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cpj0278
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The Cooper Point Journal Volume 10, Issue 19 (April 15, 1982)
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Date
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15 April 1982
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extracted text
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7
COOPER
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505
ArchiVt§.wSJtW
..
The Evergreen S(0319 C~;~
Olym pIa, Wiishir.gtcn ~35CS
NONPROFIT ORG.
U.S. POSTAGE
'PAID
P'OL YMPIA, WA
Volume 10 Number 19
April 15, 1982
PERMIT NO. 65
Feds May Override State Energy Decisions
By /. W Nielsen
Th e Bonnevill e Power Admini stration
(BPA) has far more th an enough autho rity
and far mo re than enough money to
absorb the WPPSS nucl ear power plants if
Initi ative 394 is found const ituti o nal said
U .S. Senator James McClure (R-Idaho )
Monday .
M cClu re, w ho is chairman of the Seriate
Energy Co mmittee, was in O lym pia for
talb w it h Gov. Spellman , Pres. Evans
(w ho is chairman of t he Regio nal Power
Counc il ) and hi gh-rankin g WPPSS o ffi cials.
Duri ng a press co nfere nce, M cC lure sa id
he was here to ri isc uss so me of the d iff icu lt ies being ex perienced in tht, construction of the W PPSS power pl an ts and the
irnpl ica t ions of the load fo recast for BPA.
RPA 's nf'wly released load forecast puts
puwer dpmanci esca lat ion at 1 7%. the
lowp, : fO[l:' ( as t they have eve r put out .
McC/ ur p , sketc h i n g a h ypothe t ica l
sr r' ndriu , "l id i f Init iat ive -'<)4 is found to
bl' co n; ti tu t io ll al. dncl the sta te vo ters
ve to more bond ,ales, than BPA Illay he
i on-ed to step in and assume respons ibili ty
for lom plC't mg the W PPS S pow er pla nts
MlC luce sa id th at BPA , wh ich is a Federal
,1 gPI1C\'. wou ld not have to ab id e by
Init idti vl' ll).j
I n tilp !In ',, co nferell ce, M cC lu re also
' !lukr' .lbout thf-' Nor thern Tier pipeli ne
will( h C ov. Sp,'l lmdn vetoed la,( week.
rI (> said , " rill'c(' is "1 Ilf'ed for a pi pel ine,
dll d if It', nOl to be thai l' il'l'lim'. then
«('!'I<lin ll we ought to be look ing el t four
dlternat ivl" ."
r he '>enator d id not say w hat thost'
iou r altern at ives w ere but mell ti o ned an
all-land pipelin e was pos,> ible He sa id the
last alterna ti ve wou ld be federal pre(' mpt io n of Spel lman's Vl:'to. McCl ure sa id
l l. ;ll
( r um
the
N.:.t t, o n..l;
SL' .... U fl ly
:> ld ll tl-
point , there is a need to get A laskan o il to
the lower 48 in a secure ma nner. He sa id
that sendi ng tank ers down the W es t Coas t,
through t he Panam a Canal, and into the
Caribbea n to C ulf {of M ex ico} refi neri es is
not a sec ure m ann er.
Speakin g abou t the d iffi cul t ies faced by
the Nort hwest if the WPPSS power pl ants
are no t built , M cClure said :
" My m ajor concern is what happens if
you begin hav in g a cascad ing effect of
seq uential fa ilu res that lead to an economi c bl ack ho le in w hi ch the ent ire econamy of th e reg io n is affected ."
Pres. I:va ns interpr eted McClure' s remark s say in g that
" Senator McCl ure feels t hat t he pl ants
will be needed in the future, for if we run
.,ho rt of power it will be a de triment to
thl:' North wes t in terms of peopl e's reluctance to settle here . It's costl y now to
have too mu c h power; bu t it could also
be costl y in the fu ture if we w ere to have
too l ittl e. Therefore, we have to wa lk a
fin e lin e in p lanning our power need s."
McCl ure said , " I t is importa nt to make
surl:' that the impact on the Northwest IS
no more severe than it has to be."
McC/wl'. <1 11 ardent Reagan supporter
and d se if-d('snibt'ci " ddvoca le 0 1 nu c lear
puwpr" w hen ,1<,ked to comm ent on the
h,lI1d l lll g o i l1u clhl!' wast(;'s sa id "N uc lea r
\\·.1,te , torage is not an ecolog ical prob1( '1ll but a po liti cal O il!''' Hp sa iel plans are
nnw IX'ing madp to ~pcu n' nuclpa r wast (',
I , JI eve l .
See related story page livE'
TESC President Dan evans chats with U.S . Senator James McCture (R-Idahol
PM t o b y
N'else c.
Renovation of The Corner Proposed
By Roger Dick e y
Evergreen Auxili ary Serv ices is p lanning
to enl arge The Corner in A Dorm , doubl e
the size of t he stage and put in a dance
floor.
" As far as I'm concerned , thi s is going
to happen W e've got to have more soc ial
space over there," said Ken Jacob, Director of Auxili ary Servi ces.
Jacob hopes to exp and the food service
at The Corn er as well :
" 1 hope we can continue wi th the type
of food that has bee n offered, p lus a
w ider range of menu item s and lo nger
ho urs that food is avail able."
The new Corner w ill include everyth ing on
the second tl oor at A Dorm east at the
center stairwe ll. M aintenance , whi c h now
oc cupies Room s 214 and 216, is moving
next w eek to the northwest corner of t he
Pra nksters spray .palnted several downlown 8rea buildings lasl Thursday . See story page two .
second f loor. A ll in teri or wa ll s and t he
, t . lIr~ in Tht, Cornpr w ill be removed. The
kit chen facili ties wo uld be moved to t he
north end of the new space.
O ne o f t he improvements Jaco b w ants
to includ e is an enclos ure o f the servin g
area so the soci al area could be left ope n
aft er t he kitc hen is closed .
Connec tin g a so larium to t he east side
of the buildin g, is anot her improve ment
Jacob is considering.
M o ney for the present remodelin g w ill
come from funds w hi ch Evergree n is requi red by law to set as ide for f ac iliti es
maintenance and improvements
Pl ans for the proposed changes will be
posted in A Do rm and st udent co mments
soli c ited , sa id Jacob .
The idea o f expandin g food services
was prompted . by stu dent reques ts. accordi ng to Jacob :
"Students wa nt m ore service and variety
of food . O ft en peop le ret urn fr o m campu s
at 8:30 or 9 at night and find th at Th e
Corner has so ld out of food."
Th e problem is a new one i or The
Corn er. The fir q three att empts to operatp
d lll ing fac ili t ies at th e site we re un dble to
, how a prof it Vo nda Drogmund at Sa gil
sdid th at their prpv io us ~e rv i (e th ere did
no t draw enough bU'>lness 10 . break evpn.
The prese nt st dff at Th e Corner consists
of fo ur Evergreen st udent s Jud ith John so n,
Kara D iOri o, Ndt han Jone, allCl Bt't h
Jo hn so n. Part of the rea<;on tht'Y h,lVe
been al:tlc to keep Tht' Cor ner gOlll g i,
that Au xi l iary Serv ices hilS provided workstudy positio ns for them
Bec au se of t he l imi ted kit cilPn fac ili t ies
and their own time const ra int " they have
been unil ble to prov ide a w id e menu
select ion and to keep up w ith the increa,in g vo l ume of food needed . Man y students h ave exp ressed il des ire for a larger
va ri ety o f food .
Jac ob said there has been a lo t of se ntiment o n ca m pu s for pi zza . W hi le no
decision has been made, Jilco b sa id a
major possibi lity is turnin g 'The Corner
into a p izza parl or.
The cost o f a pi zz a ovpn (hetwee n
$S,(XX) il nd $b,(XX)) has prom pt ed Jdcob to
approa ch SACA about purl hasin g the
ove n and ot her kit chen eq ui pmp nt and
runnin g th e new restaurant. A d, ·,' p f ry er,
a grill and a soft ice cream IclJk er th at
are presentl y on the fourth 'ioor of the
Li brary coul d be moved into rh e Corn er,
but at thi s ti me Jacob does not anti c lpatt'
being ab le to purc hase m ajor equ ipment
like the pi ;c,..: a ove n.
Ja cob abo fec ls that SA GA w oul d he
able to prOVi de contillu ity ,1Ild sta ff train·
in g for the res taurel nt. i iI' praises the cur rent staff at The Ca rn t' r. but po i nts oul
that as in div idu al , tudents gradu ate o r
move int o o ther lohs the food ~e r\' i (e
may su ff er.
He sa id that oth er opt io ns arC' ,lVai Idble.
,uch a~ out side vendor or h irin g d ma nilge r w il h rt-,qa u r an t m an ,lge m en l ('\ peri enft-'
-I he ConlPr , tdif i, t'nt husidSIi ( ,l bout
thp en largC'd "pact-' and p\ p,lIldpd menu
Thpy are dpprehensiv(;' ,lbout w het h,'r
thplr emph ds i, on good food ,1Ilei d
fn C' nd ly dtll1f"pl lPr(' Cdn he 11l,11lltdll lCd In
,1 l110re (Oll ll l1prt iell ,ptt ing
ludit h I()hn , on o l till' currl' lll ( nnw!'
,t,lft e n vi,ions d ,lud" ll t ,oo ppr d tIV(,
rUllnlllg th e f'XP,llld('d t,l' ,[ 11\
" Bu t a 'iludpnt COOpt'rdtl\(' I' 1l()1 gOl ll g
to work ull le" t hprf' i, 'OI1lt'(l Il f' \\ Ith d lot
0 1 (,\PPrIt' llCP to run II . ,Ill' "l id
0\ 1
"Oil le pO Int "'OlllPOI1 P
hl)'" to
~ ' dn~ purl' l\
,l nd , im pl\ ,1bout I h .. look in g
Nil th dn lonp'i, ano thpr Corn.'r \(,11 1, '1
sil id th at <l uden t s m ust contro l the co-op
With prol<''i' lonal superv i" on if tilt' (u rrpnt quality 1<; to be Ilhlllltai neci
" When yo u just hav(> ,1 work -q urh lob
thdt you go to evervd,IY ,l nd no (' >ll t m l
over w hat hdppem t hpre. you (',111 t kpf' p
up your conCt-'rn for the oVt'rall oppr<l li oll ," he ex pl ain ed
Corn er personne l art" 1110, t di st urbed
th at they have no t been in t luded ill th('
pl,l ll nin g of the future of The Corll er up
unti l thi s po int.
Cont inued on page tw u
Reorganization of Business Office Proposed
Recycling Initiative Filed for '82 Ballot
By Pat O'Hare
By Bob Davis
In Evergreen t radition , a Di sappearing
Task Force (DTF) would have been formed
Add itional informat ion on the proposed
to make recommendati ons for the Faci liBu siness Affai rs Reorgani zat ion was reties director search. Since the position ,
leased by Vi ce President for Business Di ck
would be fi lled by 'the internal reorgani zaSchwart z last Monday. In a move to save
ti on, the outside search and accompany- .
money. one of two vaca nt positions would
ing DTF are not needed .
be eli m inated and res pon sibilities added
Bob DeLaubenfels, a TESC student who
to ex isti ng positi ons under the proposed
volunteered for the unformed DTF , exreorgan i zat ion.
pr essed di sa ppointm ent that th e DTF
" The plan is to consolidate activities, "
•
wou ld not be needed:
" I don 't have the opportunity to make
said Schwartz , adding that the reorganizasure the Fac ili t ies director understands
tion " redu ces t he need to hire (from)
Evergreen govern ance and philosophy "
out side."
The position eliminated was Assista nt
He had hoped to suggest that the new
Direc tor of Facil ities , vacated by Arnold
Faciliti es director be as ked to sign a
covenant to abide by the Evergreen Social
D oe rkso n i n February . The ass i sta nt' s
res pon sibilities wou ld be handl ed by t he
Contra ct.
" We seem to have had some trouble
Director of Fac ili ties in the proposed
w ith facilities directors who just don't
rporgJlli 7 at 1011 .
underst and TESC govern ance and philosTI1(' rl'org,mi zdt ion fo llows DaVid Wa ll ophy ," he sa id . but added " It's more
hOII1 ', rp, ignat io ll f rom the Direc to r of
li kely th at so meone already here will helve
I d e ill tlt " pm t. K, 'n W inkl ey . temporarily
a bC'ttl'r underst and in g of Evergreen than
1II IIng till' pO'i lt ion . wo ul d remain there in
Acting Director 01 Facilities Ken Winkley
some pro fessiona l dirpc tor hired from
t ill' propo, pd reorg dn i /.at ion. Thi S would
oll t,icie."
,1 \O ld t ill' ext ra tro uble and expense o f
reo rgan i z atio n w ill h av e Dir ec tor of
cos t "$3 ,000 to $4,000," acc ord ing to Rita
A hi rin g ,earch outs ide th e coll ege to
'(lmlli l t Illg .111 out" dt> seiHeh for a new
Security Mac Sm ith reporting to Director
Cooper.
d
irector
of
employee
relations
fill tilt' i- df il,ti ps Director posit ion would
I d ( lI ' IIt" ci irt>c tor.
of Au xiliary Enterprises Ken jacob, instead
The elimination of one pOSition in the
of DirE'ctor of Fac ili ties Ken Winkley .
reorganization will " probably save about
" Mac is not worri ed about reporting to
$20,Cxx)," explain ed Cooper.
Ken W inkl ey ;" sa id a reli abl e administraWhile the lob transfers invo lve no
t ion source. " It has nothin g to do with
aCluill promotions, Di ck Sc hwartz pointed
earlier diffi culties w ith Mac reporting to
out that the plan " gives.an opportunity to
Dave W allbom" While Mac Smith has a
some staff for in creased responsib ility, "
good rapport with bo th Kens, Ken Winkl ey
whi ch w ill add some challenge to their
the right to disfigure the property of
B\ D" Dell/be
already has many new responsibiliti es and
work and improve thei r potential standing
ano ther.
Ken Jacob already work s close ly wit h
in the job market.
I{ainier is having diff iculties in re movSOIllt'one painted the town. literall y,
Security .
I n response to suggestions received, the
la,t frid ay. w l1E'n bu il d ings throug hou t the in g the slogan, " Property is t heft " from
down town area we re attacked by an un- the porous wal ls of its downtown branch.
known crew of painters o n a graff iti spree. Enger sai d that the walls w ill be sandbl asted or clean ed with ac id, to remove
Poli ce say they have no suspects but
w ill b(' keeping an E'te out for the night- the graffiti.
A Puget Power spokeman said that
t imp vilnddls w ho li ttered po li t ica l slogans
acrms the wa ll s of Raini er Bank, the Odd sin ce most of the power boxes are at[-ell ow, hall , DSHS, Puget Power boxes, tached to buildings, removing the graffiti
would be the responsibility of the owner .
and the Merca nt ile Building .
Detectives Hellerstrom , of thE' O lympia He sa id that he could sympathi ze with
Poli ce Department , sa id that the graffiti the pa inters. " Peopl e get frustrated
we're u sed to that ," he exp l ained
was not the typica l profan ity or bla ck
Thurston County's Director of Human
circles and " Xs ."
Servi
ces Stephen Harrington said that , like
" By the nature of it, it's someone active
in a political cause . It's a pol itica l mes- Enger, he thought that those who deface
sage. but that 's ju st my op inion ," he sa id . pub li c property have a problem.
f~/STI/<JG CORNER
He sa id pulling a tab on a voting booth,
PROPOSED APP/T/ON
He added that patrolmen would be watchor
attendin
g
a
county
council
meeti
ng
in g potential targets -more closely . in the
wou ld be a more appropri ate way to
futu re
Raini er b ank ,pokesman Enge r sa id voi ce one' s op ini on.
Proposed remodeting of The Comer In A dorm shows Increased floor space, larger stage and dance
Other slogans left by the pranksters
Rallli er is going to prosecu te t he alleged
floor. New kitchen area is at extreme left .
vandals. if th ey are caught . " Vandali sm is included . U .S Out o f ~ I Sa lvador, Don 't
\/il ndali sm . w het her it' s po li ti cal or no t," Pay Your Taxes, They are a fraid o f
The Corner
110 sa id. Ingar be liE'Yes th at no one has Your Lungs , and Nukps Kill Babies .
Downtown Attacked in Graffiti Spree
~III~STAGE
Continued from page one
Odetta Plays Benefit
CollE'ge Foundation, Patrons of South
Od E'ttd, AmE'r ica's f irst lady of folk
Sound Cultural Act ivit ies and the Washso ng . w ill take comma nd of one of the
ington State Arts Commi ss ion in cooperacapitol city's o ld est performance hou ses
with TESC Proceeds from the contion
Apr il 24 when , he stages a one-woman
cert wi ll be donated to the Washington
, ho\\ to benefit the proposed performing
Center
art, cent er in the heart of downtown
Tickets are on sa le now at $5 general
O lympia .
adm
ission or $15 for patrons at Yenney's
Slated to appear In the Evergreen
MusiC, Pat's Bookery and Rainy D ay
Lxpression s seri es , Odetta performs at 8
Records in O lympia and at Evergreen's
Saturday night in the O lympi c Theater,
Bookstore. Tickets will also be sold at the
former home of vaudeville entertainers
of the O lympic Theater (506 S.
door
and future site of the proposed WashingWashington) beginning at 7 p.m ., April 24.
ton Center, a facility ci ty planners hope
Reservations may be made by calling .
w ill become the focal point of arts and
866-W70
weekdays during regular busines:
entertai nment for all of southwest Wash:hours.
ington .
A dynami c force in American folk
music for more than two decades, Odetta,
now a visi ting faculty arti st at The Evergreen State Coll ege, promises to present
the ri ch repertoire of music for which
she's become fam ous - her own special
brand of sp iri tuals, blues, folk, chi ldren's
songs and ball ads.
With numerous recordings to her cred it,
"Four dollars wiJl bring
Odetta has performed in clubs and colthe
Cooper
Point Journal into
leges and universities through the United
States, Europe, the Soviet Union, j apan,
Africa and Israel during the past 25 years.
Fverywhere she' s traveled, Odetta has
packed houses and entranced audiences
with the driving rhythm of her guitar and
her deep, resonant voice that, reports the
Washington Post, acts like "a warm
blanket that wraps itself "round the
lyrics."
Her April 24 concert in O lympia is
co-sponsored by The Evergreen State
page two The Cooper Point journal
April 15
your home every week for
one year; keep in touch with
Evergreen from the students'
perspective . Order your subscription today! Send your
name, address, phone number, and $4,00 to 'Cooper
Point Journal, CAB XlS. The
Evergreen State College:
Olympia, WA 98505."
No final decision has been made on
how Th e Corner w ill be managed . SAGA
is explor in g the feas ibili ty of their involvement. Ken lacob and Th e Corner staff sa id
they wou ld I ike to hear what st ud en ts
think should be done.
" We'vE' found out about the p lans
t hrough customers com ing in and ta lking
to US abou t them ," said Beth johnson .
" The changes are not necessar i Iy negat ivp . It\ the process by which thE' deci , ions were madE' that bother us," said
'udi th Johnson
Classifieds
NOTHING BETWEEN YOU AND THE OCEAN
excepl dune grass, birds, and seasand s.
Casua l fully equipped cab in s s l ee p 1-5 .
2 rooms plu s kilchen and balhroom . From $24
nighlly for 2. Addit ional persons $3 . Info and
rese rvation s: Sou'wester Lodge, Seaview .
Phone 1-642-2542 .
SURPLUS Jeeps , cars, and trucks avai lable.
Many sell under $200 : call (312) 742-1143
extension 6793 , for Information on how to
purchase.
AL
S.F. NIGHT COACH,SM'
. ''So po d /IIIIIU ......
:"""eDt
.•
e.IIoIe........
I
I
.
" .
'"
Vandals 'Strike in Lots
By Roger Dickey
Over Chri stmas Break someone broke a
w indow out of Louisa Richardson'S car
and tied the anten na in a knot . Within
the last coupl e of weeks her battery was
stolen, and now her gas cap is also missing. Louisa lives in A Dorm, and parks her
ca r in F Lot, where all the vandalism and
theft took place .
As h Manager Larry Freemark related t he
ex perience of one As h resident w ho's
front-whee l drive car was parti all y dismantl ed in the Ash parking lot.
" She went to drive away and the front
ju st fell out from under the car." Most of
the problems at Ash are not that serious.
" Lo ts of gas sip ho ning and sto len radios, "
Freemark described il. " We haven' t had
any broken w indows. It 's most ly from cars
that are left un locked."
Thi s leads Freemark to suspec t thE'
theft s are the work of juvenil es , not profess iona ls. " Prof es sio n al s wou l d do a
better job and they wou ldn' t stop wit h
gas and radios ."
Fve rgree n Sec urity Li eutenant Gary
Russell has mo re th an spec ulati o n to go
on. Of the las t 67 inc idents of parki'ng lot
theft or vandal ism, in w hi ch suspec ts
were apprehended, one invo lved an Evergreen student, another in volved two mili Mry personnel. There were a few junior
high students. The rest of t he individual s
caught were students at Capit al High
School.
The probl em is sporadi c, Lt. Russe l sa id,
" W e ca tch one or two and the word gets
out that Evergreen is a bad place to pull
that. Then a little time goes by, people
forget and we start havi ng the trouble
again."
There are times that are predictably
bad, weekends, high-sc hool breaks and
summers. Russ el ex plained that th e
Security patrols are heavily manned at
those times . But there ju st isn't a large
enough force to be everywhere at once.
F Lot is the hardest hit. Some nights a
security office r sits in the lot in hi s own
vehi cle. He is able to radio 'other officers
if
Last yea r, Evergreen students formed a
vo lunt ee r patro l group ca ll ed Cr im e
Watch, wh ich worked to notify Security
of any susp icious activiti es in th e parking
lots. This year the group fi zz led out.
Russe l hopes next year's students will be
more interes ted in parti cipating in the
Crime W atch activities .
Security Head M ac Smith sa id st udent s
should check the ir ca rs everyday The
,ooner the d am age or tl-:~ft is reported ,
th e better the chance of recovery or res ti tution, according to Smith.
" We've had about 50% restitution (of
the damage reported in F Lo t). " sa id Smith .
" 1n every case but one w herE' a , tudent
was caugh t , therE' has been 1()O % restituti on . Thilt one is st ill Iwing d isr us,ed
h" twE'E'n thE' parE'nt s of tl1P studE'nt and
the own er of th E' r ar "
Sm ith ex pldined that whE'nevE' r poss ibl('
( as('s in volVi ng juvenil es w ithout pre VIOll S
record s ,1re handled outside thE' court s
S('curi ty prders to deal wit h t hp o ffendf'r',
LlIllily ilnd arrange res ti tu t ion for t he
vict im.
Smith wou lcl li ke to build a fence
,1round F Lot. " That's the only way we'll
ever be abl e to ca tch t hem all. Right now
if an of.ficer drives in they take off into
the woods, " he exp lained.
He wou ld also like to install some TV
monitors that Security has. " If we cou ld
get Hou~i ng to in stall the cabl es over
there fr om the tunnels, the res t is real
easy . W e co uld watch the lo ts," Smith
sa id .
Director of Aux ili ary Servic es Ken jacob
sa id his office had explored both of these
optio ns a couple of years ago and concluded the costs were proh ibiti ve . At that
time it would have taken "on the order of
$30,000 or $40,000" just to lay the necessary cab le for th e su rveill ance equipment.
For now Smith, Russel and Freemark all
agree the best defense Evergreen students
have ~ga inst parking- lot theft is Vigilance .
All recommend reportin g to Security anyone seen prowling in the parking lots.
Initiative 414 hopes to prevent this.
onl y 2% of the amount of energy in vo lved
in prodUCing the aluminum from bau xite.
Crisp sa id t hat a recycl ing program cou ld
detract from the ba uxite mining indu stry
but pointed out that the U .S currently
imports 80% of it s suppli es.
1-414 backers say that the resul ts of
simil ar measures in Oregon show that the
litt er p rob lem wou ld be effec ti ve ly co n-
front ed . They sa id that Oregon 's returnrate now sta nds at 90%-95% . Crisp said
that Washington's current return -rate i,
about 2S%. Most of the waste ends up
as litter or landfill , he added
CCW ,tate coorclin ator Dl'bril Kin rl PY
will be a speaker at the TF SC ~ iHth Fai r
on Apr il 24, wh en the group w ill hp ca mpaigning in the O lymp ia area .
The Cooper Point Journal
t ditor: DS DeZube Managing Editor: Kat ie Li euallen Editorial Page Editor: Tom Schaal
Photography Editor: John Nielsen Associate Editor: Roger LeVan Dickey
Reporters: ( rin Kenny, David Goldsmith, David Gaff, Bob Davis, Pat O'Hare,
Art hur W est , Lewi s Pratt, and Karen Heuvel. Advertising Manager: Patrick M cManus
Graphics: Ka ren Heuvel Lewis Pratt
Business Mana~er; Desi ret> Amour
The Cooper Point j ournal is publi shed weekly for the students, staff and faculty of
The Evergreen State Co ll ege. Vi ews expressed are not necessaril y those of the college
or of the Journal's staff . Adverti sin g materi al conta ined herein does not imply
endorsement by the journal. Offices are located in the Co llege Acti viti es Bui lding
(CAB) 104. Phone: 8bb-6213 . All anno uncements for News and Notes or Arts and
Fvents shou ld be typed double-spac ed, listed by category, and submitted no lat er
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rYPED DOUBLE-SPACED, SIGNED and include a daytime phone number where the
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~ :ditor rE'serves t he ri ght to rejec t any materi al, and to edit any cont ributi ons for
Ipngth, content and style. Display advertising shou ld be rec eived no lat E' r th an
Monday at 5 p.m. for that week', publi catio n.
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Citi ze ns for a Cle aner Washington
(CCW) is sponsoring a r.e fund recycling
ini tiative for the 1982 ballot.
Initi ative 414 would establish a minimum refund value of five cents ·on beer
and soft drink bottles and cans sold in
Washington State. Sponsors of 1-414 are
optimistic about its passage and point to
indicators of national and state-wide support for such measures.
CCF said that a recent independent poll
(conducted by WASH / PRIG based at the
University of Washington) reported that
7u 'j<'o or vvasnmgton voters would support
a system requ iring a five-cent refund on
beer bottles and cans.
In a newsletter dated March 26, CCW
sa id that eight states already have refund
l eg isl ation : Oregon, Mi c hi gan, Maine ,
Ve rmont, Iowa, Connecticut, Massachusetts and De laware. Th ey sa id that
Co lorado, Ca li fornia and Ari zona w ill also
have refund meas ures on the November
1982 ball ot.
Members of' CCW sponsored a simil ar
initiat ive (1-61) in 1979 whic h did not
pass . King Count y CCW Coo rdin ator
Thomas Crisp said th at the media fund for
the 79 initiative amounted to $9000 out
of a total fund of about $90,000.
Cri sp sa id that the successful l
opaign
against 1-61 was spOnsored by large -orporations , many from out of state, incl, ling:
Kaiser Aluminum, the Can Manufact,lrers
Institute in D.C. , Kerr Glass Manufacturing
Corp . in Los Angeles , Adolph Coors in
Colorado, and Reynolds ME'tal in Virginia.
More fu nding came from corporations in
the beverage industry, he added .
In contrast to that campaign , Crisp said
that CCW has co llected $8IXX) already,
just for the media fund . They expect to
coll ect more than $120,000 for the media
fund out of a total campaign fund of
$250,000.
1-414 sponsors say the initiative wi ll
create jobs, reduce litter and save energy.
In the area of employment, Cri sp said
that there wou ld be an increase of jobs in
the reta il and tru cking indu stries . Retail
stores would need to hire people to
handl e the in creased vo lume of returnab les and more t ruck drivers wou ld be
needed to transport it , he sa id
CCW claims that the aluminum industry
wou Id not be harmed in the areas of
manufact urin g or process ing. It clai ms
that recyc ling of aluminum co nsumes
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-'The Cooper Point Journal
April 15 page three
.~
OpInion
Analysi~
Feels: Puttin' on the II Mega-craf' Hustle
EI Salvador Reforms Deceive Public
By Erin Kenny
Amid gun f ire and explosions, the people
of EI Salvador solemnly lined up to vote.
The March 28, 1982, elections were cited
by the U .S. government as evidence that
the ru ling Salvadoran junta was dedicated '
to true reform in their country.
The Reagan administration maintained
that the parties represented in the elections spanned the compl ete politi ca l
spectrum , with only factions known as
the extreme left excluded .
However, the Was hing ton Post (Nov.
11, 1982) characterized the six registered
parties as being "on the far righ t, in varying degrees oppos ing soc ial and economi c
reforms and supporting an increased role
for the military in government. "
The Salvadoran government proposal
for the 1982 elections establi shed t hat all
polit ical pa rt ies and organizations that
wanted to participate in the elect ions
mu st register wit h 3,lXlO signatures. The
li sts of signatures were to inc lude the
home addresses, work addresses and the
ages at the pe rsons that signed the peti t ion
Short ly thereafter , the Salvadoran
Armed Forces pub li shed a death li st in EI
Sal\',1dor's largest newspaper of 1.18
ppf'ons cons idered to be tra itors . The li st
mcluded former members of the govern nlE'nl . Cat holic Un ivers ity Administrator> ,
and priests . I t al so inc luded prominent
nlt-'Illbpr< of the Democrat ic Revolutionary
[-r(\ llt \FDR l, a pc)litica l organi zat ion th at
in, :udes illl left-\\ ing part ies. The FOR was
en, ouraged by bot h t he U .S and Sa lvador·
an gO\ t'rnments to pilrticipate in the elect IOI;, The Internat ional Secretary of the
Swed ish SOLial Democrat Party pointed
ou l that . ,'Icctions wi th death li sts of the
opposit ion circ ulating, in the presence o f
U S milita rv is ma cabre. You might as
majority vote, the final decision was up to
the Congress. They voted in Duarte.
The U .S. government has cited the
agrarian reform program as additional
proof that the Salvadoran government is
makin g continued efforts to address
essential economic and political problems in EI Salvador. The land reform appeared at first to be a sincere effort on
the part of the ruling junta to distribute
the land more equitably among the
people of EI Salvador. Phase I of the land
reform ca lled for the nationalization of all
estates over 500 hectares; Phase II required nationalization of all est ates from
100-500 hectares; and Phase III ca lled for
a redi stributi on of all land to the till er.
Pres id ent of the ruling junta, Jose
Napoleon Du arte, announced the implementation of land reforms in M arch 1980
and simultaneously imposed marti al law.
... ANt:' &ECA~E. llIEY DoN'r
HAV~ TO r?AY, you GrET TO
C~U. THeM
, ! E!!!s?Nf"
mE..
w ell hold them in cemeteri es '" (Wash ington Pos t . iLrrle ·11 98 1)
The ahsenle o f fair condition s for
elec llon s was so evident that in a ju ly,
1981 . " [I Dia ro de Hoy" art icl e. the
flec toral Cou ncil of EI Salvador advised
c>ve ntua l cand idates to campa ign through
" paid advert isement s in the press, radio .
and TV . and to rema in outside the
cou ntrv ."
f he FOR has expressed a w illin gness to
Editor:
IlPgot iat e wit h t he U .S. and the Savadoran
An ope n Iplter to Senator jackson :
gO\.ernments since its format ion in 1980.
As admirers of the insightful ness and
At flr,t the FDR set these conditions for
forpthought oi the United States Constitunegotiations w ith the Sa lvadoran junta:
t ion <lnd Btil of Rights, and as a reader of
1 Withdrawa l of US advisers: 2. CessaThoreilu, jeff erson, Gandhi , etc, we
ti on of repress ion; 3. Term in ati on of state
appea l to vou to read and consider the
ot siege, and 4 Access to news media .
impli cat ions of Sena te Bill 1630.
Their ofter was relected by both the U .S
I t'a r 01 police government is strong in
and Sa lvadoran governments. who did not
t h i, (ou ntry. As most citi zens have great
conS ider the FOR to be a legitimate po litit,lIth in democ racy, howeve r, they follow
cal part\' . Later. the FOR set on lv one prelV programming and not the legislatu re.
cond iti on for negoti ation : access to t he
I he mpdia has never "picked-up on" thi s
media in EI Salvador to explain the ir pos inew version of Nixon and Mitchell 's S-1,
t ion . St ill . their offers were rejected .
but many young peoplp today have. Their
Just prior to the elections , the junta
cyni cism is profound I
rejected a Panamanian offer wit h no preThis bill will severely limit the possibili t ies for indi vid uals and organizations to
condit ion s to med iate between government and oppos it ion for ces say ing that,
peacefull y protest agai nst what they see
and fee l to be unjust . By legislating
" the f( evoluti o nary Government Junta
ilga in st politi ca l act ivi sts on the federa l
tot all y rejects mediation in the current
Ipvel wi th large f ines and prison terms, by
Salvadora n co nfli ct. The acceptance of
limi t ing the powers of the press, and by
mediation wou ld mean lend ing ourselves
protecti ng corrupt officials from " whistleto a manE'uver by international comblowers" (see sec 1115, 11 16, 1301, 1302,
mun ism ." This statement was distributed
1311 , 1331 , 1334, 1525, 1702), we are
ilt aU .S. State Department press briefin g.
clea rl y taking a large step in the direction
RecE'ntly . hance and Mexico issued a
o f a total itarian society.
joint com muniqu e stating t hat they recogThi s tendency was seen and feared by
niled th e FOR as a legitimate rep resentathe writers of the U.S Constitution. It can
tive polit ica l force . A March 6, 1982, offer
be seen by us by observing the majority
by the Mexican government to negotiate
of governments the world over. S 1630
bPtween the US ., the Salvadoran junta
can be seen as an attempt to remove
and the FOR, although endorsed by 104
constitutional barriers ' to a totally centra lCongresspe rsons , including 12 Republiized politica l process controlled by
lans, was rejected by the U.S . and Salvapowerful financial and corporate interests.
doran governments. The offer was
T6 see our fear more clearly, consider
accepted by the FDR, as all offers for
the
fact that Nazi Germany operated fully
med iati on have been . The FDR, after
w ithi n the bounds of German law. The
repeated negotiation attempts had been
Nazi's utilized an efficient preexisting
refused, made a decision to boycott the
bureaucracy wh ich was depoliticized and
E' lpct ions
unconcerned with the form or nature of
When the ball ots were counted after the
the power eli te at its top. Consider as w ell
March 1982 elections, Jose Napoleor
the fact that the "preventive detention"
Duarte. the present head of the ruling
clause of S1630, whi ch threatens our ri ght
junta, had 46% of the vote , and his
to be considered innocent until proven
closest competitor, Roberto D'Aubuisson,
gui lty (see sec 3502) is apparently identihad 27%. D'Aubuisson is head of the
ca l to a clause of t he Apartheid legal
White Warriors League, an ultra-right
code. Consider as well the fact that both
death squad , and was denied entry in the
t<ennedy and Reagan recently proposed
U .S whi le Robert White was ambassador
use of military barracks as overflow
prisons to take up the large influx of
tor " lIeged human rights abuses. H e mainS1630 victims. The fact is Adolph Hitler
tain, thilt the army does not need connad thi~ inpa lonl! ·al!o. 1 he wav this legal
trolling . Since Duarte did not receivp iI
Letters
The reform s were brought to an abrupt
halt in May 1980 under direct orders from
the Vice President, Colonel Guttierez . He
announced that there would be no further
reforms beyond Phase I.
There were many problems with Phase I
of this agrarian reform act. For instance,
many of the large landholders knew the
reform was coming so they hurriedly distributed their holdings among relatives so
that none had over SOO hectares. Also, the
reform contained a clause whi ch allowed
landholders to claim up to lS0 hectares of
the 500 for themselves and an additional
20% o f the SOO hectares if they made
improvements on the land.
This meant that of every 500 hectare
plot, only 300 would actually be turned
over to the government. Immediately fol lowing the enactment of Phase I, over
25,lXlO peasants who formerly share-
,
,,,ri,' i, pm[llowd in Sout h Af nca should
1)1' of grl'i1 t (oncern to th m(' who va lue
In"'dom. lilwrty. just in' and "II things
whi ch h,wp I1ldde th" country proud of
I!> h!'ritage
"lh III <1 lso threatf'm to leave our legal
(nd,' op!'n to tprrifying degrpes of Interprpt,Hlon Through the expilnsion of legal
dpf,nit ions of such words as " ri ot ." "con' piracy," "att empt," " soli citation," "oh,trUt tion ." " dpfraud ." "persuadE'. " as we ll
,1, many phrilsPs , S11>.10 will essen ti all y
I pga l i~e thp disru[ltion o f political protP,!> Thp intent of portions of thi s b ill is
riP,Hly to counter thp rise in grassroots
polili ( .1 1 ac ti vi ty. whi ch itself ca n be seen
,1S a rl'il ction to an uncount able number
of threa ts to t ht' pnvironment, our society
il nd the fu tu rp ot humanity .
Respect fully ,
Richard Fell ows
Thomas Danaher
By Pat O 'Hare
cropped on these large estates were
evicted by the army when those estates
were relinqui shed to the government.
Although it is stated that Phase I affects
most of the nation's best agricultural land,
in fact 69% of the land affected by the
reforms is used for cattle grazing, not
cultivation .
Only 9% of the nation's coffe land is
affected by Phase I since most coffee
farms are under SOO hectares. Coffee is EI
Salvador's major export crop and represents the backbone of the oligarchy's
power. The failure to implement Phase II
is parti cularly significant in this regard
since it would cut deeply into the
oligarchy's power by expropriating 30%
of the coffee .lands.
In December 1980, Rodolfo Viera, the
president of the Salvadoran Land Reform
Institute, presented the results of a survey
which indicated that of 184 persons killed
since March 1980 for their involvement in
t he agrarian reform , 133 had been killed
by Salvadoran government security forces.
Two days later, Vi era was assassinated .
"Get the government off the backs of
the People! " Wasn't that Reagan's zea lous
pledge two years ago?
He may not have lived up to that
pledge, but at least his administration's
record has been consistent.
In a blatant attempt to meddle in state
affairs, the U .S. Justice Department filed
suit in Seattle's U.S. District Court last
Friday with the intention of overturning
voter initiative 394. The suit was filed at
the request of the U .S. Energy Department.
Initiative 394, passed overwhelmingly
by Washington State voters last Novembel
(it passed 2-1 in Thurston County), gives
state voters final approval concerning
how much money is borrowed on their
behalf by the Washington Public Power
Supply System(WPPSS) .
WPPSS has already borrowed over $S
billion, on our behalf, to finance the
construction of three nuclear plants. The
original cost of the three plants was
estimated at $2 billion; current figures
stand at almost $14 billion .
In 1981, the Washington Senate Energy
Committee cited WPPSS mismanagement
as the cause of at least half of the cost
overruns. Initi ative 394 was a reasonable
response to th at mismanagement.
Three banks, including Seattle First
National , have already filed suit against
the initiative on behalf of WPPSS bondholders. They claim that, as bond trust ees,
their contracts with the bondholders
would be adversely affected .
The Federal government claims that the
initiative is unconstitutional because it
interferes with congress ionally-approved
contracts .
Here we have the government intervening in a matter that is the realm of
Washington voters and t heir public
agency
According to the Washington Post (January 2S, 1982) the reform program was
" near collapse because of military-backed
terror and murder, ill ega l peasant convictions, and a slow, 'frequentl y hostile'
bureaucracy."
A December 1981 report issued by the
Sa lvadoran Commun al Union found that
t here had not been many positive changes
toward a more eq uitable distribution of
land . The report found that, among other
things, only 7.S% of all land in EI Sa lvador was affected by the reform s, onl y 2
out of the 300 cooperat ives have rece ived
t itl es to their land and only 10% of t he
150,lXlO forcib ly evicted families w ho
sharec ropped have received land . Titling
for large cooperatives has occ urred for
o nly 3 out of 326 farms and provi sion al
titles have been issued to only 20,lXlO of
the 125,lXlO potential benefi ciari es.
The land reform program has been
ca ll ed a plan of rural pacification . It may,
as we ll , be called a pacif ication pl an for
the Ameri can people. Both Presidents
Carter and Reagan emphasized the signi fica nce of these land reforms and cited
them as eviden ce that the ruling junta
was indeed a progressive and even revolutionary government. This helped to
strengthen t heir fustification for increased
aid to the junta.
However, in September, 198 1, former
U .S Ambassador Robert White revealed
that " the second. stage of the land reform
had been expli citly cancelled with US
approval " (The Progressive, Sept. 1981).
It is interest ing to note that the Reagan
admini stration , as well as the Ca rter
admini stration , tri ed to capitali ze on the
supposedly active rol e the U .S. played in
promo ting this " progressive" land reform .
And so, it seems that following the
implementat io n of " progressive" land
reforms and th e holding of " free" elections , whi ch the U .S maintai ned provided
the soc ial and political so lutions to the
cou ntry' s problems, the situ ation in EI
Sa lvador rem ains as it was: violently
unstable.
Analysis
What's the deal with all these classes
held on Wednesdays? Wednesday is supposed to be governance day - the day we
all get together in o ur various DTFs,
Boards and group meetings to conduct
and improve the business of governing
" ourse lves and our institution . In schedu l-.
ing meetings with people, you will find
that an appallin g number of students have
Wednesday classes they must skip to work
on campus issues .
What, you may ask, is so important
about some silly governance day?
At issue here is not just some free time
or another way to shorten the work week.
Our ri ght>. to participatory democracy are
being eroded because students are Qu ietly
denied the t ime designated for participation. We are on the road to a loss of
educational freedom .
Students shou ld not have to sacrifice
By Tom Schaaf
their education by missing classes to
parti cipate in thei r sc hool's direction. And
students shou ld not have their participation in govern ance short-circuited by their
class comm itme nts. To gain the best of
both participatory governance and higher
education, we have set aside a governance
day .
. Evergreen's course loads are demandin g,
and the student's comm itment to education here is hi gh. But we must not detract
from our opportunities to parti cipate in
our own governance. W e have a chance
here at Evergreen to learn a most important skill : how to maintai n our own
affairs, with a vo ice in determining the
authoriti es we li ve by, and how to work
with City Hall . In essence, how to run Our
own lives!
Governance Day is a major part of what
makes Evergreen an "alternative" institution. We must not surrender this valuable
asset to our unique education.
~ U . S . Steel , Westinghou se and a Getty
Oil subsidy among others) from its
patriotic attempt to help our country?
Washington residents are ultimately
responsible for the cost of WPP5S. Washington re5idents face the gravest ri sks
from the Northern Tier pipeline; clearly
these are legitimate state concerns
warranting more than belittlement from
appointed " Mega-crats." The situation is
more complex than the government
would have us believe.
While the above-mentioned political
boils have come to a head, another has
surfaced concerning federal leasing of
large tracts of Seattle and Tacoma's
watersheds for oil and gas exploration .
The two watersheds supply most of
Seattle and Tacoma's water. Hunting,
fi shing and hiking are prohibited within
these areas in order to maintain th e
supply's purity. It seems questionable that
the Federal Bureau of Land M anagement
would endanger such a supply.
The situation is further compli cated by
the fact that the Bureau granted the
leases again st'the recommendations of
the U.S. Forest Servic e. Both agencies fall
under the leadership of Interior Secretary James Watt.
The W ashington congressional delegation lodged a strong protest and the leases
were suspended pending an investigation
into why they were issued.
It seems that the Reagan administration
sings the "States-Rights" melody when it
comes to providing social servi ces and
throws in a little centralization refrain
when it looks like states rights can be
trampled. '
The fa ct is, Reagan's administration
continues to pressure states into accepting
arrangements that promote big-government and blg-bu srness Interests whde
compromising state-residents' interests
and envIronmental concerns.
..
Whether It concerns the MX miss de
sys tem In Utah , " Ioreltnes 011 and gas
ex plo rations in California, watershed .
leaSing In Washington, direct Intervention
in state voter initi atives , Reagan's admini st ration IS creatin g a new pledge for
1984: Get the people off the backs of big
government and big business.
.
A Splendid Little War?
Wednesday Should
Be Our Day
By Bob Davis
Another case in point is the Northern
Tier pipeline. Governor Spellman recently
rejected the Northern Tier Pipeline Company's proposal to build a large oil port at
Port Angeles and a pipeline which would
span 30 miles of environmentally-sensitive
Puget Sound.
He based hi s decision on the recommendations of the State Energy Facility
Site Evaluation Council. That council
recommended rejection of the proposal in
a decision whi ch included (according to
the Tacoma New Tribune 4/9) 44,lXlO
pages of hearing testimony and other
documents .
The pipeline would traverse the
northern tier states, ending in Minnesota .
All the other states have accepted
Northern Tier's application and attacked
Spellman's decision as a collection of
lame excuses for localized reasons .
Of course, Washington would be the
only one of these states with an underwater section of the pipeline, and Spellman has been quoted as saying that Port
Angeles residents would be subject to an
unprecedented risk of explosion and fire .
Loca li zed reasons? Most definitely, but
hardly lame excuses.
Reagan's admini stration , w ith the help
of like-minded Washington Republicans,
put immense pressure on Spellman to go
against the Coun cil's recommendations.
Secretary of State Haig and Secretary of
Defense W einberger tried to sway the
governor but he held fast
In response to Spellman's rejection of
the proposa l, U .S. Secretary of Energy and
former denti st james Edwards said, " It is a
sad day when a major energy project from
which Americans would benefit is deni ed
to t hem ." He added, "Each and every
state has a responsi bility to the nation to
w hich it belof1gs. " (TN T 4/ 9)
Are our "selfish . local ized" actions
block ing Northern Tier Pipelinf' Company
~.
I n a scene remi niscenf of the days of
imperi al glory, thousands of Briton s
waved flags and shouted encouragement
as a naval task force left Portsmouth,
Monday, April S, to reclaim the Falkland
Islands from Argentina .
Argentina invaded the South Atlantic
islands, 450 miles off her southern coast,
on April 2. A handful of Royal Marines
withstood the nearly 4,(J(X)..man invasion
force for several hours before capitulating.
Great Britain has dispatched a 40vessel task force, including two aircraft
carri ers, and possibly nucl ear submarines;
w hile Argentina has prepared to defend
the islands " at any cost," reinforcing the
original invasion force and calling up
reserves.
On W ednesday, April 7, Britain announced a naval blockade of the islands.
Any Argentine warships or support vessels
found within a 200-mile radius of the
islands would be " treated as hostile and
are liable to .be attacked by British
forces," said British Defense Secretary
John Nott in a speech to Parli ament.
.(P-I, 4/ 8) I
Argentina responded by declaring a
"South Atlantic theater of operations" in
the same area, stating that any vessel
considered hostile to Argentina security
would be. attacked .
While the contestants have attempted
with these actions to threaten each other
into back ing down, diplomatic activity
has reached a frenzy. Both sides claim
they wish to avoid military conflict and
reach a negotiated settlement, all the
while refusing to concede an inch.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
has stated that Britain will not negotiate
until the occupation force has been
removed. The Argentine Interior Minister
General Alfredo Saint Jea.n, has declared
that "the Argentine position is final and
definitive." (Seattle Times 4/ S)
The conflict over the islands is rooted
in the finest traditions of imperial rivalry.
Britain and 5pain both laid claim to the
islands, and came close to war over therr
in 1770. An ambiguous settlement was
reached that lasted until 1810, when t he
Argentines declared independence from
Spain. By 1820 the Spanish were gone,
and the new republic claimed sovereignt~
over the islands.
In 1833, the British retook t he islands,
and have held them ever sin ce . The
Argentines have consistently claimed that '
the islands, which they call Islas Malvinas ,
are ri ghtfully theirs.
Within thi s histori cal context, a number
of current issues have helped bring the
crisis to a head ._The fa ct that the waters
around the Falkland s may be ri ch in oil
certainl y in creases the geopolitica l value
of the barren islands . Some experts beli eve the Falklands area may yield up to
2 billion barrels of oi l
Politi ca l instabili ty and in ternal dissension, however, are the main reasons
behind the Argentine move. Argentina has
been under military rule since 1976.
Thousa nds of Argentines have been
arrested or have simply di sappeared since
then.
Recent ly, the military junta has been
cautiously moving toward s a restoration
of some semb lance of democracy . The
officially banned politi cal parties have
become more visible and their activiti es
have been baSically tolerated by the
authorities. Di ssenting voices can be
heard .
Still , the reforms have been far too
slow for the populace Economic troubles,
including a 140% in f lation rate and 1S%
unemp loyment, have added to popular
unrest. On M arch 30, massive st reet
demonstrations took place in Buenos
Aires and other major cities to protest the
econom ic and political conditions.
According to diplomatic sources
reached by the Los Angeles Times , Argentine President General Leopoldo F.
Galtieri was stunned by t he demonstrations, and ordered the invasion in an
effort to distract national attention . This
time-honored political ploy was initially
quite successfu l : banners and flags appeared e" erywhere and people danced in
the streets in an orgy of patriotic
nationalism.
However, enthusiasm has waned and
given way to skepticism over Argentina's
ability to hold the islands if Britain should
commit her full might to retaking them.
And as one Argentine put it : " You can't
eat the Falkland Islands." (Seatt le
Times,4/S)
According to the LA. Times' diplomatic
sources . Ga ltieri seri oll~l v miscalculated
British reaction. -'pparently Galtien ,,~. c(
thought that Britain would prove so wil ling to f ight for the islands.
Galtieri is now in an ext remely vu ln erable politi ca l position . I f' hi s bid for the
islands should fa il, it is doubtfu l th at he
ca n maintain hi s po liti cal position . His
political future "depends on how it all
turns ou t," sa id one key diplomat.
(L.A. Times)
If Ga lti eri should fall, given the current
conditio ns in Argentina, it is entirely
possibl e that the current phase of military
rul e may end as well.
Prime Minister Thatcher ha s also staked
her pol iti ca l future on the Falkl ands issue.
Amid all egations that her government had
adva nce warning of the invasion, Thatcher
responded to opposition ca ll s for her
resignation by saying : No . Now is the
time for resolution and st rength ." (Daily
Olympian, 4/ 5) British Foreign Secretary
Lord Ca rrington has already resigned over
the issue.
Both Argen tina and Britain appear to be
relying on Ameri can support for their
posit ion. Thatcher has claimed that U .S.
Secretary of State A lexandu Haig came to
London as a " fri end and ally, " rather than
as an objecti ve med ialDr, while Argentina
has cited the 1947 Treaty of Rio de
.
janeiro as proof of an American obligation to support Argent ina against "outside
aggression." Indeed, the Falkl and Islands
have brought two nations co nsidered vital
to American security close to open war.
The U .S. positio n in the crisis is very
tenuous. Britain has been Ameri ca's
closest European all y for many years.
With Eu ropean dissatisfaction over America n leadership and foreign poli cy growing,
America's "special 'relationship" with
Britain can on ly become more important.
At a time when the Reagan administration is desperately tryi ng to stem the
insidious flow of "communist subversion"
in Latin America , Argentina's value to the
administrati on as an American ally also
grows.
Galtieri toured the U.S. last summer,
and made a very positive impression on
seni or administration offici'a ls and military
officers as a staunch anti-communist. He
has received warm support from the
admini stration since taking over the
presidency last December.
What is truly distressing is the noticeable lack of U.S. success in persuading
Galtieri from taking an action that is
detrimental to U.S. il'\terests. On the eve
of the InVdSIOn, Presjdent Reagan at:
tempted to convince Galtieri in a lengthy
[lhone conversa tion that the in vas ion
wou ld prove hi ghly detrimental to USArgl:'nti ne relations, but Galtieri went
ahea d anyway.
So far , Galtieri appears t6 have ca ll ed
Reagan's bluff . During the Securi ty Counci l deba te o n the in vas ion , U .N . Ambassador Jea nn e Kirkpatri ck was not present.
The night before, Kirkpatrick had been
guest o f honor at a gala dinner t hrow n by
the Argentine Embassy. Walter Stoessel,
second on ly to Haig at the State Department , was al so present.
Obvious ly, the Reagan admini stration
has no intent ion o f lettin g an in convenient little squabble ove r the Falkl ands
impede its attempts to cement relations
w ith ri ght-w ing Latin American governments such as Argentina's.
The prospects for a diplomati c solutions are sli m, despite the fact t hat neither
side ca n be sure of winning a military
confli ct over the islands.
Seri ous negotiations over the islands
were begun in 1977 , with no progress to
date. The main stumblin g block has been
the 1800 islanders t hemselves, who have
no desire to become Argentines . The
sheep-fa rmin g island community is of
thoroughly Bri t ish descent and li festy le,
right down to the country pubs and
cricket matches on the green, despite
Argen tine attempts to woo t he islanders
and draw them closer to the mainland .
The islanders have rejected every proDOsed solution, even the " Hong Kong"
arrangement favored by the Briti sh. This
solu tion would cede forma l sovereignty
over the islands to Argentina, w hi ch
wou ld then lease the islands to Britain for
a lengthy amount of time, thus ensuring
British control and administration .
So w hil e Haig shuttles back and forth
attempting to defuse the crisis, the
rhetoric on both sides grows more bellicose, the Royal Navy steams closer to the
Falklands, and the deadline for a diplomatic solution draws near.
The Falkland Islands crisis is a grotesque
w itches brew, combining the wrost elements of 20th century geopoli tics and
19th century imperialism and nationalism.
If major loss of li fe were not such a
serious possibility, the situation wou ld
resemble nothing so 'much as a grand
farce, a hollow pageantry of anachronistic
glories. Where are Rudyard Kipling and
Teddy Roose'velt when we need them .
The Cooper Point Journal
April 1S page five
•
& Notes
STUDENTS INTERESTED IN HEALTH
CAREERS: john Bastyr College of Naturopathic Medicine is presenting a special
evening program on April 16 from 7 to
9 :30 to introduce prospective students to
a career in naturopathic medicine. Practicing naturopathic physicians, college
administrators and students will present
information and answer questions about
the college and its program . The program
will take place at the school and clin ical
facility, at 1408 N.E. 45th St in Seattle's
University District
NORTHEAST YMCA in Seattle will be
on campus April 22 to interview for paid
and volunteer positions in their Summer
Day Camp and Caravan programs . Paid
pos i tion s in c lud e day ca mp director ,
associate director, counselor, mountaineerin g inst ru ctor and others. All volunteer's expe nses and event fees are paid by
YMCA. For more information see Career
Planning and Placement, Library 1214,
866-Q1 93
OLYMPIANS AGAINST INTERVENTION
IN EL SALVADOR wi ll ho ld their mont hl y
general meet ing at 7 p.m. Wednesday,
Apri I 21 on t he 3rd fl oor of the O ld
Wa,hi ngton Sc hoo l, corner of Easts ide
and Legion Featured speaker at the meeting is Dave Dellinger, a nati ona l anti -war
activist who wa, a key orga ni zer in opposition to t he Viet nam war. Call 943-7325
for morp information
Internships
Arts Management Intern/Summer Festival
Vancouver. WA
Plan and manage a Summer Arts Fes tiva l in
mid-Aug ust. Budget the event, and track
expen ses. Schedule events and coordinate the
runni ng of th e festival. Carry out afl public
relati o n functions .
Prefer student with academic background or
work experience in a co mbination o f managemen t an d commu ni cati o ns .
1 quar t er . 8- 12 h o urs / week . vo lu nt ee r
(t u iti o n rei mbursement)
Program Development · Manager
O ly mpia. WA
Develo p and publi ci ze prog rams. Irll tla te
and answer co rrespondence fo r work shop s
and ot h e r b USiness . coo rdi n ate qu a l l e r l y
ne\'\,~ l e tl e r
typin g . te lep hone co ntac t s, etc
A l so posslbllit lcs In research fu nding so urces
ne twork i ng and co mmu nit y out reac h. new
program development. etc .
Pre l er st udent wit h acad em lr; backgrou nd or
work experience in dance . perfo rmin g art s.
and /o r management.
1 Quarte r. 2'12 ·10 hours/ week. vo lunteer
6\
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SAN FRANCISCO STATE UNIVERSITY
CONTINUING EDUCATION
WILDLANDS . . . .MCH INSTITUTE
Join a B&tM;t .......... rctI Te8ll1
In the Mount* ......
or AI_.
c.....
On-site r_rch to preserve:
• Wildlift Species
• Wildernns Habitats
Summer 1982 - 3 units
Courae dei ,iJ5:
WILDLANDS RESEARCH INSTITUTE
407 Attantic Ave .. Santa Cruz. CA 9506~
(408) 427-2t06
Life with Skippy
THE STUDENT ACCOUNTS OFFICE
HOURS for publi c contact wi ll be from
9 :30 to 4, Monday through Friday.
A RISK REDUCTION DEMONSTRATION
will be held on Friday, April 30, from
9 a.m . to 4 p .m. at Olympia School
Di strict Administration Offices Building,
1113 East Legion St. Risk reduction may
be defined as making informed decisions
about hea lth behavior, that reduces the
ri sks of chroni c diseases. The demonstration is sponsored by the Department of
Social and Health Services and Central
Washington University Call Tammy
White, (509) 963-2483/SCAN 453-2483 .
RADICAL WOMEN: Feminist proponents
of aff irmative action, abortion on demand,
lesbian rights and publicly-funded childca re meet Thursday, April 22. Dinner is
served at 6:30 p.m . The meeting starts at
7:30 p .m . at Freeway Hall, 38 15 5th Ave .
N .E. in Sea ttle . For childca re o r tran sportation , call 632- 1R1 5 or 632-7449.
THERE WILL NOT BE a v iolent demonst ration at Bangor submarine base thi s
wepkpnd . "Ca ll For Armistice" is holdin g
an informati onal rally at the Seatt le Center
Flag Pla za on Saturday, Apri l 17. to protest government cuts in soc ial servi ces and
incrf'ases in military spending. For car
pooling, show up at TESC Library Loop at
11 ·30 a.m . Rally starts at 1 30 pm Call
329-8018 for more informati on.
!n
1 =
Arts Management Intern/Exhibitions & Classes
Van couver. WA
.
Plan and book a schedule of exhibitions in
the galleries . Co ntact teachers and schedule
c lasses. pref erably in th e arts . Contact
bu si nesses and encourage their use of Ihe
center for meetings and exhibits.
Pre fer s tud ent with academi c background or
work experience in comm unication s, man agemen\. and / or fine art s . So me sales ex peri ence
is hetptul.
1 q uarfer. 4-8 hours / week , vo lun teer (tu iti on
re im b ur sement)
Well ness Networi< Coordinator
Ol ymp ia. WA
Perfo rm funcll ons o f' ne two rk necessary In
Im p lemen ting the annuat pt an . working wllh
vo lun teers. mem ber ship . co rrespondence . of f i ce m aint en a nce. f u n d rals in g . b uil d ing a
re so urce d irec t ory , a nd o ther activ i ties rclated
to co nnec ti ng With wh ol ls ti c hea lth and well ness prov iders and co nsumers .
Prefer st uden t with academi c backgrou nd
In healt h-rela ted Ileld . human se rv ices, socia l
services. or bU Si ness bac kground is also hel p.
ful. W o rk e xp eri enc e in o rganizational plan ning. vo lunteer management. public relatio ns.
l und rais IIlg, ad verli s ing. and health wo uld be
helpful .
t-2 quarters . 20-40 hou rs/ week . vo lun l eer
(pOSSi b le travel co mpensation )
Correctional Officer Trainee
Tacoma. WA
Student intern would be responsibl e for
logging and report w riting . Would atso work
with m on ito ri ng of the faci lity, and body
count .
Prefer stud ent with se nior or iunior st anding. and some bac kground in social sciences
and / or corrections .
1 q uarter. 16-20 hours/ week, volunteer .
For further information, contact the Office of
Cooperative Education and sche';ule an
appOintment with a counse lor, LAB I 1000,
Ext . 6391 .
A COUNSELING PROGRAM TO ELIMINATE SELF-DEFEATING BEHAVIOR is
being held at Sen'i . 3157 on Mondays from
noon to 1 p.m ., April 19 through May 24.
This program consists of seven progressing
lessons explorin g your behavior. Examples
of self-<Jefeating behaviors are overeating,
procrastination, poor study habits, fear of
people, etc. During ·the series you will
work toward eliminating a se lf-<Jefeating
behavior of your choice.
LAST CHANCE: If you would like to be
considered as an exchange student with
St. Mary's State College of Maryland for
1982-83, you should contact Provost Byron
Yo ut z in Library 3131 before Friday ,
April 17. Catalogs and further information
are available there . SI Mary' s is a statesupported liberal arts co llege of about
1200 students, high quality and somewhat
tradit iona l curriculum, on the shores of
the Po tomac and Chesapeake Bay .
SELF HELP LEGAL AID, a student-staffed
organization that assists members of the
Evergreen community deal with their legal
problems, has n ew hours for sprin g
quarter : Mon , 11 :30 a. m . to 5 pm ; Tue.,
12 :30 p.m . to 3:30 p .m .; W ed., 9 a.m . to
5 p.m .; Thur ., 9 a.m . to 2 p.m ; Fri, 9 a.m .
to 5 pm
A MUSTACHE CONTEST is being spon·
sored by the Thurston County Fire Prevention Off icer's Assoc iati on, a non-profit
organization . Proceeds will go toward
providing public fire and life safety programs to sc hools in Thurston County. The
contest, judging and party will take place
at the Trail 's End Arena, at noon on
Apri l 24. For more information, ca ll Russ
Dali a, 491-955 5.
r
INTERNATIONAL TEACHERS representing a wide spectrum of traditions will be
present at the School of Spiritual Healing.
Sponsored by the Sufi Healing Order, the
school will meet at the Valley River Inn,
Eugene, Oregon, on April 28 to May 2.
For further information, contact The
School of Spiritual Healing-West, 2861
NW Westover, Portland, Oregon 97210:
(503) 223-4806.
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BOTH HEALTH SERVICES AND COUNSELING SERVICES will be available to
spouses of enrolled students on a limited
basis spring quarter. The term " spouse" is
being defined broadly. Fees will be considerab ly higher for non-students ($15 and
up) . We still ca nnot adequately serve
c hildren or minors with · our existi ng
resources . For more detailed information,
ca ll 866-6200 for Health Servi ces or 86&6151 for Counseling Serv ices.
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fhe first song on the album, The Thi ngs
That Dreams Are Made Of, is by far the
best song on the album . Seconds and Do
or Die are also excell ent songs. The
Human League have done what very few
groups have done in the past, and that is
to put together a great album of only
synthesizers and vocal s. Kraftwerk is the
only other band that I ca n think of, that
has been able to meld the two together
w ithout someone complaining about the
artif iciality of the sound .
The Human League succeed where
Depeche Mode, Soft Call , and O rchestral
Manoeuvres in the Dark either fail, or
wallow in the artifi ciality of the sounds
they produce.
Surpri sin gly, these three bands have
already released thei r new albums in the
United States around the same time that
they were released in Britain . Dare was
released here just recently, but has been
availabl e as an import for many months.
If you on ly buy ten albums this year, Dare
should be one of them .
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ANSWERS:
THE EVERGREEN WILDERNESS RESOURCE CENTER's Winter Outdoor Skills
Conference has been postponed in favor
of such a conference in Bend, Oregon, on
April 17, 18, 24, and 25. The two weekends will be spent learning rescues, safety,
equipment, etc. ' For more information,
contact the Wilderness Resource Center,
Library 3234, 866-6345 .
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IF YOU'RE THINKING ABOUT USING
THE SUN to heat your house or water, the
first thing you need to know is whether
you ge t enough sun at your site . To find
out, you ca n do a solar site survey. There
wi ll be a Solar Site Su rvey class sponsored by the Energy Outreac h Center on
Thursday, April 15, from 7 to 8 p.m . at
th e Tumwater Library, 5131 S. Capitol. For
more information ca ll the Energy Outreac h Ce nter at 943-4595 .
third album co nsists of ten sy nthes ized
pop tracks, nine of which could be a hit
sin gle here. The British singles in clude:
The Sound of th e Crowd , Open Your
Hearl , Don 't You Want Me, and Love
Ac tion (I Heli eve in Love ). The impre~ i ve
t hing abou t this album is th at the be,t
t hree songs o n the album are no t the
'iin gles
' I
RON BAILEY'S RADIO
3.
The Evergreen Geoducks lied Grays Harbor College one-la-one on Salurday. The Geoducp
dominated Ihe first hall and held Grays Harbor bjlck for lhe second half . The Geoducks have losl
the last lour games with Grays Harbor so this was a psychological win lor them . On Sunday.
April 18, Evergreen will host the number one 188m, Mr. Raggs. The kickoff Is al 2:45 on the soccer
field .
Human League Escapes Messy Death
The tlum an Ll~a g U ., was form ed in 1977
by Ian Crai g Marsh and Martyn W are.
Shorl Iv af t.,r formi ng the all-s ynthes izer
.l nd VU l ,d group, Philip O ak.,y and Philip
Adrt .m Wri ght \w rp added . Philip Ad ri an
Wrt ght did nut play any instruments at
the lime. but was responsibl e fo r t he
visual effects (,Iidps and film) .
Aft er their second album, Travelogue,
t he two foundin g members of the group
lei! the band just before a contracted
tour . Philip Adr ian Wright and Philip
Odkey dpcided to co nlinue to pl an the
tour, bul on ly had three weeks to find
somE' talented repl acements for the
group's masterminds . They hired joanne
Cathprall and Susa nn e Su lley on background vocals and Ian Burden on keyboard s, and did the tour . They then added
)0 Ca lli s, a veteran of several bands, including the pop Scottish cartoon band
ca lled the Rez illos .
In the aftermath of what could have
been the very messy death of the Human
League, has come four sing les and a hit
album, Dare . The album had been at the
top of the charts in England for several
months before it came out here. Their
I
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Music Review
By David Caff
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Life In
By Karen Heuvel
[
I've just got everything in perfect order
and then, in walks my roommate .. . Patsy
the slob. A few bars from the theme of
laws would be appropriate for this
in troduction.
Patsy walks through the door at 5
minutes after 5 o'clock and proceeds to
trash the house with the incredible speed
of a Kansas Tornado .
'
After slinging her coat over the sofa
and I ighting a cigarette, Patsy begin s to
di ssect the daily paper in search of the
comi cs, and then abandons the mess of
scattered newsprint to rinse out yesterday's coffee from her mug. Once settled
in the easy chair Patsy removes her shoes
to reveal a pair of mismatched socks she
has been wearing for two days.
Patsy's habits cater to the I ife of a slob.
I guess I am what some people refer to as
a neat-freak; I can't help myself. I foll ow
Patsy around with a washcloth in one
hand and a mop in the other. I split hairs
over bread crumbs on the counter or a
book misaligned on the shelf.
What is a neatfreak doing living with a
woman like Patsy Hannagan you ask?
Well , it was a desperate situation . My
best friend Carla call ed me from Vermont
to ask if I could give her sister a plac~ to
n Ti
stay until she found a house (that was six
weeks ago) and being the kind, warmhearted person that I am I said, "Of
course, Patsy can stay with mel"
As I have just mentioned Patsy has
been living with me for six weeks. It on ly
took her two weeks to create the condi tion her room is in today . There are heaps
of clothes scattered throughout the
room, barely revealing the color of the
carpet . An array of miscell aneous items
have accumu lated under the bed alon g
with half of a fro zen TV dinner. The
dresser is decorated with clothes that
were flung ca reless ly into it in an attempt
to sort the clean clothes from the dirty
ones (whi ch she does by scooping them
off th e floor and smell ing the pits of each
shirt) . Her st ereo I S st rategically located at
the head of her bed so she ca n reac h over
and fumbl e through the variety of tapes
that were spilled onto the floor three
weeks ago in a fit of desire to find her
" Devo" tape. Thi s is her " morning wakeup musi c" to get her going, she says. She
usually li stens to one side of the tape,
crawls out of bed and head s for the bathroom. Patsy drags out everything that was
put away the night before: blowdryer,
toothpaste, hot roll ers, electric toothbrush,
zit cream , etc . This really annoys me to
walk into an electrical spaghetti factory
left behind a walking light-bright.
2..
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ISt..AN"";
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After the bathroom Patsy makes her
way to the kitchen. Patsy loves to cook
and is the only one I know who ca n
create a busboy's nightmare in less than
an hour.
This is a routine I have become accustomed to for six weeks and as soon as she
finds a hou se I will personally call a bulldozer to help her move .
PETE RSONS' .
8 a . m . - 9 p . m.
weekdays
10 a.m . - 7 p.m. Sundays
open every day
WESTSIDE CENTER
Real Food
Lunch and Dinner Special Too!
• Fresh Ingredients • Reasonable Prices
Glrdln Omllitti .
.. . .. . 3.50
Huivo, HIRCIt,ro,
greln pIPPin, onion I
... US
mushrooms, erum Chll'l
willt Itome frll'
Plnn".. ' Om.lettl .... . ... . . .. . 3.75
FI,h " Cltlps ....
nungl,
elt"'I,
Fettucclnl AI Pllto .
.3.25
black ollvI'
olrlle brad
Reuben
... ..
. . . ..}:·2:
lIngnt (mlltllll) .
... us
Fre,n :.plnlCh $llld . . .
. .. 3.50
girlie brud
(;hlll'l BlIIGlr Olluxe ./lril• .. .. 3:15
i.uttttd VIII'tJblll .... .. .. .. ... 3.25
Blue Ch",e Burger ./frll. . . .. .3.75
glrllc brud, brown rice
.•Bacon 80 CIIte.. Burglr ./lrlil .. 3.75
~1Ie1 of Frnlt Rid Snapper . ..... .3.15
grillecl . ""nelt frill
.... us
'ttl
PVuida6'
.406 E. '4th Ave. 78S-9769
(across from the train station)
M-Th 10 a.m.
8 p.m
Fli 10 to 10
Sat 10 to 6
lOosed
to
page six The Cooper Point journal
Apri l 15
. The Cooper Point ioumal
April 15 page seven