The Cooper Point Journal Volume 13, Issue 17 (February 28, 1985)

Item

Identifier
cpj0355
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 13, Issue 17 (February 28, 1985)
Date
28 February 1985
extracted text
Pag~

8

F~bruary

21, 1985
Vol. No. 13

Note to all Calendar advertisers:
We can't print your event or announcement if we don't know
about it. If you just want us to
know about it, drop off a written announcement anytime. If
yo u want the rest of the campus
to know about it, too, you need
to deliver an announcement to
the CP J office before our Calendar deadline: noon on Monday .
While you'Te at it, keep in mind
our format-owe need a date, time,
location, cost (if any), and short
description of each event .

TONIGHT
"Koyaanisqatsi"
7 and 9:30 p,m ., Lecture Hall I.
$1.50,
"Godfrey Reggio's stunning portrait or modern man's war
against his world," Co-sponsored
by the Environmental Resource
Ce nter and ThuTsday Night
Films,
"Don't Bother Me, I Can't
Cope"
8 p,m" Library Lobby , Free,
The Paul Robeson Community
Theater Group pTesents this
Micki Grant musical, sponsored
by Ujamaa in celebration of
Black
History
Month,
Westside Neighborhood Association Meeting
.
7-9:30 p ,m " Jefferson Middle
School' Cafeteria,
All interested West Olympia
residents are invited to attend this
meeti ng to help react ivate the
WNA, Questions? Call 352-7013 .
Dorian Group Meeting
7 p,m. dinner, 8 p,m, meeting;
Fi reside Inn, 7321 Martin Way,
Lacey,
The guest speaker will be Kay
Boyd, a member of Lacey's city
council. For information, call
456-6650,
Bible Discussion Group
6 p,m " every Thurs day, ASH
136, Free to everyone, "searcht;rs
welcomed, "

For more information, caJl Pat,
943-7359, or or Cliff, 866-1400.

Friday
Pledge Of Resistance
Noon, Capitol Steps,
A public signing raJly for the
Olympia Pledge of Resistance to
U.S, intervention in Central
America. There will be short
speeches by SenatoT Mike
Kreidler and other legislators,
music by Citizen's Band, and all
participants will have a chance to
say a few words on why they are
signing, For information, call
754-4085,
Folk Dance Party
8 p,m .-midnight, CRe. $1.
One of Seattle's finest Balkan
bands, DobaT Dan Tamburitza
Orchestra, will be featured in this
event sponsored by the Evergreen
State College Folk Dance Club,
Beginners are welcome; many
dances will be taught.
Eppo Live

9 p,m-" also Saturday night at 9,
Rainbow Restaurant , 4th and
Columbia, No cover charge,
Eppo perfoTms bluegrass, country, and swing music on guitar
and mandolin,

Saturday
Images From Under The Cloud
7 p,m" Lecture Hall 5. Free,
donations accepted, Childcare
provided,
A multi-media show concerning
problems and so lutions in the
nuclear age, Sponsored by InneTplace and the Peace and Conflict Resolution Center.

Monday
"Track Two"
7:30 p.m. , LectuTe Hall I. Also
presented tomorrow at noon in
CAB 110. Free admission; free
. childcare Monday in Lib 3221,
" ... The best film documentary
yet made abouCwnat it means to
be Gay in North America," CosponsoTed by the L/ GRe.
Wallyball
7-9 p.m" CRC Racquetball
COUTts I and 2,
Women In Science
12-1 p ,m" Lib 3216,
Women from any academic area
are welcome to share thoughts
and ideas about sexism in
education,

Tuesday
Lesbian Support/Rap Group
7-9 p,m., Lib 3223.
Sponsored by the TESC Lesbian/Ga y Resource Center. FOT
information , call 866-6000, ext.
6544 ,
Meditation and Discussion
Noon, Lib :l225,
A time to quietly center yourself,
then explore with others your
spiTitual questions, Sponsored by
Innerplace.
Men's Support Group
Evening, check at the Men's
Center, Lib 3227, for the specific
time and place, This group meets
weekly in members' homes,

Sunday

"Oneness of Religion"
7p ,m ., ASH 141 ,
An informal discussion sponsored by the Evergreen Baha'i
Association, For information,
call Stephan Dimitroff, 866:9069,

The Way Of Tantm
10 a_m,-5 p ,m" Organic Farm,
$2 donation requested,
The Ananda Marga Society
presents a Hatha, Raja, and Tantra yoga wor,kshop, slide show,

Wallyball Again
7- 9 p,m., CRC Racquetball
Court I,
,
For those who couldn't make It
on Monday night.

Pickleball
Noon-I p.m., first floor Library
lobby.
Learn a cTeated-in-Washington
sport!
Self-Evaluation Wor'kshop
3:30-4:3Op,m., Lib 2205. Also offered Thursday noon-I p.m.
A discussion and examples . of
faculty expectations, styles,
forms, and content. Contact
Academic Advising for details,

Wednesday

Art Galleries

Academic Advising Help
10:30-noon, CAB 108,
SeveraJ faculty will be on hand to
advise students, Updated infoTmation on all 8, 12, and 16
quarter hour progTams for ~pring
are available from AcademiC Advising and the Information
Center.

Evergreen Gallery Two
Evans Library, 2nd floor.
Watercolors by Mariko MarTS
and Haruko Moniz, through
March 10,
Evergreen Gallery Four
Evans Library, Fourth Floor.
Young Harvill: Monotypes, and
Lynda Rockwood: Photograms,
February 23-March 17, Opening
reception February 22, 7-9 p,m.

Musi!!n Cancelled
Tonight's performance by
Musign is cancelled due to a cast
injury, The EvergTeen Expressions series wJlI contmue WIth
Gallantry and The Devil and
Dalliel Webster, starting March
7,

YOU DOWN?
If you are one of the select few
Housing and ASH residents who
knows that the letters K,A,O, and S
don't just stand for the radio station,
pay attention! The second K,A,O,S,
game is being planned for the near
ruture, If you are interested, we need
your help! Should we playa game
now, or wait until next quarter?
Shou ld we charge a small fee ($ ,50
or $1) to go towards a prize, or
should it be free again? If you know
the answers to these questions, or if
you want to sign up for the game,
or even if you just want to know
what in God's name I'm talking

Redeker
Friday & Saturday
Feb. 22nd & 23rd
CoYer

CUr!e at 1M Door

210 E 4th'Ave.

INTERVIEW CO-OP ED EDUCATION
COUNSELOR
CANDIDATES
Students, staff, and faculty are urged to attend the all-campus interviews with three candidates for the
position of Co-operative Educ,ation
Counselor. All interviews WIll be
held in Library 1406,
Fran Williams will be available for
an all-campus inteTview at II a,m ,
on Thursday, February 21; Linda
Hughes, at II a.m., FebTuary 27th;
and Dawn Wood, 12 noon m
Library 14(}6,
All participants are encouraged to
submit their evaluations/opinions to
Karen Block, Co-op Ed, Lab I, by
noon on Thursday, February 28th.

WARRIORS OF THE HEART
TRAINING
OFFERED
FEBRUARY 28 - March I
Danaan Parry, founder of the
Holyearth Foundation, will lead a
two - day workshop Thursday,
February 28 and Friday, MaTch I
from 4 to IO p.m, in CAB 108 ,
"Warriors of The Heart Training" is sponsoTed by the EvergTeen
Counseling Cenler and is designed to
build skills and develop the
awareness to become a positive
change-maker.
The cost for "Warriors of The
Heart Training" is $25 for
Evergreen students and $85 for community members. Pre-Tegistration
fOT the February 28-March I
workshop is required. Call the
Evergreen Counseling Center at

TWO EVERGREEN FACULTY
FILMS AIR ON CABLE
Films by two Evergreen State College faculty members will be
featured on the third Evergreen
HOUT, slated for mUltiple showing
throughout March on Channel 43 of
Cox Cable-TV in Vancouver.
Faculty Member Sally C1oninger'~
film, "Going to My House," w~
filmed in MaJaysia in 1983, and- tS

Februar)' 28, 1985

Childhood's End Gallery
222 W. 4th, 943-3724.
Paintings by Vivian Kendall and
porcelain by Colleen Trousdale,
Through March 5,
Mandarin Glass Gallery
8821 Bridgeport Way S,W"
Tacoma. 582-3355.
"Dimensions In Glass" features
19 artists recognized fOT their
achievements in a variety of glass
media .
,

a man' s race and one hand sp read
across the window appearing to be
Sheri fe' s dcplllies Temoved 21
waving, The ground ., hook as the
demonSITatoTS, induding Evergreen
heavil y armored cars rolled by .
sludenl Heclor Douglas, from the
Many of those who were arresled
tracks in front of a Burlingtongave the ir ar~esting ol'fi<:ers a cop y
Northern train headed into the Tri -~ 01' the sa me leiter the train officia ls
dent submari nc base a! Bangor
received and a loa r o r bread. They
about 5:30 p,m, last Friday, The
were booked at t he prec inct otTice <1 r
demons lratvrs Wt're arresled and
KilSap County, They "'e re released
cha rged with nim inal tresspa ss,
and will be not iried about their
Approximately 300 people had
possible arraignment,
wa ited since noon ror the train
Douglas, a first quarter Evergrecn
bel ieved to be carrying nuclear
st uuent. performed civil di,obewarheads, The theme or their vigil
dienee for the first time . at Ihe
was "Love W ill Stop the Train: AcBangor vigil. He and mOSI of th e
cept Responsibi lity,"
others wcnt through training in SeatProtests and arrests have dogged
tle. guided by 'members of Ihe
the train since it left the PANTEX
Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent
assembly plant in Amarillo, Texas,
Action and the Puget Sound Agape
PANTEX is one of the firms which
Community ,
manufactures nuclear warheads for
The Agape comrlunity is one of
the Navy,
the lllan y communities rormed of
There were arrests in Topeka,
those rcople who live along the
Kansas and Great Falls, Montana.
Iracks. that the train travels on, miIn Washington, four were arrested
tiol1wide , Though Douglas is IHit a
in Spokane, 106 in Vancouver, and
memher of either group he received
four in Centralia in addition to the
civil di s obedience training in
21 at Bangor.
rreparation for the vigil.
It Was dusk as the train approach A major factor in his motivation
ed the west ga le at Bangor. It rumbl in heing on the track s was the copy
ed ominously into view, Peorle
or the Nuremberg obligation he
oegan singing in support of those
orought with hinl on Ihe tracl\s and
vigi lers waiting on the trads, The
., uoniilled as evidencc in hi s defcme.
train storped less than 25 feet from
whm he was arn·qed.
them, A woman rose from I he
SUlllmarizing the ooligalioll. he
track , in front of the train and hand<"rlained. after WWII, UerlllJm
ed a leiter and a loaf o f bread 10 the
wcre tricd for o hc y in g government
train oI'fi<:ia" , The leiter nrlained
nrder:-. alld COlllllli/ling crilll l'''
the rca'on s f"r Iheir civi l
again", humanit y.
disobed ienlT ,
In hi, intcrprctalion <lnd "pplicaAs the depulv s hcrill's escorted or
ti()n. Douglas Ihillks. "Pcople ale
in so me ca.Sl·S draggeu rela xed. lilllr
Ob liged 1101 10 CJ)opcralc "il" crime,
pcorle off the Iracb 10 a hus. sO llle
;q!ain .. r humanit y. 4..iik'n cl' i..,
o fthc IlC"rle<1nlhe train enco urag - cO llIplici l y. , .
ed Ih c vigiic rs.
Though he say' he ,',Hllt! Ihin~ "I'
A /llan onlhe "lalfol'l11 or Ihe din 11l;IIlY illt e llectua l "l'a~()I1'" Il) ' lIPPPI [
ing (at" rclllrlll'd I hI,.' pC. Il't' ,ign IlldllY
Ill" r ea",oll for hl'ill!!nlllll~ {rad.; Ill'
vigile n Wt'P. 1.' ;' inf In I !JP\l' pcople
\\;1'. II}Pti\.':IIL'd h.\ h i~ IIhriflL l \ 11 "Ill
on thl' Irain . In olle of llie heavil\
\ i\.11. fo UOllgl a . . llil\ 111\,il1 (1 \~,h

ilrlllor('d Itlrrl'll'df"'.. lhcn' W.l"i a wi n -

dow just la r~c cn()ugh 10 'ce pan "I'

l'\'I{.kJlI

III

Ihl'

,..:ilildrl'n

\

l'llI~' UIl

dr;l\\il\~' pO\'l'd ;dull!! tilL' 1rack, _

Evergreen DTF studies sexual
harassment in the classroom

.,.
~

.!anine M, Thome

NOW
FORMING
People
interested in forming a
mixed consciousness-raising group
discussing diffeTences between the
sexes should see the sign-up sheets
outside the Women's Center,
LibTary 3216, and the Men's Center,
LibTaTY 3227,
18t
'E"
IElI
1St=:
MUSICAL DUO PERFORMS AT
EVERGREEN MARCH I
The inspiTing and innovative
musical duo of Charlie Murphy and
Jami Sieber will perform on Friday,
MaTch I at 8 p.m. in Evergreen's
Recital Hall,
Tickets for the Friday evening
event are $3.50 for students, senior
citizens and the unemployed, $4.50
general. Advance tickets are
available at Rainy Day Records, the
Smithfield Cafe and the Evergreen
BookstoTe. This event is cosponsored by the Evergreen PoliticaJ
Information Center, the Men's
Center, and the Lesbian/Gay
Resource Center. Further information can be obtained by calling
!!66-0415,

STATE COLLEGE

Artists' Co-Op Gallery
524 So, Washington .
Watercolors and pottery by John
Cash, and oils by Claudia Marsh,
through Saturday. Photography
by Dave Bushell and stained glass
by Veronica Clifford, February
23-March 2, 10 a,m,-5 p,m"
Monday-Saturday,

:;~:::;~;;;;~::~~~~~!inr;;::~r;iiiiiiiiir::;:::;::;~~
:W::IN::T:E:R::D:O:L:D::R:U:M~S:G~E~TT~~IN~G~:a~b~o~u~t:,~c~al~1~m~e~'~at~866~-~0:809::~0~T~le~a~v:e=~8:66-6000,
ext. 6800 for complete
det<jils,
8Sr:==
-IElI
181
I , '
" MENS / WOMENS
CONSCIOUSNESS RAISING GROUP

-',

THE EVERGREEN

Rape,

and lecture,

a message on the door of A-1016,
Remember: squirtguns are now
available at the branch bookstore,
IElI
181
181
u:oJr:==

by Tarja Bennell

Head Injury Support Group
6:30 p.m., Good Shepherd
Lutheran Church, North Street,
O lympia.
Head-injured persons' families,
fr iends, and interested professionals are invited to attend.
Please contact Debbie Ingalls or.
Lee Fischer at 491 -2256 for information/directions.
Third
World
Women's
Workshop
4:30-6 p.m., CAB 110.
Cheryl Henderson, of Skokomish
Tribe Social Services, will speak
on sexual abuse . She will also
prevent a 30 minute film, Beyond

Overeaters Anonymous
7 p,m., CAB 108 OT 110.
The only requirement for
membership is a desire to stop
eating compulsively, For information, call Ivy, 866-0225,

21 arrested for halting
warhead bearing train

Sherlock Holmes Film Series
7 p.m., Lecture HaJl I, $2.50,

Using The Sun For Electricity:
Photovoltaics
.
7-8:30 p . m . , First Christian
Church, 7th and Franklin. FTee.
The EneTgy Extension Service
sponsors this free class. Contact
the Energy Outreach Center at
943-4595 for more information,

Contract And Intern Sponsor
Finding Fair
1O:30-noon, CAB 110,
This is the only time you will find
so many potential sponsors in
one plac~ ready to help, Contact
Academic Advising for detatls,

Issue No 17

Protesters

pledge

resistance

by Margot Boyer

demonstrating publicly, fasting, and anti-war errorts, say ing that there
participating in civil disobedience ,
are more churches and trade unions
"History has shown that governThe pledge includes only noninvolved now,
ments do respond to mobilized
violent actions, It is part or naPledge signer Dan Maciver, who
resistance," said Randy Tillery, a
tional effort to organize opponents works with WashPIRG, said that the
local organizer of last Friday's
of U.S. intervention in Central
movement's effectiveness will grow
pledge of resistance rally and public
America for action now and to
from direct contact with legi slators,
signing at the State Capitol. Almost
prepare for a large scale, immediate greater numbers or people parthree hundred people allended to
response in the event of an invasion,
ticipating, and more legitimacy.
demonstrate their opposition to
a blockade, or other major U,S.
Speakers que, tion t he Reagan adUnited States intervention in Central
military action, According to local
ministration's claims about the preAmerica,
organizers, over 50,000 people nasent situation in Nicaragua and EI
People gathered on the Capitol
tionally have signed,
Salvador. State Representative Dick
s teps to li sten to brier statements by
Many speak ers and organizers
Nelson asked ir the Sandinista
state legi sla tors, college proressors,
spoke of the importance of gett ing
government, which has made health
peace workers, church represen"mainstream people" into the anti - care and education it's first
tatives, and other signers of the
intervention movement. Beth Hartpriorities, is a "brutal regime" as it
pledge,
mann of the Central American Acwas characterized by Reagan, or
The pledge of resistance is a docution Committee said that the movewhether the U,S" which sends guns
ment which people can sign to pledge
ment will be heard-by the Reagan adto kill teachers, children, and health
a variety of actions to promote peace
ministration as "a wide variety of care workers, is really the brutal
in Central Amerioa and to protest
people" come out
against
regime,
any major escalations of U ,S, inintervention,
Jolene Unsoeld praised pledge
volvement. The actions range fTom
Speaker Stephanie Coontz, an
signe rs as people who have the
praying for peace and becoming inEvergreen professor, compared the
formed
on
the
is s ues
to
pledge of Tesistance to Viet Nam era

a

NEXT THURSDAY - Thursday Night Films pre~ents the Marx
Brothers in The Coconuts, their first film,at 7 p.m. In LectuTe Hall .
I. Duck
follows at 9:30 m., $1.50
KINDERGYM
her subjective perception
CONTINUES
meeting of two cultures, Cloninger,
Did you know that by age four,
who teeeived her doctoTate in coma child has developed 50 percent of
munications and film fTom Ohio
his intellectual capacity?
State University in 1974, has taught
The YMCA is continuing its
at Evergreen since 1978 ,
Baby-Kindergym program, which is
Visiting Faculty MembeT Doris
designed to aid in your child's
Loeser's "Last CaJl fOT Union Stadevelopment. Through non tion" evokes the history of the
fam~us Los Angeles railroad land- competitive games and activities, the
participants are encouraged to
mark. Loeser produced the film in
discoveT their own movement
1981 while a student at the Univercapabilities and body awareness,
sity of Southern California. Also
develop quaJities of confidence, selffeatured will be Loeser's animated
esteem and- self-confidence, and
short, "Road to You."
FOT more information about "The
learn how to interact comfortably
EveTgTeen 7Hour," contact Anne
with others.
Turner, PTogram Assistant at
Classes meet twice a week, and
begin the first week of each month .
Evergreen's Vancouver campus, at
(206) 696-60 II.
The fee is $10 per month. To
enroll your child, caJl the YMCA at
--le'EI==~leEt==~leIEt==3iEle=
357-6609; ask for Susan Dowling,
Movement Education.

THE EVERGREEN
STATE COLLEGE

Otympia,

I

WA 98505

0 11 call1PUS:

'ga in input rrom Itlldell". 'Iall,
" When I was fir ,1 asked 10 be on
and I'aculty;
Ihe DTF. my fir st reaclion was,
'es tabli sh a definitivl' Evergrecn
'What sexua l harass men t? No one's
poli cy toward th e i"" uc .
ever blackmailed mc to go to bed.
Wynkoop staled tha i " sex ual
with Ihem for an eva lualion .' But
harassmclli is briefly Icx aminedj in
then as I began to find out, it docs
the Affirmative Al't ioll Polic y that
happen , and has happened , .. I
was approved last sp ring hut it', not
stopped myself and thought , "Why
ve ry comriete .. ,and we fell we
did I think Evergreen was some
neeucd a policy specific to sex ual
utopia?"
haraosme nt ."
Those arc the feelings expre.sscd
Rita Coo per , director of per ,o nhy s tudent Roberta Morello,
ncl, said, "We have a legal ob li ga member of the Disappearing Task
tion baseu on the governor\ exForce (DTF) on Sexual Harassment.
ecutive order to define and develop
wh ich was formed in Novem ber.
derinitiom and sanct ions agaimt 'ex The DTF. charged by Patrick
u,,1 harass ment and dissemi nate Ihe
Hill, provost, and Karen Wynkoop,
po li cy amongst Ithe communilyj,"
controller, wnsists of II members,
In 1975, as a re"i11 or a ,'as"
including An Mulka. chairperson,
agains t the federal government. 'ex Members of the DTF were ueterual hara,s ment becamc an illegal
min ed by administrative head s who
rorm of discriminalion under rille
represent campu" raculty, students.
VII,
a nd sta ff.
Sexual hara"sl11enl exi,,, in l11all)
"As a fa cu lty member, I would
forl11 S: unwanted tea si ng , joke,. and
hope that what we could do is lead
com l11 ('nt,,: de liberate lou ,' hing: 1111 _
and be proactive, take the opporwanted lelle rs. phone cal ls or \ isits;
tunity to look at thi s area and take
or actual or altel11pted s<" II,,1
it se ri o usly, It' s an area t hat's being
assau lt.
discussed all over the cou ntry a nd at
Cooper staled. . The rcar 01'
other institution s of higher educaretaliation Iby the harasser] keeps a
tion," Mulka said ,
lot of people away ft 0 111 carrying out
Prompted by complaints of sexual
a comrlai nt to the IC\'cl of public
harassment at a ll levels within the
sanction," Unless th me hara sse d
-campus co mmunit y, the DTF has
come fonh. "the situaliLlns \lill
three objectives:
con tinu e. "
·derine and ~ine the nat,ure
and extent of sex~ent

NON PROFlI ORe; .
U.S.POSTAG I'
",\If)
UI YMrIA, \\'A
rERMIT NO .os

February 28, 1985

Februllry 28, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

~~:;:;;Letters~

Black History Month brings forth
events with a 'tremendous effort'

Medic says
no to gU'ns

by Susan Arnold

Harass

('UII/inllcd jrUIIJ

J )lf'..!('

Black History Month is a time for
all Americans to ce lebrate and learn
more about the Black community
and Black heritage. On campus, the
Ujamaa soc iet y coord in ated a
variety of events for the Evergree n
co mmunit y.
A major part of Evergreen's Black
Hi stor y Month was the art exh ibit,
"Galle ry of Greats : The Civil Rigtlls
Movement," in the ga ll ery on the
fir st floor of th e CA B. The exhibit
showed 20t h-cent ur y Black leaders
who were (and are) dealing with oppression and fighting for Civil and
Equal Rights. The exhibi t was provided by student Dave Hende rson' s
sLe p-father who is a publi sher of
Black Newspapers in Portland and
th e Pu get Sound area.
Othe r events th at Ujamaa spon")red thi s month includ ed The
· · ~<l UX Arts Masquerade Ball, which
was a benefit for the Evergreen
Album Project, and was cosponsored with Supplemental
Events. The video Woza A lbert,
about apartheid, was sponsored with
EP IC. Wildstyle, a fi lm about Black
grarri t i art ists in New York, was
.s ponsored with Thursday Night
Fi lm s. Ephat Mujuru, an African
drummer and folklori st performed
early in the month, and was sponsored wi th Evergreen Expressions .
There were alsQ the Cleo Robinson
iJa:1ce Ensemble , who did a variety
of da nce styles, and Paul Robeson 's
Theatre G roup who performed,
[)on't Both('/" Me, / lu,,'1 lope,

I

more than men; comments about
women faculty that defin e them to
Iheir sex rather than their professional standing; comments that rel y
Cooper, as director of personnel,
on sexist humor; or comments or acand privy to complaints of sexual
tions that degrade women in general.
harassment, expressed several 011 "It's a very emotional topic. ...
camp us or campus rdated incidents.
You can't just go into these meetings
In one examp le, a sla ll .s upcrand have a cut-and-dry discussion.
visor pressed for a relationship with
It' s a very personal subject. . . [that]
his work-study studellt. A sexual
a
lot of people haven't really thought
relationship ensued, then was
about
before," Steinkoenig said.
broken off by the supervisor.
"I hope the result of the DTF will
The st udent 's work thereafter was
be an education process as well as
unfairly scrutinized and disrupted as
solving
personal problems for peothe supervisor tried to force her from
ple
so
that
they can get out of difher job situation. The incident was
ficu lt situations," said WynkOOp.
reported , and handled internally
"There are occasions when women
without formal proceedings.
fee l something is inappropriate but
A staff member a lso told of a
they
don 't. . .come forward and comsituation in which a male faculty
plain
.... 1 hope through this DTF
member was being constantly
people will understand ... what
harassed by a female student to start
shouldn't Qe tolerated."
a relation ship. The faculty member,
Mulka su mmari zed his feelings
however, was able to discourage the
about
sexual harassment, saying, "I
a ttempt s, and handled the situation
hope
that
all elements of the comwithout further incident.
munitywill become sensitized to the
If a fa cult y member is revealed as
issue. It's a n on-going efforl. ... "
a sexual hara sse r to the DTF by let The DTF will produce its first
ter or in a DTF mee ting, that perdraft
policy proposal in April for the
SOlI and the alleged problem wi II be
consideration of students, staff, and
turned over to Patrick Hill.
faculty . Presently, the DTF is in the
If the harasser is a staff member,
process of gathering information
the situation will be ha ndled by that
throughout
the community. All DTF
person' s administra tive head, said
meetings
are
open to the communi Wynkoop.
t y: Wednesdays, 10:30 a.m.- noon ,
C laudia Stcinkoenig, a stud ent
in Lib. 3121.
member of the DTF, pointed out,
The final draft policy proposal
" [We should) recog nize that sex ual
wi
ll be presented in Ma yo r June.
harassment isn't alw ays blatant; it
Said
Roberta
More ll o,
can be subt Ie . "
"Evergreen is not ]a utopia). Sexual
I I' harassment occurs in the
ha rassment does ex ist here. There's
classroom, it may appea r in subtle
people
here. "
forms: int errupting women student s

/'resic!t'III Joseph Olull(/t'/", [)u,'e Henderson lind Ujall1aa ("001'I/(J{/I ' a
Challlhhn. I£Ilk ahoUl lil" /)()rtrails of Hlaek
h'<I,I"i"< .)// dil/'/{I l ill Ihe SllIdl'lII (;{ll/erl' .

bliss hopes t hat pan I II
Evergreen', growth will be in the
Third World peoples popul ation. To
thaI end, Ujamaa is making pian s 10
draw to Evergreen Third WmlJ
' Iudent s from the Seallk and PII~s' l
Sound area .
Further events spon\lHcd )-"
Ujamaa include the annua l Kuumha Gospel Fe\lival on this Sa lurd;ll.
:vtarch 2. In April· there wi ll hc a Im .inr l'vcnl, the "Peacemakcl" l" ·
hihil, which will be aboutthc 1'l';ls"<"
and ('i"il Righls n1l'\"Cl11l'11I' . .\ III
tk latcr Ihis year a pia\" dea lin~ \lilh
i'sues of apartheid calkd. 'irll ','
I/(/I/.Ii is Dead wi ll be 1"'1'1""1"111<'.1 I"
an Lvcrgrecn \1 udent.

.......

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Bring In This Ad And
Bowl Three Games
For The Price Of Two.
(Durmg Open Play Only)

II

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Pledge

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Dear John
letter
\

.o J , ( '

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.".'I '! /',:

en li ghtment to speak out and take
risk s to become "full human be, 'gs." She encouraged people to
participate in the events of their
time, to "embrace the world like a
lover ."
While enthusiasm at the rally ran
high, people expressed different opinio ns about the effectiveness of this
type of organiz.ing. Marilyn Brown
sa id she signed the pledge because
"the war is wrong," but that the
pledge will probably not make a difference to U.S. policy. "We have to
act actively, with our bodies," she
sa id.
Harry Levine sa id that this event
ca n empower people and prepare
them to respond quickly in the event
of an invasion . He believes that
Women's Ce nter echoed Williams
more people will protest in the event
thought s. "We're cooperating
o
f an ' escalation, because "most
together a nd arguing together, but
Americans don ' t want a war."
above all we're working together.
Ra ndy Ti ller y asserted that
It 's good for me because I'm work re s is tanc e is a lr ea dy affecting
ing with women o f all herit ages, a nd
government policy. "The fact that
above a ll we're women."
we ha ven't invaded is a measure of
Panel di,cussio ns led by
public resistance," he said.
Eve rgreen facult y a nd wo me n from
Stepha ni e Coont z c hallenged the
aro und the No rthwest will add ress
to do more th an sign the
crowd
var io us topics such as political
pledge
.
She said th at people must
wome n, non·tradi tional career fields
" pledge to overcome the resistance"
for women, a nd dua l career women.
of Ihe U.S. government to c hange in
Two lectures will be given: one 011
the world. She compared the present
women 's in volveme nt in th e Nat ive
U.S. "resistance to peace a nd
Amer ica n movement and another
j
uslice" to th e British government' s
up-daling comparable worth .
re"S i Sl ance to t h e A Illerican
Revoluti o n .

"New Directions for the 80's"
headlines Evergreen's celeb rati on of
Int ernatio nal Women's Day on Friday, March 8. Co-sponsored by
T hird World Women, th e Women's
Center, and Tides o f Change, the
ev~ nt wi ll begi n at I p.m . in th e
Library Lobby with ope nin g
remarks by .faye Hardiman.
-,'he da y will conclude around th~
fir eplace of Library 4300 with an international potluck and a co ncert by
Naom i Lill le bar , a guitari st, piani st
alld p o litical folk singer fr o m
Oregon.
March 8 is commonl y believed to
be chosen a> the d ate for Int ernalional Women' s Day at an interna tiona l con ference of women in 1910,
ca lled together by Clara Zet kin at
H e" inki , Fin land. T he day co mmemora tes a ll 1857 march a nd
demon st ral ion by female garment •
and texti le workers in New York Ci•
t y. The event is nOW recogn ized by

the United Nations.
"It' s going to be exciting," said •
Dar lene William s, of Third World
Women. "Everyday a t noon we
m.:et, and we're learning good sk ill s
_ communication , negotiating and
interpersonal relationships ."
Darcy VanSteelant of the

Sincerely,
Constance Simpson

J.

New direction for women
by Heidi RoecksHunt

To The Editor:
I am opposed to the reclassification of the campus security force. I
am adamantly opposed to the issuance of firearms., in general, and
specifically handguns. Security personnel cannot, by any stretch of the
imagination, be considered 'police.'
There is a distinct difference,
characterized in part by training,
philsophy, and day-to-day duties.
In my profession, I have been
called upon to repair the damage
caused by bullets: exploded tissue,
splintered bone, mangled ' brain
tissue resulting in extremes of human
despair . To me, it is a simple issue:
no guns, no destruction by bullets.
Don't let a casual decision be
made. Don't let reactionary faction
impose these serious changes.
Evergreen is hardly a violent campus, so don't let the introduction of
weapons alter the peaceful, cooperative fabric of this wonderful
college.

d'llal"r.

a
ot
acts. Student Paul
Harding read some of hi s poetry today at noon; this was co-sponsored
with Supplemental Events.
The events fulfilled part of the
Board of Tru stees goal for increasing cuhur·a l literacy.
Hoover Chamb l iss , eoordina\(1r
of Ujamaa, sa id a " tremend oU\ ef·
fort" was made by many people for
Black History Month. He said, "On
bchalf of Ujamaa , I'm re.all"
graldulthat there arc SO many good
pcpple who arc willing to support
what Ujamaa does·...·iiltere are .,()
lIIany peopk to th ank for lour] 'l)('
l·l" .S during 'R5 ... 1 hopc il cpnt illues
;: I~ I hl' &.:ol1cgl' gro\V, .

Westside Shopping Center •
943-2400


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(jiTERSONS

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JUDAS I'RlEST
STAINED CLASS

PINK flOYD
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In closing, I don't think we are
"allotted" time at Evergreen. I'd
wager that most of us made a conscious decision to come here. Then
we have to pay (or, in the case of
alumni; have paid) money for our
time here .
Sincerely,
Mike Mc Kenzie

Raise yes
guns no
Hello Editor,
Since I've been absent from campus, this letter may seem late in coming, but I'll give it shot. First of all,
I commend Janine on her research
and article on the security
reclassification. It takes someone
with her courage to make the rest of
us get on our soapboxes and speak
out. Evidently, some of our
graduates have forgotten what it was
like to be a beginning journalism stu_
dent. Come on, Francisco, we all
start somewhere. That is why this is
a student paper run by student journalists. Now, as long as I'm on the
subject of soapboxes ....
I also must speak out against our
Security Department carrying handguns. Because I attended summer
Quarter, I had the opportunity to
meet several security persons, and
have since enjoyed conversations
with them . I wonder- if I would have
these same feelings if they had been
labeled policemen and carried handguns. I understand these people wanting and possibly needing a payraise,
but I must say no to handguns.
The second issue I would like to
raise is the Student Art Gallery,
located across from the cafeLeria. As
much as I enjoyed the images
displayed for Black Hi story Month,
I fail to see where it qualifies as student art. As one of the students who .
spoke to the S & A Board last year
in support of the gallery, I have been
under the impression it wo'uld be
Teserved for student art. There are ·
students here who are willing to
share their work. I hope that future
. displays are o f student art. Still with
me?
One last item. I would like to
thank the Native American Studies
Program, MEChA, and EPIC for
co-sponsoring with the Northwest

THE FURS

Tbe Cooper Point Journal i$ published weekly for the students, staff, and
faculty of The Evergreen State College. Views expressed are not necessarily
those of the college or the Journlll's staff. Advertising material contained
herein does not imply endorsement by the Journlli. Offices are located in
the CAB, Room 306, Phone: 866-6000, x 6213. All announcements must
be double-spaced, listed by category, and submitted no later than noon on
Monday for that week's publication. All letters to the editor must be typed,
double-spaced,limited to 250 words, and s(gned, and must include a daytime
phone number where the author can be reached for co nsult ation on editing
for libel and obscenity. The editor reserves the right to reject any material,
and edit any contributions for length, content, or style. Letters and display
advertising must be received no later than 5 p. m . on Monday for that week's
publication.

--

POMVERNOW
~"'~Ia..-'''''-'Atd",,",

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COME EARLY FOR THE
BEST SElECTION I

Editor: Roger Dickey

""""""'11 &
T;m J#;s~fR

Dan

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' ..... TO..,~"-OfOoold

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o

Dear John Dylan Cooper,
I do not agree with the statement
in your letter that "alumni, who,
having completed their allotted time
here, should bow out gracefully and
let those remaining do what they are,
after all, here for."
I think anyone who has an opinion about anything they read in the
CPJ has the right to respond to the
editor and express their opinion. I
think th a t is the purpose of the
CP 1' s letters page and the purpose
of any newspaper's letters page.
I'm not certain what you think
students "are, after all, here for."
But, as a CP J staff member, I think
that any leller the editor receives
shows people are reading the CPJ
and reacting to its content. I think
that's what the CPJ is here for, and
what the people who work on the
CP J are here for : to inform the
readers so they can think about
Evt;rgreen 's current situation and
form their own opinions.
I think your statement is similar

~~M.

Indian Center by bringing representatives from the International Indian
Treaty Council to campus. If 'you
don't know who to thank for
delivering the log in front of the
Library, it's Greg Colfax of the
Native American Studies Program.
Thanks for being so patient.

~~~~~~~~~~~':"'!'..."",:,~,:"",,,!,,,"';'~~!!,,,"~_ _,,,!,,_ _ _,,!!,!!,_ _

ON THESE ORIGINAL CBS HIT ALBUMS!
HUNDREDS OF "NtCE
PRtCE" HITS TO CHOOSE
FROM' SPR INGSTEEN!
McCARTNEY! CHtCAGOI
FOGELBERG! CLASHI
JUDAS PRIE STI
PtNK FtOYDI

To: Editor, Cooper Point Journal
Topic: John Dylan Cooper's letter
in the February 21 issue .

to something Ronald Reagan would
say in a speech. It has an American
cliche ("bow out gracefully") to
make the reader think they know
what you're talking about, yet the
statement lacks focus, clarity, and
substance. The importance of your
statement does not outweigh any
other expression of personal

......,.......,.................,......
~""""-IHcC

or

WESTSIDE CENTER
DIVISION & HARRISON
357-4755

Page 3

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Acting Editor : Charlie Ca mpbell
Assistant Managing Editor: Kurt Batdorf
Photo Editor: Chris Corrie

Gary H. Wessels

Art review
disgusts
Dear Editor:
A chilling shroud of disgust
enveloped my body after reading the
"Black History Month Deserves a
Better Show" article in the February
21 st issue. The last time I experienced similar disgust was when I
heard a fellow student exclaim that
Black history was important only
during February.
Sheer ignorance served as the
motivating force behind the
ludicrous statement and, especially,
the writing and publication of the article. The author of the review, Rob
Dieterich, shallowly judged the art
on its physical appearence, instead
of its content. His unrealistic comparison of the tacky art decor littering the Fourth Ave Tavern's walls to
the historical and educational prints
provided by the Miller Brewing
Company proved highly insulting.
Whether Shivers or Picasso created
the prints, it is the statement expressed through the colors and textures of the art that should be addressed, not the quality or quantity
of the reproductions .
In addition to his superficial
criticism of the prints and the faces
that do not appear on them, the

Kirsten Lowe,
Business Manager, C P J

Art show
informs
Dear Editor,
All right, so the art show for
Black History Month is sponsored
by Miller Brewing Compan}. So?
Miller Beer is doing a service to
Black History by commissioning artwork to be done and shown
throughout the country, in order to
educate not only Black people but
white people as well. Miller put
money out to commission the work,
and it is making it back in the form
of publicity. In the real world,
nothing is free . .
The art show is in the Student An
Gallery for two reasons. First there

were no Black artists on campus who
had work to show, and second, if the
artwork had not been shown in the
Student Art Gallery, there would
have been no commemoration of
Black History Month in the form of
a display, because there was no
available space on campus to show
the artwork.
My impression from statements
made in the eO'l1ments book and the
CP J is that ' most people seem to be
critical and overlook the positive
points of the show. I: It shows black
leaders in a positive light. 2: It is a
positive role model for Blacks. 3: It
shows little-known Black leaders
who otherwise would never receive
acclaim . 4: The whole show is explained in a take-home bookl et
which promotes education , fun her
curiosity and enlightenment.
If the critic believed that the a rt
had no class, then why did he men tion that it belonged in the hi story
books? The fact is, it isn'l in any
history book s ! That's why it is here,
to enlighien the culturally illiterate.
And there seems to be a lot o f
them around here!
Dave Henderson

Smoke free
areas
Editor:
Two new areas ha ve been
designated Smoke Free Lounges in
the College Activites Building: the
104 Lounge just off t he main Saga
dining room, and The Pit o n the
third noor west end. Thanks for
your cooperation.
Michael Hall
Student Activities Director

--

-~

Roots of words can raise eyebrows,
and etymology is ' not ·about bugs
by Susan Allen
Etymology. The first tim(' I e ncountered this word, I had a vag ue
notion it had so mething to do with
bugs . I was rea ding the descr iption
of a literature course I had signcdup
for, and was puzzled by the inclu sion of two credits of insect stud y.
I had heard that James Joyce was a
bit odd in hi s writing techniques,
but. . . . So I reached for m y
American H eritage Dictionary (as I
will do throug hout this article) and
found: "etymology - the branch of
linguisti cs that studi es the deri vations o f words."
Though not as loath some as studying bugs (pardon my phobia),
etymology didn't so und very in tere sting, either.
Over the next fel< weeks, I came
to realize how intriguing the stud y
of word origins could be. Etymology
is Trivial Pursuit a nd genetic
research rolled into one. Many ordina ry I;: ngH sh words actually have
strange and wonderful meanings .
Root words propogate families. As
111 human families, elements of word
famil es differ greatly, yet st ill retain
recognizl'.b.ly similar trait s .
Many a nim a ls have names ·indicative of their physical oddities or
behavior. "R hi noce ro.' " comes
from the Greek words meaning
"nose horn. " T he G ree ks a lso
na me the "hippopotamus," in their
lang uage meani ng "ri ver horse."
The squirrefis named for its glorious
appendage the "shadow tail," also
from the Greek. The German word
"schurke, " meaning "a greedy
parasite" evolved into today 's
"shark," which remains a repugnant
anima'!: Probably th e kindest
descriptive name for an an imal

Poetry Editor: Margot Boyer
Production Manager: Barbara Howell
Advisor: Mary Ellen McKain
Photographers: Eileen McClatchy, Irene Buitenkant
Writers: Tarja Bennett, Beth Fletcher, Nancy Boulton, Kurt Batdorf, Charlie
Campbell, Janine Thome, Susan Arnold, Rob Dieterich, Traci Viklund,
Wendi Kerr, Tom Spray, Carla Casper, Heidi Roeck sHunt, Mike
McKenzie, Susan Allen
Production C rew: Roger Dickey, C harlie Campbell , Kurt Batdorf, Tom
Spray, Mike McKenzie, Susan Arnold, Wendi Kerr, Margot Boyer, Nancy
Boulton
T ypesetter: J. C. Arm brewster
Business Manager: Kirsten Lowe
Ad Manager: Theresa 'Conner
comes from the Algonquin Indians.
Distribution:
Allison
Stark
wordsquirts,"
"signakwas
u ," corr
meaning
_____
iiiii___
';'__________________- ' Th!!ir
"one who
upted

,""~

author of this slanted review essentially mentioned that the use of the
stu~ent gallery should be solely for
students' work': What Dieterich
failed to acknowledge was that
members comprising Ujamaa are
'students, and the display we chose
for exhibition was our contribution,
as students, to the gallery and
Evergreen. Therefore, the gallery is
being utilized sensibly.
Unless Dieterich can balance the
issue while writing reviews, thereby
providing some positive aspects with
the negative criticism, and unless
you, as the editor, can use a discerning eye for your reporters' submissions, I suggest that both of you
refrain from writing and publishing
Third World issues since they are undoubtedly of no interest to either of
you .

int o "SK unk " by the ea rl y pioneers.
Over the yea rs , a word can be
wor n down, iI' " unnece.s .sary"
sy ll ab les and leller .. dropped o r
a ltered thr o ugh co nst a nt use. Man y
of you may k now of t he Hospit a l of
St. Mary of Bethlehem, a n infamo us
asyl um in Sout heastern London. As
is usua l, the name was shortened 10
"Bethlehem" by those who used it
111 0s l. It eve nt ua ll y came to be prono unc ed "bed la m ," and became a
noun mean in g "any place or ~ itua ­
t ion o f noi sy uproar and con fu sion." Mary Magdalene is known as
th c paragon of tearful repc nt enec.
Aga in , the e rosio n o f consta nt usc
turn cd
d id it s work, a nd
"Magdalene" into "ma udlin ," th e
English word meaning "effusively
sent ime ntal. "
One of my favo rite etymologies is
Ill at o f "posh," meaning "lu xuri o us, ex clu s ive." Po sh is an
ac ronym for "Port Out, Starboard
Back " - referring to the side o f th e
ship wealthy British citi zens preferred when sa iling to Indi a and bad .
Nat urall y, their first choice would be
a cabin on t he side of the ship oppo.s ite th e sun, which was a lso
rumored to have the best view ..
Consider these word s: " spec tacle,
spectrum, aspect, circumspect, in spect, perspecti ve, suspecl."-Side by
>id e, they appear to co nt a in
somet hin g which m akes them
simil ar. It is th e root word "spek,"
meaning "see and regard." What do
"cauldron, calorie," and "non·
cha la nt" h ave in commo n ?

frOtn, " whal is "tradDI "
wha l is harrening to
" tra c tinn '''?

0

And j usl

,1l 1llL'One

in

Worth ' (all a l,o ~: rc<Jtl' c hain ~.
Silll'e " tele" mean .1 "far", a lld
"p ho ne" mean s " vo ice , " lhen a
"I cle p honc" is a "I"ar voicc .·' And
, in ce " scope" mean . . ·'watcher " . a
" telescope" i.s a "farwa tcher".
Then , s in cc "per i "
IIleall S
" a ro und, " a "pe ri scope" il a n
"around watcher." fi nall y, th e roOl
word for "ratclic" Illean, 10 \\'a:k.
so •• peripatct ie " nl ea n.. . •. arllund
wa lk ing."
St ud yin g word .l . Iheir hhi llr ics
a nd fa mili es , can be qu it e l' ll\ crlain ing. I've found it easier 1<' rcmemhl'r
wha t words mean when I know their
slo r y, th ere by bu ilding mY.lllea ': rc
vocab ular y. I ne ver co uld reca ll I he
definiti o n of "supercili o us" liPId I
found o u t il llleant "raiscJ
eyebrow." Somehow, I gct a mu ch
clea rer image of that word Ill)".
Peel'e ()f Ihe H'ee,( The III erU'L'
of foreign word> in Eng li sh Ilfi l in),!
(sugge.s ted by Car la Casper ).
W hen an autho r sl ips int o I Ct lin.
G reek or Frenc h to make a po in l. "r
e mbelli sh o ne, a lot of us read·.:r, ,"et
lefl beh ind. When I sce t'1"ll'C
s prinkled lavi\ hly with forelgll \I ort!>
and phra>es, I react in 11"0 \\a' >:
o ne , by fee lin g inferi o r and
fru st rated because I ca n 'l unu erlland Ih e writing; and two, by put ting th e book away and nOI fi ni slnn g
it.

"Calor 1" meaning I 'heat." is a part

of th em a ll: a "cauldron" is for
heating somethin g in, a "calorie" is
a unit for measuring heat, and "nonc ha lan t " denotes non-heat, or
coo lness. If "attract" mean s "pull
toward," extract m eans "pu ll out,"
"contrac L" means "pull together,"
"distrac t " mean s "pull away

The a uthor who wi shes to be read
by people who a rc 1101 multilin gual
should not use a large a mount of
foreign quotes . Un less t hey art'
translated for less learned readers.
these phrases will excl ude most
readers from understanding and en·
joying a piece of writing.

Pa~e

4

TH~

COOPER POINT JOURNAL

President enters program
by Charlie Campbell
Joseph O lander, Evergreen's new
president, joined Societ y and the
Co mpu'ter for two weeks "because
he wanted to find out what it was
lik e to be a student and a faculty a t
Evergreen," sai d Bill Brown, an in str uctor in the program.
O lander sa t in on th e program
from Feb. II to Feb. 22. He said , "I t
worked beautifully."
Olander said learning how
studen ts a re tau ght a t Evergreen is
"somet hin g that I reel real strongly
abo ut doing. My time constraints are
very hea vy ri ght now beca use the
legislature is in sessio n. But I felt
that Evergreen is so speci al that it is
important for me to gain a greater
understanding of what we are all
about academ ica lly."
Olander rea d The Japanese Mind
by Robert C hri stopher and attended semi na rs on the book . He too k
part in fac ult y seminars, math
workshops , compu ter programming
workshops, and writing works hops
where he cri tiqu ed students papers.
Olander was not req uired to turn
in any parers himse l f.
He lectu red on Japanese cu lture .
The program's topic for thc two
weeks was Japan, and the nat ure of
Japan' s c ha ll e nge to American
tec hnology, parti cula rly com puter

techno logy .
"I' m interested in computers and
their impact on society , and I' m interested in Japan," Olander said .
"So, it was a nice convergence of
interests. "
Brown sa id, "It went very well.
He learned a lot about seminars. We
lea rned a lot about Japan."
A student in the program, James
McGuire, said, "It look ed li ke he
[Olander] was going to ju st observe,
but a couple of people sta rted asking him questions and he started
getting into it."
McGuire said speaking in front of
the college president was initially
intimidating:
"At first, pcrhaps, it was a little
st i ff. But once he start ed co mmunicating on a personal level it was
lik e, 'Hey Joe, what do you think
about this.' It was nice that we could
treat him almost lik e a no th er
student. "
Olander was often helpful in getting stalled semi nars rolling again,
a dded McGuire.
Both McGu ire and Brown not ed
that O la nder seemed to understand
the se min ar process. Olander said
the University of Texas, where he
was vice president for academic affairs. had sem inar, but. ' " the y
weren't collaborative . They we ren ' t
tea m ta ught."

managers

Housing seeks new
student managers soon
by Beth Fletcher
The selection of st udent manager ~
for the 1985-1986 school year will
begin soon.
Housing is currently designing the
st udent manager application form,
and hopes to have a noti ce out for
application dates by the e nd of the
week.
The first step is a meeting tentatively set for March 10 at 7:30
p.m ., to pass o ut application form s
and explain th e selection process.
For mer st udent managers will also
be on hand to talk about the job.
After the meeting, applicants will

Album project returns to Evergreen
by Heidi RoecksHunt

After a two-year absence, the
Evergreen Albulll Project has
returned, g uid ed by ~t ud e nt­
producer, Tom Hill and Rick
Powell.
"The purpose of th e a lbulll projec t." Hill and Powell sa id, "is to
integrate the talent s of Everg reen 's
music, audio, a rt , a nd marketing
student s towards a common goa l
that ref1ects the diversity of skill s
here. "
Wi th the rekase date for th e
record set for t he beginning of Fa ll
quarter, Hill a nd Powell arc curren tly making a las t push to get musiciam a nd art ists to sub mit th eir
work. The final deadlinc for submis, io ns or demo tapes and desigm for
t he album cover is March 15:
'"T hree -quarter, of se llin g a
record is what the roV('r looks lik e."
Hill sa id. " It co mcs down to ccrtdin
people ,hoppi ng and they' ll buy
what catches t heir eye."
Both arc anxiolls to have a large
number of s ubmissions tn work
with ; ro ugh sketches arc acceptab le.
Hill and Powell ta lk ed abou t th e
COlllenl or t hei I' fut ure recunJ , exprcssing an interest in receiving any
alld a ll forms or original music:

fr om d assical to funk, rock to
bluegrass. As lon g as it s written by
an Evergreen studellt. they'd lik e to
hear it .
Said Powell: "One of the reasons
we didn't want to pi ck a single concept for the re(Oord is beca use we
didn't want to ge t contrived pieces."
The process of selecting the mu sic
for the a lbum will be do ne by an advisory board consisting of eight peopic chosen by Powell and Hill. They
are looking for individua ls with a
knowledge or mllsi c a nd plan to
issue a qucstionn aire to those expressing int erest in tak ing part.
Selcct io ns will bc madc during th e
next week .
Past a lbulll projects wcre wcll made, agreed Powell a nd Hill.
but
with
titl es
s uch
a,
"£ =,11/("2 ± ur- IDB" and a thrccqua rt er COllllllittlllcnt to the project,
ma~ting the album proved to be a
major problem. Boxes of these
n.:c ord s can be found sturred away
.
in closets .
Powell and Hill have, th ere fore.
com mitt ed them selves to a five Lluart er project wi th the intcntion o r
spe nding their las t quarter selling the
a lbum . They ha ve even gO ll en
thelllselves a marketing directo" Annettc Standi fer.
They plan to make th e campus

th e ir main out let , but may also include record stores in Olympia. Both
spo ke enthusiastically of soliciting
airply on radio stations in the Northwest at mostly independent station s from Portland to Bellingham .
The Evergreen Album Project has
received a ll it , money t hi , year
through fundraisers-everything
from bake sales to da nces. Although
their d a nce, "Last C hance to
Dance," proved to be success ful ,
they are ha rd at work on other projects to get Illoney.
"So much time is spent on fundra ising," Hill said deject edl y, " that
we often lose sight of the album
proje,t. "
Their last bi g push to raise fund s
in Winter quarter will tak e place on
March 15. That night in the Library
lob by Ti ny Giants a nd Ca use and
Ef fect (formerl y Natural Ca uses)
will per for m at "The Ret urn of th e
I.ast C ha nce to Dan,e."
The final se lect ion s for th e music
ror tire a lbum as well as its cove r will
be announced tha t night. Vo lunteers
to hClp with the dance are needed;
co ntact x6265 for more information.
"We arc keeping detailed reports
and our goal is to step back, and
there'll be enough mu ne to start
another .album project," Powell
sa id. Hill nodded in ag reement.

-

have about a week to turn in their
completed applications. Housing
sta ff will then begin interviewing,
and should know by the first week
of April who next year's student
managers will be.
This year, student managers were
offered an eight credit group contract dealing specifically with their
jobs as student managers. This
course has been offered intermittently through the years and is not mandatory. However, 10 of the 12 current student managers are enrolled
in it. Housing Co-Manager Jeannie
Chandler says she hopes to make it
a permanent option.

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February 28, 1985
The student man_ager's primary
purpose is to serve as a link between
the residents and Housing. Student
managers arrange activities, dispense
vacuums and change for laundry,
and serve as counselors/ friends to
residents . In the student manager
training sessions, they are taught
conflict resolution techniques,
methods of dealing with crises, and
day-to-day positive interaction skills.
It is important for student managers
to know the names of all the
residents in their building, and
something about their personalities.
. Kari Summerour, who was a student manager for 1'/2 years, said
"resident contact" is the most important aspect of a student
manager's job. That means being
highly visible to residents, and as accessible as possible.
What many first-time Student
Managers do not realize is that the
job is 24 hours a day, seven days a
week. Even when they are not officially "on duty ," they must be
available to their residents.
"I have no private life," said Dee
Dee Fowler, student manager of BDorm, "People always need things
and I'm here to supply them.'!
The stress level is high for student
managers, and they are encouraged
by the Housing staff to take some
time for themselves once in a while,
and get away from their duties.
Their absence often irritates
residents who may have needed the
student managers services,
Dealing with harassment from ·
residents is one of the worst aspects
of a Student Manager's job. It is difficult for them to ask friends to obey
Housing rules , like not drinking in
public areas. They get such comment s as "Why did you have to see
it thi s time and you didn ' t las t
time?"
There is a certain amount of
resentment towards the student
manager as an .a uthority figure,
which sometime!deads to difficulties
in their personal relation ships.
If the job is tough, why do people do it? Most say t hey enjoy working with people and learning to tak e
a leadership role .
"This job teaches you a lot about
yourself - how much you can take,
how much you can't take," said Kelly McC lary, Student Manager of 0Dorm. "It also teaches you how to
say no.'1
Student ma nager hopefuls are
urged to act naturally when app lying for the posi tion .
Don't try to impress anybody, just
be yourself," said Mark Campbe ll .
a second -yea r Student 1\·lanager.
"The way you fill them [the applications] out means a lot .
"They're looking for different
people, they want everbody [living
in the dorms] to identify with at least
. one," said Fowler.
"It will be o ne of the hardest jobs
I've ever done," said McClary,
"also one .o f the funnes!. I f you
- want a job with every kind of, emotion in it, be a student manager."

February 28, 1985

Critic say Frankie say too much
by Wendi Kerr
Twenty-one years after liverpool's Fab Four, the Beaties, arrived on American shores, another
Liverpudlian band is making a
splash.
Frankie Goes To Hollywood,
named after an old Sinatra movie
poster, is the latest British import,
complete with an almost Beatiesque
merchandising effort. Fans can obtain Frankie t-shirts, calendars,
bobby-sox, and even boxer shorts.
" Relax," the first single from the
megahyped Welcome to the Pleasure
Dome atbum, flopped on its first
release last year, but has been revived to considerable chart success
(number 21 in the latest Billboard).
The album is unusual in more
ways than one. It's a double albwn
(how many bands debut with a double album?), it has four (count 'em
four!) cover songs, and it 'tries
harder than most albums, in this age
of the dance beat, to be a Serious
Artistic Statement.
Throughout the liner notes, the
lyrics, the quotations, and even the
advertised promotional merchandise
(the "Virginia Woolf vest", the
"Kurt Weill sweatshirt "), this album
is pretentiously artsy. Under the intellectual trappings, however, ·
Frankie's message isn ' t much different from that of Prince: salvation

through sex, heaven through
hedonism. While they sing about the
hopelessness of war ("Two Tribes"),
their advice is similar to Prince's
"1999" : the world may end tomorrow, so we had better have a damned good time tonight.
Like Prince, Frankie has gained
notoriety by the sexual innuendo of
·their songs. "Relax, don't do it,
when you want to suck it to it. .. when
you want to come, " sings vocalist
Holly Johnson. The line
got
"Relax" banned from the airwaves
of the BBC (the controversy,
though, drove the song straight to
Number One in the U.K .), Another
song is called "Krisco Kisses," and
it's not about baking.
On the other side of the coin,
however, is an epic ballad, "The
Pow er of Love . "
F rankie' s
Christmas single, it went to Number
One in England, but probably won't
be released here. Never mind - as
ballads go, it's superb, and also proves that .I ohnson has a better singing voice than is evidenced in

"Relax" .
"The Power Of Love" may be
hopelessly romantic, but the chorus
will haunt you forever if you give it
a chance.
The album also includes an eclectic bunch of cover songs . "Ferry
Across The Mersey" , originally
done by Gerry and the Pacemakers

Though many people dream or
,o meday having their biograp hies
wr itten, some of us arc II0t in the
lea't bit int erested in the idea. Thosc
peorle with the stars of history in
their eyes keep journals, diaries, and
letters in sa fe. easy -to-find places.
But what do we who desire eternal
anonymity do with our wri ti'ngs?
The question is not easi ly answered.
Unfortunately, we are su rrounded on a ll sides by pesky
biographers, and our ·.vritings are in
co nst ant danger o f being snatched
up and published. "Ah" " we might
cx laim, "but on our death beds all we
nced do is tell our loved ones to burn
all th at we have w~itten." This is no
,ure way to maintain our anonymity.
Loved ones usually hold such high
e~teem of our creations, that they
rea,on (after our deaths) that we
IVe re quite mistaken in our desire to
ha ve them destroyed. They save
them, the biographers get them into
their grips, and 10 and behold, our
innermost secrets are revealed to the

general public.
We indeed have a problem. But
th anks to t he ancient p hil osopher,
Xenolicious, our problem is far from
insoluble.
Little is known about Xenol icious,
except that he was a liar.
Of grea ter imporlance to us,
however, is hi s on ly su rviving work
Giving Biographers tl,e Brushoff In
this
wonderful
expos iti o n ,
Xeno li cious
illustrates
his
biographer-foiling techniques in a
series of fables . Gumbo. the protagonist of these tales , guides us
along from o ne technique to the
next.
So let u s examine these
illustrations:
In the first tale, Gumbo rests
alone in a field of lilies. Suddenly a
group of biographers, disguised as
shepherds, approach him. They
question him, hoping to gather
enough information with which to
write hi s history.
"What is your name, fine
fellow?" they ask.
"My name is Flamingus," Gumbo replies shyly, not fooled by their

disguises.
"We a re tired and weary
shepherds ," say the biographers,
"and a rc a nxious for rest a nd relaxation. Have you a journal that we
might read for our entertainment? "
"W hy, certainly," Gumbo says
ga il y, pulling his lie-ridden journal
from a sack.
The biographers, ent iced beyond
measure a t the sight of his journal,
grab it from G umbo's hand and race
off like a herd of cattle. Gum bo is
not in the least bit disturbed .
In the second tale, Gumbo invites
all of the biographers in his vi llage
to a banquet. At the banquet table,
whe!) a ll the gues ts have sated their
appet ities, Gumbo rises from his
cha ir to make a deceptive
announcement.
"It is my hope," he says, "that
after my death, one of you wi ll write
my history. If I should die, you'll
find my journals in the top drawer
of my dresser. I have dated and
organized many of my other papers
for your convenience, and
have
placed them in a wooden box at my

bedside. "
The many biographers sm ile
politely at Gu mbo, but when he
leaves the table for a moment, they
speak un kind words:
"G umbo ? Who cares about
Gumbo?"
"I shan't waste my time on his
story. "
"Nor I."
So the biographers collect their
hats and leave and never think about
Gumbo or hi s history again.
In the last illustration, Gumbo, in
order to fool the biographers yet further, posts hi s weekly journal which has agai n been secret ly filled
with lies on a pole in the
marketplace. T hese written accounts
are very unpopular and are torn
down and stamped on ... usually by
the village biographers .
Let us now look to find some
meaningful guidelines from the three
tales.
Tale number one teaches us how
useful falsehoods can be. If we fill
our journals with lies, we can rest

easy, as Gumbo does. For it does not
matter whether the biographers get
a hold of them or not. Our anonymi·
ty is not threatened.
Tale number two shows us that
biographers are put off by those who
make their histories too aeeessible,
Thus we should fo llow G umbo's example and pretend that we desire our
names to go down in history.
Tale number three illustrates the
importance of false openness. To
throw the biographers for a loop, we
need o nly to make our private lives
avai la ble to the public - or at least
to appear to do so.
Biographers, we must remember,
are tempted to w rite the hi stories of
people who keep secrets. Secrets
drive them to drink , and to create
within themselves a great desire and
longing to get their hands on what
is hidden.
We have Xenolicious to thank for
these ingenious methods. If we
follow them carefully, o ur anonymi·
ty might just have a chance. Perhaps
someday, we can be like
Xenolicious, and be remembered as
clever, anonymous liars.

in 1964, is appropriate, since Frankie
is the first band since the
Pacemakers to have its first two
singles hit Number One in England.
"Do You Know The Way To San
lose" is a throwaway, a painful
mimic of the original, guaranteed to
make you push fast forward. "Born
To Run" is a faithful rendition of
the Springsteen original; it suffers
because the song is one of those that
just can't be remade successfully,
because it' s identified so strongly
with the original artist and version.
"War " is a better reworking, with
snippets of a Reaganish voice inserted between verses, and it's an appropriate lead-in to the anti-war an·
them, "Two Tribes".

.,

If you arc looki!lg for quiet, soothing music , look elsewhere. If yo u
arc eas ,l y offended, buy som ething else. If you are looking for eccentric, spon taneous humor with a rock-n-roll beat, you might try Jalllm/11~ Will! Spack, the latest tape from underground legends Zamo .
When I say ecce nt ric, I'm no t kidding . This is no George Ca rlin; it 's
not even Eddi e Murphy. Nobody, but nobody, comes close to Zamo.
The band, Sma ll -boy, DDS G reg, Huv-boy, a nd Za mo, tak e a perfectly
normal rock riff and mutate it into sonl ething totally alien to most
li steners. a, Zamo (the liner no tes call 11im "att ack/assaul t vocalist")
improv ises lyrics on the spot.
In th e process, they ma nage to in sult nearly every body : wit ness such
titles as "Les bian Love" ("Why did you leave me here that day/ Why
did yo u tell me yo u were gay,!"). a nd" Jesus Sucks." Even the cassett e
~over illustrati o n, of a phallic Q-Tip abou t to be insert ed in a ra th er symbo lic Spod's ear, is bound to o ffend so meone .
Zamo is definitely not for eve rybody, but if yo ur sense o f humor is
'omewhat offbeat, you mi gh t want to give Jamming Wilh Spack a try.
I f no t, take my advice a nd sta y away - far, far away.

Robeson theater illuminates TESe
An often heard complaint is that
nothing ever happens in Olympia.
Well complainers. I hope you were
a t Evergreen last night, because
something did, The Paul Robeson
Community Theater Group performed in celebration of Black
History month . Not only was it free,
they were wonderful.
.
Luckily, the show started late, giv-

ing the unsuspecting a chance to
wander in and catch it. At the
scheduled curtain time, there were
scarcely 50 people present. When the
show began. nearly all the chairs in
the library lobby were full and more
people sat on the stairs. At least they
sat part of the time, when the group
didn ' t have them on th'eir feet clapping and dancing .
The group performed excerpts
rrom a musica l entitled Don 'I BOlher

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Zamo offends hilariously

The ultimate downfall of this
album is its length. Two discs are
difficult for any band to fill, and
" ... Pleasure Dome", while it has
some great moments, has others
which seem to drag oli forever. The
material would have made an excellentsingle LP, and for this reason
the album just might be worth buying, especially if "Relax" intrigues
you .

by Traci Viklund

Anonymity lovers may still have hope of escaping biographers
by Tom Spray

Page 5

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

~

.».

Free groce/')' dehvery wrlhlfl J miles With 130 m""",,,r;, order
Call the mght before 01 befom 200 PM

~
7 AM to 10 PM Mon-Thurs
7 AM to 11 PM Fridays

8 AM to 11 PM Saturdays
8 AM to 10 PM Sundays

3210 Cooper Point Rd. NW .866·3999

Me / ! Can '( Cope. The production
was alive and energetic, infectious,
and inspiring. It was comprised of
vignettes introduced by executive
director Bobby Wooten as " .. .il-·
luminating the Black experience in
America today."
T he performance included skits,
songs, dances, a nd soliloquies. They
were melancholy , angry, and joyous.
Most of all, they were inspiring expressi ng a hope for change and a
resolve to make that change happen.
The show began with a song about
moving on and up . Sonn y Daniels,
in a velvety smooth vo ice, began a
capella and was later joined by the
other five group members. From
there, they went gracefu ll y to the tithe piece "I Can't Cope." Not nearly as depressing as it sounds, this was
a serio us song done in a funny way.
It was about saying "NO" to injustices: higher rent, demeaning
work, and low sa laries. The hopes
expressed in the song encompassed
us all, not only Blacks, "You ain't
Black l But you gOlla copell gOlla
copel All God's chi ldr en gOlla
cope. "
The most moving segment of the
show was a monologue performed
by director Jerry Brewer entit led,
"River Niger." Delivered in a poetic
rhythm , it was a passionate state·
ment about oneness and uni ty, a
soliloquy about a river connecting all
people everywhere. The audience
was silent as Brewer picked them up
and carried them along, ending with,
"Hold hand s my ch ildren / And the
whole world shall hear my waters."
After this, the mood shifted a nd
the group performed a skit about a
Sunday .morning church servicc.
Danny Davis led the others with hi s
credible performance as a rousing
pastor. The song, "Good Vibrations," brought much of the au dience to their feet.
The Paul Robeson group richly
displayed (he possibilities of enter·
tainment. Which just goes to show
- there are things going on in Olympia, you just have to attend them.

Pa~e

February 28. 1985

6

Swells slow
TESC sailors
by Cath Johnson
Mardi Gras is over, the revelers
have gone home, and the Geoducks
are back sailing on Budd Inlet.
Evergreen finished in ninth place
at Tulane University's Nelson A.
Roltsch Regatta. The Roltsch is a national level competition and draws
some of the best team from across
the country.
Ten schools participated in this
year's race. Evergreen finished in
front of Miami of Ohio and just
behind the University of Texas.
"We did well considering the
competition," commented coach
Janet Welch. "There are a lot of
high-caliber collegiate sailors out
there. Tulane (who won the regatta)
has a skipper who made it to the
Olympic Trials last year."

Welch described the sailing performance of the first, second, third
and fourth place finishers as
"flawless," and feds her team
. learned a great deal with sailing with
such talent.
"We were all like sponges, soaking up every available bit of information," Welch said.
The Roltsch is an annual event
held on Lake Ponchartrain, which is
72 miles long by 28 miles wide. The
waters are often rough, and during
this year's race the swells ran three
to four feet.
The Evergreen sailors were not
ready for this amount of chop, since
Budd Inlet is so protected. Coach
Welch, however, feels that coping
with the unfamiliar conditions increased her team's confidence, and
will make them just that much more
",-competitive at home.
" The Evergreen sail team still faces
a rigorous Spring regatta schedule.
They race against Oregon State next
weekend. Hopefully, those who
went to New Orleans can share all
that they learned with their teammates, making the Geoduck fleet
one of (he fastest in the Northwest.

Swimmers fail by fraction
by Cath Johnson
Last weekend, at the NAIA
Regional Championships, the
Evergreen swim team closed out its
1984-85 season. Out of eleven participating schools, the Evergreen
women finished in eighth place, with
67 points, while the men scored 57
points and placed seventh. in the final
standings.
Evergreen coach Bruce Fletcher is
very proud of his team's performance. "We demonstrated to the
league that Evergreen has a very
serious swimming program, and that
our swimmers are committed
athletes.' ,
The women's squad experienced
their greatest success in the relays,
surprising everyone in the 200 free

relay. The team of Mary Beth
Berney, Tina Bauer, Shawn Blaisdell
and Martha Grazier missed the national qualifying time by just sixtenths of one second.
"I couldn't believe how well they
swam together," said Fletcher.
"They really got psyched, I guess ."
The same group also placed
seventh in the 200 medley relay.
Diane Lucas swam in place of
Blaisdell in both the 400 medley and
the 400 free relays. The women placed eighth in both events .
Meanwhile, Blaisdell went ·on to
score points in the diving competition, placing sixth in the three meter
and fourth in the one meter.
Blaisdell's fourth place finish was
the best placing by an Evergreen
swimmer at the meet.

ALL WArS TRAVCL SCRVlce, IIIC.

February 28, 1985



Coach seeks
tennis
players

WESTSIDE SHOPPING CENTER

OLYMPIA. WASH INGTON

943·8700

.~

by Susan Arnold

Applewhite runs
chilly marathon
Evergreen runner Mary Applewhite opened the Geoduck's 1985
track season this weekend by running the Trails End Marathon. Run
in Seaside, Oregon, the Trails End
course is predominantly flat and
usually fast (when the weather
cooperates). The first half of the
26.2 mile course takes the runners
out to the east over country roads,
while the last half brings them back
along the coast. The final miles are
run just adjacent to the beach, and
makes the Trails End finish one of
the most scenic in the country.
Applewhite got off to a strong
start Saturday, averaging seven
minutes per mile for the first five
miles. At the race's halfway point,
she was still well under planned pace
time, but was beginning to slow
down (she had hoped to run a 7:40
per mile pace, and finish around 3
hours and 30 minutes).
The weather, which had been
balmy at the start, turned colder as
the race progressed. Many runners,
including Applewhite, who had left
clothing behind, had di fficulty staying warm over the last miles.
"Somewhere around mile 17 I
started to feel the cold," said Applewhite . "I was shivering, really
hungry, really thirsty, and really
slow." Applewhite finished in three
hours and 55 minutes. Although she
was more than 20 minutes off her
3:30:00 time, she was still fast
enough to place third in the collegiate division .

Evergreen Tennis Coach Bob
Reed welcomes anyone who is interested in playing tennis to join the
team, regardless of prior experience
or ability. Presently there are 14 men
and one woman on the team. They
have been practicing for only two
weeks, so now is a good time to join
the team. The team particularly
needs women players .
Coach Reed is willing. to make
changes in the practice schedule to
accomodate any interested players.
Presently the practice schedule is:
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and
Friday, 4-6 p.m .; Tuesday and
Thursday, 7-9 a.m.; and Saturday,
10 a.m.-I p.m.
There are six practices or matches
every week, and Reed wants players
to participate in at least three practices per week.
Reed is determined to give 150
percent to establish a women's team.
He said there will not be pressure to
compete-people can come out just
to practice. He does think that there
is a stigma and fear about competing
on this campus, which he hopes people will overcome.
Reed said th&t there are true
beginners on the team as well as people who have played a lot of competetive tenl)is.
Reed's foremost goal is to expand
people's enjoyment of the game. Second, Reed wants to help players improve, both physically-mainly in
"stroke production," as Reed called it, and mentally, "primarily [in)
concentration." Third, Reed wants
to enable each person to develop
toward their own specific goal,
whether he or she wants to win a
match, or simply play better tennis .

In the Morning

where do you go
before I am awake?
what can there be to do
when the sun is hardly alive
and even the birds are groggy?

Reed wants players to gain more
than trophies and memories from
their experience in int.ercollegiate
tennis. He wants people to see the
"value of tennis as a vehicle for lifelong growth," as he said. He
believes tennis can help a person
build a foundation for their whole
life, if they grow with it spiritually
and physically.
Matches are usually on
Wednesdays and Saturdays. The
men had their first match yesterday,
and the women begin competing in
April. The season runs through midMay.

now you settle
and my chest carries that regular
sudden weight as you work
your way down in
to my sleepiness
doing this daily
homecoming
the room brightens
up

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Earn 12 semester (18 term) hours of either lower or upper
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Take the following four courses:
Ecology 01 North American
Deserts (4 semester credits).
Ecological field sludil. at pllnll , .nlmall lind
ecospteml In desorb Ind IlImhtrtd land I from

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Ind cultur'll at past and preunl timet, natural

resources Ind envlronment.1 prableml . lndlvldu.1
Ind group projactl, Illdurll, aIId lab W1Irk.

Vertebrates 01 North American
Deserts (3 semester credits).
Naturel hlllOry. systematics and behlvlor of
vertebrates with speclll .mphuls on "eld Idenlineation Ind teChniques used In field studies ineluding milt neHlng and binding 01 bird, mln.lng
tt smlll mammals lAd IIZlrd., aging IRd sexing.

Where will 'it all end? what will happen, we say
It was champagne at my place that made you that way.
The solution is clear, though your video play
Obscured it, goddammit, but now it' s okay:
We'll find it, the answer, ending all disarray
At my place with schezuan, and strawberry champagne
Anonymous

Another Existential Waiting Room
my time passes
like the dripping of a water clock
in a cave
created by Jean Paul Satre
my time flows
like the sand in an hourglass
in Franz' Kafka' s kitchen
my time ticks steady
as a watch
in a Dati landscape
at a right angle to itself
and at odds
with a punctual world
with a symetrical world

Susan Christian

Study, Camp, & Hike In Death Valley, the Mohave
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Vascular Plants 01 North
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human Ulel at nllivi pi Int.; I.mlllanulion with
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orders of deltrt plants: evolutionary history and
relationships at rloras,

Invertebrates 01 North
American Deserts (1 semester
credit).
Natural history, systematics and beh.vlar with
special Imoltasl. on lIeld identification IIId technlquel used In field studl ••.

INSTRUCTORS; Dr. Ellen Benedict & Stoff.
ClASS LIMIT: 24 students (enrollment closes March 8th).
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.
For additional information, contart Dr. Ellen Benedict, 8106 S.E. (a~ton, Portland,
Oregon 97206. Phone (503) 774-1233.

Euclid is the god
of the stock broker
Newton is worshipped
on the altar of technology
I am the heathen
burned on their stake
unemployable
no market value
a dreamer and irresponsible
as well
"it can't be helped" I think
sitting in a wcrld
where time circles forever
where nothing ever ends
where it started
Pete Murney

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I went camping this
weekend. Labor day
weekend. Fort Spokane
on the River. Motor
homes galore. Everyone
out to enjoy the
country. I nsulated in
motor homes, bug spray,
sunglasses. Ran the
river on hard fast
motor boats. It's the
wilderness because
there's trees, ifs cold
in the morning and
your hair is greasy.
People every fi fly yardslevel sites for the tenta table- running waterflush toilet- fire grating.
Make believe. The
animals are gone
except for a few birds,
and the cats and dogs.
So is the plant life
except for a yellow
fuzzed ground covering
and some pine trees.
Tracy Gibson

Looking into your golden glow
in the lamplight
you said "Tell me a story"
and I was speechless.
It's not as easy as that you know
When you're lost in the shine like that
the words get stumbled
and stick to you teeth
Chris Bingham

I wish I hadn't been told:
contention despite my contention
that I enjoy my lookout position
on a great grey rock
on an overhanging cliff,
crowds below.

So many stories they have
like a quilt my mother began
(but couldn't finish, even her.)
keep my blankets untarnished
by calicoed stories
She told me I raised myself
witches seem to agree:
I took a superflous journey
equipped with a weapon, wrapped in skins.
neither male nor female,
in an Arctic snow I was determined to be alone.
To be alone, to be alone
"my best work is done when I'm alone . "
Found interlaced in rotting vine
an urbane primitive tried to nurture me
(and ad vise)
'
,
but I escaped three times:
physical,
mental.
now spiritual,
for these times are spiritually dangeroll s
From my wicked tower
I distance myself
the many cottons, wools, and silks,
. like. functions in a Matinauski nightmare,
tntertwtne to form the quilt
that. I can only layover my body
10 shield myself from the cold of my inclination .
Annecg
Media
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