  age from 18 to 19.  The bill isnow before the 
Senate Rules Committee. Its  chances of reaching the floor  during the
current session are  considered to be favorable.  On the 80-17 vote for the
 bill, Reps. Barney Goltz,  D-Bellingham, DuaneBerentson,  R-Burlington and
Don Hansey,  R-Bellingham, voted in favor.  Only Rep. Dan Van Dyk, 
D-Lynden voted against it.  Van Dyk explained the major  question involved
the rights of  majority, all of which were  conferred by the last session 
except the drinking privilege.  He said he couldn't support a  bill which
didn't recognize that  question.



     ----------



     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 5



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Friday, February 23,1973 Western Front 5  the „ western
front editorials...  THE NIX-ON DOCTRINENIX-ON AMNESTY  SEND THEM TO JAJUj 
NIX-OM PRESS FREEDOM  SBMD THEM TO JMUJ  NIX-OKI WELFARE  SEND THEM TO JAIL
i  NIX*ON PUBUC HOUSING  SEND THEM TO  gt; I L ;  NIX* ONABORTION  THE
SUPREME COURT  NOT \MlTWSTA»^PlNG ;  NIX-ON MARIHUANA  S 6 W T H
E MT O ^Ail-i  NIX* ON PRISOM REFORM  SBWD "THEM T O SOLITARY.  Q19?3
6.Mrter  New council isbad idea  Press repression is alive and well on
Western's  campus.  The AS Board of Directors Mondaycapped a  series of
threats and ultimatums to publications by  resolving to create their
own"Communications  Council" and have it responsible for student 
publications.  The board decided toconstruct a new council  around a policy
which—less than a week  earlier—was
labeled "unworkable" by he Student  Publications Council and rejected by
the College  Services Council.  As its rationale for theaction, the board
blames  the Publications Council for not affiliating itself  with the AS
government. Theresolution to create  a new council replaced an earlier
board motion to  cut off all funds for publications atthe end of this 
quarter.  What the board, in its impatience, has failed to  take into
account is that thecurrent Publications  Council is responsible to the
Board of Trustees  through the college president. Acouncil so  established
has no authority to "affiliate" itself  with Associated Students or anyone
else.Also, the trustees, through the president, have  authorized the
current Publications Council to act  for thecollege as publisher of The
Western Front,  Klipsun and Jeopardy.  For one faction on campus to try
tosupercede  that authorization and claim for itself the role of  campus
publisher is not only dangerous, it'sridiculous.  The board of directors
say they will still expect  the trustees to accept legal responsibility
forcollege publications, even though the trustees will  have no voice in
how they are structured and  operated. This is extremely unlikely.  Another
aspect of the problem that the AS  board fails to recognize is that
thequestion of  where publications should fit into the all-college 
governance structure has been sent to theAll-College Senate. Until the
Senate decides where  publications fit in, it would be ludicrous for
thepresent Publications Council to "affiliate" itself  with any group. 
Likewise, it is just as ridiculous for anyone  Senate constituency, like
AS, to decide that it will  be the publications' boss and act as
campuspublisher.  Still more ridiculous and infantile have been  the "You
better play ball with us or we'll cut yourfunds" ultimatums that student
government has  ' been sending to the Publications Council and to 
thepublications staffs themselves.  Another flaw in the AS thinking is in
the actual  implementation of the"Communications  Council." Its document
calls for representatives  from the publications staffs, from theSenate's 
Faculty Caucus, the Staff Council and the  administration.  But until the
publications matter issettled on  an all-college level, it is extremely
doubtful that  these groups will send anyone to the ASBoard's  new maverick
council.  The basic point that the AS Board seems to  miss is that the only
way toinsure a free press on  campus is to so structure the publication
process  so that no one group can takecontrol or impose  its wishes.  The
board's- attitude toward publications  demonstrates, at best, a
grossmisunderstanding of  the situation, and at worst, a desire for press 
control ala Nixon.  The directors saythey have the power to back  up their
action because they hold the purse strings  to publications. If thisproves
to be the case, then  it only serves to demonstrate that it's high time 
the publications purse strings be placed in steadier,  more responsible
hands. /  tbe_ western front staff EDITOR: Jack BroomMANAGING EDITOR:
Rodger Painter  PRODUCTION: Duff Wilson EDITORIAL PHONE 676-3161SPORTS:
Howard Scott ADVERTISING PHONE 676-3160  COPY EDITORS: James Heitzman,
RahnLahti, Dennis Mansker, Judy Mooers, Dennis Ritchie  AD MANAGER: Richard
Roff  GRAPHICS: ElsiVassdal, Sue Giese  BUSINESS MANAGER: Terri Whitney 
PHOTO EDITOR: Roberi NealePHOTOGRAPHERS: Bob McLauchlan, Thomas Schultz,
Jim Thomson  REPORTERS: ChristineAnderson, Scott Anderson, Rob Baldwin,
Alan Bauer, John Brewington, Jim  Brooks, Sonja Brown, DougCockburn, Alice
Collingwood, Bill Dietrich, Nicholas Gardner, Victoria  Hamilton, John
Harris, Bruce-Hayes, Rochelle Henderson, Heidi Henken, Tom Home, O.K.
Johnson,  ,Patt Johnson, Keith Myette,Stephen Neff, Janice Perry, Dave
Peterson, Michele Raymond, Jackie  Ryan, Tim Scott, Steve Sewell,Kent
Sherwood, Stephanie Smith, Robert Speed, Benno Steckler,  iLeslie Stewart,
Sherry Stripling, TonyVolchok, Duane Wolfe.  The Western Front is the
official newspaper of Western Washington StateCollege. Editorial opinions
are those of  the writer  Entered as second class postage at
BeUingham,Washington 98225. The Front is represented by NEAS, New  York. 
Regular issues are published onTuesdays and Fridays. Composed in the
Western print shop and printed at the  Lynden Tribune. STAFFADVISER: R. E.
Stannard Ji.  [ letters. • •
•  Finds no 'love' in atheists  Editor, Western Front: 
Iwas quite intrigued when I  picked up a Western Front and  read '"Militant
Atheists'  Counterattack," so Iopened my  paper and found an article 
entitled "Atheists Organize  Against Christians." Somehow  whatI'd read up
to this point  just didn't bring visions of love  and non-violence to my
mind.  And then, when Iread '"Our  first target is the Campus  Crusade for
Christ'," I looked  skyward to see if any bombs  werefalling.  I never
could find the word  "LOVE" in the article, yet God  loves us all even if
we are  atheists whodon't know that He  exists. Perhaps if these people 
would seek God's love both in  the Bible and in theirhearts they  would
find that Christians  aren't attacking them.  Our goals are pretty much 
the same, ifpeople don't wake  up to themselves they all will  perish. 
Doug Coleman  Snohomish, Wash.  Hospital fee 'outrageous*  Editor, Western
Front:  Your article in high praise of  St. Luke's Emergency
Facilities(Emergency center operates  efficiently; Feb. 16, 1973)  ignores
the single largest  problem. I quote fromthe  article itself "The cost of 
emergency treatment varies at  St. Luke's. A flat emergency fee  ($10)
andphysician's fee ($12)  is charged to all patients."  The writer seems to
pass by  this outrageous fee as if itwere  nothing.  An emergency center
must  not only be efficient, but must  be economically open to all.  Ifone
has to weigh the  question of whether or not to  see medical help, then
there is  something horriblywrong.  Dick Falkenbury  Fairhaven  Disruption
policy puzzling  Editor, Western Front:  These Christianfanatics have  gone
too far! They dare  proclaim their message in  classes! So the
campus—studentsand administration—is
up in  arms over this clear and present  danger. Dean McDonald  emphasizes
thatthese Christians  are out of line and violate  college policy.  But,
tell me this. During the  past three or fouryears when  disrupting,
nihilist students took  over parts of many class periods  with their "take
it over-shut it  down, occupy and desecrate,  talk no-violence yes, grant
our  non-negotiable demands, the  college isirrelevant and  dehumanizing,
down with  e v e r y t h i n g " messages the  student body at Western,
thecollege administration and Dean  McDonald were curiously silent! 
Question: Where were the  objectors to, usurping class time  then? Why did
it take the college  approximately three years to  announce a policyagainst
class  disrupters?  Answer: Fear. Everybody  knows you can squelch 
Christians without fear ofphysical retaliation. Christian  students won't
seize buildings,  wire bombs or initiate physical  violence.But how we all
quaked  in our shoes while those other  persuaders held sway! Truth is, 
even, our collegeadministration  dared not oppose them. But  Christians?
Everybody knows  they're easy targets. Nobody's afraid of them! No, I'm not
a  Jesus freak or fanatic. I'm just a  neutral student trying to 
understand thewhole scene, not  just the easy part of it.  Alan C. Greene 
614 High Street  Baby bibs for borrowersEditor, Western Front:  Once again
I must speak out  against another golden shaft  wielding policy whichis
being  perpetrated against us humble  undergraduates. Keeping in mind 
several budget limitations, Isuggest that Wilson Library  purchase baby
bibs and feeding  spoons. Such purchases would  be more inkeeping with
then-present  library check-out policy'  for faculty and graduate 
students.  The present policyallows  quarter privileges for graduate 
students and yearly for faculty.  Undergraduates have only a twoweek
check-out. I know  personally of incidents where  graduate students and
faculty  have received"casual" reminders  and mild remonstrances for 
materials checked out eons ago,  while someundergraduate  students have
been observed,  figuratively speaking, to  prostrate themselves
beforecertain library zealots for going  one day beyond the grade  period.
I personally have had to  contactprofessors to obtain  overdue material for
my research  which they had forgotten about  in the trunk of theircar. 
That the library desires to.  retrieve overdue material for use  by others
is admirable; that it  allowsspecial privileges to some  as an official
policy is a personal  affront to my sense of fair play.  Thejustification
for this policy  is unclear. It is alleged that the  faculty and graduate
students  seem torepresent a special class  and ought to have special 
privileges. It is also alleged that  their need touselibrary materials  is
seen as more "legitimate" than  an undergraduate's need. Such 
justifications areat best highly  suspect and in some cases a  laughing
matter.  I challenge Wilson Library to  offer anyjustifications for such 
policies. I might also add that  some of the library staff has also 
expresseddisapproval of such a  policy.  I recognize that a new policy  m e
a n s erasing another  t i m e - h o n o r e d academic  institution. I'm
not sure the  faculty is ready for it. After all, I  know some of the
faculty arestill brooding over no freshmen  beanies or homecoming dances. 
Robert Franco  Political Science



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     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 6



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6 Western Front Friday, February 23, 1973  Co-ed Kappa un lt;  I PLAY ON
WORDS-Ridgeway Kappa'sresidents publicize what it's like on the 
experimental third floor.  by JANICE PERRY  The Turd Floor  OMom, and you
too Dad,  Look at us we're not so bad  With a co-ed floor and a whole  Lot
more . . . .We're really a fine group  And if you don't agree, then  Piss
on you all because someday  You'll see thatKappa's  Third floor is a fine
place to be.  (Kappa graffiti)  The contention is enthusiastically
unanimous.  "Ireally like it," came from everyone interviewed  about
Kappa's experimental co-ed third floor.  In the hall,men and women were
placed in  rooms at random. Each sex has two bathrooms  and a resident
aide.Planners intended the Kappa  experiment to be modeled after similar 
arrangements at the University ofWashington.  The experiment was to last
only through Fall  quarter, but it is continuing because "it turnedout 
really well," said Jim Mulenos, resident aide.  "They don't sleep together,
or anything that theadministration was afraid they would do. The  reason
it's a success is because they relate on a  humanlevel, not on a sexual
level."  Reasons given for the popularity ranged from  the "naturalness" of
the livingconditions to being  in a situation where it's easier to make
friends.  Roden that she  experimental. CindyWashington, where  common.
"I've alvfc  she said. "I like to,  girls."  Phil McElliott  The reason, 
is becau:on a  not on a  environment with  floor."  The only proble  the
difficulty peop  bathrooms. "So we  doors,"said Stephc  of Kappa.  Far from
being  community, accord!  illustration. "My dac  got together and
bosill—it's just like a fa  Kappa's third floor is so
normal to Cindy Agreeing with he  $100 offered for  beststudent library 
Western undergraduate  students who think they have a  good personal
library may entera campus competition for a  $ 100 award, donated by Howard
 McGaw of the library science  faculty.William H. O. Scott,  documents
librarian and  chairman of the awards  committee, said the
entrants'libraries will be judged in part on  "intelligent interest, scope
and  imagination shown in the  collection andsense of purpose  in acquiring
the books."  the ^ western front  Collections should include 35  or
morebooks, and they may be  concentrated in one subject area  or on one
author.  Any undergraduate studentwho will be enrolled at Western  during
Spring quarter is eligible  to enter the contest. Deadline  forsubmitting
entries is March  31, and the winner will be  announced during National 
Library Week in April.Entry forms are available  from committee members. 
Members, besides Scott, are  Eugene Garber of- the English  department;
Marian Alexander,  serials librarian; Mary Robinson,  associate dean of
students;Karen Kuhns, Fairhaven junior;  Janet Pyette, economics junior; 
and Lynn Cornelius, biology  senior.McGaw also has entry  blanks. 
Geography students take flyL  Examine features  they often study 
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Telephone.  .ST Zip. WK  by ALICECOLLINGWOOD  A single-engine plane sped
down the runway of  Bellingham Airport, climbed into the sky and took  four
people on an unusual field trip.  They took to the air to examine the
natural  and man-madefeatures they so often study on  maps, to bring a
touch of reality to their paper  world.  They were students in Robert
Teshera's  geography 460 class, the teaching of geography.  The students
were learning how tomake a field  trip meaningful by planning one, taking
part in it  and evaluating its effectiveness.  Their flightplan took them
from Bellingham  Airport to Ladner, B.C., then east to Mission City,  B.C.,
south to LakeWhatcom and back to the  airport. Using map scales, distances
and the plane's  speed, the students haddetermined the time  needed for
each leg of the trip down to one-half  minute, and the plane was only
twominutes late  touching down at the airport.  Teshera believes such a
field trip is a "vehicle"  for usingdifferent types of
maps—flight charts,  topographical sheets and
others—and translating  them intoreality.  He said he
first realized the drawbacks to  earthbound geography field trips as a
graduate  student on a flight from Washington to Montana.  As the plan
passed over the Columbia River Basin,  he saw theterrain in a different
light, and patterns  A VIEW FROM ABOVE-Jim Smith and  Robert Teshera look
downat terrain  surrounding Bellingham.  LAND TAKES ON NEW
DIMENSIONS-Geography|  Frazier RiverValley.  of erosion and development of
land mass became  evident to him.  "I saw flying as a means oftranslating
between  map and real earth," he said.  Jim Smith, a graduate geography
student who  planned the leg of the trip between Ladner and  Mission City,
B.C., said the main objectives of the  flight were toview a big city, a
couple of major  river systems and farmland development.  Smith, who has
taughtgeography at the junior  and senior high school levels for six years,
said  there are still a number ofgeography teachers who  take the "capital
city, highest mountain, main  product of a country" approach toteaching 
geography.  "They don't try to convey why the people of a  region live the
way they do," he said.Smith thinks this approach stems from  competition
among teachers to have their students  get highmarks in the National
Achievement Test,  which asks such questions.  "I want to teach them
somethingthey can put  to use in later lives."  And part of effectively
teaching geography,  Teshera said, is makingfield trips mean something
£j|  to the students. p[  "The motivation for this class project
is 0|  recognitionof the fact that most field trips in A



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     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 7



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Friday, February 23, 1973 Western Front 7  imously popular  unaware that it
is  from the University of  likeKappa's are  [fused to it this way,"  ends
that are guys and  lot of things together, like skating parties andjam 
sessions."  "We have a lot of fun," said Mark Reiman. "It's  good for
friendships and closeness."  idcalled it "a healthy Mark admitted that the
girls aren't the rowdy  •* ones, but Jeff Walter chose
todisagree. "We have  two nuts across the hall, yelling and screaming all 
the day long," he said. Despitehis "crazy neighbor  girls," Jeff said,
"It's definitely better in a  !. success situation like this."  y
relatelevel,  $1 level.''  Ed girls on the same  ioned by anyone was  using
their respective  fnbols painted on theton, resident director  lem, third
floor is a  ston. One girl gave an  t month, and the kids  plant on
thewindow  le said.  ,ouden said, "We do a  No one seems to mind any extra
distraction or  disturbance.Peggy Hall had her mattress, sheets  and
pillows strewn throughout the hall one night,  but she said that it was all
in fun. "You'd be  surprised how many people sleep without their  doors
locked at night," sheadded.  Louder called the presence of girls "quite 
enjoyable." Sue Bissonette, who lived in Mathes,  alsolikes the presence of
the opposite sex. She  said that there were guys in Mathes Hall anyway. 
With bothsexes present, "the men check on  the women's behavior and
vice-versa," said  Preston. About thewomen, she said, "They've got  male
company, so they don't have to sneak." She  said that competitionamong
girls for men's  attention is less than on an all-girl floor.  "People
thought there would be pairing up,"  said Colleen Dinsmore, third floor's
resident aide.  "But it's more like a brother-sister situation." 
Everyinterviewee advocated more floors like  Kappa's third.  Shannon Point
Marine Center  construction begins,open to all  Construction began on a 
$354,522 laboratory-classroom  at Shannon Point Marine Centernear
Anacortes, with a ground  breaking ceremony last Tuesday.  College
President, Charles J,  Flora, and the director of  Shannon Point, William
C.  Summers of Huxley College,  were among the attendingofficials.  The
facility will be  administered by Western. Its  services will be available
for use  by academicdepartments and  cluster colleges at Western as  well
as by students from a  consortium of statesupported  colleges. -  The
consortium members  are: Central and Eastern  Washington State
Colleges,Skagit Valley College and  E d m o n d s and Everett  Community
Colleges. Students  from any stateinstitution of  higher education will be
able to  study at the facility.  The laboratory-classroom  building is
athree-story masonry  structure, with exterior walls of  giant brick,
reinforced concrete  floors and a,red;cedar-shake  roof.  Shops, a
receiving area, a  lecture hall and wash-up  facilities are to be located
inthe  daylight basement, with  instructional laboratories and  aquarium
space on the first  floor.  On thesecond floor,  field trip Senate to
consider  reorganization plan  5S members get a good look at the 
olsdegenerate into an entertainment  •e students," he
said. "We must help the  derstand the necessity ofplanning a  sed and
meaningful field trip."  gave general instructions for the  time and
distance limits andlet the  their own planning.  ggested natural and
man-made features  n on each leg of the trip and included 1 time, compass
direction and distance  The students will not evaluate their  fid how well
the plansworked.  he fourth year Teshera's geography 460  de a flying field
trip, and it has been so  3 would like toexpand it to other  dents would do
map reading, lab work  investigation, followed by a flight to  all view
ofwhat they are studying.  ton can see individual aspects of a  1 area by
walking through it," Teshera  he has difficulty seeing patterns. This  tig
contributes to map-reading ability."  there are "always budgetlimitations
on  this," but he doesn't think the cost is  Flights for this class cost
$20 for each  lr-long trips.The students paid $4, and  picked up the
remainder of the tab.  A long agenda faces the  All-CollegeSenate Monday 
night, with items ranging from  administrative reorganization to  internal
publications.College President Charles J.  Flora gave the senate his 
proposal for administrative  reorganization inJanuary, and a  senate ad hoc
committee has  been working on suggested  revisions. The plan calls
forchanges in lines of responsibility  for administrators.  A College
Services Council  p r o p o s a l for internal  communications will be 
presented to the senate for  consideration.  It calls for making FAST, the 
faculty and staff newsletter, the  disseminator of information for 
faculty. This would include  policy statements,agendas and  minutes of
meetings and actions  of college agencies, as well as-the  regular
offerings of the  newsletter.  The proposal also encourages  The Western
Front to publish  the contents of the studentactivities bulletin, which
would  be discontinued. The daily  bulletin would be posted on all 
conspicuousbulletin boards and  sent to the Associated Students,  the
Viking Union staff and  academic departments. The Executive Committee  will
also make a recommendation  for formation of a  committee to review the
senate.  The Board of Trustees requested  the review when it approved the 
senate in principle almost two years ago. The committee will  e v a l u a t
e the s e n a t e 's  effectiveness and make any .recommendations for
changes it  thinks are necessary.  A six-man committee is  suggested by
theExecutive  Committee, composed of the  heads of each of the four senate 
constituencies (students,faculty,  administrators and staff) and  two
senate faculty members.  The senate Committee on  Councilsand Committees
will  present some information on the  affirmative action program for 
hiring of women andminorities.  The senate Executive  committee will ask
that the  current policy on tuberculosis  tests beabandoned. The policy 
requires that all employees have  a chest x-ray or skin test every  two
years, andthis is no longer  required by state law :  Area fenced  for
protection  Pedestrian traffic is  p r o h i b i t e dw i t h in 
construction barricades for  High Street utilities  . construction now
underway,  except fordesignated routes,  according to the Office of  Campus
Planning.  S i g n s are posted  prohibiting entryinto the  dangerous
areas. Neither the  college nor the contractor can  assume any
responsibility for  injury or damage resulting  from unauthorized entry to 
the construction site.  Headstart gives benefit  spaghettidinner tonight  A
fund-raising spaghetti  dinner for the Bellingham  Headstart Program will
be held  tonightat the Aldersgate  Methodist Church at 1400  Larrabee from
4 to 8 p.m.  The proceeds will go to theParents' Fund. This fund  provides
items not covered in  the government allocations for  the children. These
include  books, toys and field trips.  On the menu tonight will be 
spaghetti, salad, bread and cake.Tickets for the all-you-can-eat  dinner
will be $5.00 per family,  $1.25 for adults, $.75 for  children andunder 5
years, free.  TO BE COMPLETED THIS FALL-An artist's sketch of what the 
Shannon PointMarine Center will look like when completed.  Construction
began this week.  office-laboratories, dry labs,a  darkroom and
administrative  offices are planned. An electrical  heating system will
eliminate  emissions into the air at the  laboratory facility. Fluorescent 
lighting will be installed.  All structural elements willremain exposed for
low  maintenance and construction  cost. Floors will be bare  concrete with
interior,walls  having exposed masonry except  for a portion on the second 
floor. There are no suspendedceilings or other cover-up  materials. 
Shannon Point is located on  71 acres immediately west of theWashington
State Ferry  Terminal at Anacortes. The site  contains 2,900 feet of
shoreline  a freshwaterpond and a forest  area.  The Marine Center was 
developed primarily for  undergraduate instruction andresearch in the
marine sciences.  The laboratory will complement  graduate-level research
facilitiesoperated by the University of  Washington at Friday Harbor. 
Attempts have been made to  make the newbuilding as  unobtrusive as
possible. It  probably will not be possible to  view it from a distance,
exceptfrom the air. Completion of the  building is scheduled for fall of 
1973.  Included in the project in  addition to the laboratory and 
classroom building are an access  road, a parking area and a  sea-water
pumpingsystem. A  small residence unit, a visitors'  center and a
conference center  are tentatively planned forlater  phases of development.
 Judge a prof  Four student members are  needed on the newly
establishedFaculty Capsule Committee on  the evaluation of teaching.  The
committee was set up by  the FacultyCouncil to find the  best kind of
student evaluation  of teachers.  Students interested in serving  the rest
ofthis year and the  following academic year can  c o n t a c t Henry
Adams,  temporary chairman, at 3p.m.,  Feb. 27 at Miller Hall 346. 
Discover the World on Your  SEMESTER AT SEA  Sails eachSeptember   February
 Combine accredited study with  educational stops in Africa, Australasia 
and the Orient. Over 7500  students from 450 campuses have  already
experienced this international  program.A wide range of  financial aid is
available. Write  now for free catalog:  WCA, Chapman College, Box CC40,
Orange, Cat. 92666  Peace Corps/  \IISTk  ON OINvPUS NEXT WEEK  For the
last time during thecurrent  school year, Peace Corps/VISTA reps  will be
on campus Feb. 26—March 2.  in the
PlacementOffice—Edens Hall.  We'll be seeking seniors
majoring in:  * Liberal Arts * Business Administration  *Math-Science *
Education  * Physical Education  * Nutrition—Home
Economics  Peace Corps/VISTA:more than a job,  an opportunity to help.



     ----------



     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 8



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8 Western Front Friday, February 23, 1973  Saffrons  * ~ T COFFEES  r ^ ^ i
TEAS  | f s - i | HERBSSPICES     KITCHEN PARAPHERNALIA  2029 James St. 
OPEN 10-6 733-0517  Students bleedStudents gave more blood  than ever
before.  Dr. Robert Gibb of the.  W h a t c o m P a t h o l o g i c
alLaboratory said 58 Western  students donated blood during  the Feb. 13th
drive and called  the drive a "big success."  The blood, which was used  up
in a week, was made available  to Whatcom County residents free of charge
except for a small  typing fee.  Shop 7-DOK  Specials at  Ennen's. F*M 
Monday-Saturday ' 9am-11pm • | | I  Sundays
10am—7pm ^a^^i^^J  Corner of High   Holly  nr  szz. o
•($  Let theMarantz  people  test your  stereo  for free.
 Wondering about the condition of  your audio equipment?Just bring in your
amplifier, preamplifier, or receiver —  regardless of
age, make, or where you bought it.The Marantz  people will take it from
there.  First, they will thoroughly test your equipment (except thetuner
section of your receiver) on $7,000 worth of precision  laboratory
equipment. And they'll tell you ifyou're getting all  the sound performance
you paid for.  In addition, the results will be plotted on a graph foryour 
records. You'll also get an attractive brochure that explains  exactly
what's been done and what it allmeans.  There are no strings attached.  And
you don't have to buy anything. We're bringing the  Marantzpeople to our
store simply to get you to know us a  little better.  Date: Feb. 24  MASTER
CHARGE  Time:10am-5:30pm  BANK AMERICARD  'Terms available'  HOURS: Open
til 9 weekdays Open til 7 weekendsToellingfafi.-no. ( cs eonutnerr  Tie
o.tjcxlly  6 7 6 - 8 0 1 4  Kaprow 'happens' today  by BILL DIETRICH 
Acentury from now artists will argue about  him, historians will study him
and scientists won't  know heexisted. But today Allan Kaprow is  happening
at Western, organizing one of the  participatory art forms for which he has
become  famous.  Kaprow is a painter, sculptor, critic, designer of 
environment and primeinventor of the  spontaneous "happening," an art form
that has  spread world wide and one in which he isinviting  Western
students to take part.  The Happening blurs art and life, using  t w e n t
i e t h centuryjunk, creativity and  environment to blend everyday
experience into  slightly wild activities that reflect onpeople and  what
they do.  Kaprow's Western happening will be unique,  enlisting the
participation of asmany Western  students as want to •
volunteer into an  afternoon-long event that will begin at noontoday. A
discussion of the.happening will follow at  8 p.m. in the Viking Union
Lounge.  Kaprow'sHappening is sponsored by the  Continuing Symposium on the
Contemporary  Arts, the NationalEndowment For the Arts and  the Whatcom
Museum Society.  Students interested in participating inKaprow's  art
should gather in the Viking Union Lounge at  noon today. Gene Garber of the
English faculty says that Kaprow will use 100 to 150 people or  more.
Kaprow stresses that his fluid art form is to  beexperienced, not just
observed.  He has been studying Western and Bellingham  since
yesterday,deciding what form the happening  will take. Teams of
participants will probably be  sent all overBellingham to perform their
role in  the production. Garber advises a sack lunch be  taken by
.participants. Kaprow has organized more than 100  happenings in the past,
some of which have  included a mockmurder and funeral, a marriage  between
a girl and a compact car, playing a Beatles  record in arefrigerator and
making a jelly  sandwich out of an automobile hood. »  A
Happening called the"Courtyard" involved  the erection on a 30 foot high
frame mountain  covered with a tarp in a hotelcourtyard. Actors on  three
hotel floors shouted at each other across the  mountain as it erupted
withblack paper balls,  dishes, and pots and pans.  A girl in a night gown
listening to a transistor  radioclimbed to the top of the mountain with 
considerable sensuality, followed by mock press  photographerswho took
pictures of the girl as she  struck cheesecake poses. Then a second
mountain  descended fromwhere it had been suspended  upside down above the
courtyard. The  Happening's climax came when thetwo mountain  peaks joined,
swallowing the girl.  Kaprow has been using the debris, smells,  lights,
andsounds of civilization for 20 years to  develop first an art that
surrounded the viewer,  called theEnvironment, and then his more  informal
and changing Happenings, set in fields,  breweries, and woods.Kaprow
stresses that the Happening mixes art  and life, occurs only once, and
makes time variable  anddiscontinuous. His erasure of distinctions is 
reflected in that his work has been discussed in  journals ofpoetry,
painting, dance, architecture,  music, drama, education, and in Time
Magazine  under "ModernLiving."  Kaprow, 45, who has studied painting with 
Hans Hoffman and music with John Cage, is anAssociate Dean at the
California Institute of the  Arts. His work has been exhibited in major 
museums inAmerica and Europe, and he has won  the Copley Foundation Award
and a Guggenheim  Fellowship.  'The Getaway' is tasteless  by DAVE PETERSON
 Relying on the amount of  bullets fired instead of acting,"The Getaway" is
a tasteless  robbery thriller with McQueen  and MacGraw terribly miscast. 
The storytakes place in  Texas where recent prison  p a r o l e e "Doc"
McCoy  (McQueen) and his wife Carol  (AliMacGraw) are told to rob a  bank
of a huge sum or else see  Doc back behind bars.  T a k i n g twopeculiar 
henchmen to do the basics, the  McCoys succeed, but one of  their cohorts
shoots a cop.  Backat the rendezvous the  remaining henchman, Rudy (Al 
Lettieri), attempts to take the  money and run but,alas, Doc  draws first
and gives him five or  six bullets into his bullet-proof  vest. The McCoys
then drive to the instigator's home, she shoots  him and the dynamic duo
take  the money and run.  From here on outSam  Peckinpah's direction
delights in  showing the contorted features  of bullet-riddled men as a
line ofred marks the very methodical  escape of the McCoys.  Steve McQueen
as Doc, the  gun-slinging, wife-slapping  meanie, does his best acting 
with his shotgun instead of his  mouth or vocal chords. I guessLecture
series starts Sunday  A concert and lecture series  titled "Sundays at
Three" will  be offered bythe Center for  Continuing Studies beginning 
Sunday.  The series will feature a  variety of programs inmusic and  the
arts at 3 p.m. each Sunday,  in the presentation room of  Wilson Library. 
Sunday's offering will be  "Yevtushenko: A Voice of  Russia and the World."
The  Readers' Theatre from the  University ofWashington will  present
selected poems,  autobiographical writings,  thoughts and music
whichexemplify the Russian poet,  Yevengney Yevtushenko.  Other programs in
the series  will include a"lightscape"  presentation combining music  and
visual imagery by Paul  Dusenbury; a concert featuringmusic of Northern
India with  Zakir Hussein (son of Alia  Rakha who accompanies Ravi 
Shankar) on theTabla Dru; and  a presentation of paintings of  various
historical periods by  Thomas Schlotterback,associate  professor of art at
Western, who  will acquaint the audience with  the character of the
peoplewho  lived during those times.  The audience will have an 
opportunity to talk with the  performers whilerefreshments  are
served—exotic teas and  coffees from the Fairhaven Spice
 Shoppe.  Admission to oneshow is  $1.50 for adults and 50 cents for 
children. Series tickets cost $6  for adults and $1.50 for children  under
12 and will only be sold  prior to the first performance.  all good actors
lay an egg once in  awhile.His dense, dull wife Carol is  played terribly
by Ali MacGraw  to no real fault of her own  abilities exceptthat she took
the  part. The first two words she  says are, "I'm sorry," and maybe  she
was.  Possiblynoting that the  relationship between Doc and  Carol was not
erotic, an obscene  subplot hatches on filmbetween  Rudy and Fran. As far
as the  action of the movie is concerned  this weird diversion is a
flatabortion.  If Peckinpah liked to direct  actors as much as showing the 
viewer in slow motion that hisbullets, indeed, hit their target,  he might
find a good movie with  his name on it. But this is not it.  "TheGetaway"
has been  held-over for a third week at the  Grand Theater.  TODAY  4-6
p.m.: Muslim StudentAssoc, VU 360 (every week).  MONDAY  8 a.m. to 1 p.m.:
Lummi Management Training Class, VU 305.4 to 5:30 p.m.: Campus Christian
Coalition, VU 010.  7 p.m.: Motor Sports Club, VU 224 (every week).7:30 to
9:30 p.m.: Recycling Committee, VU 010.  TUESDAY  6:15 p.m.: Christian
Science Organization,VU 360 (every week).  6:30 p.m.: Chess Club, VU 224
(every week).  TODAY:  3:30-5:30 p.m.: Intramuralwrestling, Carver Gym
Wrestling Room, everyone  is welcome to compete.  8 p.m.: Mama Sundays,
MikeAtwood entertains, VU coffee shop, free.  Spring Quarter Advance
Registration.  TOMORROW:  9 p.m.-1a.m.: Hoedown dance at Edens Hall North,
free.  SUNDAY:  6:30 and 9 p.m.: "A Day in the Life of IvanDenisovich,"
plus cartoon, Music  Aud. 50c.  3 p.m.: YEVTUSHENKO: A Voice of Russia and
the World,Library Presentation  Room. Tickets in advance through Center for
Continuing Studies, 139 College  Hall.MONDAY:  Spring Quarter Advance
Registration  7:30 p.m.: Jewish Student Association presents"Shoppe on Main
Street "  L-4.  4 p.m.: Women's Commission, VU 225.  TUESDAY:  Spring
QuarterAdvance Registration.



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     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 9



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Friday, February 23; 1973 Western-Front 9  OUCH-Ryan DeWard of Lynden takes
advantage of the WellChild program at the Whatcom County  Health Clinic. At
left is Ryan's mother Ard with clinic nurse Mrs. G. Salisbury giving the
shot.  Health department offers  many community services  by PATT
JOHNSONMany students think the Whatcom County  Health Department is
synonymous with VD  checkups andPlanned Parenthood. Although these  are the
best-known services to the college  community, thedepartment offers many
other  diversified services.  The biggest single program sponsored by the 
HealthDepartment at 509 Girard is  immunizations. It is the community
center for  vaccines and overseas shots.There is a sliding fee  schedule
for those who can pay. This program is  geared for the general
populationand is open  every afternoon.  The fastest-growing program is the
Well Child  program. This programprovides examinations for  babies to see
that they are growing properly.  Patients get routineimmunizations. Also
included  in the program are classes to teach mothers how to  raise their
children.This is a free program designed  for low-income people and is held
mornings by  appointment.  There isalso a free tuberculosis outpatient 
treatment clinic which includes about 1,000  patients. X-rays and drugs are
administered to  patients who need them.  Another free service is the
Venereal Disease  clinic heldevery afternoon by appointment.  College
students comprise one-half of the Health  Department's load.Infectious
cases are treated and  interviewed for contacts who are advised to  contact
the clinic or go totheir private physician  for treatment.  The
Conservation of Hearing program is a free  service designedmainly for
preschool-age children.  Children suspected of having hearing problems can 
have their hearingchecked at the Health  Department. Schools are required
by State law to  check pupils' hearing everyother year. Children  who have
a hearing a loss are treated at the Health  Department or sent to a
privatedoctor.  A free Mental Retardation Diagnostic Service  also geared
for young children offers completetests for children suspected of being
retarded.  Through a nursing service, clinic nurses work as  I schoolnurses
for schools that don't hire their own.  These include Blaine, Ferndale,
Meridian, Mt.  Baker andNooksack school districts.  A Family Health program
provides counseling  to financially or otherwisedeprived families on  what
sort of medical care is needed for the family  and where to find it. 
TheCommunity Health program maintains a  continuing communicable disease
surveillance for  the county.For this purpose, a complete stock of 
materials and mailing containers for sending  specimens to theState
laboratory is kept at the  Health Department.  The Mental Health and
Illness program advises  people of where to find help. A psychologist and 
nurse on the staff investigate complaints by family  or neighbors and
either advise the ill person about  treatment or seek a commitment through
the  courts. There is alsoa clinic which provides further  treatment to
patients returning from institutions.  The birth and deathcertificates of
people who  are born or die in Whatcom County are obtained  and on file at
the HealthDepartment.  The food handler's test for restaurant workers is 
given at the Center. Environmental Healthspecialists also licence and make
periodic  inspections of food service "establishments to  upgradesanitary
standards.  Health Department officials inspect and sample  milk at both
dairies andpasteurization plants to  ensure proper production of milk and
milk  products. They also inform consumersof potential  health hazards
associated with raw milk  consumption.  Officials also sample public
andprivate water  supplies to ensure that water sources are free from 
contamination and to requireconstruction of  water facilities which provide
safe, adequate water.  Sewage tanks are also inspected toeliminate  faulty
systems and to reduce sewage pollution of  underground and surface waters. 
After a fullday of these programs, three nights  a week the facilities are
opened to Planned  Parenthood. This is oneof the better-known  programs at
the clinic. Planned Parenthood has its  own board, but the HealthDepartment
handles  grants for it and donates the building and some  help.  As Dr.
Phillip Jones, directorof the clinic  stated, the Whatcom County Health
Department is  "basically a double-shift clinic."  New poli sci major-minor
approved  A new major-minor  concentration in political science  to be
offered in Fallquarter,  1973, has been approved by the  Academic Council.
The new  concentration will be an  alternative to the present  requirements
for political  science majors.  The total course requirement,  which
variesbetween 104 to 119  credits, satisfied both a major  and minor. 
Several courses are required  that wouldsatisfy general  e d u c a t i o n
requirements,  including a number of classes  outside the political science
 department.  Other departments to have  courses in the concentration are 
English, speech, sociology,psychology, economics, business  administration,
mathematics and  H u x l e y C o l l e g e o fEnvironmental Studies. 
Students wishing to become  interns will have a choice of two  programs.
Thelegislative  internship will involve working  with the state legislature
in  Olympia. The administrativeinternship will involve working  in a
government office, probably  in Bellingham.  Class offered  on (year)1250 
The year 1250 is the subject  of a course being offered Spring  quarter by
the medieval studiescolloquium.  "The year 1250: A  Cross-section of
Medieval Life"  is the title of the course, offered  throughthe foreign
languages  department as French 367c,  M e d i e v a l Literature in 
Translation.' The 3-creditclass  will meet Tuesdays from 7 to 9  p.m.  The
course will take an  interdisciplinary focus on life in  theyear 1250.
Twelve faculty  m e m b e r s from various  departments will team-teach the
 course, coveringthe literature,  music, science, history,  philosophy and
religion oM gt;oth  Europe and the Far East.Additional information may  be
obtained by calling Arthur  Kimmel at 3032 or Lee  Dresbeck at 3459.Looking
for us?  We are at the foot  of Indian at Holly  BASHIN-HOBBINS  ICE CREAM 
STORE  THESTEPHEN'S  619 E. Holly  733-9982  Xhicken  Supreme  WHY COOK
when we can DELIVER to yourdoor our SPECIAL DINNERS?  With each dinner, you
get french fries, roll  and honey.  4 pc. chicken$1.79 10 oz. ribs $2.79  6
shrimp $1.79 8 oz. fish $1.69 gt;  9-12-16 inch pizzas  734-5140 ^
— - •|—^ Ask about
our  319 Lakeway Drive ' 1 I group specials  MCQUEEN  WKDAYS 5:45-8:17  SUN
3:14-5:45-8:17 MacGRAW  THE GETAWAY * ^  OPEN FRI-SAT-SUN 6:30  SUN NITE IS
$2.00,PERCARLOAD NITE I samish  lt;***» gt;  MOtbyion: 7U-MM  5 
BIG  ONES  O-Rama  1) Wild Angels  2)Hels Angels on Wheels  3) Angels from
Hell  4) Hell's Angels  5) Devil's Angels



     ----------



     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 10



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10 Western Front Friday,, February .23, 1973  NO WHERE TO THROW-Eastern's
Larry  Meeks (44)stands holding the ball as his  intended target, Dave
Hayden, is guarded by  Viking Mike Buza in Friday'sbasketball game.  As
Meeks tries to decide what to do with the  ball, Keith Lowry harasses him.
Westernwent  on to win,-66-62.  Cagers slip past Savages  by O.K. JOHNSON 
A three-point play by Keith  Lowryand two Mike Franza free  throws with six
seconds left on  the clock locked up Western's  66-62 victoryover Eastern 
Washington State College last  Friday night in Carver Gym.  The victory,
avenging an  earlier64-52 loss to the Savages  in Cheney, was double sweet
as  the win moved the Vikings one  step closerto sole possession of 
EVERGREEN  CONFERENCE  STANDINGS  Central  WESTERN  Eastern Ore.Eastern
Wash  Ore. College  Ore. Tech  S. Oregon  Evco All gms  10-1  8-4  6-5  6-5
 4-7  4-8  2-10  18-6 15-10  13-11  13-9  7-17  13-12  6-18  Typewriters, 
Adding Machines,  Sales, Service,  and Rentals. EI22 bellingham  business 
machines  1410 Commercial 734-3630  second place and a ' district  playoff
bid.  In a half that saw the lead  exchanged 11 times, Western  jumped off
on a quick 2-0 lead  on a Chuck Pricelay-up off a  Mike Buza assist. 
Eastern battled back on  balanced scoring from Randy  Schutjer, LarryMeeks,
Dave  Hayden and Steve Hook to push  the Savages into a 15-10 lead,  their
longest of the night.The Vikings, overcame the  Savages' press with Franza,
Buza  and Price scoring on the visitors  to taketheir longest lead of the 
half 33-30. Schutjer got the hot  hand for Eastern, powering the  Savages
to a 36-35 halftime lead.  Hook paced Eastern in the  opening minutes of
the second  half to a 45-41 lead, scoring seven points. Craig Nicholes, 
Buza and Franza edged the  Vikings closer, taking a 58-57  lead on aFranza
jumper.  Western stayed on top for the  rest of the game.  A technical foul
against Buza  causeduneasy moments for the  Vikings as a 61-57 lead was 
reduced to a 61-60 advantage.  Western went to astall at the  2:19 mark
before Lowry hit on  a lay-up from Franza. Lowry  was fouled on the play
byHayden who left the game with  his fifth foul.  Franza made good on a 
one-and-one situation to ice thegame for the Vikings.  Franza 4ed all
scorers with 27  points and was followed by  teammates Price andBuza with 
12 and 10 points respectively.  Shutjer led Eastern with 16  points, 12 of
those coming in  thefirst half. Shutjer was  followed by Hook with 14 and 
Meeks with 13.  VIKINGS 66, SAVAGES 62Western  Buza (c)  Fisher  Franza (g)
 Lowry (f)  Mount (f)  Nicholes  Price (g)  Totals  E. Wash.  Hayden(c] 
Heutink  Hite  Hook (f)  fg  4-12  1-1  8-17  2-4  2-6  1-3  6-12  25-55 
ffl  1-8  1-2  0-0  6-16  K'ln'wski(g) 2-7  Meeks (f)  Picard  Schutjer(g! 
Totals  Halftime:  Turnovers  Team rebo  E. Wash.  5-6  1-4  7-16  ft  2-2 
0-0  11-12  1-1  1-3  3-6  0-0  18-24  ft  6-9  0-0  0-0  2-4  1-2  3-6 
2-2  2-2  reb  2  1  0  7  6  3  8  35reb  9  1  0  5  3  10  3  2  23-59
16-25 47  E. Wash. 36,  Western 8, E  pf tp  4 10  2 2  3 27  4 5  1 5  3 5
 4 12  21 66  pf tp  5 8  1 2  2 0  3 14  1 5  3 13  2 4  3 16  20 62 
Western 35.  . Wash  unds: Western 8,  14.  . 14.  CHUCMNUT
CYCl£  Hodaka Motorcycles  Service on most makes  Cycle parts 
accessories  Two stroke bulk oil  75c qt.  "SERVICE OUR SPECIALTY"  Half
block north of State  James exit  phone 733-7615  2025JfcMG9  Ruggers fo
host  Vancouver club  The Western Rugby Clubhosts the Vancouver, B.C., Red 
Lions in a match tomorrow  behind Carver Gym at 2:30. In  case of rain,the
match will be  moved to the Roosevelt School  playing field.  The Vik club
has a season  record of 12-5.  Viks stop EOC,  win 2nd in Evco  Western's
basketball team  earned a second place finish in  theEvergreen Conference
by  beating Eastern Oregon College,  90-62, in the Big Blue's last  regular
seasongame, Saturday.  The Vikings were led by the  team's three seniors,
Mike Buza,  Mike Franza and TomMount,  appearing in their last regular 
game for Western.  Among them the "seniors  combined for 62points in their 
farewell performance. Mount  was high scorer for the game  with 25 points.
Franza hit 21and Buza had 16.  "I was real proud of the way  the seniors
played," Viking  coach Chuck Randall said ofthe  game. "Mount had one of
the  best scoring nights of his  career."  Each of the retiring Viks 
received a standing ovation from  the Carver Gym crowd when  they left the
game in the second  half. Buza left withWestern on  top by nearly 30
points.  The San Jose, Calif.,  teammates exited from their last 
regular^ames via the foul route.  Mount picked up his fifth with  minutes
left and his Mitty High  School classmate, Franza,  charged for his final
foul 30  seconds later.  The Big Blue of next year  then took over
andenjoyed  themselves as the Viks coasted  to their 28 point victory
margin.  Mount scored the first eightpoints for the Vikings and hit 10  of
15 from the field for the  game.  Western had little trouble  with
theMountaineers, breaking  a 12-12 deadlock at 11:51 in the  first half and
jumping to a 24-12  lead fourminutes later.  In the second half the three 
seniors quickly ran the 40-30  point halftime lead to a 20 point margin. 
In spite of the scoring edge,  Randall was not over joyed by  his team's
performance. "Theyplayed good enough to win,  Saturday," he said. "But they
 were kind of down after beating  EasternWashington the night  before.  Top
pointman for the  Mounties was Jack Easter with  18 points. JimMacKay
finished  with 13 as the only other EOC  player in double figures.  As a
team the Mounties shot32.7 per cent from he field,  hitting 20 of 61 tries.
The Viks  shot 47.4 per cent with 36  baskets in 76attempts.  EOC outscored
Western at  the free throw line, making 22  of 27 tosses for 81.5 per cent
asthe Vikings hit on 18 of 23 for  78.3 per cent.  VIKINGS 90, MOUNTIES 62 
Western fg  Bissell(f) 0-2Dudley 0-0  Fisher 2-5  Franza(g) 9-15  Hot vet 
Laws  Lowry  Mount(f)  Nicholes  Price(g)  Totals:  1-2  1-3  0-1  10-15 
2-4  4-12  36-76  EOC fg  Archer(g) 2-2  Crittendon 1-6  Easter lt;c) 8-13 
Fryback 2-3  Isbell1-5  Lyman 0-2  MacKay(f) 3-7  McClary(g) 2-9  McGladrey
1-3  Nutt 0-3  Towns d(f) 0-8  Totals: 20-61  ft0-0  0-0  2-2  3-3  1-2 
0-0  0-0  5-8  3-4  2-2  reb  10  1  4  4  1  0  6  9  5  2  Pf tp  2 16  0
 6  21  3  2  025  7  10  18-23 49  ft  0-0  1-2  2-4  5-6  0-0  0-0  7-7 
1-2  2-2  0-0  4-4  reb  3  5  9  1  0  5  4  6  3  0  224 90  Pf tp  5 4 
3  18  9  2  0  13  5  4  0  4  22-27 42 24 62  Halftime: Western 40, EOC
30.  Turnovers:Western 11, EOC 25.  Team rebounds: Western 5, EOC 4.  Two
matmen place  in conference meetAdmiral Flunder and Tom  Tripple were the
only two  Viking wrestlers able to place  last weekend at theEvergreen  C o
n f e r e n c e w r e s t l i ng  tournament held at LaGrande,  Ore. 
Flunder and Tripple both captured third places in their  ADMIRAL FLUNDER 
respective weight divisions,  Flunder at 126 andTripple at  150.  As a
team, Western placed  last. Central won the title for the  ninth straight
year. Placing behind the Wildcats were  Southern Oregon, Oregon  College,
Eastern, Eastern  Oregon, Oregon Techand  Western.  Flunder's first match
was  against defending conference  champion Dan Speasl who againwon the
title. Speasl shut out  Flunder 12-0.  Flunder advanced to the  losers
bracket where he  decisioned Eastern Oregon's Tye  Hamilton 5-0 and Oregon
Tech's  Bob Rodregues 7-0 for third  place.  Tripple waspinned in his first
 match by strong armed John  B u r k h o l d e r of Central.  Burkholder
later forfeited the title to Terry Thomas of  Southern Oregon.  T r i p p l
e pinned Mike  Englegau of Eastern Oregon,decisioned Paul Staeheli of 
Eastern in a close 8-7 battle, and  beat Mike Perry of Oregon  College 8-1
forthird place.  Rudy Pena, 118, lost his first  match to second place
finisher  Dave Robinson on a pin andwas  decisioned 14-2 by Central's Lee 
Reichart.  Dwight Mack dropped a 10-5  decision to Oregon Tech'sTino  Diaz
and then was blanked 6-0  by Dan Cruz of Eastern in  matches between 134
pounders.  MarkSencenbaugh also  dropped two decisions, a 8-4 loss  to John
Hayward of Eastern and  a 5-1 decision toTerry  Danielson of Oregon
College.  At 158, Mark Stroobrandt  was pinned by Eastern's Keith  Koch
andwas decisioned by  Tony Blore of Central.  John Mosich was a pin victim 
of second place finisher JohnAdams of Central in the opening  round and
then went on to lose  a tough 3-2 decision to third  placefinisher Kevin
Derowitsch  of Oregon College.  After shedding 30 pounds of  weight in
little over a month,Brett Bennett was a first round  pin victim of second
place  finisher Jerry Stidham of  Southern Oregon.Bennett lost  his second
match to Eastern  Oregon's Paul Tarter 5-3. Tarter  finished third. 
Eastern's BobShaw saddled  "B.J." Bill Jones with a 12-0  opening round
decision in  heavyweight competition. Joneswent on to pin Oregon Tech's 
Jim Ryan but fell 8-7 to Jim  Seymore of Oregon College.



     ----------



     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 11



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Friday, February 23, 1973 Western Tront 11  Women to face WSU, Cenfra/  TWO
IMPORTANT POINTS-Western's Kathy Hemion scores  two points with the perfect
ending of a fast break during the  Vikingsrecent 55-53 win over the
University of British  Columbia's junior varsity.  Hoopstresses run 
victory stringto 17  Simon Fraser University  (SFU) and the University of 
British Columbia (UBC) junior  varsity wereadded last weekend  t o the
women's varsity  basketball team's string of 15  straight victories. 
Westerncame back from a  week plagued with injuries and  illnesses to
barely defeat SFU  48-45 and UBC 55-53.Claudia Haaker (6-0) started  her
first game of the season in  place of the Viks' usual center 
TheresaNafziger (6-1) who was  on the bench recovering from an  illness. 
Alice Textor started the Viks'  scoringagainst SFU three  minutes into the
first quarter  with a lay-in off of a steal by  Kathy Hemion and a keypass
by  Trena Page.  SFU's center Sheila Strike  counter-attacked with a five
foot  shot from the center of the key.  Strike went on to score 20  points
in the game.  Hemion scored eight points  in the first quarterto lead the 
Vikings to a 16-4 advantage.  Western continued to control  the game in the
second quarterwith its fast break lay-ins  bringing the halftime score to a
 one-sided 27-12.  Free throws by Western'sWendy Hawley and Trena Page  and
points scored from two  steals by Alice Textor stretched  the Viks'lead to
40-31 with  5:53 left in the game.  Hemion had 16 points and  Hawley had 13
points to lead  theVikings to their 48-45 win.  Western's second game of
the  day started with the UBC  jayvees jumping to a quick 4-0  lead.
Claudia Haaker's successful  6-footer, two free throws and an  eight foot
hookshot duringa  two minute rally spurred the  Viks onto a 9-8 lead.  The
UBC jayvees started an  effective full court press early in  the second
quarter and tied the  game up 21-21. The combined  efforts of Haaker,
Hemion,Textor and Geri Campbell  settled the frantic Vikings down  to
recapture the lead 31-27.  Fatigue took itstoll on  Western in the third
quarter and  UBC crept back even with the  Vikings 38-38.  "I think we
reallyplayed well  considering we had many players  fighting illnesses,"
Viking Coach  Lynda Goodrich said."Claudia  Haaker came off the bench and 
did an excellent job."  Western's junior varsity  ended its season Tuesday
night  with a 48-42 victory over the  University of British Columbia 
Senior B team.  VIKINGS 48,SFU 45  Western (48): Bezona, Campbell  3,
Carder 2, Haaker 4, Hawley 13,  Hemion 16, Page 3,Stripling, Textor  7. 
SFU (45): Bell-Irving 7, Dale 1.  Hadfield, Hamm 3, McDonald 3,  Owen,
Strike 20,Thomas 6,  Thorburn 5, Wimbles.  Western: 16 11 9 12 - 48  SFU: 4
8 19 14 - 45  VIKINGS 55,T-BIRDS53  Western (55): Bezona, Campbell  5,
Carder 4, Haaker 12, Hawley 8,  Hemion 13, Page 5, Stripling,Textor  9. 
UBC jayvees (53): Ballantyne 9.  Brunatti 4, Creelman 4, Davidson 2,  Dean
2, Kent 7,Lendeburgh 2,  Parker 2, Peterson 6, Sindor 6, Zerbe  13. 
Western: 18 13 7 17 -55  UBC jayvees: 13 1411 1 5 - 53  by SHERRY STRIPLING
 Leading Western's varsity  sports with a 15-1 win-loss record  thewomen's
intercollegiate  basketball team will have a tough  battle tomorrow - to
try to  increase its winstring to 17  straight.  The Vikings travel to 
Ellensburg to match up against  Washington State University(WSU) and
Central Washington.  Both WSU and Central will be  leading contenders for
the  regionaltournament crown  Little Blue  beats Falcons  Jumping out to a
huge first  half lead, Western's freshmanbasketball team held off several 
attempted rallies to defeat  Vancouver, B.C. City College  last week,
71-51. The win gave  the Little Blue an 8-9 season  record with one game
remaining  on their schedule.Western's hot-shooting and  rebounding in the
first half gave  the Vikings a 45-17 lead at the  intermission.The Viks'
defense  held the Falcon offense to only  one shot most of the time, 
usually from long range.  Inthe second half,  Vancouver put on a rally at
the  start of the half, outscoring  Western 11-0 in the first four minutes.
The Falcons closed the  gap to 13 at one point,  outscoring the Vikings
21-7  before Westernfinally caught  fire to close the game out with a 
rally of its own.  The Vikings' "mini-offense"  again led theway for
Western as  Bob Hoefel, Jamie Greene and  Ken Kelley, all under six feet 
tall, scored 43 ofWestern's  points.  Hoefel, the team's leading  .scorer,
hit nine-of-12 shots from  the field and finished with22  points to lead
all scorers. Greene  scored 11 and Kelley had 10.  Hoefel and Randy
Jorissen led  theLittle Blue's board attack  with 10 rebounds each as 
Western out-rebounded VCC,  57-48.  Randy Allanwas the only  Falcon in
double figures with 12  points as the Vikings held  Vancouver's
high-scoring Blake Iverson to only nine points.  Iverson had scored 26 in a
 previous game with Western,  won by the Viks,70-68, in a  tight battle in
Vancouver.  Coach Gary Burch will lead  his Little Blue into Seattle 
Wednesdayfor the final game of  the season, a return match with  the
Seattle University junior  varsity. Western wonthe first  encounter,
downing the  Papooses in Carver Gym, 62-59.  VIKINGS 71, FALCONS 51 
Western(71): Laws 8, Greene 1 1 ,  Hoefel 12, Kelley 10, Kim Sherwood  5,
Jorissen 4, Kent Sherwood 4,  Healy7.  Vancouver (51): Stevenson 2,  Kilner
6, Allan 12, Bowman 6,  Bazaluk 2, Iverson 9, Chamberlin 6,Coults 4, Cooper
4.  Halftime: Western 45, Vancouver  17.  Fouled out: Cooper (V).' 
Technical foul: VCCcoach. FG: WW  27-65, VCC 21-67; FT: WW 17-31,  VCC
9-16.  Swimmers at championships  TheWestern swimmers are in  Ellensburg
today for the  weekend Evergreen Conference  championships.  Thesix member
team will  face Southern Oregon and  Central. These are the only  schools
in the conferenceto  field swim teams.  The Viks will be sending four 
swimmers, Tom Ward, Don  Williams, Bruce Johnsonand  Paul Simmerly, and two
divers,  Robin Allen and Doug Brown.  Ward, this year's captain,
willprobably be swimming the 100  and 200 yd. butterfly and with  the 50
yd. freestyle.  Williams, along withWard,  will be swimming the 100 and 
'200 butterfly and the 500 yd.  freestyle.  Johnson will swim in the100 
yd. and 200 yd. backstroke and  the 500 yd. freestyle. Simmerly  will round
off the team with the  100 and 200 yd. breaststroke  and the 200 yd.
individual  medley.  All four swimmers will enter  the 400 yd.medley relay
and  the 800 yd. freestyle relay.  Both divers will compete in  the one and
three metercompetition. Allen is a former  Evco diving champion.  which
will be. fought over next  week at Western.Western took second to WSU  in
last year's tournament and  barely defeated the Cougars  53-47 in theironly
meeting this  season.  WSU's main offensive threat  is 6-5 center Jennifer
Gray. Gray  was out withan injury in the  Viking's previous game against 
the Cougars and may make a big  difference in tomorrow's game.  A win over
WSU will give the  Vikings the i psychological  advantage when they meet
the  Cougars in the regional  tournament. Both teams have a  good chance of
making the finals  since they are the twotop seeds.  Central will be out to
revenge  its close 47-43 loss to the Viks  earlier this year. The
Wildcats'scrappy playing brought them  back from a 21-13 halftime score  to
take the lead twice in the  fourthquarter.  "Central is always tough," 
Coach Lynda Goodrich said. "It  should be a real dog fight." 
Westerndestroyed Central's  ho'pes for the regional  championship last year
by  knocking the Wildcats out of thetournament in a semi-final game. 
Western's chances for a double  victory tomorrow lie in its  ability
tomaintain a fast break  pace.  "If our running game is on  neither team
will be able to stop  us," Goodrichsaid.  U/e the  2forl  cta/zified/:  Get
the message across  CUSTOM RUBB€K9T^W  For free type
styleand price sheet phone 734-1288 or write to  2315 " I " St. (One day
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order stamps at Campus Co-op Bookstore  ir rr " " *"• *f
= »  Wellshow  you how  to tame the  wild blue  yonder*  Point
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flight school and have  the opportunity of winning



     ----------



     Western Front - 1973 February 23 - Page 12



     ----------



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