•*) Vol. 53 No. 28 July 31, 1980 Central Washington New dean appointed Dr. Burton J. Williams has been named Dean of the newly formed College of Letters, Arts and Sciences. Announced by Academic Vice President Edward Harrington, the appointment will be effective Sept. 1, when the University's Schools of Arts and Humanities, Natural Science and Mathematics, and Social and Behavioral Sciences will merge. Williams will head the new col­ lege, containing 35 of Central's 52 departments and programs. The other major academic divisions are the School of Professional Studies, which includes teacher education, technical and n voca­ tional departments, and the School of Business and Economics. The creation of the new college was announced this spring by President Donald L. Garrity. The consolidation is designed to give flexibility in faculty assignment, aid in developing interdisciplinary programs of study and save money, Garrity said. Williams, on the history faculty since 1969, served as Dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences the past eight years. The Deans of the two other schools which will merge to create the new college are Dr. Bernard L. Martin, who has served as head of the School of Natural Science and Mathematics since 1972 and Dr. Zoltan Kramar, who has been In­ terim Dean of the School of Arts and Humanities the past four years. Martin, professor of mathematics, and Kramar, pro­ fessor of history, will remain on the Central faculty. Author of five books and numerous articles on the history of Kansas, the Midwest and Washington, Williams earned undergraduate and master's degrees at Southern Illinois University and a Ph.D. at the University of Kansas. Committed to a "teaching ad­ ministration," Williams plans to continue his teaching, research and writing activities. Other members of the Williams family are involved with Central as well. Two of the new dean's six chldren are alumni, one is current­ ly a student and another will enter this fall as a freshman. Mrs. Williams is also a Central student and a member of the Douglas Honors College. Williams is currently vice presi­ dent of the Ellensburg Rotary Club, and during the 1979-80 school year was co-president, with his wife Carol, of the Ellensburg High School Booster Club. Mrs. Williams is a member of the Ellensburg School Board. -Wy-' MM i vj 1 •wo:*-*: \ -V. . • /» t * *'• MMliWiii Wmmm University Ellensburg, WA 98926 Appeal goes on SUPER DEAN Dr. Burton Williams will become dean of the newly- formed CWU College of Let­ ters, Arts and Sciences Sept. L When the search began earlier this year for someone to fill the position, many referred to the person to be selected as Megadean or Superdean because the dean would head up 35 of the university's 52 depart­ ments. In this photograph, Dean Williams is not im­ itating Ronald Reagan by demonstrating that at age 52 he is able to handle the job. Actually this photo was taken shortly after Williams was named dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences eight years ago. At age 44, Williams probably did feel he needed to prove his stamina. Kicker aids Chicano students The largest effort ever mounted in the Northwest to raise scholar­ ship funds for Chicano students has been launched by Amigos de Chicanos en Salud (Friends of Chicanos in Health). The all-volunteer organization was founded last year by Nor­ thwest business, educational, and civic leaders to provide moral and financial support to Chicano students entering health profes­ sional training. Efren Herrera, All-Pro place kicker of the Seattle Seahawks, has been named Honorary Chairman for the campaign which involes campaign organizations in thirty communities throughout Oregon, Idaho and Washington. Herrera appears as the Amigos' spokesmanin a television an- nouncemnt promoting the cam­ paign. Fundraising proceeds will pro­ vide scholarships and grants to Chicano students who are pursuing medical, dental, and other health careers in the three Northwest states. The Northwest has less than 10 percent of the Chicano health pro­ fessionals it needs to serve the region's Spanish-speaking com­ munity, according to an organiza­ tion spokesperson.- He added by Shane Kenison The appeal hearing concerning Dr. Charles Stastny's dismissal from the CWU faculty will be con­ tinued in a few months so the visiting judge, James J. Dore, will have time to study the written briefs, arguments and 1,349 pages of transcript from Dr. Stastny's hearing. Dr. Stastny's attorney, David Danelski, a professor of political science at Stanford University and . acknowledged expert on the Con­ stitution, told Judge Dore that, "the penalty is so excessive it violated due process..." The brief submitted by Stastny's attorneys states, "dismissal of a tenured faculty member from a university is one of the most severe punishments in American society,...roughly equivalent to im­ peachment of a judge, disbarment of an attorney, dishonorable discharge from the armed forces and imprisonment for a serious criminal offense..." Danelski goes on to say that Stastny's constitu- tionaly guaranteed rights to both academic freedom and the freedom of speech were violated. Danelski further states that severi­ ty of the punishment by the Board of Trustees handed down last February 1, "is excessive and un­ conscionable that the Board of Trustees acted beyond its Jurisdic­ tion when it based its decision to dismiss him partly on the recom­ mendation of his former col­ leagues that the board acted ar­ bitrarily and capriciously in mak­ ing its findings and decisions in the case." Owen F. Clark, counsel for Cen­ tral stated, "What would shock the conscience would be to allow the university to ignore the standards i it expects from its faculty." Clark, who represented Central in the ac- tion against Stastny, opened his ad­ dress to the bench by saying, "It is a rare occurance (the dismissal of a tenured faculty member from a university) but perhaps not as rare as counsel (Danelski) has stated in this court and in his brief." Danelski states that there are problems with the definition of the term "insubordination" and that to be insubordinate, "requires a course of conduct and not a single act..." He went on to cite Califor­ nia court cases to support his con­ clusions concerning this point of i law. Clark said that according to the hearing record Dr. Stastny had taken six unauthorized absences between January 1973 and October 1978. This, coupled with the six day ! late return winter quarter 1979, is what prompted the action by Presi­ dent Donald Garrity. Reading from the faculty code concerning the need for permission to be absent from campus, Clark stated, "The first amendment does not protect that kind of conduct..." ' The charges which resulted in .the dismissal of Dr. Stastny in­ clude gross misconduct, insubor- ! dination, and willfull and grevious violation of university rules. The range of possible sanctions that are available to the university include a warning in writing, a cen­ sure, (which Clark described as a written reprimand) change of assignment, suspension with pay, or dismissal. Money for buildings The state legislature will soon be looking over Central's $13,260,800 budget request for the 1981-1983 biennium. According to Gary Car­ roll of the campus budget office, the Capital Budget Request will in­ clude a major addition to Nicholson Pavillion and remodel­ ing of the present structure. Plans to remodel Barge Hall are also be­ ing allowed for in the request, as well as normal and emergency maintainence costs. For Nicholson, there will be a new support gymnasium, lab and locker facilities, and a new building for the physical educa­ tion, leisure services, and health departments. Total cost for the project is estimated at $9,951,200. The reason for the new buildings is to bring the P.E., health arid leisure programs together in one area, and allow more room for of­ fice space without further burden­ ing an already crowded Nicholson Pavillion. Barge Hall changes will mostly be renovation of interior spaces, which will insure the. continued use of the historic structure. Plans call for the consolidation under one roof of all student services offices except medical care, plus a number of faculty and alumni of­ fices, some of which are already in Barge. There will also be areas for public service set aside in the building, includeng the CWU * Regional Archives and the Museum of Man. Total cost for the Barge project estimated at $7,860,700. Money received last biennium for working drawings on both pro­ jects has already been used, with left over money, about $4,900, be­ ing added to the next budget. It should be mentioned that this is just a request for funds, nothing is for certain. The realization of these plans is up to the legislature and the governor. By the time these projects are completed, most of the current student body at Cen­ tral will have graduated. The last biennium brought the remodeling of McConnel Auditorium. Central officials are hoping the governing body in Olympia will be in another generous mood when they take a look at Central's next request. A copy of the Capital Budget Re­ quest for the 1981-1983 biennium can be inspected at "the Budget Of­ fice upstairs in Mitchell Hall. HSS move The Handicapped Student Ser­ vice has moved its office to Ken­ nedy Hall, rooms 114-116. The telephone number remains 963-2171. The accessible entrance is the northwest door of the building. Page 2 Campus Crier ... . P'v -• ibM^i July 31,1980 The governor's mansion was i built in the 1880's by the Craig brothers On Craig's hill. . . by Leslie Barnhart mansion waits The dream of two men sits alone and seemingly out of place on the hill at the corner of Third Avenue and Chestnut Street among the many "ordinary" houses. It's called the governor's mansion, mansion, or simply the castle. The story behind the impressive structure goes back to the 1880's when Ellensburg was fighting with North Yakima (Yakima) and Olympia for the honor of having the state capitol located in their ci­ ty. Olympia had been the territorial capital but when statehood was near, a popular vote was required to determine the city in which the new capital would be located. Residents of Cen­ tral Washington wanted it moved across the mountains to the center of the state. North Yakima and Ellensburg both claimed they were located in the center of the state and would make better locations than Olympia. The rivalry among the three major con­ tenders was fierce. North Yakima claimed it had better wagon roads, better railroad connections, and a bet­ ter valley. The Kittitas Valley, they argued, was too narrow and didn't have the city ser­ vices available in North Yakima. Ellensburg claimed they were the exact geographical center of Washington and a center for ranching and mining interests in the area. Olympia boasted that their excellent city services and the beauty of Western Washington was enough reason to leave the capital there. They also insisted that North Yakima and Ellensburg were both insufferably hot dust bowls. The population of the three cities was also an issue, all claimed an exaggerated number of citizens. The actual population of the fast growing cities, according to the 1890 census, was Olympia, 4698, Ellensburg, 2768, and North Yakima, 1535. Other cities contending for the capitol, to a lesser degree, were Yakima City (Union Gap), Pasco, Centralia, Waterville, and Waitsburg. While this controversy raged throughout the^state, two brothers had a vision of Ellensburg eventually becoming the capital. Britton and Samuel Craig were so sure Ellensburg would be chosen they began construction of a residence worthy of a state governor. It was a personal vision, no financial help was provided by the city. The brothers used they own money to start work on a three story Victorian mansion. The city did lay out Capital Avenue as an approach to the mansion, expecting later government buildings would be added to the area. The original structure had a mansard roof, which is a roof with two slopes on each of the four sides, the lower slope being steeper than the upper .The third story was deisigned to be used as a ballroom for the many social functions a governor might be expected to give. The cupola., (tower) was structured to be the highest point on the interior spiral stairway. The Craig brothers also fitted the interior with hardwood floors and ornate woodwork. The walls were constructed of brick or stone, butane of the subsequent owners covered them with stucco. On Oct. 1,1889 an election was held to decide where the capital for the new state would be located. The Voting results were: Olympia—25,490 North Yakima—14,711 and Ellensburg—12,833. A clear majority of all the votes was required for the final determina­ tion therefore, another election was scheduled for Nov. 4,1890. During the taiiae between the first and second election, the residents of all three cities in­ tensified their efforts to sway votes to their city. The second election proved a fatal blow for North Yakima and Ellensburg Olympia received a majority of the total votes. In retrospect, it has been said if North Yakima and Ellensburg had combined their efforts, pooled their votes, and decided on one Central Washington city in that first election—the state capitol might very well be on this side of the mountains. The Craig brothers' dream had faded. They had built a mansion in a small town where there was to be no governor. In addition to the sad disappointment they must have felt, the mansion had been a financial catastrophe totaling thousands of dollars. The brothers had been forced to mortgage the building and were unable to pay the loan At a sheriff's sale on March 9,1893 the mansion was sold to Nathan Cusing for $4300. It lay empty and neglected for several years, windows broken none of the owners gave it the care it needed. • The closest it came to having nobility housed within its walls was when Julius Caesar Hub* bell bought it in 1904 for $800. Even this distinction was short-lived. Hubbell sold the mansion the same day he bought it—for a profit of $150. Today, the mansion is divided into five apartments and is again for sale. The governor's mansion and the dream of two brothers goes back almost a century now, the mansion sits quietly on the hill—still waiting for the governor that will never come., Curt Smith will seek re-election State Representative Curt Smith, R-Ephrata, has announced his intention to seek re-election to the State House of Represen­ tatives. "I'm still very concerned about continuing inflation and the ever increasing tax burden being placed oh the average family in the state of Washington," Smith said. "We must hold the line on spending and set our priorities in the coming state budget." Smith, a successful Columbia Basin farmer since 1955, said that legislators in the next session are going to be facing a sizeable short­ fall in reyenue. "I helped lead the successful drive for Initiative 62 in the 13th district which the people over­ whelmingly passed to limit state spending. This will have a great in­ fluence on the state budget expen­ ditures in the next session," he said. Smith noted that citizens, by passing Int. 62, have told legislators to live within their ' means and set priorities in budget Rupublican seat mate, Sid spending. Flanagan, R-Quincy, will be work- "Any tax increases will only add ing hard to ward off any new taxa- to more inflation and lead to addi- tion. tional personal regulations and "The future of our state is ex- less. local control," Smith said. cellent if we only would tell others Transportation, Labor, Smith said that he and his about its natural beauty. We Ecology Committees. should also promote the sales abroad of our abundant natural resources and agricultural pro­ ducts," Smith said. Smith is a member of the House and Central receives NSF grant Central has received a $11,000 ' grant from the National Science ' Foundation (NSF) to evaluate the immediate impact of Mt. St. Helens ashfall on streams and the insects that live in them. Dr. Stamford Smith, zoology pro­ fessor and recipient of the Univer­ sity's 1980 Distinguished Research Professor award, will direct the three-month project at three stream sites in Kittitas County and two others near the active volcano. Smith explained that his study will determine if the May 18 ashfall had an effect on the larvae of aquatic insects. If an effect is . observed, he said, researchers will try to predict the long-term ramifications. "Has the ashfall cut down the potential of aquatic insects for reproduction, for example?" he said. Smith said the NSF funding was specifically directed at short-term projects to measure transient data from the spring ashfall. He hopes to follow up the project with a long- term study "to find out how the lar­ vae died, if we find significant numbers were killed. Did they, for instance, feed on the ash and stave to death, * or were they smothered?" he conjectured. Four of the five stream sites to WSL conference soon A political conference sponsored ty the Washington Student Legislature (WSL) and Central's Conference Center will be held Sept 26-28. Registration for the conference is Sept. 26 at 3 pm. Candidates from both the Republican and Democratic par­ ies will be available to cover the ssues appearing on the November ballot. The issues discussed will in­ clude, the economy, energy, higher education, and the political party process in our state. The goal of tfye WSL is to offer educational services to students from all areas of college life in the state. Those services include train­ ing in the legislative and bill writing process. be monitored this summer have been previoulsy monitored by Smith and his students, so they have extensive data on the inseci and water conditions before the Mt. St. Helens eruption. Summer registers posted The Career Planning & Place- ministrators to sign the register to ment Center has summer registers notify teachers of the positions posted at Barge Hall, room 105. open within their respective The teachers register allows districts. teachers to sign the register which summer registers also allow is checked by school ad- for informal interviews to be ar- ministratorS. The administrators ranged. register allows school ad- July 31,1980 Campus Crier Page 3 Editorial V.P. choice—Just media hype? letter to the editor by Paul Emmons CU Some national conventions are of interest'for choosing a presidential candidate. I grant that long before this one, the aspirations of millions had found their resonance in Ronald Regan, leaving the Republican convention free for a : celebration of unity, with symbolic and ceremonial importance. Yet few delegates will return home feeling that they had wasted their time simply because certain ques­ tions had never been in doubt. They were clearly far from taking unity, celebration, symbol, and ceremony as matters of no impor­ tance. The country bey ond Detroit turn­ ed to the television as a window, trusting jto see and share the con­ vention in its perspective. The TV news media, alas, had other ideas. . Did they find the unity, the celebration too unimportant, or was it unsatisfying to them for other reasons? The question. became vexatious as Wednesday night progressed and we blinked at the TV to shake the distortions from our eyes, for it had become no window, but itself a spectacle. One substantial piece of business remained which, though equally ceremonial as an act of the conven­ tion, intrigued as transpiring dur­ ing the convention: the vice- presidential nomination, a decision which was Mr. Regan's to make in his hotel fastness and to announce on the final day. In this a degree of anticipation is natural-the an­ ticipation of a family member making Christmas preparations, who looks forward to receiving gifts but respects the principle that their identity is none of his business until December 25th. One's discomfort began by being forced to view the convention in­ stead as through the eyes of a mischievous brat obsessed with peeking into every drawer and cupboard of the house on the twen­ tieth. We are accustomed by now to a press which covers elections as so many sports events, by quoting opinion polls and asking people who they think will win, by analyz­ ing "campaign strategies" instead of America's problems and what the candidates propose to do about them. So when, amidst our nation's agonies, the media perceived their primary mission as telling us on Wednesday what Mr. Regan plann­ ed to tell us on Thursday, the sheer vacuity of it all was only par for the course. Would that the press, hav­ ing determined to play the fortune teller, could do it correctly. Or would that, having failed with crystal balls, it might at least ad­ mit to another kind. But dim cup-, boards are no deterrent to over curious children. And those con­ sidered far-sighted put on spec­ tacles that magnify. Last week, (absurdly long ago, isn't it?, when all one's attentions are focused on trying to project tomorrow into today), as the possi­ ble names were clicked off and meditated over like rosary beads, George Bush's was always one oi the first. A logical and strong choice, with a distinguished Washingron career touching foreign affairs, conservative yet acceptable to moderates, youthful, and in fact far from inconceivable as President. Gerald Ford's name was seldom on the list. For all hifc qualifications, his place in America's heart, and the strength he could give the ticket, his demur­ rers were convincing, and it re­ mained far fetched to expect a former President to run for Vice President. That Regan did con­ sider him carefully nonetheless could bespeak imagination and thoroughness. With the convention underway, the news me«tia continually distracted from the business at hand in favor of the latest whisper­ ings and opinions, cornering peo­ ple who would respond with frand ignorance, decorous evasion, or evident annoyance. Speech after speech was assessed, if at all for its possible effect on its maker's Vice Presidential prospects, and con- trasted with George Bush's "low profile strategy". Then somewhere among the media's ceaseless bedgering of anyone and everyone for some clue to their ephemeral treasure, it was broach­ ed that conversations with Mr. Ford's staff were becoming serious. Instantly the rumor was transplanted to the realm of soap opera. We were given to wonder anxiously whether Ford and Regan were "in physical contact...er...in the same room". There was talk of a co-Presidency under publicly stated conditions, promptly dubb- ed"The Treaty of Detroit". (Evidently pulling up treaties under negotiation by the roots to ' see how they are growing is stan­ dard press practice.) Soon came a • prediction that to complete their singular innovation, the two would triumphantly enter the hall that very night. Presses at the Chicago Sun-Times actually began rolling, Ford's name in the headlines. Now that we all have seen Regan thus provoked into an early an­ nouncement of ("only") George Bush after all, what will become of these deliria? Will they be tossed 1 into the waste basket along with all . the other speculations and straw polls, that are ever-such-hot news until the moment the real polls : close? Or will the commentators 1 continue in crocodile tears, solemn shakes on the head, and despairing : gestures to illustrate the appalling lack of control in which the i people's expectations were built up | and then-dropped-kerthump-by Ronald Reagan?And in the next breath, to pity the poor souls listen­ ing to speeches and waving placards on the floor, deprived all the while of the electronic media, and so not knowing what was real­ ly going on... R eaders disagree To The Editor: Re: Alan Smith's editorial|"E.R.A: A Right of Choice" JulyJ17 minority rights" mean? Smith doesn't say if he means an effort to •deny or affirm minority rights And how can Smith state that the E.R.A. is involved with minority rights when, in his very next sentence, he reports that women outnumber all other groups? Ac­ tually, he wrote "Women out­ number blacks,whites, and, heaven forbid, even us men." Is Smith desassociating men from the group of blacks and whites? Is he disassociating women? If not, comparing the number of women with the number of blacks or , whites is like comparing bedknobs with broomsticks-it doesn't make much sense. Smith's use of broad, abstract terms unsupported by details or explanations also leaves us in the lurch. We're still not sure what he , meant by "right of choice", though Never have so many words, which when taken separately or in small snatches make perfect sense, combined to convey such a striking picture of total non-sense as they do in Alan Smith's column in the last issue of the Campus Crier. Our reading suggested a Marx Brothers type of approach to writing that, while it may appeal to nostalgia buffs and psychoanalysts, doesn't say much for the quality of our college paper or the talent of its staff. Smith's editorial skips from one half- developed thought to the next like a hot potato being passed from child to child. This method may be great at parties but it left us with a vague, unsettled feeling as to what Smith really meant or thought. What, for instance, does "...another effort in the sanctity of Military discriminates against men? by Scott Collier Draft registration is upon us and a lot of people are not taking it too well. I really can't blame the young men who are affected by the bill for feeling a bit discriminated against. Take two people of draft age and of opposite sex who will be either go­ ing to college or getting a job, if a draft takes place, the man will have to serve a tour of duty in the service before going on to his intended ambi­ tions in life. The woman will either be almost through college or well wp the seniority list in a job. Where does this leave the drafted male veteran? It leaves bim two to four years behind his female counterpart. The educational benefits in today's system are little help in getting the veteran through school, and with today's inflation rate and with prices so high, a serviceman stands little chance of saving any money at all. A drafted person can probably expect to make only about $350 a month take home pay. I know from my own four years of service that a soldier spends nearly that amount on hamburgers, since he can't eat the military food. Add to that the payments on a car, that is if the serviceman is lucky enough to swing a deal on one. You see, banks are very reluctant to loan money to the defenders of our nation because of their low pay .and sometimes "questionable character". Well it's no wonder nobody wants to get drafted! By forcing a man into the service and paying him peanuts, (Jimmy Carter's favorite), the government is automatically depriving that man of the life he wants, and placing him permanently (at least for two years) below the poverty level. This situation gets worse for the married man. But as they say, if the service had wanted you to have a wife and kids, they would have issued them to you. Meanwhile, our draftee's female counterpart is left to her own life, completely free to make of it what she wants to. While I'm on the subject, I should mention that if the Democratically supported ERA was to be adopted, women would be subject to the draft, with no excuses about sex or inadaptability for combat. To pass the ERA is to give women the "right" to be drafted. Do all women want that? I can assure you the military doesn't want that. They just don't need that many women. Now, back to the basic problem..."How do we get enough intelligent young men in the service?" The.answer is simple. Make the service a more attractive way of life by paying the serviceman what he's worth! As an enlisted man, I could count on four things: 1) At least eight hours of work a day, more often twelve, 2) Working at least two weekends per month, 3) getting sneered at by banks, car salesmen, and cops, 4) Being sent 2,000 miles from home without enough pay to afford a trip home once a year. If you manage to get a "military hop", expect to get Wiiped by the general's wife and her cat. * I say again, PAY the people! Give them $9,000 a year starting pay. When I turned down a $12,000 re-enlistment bonus and opted for civilianism, I was asked to fill out a form explaining why I wasn't staying jin. I wrote,"Inadequate pay and discrimination within the service in regards to hair length based on sex". Yes, men face more discrimination even after they're drafted! Everyone can pick out a serviceMAN, he has a whitewall haircut. Can you pick out a woman in the service? No. They can wear their hair down to the collar, meaning very long hair can be pin­ ned up. Men can have no hair longer than three inches, total thickness not to exceed one-half an inch, tapered in the back. Personally I don't mind wearing short hair, it's a lot less trouble. I just don't lik6 having to wear it that way just because I happen to be a male. As far as I'm concerned, what was good enough for George Washington's army is good enough for Jimmy Carter's army. I'm not for drafting women. I'm not for drafting men either. I'm for paying the country's guardians a decent salary, and trimming the pay of the bureaucrats that determine low military pay just before voting themselves a 25 percent pay raise. I'm also for equality within the service to the point of putting women in combat situations. There must be a serious re-thinking of our military induction system, along with a change in service regulations which single out men. With this leadership by our military services, maybe the rest of our country will come around and recognize what real equality and civil liberties are all about. it's right up there in the title and .repeated several times in the body. He implies, in his opening paragraph with the bird-cage ex­ ample, that most women are E.R.A. advocates or sympathizers. Then he contradicts himself by saying that "...the equal rights movement is spearheaded by a minority of women falsely representing women as a whole. The record shows that the majority of women (and men) support (E.R.A.. This is evedent since a ma­ jority of states (35) has ratified it. As far as the gist of the article goes, it seems that Smith hasn't even read the amendment. Here it is: "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex." In light of this, Smith's foray into child- rearing, family relations, and whether or not a woman gets stuck with a loser for a husband is total­ ly, ludicrously, irrelevant. The E.R.A. is not designed to alter marital relations, only to in­ sure equal treatment under the law for both sexes. This has been sore­ ly lacking for the past two hundred years. For sociological and even psychological reasons, women have always been treated as a minority, as something less than men. As Simone De Beauvoir once pointed out, there are two kinds of people: human beings and women. And when women start acting like human beings, they are accused of being men. We think it's about time both sexes were treated like human beings. Finally, Smith should be chastis­ ed for one of his final remarks: "If E.R.A. supporters couldn't get their act together in the allotted seven year time limit, why grant them an additional three more years...?" It took hundreds of years for the black man in America to gain his freedom and rights. Using Smith's time allot­ ment criterion, blacks should have been kept in slavery forever. It took one hundred and forty years for women to get their right to vote. Was this a mistake since it didn't happen overnight? There can be no time limit on human rights. Robert Story Kathy Riley Page 4 Campos Crier July 31,1980 Leisure Lake Chelan theatre prospers Student Clayton Doherty and Prof. Richard Leinaweaver are- watching their dream come to life this summer in Chelan. The Lake : Chelan summer theatre on stage in the Masonic Temple through Aug. 31, is the result largely of these two gentlemen's energy and com­ mitments. Doherty spent 1979 in Chelan lay­ ing groundwork for summer theatre in the area. At that time he initiated a feasibility study which included mounting a production us­ ing local Chelan talent. He manag­ ed the puppet show The Brave Lit­ tle Tailor, written and directed by by Drama Prof. Jim Hawkins, at Chelan's Ruby Theatre last sum­ mer. Co-author is Terry Parker. Hawkins is back in Chelan this summer directing Neil Simon's Tlie Odd Couple, a classic not to be missed. Doherty's new role is general manager for the summer theatre program. Working with the 30-member Central company and moving them from Ellensburg to1 Chelan has provided valuable ex­ perience to the one-time jazz music major. "I came to Central for its jazz program, and was drawn to the musical theatre stage," Doher­ ty said. One of Doherty's first ex­ posures in theatre four years ago was provided by Leinaweaver, ar­ tistic director of the Lake Chelan summer theatre project, who hired Doherty as stage manager for Ja- ques Brel is Alive & Well & Living in Paris. The two have since been working in different directions toward a similar goal—summer theatre in Chelan. They have succeded in assembling a troupe of artistic pro- fessionals now performing int Chelan. Leinaweaver has turned the general auditorium of the Masonic Temple into a intimate 120-seat theatre. The able technicians who *built all shows from scratch are led, by J.C. Willis from Centralia, and' Kenneth Berg, Ellensburg.' "The audience will appreciate the fine detailing that went into building the sets for the four productions," Leinaweaver said. Leinaweaver directed both Vanities and Night Must Fall which are playing through August. The Odd Couple and Charley's Aunt opened at Threepenny Playhouse on campus and were received warmly by the communi­ ty. Phillip Wickstrom, the company's guest director from Centralia Community College, has caused quite a commotion with his hilarious production of Charley's Dean Nicholson... Aunt a rollicking farce. , Leinaweaver said of the summer theatre "This opening represents the culmination of several years of planning and effort and a substan­ tial investment by the Central summer program. I hope it also represents the first of an annual professional theatre season presented in Lake Chelan, the clean and green resort in North Central Washington." Recruits John Harper Fine arts planned for capital "The members of the Washington State Legislature have been appointed to serve on the newly created Joint Legislative Arts Committee," announced Senator A1 Williams. Created by the passage of House Bill 1763 last session, the Joint Committe is responsible for the development of a comprehensive 10-year plan for the acquisition and installation of appropriate works of art in the Legislative Building. It is also responsible for the ad­ ministration of a special capitol arts fund to help finance the pro­ gram. In addition to Senator A1 Williams (D-Seattle), wKo was named Chairman, the Senate members appointed are: Senator Del Bausch (D-Olympia) Senator Susan Gould (R-Edmonds), Senator Alan Bluechel (R-Kirkland). The House members are Speaker Pro Tem­ pore John O'Brien (D-Seattle), who has been a long-time advocate of fine arts for the State Capitol and who was instrumental in the sponsorship and passage of Substitute House Bill 1763, Representative Shirley Winsley (R-Fircrest) Representative Paul Sanders (R-Bellevue), and Representative Frances North (D-North Bend). The First phase of the 10 year project was provided for by the legislature through a $200,000 ap­ propriation made to commission fine artwork for the Legislative Chambers. Six semi-finalists have been selected by a Jury of professionals from nearly 200 qualified artists who applied. Each semi-finalist has received a $1,500 commission to prepare scale drawings $nd models to be submitted by September 2,1980, for review and final artist selection. "We are fortunate to have a government center and a State Capitol Group that represents the best building scheme of any state capitol in the United States," Senator Williams said "The original plans called for artwork to accent and complement the ar­ chitecture of the buildings and landscaping of the grounds, the passage of SHB 1763 will provide the foundation for the continuation and completion of this final phase. The Legislature may now accept donations of suitable art objects or other personal property and may receive moneys, including gifts, grants, donations and bequests to be deposited in a Special Capitol Arts Fund to be used for the ac­ quisition and installation of works of art. It is also anticipated that the selection process will include substantial public participation." "I am confident that with ade­ quate public support and the tremendous talent available through the many well qualified northwest artists, the committee will be successful in meeting the challenge of completing a plan that was conceived some 50 years ago. Special Ed job open The Conrad School District from Conrad, Montana will have a representative at the Career Plan­ ning & Placement Center to inter­ view interested candidates major­ ing in special education for a posi­ tion in the Resource Room for lower elementary. Candidates need special ed endorsement to qualify. CWU basketball coach Dean Nicholsonhas recruited 18 athletes who will be among the candidates attempting to fill the holes left va­ cant by the graduation of Ail- Americans Ray Orange, Dennis Johnson and Joe Holmes and star­ ting guard Sam Miller. Included on the list of recruits is 6-7 junior John Harper, who has the skills to play forward, center or guard. Nicholson said Harper has the potential to be one of the best players he has ever coached. Harper is form Dayton, Ohio, and played one year of college basketball in the Midwest and another year at Yakima Valley Community College. Last year he attended Seattle'University, but tiidn't play basketball. Nicholson also has 11 other ^transfers on the list, including six who are 6-5" or taller. The tallest recruit is Howie Long, a 6-9 senior I from Bellevue. He played two iyears at Bellevue Community Col­ lege and another at Boise State. Among the high school players is Mike Shain, a 5-11, 165-pound guard form Foss High School in Tacoma. His senior year, Shain scored 19.5 points a contest while shooting 52 percent from the field and 88 percent from the foul line. Shain was selected to play in the state All-Star game. Hal Holbrook as Mark Twain Lipizzan stallions return The Wonderful World of Horses Featuring The Royal Lipizzan Stallion Show returns to the Seattle Coliseum for two performances on Saturday and Sunday, August 9 and 10. Showtimes are set for 8:00 P.M. on Saturday and 2:00 P.M. on Sunday. A popular family attraction, the 1980 program features some of the world's most beautiful horses, talented riders, stirring music,. dramatic lighting effects, and traditional and colorful costumes.' Filled with a tradition of almost* 400 years, the equine extravagana consists of over 20 horses from around the world including the in- • credibly graceful lipizzaners. Bred from some of the world's finest bloodlines, these rare and noble horses are famous for their in­ tricate maneuvers, elegant high stepping marches and great leaps, known as "airs above the ground." Created by Gary and Philip Lashinsky, the show spotlights such internationally acclaimed riders as Carlos Mancero leading the precision routines and Dianne. Olds with her Andalusians. Other acts featured include Rex Rossi, world champion trick and fancy roper and several comedy numbers including "Tony The Wonder Horse." Hal Holbrook brings his one-man stage production, Mark Twain Tonight to the Seattle Opera House for one performance Wednesday, August 6 at 8:00 P.M. In 25 years of stage and televi­ sion performances, Holbrook has succeeded in persuading audiences that he is, indeed, the great American literary figure, Mark Twain. Lauded by critics and crowned by awards, Mark Twain Tonight has won the Vernon Rice Award and Outer Critic's Circle in 1959 for off-Broadway the Tony and Drama Critic's awards in 1966 for the Broadway production, and three Emmy nominations in 1967. Holbrook, who spent five years researching the character of Mark Twain before he introduced the play off-Broadway, has starred in New York stage productions like I Never Sang For My Father and Man of La Mancha. His list of television credits include the Emmy-winning Senator series, Suddenly Single, That Certain Summer, Pueblo and the series specials, Sandburg's Lincoln. Samuel Clemens, who adopted the psuedonym Mark Twain, created American literary treasures like The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In his later years, Clemens/Twain became an outspoken critic of the changing character of American govern­ ment, society and morals. An ec­ centric humorist, he poked fun at. everything from Presbyterianism to Wall Street. Art show opens today Reserve Board has failed The Federal Reserve Board (FRB), set up by Congress in 1915, has completely missed the mark, failing to accomplish what it was created to do, according to Peoples National Bank economist William Wilton. Wilton said "The FRB was charged with preserving the stability of the American dollar, and it's utterly failed to carry out its mandate." "The U.S. money market is be­ ing regulated to death by the FRB and the U.S. Department of the Treasury," he said.' "Yet at the same time, the federal government uses the na­ tional banking system to increase the national debt," Wilton said, ex­ plaining that although the average bank sustains only four-tenths of a percent loss on personal and cor­ porate loans annually, government, borrowing is paid back in "newly- printed money." "The federal appetite needs $2 billion every week in the form of government bonds to cover its ex-! cessive spending," Wilton said. "Until we get some common sense back in Washington D.C., there's no way to curb inflation," • he said. "We just can't keep 'prin­ ting into existence' $70 billion a year, as the government has seen fit to do for the last five years." . "An ounce of gold 200 years ago would buy a good suit, and now it. will still do that-and more," Wilton said. "Until the feds get tough with themselves and stop' printing dollars by the jillions, there's no end in sight for U.S. in-. flation." "Constructivism and the Geometric Tradition," an exhibi­ tion of geometrically based art, will open at the Seattle Art Museum Pavilion in Seattle Center Thursday, July 31, remaining on view through September 14. Constructivism refers to the use of geometric ordering principles combined with an artist's sense of expression! While geometric and mathematical elements in art have been prevalent since prehistoric times, it was only when contem­ porary art moved into abstraction (early 20th century) that it became possible for artistic expression to deal directly with pure geometrical forms. "Constructivism and the Geometric Tradition" includes 200 paintings, sculptures, assemblages, collages and draw=- ings by 138 European and American artists whose works were influential in the develop­ ment of this movement. The exhibit is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Thursday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. and Sunday, 12 noon to 5 p.m. Swings n'Things for kids For those children of faculty, students, and the Ellensburg com­ munity, University Recreation is offering the second session of Sw­ ings and Things from July 24 through August 22. The program provides arts and crafts, game ac­ tivities, music, drama, and special events for children ages 5 to 12. Playground hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. week days. For more information 963-2728 or 963-3512. Page 5 Campus Crier 3? ©' Office of veterans affairs state guidelines for fall The Office erf Veterans Affairs (OVA) is still in Mitchell Hall and barring any administrative changes it will remain there for awhile. Through the years the OVA has made numerous location changes and indictions now reflect the pre­ sent location is permanent. A reminder if you are attending at least halftone summer quarter and wish to continue through fall, make sure you submit the $50 prepayment before Aug. 1. This will ensure that no interuption in pay will occur and the money will be there when needed most For persons not attending sum­ mer quarter you need to come in to the office and sign up for advance pay so a check will be waiting at registration. Many questions have arisen as to delimiting dates and entitlements s on Independent John Anderson won this state's official stamp of ap­ proval Saturday as almost 800 delegates across the state gathered in Bellevue to nominate him for the presidency. To get on the ballot in Washington state, a candidate must be nominated by at least 159 voters. This number is based on a percentage of voters in the state. Five of the delegates were from this county John Wines, David Bellande, Terry Madden, and Cliff and Jeanne Carpenter. Anderson himself wasn't at the convention, but addressed the delegates by telephones. He told delegates, he was convinced, "After reading the Republican platform and seeing some of the revelations about the Carter ad­ ministration this week that and in­ dependent candidate will be elected." The western coordinator for the Anderson campaign in this state, Ken Smith was also nominated to fill the ticket. This Was to meet state requirements for full slate and will be changed when Ander­ son announces his running-mate in the next few weeks. Nine electors were also selected to vote for Anderson in the electoral college should he take this state in November.* The darling of the convention was Anderson's lone deligate to the Republican National Convention, Mardonna Sustin-McKillop. She told his convention about being isolated and ignored by the state's 36 Reagan delegates but said at the Detroit convention she still con­ sidered herself a Republican. for veterans at or near the 45 month period. Delimiting dates under normal circumstances can­ not be extended. If within the 10 year period of eligibility you couldn't attend school due to cir­ cumstances such as long illnesses, incarceration or any legitimate reason you1 can file a statement of ( mitigating circum$tances. Includ­ ed should beall documentation i which can verify your reason for the extension. If tfny veterans are approaching this 10 year period it would be^advisable to submit the paperwork as soon as possible. The only exception for extension of the 10 year applies to dependents only. The 45 month entitlement can be extended if the veteran starts the quarter with some time left. An ex­ ample would be a veteran starting fall quarter with justone month of entitlement left. The V.A. would pay the individual for the entire term. This particular instance does not apply to dependents, who are terminated as soon as the benefits run out. Finally, grauduate students for fall quarter will have to take 10 credits to be certified full time as opposed to 8 credits which was previously full time. This was not the decision of V.A. but the policy of Central. If you have further questions come by the office or call 963-3418. July 31,1980 Admissions director !,appointed by Leslie Barnhart Bruce Bradberry has been a] pointed the new director of a sions. He was raised in Southern California and says he enjoys the ^distinct seasonal changes in Ellensburg and the lower cost of living, (especially in housing. Bradberry commented, ". . .the «ost of living in California is obscene." But what drew him to Central more than anything was the chance to get back into directing admissions. He was director of ad-1 missions and registrar for Indian! Valley College the past three1 years, and wanted the chance tc jwork at a four-year college. I "Two-year colleges are great,' Bradberry says, "But they lack Bruce Bradberry (that feeling of completion-here you can see people succeed prefers to say he energetically tells through four years of college." prospective students, about the Asked about his job, Bradberry university-Central will sell itself, replied, "The director of admis- -The director of admissions works sions is responsible for dissemina- with potential students from 'ion of information and counseling Washington and the United States lor students. The director is an ad-as well as foreign students. jvocate for the college, students Another part otthe director's job have to keep buying Central each -is to process student academic in- quarter." formation and make the final deci- Bradberry likes working with sion as to who qualifies to be a stu- students and spends a lot of time dent here. The admissions office is recruiting new students, but ioesn't like to call it recruiting, he Welcome, Second Term Students I 71 COMPLETE BEAUTY CARE AT Band Box Beauty Salon in the plaza Early morning and evening appointments OPEN 6 DAYS EACH WEEK 708 E. 8th 925-2177 We have REDKI products! lePV 0 * will be at YAKIMA FAIRGROUNDS 28- Aug. 3rd Lee, Wrangler and other fashions jeans-at $20.00 SEE YOU THERE! ^ Met* A FIN! RESTAURANT GOURMET FOOD 0PCN MONDAY ihni SATURDAY 402 k tail Downtowm EHmsburg, WA W54545 : j • iKt,. i'l 111 If 111 H « I II I I . 1 D & M MOTORi Complete Body Shop Mechanics on Foreign & Domestic 24-hour towing 205N. Main 925-4151 where all student files originate. Bradberry hopes to improve the •efficiency of his office by taking an leven more positive approach to prospective students and by trying to involve the admissions office more in what is happening of cam­ pus. • One idea he is working on will surely be applauded by all .students, Bradberry hopes to in­ troduce a system by which students will need to write theii name down only once upon enter •ing college. The Clinton Noyes family wishes to extend a special anks to the|S.U.B. Employees for their ons to the Violet Noyes memorial fund. L —— n(i f he UnlV J sessionS' c°Z%k Headd"art®. 'shop f°r f pwsbees and cessind t°' ^ iklAfii* & Page 6 Campus Crier July 31,1980 July 31,1980 Campus Crier Peoples Pond Bugs like it too! Not just M for swimming • • • but an afternoon float is refreshing it * j .»•' J** -• • -v ,f - - YA**' -V 'wiv'A -VV: -""torn* r W0m%' "+ *v« * * 4/ V. •?• % -h / w-k.' mm*:!?* • '* •v-:v^x , V::'? ! v.v. '',*«*• ^ps #*f% $ yx \ * * Collier V •«•••*•:£•...... ..... Mjrvrw • •••••', w/fri :• :.. v . ? . • -r -•/''' Photos by Sco Page 7 A good place for photographers Not just for people Page 8 Campos Crier July 31,1980 Beware of swimmer's itch by Alan Smith / A small parasite has plagued i lakes in the western and northern regions of Washington, including Kittitas County. The parasite which causes swimmer's itch has been dormant for the past two summers. Swimmer's itch occurs when the free swimming parasite burrows under the skin of a swimmer. The. parasite then dies and an allergic, type of reaction develops, which causes intense itching and the ajK tfr pearance of a rash. The parasite generally uses, water foul, such as ducks and gulls as its host, but may enter a human who accidentally intervened in the process. Since the parasite has entered the wrong host, it dies underneath the skin causing the symptoms of Swimmer's itch. Within five minutes to an hour after leaving the water the person may experience a sharp burning and itching of the skin affected, which may occur on any part of the body exposed. Small redish pimples appear within 12 hours and these may be surrounded by a zone of redishness. On the second day, some of these pimples may have become small blisters and in some instances the blisters may become pustules. According to Mark Soltman of the Kittitas County Health depart-? ment, there have been no reported cases of swimmer's itch for the past couple years. Soltman ex­ plained that the only way to detect the parasite in local water supplies is if cases have been reported to the health department. In view of the difficulties involv­ ed in chemical treatment of lakes, another measure to protect bathers may be advised. In prac* tice, this measure is quite suc­ cessful if adhered to: It consists simply of removing water from the body immediately after emergence from the water by toweling or by whipping it off with the palms of the hand. If you believe you have con­ tracted Swimmer's itch, can a physician for advice in treatment and notify the Kittitas County Health department of where you were swimming. 99 Seattle lawyer-mountaineer Bill Robinson told his teen age au­ dience at Business Week our legislators have under-estimated the ethics of the Washington business community, jumping in with more laws than necessary to complicate their operations. "Just like climbers, there are two types of business leaders. The summit-oriented are those who will go for the top, no matter what the price in integrity, people or supplies. The party-oriented are those whose motivation to succeed is just as strong, but who are also concerned about the people around them, their reputation and the future of their enterprise," he said. Robinson, a member of the law firm of Carney, Stephenson, Si- queland, Badley, Smith & Mueller, and formerly a lobbyist for the Association of Washington Business, emphasized that govern­ ment seems to believe all business people are summit-oriented. "There are 1,622 Washington laws regulating business- obviously our lawmakers don't believe business people are ethical," he said. Robinson said: "I'm trained ir the law, but the law doesn't always make sense." If you're interested in going into business, you will find that the law is not always a good guide as to what is ethical, he explained. For example, it's all right for a grocer to sell a one-pound sack of Secretary of Education Shirley 7 M. Hufstedler has announced a newly revised Basic Educational Opportunity Grant (BEOG) pay- obeyed," he said. ment schedule that schools will use Many of the state's business are ™ calculating the amount of in- operating illegally not out of intent dividual student grants in the but out of ignorance, he said, academic year. because there is no central place The payment schedule takes into for owners to go to find our which account ** *140 reduction of the thousand-plus regulations grass seed, but illegal for the same apply to theft* company. person to sell a two-pound sack, without purchasing a nursery per­ mit. "Is that an ethical question?" he queried. "On top of the 1,600 state laws , "I believe legislators should be sure that a problem exists before they add another law regulating business," he said, pointing, out that the free market place in funds that will be available for BEOG for the year which began on July 1. Under this reduction each student's 1980-81 award will be $50 less than he or she would receive if the program were fully funded. BEOGs may be used by students regulating Washington business, regulates itself pretty efficiently if 10 helP ^ cost of education at the government has created 252 boards, commissions and agencies to make sure that those laws are left alone. standard participating prices) service Seniors and Graduate students wishing to register for placement more than 6,000 colleges, univer- sitities and postsecondary voca­ tional schools. The Department of Education also is revising the 1980-81 formula. for assessing the earnings of dependent students who apply for BEOGs. Such students are from families whose incomes are so low that student earnings are necessary to sustain the family. Under existing formula, approx­ imately 50,000 applicants in this low-income category were found Rick Sasaki 925-4175 \ ear after year, semester after semester, the CuliegeMasfer' from ' Fidelity Union Life has teen the most accepted,, most popular plan on campuses all over America. \ Find out why. Call the Fidelity Union CollegeMaster* Field Associate ... in vour area: service may pick up a registration either ineligible for grants or eligi- packet at the. Career Planning & ble only for small amounts. To cor- Placement Center in Barge Hall, rect this situation before the begin- room 105. Any person who has ning of ihe fall term, the Depart- taken 15 quarter hours of graduate ment will send these students new work from Central qualifies to set eligibility reports that reflect the - up a file. revised income assessment for­ mula. aHiiHiHtiiHtuimmnii- Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Faculty Advisor iiniiitiiiiiiinuiiiutft Sheila Countrymans Walter Cornelisonl KathyBradshawl JohnP. Foste B • Giic^c.Vlaster' i _ Staff iUslieBarahart Wally Cordova g Kevin Brewer Cynthia Foster jNickCamarata Lew Harris ^ Scott Collier Shane Kenison (' / - 6 The Campus Crier is a laboratory newspaper in conjunction with the! mass media department. During summer quarter the- Campus Crier 1 publishes biweekly and resumes weekly publication in the fall. ByronKingg ( • Alan Smiths Megan Sullivan| Sarah Watsonf Winegar's 419 W. 15th—92S-1821 Located Just 8 Blocks West of Nicholson Pavilion & H-P 83° July 31,1980 If you re willing to travel Campus Crier Page 9 by Leslie Barnhart There was a sharp decline in the number of people going into the teaching profession during the 70's. Many of the people who might once have wanted to become a teacher are going into business or other more profitable occupations. Job vacancies have increased significantly over the same time period. Teaching seems to heve lost its glamour to many people. Better paying jobs have lured both pro­ spective and experienced educators away from teaching. Brighter future for teachers Professor Donald Black believes that teacher "bum-out" is another * reason why many teachers and ad­ ministrators leave education. Black said, "Stress is taking its t toll. The demands of society place a great deal of stress on teachers and they must learn how to handle it. More classes are being offered * in this area." Other teachers have retired,, gone into administration, or simp­ ly switched over to another line of 'work because they didn't like teaching. In addition, a good percentage of teacher graduates * never look for work in their field. There are fewer teachers graduating and there are more Teaching jobs are available vacancies. This trend implies a brighter future for teachers. lTry the smaller s districts • Two other good signs for iteachers in Washington are a population increase and stable • economy. The 1980 census shows Washington's population on a steady rise, and this will certainly mean more children in school. Washington's economic stability is generally better than most states and is not expected to change in the near future. There is, however, one situation in which finding a teaching job be very difficult—an applicant's lack of mobility. Even if you're a good teacher, but confine your job hunting to one specific geographical area, your chances for employment go down. Pro­ fessor Black explains,"You can get a job if you don't mind going to the smaller districts. Enrollment is declining in big districts." Openings every year Although the competition may still be fierce in a small school district, the fact remains that many people insist upon living near a metropolitan area and refuse to move for whatever reason. This attitude gives those who are willing to move the advan­ tage. Eastern Washington has many small districts where a teacher can get started and try later to get the "perfect" location. Good job possibilities are pro- jected in mathmatics and science, ' as well as the vocational arts and special education. But its not a good idea to jump into a certain field just because job prospects look good. Job heeds may change, , | so choose the area you are in- | terested in because there are job openings in every field each year. ! • • \ Coaching and advising important j Don't forget one very important | item that will sometimes never be • mentioned throughout your four I years of college. Not until you begin sejsurching for a job does it become painfully apparent that J districts want not only a teacher of [ an academic subject, but a coach or advisor as well. To some districts, your academic success in college might 1ye * secondary to your coaching skill. This is not always true but it would be to your advantage to be able to offer a school district not only your classroom skills but also some kind of proficieney in • coaching or advising extracur­ ricular activities. Shortage on horizon Teaching jobs can be found if you i plan ahead in anticipation of coaching or advising, keep a good academic record, and remain flex­ ible in your choice of geographical area. The last one is the most im­ portant. If your're willing to ipove, What this could mean for teachers is a return to the golden days of yesteryear, when teacher shortages forced school districts to court prospective teachers like they were big name football stars. - Job listing books available The Career Planning & Place­ ment Center has the following job - W X ~ 9 . the chances of finding employment listing books : Elementary are good. Teaching Positions Secondary Professor Black is optimistic Teaching Positions Ad- about the general future of people ministrative Positions Two and who stay with education, "I believe Four-Year College Positions and there is a teacher shortage on the horizon because less people have been going into teaching. They have chosen higher paying careers." Business, Industry,'and Govern­ ment Positions. These listings may be checked at Barge Hall, room 105, from 8-noon and 1-5, Monday through Friday. London educator to lecture at workshop ru. r~i _i. T_M _ T - .• i__ . . .. ..JP- Dr. Robert Jeffrey* a London mathematics educator, ~ will be guest lecturer for "Mathematics Activities for Intellectual Develop­ ment," Aug. 4-7. Jeffrey, from the West London Institute of Education, will work with elementary teachers and parents of young people to make them aware of the thought pro­ cesses involved in math activities and the development of those pro­ cesses in children of different ages. Jeffrey and Dr. David Fielker, who presented a workshop July 28-31, will attend the International ' Congress of Math Educators in Berkeley, California following the - August workshop. downtown Lucky Wed. 30 - Sat. Aug. 2 Also Ai^ 5-9 (we'll see?) Aqg.12-16 & 19-23 Great Summer Misic! " Go Low *° For Rodeo Week 27-31 is again, Lucky no cover six days a week 9" 319 N. Rati Ellensbuig Page 10 Campus Crier r$ July 31,1980 V . . , N Instructor Malloy supervises preperations. She is current­ ly river rafting and backpacking in Austria. School business with summer pleasure 13 photos by Byron King The summer schedule is usually filled with many interesting workshops and seminars that are only offered during summer quarter. The physical education department offers river rafting one session in the summer. The course consists of two class lectures and three floats on the Yakima River. The Yakima is not an extremely difficult river to float but much can he learned from it like how to read currents and and what to do in various emergencies. These are important fundamentals to learn as soon as possible, especially if you are planning someday to float a major white water river. Pat Malloy of the physical education department is the in­ structor. She has experience floating on many rivers on the west coast and Idaho and is a partner in a small river rafting tour company in Southern California. Malloy hopes next summer to move at least one of the floats to the Wenat- chee River where more white water areas are ava ilable. So if you are in Ellensbiirg next summer and 'are an outdoor en­ thusiast, why not mix school business with summer pleasure?- The crews take time out for lunch on the beach. What better way can you think of to earn a credit? The final float is a four hour trip which begins in p Cle Elum. • \ J Vi j - a?:fe w v * "• 4!^ " ^ *"- v ''' - '..v. • tern. July 31,1980 Campus Crier Bookstore attempts to solve problem Page 11 \ The problem of not being able to for teachers. "Workbooks won't be (get the textbook for a class may be included, but books for Masses jsolved fall quarter. Textbook with a heavy homework load may Manager for the Campus be set back in greater numbers." bookstore, Gary Moore, said before classes start next fall the Campus Bookstore will set aside a few copies of each book. When a book sells out there and at Jerrols, The bookstore will try to batch jseveral orders together and get them out as quickly as possible ac­ cording to Moore who added, "The books will th$n be given to those students will be able to special students with special order forms, order additional copies. The copies So students will want to come in as set aside would then be loaned to soon as possible to special order until both bookstores sell out of the title. Moore called the communica­ tion between the bookstores, "as good as anyone can have-We have (to, or we'd have a nightmare." The next step is have the pro­ cessor poll the class to find out not how many don't have the book, but how many are going to buy one. Then they try used book sources. Moore sai(f they can get a used book in six days at best but it takes j ,, . . • -- -r .—— uwa in ai uesi uui u taxes the library and made available to books that are sold out. The sue- a minimum of twelve days to get a 'ptii/ifilnfn tvrnA kovvA a A O /"I naoc a( . 1 - a * ® •- students who have a valid A.S.C. cess of the whole plan rests on card and a copy of the special communication between the facul- orderform. ty, bookstore and student." "It's going to work out wonder- The procedure when a title sells fully for everyone," said Moore,, 3ut is to call Jerrols to see how "It's going to be more convenient many copies they have. According for students and more convenient t0 Moore, no orders will be sent out new book from a publisher on the east coast. Of course the best plan is to avoid understocking at all. Moore claimed they sold out about ten jp6rcent of their titles. He said out !/ about stocked .quarter, 60 to 80 of them will sell out. One of the problems is the cost of overstocking, including freight and shelf damage. Most publishers will give 90 days to two years to return a book. However, some publishers won't buy back books at all, accor­ ding- to Moore. He said, "Jerrols doesn't buy books from publishers who won't take them back but we can't do that because if we don't supply the book we've failed the students." How the bookstore determines jthe number of books to order is pretty complicated. Professors fill (out a form for each class each quarter that lists the number ol .students he expects in the class, Ihow many quarters he expects to 'use the book and whether the book is required. The form also indicates how many students the ^professor expected Jlast time and how many, actually signed up as well as how many "books were ordered and how many were actually sold. Moore said the number of books sold last time is used as a base and that a percentage is then allowed for growth. They don't assume one book per student. According to "Moore, "Depending on the class, 75 to 80 percent don't buy books They either share with their girlfriend or (boyfriend or get along as best they Jean." He added, "with the price of ibooks today, I don't blame them." Youth The state has hired one six- member "Youth Corps", crew to clean litter from state and county roads and recreation areas in the Ellensburg area during August, according to Russ Taylor, Regional Manager for the Depart­ ment of Ecology. The Ellensburg crew will be one of six crews operating in central Washington. Vicki Rock, a teachers's aide from Morgan Mid­ dle School, will supervise crew ac- going to clean up tivities and transport crew members to and from clean-up locations in the area. August crew members are Dianne DeBusschere, Keven Grant, Heather Lipsky, Julie Smith, and Darren Wall. • This Department of Ecology "Youth Corps" is an activity of Washington's Model Litter Control and Recycling Act, funded by a tax oh all litter-related businesses. The Youth Corps assits in cleaning lit ter from roadways, provides sum' mer employment for young people between the ages of 14 and 17, and serves as a reminder to the motor­ ing public that litter is a problem they can reduce. Sally Hicks, Ecology's Litter Supervisor for central Washington, urges , all motorists to carry and use litterbags, and to recycle their recyclables. Up-to-date recycling information can be obtained by calling toll-free 1-800-RECYCLE. ress There are some encouraging signs that private firms may be able to turn the tide of government regulations concerning en­ vironmental protection, according to Weyerhaeuser environmental affairs manager Ken Karch from Tacoma. Speaking to an audience of 300 high school students at Business Week in Ellensburg, Karch said: "Congress is very receptive to changes in the clean air and clean water acts," explaining that the economic and . energy-use ramifications of those pieces of legislation have been enormous. "Especially as our national energy concerns ripen and large- scale energy projects are under­ taken in the national interest, we are finding Congress quite in­ terested in re-examining its legislation and, especially, the federal agencies' interpretation of the law," Karch said. gnmrermxtfrr smrrm a"6 YaTsTyBTffymre Do you want to enjoy summer without hair care problems? Sign up for a class that will educate you to handle your hair. Jleachers are our own designers. Cheryl, Lori 9 I Z i I Subjects: Braiding HomeCare Perm or Not? Classes are limited so call early •••"•••HI Only $20,00 a session. Call, or stop in at PJ's Corner of 3rd & Sampson 962-2550 « P 0 0 P B 9 P 8 P 9 P P ft P P P P ft P P P 0 0 0 P 0 0 0 0 0 O O 0 O ft ft ft ft ft ftftftf| Citing multi-million dollar pro- jects required of private industry by government agencies, Karch noted ttat many wSre largely inef­ fective in producing significant in*- provementsinair orvyaterquality •"There's no question that we in industry are ready to spend the 'money to maintain clean^air and water, but we have a great deal of trouble spending the money just to satisfy regulations," Karch said. "If a new administration would send in a SWAT team to examine the thousands of agency inter­ pretations of the environmental protection laws passed, I think the country could save millions of dollars annually by eliminating in­ effective regulations and using the funds where they would really make a difference," he said. Karch cited the recent En­ vironmental Protection Agency implementation of. a "bubble policy" as a positive step in sensi­ ble air quality control. Under this plan, the EPA would measure the total emission from an industrial plant's smokestacks, for example, rather than requiring a certain standard of emission con­ trol from each of 30 or more in­ dividual stacks, he said. "As long as the plant's total emissions were within acceptable limits, they would be all right under the new policy," Karch said. Congress is also holding over­ sight committee hearings on clean water legislation at this time, with' extensive industry input invited. "Federal agencies have been in­ credibly rigid in their interpreta­ tions of the law in the past," Karch said, "but we are beginning to see some signs that the government recognizes some defects in the system it has set up to protect the environment." "The years ahead, with a tight economy and tighter energy pic­ ture require real cooperation bet­ ween government and the private sector," he said. "It's time the government changes i its- philosophy about pollution control and relies more on the expertise of those in business to get thejjob done effectively. News from the Library • A selected list of new titles from the Central Library. On the new bood shelves, Room 203, July 31-August 4, 1980. * Isaiah Berlin. Against the current, essays in the history of ideas. 1980. I *Karl Otto Apel. Towards a transformation of Philosophy. I 1980.' • „ - - v' ?: ' •Amiri Saikal. Rise and fall of the Shah. 1980. •Thomas M.Kando. .Leisure and popular culture in transi­ tion. 1980. ... *Ki Hang Kim. Mathematics for social scientists. 1980. Robert L. Heilbroner. Marxism, for and against. 1980. Gordon C. Rausser. Dynamic agricultural systems, economic prediction and control. 1979. John Young. Capitalism arid human obsolescence, corporate control vs. individual survival in rural America. 1980. *I.M. Destler. Making foreign economic policy. 1980. •Arthur B. Shostak. Blue-collar stress. 1980. •Donald T. Lunde. Die Song, a journey into the mind of a mass murderer. 1980. •Don Locke. Fantasy of Reason, the life and thought of William Godwin. 1980. •Deborah A. Demott, ed. Corporations at the crossroads, -govern^ce and reform. 1980. •Alan F. Westin, et al. Individual rights in the corporation, a reader on employee rights. 1980. V •William Orville Douglas. Justice Douglas and freedom of speech. 1980 •Alfred T Vogel. Owl Critics. 1980. (education in America) •Laurie Lisle. Portrait of an artist, a biography of Georgia O'Keeffe. 1980. % •Robert F. Meader. Illustrated guide to shaker furniture. 1972. ' •Wilson B. Key. Clam-piate orgy and other subliminals the media use to manipulate your behavior. 1980. •Society for Pure English. Tracts. 7 vols. •Maurice J. Valency. End of the world, an introduction to contemporary drama. 1980. •Oscar Wilde. Complete shorter fiction of Oscar Wilde. 1979. •Helen H. Vendler. Part of nature, part of us, modern American poets. 1980. •Aldyth Morris. Damien. 1980. (drama) •Bertcjlt Brecht. Poems, 1913-1956. cl976, 1979. •Hermann Hesse. Gesammelte briefe. •Anthony Trollope. Vicar of Bullhampton. 1979. •James Patrick Donleavy. Schultz. 1979. (fiction) •Leszek Nowak. Structure of idealization, towards a systematic interpretation of the Marxian idea of science. 1980. ' •David N. Burghes. Mathematical models in the social, management, and life sciences. 1979. •British Museum. Natural History. Dinosaurs and their liv­ ing relatives. 1979. •Radio amateurs handbook. FOREIGN CAR REPAIRS AND PARTS r iMMlNiliUIS it «mit *•»•! INDEPENDENT AUTO REPAIR 603 Nrtrth Main 925-5539 Page 12 Campus Crier July 31,1980 Business Week No action on inflation Voters shouldn't. expect any: government action aimed at long- term inflation-fighting in an elec- tion year, Seattle insurance counselor Dale Nasman told Business Week participants. "Who is going to run on a plat­ form that promises to raise per­ sonal taxes, cut federal spending in local communities, restrict credit and overhaul the welfare system?" Nasman, president of the John A. Soderberg Company,' asked his teenage audience. Controlling inflation in a country as complex as the U.S. is at best a delicate balancing act, Nasman pointed out. Measures undertaken'! to slow the inflationary spiral have to be tempered to avoid deep reces­ sions, out-of-control unemploy­ ment and strangulation of in­ dustrial productivity, he said. * "We voters share some of the responsibility for inflation," Nasman said. "Everyone wants to, be exempt from fighting jnflation- we all want our share of the federal pie. Let some other community's pet pork-barrel project get 'cut from the budget." • As a result of voter pressure, he' said, the federal government con­ tinues its spending spree. "The U.S. government is the largest pur-j chaser of goods and services in the! The Ellensburg Chamber of Commerce lists the follow­ ing conferences scheduled for this summer and their ex­ pected attendance. 3-9 6 19 25 AUGUST Business Week-CWU-Courson Hall (350-400) Farm & Land Institute-Holiday Inn (100) Christian Women-Holiday Inn (75) WA State Dept. of Game-Holiday Inn (150) country, bar none," he said. The major problem is that the, feds don't provide sufficient goods and services in return, Nasman- said. Washington, D.C. also cranks up the printing presses.too readily to remedy national cash-flow pro­ blems, he pointed out. "The government puts too much money into circulation, without upping its own production," he said. Therefore, the U.S. government contributes to inflation at both ends of the definition, since "infla­ tion is too many dollars chasing too, few goods and services," Nasman concluded. The solution will be tough, in­ volving personal and corporate sacrifice, he said. Productivity clauses built into labor contracts, an overhauling of federal spending* programs at every level and a reduction of money in circulation were some suggestions fielded by. high school participants at the! private enterpriseschool. A WB raises monies for young leaders Hie fifth annual private enter­ prise education program for high school juniors and seniors bankrolled by the Association for Washington Business will reach 1450 students this year, chosen from 2300 applicants, according to Hal Wolf, volunteer chairman. The AWB raised $201,000 in 1980 to provide full scholarships for the youngsters to attend one of four week-long sessions on campus. The university, along with the State Superintendent of Public In­ struction co-sponsors Business Week. More than 100 people from the business community serve each year as company advisors, lec­ turers and workshop leaders. Students divided into groups of twelve, form their own "com­ panies" and play, with deadly seriousness, a computerized game simulating a new firm's first two years in business. An average of 80 teachers each Government is the villian Labor and management will put aside their confrontations in the future to form an alliance against a much greater foe, according to a scenario painted by Seattle retail management consultant Dick Out- calt at Business Week here at Cen­ tral "The fight of the future will be the private sector against the public sector," Outcalt predicted at the annual conference for high school students. Brandishing "Star Wars" vocabulary like a laser sword, Out­ calt described the capitalist socie­ ty as the only one with the "force." "Our private enterprise system is the only one that unleashes the undeniable force of free and am­ bitious individuals," he said. "By reining in and working TOtti that force of individual initiative, our country has accomplished great things," Outcalt said. The villian in the piece, he sug­ gested, is too much government tinkering. "We must not discourage or cur­ tail the force, because it can be damaged and even destroyed. Overtaxing is one threat. Another is smothering by over-regulation," he explained. But Outcalt also saw trouble within the business community. "We have to wake up from 50 years of the Dark Ages to communicate to the nation how private enter­ prise works," he said. "Literally since the Wall Street crash of 1929, business people have been ashamed of the Depression," he said. "Commercial leaders, realizing that the public had lost faith in the system, went about their business quietly, accepting their bad name and not bothering to educate the public to the benefits of private enterprise earlier generations had known." Outcalf said a Renaissance of sorts occurred in the mid-1970's. "Now young people want to understand our economic system. They want a piece of the action and are asking how to get into business for themselves." Business, "the risk-takers of our society," Outcalt said, must demonstrate that competition pro­ duces good things for all con­ sumers, that profit isn't a dirty word, but is what makes new jobs and better products possible. Outcalt, who has worked with Washington's Business Week since its first session in 1976, noted that each year, the students are better educated, more familiar with cur­ rent events and more eager to get into business. "They are better customers than earlier generations of teenagers, and in a few years, they will better voters. They will be a real, challenge to our elected officials, because many of these kids already understand our private enterprise system better than those they will be voting for, I'm convinced," he said. year are awarded scholarships to participate inBusiness Week, for­ ming, their own teacher "com­ panies" and attending university lectures to earn academic credit for their week's work. The Business Week idea, begun in 1976, has spread from ' Washington to eleven other states. This year students from Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, North and South Dakota, Pennsylvania, New Mexico, California, Missouri and Louisiana re hearing the private enterprise story told by leaders from their state business communities. Some- states have embraced Washington's format, complete with computer game, while others have modified the program exten­ sively to fit their own needs. The idea, however, remains the same-telling tomorrow's leaders about the economic system that has made our country strong and independent. Classifieds Attention horse lovers only: for sale, smart, older quarter horse gelding. Dependable for in town or country riding. Gentle but still gives an experienced rider a good ride! Call weekends, or Tuesday, Wednesday nights after 5:30 pm. at 963-2066. Will need references lo make sure of a good home for Joe! Roomie Wanted Male or female to share 2 bedroom apt. in Alder Terrace. $72 monthly rent. Call 925-3906. . For sale: 35 mm wide angle Canon lens. Bayonet mounting. Only been used a couple times. $125. Call weekends or Tuesday, Wednesday nights after 5:30 pm. at 963-2066. Company loyalty key to work environment Employee. incentives, like rap sessions with management and profit sharing, are necessary elements to a successful non-union work environment in the 1980's, Spokane electronics executive Lew Zirkle told business leaders, teachers and high school students at Business Week. Zirkle, founder and president of 11 year-old, non-union Key Tronics, largest computer keyboard component producer in the world, told his audience a reliable work force is one of a com-. pany's greatest resources. "Building an attractive work en­ vironment is one of the toughest tasks management has to tackle," he said. "Building company loyal­ ty is necessary, though, to ensure productivity and to discourage unionization." "At Key Tronics, employees receive a monthly bonus based on productivity and profit for that period," he continued. "But empiloyees incentives involve more than money," he pointed out. Every week, one employee from each Key Tronics meets, without supervisors present, with the cor­ poration's top management to discuss problems and ideas for im­ provement. There are a host of other factors Zirkle calls basic management facts-like fair treatment of all employees and a willingness to develop individuals' strengths rather than attempting to "cure" their weaknesses. "It's not all a bed of roses at Key Tronics, though," Zirkly said. "Our people, those who complete the first three months on. the job, stay with us a long time," he said. "We lose 40 to 50 percent of them during that initial period-half at our request and half by their deci­ sion." Zirkle told his audience, "We ex­ pect our employees to know what work and discipline arer" It^i Give yourself something beautiful to remember the valley by... The Ellensburg Blue Agate in handcrafted settings. FOK SALE Candpy. Was used on short-box Ford pickup. Could be used on stan­ dard size pickup. A-l condition, two interior lights, Storage compartment, insulated. Was camper for small family. Good as new. $450. Phone: 962-9405. - WANTED ~~ Anthro Text-Fagan: Archaeology:an Introduction call 963-3478 For Sale: Aims 120 watt 2-channel amplifier with reverb. In good condi­ tion. $200. Call 246-0464 after 5 pm. Buy or sell with classifieds! 10 words per $1, 5* per word after 10. Cash with copy, call 963-1026. Precision hair 707 N. Main, Ellensburg, Wash 925-Hair 309 N. Pearl f 925-9560 60 I MEN & WOMEN HAIR CARE STUDIO (