The Cooper Point Journal Volume 25, Issue 19 (March 9, 1995)

Item

Identifier
cpj0636
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 25, Issue 19 (March 9, 1995)
Date
9 March 1995
extracted text
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Archives
The

Ev.e~green Stat~ COl/~~e'"

OlympIa. WashingtoQ

aB50i

Congratulations! You've made it through yet another Diy Winter. Thank you for your partlclpalion.

MARCH

9, 1995

TH~ EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

VOLUME

25

ISSUE

19

Fou~th stolen vehicle
recovered in (-Lot
by Pat Castaldo

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REQUIEM FOR KURT COBAIN. A benelil for the de·
pressed who cannot aHord therapy. Seeking
bands/songwriters with a decent recording 0.' a
song inspired by Kurt's lite/death for CD com plla·
tion. Call for info.

CPJ Managing Editor
Steve Bodwin didn't even realize that his
1987 red Firebird had been stolen from the
driveway of his Tumwater apartment complex
until Public Safety Sergeant Larry Savage
called him early Monday morning.
Savage found the mint condition Flrebird
with its windows smashed in , tires slashed and
interior mutilated while he was conducting a
standard patrol ofC-lot at 3 am.
This is the fourth stolen car found in
Evergreen parking lots this year. Three of the
four were found before their owners realized
that they were missing.
Savage suggests that the cars are stolen
and then used for other criminal activities.
before being dropped off at Evergreen. "TheS('
two [suspects] knew what they were doing and
used gloves," said Savage, "There aren't any
prints at all."
John Chandler. an Evergreen student.
was leaving the Computer Center Sunday night
at around 9 pm when he saw the car in the
parking lot. Two men were with the car, and
they requested a jump start for the Firebird
from Chandler. One of the men drove a small.

tan pickup truck.
"If I had jumper cables, I would have
given them a jump," said Chandler.
Chandler left the parking lot. The men
told him that it was okay, as they had "already
called someone_" He did not suspect anything
suspicious at the time.
Bodwin, th e owner of the car is not an
Evergreen student. He works downtown at the
Olympia Gold's Gym. Bodwin says that the car
has a brand new battery, and can't understand
why they would have needed a jump.
Savage suggests that when the thieves
hot-wired the car by smashing the ignition
cylinder. they may have damaged the car's
electronics.
At around 1 am, two Evergreen students
who were asleep in the back of their pick-up
truck were awaken by the hiss of air being let
out of tires. These two students were in
violation of the campus habitiation policy.
"I thought it wa s my ve hicle at first.
beca use I was half asleep," one of the sleeping
stud ents. Travis Turner said. His truck was
parked only five spaces away from th e stolen
vehicle.
Turner also heard the smashing of glass.
as the car thieves smashed in the hat c hba~

WHAT builds straw bale
house on Red Square

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Owner Steve Bodwin, Sgt. Larry Savage and Tim from Tim's Westside
Towing examine the damage to the stolen car found in C-lot Monday.
and driver's side windows. lie said when he
looked out of his truck window. he saw th e two
suspects head towards ma in campus.
After the incident, Turner went back to
sleep and did not contact Public Safety. Savage
said that ifTurner had used the blue emergency
telephone, "at least we could have been out
looking [for the suspectsl."
The two suspects, accurding to Savage,
ca used an estimated $4,000 damage to the car.
including the smashed dashboard. Bodwin's

Future higher education
funding still in question
by Dawn Hanson
CPJ Staff Writer

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Kathleen Luttrell bores holes into the wood-frame window
of a demonstration straw bale house built on Red Square_ The
Washington House of Appropriate Technology (WHAT)
presented the house as an example of the usefulness and
practicality of constructing houses with straw bales instead of
traditional materials.
The straw bales are stacked on top of one another and pins
are driven through them for reinforcement. The straw bale
houses are known to be extremely energy efficient, inexpensive
to build and environmentally friendly.
photo and text by Ned Whiteaker

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Internal
Seepage

leather jacket and cassette collection was also
stolen from the car. The ignition was sha tlered
and Bodwin could not start th e car to see if th e
engine was at all damaged.
The ca r was insured. but the insurance
compan y sa id th e}' 1V0uld not be able to
examine the car for another three days. Bodwin
had the vehicle towed to a local garage fur
service. Public Safety rt'commends not fo keep
valuab le possessions in your ve hicl e. and
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report all suspicious act ivity.

With this last week marking the half-way
mark of the Washington State Legislature's
105th term, legislation concerning tuition
power and the state of higher education funding under the state budget remains unresolved .
Higher education funding in the state
budget is still under question at this point. According to TESCs lobbyist. Kim Merriman, the
state budget is still being worked on by the
House and will likely be introduced in two
weeks.
Currently, Merriman says that Ihe House
is struggli ng with where and how much money
should be allocated amongst th e different state
departments. Their problems come in part due
to the passage of Initiative 601. which limited
the state's spending.
The need for high er education is growing due to an increasing number of students
and the services they require and Merriman believes that funding for higher education is not
in jeopardy.
The issue of tuition power con lrol is also
still under question as of this point. The Senate and House have vast ly different views of
what tuiti on control should look like. which is
reflected in their separate bills.
As reported in the Feb. 2 CPJ. Senate Budget Chair Nina Rinehart's proposal. Sena te Bill
5325, leaves tuition,control with the legislature. SB 5325 takes the per capita income to
determine the rate at which college tuitions for

the entire state will rise.
Currently. SB 5325 has passed Ihrough
the Senate by a 28 to 20 vote and is awaiting
further action by the I louse.
The House tuition bill. I-IS 1909. is sponsored by Iligher Education Committee Chair
Don Ca rlson. Like Governor Mike Lowry's
budget plan. which was outlined in the Jan. 12
CPJ. HB 1909 gives tuition rai sing power to
inujvidual schuols.
.
As passed by the Iligher Ed ucat ion Committ ee. Ca rlson 's bill allows for ind ividllal state
four-year insitiutions to set their own tuitions.
HB 1909 sets the tuition bast.' isset at the 199495 rates, from which institutions may increase
at levels between 10 to 30 percent a year.
TESC Board of Trustees and TESC President Jane Jervis have both stated in the pasl
Ih at they were against this type oft uition plan .
Merriman stated that it is the feeling of the
board that "the alllount of t uitioll alfects who
gets to go to school". They are concerned that
many people who can currently afford coll ege
tuition may will not be able to alford it in th e
future under HB 1909.
In addition, the board feels thai "the state
legislature should set state levels" when concerning the tuiti on of the six state colleges and
universities and keep the tuition setting power
in the Legislature.
HB 1909 has been presented and furt her
action is pending by the House Appropriations
Comm ittee and may be ammended as the
House continues to develop its version of a
state budget . . ,

TESC

Campus Recycling
program threatened,
page3

Olympia, WA 98505

Bulk-Rate
U.S. Postage Paid

Address Correction

Olympia,WA
98505

Requested

Permit No. 65

NEWS
Edited by Dawn Hanson

NEWS BRIEFS

TESC Recycling Program faces budget' reductions
by Lyn Iverson

EVERGREEN

Senior perfo.rmance has special, younger guest

Career fair in Lacey to
recruit lESC students

Earth Prayer, a senior recital
directed and organized by
Llew,ellyne Beth Whaley, was
performed in the Recital Hall
on Monday, March 6.

The Ca ree r Fair 1995 will be held March 14 fro III noon to
-l pm at the pavilion of St. Martin's College.

The fair offers free admission. free transportation to from
b ·ergreen. free refreshments and a chann' to meet with over a
hllndreu recruiters frum different businesses and organizations.
Groups in attendance will be as divrrse as Wolf Havrn
In le rnalional . Farmers Insurance Group , Olympia Police
Department and Microsori.
:\ \'an will depart E\'ergreen's bus loop ever~' hour on the
II:dI' huur frum 11:30 am t() 3:~0 pill to the fair.
If you 1I'0uid like to knoll' more about the filir. ca ll Career
I)e\'E'lopmen t at xG193.

The crowd was delighted
when during the
performance of "Cedar
Redwood, a glimpse of forest
nymphs," a small child
reached the stage and
proceeded to dance.

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Union holds brown
Campus won't be dead Visit videoconference
bag legislature update during spring break
on electronic villages
The V\'ashington Federation oi'State Employees Council
28's Executive Director and Director of Public Affairs, Greg
I)PI'errux and Tim Welch. will present an upd ate of issues
curren tly before thl' Legislature concerning stat e employees.
The presentation. which is sponsored by Eve rgrecn's chapter
of the un ion. will take place on Friday. March 10. from noon to
1:30 pill in L11 2.
.
The uni on's prese ntation will hi ghlight the collective
bargaining bill that is currrnt ly before the Legislature and major
union actions that are occurring as a result. A question and
answer session will fo II 011'. and all participants arr encouraged
to bring their lunches and questions.

St udents staying on campus during Spring Break. March
20 to 24, will be joined by conference participants.
As for ca mpus dining. food service hours shall be altered
during Spring Break. The Deli wi ll be open from 7:00 to 4:00
pm daily-and the library coffee cart open from 7:~0 to 2:00 pill.
The Greenery and CAB coffee ca rt will be closed throughout
th e week.
Co nfercnce Services requests that you don't feed the
visitors or poke them with sticks.

When will we see the
next CPJ?

Native Students hold
spring food drive

There will be no glorious
Cooper Point journal !Iext
week. eva l week.
The nex t CPj will hit
newsstands on April 6, 1995.
Submissions deadline is
at noon on Monday. April 3.
Questions or concerns?
Please call x62B.

Thl' Na tive Studen t Alliance (NSA) is currently running a
can ned foou drive. All food that is collected shall be Junated
for the Western Shos hone Defense Project's Spring Ga th ering
in Crescent Valley, Nevada.
To make a donation . eith l'r bring them tt) the NSA's bake
sale table in the CAB on Tuesday, March f4 or at their office on
the third floor of the CAB.
For more informati on. conta('t the NSA at x61OS.

SECURITY BLOTTER
Compiled by

Matthew Kweskin

Friday, February 24
2123: A large fenced in ~: toragl'cage was found
open in the Library basement. [Perhaps some
peop le are preparing in case they turn thi s
place into a jail and imprison all of th e
~ tudent s. J

The Ilappy Squad of Earth performed Utila, Honduras.
The CPj regrets whatever confusion
on campus cable access as a special favor
to the prouucers of Infectious Waste this may have caused.
Last week the CPj accidentally left off
Theatre. It aired on a continual loop on the
Tuesday and Wednesday immediately after a byline for an article on the swim team
written by Julie Wilson, cite publicist. We
taping.
The next shows will probably air next sincerely apologize for the overSight.
quarter in several cities including Seattle,
If there .is ever an error in the CPf,
Vancouver, Dayton or Maui They will
definitely not air in L.A., N.Y., Chicago, . please let us know. We'll thank you for it.

SOLE

Tuesday, February 28
Saturday, February 25

tJUll: T and R Dorms' fire alarm pull sta tions
l\'l're ma li ciou\ly ac tivated .
0:!5S: A-Dorm pull station a(,tivated.

Wednesday, March 1

Sunday, February 26
O:U9 : A runaway was reunited with their legal
gU<lnJ ian. She was fi)l1nd crying. asking to be
r('turned hOllle.
153fl: Two vehicle acc ident at Driftwood and
th e Evergreen Parkway. There were minor
illjurit:'~.

Monday, February 27
040U: A ~tack of Cooper Point journals was
\('t on fire in the A-Dorm loop.
OS24: Graffiti wa~ found in the Library
pa~scnger eleva tor.
174S: Verbal altercation between a Bookstore

2

Errata

employee and a customer.
2350: A person attempted to push SOIlleone
down the stairs in A-Dorm. luckily. the person
pushed didn 't fall too far.

Not hing too interesting (unless it was your car
towed from the A-Dorm court yard at 0538.)

PAGE

On March 30, you can attend a vidcoconference via
satellite on how the worldwide computer network may change
the educat ion system, the workplace, the healt hcare system and
government .
The worldwide computer nrtwork could also affect social
justice and create economic, social and cultural issues we'll all
need to deal with. The satelli te conference will be held from
9:30 am to noun at an undecided location.
Academic programs are welcome, but yo u must let
Michael Huntsbe rger at x6895 know if you are bringing a
program.
The event is spo nsored by Student Activitirs and yuu
should watch campus mail for details or call Student Activities
at x6220.

MARCH

9, 1995

0110: Car vandalized in C-Lot.
1501: What was thought to be a burglary from
the Seminar building was reported. It was later
disc ove red that t he problem was
comillunication. not thievery.
2100: Car vandali zed in F-Lot.

Thursday, March 2
0930: A person was caught pocketing a muffin
from the Corner Cafe. When confronted by an
employee, they refused to pay for it.
This was a bad elevator week. There were three
incidents of people being caught in elevators,
and two elevators that became inoperable
while empty.

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

CPJ Contributing Writer
The Evergreen State College,
known for its ethos concerning environmental issues, is being dealt a sad
blow to its recycling program. Due to
cuts made for the next biennium's
budget, the Recycling Coordinator's
position, currently held by Glenn
Duncan, is being eliminated.
Duncan became involved in
TESCs recycling program as a student in 1989. His work began as a
project for the class "Making a Difference Doing Social Change." Since
then, Duncan has been responsible
for, many changes in the college's recycling program.
TESCs recycling started in the
mid '70s with student volunteers.
Duncan said that the volunteer design was not working well because of
the "ebb and flow" of the student
population and a fluctuating commitment to recycling. To the custodial staff's dismay , piles of
recyclables often accumulated, with
no volunteers to haul them away.
Duncan's goal for his year-long
project was t9 revamp TESCs recycling program.
Duncan began by doing some
research, or "dumpster diving" as he
calls it, to find out what TESC's trash
consisted of. Duncan actually
crawled inside the school's
dumpsters and dug around in the
garbage, noting what was in the
dumpster and how much of it could
be recycled. From there, he began an
educational campaign, letting the
campus know what he'd found and
how to go about recycling it.

Duncan expressed his admira- now recycles 37 percent, nearly 254 all recycling," said Leago.
He worked with TESC's adminDuncan plans to continue
istration to create a permanent posi- . tion for Wright's perseverance in get- tons, of its total annual waste.
Advancements
are
being
made
moving
the recycling program fortion that would organize and lead the ting the SMART program running,
in
the
buying
of
recycled
products
as
ward
until
June when his position
college's recycling program. The ad- . "Gregg worked through all of the
ministration created the position, confrontation and conflict. The col- well. GOLD Report figures indicate will cease to exist. "People know
and hired someone else for the job.
lege wa~ted to internalize things, but that 60 percent of the paper TESC what to do now, but it's important
now buys is made from recycled to lay the groundwork for the next
"It hurt my feelings that I. people didn't want to have more
wasn't hired. Looking back, I think things to do. Gregg really changed . product. The college is also buying steps," said Duncan. When Duncan
they made the
laser cartridges leaves, the duties and responsibilities
right choice,
for their printers that were once the Recycling
that are recy- Coordinator's will be given to Leago.
though. He had
clable. Duncan
the skills. He was
As the school continues to face
calls the recy - more budget cuts, many are being
good for the
cling program "a asked to do more with less. Duncan
school," said
work
in explained by saying, "George wears
Duncan
of
progress."
a lot of hats." Leago's catalogue deformer Recycling "R e - scription read s "George Leago,
Coo r din a tor ~
cently, Duncan Building Maintenance / Grounus /
Gregg Wright.
~
has been work- Recycling / Motor Pool Supervisor."
Wright was ;
ing with George
If Evergreen wishes to be
responsible for >
Leago from Fa- known as an environmentally act ive
the research and ~
cilities to make community. we all need to be aware
installation of >.
improvements that our actions will be more effecthe Self Managed .0
in the recycling tive examples than our rhetoric.
Activity for Reprogram. Cur- "Close the loop." "Reduce, reuse, recycled Trash ~
rently, they are cycle." We have talked the talk. Will
(SMART) sta- Q.
tions on campus.
Student Chris Fuess recycles cardboard in A-dorm. looking at the we continue to walk the walk?
possibility of obFor more information on what
There are now 30
taining a pulper for food services.
happens to TESC's recyclables. Ton i
or so SMART sites located around the 'not me' attitude."
The machine would extract Clement. Pijper Day, Megan
campus where paper, glass and cans
Wright resigned from the Recyclose
to 50 percent of the water from Pinkerton and Sherry Swanson.
are collected for recycling.
cling Coordinator position in June
The SMART stations weren't 1994 to help run a faI!lily business. the food waste and reduce it into four students from the Sustainability
received well by all campus mem- Duncan was hired on to finish out smaller chunks, making the food Initiative program, have conducted
bers, however. The application of the the current biennium. He returned easier to compost. As wi th the extensive research and produced a
SMART sites, the application of the paper titled "The Fate Of Olympia's
SMART sites meant that the custo- to TESC in October of 1994.
dial staff would no longer be emptySince its volunteer beginning pulper would require individuals to Recyclables: Where Do They Go?"
ing office garbage cans and that each in the mid '70s, TESC's recycling pro- sort the waste, but would greatly re- Contact Glenn Duncan x6843 about
person would have to sort their own gram has become more efficient and duce the amount of trash going to a seeing a copy. •
landfill. "We're always trying to think
trash. The custodial staff in turn be- effective. According to figures from
came responsible forthe emptying of the second annual Government Op- of ways that we can improve the overthe SMART barrels. With this shift tions to Landfill ...-----.- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,
in people's workloads, the same Dis P 0 s a I
• In Celebration ofWomens History Month
amount of waste is now being moved
but much of it is being diverted from
the landfill.
July 1994), TESC

e

~~u~~D~9~errt

Folk singer Buffy SainteMarie to teach at TESe
by Carson Strege

CPJ LaYOttt Editor
Acclaimed folk singer, artist and author
Buffy Sainte-Marie will join Evergreen's faculty
in fall of 1995. She is would like to teach
Native studIes and computer imaging
techniques.
Sainte-Marie is Evergreen's first scholar
brought to campus through the Evans Chair.
The Evans Chair is a fund designed to
bring scholars, such as Sainte-Marie, to teach
at Evergreen.
It is was established in 1992 to honor
Daniel Evans, a former Washington State
Governor and Evergreen president.
Longhouse project coordinator Colleen
Ray was instrumental in orchestrating SainteMarie teaching stint at Evergreen. The
Longhouse Planning Disappearing Task Force
(DTF) recommended that the college invite

Sainte-Marie to participate in the opening of
the Longhouse, expected in fall of 1995.
Ray received a letter from Saint-Marie
last Thursday confirming her intention to
teach at Evergreen.
Saint-Marie wrote, "Here is a description
of what I have in mind to share with Evergreen
students in September. The program is called
'Reflections of the Native Experience: Artists
with Emotion'. We will be looking at the
effects of historical events upon the Native
people, Native identity. The students will be
expected to produce works of art that convey
not only specific facts but also personal
emotional impact upon the artist and the
audience. The song "Bury My Heart at
Wounded Knee" is an example of such a
work."
"Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" is
Saint-Marie's international hit. . .

VILLAGE MARl
RighI JmtnIlle tbtJr

LEVITY

PROVIDER
TeE's mE.
101 CAPIlOl WAY NORTH
ON 4fH AV[~ [ 3 DOORS rotIN rRQI,t [Sf'[

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tuck lhe moll

cw. LY YOGOOl

W'o m"e n can find resources
to access on the Net

March. It's pretty sad to think that we live '
in a world that needs to have a special month
to recognize the accomplishments of 52
percentof our population. You know, the
people that everyone likes to say "Hit" to
when they get on T.V.?
Women.
Our
mothers,sisters,
teachers
and
caregivers.
So just what the
heck am [ talking '
about? March is national ' Women's
Month (as if any ofyou didn't already know
that). In the spirit of the celebration, I'm
going to point exclusively to places on the
web designed for women.
I thiflk that you'll all find it interesting
to kno.w that when I did a search using
~women~ as my keyword, the majority of
what came up were resources for women
who want to keep themselves from getting
beat up or raped. (What's up with the
assholes out there that make this
. nescessary?) I had a hard time limiting myselfto things specific to women. The reason?
Well. most of the stuffout there is for everyone. The problem is not in finding resources
and entertainment that women will appreciate. The problem is rmding women out

there at all. So whether your interest lies in
finding out where to go to learn how to put
a dent in some guy's butt, find out about
career oppurtunities in advanced technology, read some stuff by and for women, or
just hop around and
see stuff, call up your
girlfriends get some
beers and get online.
Make yourselves
known. Affect things.
Break the chain. Here
. are some places you
can start.

Women and Computer Science
http://www.ai.mit.edu/people/ellens/
gender.html

F.I.S.T http://galaxy.einet.net/ galaxy/Community/Safety/ Assault-Prevcntion/apin/FIST,html
Women's Homepage http://
www.mit.edu:8001/people/sorokin/
women/index.html

Women's wire gopher gopher:/ /gopher/wwire.net:8101/
.•
Women's Forums: Listservs
gopher:/ /path .net:8101/00/Listi ngs/
electronic_womens_forms
Women's Studies and Resources
gOPher:~g.cWis.uci.edu:7000 /1l/

women

rArE

Fre.sh pizza, pasta,
a"d othe ... spe.cialtie.s f..a,,",
0 .... wood fired ave."
)\J1I!.)(f

IW GAS • SAUDS S- SOUPS
MOVU;S' r:llM DtVnOPING
UPS SlIPPING • 5. 00PIm
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THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL MARCH

9, 1995 PAGE 3

COLUMNS

edited by: Derek Birnie

I

Her-story

Dan's favorite malcontent can't get laid

thor
Daley ar~l-P!p's
from their works atFroi.tir·Sf~as(J.ns'b<K)ksltore
at 6:30 Pnl.': 9)$~ is ...
. .. :
The Nati~ AI1iericiin Sturuesrontin~
ues. its Friday triomlng~es at ;10
in
LH3 and the Peace Center presents a0deo
a nd talk regarding Tibet at 6:30 pm.iIi LHl

He is never satisfi ed . He is forever complaining. Wh en things improve, does he stop
complaining? No ; instead, he shifts his focus
and continues cor!lplaining about other things.
He is perpetually restless arid dissatisfied.
What is his problem?
He has no spouse or partner- it figures.
The man probably just needs to get laid. His
constant nagging and criticizing is undoubtedly the result of not "getting any." If he
stopped complaining, he could probably have
all sorts of partners - but he keeps on yammering.
He has no family - are we surprised? If
he did, the press of family responsibilities
would drag him down to earth with the rest of
us. He would have plenty to complain about
in his family, of course-who doesn 't?- but
at least we wouldn't have to listen to him. His
kids would run him ragged, and his battery
would run down; he wouldn't have the energy
to keep up his bickering banter.
By this time, it should come as no surprise that he doesn't believe in God, either. This
man has no spiritual refuge. If he did, maybe
he would calm down and shut up. Will someone please con veri him to something other
than complaining?
Considering his state of perpetual dissatisfaction, we can be pretty sure he's one of those
twisted personalities who finds no good in anything. It's clear that he needs help; why doesn 't
he get the psychotherapy he needs? He is obviously compensating for personal problems. He

To the extent thanve come to experience ourselves - one's self - as a category, ~ player, a
piece in the game, an "out there" to be maneuvered, manipulated, sacrificed ... we fulfill the
promise ot pseudo-understanding: we become
things. Would it be a better world ifI-ifyou,
ifall of us- "shut down " and just "looked out
for Number One," "got a life," and fulfilled variB 'y
ous other cliche exhortations to Relax and
.:" .
)..' "·:D' ,;' \-it
,:> ".' ,,~'~S~;;".'-. t·,:
Smile?
Of course there are various ways to raise
is just a lonely guy without a lover, someone hell, and some are more or less effective accordwho wants to bring attention to his sad self by ing to circumstance. There is a very natural
making a noise. He is forever causing lawsuits, wish to do things in the most pleasant, lowestuproar and public scenes. He needs adjustment profile way possible. Few p~ople actually ento the world as it is, so he can "get a life." La- joy drawing lightning to themselves - it becomes hard to "bear the current." Fortunately
dies and Gentlemen, meet Ralph Nader.
There is a serious point to the "debunk- for us, however, there are a few perpetual maling"litany meant to "explain" the behavior of contents around ". which brings us around to
a malcontent like Nader. The "psychologizing" Ralph Nader, again.
There is an interview ofMr. Nader conof individuals has become one of the leading
ways of discrediting and dismissing social criti- ducted by David Frost, in the March issue of
The National Times. If you have a few minutes
cism. If a landlord, government or person in
authority is uncomfortable with being placed sometime, read through it. In the event that
on the hotseat, obviously anyone who makes a you thought Ralph Nader was just the "safe car
noise about the status quo has "a personal guy" or only wanted to make bureaucrats be a
problem." Will someone please tell those ecolo- bit more responsible, you are in for a surprise.
gists to stop compensating by dispJacingtheir This man is looking at the foundations of socireal compla ints into areas that won't lessen ety, seeking far-reaching transformatio ns in
our way oflife. Ralph Nader is a living philosotheir deep-seated emotional anguish?
An additional result of such pseudo-psy- pher, a Utilitarian paladin fo r Everyman and
chology is that it obscures the multidimen- Everywoman.
"He can 't get no saiisfaction." Thank
sional character of individual human beings.
You are not a label, and neither is anyone else. goodness.

HEtL~RJ\ISER

·TtiE:" flF:T~c¢<>~U~NIS¥
t)~ff;R~~HA.Et:

am

Write for the (PJ this spring,

orLH3.
On Saturday, the G?ffiingGuildand

the Camarilla have planned a ftee geoCon
III preview in theLI1~ tlt.noon. Aiong with .
games ' andD:lo'1es, ~heY're,sI?()nsoring
. Dance 2jn9B<. 2~OPat 8 p'IU,(f~turing
techno..wave.:tave.an(f aJtemativefOck with

MC,~OO Baud 'andbJspit~ub~le: You
should hririg a' Caiilie"g-f~ 46nation for
the dance: .,..
··F''''?),: ,.,>.;;,~: '. / .

;.' '" sUnday, the J~~~:'fpJtifu~1 Center
offers a'Purim c:arruyhlhfWOO.1'his,releb.ration,~ts an daj:"fr.~~dQ a~:!a,:9 pm.
Meet theJCq s. tWon~ t(;ordinatOrs. .
TheS&A>Boat:!i~be{l~liber~ting'

this weeka:n4~unng~r~op .thdundirig .

levekto be.aUix:ated{o the (PI; KAOS,the
Recreatio!l .~d:Child'Care CentetS.,l(YOu
have strong feeIing~ about thlli you should
contact the Board office atx6221 or talk to
one ofthe Bdardmeffibers and passon your
opinion. Right now, this i.s -as close to arepresentative body you have. on these types
of decisions, so use your voic~ or lose it.
If the S&A Board protess ofallocating Services and Activities funds peaks your
interest, you may wish to know th~t applications are now available for next year's
board coordinator position. The successful .
candidate will begin trllininginApru ofijlis
year and serve all of ~ext year. Thel:oordinator position for the EvergreenCoaiition
Building Center is aIso open. Pick up~pli­
cations at theftont counter in the$&A area
of the CAB 3rd floor.
Other allocations to be made which
will affect your life \Ire being made with all
naste in the Qthet Washington. Despite the
recent d efeat of the ,balanced budget
amendment, certain members ofCongress
are pushing ahead with the ~Contiaet with
Amtrlca... This 3zenda contams compo-..
hents which woul4 drlI"sticaJly.~ higher
education'filJt<iiligtev~andthe stnictures
for student aid, Watchfo
.". 'esoncain<
pus MUch 29-whicl\ ','.
ua chAnCt!,
to Iearn.m~re foout th!s~arld~o.eXpress.

your Qpinjon; Ii. foos e.cOJilitilin of c:oqrdi·

natol~and i:onCe.me4~d¢ntS; ~tYty1d

staffiS forming to facilitate: tile ~;lys' activi· .
ties; 'You can· get involv~d by, ~ontacting .
Oatg at the }'>~«: Center (x6098).
PAGE

4

MARCH

9, 1995

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

,Our long,
national nightmare is over.
Duckman returns,
with ,all· new episodes.

Our Mothers' ·Stories

lIc~0M~•
r~lv:11!

ALL-NeWerlS'O/JeS'!
f]tIJRlJ]Yf '0:'30 FI'1/9:30

r

FroIIIllle ortlilaillillltors of TIM SlIUSDA
Featuri.. abe tokes of JuoIAleDader.
Nil., Tllvis. 1111
lid
Dweezil Zappa. WHIt auk .., frIIIk ZIDDL

cunr

~USAe
NDWORK

draft.
G ra phic and text by Reyn(, r PaJilla

~"'ilo~oring one month at a time
~ .:.,:

The acco mplishments of the m ale populatio n a re
. celebrated 365 days a yea r, and I do n't beli eve hum ank ind wi ll
5~ progress un til all peo ple 's (i .e. wo men an,1 people of colDr)
;,~
){ achieve ments are celebrated da ily.
.~
U ntil th m time a rrives, we mu st ho no r t hose th at have
". paved the path o ne month at a time.
P~ tri c i a Billin gs

Sridevi's mother, center
she went to a g rocery store. A s
wo nde rful as the stories are , I
find it fasc ln atil)g that my m o m
can tell such stories . I could no t
tell yo u about the first tim e I
answe red a ph o n e , ate pizza o r
we nt g roce ry sh opping b ecau se
there is no thing to telL I d o n't
re m e mbe r whe n these " first s"
ha pp e n e d.
Pe ople te nd to glo rify the
acco mpli shme nts of the fathe r,
t he husb a nd, the m a n, assuming
tha t the mother, the wife , the
wo m an, simply b e ~cfited from
h is successes . W o m e n's struggles
a nd achievem e nts a re rarel y recog nized. Pe o ple a ss um e that
wo m en are b o rn w ith the ability
a nd desire to cook, clea n ;md ca re
fo r childre n, a fte r a ll, th at's their
jo b isn 't it? By the tim e I was

b o rn , my m o m could p repa re a n
elaborate m ea l, keep the ho use
spotless and ca re fo r the fa mily
all a t the sa m e time. S urel y he r
a bilit y to d o t hi s wa s inn ate,
was n't it?
I could h ave go n e o n as·
suming thi s, but if! h ad, I wo uld
h ave n eve r he a rd h e r srories .
Kno wing what my m ot her ha s
go n e th rough h as made m e resp ect, admire and appreciate he r
a ll the m o re.
If for no othe r reason, le t
W o m e n 's History Month be the
impetu s for everyo ne to learn
th e stori e s of the ir m o th e rs,
g randmo thers, aunts, sisterS a nd
fri e nds.
Do no t allow women' s sto·
ries to remain unheard.
Sridevi Ramanad1an

Queer women: visibility and
mobility within society

O

)

writing of history but a
better and mo re complete

I

n school, I ll sed to always
get in trou ble for ta lking. "Be
qui et!", "Keep still! ", and
"Shut up'" were not in my voca bu·
lary. My m o m could never und erstand this whe n she atte nded
p arent·te ache r conferences.
" M y dau ghter? Are you sure
w e"Te wlking about the SClme child?
S he 's so qu ie t at home."
It w as true . I didn't say
muc h a t h o m e b u t m o re than
m ad e up for it at scho oL A s I
g re w o lde r, h o wever, I fo und
myself m o re a n d more silent o r sile n ced, o utside of the h o me
as welL Feeling margina lized and
that m y voice w as n't be ing hea rd,
I wo n de re d who else was a m ong
the unhea rd . I took a numbe r of
wo m e n' s studie s cl asse s and
le a rne d m a ny o f the ins piring
a nd p o wer ful stories o f "the s ile nt majo rity." 1 pur posely a nd
passio n atel y searche d ever ywhere
fo r m o re sto ries, eve rywhere that
is, except my ow n h o m e .
My m o m got m a rrie d a nd
shortly the re afte r, left h e r limited, pro tecte d rea lit y to jo in her
hu sba nd, who was, quite frankly,
still a stra n ger to he r, to come to
a n unknow n wo rld h a lf w ay
a round the glo b e. What tria ls
a nd tribul a ti o ~ s did s h e go
th rou gh ? N o o ne as ked he r. And
s he d id no t te ll...
U ntil I fin a lly as ke d. M o m
told m e about the first time she
a n swere d a pho ne, t he first time
s he a te p izza , a nd the first time

..

There is often times criticism against the co ncept o f
"Her·story" , calling it a rewriting of hi story. But
women h ave continuo u sly
played as great a rol e in
human history as men . All
"Her-story" does is ' recognize
women' accomplishments as
well as mens'. It is no t a re-

ver t he past t wo decade.s wo men's histor y has negated and a rich histor y was passed over.
been redefined. Through this process we have
At the forefro nt of efforts to p rC~en·t' quee r women··s
eva luated rend itio ns of history whi ch a re history is t he New York C it y based L.:sbia n Herstor y
about rather than by wo men, sought out first hand Archive, co·founder by Joan Nestle. The archive houses
accounts, and maybe most importantl y begun efforts innumerable books, videos , phocographs, d iaries, and
to preserve the oral histories passed dow n from mot her ot her memorabilia and is made accessible, free of change,
to daughter. The battle to preserve and articulate quee r to a ll lesbians. The fo llowing q uote comes fr o m Joa n
wu men 's .histor y, which stemme d (rom this large r Ne stles book A Restricted Countr y.
"The Lesbian Herstor y Archive is all 'l bout a peuple's
move ment, has met similar obstacles plus several others
part icular to quee r cultu re.
refusal to live with in the di rty jokes amI folklore pathology
Q ueer wo men have ~radi tiona lly been distanced of a cont rolling soc iet y. To depri ve a people of t heir
f ro m their h istory due to lac k of inter-generatio nal hi story, o r to construct one for them that im mo rtali zes
infl uences . Th is d ilemm a is two fo leL The obvio us humiliati un, is a conscious cul tu ral act of t he powerfuL"
A num ber of excellent books have recentl y come
problem is t hat because most quee rs are brought up in
st taigh t fam ilies they lack an o ral tradition that includes out dea ling wi th pre-stonewall riots queer h istur y, I highl y
t hei r experience. A second, more su btle, dete rrent to recommend t hat anyone in te rested sta rt with Lesli e
t he passing down of q ueer cu lture is the myth th rlt Fienbe rg's Stone Butch Blues , Joan Nestl e's Persistent
equates queers with pedoph ilia. ·T his evokes such a Desire; a fe mme/ burch reader, or go dow n to Rai ny Day
fear of scrutiny on t he pa rt of olde r q ueers that they and rent Lesbian'Tongues, or She Even C hews To bacco.
rarely communicate with the younger generatio n which Un fortunately I am un able to recommend a great dea l of
hi storical accounts dea ling with bi or t mns queer women's
despe rately needs queer role models.
W hile the fe minist movement of the 19 70's did hi story d ue to lack of published material. The Evergreen
a great de;! 1 to strengthen queer wo men's communi ty Queer Alli ance also has a sma ll queer spec ific li brary.
in terms of visibility and mobility with in the dominant Stop by any afterno on Mo nday th rough Thursday.
culture, t here is a gre;!t dea l of self· loathing appa rent
Jul es Si hbern
in this era's affec t on queer histo ry. By d ispelling
"myths" about queer wo men, such as t he existence of
fe mme/ b utc h re lati o n s hip s, th e ti es be t wee n
prostitution and q ueer hi story, and the presence of
women passing as men ; many women's stories were

Building On
Our History

T

he hi sto ry I have bee n
handed in public education
is a h istory ot wa r and
po liti cs a nd co mm e rce and
impo rtant dates, but the peop!.: I
kn ow and love and care about haw
never been a part of that history:
wh ether it is beca use they a rc
women , ur people of color, or queer,
o r poor, o r no t C hri st ia n, o r
physicall y cha llenged, or just w o
radicaL
This history and the stories
of the people who came bcfclre us
are important. In a world where we
have been marginali zed t he o nl y
thing we h,we to build un are t1wse
stories and we mu st depend o n
ourselves to seck them ou t, listen,
and tell thell1 again.
I was born a girkhikl in a
small tow n that was a d~ n gef(l u s
pbce fo r ll1 e an,1 the other wo man
in my b mil y. My mother :md I hall
to fi gh t to esca pe the cycl es o f
ge ne rati o na I ,Iom l'stic v io kn cc,
pove rt y, lack of e·duGlti o n , and
a k o holis m.
And in my life my Illother has

filled me with dos and do n' ts tr yi ng
tu keer me from repeating her liic
ami return ing to those cycles. I haw
o nly ha lf understood what she h<ls
sa id becausc I am rel ying o n the
memo rics of sur viving as a child in
that environment. It has taken a lo ng
time but my mothe r's stories, h<:! r
stories as a woman the same age I
am now, are just being told and thcy
are the most valuable thing she has
ever given me. I can I"ok at my mom
Hnd say that I finall y understand how
much strength it has taken for her to
live and how much courage it took to
acm mplish what she has.
I am build ing o n everything
t hat my mother worked so hard tilT.
If she wouldn 't have told mc her
hi story and her stories I wnuld havc
h.(d n(l reference poin t tll begin with .
TherL' is strength in t he hi story ,,(
the pCllple who have: Cllille hd~' Tl' me
an,1t he people \Vh(I h,we COIlle: bd~'r,'
a II of us. In that s pi rit I celebrate
Womcn's Hi story M(l nth and th e'
hi stllry of ;111 of the penpk whus,'
swrie:s have go ne: untllkL
Na()llic Ca rtwright

Why Women's History?
Wumen's Hi stur y Munt h . Why'
It's sim p!.: . A lthough h isto ry, li ke: ;l ny schola rl y pu rsui t
should he im pa rti al save fu r the t:1Cts, it is not. The :1(Cl1ll1pli ,h ment ' of all sho uld be see n ,lIlel fnllgn ized by all , hllT it is nllt,
Hi stor y is neit her ge nLlcr-neut r,l l or w lo r-bli n,l, <lIlLI w h e r e\'t~ r 111
t he wu rld you live, it' s nu r nearl y as ni ce to other na ti uns . Htl m:1I1
natu re bei ng wlut it is , t hese biases wi ll pro hahly alwa ys b ... wit h
LI S. Then: wi ll always be those whll wil l seck to rell'r ite hi story w
fit their belief syste m or age nLla, t he new C l1 ngres s :\I1 ,1 t hL'
C hri stian Ri ght be in g pa infully g"Ud l' xa lll pks hne at Illl III l' .
Fort unately fo r us, there will a lsn a lways he t hllse wh"
oppose, con t ru nt and decry t h me whu wo uld sti lly Ll llT he ri tage
with bias and ignorance. Wo men's Histo r y Mllnrh is just lIm'
exam ple o f t h is positi ve eJt(lrt to insure t hat there lI'ill .dways bc
room at t he table of h istor y for a ll of us_
If we as a species eve r do outgrow ou r t~lll i i s hne: ss in reco relkeepi ng, it will be beca use effo rts li ke t hi s.
Joh n Ford
Coord inator TESC Men's Ce nter

THE CooPER POINT JOURNAL MARCH

9, 1995 PAGE 5

C15

shall make no law respecting an establishme1it of religion.
e
0
l~i'
. f the press;
or
o
19
'ee m m
s e
0 '
.
o he r(
tli pe
a t assemble,
and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

fh):'a

The Evergreen Social Contract

. Constitution of the State of Washington

Members of the community ·must exercise the rights accorded them .to voice their

Article 1 § 5 FREEDOM OF SPEECH

opinions with respect to basic matters of policy and other issues. The Evergreen

Every person may freely speak, write and publish on all

community wi/{ support the right of its members, indivi(lually or in groups, to express

~u!Jjects,

ideas, judgements, and opinions in speech or writings.
y ...." ••• _ . " •• ~' .... n

....

• •• '"

...... . ... , ...... _

being responsible for the abuse of that right.

Community supported farms
recreate the farmer-consumer bond I S/ighty West ~dit.ors
Evergreen media

I

I defend publication

b Ethan Es ie
deliver directly to individual homes.
.
y
P
The contents of the box vary from week to week, !
. .
COlltribLitillg Writer
depending on what foods are being harvested at the time. This
by Brian Nadal and Ethan Salter
A few farms around Thurston County have enacted a very helps the food consumer (or, in this case, the member) get more 1 Slightly West Editors
progressive wa>' of marketing produce to their local acquainted with what foods are grown and harvested in their
consumers-the Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) region during which parts of the growing season. This in turn
As of the publication of the fall issue of Slightly West.
method. CSA farms, of which there are five in our local vicinity. leads to a heightened awareness of the inconsistent nature of
we
have
received a number of complaints regarding the
are currently looking for households to buy shares in their farms the harvesting of food . Many of us often forget how much we
fact
that
the percentage of Evergreen students published
for the coming growing season.
rely on mass transportation to keep supermarkets, and even
in
the
magazine
this year is far lower than it has been in ,
For a lump sum of money contributed to the farm in the smaller stores such as food cooperatives. stocked year-round
previous
years.
Many
in the college community complain I
springtime, a household can receive a large box offresh, organic, with such a diverse variety of produce.
that
it
is
unjust.
Slightly
West is a college magazine and !
locally grown food every week
...
Recent decades have
therefore
should
be
a
forum
solely for the students of the
during the summer growing
...
seen the industrialization of
college.
season. In addition to vegetables
Local (SA's:
agriculture
and
the
As is always the case, the issue is not that simple.
fruits and herbs, most offer
consolidation of farmland into
Our
goal
as editors of Slightly West is to make the
Common Ground
866--9527
the hands of bigger and bigger i
bouquets of f10wers as well,
magazine
the best it can possibly be. Thus we have
during certain parts of the season.
Helsing Junction Farm
273-8557
corporations. This has had
adopted
a
policy
which allows anyone to submit to the
The shares sold by Th urston
Independence Valley Farm
273-5882
drastic consequences for small
magazine.
Since
the adoption of this policy we have
County's five CSA farms range in
9th Heaven Herbs &Vegetables 493-1107
farmers, who have a hard time
received hundreds of national submissions, while still
price from $300 to $500. Two of
Rising River Farm
273-5368
competing with the lower prices
continuing to receive only a small number of student
them-Independence Valley
offered by large farms. When a
submissions. Our sole concern as editors of the school's
small farm becomes a CSA and
Farm and Common Groundalso offer a half-share option. with
sells shares to local consumers ; literary magazine is to insure that it is of the highest quality
possible. This does make it harder for a large number of
which you get roughly half the regular amount of produce. at the start of the growing season, it gains enough capital to
Evergreen students to have their work published. It does,
Common Ground. located in the west side of Olympia's , is the reduce its reliance on loans from banks. The interest paid on
however, make being published a great deal more
closest CSA farm to the Evergreen campus.
loans can be very damaging to small farms, as it is to any small
meaningful for those students who appear in the
CSA prices are usually roughly equivalent to wholesale business endeavor.
magazine. We believe that the writers at Evergreen are
Essentially, CSAs are aimed at recreating the ancient and
produce prices. Rising River Farm estimates that, for the $425
capable
of competing with other writers on a national
they charge for 24 weeks. a household of four ends up paying vital bond between farmers and the people who rely on them
level.
Our
job is to provide them with a forum worthy ;
less than $4.50 per person per week. for a sumptuous amount for food. Anyone staying in Thurston County during the
enough
to
publish
their work in.
of produce.
summertime should strongly consider this progressive method
As
editors
we
are trying to make Slightly West more
For those who can't afford to pay the whole sum in 'the of purchasing food.
than
another
literary
rag. We are trying to produce a
spring. all five offer staggered payment plans. They also accept
For further information regarding the types of vegetables
magazine
which
will
win
acclaim for both the school and
food stamps. Most of these farms have two or three designated available, the share-selling logistics, prices, and other aspects
the
writers
of
this
school
on a local. state, and hopefully
pick-up locations in Olympia for members to receive their of how these farms tick. brochures for all five are usually
level.
national
weekly box. In addition, Helsing Junction Farm has pick-up available at the Olympia Food Coop. In case the brochures are
Yes, there are writers with no affiliation with the
locations as far away as Tacoma and Seattle. On the other hand. absent at the time, one can also call the farms , to have a brochure
school
published in the magazine. This is not uncommon
Ninth Heaven Herbs & Vegetables. located in east Olympia. will mailed.
in a college literary magazine. It is, in fact, accepted
practice. It is called the literary world because the entire
I
world is able to participate in it. Literature is not an
exclusive college club. By only publishing Evergreen
writers the magazine would lose a great diversity ofvoices
, and becomes a forum for the few who attend the school.
In short, without a great diversity of voices the magazine
becomes stagnate. With stagnation comes mediocrity.
scientists will present lectures and computer delIlonstrations
by Nalini Nadkarni
Protest is an Evergreen tradition. Yet, it is not what
----_._- - of potential tools that might be used to solve these problems.
is called for now. Instead of complaining that the
TESC Facufry
The following day will be used to work (and play!) with real
standards of the magazine are too high, Evergreen writers
In the last decade, the upper canopy offorest ecosystems canopy data sets in small groups to see what works and what
need to pick up their pens and start creating new and vital
has attracted growing interest from forest biologists , 'does not. The final day is a field trip to view site ofa major forest
work which we will gladly publish. There needs to be less
environmental scientists, resource managers, and the general canopy research facility, the Wind River Canopy Crane Facility
complaining and more creating. There is non reason why
public. Recently, canopy scientists have developed creative at the Gifford Pinchot National Forest. There, participants will
the writers at our school can not write poetry and prose
metlhlJs to gain safe and ready access to the forest canopy, e.g., write up results. make recommendations for fruitful avenues i capable of standing side by side to the prose and poetry
to pursue, and lay the groundwork for the writing of a major i created in our nation. It i.s indeed a challenge, a call to
mow1tain·climbing techniques, hot air balloons, giant construction cranes.
Their research suggests that forest canopy communities grant proposal to the National Science Foundation.
strive beyond the bounds of the average. The literary
Expected workshop outcomes include: identification of
are crucial in maintaining the diversity and resiliency offorest
community at Evergreen has the potential to either
ecosystems. However, few methods exist for studying the potential analysis tools, software, and other data sources; a draft
stagnate or strive. We the editors of Slightly West are
underlying structure in a rigorous or standardized way offorest information model; exploration of common procedures for data
asking the community to strive. We hope you will rise to
canopies. With the growing interest in the canopy from new collection and exchange, and identification of development
the challenge.
ways of climbing into trees , forest ecologists need to deal with: tasks and research questions, We foresee that a major grant
1) new types of data. 2) much more data and 3) the need to proposal to implement the ffr!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ffi
potential solutions will grow
share data among researchers with different questions.
In 1993, an interdisciplinary team was awarded a grant from this workshop.
Members of the
from the National Science Foundation to collect ideas.
approaches, and software on managing and processing three- Evergreen community have
dimensional data that relate to tree crowns and forest canopies. contributed greatly to the
As part of that process, two members of the team (TESC faculty facilitation of this conference,
members Nalini Nadkarni and Judy Cushing) have brought including the Computer
together an interdisciplinary groupofforest canopy researchers. Applications Lab, the
comp uter scientists, database experts. and statisticians to Academic Computing Center,
Conference Services, and
discllss these questions and potential solutions face to face .
TUESDAY NIGHT
Nadkarni and Cushing will convene an international Media Services. Several
workshop at The Evergreen State College from March 15-18. faculty members (Jovanna
BLUES JAM
1995 to design the contents of the "computer toolbox" offorest Brown and Thad Curtz) and
8pm. Can you play the
canopy scientists in the 21st century. This workshop is the students from TESC and the
blues? Com~ in, sign up
linchpin in learning how to process tree crown and forest canopy University of Washington will
and jam with the house
spatial data to visualize and analyze such information at a variety serve as "scribes" to record
band, it's time for
the sessions. We welcome all
of spatia l scales.
The workshop will take place in and around the Computer students, faculty, and staff to
at the 4th Ave."
App lications Laboratory (CAL). On March 16, introductory walk through the CAL and
Remember: On other more mellow evenings, 4th Ave Tavern is
lectures and presentations of case studies of the issues and surrounding areas during the
questions that forest canopy scientists face will be presented. conference to view the posters
a great place to study while eating pi:z:za and sipping beers.
This will be followed by an informal poster session in the hall of and get a view of the cutting
Microbrews, imports and domestics on draught.
Lab II near the CAL to give all participants an understanding of edge of this exciting field .
786-1444· ·2.10 E. 4tb Ave.
the problems that need solving. That afternoon , the computer

i

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I
I

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Evergreen hosts interdi$ciplinary
workshop on forest canopy science

. ilMM*i!W!J

9, 1995

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

th re
0
r
.
;
.
pee e
,
and to petition the go nment for a redress of grievances.
r

• Forum

Nomy finally gets her due Death row prisoner Mumia
Abu-Jamal needs your help

[feel I have been silent for too long about
how much I appreciate Nomy Lamm's column.
Since I first read her zine I have enjoyed her
writing style, which I find not only accessible
and clear, but downright beautiful in its lack
of pretension and fa lse objectivity.
Although I don't know Ms. Lamm
personally, I feel a strong sense of identification
with her. This sense of identification has come

about only because of her writing and the
honesty with which she struggles with issues
which are dangerous to explore on this
campus. I applaud her as a brave and literary
woman, and I hope she continues to write and
publish in the highly individua listic, highly
developed voice with which she has emerged.
Sincerely and Respectfully.

Vrrginia Lore

Are 1994 voters evil, Jane?
Jane Jervis says that the new legislators
were elected by "we the people" because the
left and the middle didn't vote and she quoted
an old saying that says, "the only thing
necessary for evil to triumph is for the good
to do nothing." (CPl. March 2,1995) So the
triumphant voters of 1994 represent evil, Ms.
President? The left and middle are good and
the 1994 voters are evil? The bumpkins always
suspected TESC held them in contempt. Now,

the rubes have the audacity to elect difficult
legislators. Let the truth rip.
Atta girl Jane. Let the simpletons have
both barrels. They need you more than you
need them ... or do they? Oh well. KVI listeners
will understand.
They wouldn't dare come up with an
initiative to turn TESC into a half way house
for monocultural academics ... or would they?

J.T. Quigg

IIStop working for the man and
start working for,your Mother"

I

PAGE 6 MARCH

la~w
res~ecti~~tll~;
est~bH~Shme:J~
~f r~i!I~iO~

•• ___ <-...... ~,...,,"'.... """' •• • "' ....... "' ..... ........ .

\

.&

Congress ShRall makee no

by Mark DesMarets

Contributor

This letter is to denounce and respond to
an idiotic offer suggested by an Evergreen student named Burt Culver. The offer was stapled
to the AT&T credi~ card application brochure
dispensers around campus: "I will donate $.25
to Earth First! for every filled out application
sent in whether it gets approved or not. Imagine, AT&T giving money to EF! - Burt Culver,
Evergreen Studen t."
Fuck you Burt! Am! fuck AT&T and aU the
other huge multinational corporations that
plunder this beautiful earth for power and
profits! I couldn't think of a more ludicrous
attempt to suck people into the toilet bowl of
capitalist greed and consumerism.

If you actually supported Earth First! (or
know anything about the EF! movement) you
could see how ridiculous your "offer" is. Corporations are one of the main causes of the
destruction of this earth that you see around
you every day l'nd they need to be destroyed
not supported! Obviously getting one of their
wage slave buy now and pay and pay and pay
later credit cards is in diametric opposition to
the goals of Earth First!
I suggest that anyone wanting to support
Earth First! should first cut themselves offfrom
supporting any business that had as its #1 objective the making of money. Money
=power=domination=the destruction of critters, forests, families, communities, rivers, soil,
etc ... And I suggest to you, Burt, stop working
for the man and start working for your Mother.

by Beth Brown

EPIC Coordinator

I went to jail once. For jaywalking. Or
maybe it was because I'm one of those folks
who can't take "because we said so" for an
answer. I was only in the holding cell for two
hours but it was long enough to make me
appreciate the dark and cloudy sky when I was
released. And after experiencing the way the
power-trippers at the Thurston County
Jailhouse covered the little window in the cell
door to keep me from communicating through
gesticulations with the brothers in the cell
across from mine, I appreciated the fact that I
have enough freedom to contact those I
wouldn't want to be in contact with. But when
the exhilaration offinally (after only two hours)
breathing fresh air again wore off, my heart
sank to think about the fact that if a simple.
meaningless act of resistance to the "what we
say goes" mentality can land me in jail, then
what happens if I decide to resist on a larger
scale? And what if my act of resistance is not
merely to dety or ignore an absurd law, but is
counter to the interests ofthis system. such as,
say, the act of spreading truthful information
to a public that has been so drastically and
deliberately misinformed?
What might happen? Well, Mumia AbuJamal, the nation's only political prisoner on
death row (according to Amnesty
International's definition of a political
prisoner) is a good example of what can and
does happen to those who resist by spreading
the truth. N~ver mind the fact that Mumia
Abu-Jamal is on lock-down for 23 hours a day
in a cage too small for even a large dog. Never
mind that he remains shackled with his hands
chained to his waist while he sits behind a
plate-glass window for the non-contact visits
he is now only allowed to have with certified
lawyers and immediate family. And never
mind the fact that he has been thrown into 'the
hole' numerous times for refusing to cut his
hair which he wears in long dreadlocks as a part
of his spiritual beliefs. Never mind these things
for now and understand why he was
imprisoned in the first place and why
Pennsylvania Governor Tom Ridge is in such a
hurry to legally murder him.
Absurd as it may sound, Mumia Abu-

Jamal is never allowed to see sunny or cloudy
skies solely because of the fact that he believes
in truth . And the President of the National
Association of Black Journalists, he was a wellknown and respected man who had access to a
public who listened when he commented on
and wrote about public housing, welfare,
prison conditions and other issues that affect
us all as citizens of the United States. But when
he exposed little-known truths about MOVE,
a radical organization that was the subject of
constant persecution by the Philadelphia
Police Department and other forces behind our
legal system. an organization whom the
mainstream media deliberately portrayed as a
hostile and violent cult of savages who
preached 'kill whitey' (sound familiar?
remember the American Indian Movement?
the Black Panther Party?). Mumia suddenly
found himself unable to find steady work in
journalism. His beliefin truth was too radical ,
not in the interest of this system of deliberate
misinformation.
In 1981, Mumia was framed for the
murder of a po lice officer and was
subsequently sentenced to death, despite the
facts that all evidence pointed to his innocence
and that nearly everyone of his constitutional
rights was violated during the trial.
And so Mumia Abu-Jamal sits isolated
and skyless in a cage while those who make the
laws we are supposed to live by (no questions
asked) prepare to murder him legally. The only
way he can be saved is through massive and
immediate public pressure. Remember that if
it is legal to persecute. frame. convict and
murder a person who is guilty only of believing
in truth, then your rights, and those of your
family and friends are at stake, too.
Send letters of protest against the unjust
murder of Mumia Abu-Jamal to:
Gov. Tom Ridge
Main Capital Building, Rm . 225
Harrisburg. Pennsylvania 17120
or call: (717)783-1198
To get involved with the Free Mumia
Campaign or for more information on his case.
call E.P.I.C. at x6144 and/or join us and the
NSA for an evening of film, updates and
. lectures on three U.S. political prisonersMark Cook. Leonard Peltier and Mumia AbuJamal. Thursday March 9, in L H 5 at 7pm.

"

The Cooper Point Journal is
directed. staffed, written, edited
and distributed by the students
enrolled at The Evergreen State
College, who are solely
responsbile and liable for the
production and content of the
newspaper. No agent of the
college may infringe upon the
press freedom of the Cooper Point
Journal or its student staff.
Evergreen's members live
under a special set of rights and
responsibilities, foremost among
which is that of enjoying the
freedom to explore ideas and to
discuss their explorations in both
speech and print Both institutional and individual censorship
are or variance with this basic
freedom
Submissions are due Monday
at Noon prior to publicarion, and
are prefarably reeieved on 3.5'
diskette in eirher WordPerfect or
Microsoft Word formats. E-mail
submissions are now also
acceptable.
All submissions must have
the author's real name and valid
telephone number.

Volunteer
Comics Page Editor: Brian Zastoupil
News Briefs Editor: Dawn Hanson
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Copy Editor/Typist:Laurel Rosen
Business
Business Manager: Graham White
As..qsrant Business M:mager: Kate Wray
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Circulation Manager: Melanie Strong
Distribution Manager: Catlin McCracken
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Dianne Conrad

Wear Green, Pinch a Friend,
and !tun 10 Gel Your

SAINT,
PATIlICI('S

DAY

Supplies allhe 'Bookslore

HAVE A SAFE

SPItING
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HAPPY 'BIIlTHDA Y 'BETHANY

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL MARCH

9, 1994 PAGE 7

Priscilla it's no drag, man
Hammerhands offers careful

examination and dark humor
by Pac Cistaldo
"But they just sa id fuck on TV,"
exclaims Hillary Markowitz, who plays the
daughter of a slightly different American
familv in the three·act brain child of
Everg~een senior Adrian Woods.
Ilal7lmerhandsis Woods' senior thesis,
on stage March 9·11 at 8 pm in COM 209,
and features a bevy of talented actors. All
performances are free.
Those unfamiliar with COM 209 will
not be ab le to appreciate the
impl ementation of stage design.
Woods' usC' or the room provides for a
tight fit; allowing the audience to feel
inside of th e performance space, as if
they were feeling th e warmth of a
living room armchair and not the hard
of a classroom seat.
Ben l'\ewma n constructed a
light ing grid which illuminates the
charac ters In proper si t·com tradition.
l\ lonologues and stark audience·direct
realizations are captured with a near
satan ic·red glow.
Not Sight , but sound proves
crucial to the play. An excellent piece
of audio engineering provides for th e
television set, complete with I-Iammerhands,
the make·believe television program full of
Amer ica n patriotism, and sn ippets from
everyone's favorite neighbor, Mr. Rogers.
Ruby Berdine and Steve Barrett play
mom and pop, respectivel y, to
Hammerhand' s family of five: mom , dad,
son, daughter and dog. The two do a good
job at portraying figures who are, at the sam'e
tim e, simple and complex.
Berdine is perfect as a mother accused
of having an affair with the dog-who is, of
course, a human.

The family squabbles over Arthur
Miller references, Seventh Day Adventists
and popcorn, The play carefully examines,
while maintaining a certain level of dark
humor, the role of the mother in a household
and television in people's lives.
Capitalism and confusion isn't a core
program, but two ingredients of this fine
senior project. The play ends with something
that just isn't what most people expect from
Ame rica 's nexl favorite family.
Pat once wrote a play and won a
hundred bucks for it. Ask him about it.

There's a strange
film coming to your
video store April 4,
and you'll either love
it, hate it or not know
what to think of it.
The film, Priscilla, Queen of the Desert is an Australian
comedy about two drag queens and a
transgender travelling the Outback in a rickety bus, the bus' name being the film's title,
courtesy
PolyGram
Starring Terrance Stamp (Superman
HomeVideo
I&II), Priscilla is at its worst moments
© 1995
misogynistic and racist. At its best, which is
more often than not, it is a story of
L...._ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _- , friendship and love, albeit to a (in this
writer's opinion) particularly vile disco beat.
The film does well exemplifying th e
A little family bonding in
necessity oflaughing at one's self, as well as
the pain of being laughed at. Often as subtle
as a train wreck, Priscilla delivers an
interesting and strange journey with three
They are (from
interesting and strange people,
left to right)
So, it's simple folks , if three guys
Honey
dressed in drag lip-synching (bleah!) disco
(H illary
across the desert of Oz doesn 't float your
Markowitz),
boat, skip Priscilla. ButSon
If you like a warm film about friends
(Chris Stephan)
, with decidedly zany overtones, by all mea ns,
and Mom
rent Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.
(Ruby Berdine)
I do agree with Mr. Stamp, though,
Photo by
when I say, "NO MORE ABBA!"
Pat Castaldo
John Ford takes his cinema

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a pack animal. being forced into labor day
after dllY by an unfeeling husband, She leaves
him and gets married to someone that she
believed truly loves her, only to find that he
wants her only so she can used as an
accessory.
The third marriage is to Tea Cake, a far
younger man, that gives Janie the love and
appreciation that she had been looking years
for. It is when Janie is with Tea Cake that she
is happiest and feels that she has found her
dreams.
Now I know that this sounds rather
simplistic, and that you think that this is
some "racy romance novel" (as it was once
called by a reviewer of that time), but that's
all wrong. You see, throughout this novel
Janie is continuing to find her strength and
her voice. She does not find sorrow or finds
pity in her situation, only the power to
continue on to pursue her elusive happiness.
Dawn is quite a nice person.

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9, 1995

Their Eyes Were Watching God.
by lora Neale Hurston

.

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still is

Cfiarming 1910
Mans ion
OverfooKjng tfie
Puget Souna
& tfu O{ympic
Moun tains,

CARPOOL

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Ensuring the future
for those who shape it ....

5 13 CAPITOL WAY
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON

PAGE 8 THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL MARCH

1"( E T IRE ,\\ I·: \: T

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or fast· relief from the n aggi ng ache of taxes,
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painful your tax bill is every year.

"Life's too short to drink bad coffee. "
-Dick Batdorf

I could very well begin this review out
by telling all of you how much this book,
Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora
Neale Hurston, changed my life or
something along those lines, But r thought
that that wasn't what you probably wanted
to hear about. After all, how this book caused
me to reevaluate my thinking as a woman has
very little to do with what this book could
potentially do for you,
Instead, r will tell you a little about the
book and maybe some other stuff that may
or may not have to do with Their Eyes .
Their Eyes is the story of Janie
Crawford, an African-American woman in
the South during the turn·of-the-century_ It
follows Janie as she struggles through two
marriages and eventually finds happiness
through a third.
In her first two marriages, she struggles
to cope with the fact that she is not treated
as person and is not respected, In the first,
an arranged marriage, she is treated more as

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BROTHERS
Bagel Bakery A
Sandwi~h Shop
We 're baking your bagels right
now with honey, No Sllgar
We're in Capital Village between
Ernst and Payless
on Cooper Pt. Rd.
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Come see us:
Mon through Fri· 7 to ';
Sat· 8 to 6
Sun· 8 to 5

for a bagel - for a
. sandwich - for a dozen
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL MARCH

9, 1995

PAGE 9

3J7@6 pm -

works

Graduatl student. present tIeIr

on Issues ranging tom the mmmI

gered Species Act to the Human Genome
ProIect, willi geographic areas of Intarest
ranging from BrazIl to . . PacIfic IIorthwest.
Admission Is tree In LH2, sponsored I¥ the
"Population, Energy & RiIsow'ces" program.

3I11®naoa - GeoCon III wiD ........ a hie
preview of gaming, ...... IIIId dIncIIIg. A
dance will toIIow at 8 pm ......... Me _
laud and DJ SpIIbubbIe. T1IeI8 ...... ...
f .... In lie
BuIldIng, spGIIIOI"8d IIJ
"yourIOlJ,j'5njGamlng GuIId."

'=

l.tMH9:0i I
3113 - Frenc:tGDdeported to lie Greenery,

l'U"iN:ull
3I19@7:30 pm - MIIIIcIaas tom the CIpIbII
Area lDuIIt SympIIonr IaocIatIOn wiD be
perf....... chHIber -.able ...u Wlder III! dIrecUoa or MIcMeI Lobberget at lie
United
The ....... Is
....., bill dIutIias Ire accepIId. The UnIted
£IucMs of 0IyIIIpIa Is located at 1111 and
ClpIIDI . . , In downtown Olympia.

MARCH 9TH

MARCH 24th

3I9@6 pm - Graduate
works on issues
gered Species Act to

P"'ject,~W~~IUtIJ:==~

ranging .....'" ~i.U.II.I:&:.U

Admission I. tree In

"Population, Energy &

P.ece"t~

SPECIAL ORDERS WELCOME

I

--------

I
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OLYMPIA'S BEST
SELECTION OF FOREIGN FILMS
2 FOR If
RENT 1 MOVIE-GET 1 FREE
(with this ad) ,

I

Expires March 22, 1995

formation and upclatll!li

3115 -TwbrT,,"~I~mm_
In the Greenery.

Mark Cook Ind
currently Imllri~nlll!lII
what many feel ......I'I'I'!'II"I
event Is tree In LH5
NSA.

c.JOr'tls

In the Greenery.

J,Q,5 co",,~
Q.te

to troy ",tt."tjo/,\
pc>ople T~Qt o.~ not

AW"~ o~ t"/! J.nSl!rs 0; .,Ioe enJri.s~
1~"3k4je. He,-< we I, ....e "5'~ 0.. PQ,," o~

ARCH 29-3

t~4-t

R«",e",,'.,.

oIeriWjj(.[fion all

I
I

]:-t

Tho.'t riierQ

sh0<4/J !!!!!!' be conr.4.seJ..

"to

o.l4Jo.ys

IAJe

th«",

''''''tio....rl t

Dli Smart IIWII'IIIMJSS

car at home and mm-

3117 - EncIIIIIacl~

MARCH 18!

I

re;=r:

....·...1:. will focus

I

3I18@10IM 7
and

---------

. ..

III

he ....... IpcIIIIOI"IId br
Contlct Michael
.-llons at x&895.

Martlas Pav.IIOIL <;.. .,..'.... II
p"'f~ja support Uon comnaunlt, sei'1r1ce
proJeCts In aad arouad DIJmpIa.
~~~~

WESTSIDE CENTER
DIVISION & HARRISON

system, the work
Location to be an-

'"

MElHI.ous, wlll'Jje heIIl

357-4755

on

original tbeatre, perII1II dance pieces of

be peIIormed at . .
this enning. The

This is CPJ

Classifieds

specify

a time.

information

CfP£.1L,

Help Wanted

(~I,",. ~LO

f\¥£ NC5f!

FASTFUN~Ue
the $500'
Y
Organiniza .

mdivid-ea.,dubs. moti

iffENOr!

pSt

ted

financial o '

.

(800)

Dear Mom,

775-3851 e

3/10 - Baled chiclr8n
In the Greenery.

like

ChicqoPro.
ow (1.06)
713-6017 to redeve free
Blues Harp sample tape and

Lost a

((~

Blaek~r

daypla~nn/book in

Friday

on
5.

Pleue caU N

J office

Downtown

3/10@8 pm -

with.

Pilaf found

1Wo contemporary Hawaiian

musicians, Brother Nollnd Ind Tond,
ConJugcIon will be pedormlng In Ubrary
4300. Thl. event Is spon.ored by The
long house Educational and CUIIuraI Center.
NSA, MeCHA, Women of ~ UMOJl and
Rrst Peoples' IdvIIIng ServIces

fllmnlaldRg InIIcII of . . DIJIIIpIa Rim S0ciety, II ............. a free presentation of
DIy........ fII-. the Rim Ranch . . . JIIU
to .1IIIImII ; ; : IMII'k. lids __ Is ....med
'iitfjfl,~@n5Ifmlnd wi. be II...... by
• training
explosion. 11ds ..... will be
held at .. MIdnIght Sun OR ColumbIa IInIet.

fin.

DEPRESSION wiD be at
the Capltal11luler 1ackst..... ,@ijiW
going to Europe and IINIJ ..... come back. CCIme and
show them that JIIU ... them. $5 (duh).

emi"m..Jti',!.,l.i81118y',.
411@1pm -

WlIdJI:ts, origInallheatre, per-

formance art, poeIry and dance pieces of
15 mIRuIes or less wli be p81formed at . .

I1lIiIfIlttllI1 sometime this wenlag. The
preIS

Wanted
Join the De Mo Fan
Club. Send a etter of intent
to uh, Dear
to Our SUrVmd:-~n
Olympia. WA 985

3/11@8 pm - Student cnaIIJd and directed
Hammertaands
oc:aII' In COM 209. 11I1s
eventll[DD- IIey all woriuld really bani
so JIIU shGuId ..... JllUr support.

Garnes • MclfJ " • f"

,~h: '

U\qO

r

'-'~~ e"'I"'~ .
~-"l:!'

c",..eE

COULl>

\..\.-:L

cttU""P _ 'IOU 'SING-.
\!!f: .. 1'Iri-I .....1> &OOI>!

Open Daily • Open Late

a



Fri & Sat til 9

I had this weird dream the other
night. In it, I was talking to
these three guys, and the 1st
guy says , "jonathan, take me to
mr own private Idaho." Then the
2nd guy chimed in, "take me to
my own privateNew York." Then
J
the 3rd guy, a real evil looking
circus ringleader said: "No, take
me to my own private Poland,~ and
drew back the air like a curtain
to reveal a surreal urban nightmare.

Zoe & Karl are now living
some kind of "bohemian" lifestyle next to the 4th ave. ta

0

Ane I saw Phan on Tv in
Pittsbu~gh. I think .
Do you think all of this is
somehow related?
love,
jonathan

Cl

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(eLLera..i-o(' orerafors;

·'CC@o

IMPOR TS FROM
AROUND THE WORLD.

\5.I00Kc:1

M-Th til

Speaking of Darby, s he
says her band might break
up because everyone likes
it too much.

foy e)( - pa..'rtrc:le- ae-

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We're the largest
Used Bookstore in town.

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9, 1995

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at 866-6000~13

PAGE 10 MARCH

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fl,lrrtJ8'1 at..

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Dear Mom by Demian A. Parker
no

Lessons ,.-_-,

~st

o~ ...

Your Grateful Dead and
Ph ish Headqual't~l's

"'Bear one another s 6urrfens, and so
fulfill the Law of efirlst."
-(jafatians 6:2

c/l

gCu - rK1 J

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9 LIJ.. - offi?I

Intere.tln,g. ImagInati ve and Beautiful
Clothing. GIrt. f'rom IndIa. Indone"la.
Cent ....1 and iklU th Amerlc:a.

202 W. 4th Avenue
OlympIa. WA 98501

357'7004

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL MARCH

9, 1995 PAGE 11
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