The Cooper Point Journal Volume 13, Issue 23 (May 2, 1985)

Item

Identifier
cpj0361
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 13, Issue 23 (May 2, 1985)
Date
2 May 1985
extracted text
THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL



TONIGHT
"Dersu Uzala" 7 and 9:30 p.m., Lecture Hall I, $1.50, childcare provided for 7 p.m. show in Lib 3221. Akira Kurosawa's Academy Award winning epic, set in Siberia,
concerns an expedition of Russian soldiers sent to chart the wasteland with the guidance of an old, lone hunter. Time called Kurosawa "one of the few epic poets of the cinema."
Jazz at the Rainbow 9 p.m., no cover. The Tom Russell Group.

St udent

Newspaper

Friday

of

The

Evergreen State Colfege

May 2, 1985

International Folk Dancing 8-11 p.m., Organic Farmhouse. $1 donation. Experienced dancers and beginners are welcome; dances will be taught. For information, call 352-7013.
Jonathan Glanzberg Performs Rainbow Restaurant, also Saturday night. Glanzberg plays blues, ragtime, and jazz guitar.
Ultimate Frisbee 3-5 p.m., Athletic Fields. The Ultimate test of your nying disc skills. Beginners are welcome, as well as more advanced players.
Rock Against War 8 p.m., Lib 4300. Beat Happening, Cause and Effect, Communicator, and the Details will perform a benefit dance for medical and educational
aid to EI Salvador. Admission is $3 and refreshments will be provided.

Sunday
Clearwater N.W. Meeting and Potluck 6 p.m., 113 Decatur. Clearwater N .W. is a group whose dream is to build a large traditional sailing vessel to celebrate, protect,
and study our waterways.
More Ultimate Frisbee 3-5 p.m., Athletic Fields. Open to all disc-ers, beginners too.

Monday
Wallyball 7-9 p.m., Racquetball Court 1, CRe.

All are welcome.

"Sowing Hope" 7:30 p .m. , Lecture Hall I. Al so Tuesday, noon, CAB 110. Free. A film about religion and life in the controlled zones of EI Salvador. Sponsored by
Student s For A Humane Foreign Policy and EPle.
"Next Stop, Greenwich Village" 6:30 and 9 p.m., State Theater. $2 .50 for Olympia Fil m Society members and senior citizens, and $4 for non-members. This semiautobiographical film by Paul Mazursky is th e story of a yo ung actor's expe riences in Greenwich Village during the 1950's. It stars Lenny Baker, Christopher Walken,
and Shelley Winters.

Tuesday
Issues of the Earth Noon -I p.m., CAB 104. This weekly faculty lectur e series continues with Rob Knapp speaking on "Energy and Transportation in Thurston Coun ty."
Spo nsored by the Environmental Resea rch Centcr.
Holocaust Day of Remembrance Noon, Library Lobby. Arthur Jacobovit z will speak. Spo nsored by Ma'arava.
Volleyball and Pickleball Noon-I p.m., Red Square. Also on Thursday.
"Dark Star" 7 and 9 p.m., Lecture Hall I. $2. A low budget space od yss cy created by th e yet- t.o- be-famous John Carpenter. People tell me it 's hil a rious. All proceeds
from the s howing of thi, film go towards the Evergreen A lbum Project.
Free Vaccinations 10 a.m.-2 p.m ., CAB third noor pit. Free. Back by popular demand, an RN and LPN will administer free measles , mumps, and rubella vaccinations,
and student health advocates will be avai lable to answer a ny quest ion s yo u may have about immunization.

Wednesday
Olympia Zen-Kai Zen and Meditation 7:30 p.m., Rotunda. Free, bring a pillow.
Natural History and Ecological Relationship in the Washington Marine Intertidal Zone 7:30-8:30 p.m., Lecture HallS . Betty Nicotri, professor of biology at the University
of Washington, will present this lecture on inteertidal ecology as part of "The Scien tifi c Sense" lecture ser ies .
Careers In Print Workshop I :30-3:30 p.m ., Library Lounge 3500 . An editor, director , bookstore bwner, reporter, writer's consultant, and a freelance writer will participate
in a panel. For more information, contact the Career Planning and Placement office in Lib 1213 or call 866-6000, ext. 6193.
"Piece Of My Mind" Discusses American Illiteracy 12: 10 p.m., First United Methodist Church, 1224 E. Legion Way. Julie Cushman of South Puget Sound Co mmunity
Co llege will discuss definitions of literacy, literacy's function in po litics, the illiteracy situation in Thurston County and much more.
Jazz at the Rainbow 9 p.m., no cover. Bob Meyer performs every Wednesday night.
Ultimate Frisbee Again 3-5 p.m ., Athletic Field s. Special women's workshop for beginners and experienced players.

G

Art Galleries

\"1
..\ Ii

CAB Student Art Gallery One-person show by Judy Kirk, opening May I.
Gallery 210Y, 210 Y, W. 4th. O lympi a. Oils by Marion Erickson and pottery by Barbara Patera. Through April 28 .

Evergreen Gallery Two "Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.', Peacemaker" Traveling exhibit from the Peace Museum in Chicago, through May 12. Admission is free.
Evergreen Gallery Four Paul BergerlVicki Scuri, through May 5.
I

The Twilight Zone Gallery Tenth Floor, A-Dorm. Open all night, every night. OL YMPJA , WA--"Squidmania" has struck the residents Of Washington state, as the campaign to make the lowly squid Washington's official state animal rolls on . Squid T-shirts are available from local stores, squid tunes are played on the radio, and to
top it all off, 3,000 people gathered at the Capitol for a rally on "Washington State Squid Day" last Friday. Observers blame the Evergreen State College newspaper,
the Super Pointless Journal, for starting the furor with a series of anonymous "squid features . " Reporters contacted at the weekly rag denied all responsibility for the
. squid campaign, as did several squid interviewed in their home in Puget Sound. Speculation now turns to the new governor, who has admiited to a "passing acquaintance"
with squid, if not a close relationship. To be conlinued ...

An alcohol/drug support self-help
group has been formed under the
auspices of the Counseling Center to
assist people in dealing with
substance dependency and abuse.
The group is open to anyone in the
Evergreen community who feels that
they might ~e nefit from such a
group. Regular weekly meetings will •
begin Monday, April 29, noon-I
p.m. Please call the Counseling
Center, 866-6000 ext. 6800 for loca tion (you do not need to identify
yourself).
Gallery 210 Y2 is soficiting work by
Olympia area artists for an invitational group show in May. For information and an application, write:
Gallery 210 Y" May Show, 210 ,/ , W.
4th, Olympia, WA, 98501. Please
enclose a SASE.
The WashPIRG BOllrd of Directors
has openings. The Board approves
local projects, decides on local activities and budget, and represents
WashPIRG on campus and in the
community. Internship credit is
possible. Applications are avilable in

the WashPIRG office, Seminar
3i52. For more information, call
866-6000, ext. 6058. DEADLINE IS
FRIDAY, APRIL 26!
The Crisis Clinic needs your help.
Final preparations are underway for
the Fourth Annual Crisis Clinic
Garage Sale June 15 and 16. The
Clinic needs donations of used or
new household items, clothes,
books, toys, or anything else you
could donate. For information on
drop-off locations and pick-up of
large items, call 754-3888.
Expense Paid Volunteer Positions in
Conservation and
Resource
Management
The Student Conservation
Association in Charlestown, New
Hampshire,is accepting applications
for its 1985 summer I fall Park,
Forest and Resource Assistant positions in several places in the United
States.
Any person interested in applying
should call the Student Conservation
Association
immediately at

(603-826-5742). Deadline for applications is June' I.
The Statewide Domestic Violence
Hotline is looking for people interested if helping battered women
and their families. Volunteers help
people by providing crisis counsel ing, information, and referrals. A
new volunteer training will begin in
late May. For more information and
an application, caJl 753-4621 or
754-1183.
Washington Fair Share will be on
campus
recruiting
summer
employees on May 22, at noon, in
Lib 2101. Interviews for jobs with
this social change organization are
available for sign-up with Career
Planning and Placement. Salaries
range from $180 to $210 a week.
Call 866-6000, ext. 6103 .
Representatives from the Olympic
National Park and the Leavenworth
Ranger Di<Jtrict of the Forest Service
will visit the campus to recruit
students on the following dates: May
3, noon-I:30 p .m. (Leavenworth),

and May 6, 10-11 a. m. (Olympic)
Contact the Office of Cooperative
Education, 866-6000, ext. 6391 for
applications and information regarding eligibility.
The Great Geoduck Gallop is approaching fast! On May 18, participants will use the Evergreen track
and trails to cover ~,OOO mile
representing a trans-United States
"gallop." Prizes will be awarded to
the individuals and teams who raise
the most money in pledges and cover
the most miles. Pledge sheets are
available from CRC 302.
Inland Empire Girl Scout Council is
seeking qualified applicants for
waterfront assistants. Those interested should contact the council
office for an application: Inland
Empire Girl Scout Council Inc.,
South 1402 Grand Boulevard,
Spokane, Washington 99203 .
A therapy group for bullmles will he
aVllllable startiDg Friday, April 26.
The group Is open to Evergnen
students, as well as others from the

.Olympia community. The group will
meet for sill consecutive weeks to
",Ip deal with anxieties, pressure lind
concerns related to the summer vacation. For further information, please

Cooper Point Journal Contest Winner is Ache'n
THE EVERGREEN
STATE COLLEGE
Olympia, W A 98505

NONPROFIT ORG.
U.S. POSTAGE
PAID
OLYMPtA. WA
PERMIT NO. 65

page 2

May 2, 1985

THF: COOPER POINT JOURNAL

May 2, 1985

a e3

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Asian Pacific Heritage week
brings many events to Evergreen

Singer replaces seeds of the soul
by Mike McKenzie
"I've been teaching pretty solidly
for three of four years," said
vocali st Susan Osborn. "Singing is
available to everyone and the feeling of ecs tasy is ava ilable for
everyone . "
Osborn, who has been singing
since she was a chi ld , will perform
a solo concert in Evergreen's Recital
Hall a t 8 p .m. on Friday, May 3. On
the following day, Saturday, May 4,
she will co nduct a work shop enti tled " The Seeds of Singing" in
CA B I 10 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m . .
"Peop le will feel Iha t they want
to tak e thi s workshop . They will
have felt in them,elves th at th ey have
always wanted to si ng ," Osborn
sai d .
She explained Ih al Ih e titl e for her
works hop ca me from a n ar ticl e she
read about " tr ibesme n who ca llih e
so ul the 't he seeds of si ngin g. '"
T hese tribesmen believe that as
people g row I he ,ecd, hecome
mi spla ced, "so, as Osborn said,
" They have a ce remony to bring the
seeds back into place."
"The seeds are there in whatever
people," Oshorn added. Her

workshop is designed to let people
have "the experience of letting their
voice totally out. "
Osborn's foundation for singing
is spiri tual. She began singing things
like "Sil ent Night" in church.
"I got my first guitar when I was
ten," she said. "Hootenannies were
big then."
Next Osborn started playing string
bass, as soon as she was big enough
to reach aro und it. She sang in choirs
in high school, and played the violin.
She went to Iowa State Un iversity
from 1968-71, but left sc hool to
travel the Midwest as a solo coffee
ho use act. In 1973 she jo ined a country rock act and " toured all over."
Then, in 1975 , she sta rted a group
ca ll ed Gar den with two other
wo men . A lso in 1975 she met Paul
Winter.
"I'm co mmitted to using what I
lea rned from Paul," Os bo rn sa id. '
"I 'm deeply indebted and grateful."
By 1978 she had worked on Paul
Winter's album Common Ground,
an d started to uring with the Paul
Winter Conso rt in March o f that
yea r.
If you go see Os born perform, or
participate in her workshop, be
prepared . Her singing has made

many people cry. Osborn has said
that "crying is ultimately connected
with singing. Singing is like surfing.
You have to learn to ride the wave."
Osborn said that another reason
people cry when they hear her sing
" is because I am a naked human being on stage. It's just letting go completely. Everybody knows how. I
show myself how and singing is my
teacher. I sing pretty much all out. "
"What I mean is to totally surrender to th e gift I've been given .
Life is poign ant when lived to its
fullest. "
Tickets fo r Osborn's co ncert cos t
$6 general and $4 for students, the
unemployed and senior citi zens .
T hey are available a t T he
Bookmark, Yenney' s Music a nd
Ra iny Da y Records. Ad mi ss ion to
th e workshop is lim it ed to the firsl
25 persons to regi ster, a nd costs $5
fo r student s, se ni or citi zens and the
unemployed, and $10 for the general
public.
To register for the work shop, contact Marita Berg at 866-0825, or Innerplace c/o CAB 305, TES C, or
866-6000, ex tension 6145. Dead line
for registrati on is 5 p.m . o n Thursday, May 2.

by Susan Arnold
"To recognize Asian-American
contributions to the Northwest with
respect to culture, economy, and
politics," is the emphas.is of AsianAmerican Heritage' Week, said student Tsukasa Sekizaki, coordinator
of the Asian· Pacific Coalition.
"Most American do not discuss
the issue of Asian-Americans; most
of the time, they lack interaction
with them. These events are an excellent opportunity for the Evergreen
community to think seriously and
begin to understand deeply who
Asian-Americans are: what kind of
experience they have gone through,
and their current struggle," Sekizaki
said.
The film Bittersweet Struggle will
start the week's events on Monday
May 6 at I pm in Library 3500. It
will show the experiences of the
Southeast Asian immigrants in
America, including the encountered
contradiction between dream and
reality, work and exploitation, a~<.I
the struggle for national and cultural
identity.

Just after the film, at 2 pm, Dr.
Thuy Vu will speak on the Southeast
Asian refugee issue in the Northwest, including his own experience.
The major academic activities will
take place on Wednesday, May 8 in
Library 4300. At JO am Evergreen
faculty member York Wong will lec·
ture on the history of Asian immigration into the Northwest.
At 11 am a documentary film ,
Fukuyama Family will detail the
struggle and current life of an immigrant family .
Peter Bacho, adjunct faculty, and
Doug Chin, author, will speak on
the current issue of Asian-Americans
in the Northwest at I pm.
A "highlight of the day," said
Sekizaki, will be three Asian·
American women in a panel
discussion at 2 p.m ..
Pianist Deems Tsutakawa of Seat·
tie will play at the Recital Hall at
8:30 pm. His music has been
characterized as a "blending of R
and B, jazz, rock, and pop," with
"infectious rhvthms ... " wrote Tom-

mie O . Oiye of the International ex-

aminer.
There will be two films shown
two times on Thursday night at 7
and 9:30. Unfinished Business is a
documentary of three JapaneseAmerican men who refused to be incarcerated during World War [I.
The · film shows wartime anti·
Japanese hysteria, evacuation, incarceration, and life in the concentration camps. The men tell their
personal stories of the refusal forty
years ago and the story of the fight
against the government today.

Beacon Hill Boys is a 1985 film
which was produced by two
Evergreen grduates, Dean Hayasaka
and Wm. Satake Blauvelt. It is a
comedy-{)rama about four JapaneseAmerican boys just out of high
school in the early 70's.
The writer of the screenplay, Ken
Mochizuki, was spurred to write it
after the Seattle murder of two
Asian-American activists who were
trying to make changes in the cannery union . Mochizuki saij that the

Due to the recent reclassifidllion
of individual sec urit y o fficers to
poli ce officers, a DTF (Disappearing Task Force) on Campus Secu ri ty ha s hee n charged by Dick
Schw art z. Vice Presiden l for
Bu,i~ess, to ex ami ne the reclass
im plica t ion s.
Two primary questions thc DTF
will address arc : Sho ul d the Securi.
I\' depa rtment become a police
Jepartmen t"; a nd, if a police depart ment is fnrmed, should the officers
carr\' handgun s"
Altllough charged by Sc hwartz,
t hc Illcm hers of til e DTF were
chosen hy I-:en Jacob, di r,'ctor o f
Auxiliar y Services, inc lu ding t he
Securi ty depa rtmenl .
Stude nl representa li on for the
DTf' is a Cam pus Sec urit y dispat-

cher, two student housing managers,
and a student -organization coordi nator. Many o thcr DTF membe rs
al so ha ve ~e curily backgrounds
a nd / or a rc fami li ar with law
enforcement.
At th e fir st meeting held las l
Wed nesday, DTF member Dia na
Cushin g emphasiLed that the DTF
should "bend over backwards [to
publicize DTF meetings] so th at Ihe
com munit y h a~ a se nse that Ihey arc
involved." Cus hing a lso sugges led
putting the DTF minutes in the CP.I
a nd ha vin g copies of DTF mat erial
a l the Informat ion Ce nl er in th e
CA B, a t the C ircul ation Desk in the
Libr ary, and in the office of Gai l
Marl in, Dean of Stude nt s and DTF
chairperson . Mart in stated th at such
material will be avai lable to th e communit y upo n req lJest by this week ..

When Martin was asked if she was
sa tis fi ed wit h th e DTF representatio n, she said that "more third world
members are needed." Asked why,
Martin sa id she feels that "third
world people have a special perspective on police and sec urity matters."

The DTF should' 'bend over
backwards so that the community has a sense that they
are involved. "

Board of Trustees' ultimate decision ,
based on the DTF recommendation ,
if a police department is created on
campus. In that event , the department would obtain its authorit y
from the Trustees, instead of the
Thurston County Sherilrs Office, as
it does now.
A member of the DTF, Jim
Wussler, of Campus Facilities, and
a former SI. Martin's securit y of-

ficer, commented that Western
Washington Universtity's study of
their Security department took nine
months . He expressed skepticism,
but hope, that Evergreen 's DTF on
Ca mpus Security could be complete
in less than two month s .
The DTF meetings are open to all
faculty, staff, and studerlts. The next
meeting wil be be May 8, 1:00-3:00
pm, in Ll612.

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WES TSIDE CENTER

The Seattle-based funk·n-fusion
group "Common Cause" will play
for a dance on Saturday at 9 pm .
Three dollars will get you in, and
refn,shml'nl< will he available.
In 1979 former President Jimmy
Carter designated the first week of
May to be a time to recognize AsianAmerican contributions to this society with reference to culture, politics ,
and economy.

nt

o

-

.ers

Hot Launch takes off in Gallery Four
by Irene Mark Buitenka m

Mart in has made June 7th the
deadline for the DTF to make a
recom mendation repo rt 10 Sc hwar l7
and Ihe Board of Trustces . It is Ihe

early 70's was a time of great change
for the Asian-Americans, and this
period held "a story that needed to
be told." The cast was entirely
volunteer , as were the props,
vehicles, costumes and locations.
The film was shot entirely in Seat·
tIe, mainly at Beacon Hill. The film
will give good insight toward
understanding
contemporary
Japanese -A merican s
in
I he
Northwest.
r

DTF to examine Evergreen Security reclassification
hy Jan in e M. T home

Pianist Deems Tsutakawa of Seattle will
play at Evergreen on Wednesday, May 8.

It is a privilege to have the Vicki
Scuri show, HOT LAUNCH AT
HOME at Evergreen (fourth floor
Library Gallery) . It will be here only until May 5. It is a profound expression in Multi-Media loaded with
metaphors which are challenging to
the viewer.
The excellent quality of the piece
beco mj:s understandable with the
realization that Vicki Scuri has exhibited her work 45 times since 1979
and has studied at three campuses of
the University of California, a nd in
France before getting a M.F.A . from
the University of Wisconsin . At [1resent she is an assistant professor of
art at Whitman College, Walla
Walla, Washington. Her ' work
reflects the experience and sensitivity of her 32 years.
Cons isting of film, sound and
sculpture, the show is four dimensional environment into which the
viewer is immersed . The fourth
dimension is time . The changes in
time provide new images from pro-

Jectors and sounds from tapes as the
view moves abou t assembling the
messages. The room is lit from the
ambient light of five projectors so
there is a shadowy effect. The sound
from four audio tapes which
sometimes blend when one doesn 't
focus on a single one lend an a tmosphere wh ich is a little like an
amusement park funhou se. I mages
are projected on walls and bedsheets
held on lines with curious
clothespins. As one moves through
the mysterious light and shadows
hearing strange sounds and noticing
black and white objects of varying
sizes, mostly vertically poised , the
message begins to materialize .
Many of the objects are kitch en
utensils. At home , the kitchen is the
place where things happen . It is the
place of preparation for nurturing
the nuclear family , such as fixing
lunch . This stimulates thoughts
a bout laboratories and plants where
death dealing thin gs are prepared
a nd " nuclear" produces another
meaning.

In one section th e viewer is in a
kind of cage whil e observing
miniaturized missiles on the floor so
there is both the feelin g of being over
and under so mething. The ambience
of the dramati cally lit se ttin g mak es
th e viewer feel he is on a stage; it
cretes a mystery which diffuses the
vertical dowels and implements and
lik e stage props Ihey become accepta ble as sy mbol s. One of'the tapes
is of Vincent Price testifying in court
that Leonardo Da Vinci's genius was
a pplied to inventions for war as well
as art. Another tape is clearly th e
voices of children .
Eac h of the man y elements was
carefully selected to compose the
total message. Thi s message is one
response to the nuclear age. There
have been many and the number a nd
strength of them a re necessa ry . Un·
fortunately redundancy often tends
to diminish potency. To make this
statement in a n original a nd moving
way is a great contri bUlion and this
work does it. It isn't presumptuous
to say it sho uld be shared with the
nation and indeed the world .

Let Washington Mutual help with a
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page 2

May 2, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

May 2, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

a e 3

Asian Pacific Heritage week
brings many events to Evergreen

Singer replaces seeds of the soul
by Mike McKenzie
"I've been teaching pretty solid ly
for three of four . years," said
vocalist Susan Osborn. "Singing is
available to everyone and the feel ing of ecstasy is avai lable for
everyone.' ,
Osborn, who has been singing
since she was a child, will perform
a solo concert in Evergrcen's Recital
Hall at 8 p.m. on Friday, May 3. On
the following day, Saturday, May 4,
she will conduct a workshop 'enti tied "The Seeds of Singing" in
CAB 110 from 9 a .m . to 6 p.m ..
"People will fl'e1 that they want
10 take this workshop . They will
have felt in th em,c1ves that they ha ve
always wan ted to si ng ," Osborn
said.
She ex plain ed that the tit le for her
workshor came from an article she
read about "tribe.,men whu call the
so ul the 'the seeds of sin gin g ' "
These tribesmen believe that as
pearle grow th e seeds becom e
misrlaced, so , as O.,horn said ,
"They ha ve a ceremony to bring th e
seeds back int o place."
"The seed s art: there in whatever
peuple ," Osburn a dded . Her

workshop is designed to let people
have' 'the experience of letting their
voice totally ou t. "
Osborn's foundat ion for singing
is spi ritual. She began singing things
like "Silent Night" in church.
"I got my first guitar when I was
ten," she said. "Hootenannies were
big then."
Next Osborn started playing string
bass, as soon as she was big enough
to reach around it. She sang in choirs
in high school, and played the violin .
She went to Iowa State University
from 1968-7 1, but left sc hool to
tra vel the Midwest as a 5010 coffee
house act. In 1973 she joined a countr y rock act and "toured all over."
Then, in 1975 , she started a group
ca lled Garden with twO other
women. Also in 1975 she met Paul
Winter.
"I'm co mmitted to using what I
lea rn ed from Paul ," Osborn said.
"I'm deeply indebted and grateful."
By 1978 she had worked on Paul
Winter' s album Common Ground.
and started lOu ring with the Paul
Winter Consort in March of that
year.
If you go sec Osborn perform, or
rartieipate in her work shop, be
prepared. Her singing has mad e

many people cry. Osborn has said
that "crying is ultimately connected
with singing. Singing is like surfing.
You have to learn to ride the wave."
.Osborn said that another reason
people cry when they hear her sing
"is because I am a naked human being on stage. It's iust letting go completely. Everybody knows how. I
show myself how and singing is my
teacher. I sing pretty much all out."
"What I mean is to totally surrender to the gift I've been given.
Life is poignant when lived to its
fullest.' ,
Tickets for Osborn's concert cost
$6 general and $4 for stu dents , the
unemployed and sen ior citizens.
They are available at The
Bookmark, Yenney' s Music and
Rainy Da y Record ., . Admission to
the workshop is limit ed [0 the fir sl
25 persons to regi ster, and costs 55
for studen ts , sen ior citi zens and th e
unemployed, and $10 fo r t he gene r~ I
public.
To register for the work shop, contact Marita Berg at 866-0825, o r In"
nerplace c/ o C AB 305, TESC , or
866-fiOOO, extension 6145. Deadline
for registration is 5 p .m . on Thurs day, May 2.

by Susan Arnold
"To recognize Asian-American
contributions to the Northwest with
respect to culture, economy, and
politics," is the emphasis of AsianAmerican Heritage Week, said student Tsukasa Sekizaki, coordinator
of the Asian-Pacific Coalition.
"Most American do not discuss
the issue of Asian-Americans; most
of the time, they lack interaction
with them. These events are an excellent opportunity for the Evergreen
community to think seriously and
begin to understand deeply who
Asian-Americans are: what kind of
experience they have gone through,
and their current struggle," Sekizaki
said.
The film Bittersweet Struggle will
start the week's events on Monday
May 6 at 1 pm in Library 3500. It
will show the experiences of the
Southeast Asian immigrants in
America, including the encountered
contradiction between dream and
reality, work and exploitation, ang
the struggle for national and cultural
identity.

Just after the film, at 2 pm, Dr.
Thuy Vu will speak on the Southeast
Asian refugee issue in the Northwest, including his own experience.
The major academ ic activities will
take place on Wednesday, May 8 in
Library 4300. At 10 am Evergreen
faculty member York Wong willlecture on the history of Asian im migration into the Northwest.
At II am a documentary film,
Fukuyama Family will detail the
struggle and current life of an im,
migrant family.
Peter Bacho, adjunct faculty, and
Doug Chin, author, will speak on
the current issue of Asian-Americans
in the Northwest at I pm.
A "highlight of the day," said
Sekizaki, will be three AsianAmerican women in a panel
discussion at 2 p.m ..
Pianist Deems Tsutakawa of Seattle will play at the Recital Hall at
8:30 pm. His music has been
characterized as a "blending of R
and B, jazz, rock, and pop," with
"infectious rhythms .. . " wrote Tom-

mie O. Oiye of the International Ex-

aminer.
There will be two films shown
two times on Thursday night at 7
and 9:30. Unfinished Business is a
documentary of three JapaneseAmerican men who refused to be incarcerated during World War II.
The film shows wartime antiJapanese hysteria, evacuation, incarceration, and life in the concentration camps. The men tell their
personal stories of the refusal forty
years ago and the story of the fight
against the government today.

Beacon Hill Boys is a 1985 film
which was produced by two
Evergreen grduates, Dean Hayasaka
and Wm. Satake Blauvelt. It is a
comedy-<lrama about four JapaneseAmerican boys just out of high
school in the early 70's.
The writer of the screenplay, Ken
Mochizuki, was spurred to write it
after the Seattle murder of two
Asian-American activists who were
trying to make changes in the cannery union. Mochizuki saij that the

Pianist Deems Tsutakawa of Seattle will
play at Evergreen on Wednesday, May 8.
early 70's was a time of great change
for the Asian-Americans, and this
period held "a story that needed to
be told." The cast was entirely
volunteer, as were the props,
vehicles, costumes and locations.
The film was shot entirely in Seattle, mainly at Beacon Hill. The film
will give good insight toward
understanding
contemporary
J apanese- Americans
In
the
Northwest.

The Seattle-based funk-n-fusion
group "Common Cause" will play
for a dance on Saturday at 9 pm .
Three dollars will get you in, and
refrpshmpnt. will he available.
In 1979 former President Jimmy
Carter designated the first week of
May to be a time to recognize AsianAmerican contributions to this society with reference to culture, politics.
and economy.

OTF to examine Evergreen Security reclassification
by -'anine M. Thome

Due 10 th e rece nt reclassifi cat ion
of indiv idual security officers to
poli ce o fficers. a DTF (Di sa ppea ring Task Force) on Ca mpus Securi ty ha, be en charged by Dick
Sc hwan/., Vi ce Pr es ident for
Bu , incss. to examine Ih e recia,.'
imrli ca li o ns.
Two rrimar y questions the DTF
will address arc: Should the Securi ty departmenl hecom e a pulicc
department " ; and, if a police dcrart mCl1t i, formed. should the office rs
ca rry ha nd gun s?
,\It hough cha rged by Schwart z,
the nlembcr, of Ihe DT F were
cho,cll by J.:en .Iacoh. director of
AII.\ diar y Services, including tht'
Security departmcnt.
SIudc 'lI re pre,c ntation for Ihe
DTF is a Ca mpus Security dispat -

cher, two student housing managers,
and a student -organization coordinator. Many other DTF members
also have ., e(u rity background s
and / or arc familiar with law
en forcc men t .
At the first meeting held la st
Wednesday, DTF member Diana
Cushing emphasiLed that thc DTF
should "bend over backwards [to
publicize DTF meetings] so that th c
comm uni ty has a sense that they arc
invo lved ." Cus hing also sugges ted
putting th c DTF minutcs in the CP.J
and havi ng copies o f DTF mat erial
at the Information Ce ntn in the
C AB, at th e C ircul at ion Desk in the
Library . and in thc office of Gai l
Manin. Dean of Studenl s and DTF
chairperson. Martin stated th at such
material will be available to thc com munity upon request by this week._

When Martin was asked if she was
satisfied with the DTF representation, she said that "more third world
members a rc needed." Asked why,
Martin said she feels that "third
world peoplc have a special perspecIive on police and sec urit y matters ."

The OTF should' 'bend over
backwards so that the community has a sense that they
are involved. "

Martin ha s mad e .I une 7th the
deadline for th e DTF to make a
recommendat ion report to Schwan z
and th e Board of Tru st ees. It is the

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Board of Trustees' ultimate decision,
based on the DTF recommendation,
if a police department is created on
campus. In that event, the department would obtain its authority
from the Trustees, instead of the
Thurston County Sheriff's Ornee. as
it does. now.
A member of the DTF, Jim
Wussler, of Campus Facilities, a nd
a former St. Martin's securilY 01'-

ficer, commented that Western
Washington Universtity's study of
their Security department took nine
months. He expressed skepticism,
but hope, that Evergreen's DTF on
Campus Security could be complete
in less than two months.
The DTF meetings are open to all
faculty, staff, and students. The next
meeting wil be be May 8, 1:00·3:00
pm, in Ll612.

ht

o

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Hot Launch takes off in Gallery Four
by Irene Mark Buitenkant

208 W. 4th AVENUE

PHONE: (206) SUN -TAPE

MINIATURE GARDENS
CACTUS NURSERY
5140 Kinney Rd. SW
(off Black Lake Blvd.)

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8 AM . 9 PM Daily
10 AM - 7 PM Sundays

Open Every Day

WESTSIDE CENTER

It is a privilege to have the Vicki
Seuri show, HOT LAUNCH AT
HOME at Evergreen (fourth floor
Library Gallery). It will be here only until May 5 . It is a profound expression in Multi-Media loaded with
metaphors which are challengtng 10
the viewer.
The excellent quality of the piece
becomes understandable with the
realization that Vicki Scuri has exhibited her work 45 times since 1979
and has studied at three campuses of
the University of California, and in
France before getting a M.F.A. from
the University of Wisconsin. At present she is an assistant professor of
art at Whitman College, Walla
Walla, Washington. Her work
.reflects the experience and·sensitivity of her 32 years.
Consisting of film, sound and
sc ulpture, the show is four dimensional environment into which the
viewer is immersed . The fourth
dimension is time . The changes in
time provide new images from pro-

Jectors and sounds from tapes as the
view moves about assembling the
messages. The room is lit from the
ambient light of five projectors so
there is a shadowy effecl. The sound
from four audio tapes which
sometimes blend when one doesn't
focus on a single one lend an at mosphere which is a little like an
amusement park funhouse. Images
are projected on walls and bedsheels
held on lines with curious
clothespins. As one moves through
the mysterious light and shadows
hearing strange sounds and noticing
black and white objects of varying
sizes, mostly vertically poised, the
message begins to materialize.
Many of the objects are kitchen
utensils . At home, the kitchen is the
place where things happen. It is' the
place of preparation for nurturing
the nuclear family, such as fixing
lunch. This stimulates thoughts
about laboratories and plants where
death dealing things are prepared
and "nuclear" produces another
meaning.

In one section the viewer is in a
kind of cage while observing
miniaturized missiles on the Ooor so
there is both the feeling of being over
and under something. The amb icl1l:c
of the dramatically lit setting makes
the viewer feel he is on a stage; it
cretes a mystery which diffuses the
vertical dowels and implement s and
like stage props they become acceptable as symbols. One of the tapes
is of Vincent Price testi fying in court
that Leonardo Da Vinci's genius was
app li ed to inventions for war as well
as art. Another tape is clearly the
voices of children.
.
Each of the many elements was
carefully selected to compose the
total message. This message is one
response to the nuclear age. There
have been many and the number and
strength of them 'are necessary. Unfortunately redundancy often tend s
to diminish potency. To make thi s
statement in an original and moving
way is a great contribution and this
work does it. It isn't presumptuous
to say it should be shared with the
nation and indeed the world.

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'5- 30,

1985 400 Cooper Point Road

I
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.. _---- --------'..
Good only at

May 2, 1985
May 2, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 4

Let te't 4
Plea cops
a letter

featured in the collection of
"goodies" to be displayed at the
Louie Louie Day First Anniversary
Car Show and Rock'n'Roll Dance to
be held Apri[ 12th; 1986. Stay tun ed for details.
Again, my thanks to you.

Dear C PJ

Sincerely, Carl Cook

Your plea for letters served as a
" harp kick in the back side .. . a
reminder that I s hould have written
ear lier. Speaking of Louie Louie ... as
t he orga ni zer of the Louie Louie Day
rally at the State Capitol, I want to
thank you for the outstanding article th at appeared in the CPJ. From
I he point of view of someon e who
was there ... the writer was very s uccessful in getting the feel of the
event, the energy across to the
reader. The article was FUN to read.
Since Louie Louie Day, I have
received newspaper clippings from
all over the coun try. The-CPJ story;s
by far the best of all, and Will De

Francisco is
right again
To The Editor,
Wendi D . Kerr is absolutely correct in her assess ment of the
apathetic Greener (circa 1985).
Makes me happy to be an '84
graduate.
Actually, the general sc hool
populace was fairly apathetic when
I ran the paper (now [ gave away my

DO YOU KNOW HOW TO ANSWER THE TELEPHONE?
If you can, thcn you co uld work for the CPJ.
Two positions are open: Editor and Busincss Managcr.
Remember, Ihese are paid int erns hips!
If you'd like to apply for either position, please write a letter
of application to Evergrcen's Communications Board spec i fying how long you want to hold the position, your qualifications,
your previous academic work, and your ideas on what this position mea ns to you and to Evergreen.
Duties and Responsibilities
Editor: full responsibility for the CPJ's content, format. quality
a nd direction.
. The editor must facilitate staff meetings, and monitor staff compliance to professional standards, codes, the directives and intent
of the Com munications Board, and the appropriate provisions of
th e EAC , and the Washingtqn Administrative Code. The editor
is responsible for recruiting, training, supervising and termination
of the managing editor, production manager, graphic and photo
ed itors, and writers.
The editor must make story and photo assignments, and organize
the weekly production process.
The editor must make an effort to continually improve the CPJ,
and provide leadership to the entire ·organization .
Business Manager: responsible for the financial health of the
Cooper Point Journal. Maintaining a financial journal, filing,
maintaining written and verbal contact with advertisers, work ing closely with the CP J advertising manager and general accounlin g sta ff, billings a nd collections, mailing newspa pers to
subscribers, and updating the subscribers' computer file.
Qualificat~ons

Editor: good writing skills are essential. Must be able to edi t copy,
type, proofread, and do lay-out. Experience on a newspaper or
magazine'is extremely desirable. Leadership skills are important.
Business Mnnagt:r: Familiarity with accounting fundamentals,
operation of adding machine and typewriter. Ability to clearly communicate and work well with the public and staff in a variety of
situations. Ability to work in a highly active environment. Some
knowledge of marketing and distribution techniques,
and limited experience working with the P-system on the HewlettPackard computers.
,<

If you're interested, the application deadline is 5:00 p .m.' on
Wednesday, May 9. Please bring letters of appli cation to CAB 306,
TESC, attention of Tim C rews, advisor.
Interviews will be held at the May [0 meeting of Evergreen's
Communication Board in the Board Room on the third noor of
Evergreen's Library .

identity. Or did you look at the bottom of the page?). I think the lack
of enthusiasm over the CP J (My
Baabbyyy!) had to do with the uni que creature known as a "greener."
Most students seem to get very
focused in on what they're doing
(i .e. Biological exploration of Dr.
Seuss or How to See the Grateful
Dead on a '16 credit Internship) and
their interest in the political elements
of Evergreen is minimal. I don't
mean people aren't politically aware.
Shoot, we've got more political activists than Deli Bob has bad jokes
(close call though). [t just seems
most greeners aren't too involved in
protecting the structure that provides
so much of their forum.
People like to shake and bake in
the kitchen but don't want to clean
the rest of the house. Perfectly
understandable and refreshing;
especially compared to the frats,
soa ps, suds, and sports scene at
places like the UW or WSU. It does
create problems for a hardworking,
earnest little paper trying to bring
student attention to ·the structure
that houses all of our dreams.
The concern is not over what to
do about spiraling enrollment and
diminishing funds but over the fact
that " my program is full and I'm
number 234 on the waiting [ist."
OK, OK, [ know that's not really
fair. Let' s put it this way; Many's
the time students have gotten
frustrated with or angry at
Evergreen for not being able to
supply something. A few years ago
it was the 16-track recording studio
and the Album project; The Theater
Department, or what there is of it;
The lack of computer classes,
dwindling arts and humanities selections, reduction of photo classes and
services, retention of worthy facu[ty (the two year struggle of Doranne
Crable comes to mind).
Those students who got involved
in governance at Evergreen (DTFs,
S&A Board, many others), they
knew what was coming down and
fought--not always successfully--to
retain something they thought
. Evergreen should have. Many got involved because the changes proposed affected them.
The reason you have an album
project currently in the works is
because former students like Bill
Eiseman looked for ways to do the
project after the college withdrew its
support. He got involved, learned
the system (like a fish takes to water)
and put it to work.
The reason [ inherited a wonderful compugraphic machine at the
CP J is because the editors before me
lobbied for it even though they knew
they would never get to use it.
The reason the CP J has got much
betler quarters and new light tables
t han we had last year is because
former CP J advisor, Mary Ellen
McKain worked hard to obtain
them.
The reason a fantastic teacher like
Doranne is still at Evergreen is
because students got involved and
refused to take "no" for an answer.
Too many students (though obviously not all) don't want to get involved unless their specific academic
program or course of study is
threatened. Their apathy is the result
of a tunnelvision-type illness that
affects lots of students.
All this affects the CP J because
while Governance is an important
(essential) element of the Evergreen
experience, it doesn't bring in the 01'
ratings. Remember guns on campus?
I sure do . Remember last year's 'ongoing debate on pornography?
Remember the charges of racial insensitivity leveled at the CP J earlier
this year? Those things stir up emotions in people and get responses.
Get the hint?
Now, since time is getting short
and this monster is getting long, [et's
specifically address the other part of
Wendi's letter .
I thought your coverage of Louie
Louie Day was the best of all the
papers that covered it. You caught
the mood of the whole affair very

well. 'I hope you saw Arlo Guthrie
last week cos he was fantastic too .
Congratulations to Mister Mike
who has put together some good
looking papers this quarter. Keep it
up.
Who did that great cartoon about
Valley girl meets sleaze? I take a lot
of shit for bei.ng a greener in my office but everyone appreciated that
cartoon. Hell, some even ' read the
rest of .the paper. Encore .
I say we keep Evergreen beaches
nude (optional) and dogs leashed,
except for Sandy Dog who has a student card and used to write a column
for our illustrious paper.
Finally, everyone who has not
bothered to read a single story about
what is happening up here on the
Hill with regard to state budget cuts
and agency spending AND possible
tax increases; PLEASE read Carla
Casper's article on page I of last
week's paper. That way, if they cut
YOUR program or YOUR staff
position or YOUR resource center,
you'll know why. Who knows, you
might even decide to fight.
Francisco A. Chateaubriand
Class of '84
P .S. Wendi Kerr sounds like editor
material to me. Joe Bob sez check
it out.

Reader's plea:
Get with it!
A
Plea to
Community:

the

which definitely conveys the impression that it's already a clothingoptional area. Security should make
sure the status of the beach is clear
before they harass anybody. Better
yet, they should forget about the
whole thing.
Jean Fallow

Dear CPJ,
The Evergreen Beach should be a
clothing-optional beach. I do not
know why there is such a fuss over
this situation.
The people who live across the inlet would need telescopes to offend
themselves.
Also, if the officials are concerned that nudity attracts weirdos and
creeps, they ought to consider how
they must look-stumping about
with dour faces on a beautiful pebb[e beach surrounded by healthy individuals enjoying the rare Olympia
sun, while they sweat and grumble
in their itchy blue uniforms,
grouching at everyone to put their
clothes on.
Why can't they just relax and stop
making a mountain out of a
molehill?
Bemused by such medieval
ignorance,
Scott Brownwood

Evergreen

PLEASE GET OFF YOUR
ASSES!!! One by one the social
freedoms that helped make
Evergreen so special are being lost,
some through bureaucratic fiat, but
most because of the ineredible
apathy that pervades this campus.
For instance, the Evergreen Councit (once the decision making body
on campus) has been rendered
powerless by lack of support in the
campus community.
Another example? This week's
"big issue" is clothing policy for the
beach. Unless the "clothing optional" idea gets A LOT of support,
the administration will no doubt
take the politically correct action and
it will be "indecent" to expose your
body at your beach .
So come on everyone--GET
W[TH IT! Turn off those re-runs,
put down that frizbee and that joint
for a few minutes, and invest some
time in Evergreen to keep it a shining light in a dark world! Think
about campus issues, and, whatever
you opinion, let it be known. It is
noble to work on the global issues
and try to make the world a better
p[aee, but if your own community
falls to ruil1 in th,e proces!>, what
have you gained? A1so--if we lose the
unique Evergreen social experience,
can our academic stagnation be far
behind?
Finally--if you really think your
voice isn't important, that nothing
matters, or if you are only here
because Evergreen doesn't give
"grades" , kindly take your bad attitude somewhere else and make
room here for those who believe they
can make a difference. Thank You.
Randy J. Earwood

Reader votes
for nudity
Dea'f CP J:
I cast my vote for a nude beach .
Why not?
I'd like to point out that there are
currently signs on the beach reading
"Do not go naked past this point,"

Letters, From page 4
at my job. Please, non-nudists, stay
.on the part of the beach near the
Duck House, and my naked navel
will not cause you to drool and faint.
For I will be down on the West end
often, Earth Day, Sunday, maybe
everyday, until this temporary home
passes from underneath my feet,
leaving the sands for other travelers.
Come on and all and join me
sometime, and let's just see these
. security people write tickets for five
hundred of us .
An Alumni

And another
nude ,vote

To beach, or
not to beach?
Down at the Capitol Mall at a
bookstore, there is a book entitled
NORTH AMERICAN GUIDE TO
OUTDOOR
NUDE
SUNBA THING AND SKINNY DIPPING AREAS. This is not a joke.
Evergreen State College is listed in
the book. I did not buy the book,
but copied down the information
from it on areas in Washington State
to be placed in the Wilderness
Center, for students to look at. I
have come and gone and graduated,
but I can tell you all this : The Nude
Beach was an official part of our
tradition here long before I scratched the words (Yes, Mr.Russell, it
was done with my pocket knife)
NUDE BEACH on the sign listing
the alternative paths one may take
when approaching the beach. I scratched the words on the sign because .
Evergreen . is an alternative school
and r was providing people with
alternatives. I have so much healthy
respect for the moms and dads and
tOl.lfists that might come h~re to visit
that I gave them fair warning. Now,
I have been informed that Andy of
the Security force is hiding out in the
bushes waiting to give people tickets.
(How long do you stare at people
before you bust them, Andy?)
I come back to Evergreen to visit
often, and there are three basic
places I stop in to visit: to the
Library to see Malcolm, to the
Wilderness Center and Bike Shop to
drop in on old friends, and to THE
BEACH.
My best studying was done on the
beach. My best Tai Chi exercises
were done on the beach . At one
time, we seriously considered having
a large skinnydipping party for
Earth Day down there. I don't claim
that' my need for childlike innocence
is my excuse for one of my favorite
pastimes, I just claim that, in a real
sense, the wisdom of an old being
has taught me that the beach is more
properly an extension of my own
body than the sexual-stereotyped
middle class clothing I have to wear

See Letters, page 5

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Of the beach
and graduation
Editor, CPJ:
Two opinion s:
J) A separate graduate-and-guestonly dance to celebrate graduation
is antithetical to the Evergreen tradition. It reeks of a snobbery and
elitism that one finds in institutions
that are designed to dehumanize the
individual and encourage cutthroat
and divisive competition between
classes, such as the military.
I urge all graduates and performing musicians to boycott s uch crap .
It's an insult to those of us still interested in maintaining Evergreen's
cooperative interdisciplinary atmosphere. (I mean really, this year
graduates only, next year freshman
hazing. Come on!)
2) Nude swimming at the beach
should be harrassment free.
(Another Evergreen tradition.) Naked people swimming, fucking, sunbathing or daydreaming on the
beach is an aspect of student life on
this campus that should be enhanced by a policy of healthy nonintervention on the part of security.
Until last summer [ had never heard
of anyone getting a ticket for public
nudity on that beach. Why the sudden crackdown? It smacks of the
egocentric, paranoid, power trippng
frame of mind that makes cops want
to carry guns on one of the most
peaceful campuses in the country.
For the health of the campus,
changes should be made in security
personnel in favor of officers whose
skills and attitudes reflect cooperation and communication as opposed to confrontation and
domination.
Evergreen might be the avant
garde in education but its security
department is racing toward the
stone age . Think about it. While
security was watching all those naked people on the beach someone
could have run off with the library .
Sincerely, Chris Bingham

Upset and appalled reply
Dear Editor of the CPJ:
As Chairperson of the Graduation
Planning Committee I want the
chance to respond to Marlene
Brown's letter in the Apri[ 25th issue
of the CP J entitled, "Upset and
Appalled " .
I am sorry that Ms. Brown has
been unable to attend any of our
meetings, but it is hard to find a
meeting time for 600 undergraduate
students and 25 MPA students.
On the issue of the Graduate's
Dance, the view of the Dance subcommittee was re-explained in the
the March 19th Graduation Newsletter, after we had received Ms.
Brown's letter. By "formal," we
mean whatever formal means to
you. We will have 175 tickets to sell
(25 have been reserved for Third
World graduates from both the
Tacoma and Olympia campuses)
and we want to sell them to the
graduates first, because the dance is
for the graduates, but if a graduate
wants to bring students who are not
graduating or a non-Evergreen student they may do so. This dance
WILL NOT be a replacement for the
traditional Meadow Dance, the
Graduation Committee has nothing
to do with that dance.
On the matter of invitations, I told
everyone in the first Newsletter that
we were going to be putting together
announcemen(s at the January 10th
meeting and we did and ordered
them on January 16. The committee did not hear of any complaints
about the invitations until March
when we received Ms. Brown's letter. I am sure we have many finely
schooled seniors ski lled in arts and
graphics, but when the committee
advertised in the CP J, the Graduat ion News[eller and with signs
around campus for the Tshirt/Sweatshirt design and Program
Cover design, we got very few entries . There was a $50 award for the
chosen artistes). I understand that
anyone who is "raduating this year
is really busy, but I do not want
anyone to think that we did not try
to give your art students the
opportunity.
No one who does work for the
committee gets paid, we are all
volunteers. I myself am taking 16
credits this quarter.
I apologize for the Newsletters
getting to people late, but I often end
up doing the Newsletter mailing by
myself, which on a few days has
meant that a Newsletter ends up going out a day later because it has
taken me so long to do the mailing.
I do want everyone to know that the
committee is working very hard and
doing the best they can to represent

The Cooper Point Journal is published weekly for the students, sta tT
and faculty of the Evergreen State College. Views expressed are not
necessarily those of the college or the Journal's staff. Advertising
material contained herein does not imply endorsement by the Jour. nal. Offices are located at The Evergreen State College, Campus Activities Building 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, signed, and must include a daytime phone number where the
author can be reached for consultation 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.
Editor: Mike McKenzie
Managing Editor: Kurt Batdorf
Photo Editor: Dave' Peterson
Production Manager: Wendi Kerr
Poetry Editor: Margot Boyer
~ \.
Advisor: Tim Crews
~.
Photographers: Carla Casper, Dave Yates;- .
Writers: Susan Arnold, Nathan Jones, Kurt Batdorf, Wendi Kerr,
Irene Mark-Buitenkant, Carla Casper, Roger Dickey, Tim Quam,
Steven Aldrich, Janlne Thome
Production Crew: Wendi Kerr, Mike McKenzie, Kurt Batdorf, Tim
Quam, Nathan Jones , Margot Boyer, Kirsten Lowe, Carla Casper,
Dave Peterson
Business Manager: Kirsten Lowe
Ad Manager: Roger Dickey
Distrubution: Allison Stark
T ist: Mar ot Boyer

page 5
Survey: please return 10 Cab 30S

the graduating students' interests.
We did take one of Ms. Brown's
suggestions and have twice manned
a table in the CAB.
I, like Ms. Brown, encourage you
all to respond actively and come to
our next meeting on May 14th at
4:30 pm in the Board Room. Our
meetings normally last about 2
hours, so stop in when you can. And
as I do in all our Newsletters, I encourage all those who cannot attend
the meeting and have something to
say, to contact me at 866-1898 or
leave a message in the Registrar' s
office.
I sincerely hO'pe everyone that has
anything to do with graduation will
be pleased with the results and
graduates will be proud to be
members of the Class of 1985.
Thank You for Your Time,

The Student offices on th'e third /loor of the Library Building
are currently provided to Student Organizations by the Administration of the college free of charge. This arrangement was established by the Board of Trustees for a ten year period starting on
November I, 19/t1. The college has provided this space to Student
Organizations as a statement of gratitude to the S&A Board for
a $103,000 fees gift to Evergreen in a time of financial crisis .
How do you think new spaces can be found or crented?
Check one:
--- -- - - - - E x pand the CAB by building 20 offices o n the
third noor deck. Funding would come from S&A Fees at an
cstimated cost ranging from $153,000 to $600,000.
- - - -----Rent space in other buildings, such as the
Seminar Building, as does the Commission for the Humanities,
the Washington Occupation and Information Service, and seve ral
other non-college organizations.

Connie Gray, Chairperson
Graduation Planning Committee

- - -- - - - - Buy modular structures, such as the 201 and 211
buildings (Ceramics and Metal Arts Buildings) .
- -- - -- - -Other: pleasedescribebecause we need all the
brilliant ideas we can get.

The gods must
be racists
Dear readers of the Cooper Point
Journal,

./ "";\ \

Ahem.
Re: Review of THE GODS MUST
BE CRAZY
We would lik e to ca ll to your attention a few interesting points.
I. The film reviewed was made by
South Africans, within the context
of their South African culture.
2. The cultural context of South
Africa holds a system of the separation of cultures, also called
apartheid.
3. The film reviewed illustrat es the
separation of cultures (albeit clouded within a mythical se tting).
4. Attending this film makes popular
squawkin gs, i.e. divestigure of funds
to South Africa, ethno-centrism by
white South Africans--and various
anti-apartheid
state ment s
hypocritical.
5. We urge you not to make yourself
a hypocrite.

\

.~

\./

J
I

\..

/

11J('~~'f

-,.JO. 41

~~--------~~~~~--~---------------------------

Hollywood.
We dogs have been stewing about
a problem, a bone-o f-contention, if
you will, that we have concerning the
leas h law.
It 's sp ring and we dogs want to
frolic. We want freedom and liberty, same as you people claim to
want, but you insist that laws will accomplish what common sense
cannot.
You humans don't seem to rea li ze
the event of spring. What with the
daffodils and magnolia nowers, the
crawling an d creeping things that
scratch in the brush , and th e other
dogs!
Now personally speak ing, I've
been pent up on the back porch most
of the · winter feeling dank' and
miserable and now that sp ring is here
and I want to kick up some dirt, you
impose upon us by insi~ting that we
be restrained with leashes or penn ed up inside squ iggly wire cages.
Instead of distinguishing between
us dogs, you bunch us all together
as rascals and leg-c hewers! Some of
us only want to play or be amorous.
You forget that we see and hear and
srnell so much more intensely t\lan
humans and for us to be confi ned

Lois Maffeo
J.W.-Renaud

Reader: dogs
are bilingual
Dear Cooper Point Journal,
My person calls me Sheba, but I
call myself Dyad-a -dog. Few
huma ns have attempted to understand us, but we dogs a re bilingual,
or, a t least, we understand your
meanings perfectly.
There are a few ambitious ones
who have even learned to read
English. dogs suc h as Underdog and
Deputy Dawg . but thi s has been in
the form of scripts. These dogs are
exceptions, and, anyway, they live in

in this way makes us crazy!
You've
had
warning s
befon: ... (haven'l you rllad Animal
Farm? Much of the story is Irlle ,
espec ially the in te lli gence part,
although t he plot wa s slightly
twisted, that is, with regard to what
we dogs know about animal life) .
But it is a warning nevert heless .
We four-Ieggers a lread y bow to
you enough as it is; many of us come
when called: we heel, rollover and
sta y-pu t when ordered to. We caleh
your frisbees to entertain you .
Sometimes the way we respo nd to
yo u is downright humiliating, not to
mention embarrassing.
We dogs on ly want 10 ha ve fun.
We hllve no jobs to go to, no appoint ments to keep, no bills, no
plans 'for the future. We ' re only being dogs and we're very angry thai
the sec urity people a re infringi ng on
ou r territory.
Thai's all I'll say. I just hope thai
the security people wake up and treat
us on an individual basis rather than
oppress all os us with leash law\. We
dogs will admi t that we're not
created equa\.
Signed,
Dyad-a-dog

Mike tries again
Dear Readers,
It hasn't been easy to get information
on the Evergreen beach policy. In fact,
it's been difficult to get any information.
From the information gathered, I'd say
it doesn 't look good for people who want

.,
c

NO SWIMMING
OR
SUNBATHING
BEYOND .THIS POINT

...~
Do NtJoT (..0 I\JAl(l'ot;>
..
I've heard things like "it's a state law," J:
- ' ......... .. ..... .. ..
.
-;;IISC,'
,..... ,'. '1"- '..(H ,; -,'<;;:c:-"'
..
you can't have nudity on state property. l:
I've also heard new signs have been c::
ordered for the beach, and they'll be up :;
for public display pretty soon.
~
I don't know what happened exactly, -a
but my view on the subject is that the new
beach clothing-policy was decided upon
RETRACTION
I've asked the Vice President's office
and that's that.
for the public records concerning this
Or is it?
In the last issue of the CPJthe letmatter. I f I understand public access to
ter to the editor titled Freedom oj
It seems to me that governance at
public records laws correctly, they'll have
Evergreen is an issue in this also. If
Choice was erroneously attributed to
to reply to this real soon. Like in time for
students want to have a voice in the beach
the Central American News Comnext week's issue.
issue, they'll have to take a reactionary
mittee. The actual writer of the [etSincerely,
role in it.
ter wished to remain anonymous.
Mike McKenzie, editor
the beach clothing-optional.

---

-

,,-.

~. "fal

to campus

(hwr~~ c:a"''''Ii~ "e,(.t"o.r;~

TflE FIRST EVER GREATER OLYMPIA AND EVERYWHERE ELSE WE'VE TRAVELLED HAMBURGER REVIEW
( ' I)l1l1~ileJ

hI Wcndi

I).

Kcrr from C PJ staff reports

Tlll'll' ,IlL' liI11c~ l\h CIl (o ld rillJ a nd qaJe T o p RJ.mcn just won't ~atisfy the ap pd ite or a red-blooded, meat-eating, hard-working college
'llILknl. ,\t t illll'~ lil-.e Ihc,>c, onl.- a hambur ge r will do,
( 1Il L'L' 1)1lL' kh dl'cidl'd 011 a hamburger for dinncr, th e llue'>tion remains: Whe rL' to buy the burger ?
1" ilL' II~ ,II !'.I\ er the humin )! Liuc~ti l) 1l of "\Vhcrc', thc hed,?" , thc CPJ> intrep id qa t'!" of im cs ligJ.tive rep ortcrs conducted a week -long
'LIII l'l \'1 1\)L'~r1 l' l',I~IUI; IIlI ' , al grca t ri,1-. 10 I)ur pockelboob and di gc~ ti\"(~ ~y<,[ em '>,
\\l' ,kI Pl~,,'d Ihl' Big rhrL'L' (\kDo lla ld',>, Burger " il1 g, and Wend y' ,) ,bccause a ny '>e lf-re ,>pcc l ing carnilore has a lread y heen there, When
"L' I 1' II(cililL' lllhL'1 le ' tali la nt ~, froll1 I he (":\}3 to Ihe Ca pitol , wc graded Ihem on ,peed of '>cniL'c, price, laSle, and presentation. The ratings
I lI1 i'l' ('llill 1)lll' iJur)!L'r (P()LH) tll ,'ou r hur)!cr\ (e\( l'I1cnt) ,

Bt.' It \1 oort · ~

The Greenerv (SAGA)
,

v

CAB 1q !l oor
The SAGA burger ($1,25) was served quickly, in two minutes and 30 seconds. It comes with a "portion-control containcr" that ho ld" till L'l'
dill pickles and some lettuce shavings. The meat patty is usually shr iveled to 2/ 1 the size of the bun . Th ere is a co ndim ent bar that i'catu tl'.s
ayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, and tartar sauce. When we tested it, th e mustard was th e ta st iest pa rt o f the entire burger: the meal h ~ld
almost no smell, and t he bun was dry . The people who work a t SAGA are really nice, hut if they had more to work \\ itll, wc'd
. a ll be happIer .
The best thing about eating a burger at SAGA is that th ey call out your name when your o rder i'> read y, ~o you co uld gilc thclTl
a fake name like Mallard or Brack or Barney and they would broadcast it to the whole wor ld (or at least the whole ca feteri a).

Peoplc ~s ChoifC Cafeteri a

4111 ;\ \ l' nl! L'. d ()" 11 I U II" n ,
\\ ·c' II icd 1 ilL' ChCl"L'hur~cr f)c1 U\l' (SJ .25 . wil h fricq. II was scrvcd 15 minute,> after ordering . Thi s burge r was stunning; it contained
<llill hl'l)" n Il1C;It. (hcese drollpill!,! ovc r thc "i dc'>, 1\\0 slicc,> of tomato, mayonllJ.i'>e, pickles, lettuce, and onions. The beef was
,I hll r, II"L' , hUI lIa . . IUIllIllI afl~' W<tY: flo l tOll greasy, not too dry . The frie<. were also good; they arc cut fresh daily .

If this is the People's Cho ice , then where is the Peop le' s Alternative? You must

tak~

Capitol Rotun da.
a numb er a nd wait five minut c . .

for your hamburger to emerge from t he nether regions of the kitchen. This burge r contain s let t uce) un k 110\\'n ~auce, a
small patty , and a large slice of tomato . Condiments come in small plastic packages; horseradi sh is availahle, but no onion.
The burger was barely warm, and had almost no grease . It was very possibly a mixture of meat and soybean, just like
the ones we ate back in hi gh -ichool '
If the tack y pictures on the wall s or thi s place don.' t turn your stomach , th ell nothing I\ill.

Illlrillerl\ IIll' Herh alld Onion), Legion Street.
I ill' l rhan ()nlllil ,l!l'h bL'cllrulll the Meat Stor e in Taco ma , which boa <,(,> of lean beef from animals that haven't
hL'L'11 ill jl'l'lL'd 1\ ilh (ilcI1l ical, and whosc fond i, cJ.rcfuli v ,clec ted . Because of thi'>, their hamburgers ($3.95 , in11Idi n" ' lluh \lI ... alad. L'otta)!c l'hecse, or hash brown-i) have a vcry good fla vo r. Service i~ prompt, and the burger
I, l'l en 'L'I '. L'll tln ~I \\ ilole II hl'a t hun . It i\ rathe r e.\ rensivc, but vcry good ,

dangerously addictive

adrJictive

Halll\l)ll '\\·l'l1l1e.
I ill' " Bllh ', Big Burgcr" (~2 , 2()) wa, "'t.TIL'd lluidly. threL' minutes aftcr ordering. How eve r, serv ice inside takes
IlIULI11(1 1l l'l'l lil ~tll ,cl"licL' al thL' dri\l> up \\illlhm ["hl' " Bi g Burge r" is definitely a two-hand, three- narkin meal.
II '_(\lllalll~' 11\0 pattie' . cheese, ktt;lCl', o nc , li ce of lumatll. and globs o f sr ecia l '>a ucc . It is a ve ry drirry burger .
BIlh', . Ioe' no! open I)n Sundav ....

-----,

.~

th~~

NASTY STUFF

yOU

reaily don I wanl

hI r!-l1

-"

.• __ _ _ ~J

( ','"per Pnin t Road .
I Iclke\' lakc', aJI·.... rti . . ing cld ilm tilat till'Y "'CrlC ":\ mer i(a', Best Burger. " This is NOT TRUE. The 1;\ pound
hur,l!LT (at S2 .95, till' ~ma llc st burger they haH" lInle,>s you'rc under 12) was only O.K . They will cook th e pally
In \nUI ,pcL'iricat ions, and they provide a large cond im ent bar , but their cheese is some vile, drippy, liquid stuff
Illat doc ... n'l rea ll ~' tastL' vcry good, and the meat it sel r wasn't parti cularl y flavorful. If you aren't a big eater,
!' I,lkey Jake', i, definitdv a waste of mOllcy. If yo u arc a big eater, have money to burn, and like neon (the
rcst aurant ha~ at lea ~t 35 neol1 ~igl1'>), it' ~ a good place for a n occasional burger. Just don't expect it to be America's
best .
i

....
•• ,1

-.;.

_

- .. ~

Ca pital Mall.
fhough Oran ge Julius is known for cool, refreshing
fruit drinks, and for a va riety of hot dogs, the
re~laurant a lso serves hamburgers. The Juliusburger
($1.50) includes lettuce, pickles, and tomato, and it
looks great. Unfortunately, il doesn't taste quite as
wonderfu l; The meat was too chewy . Service took
7- -9 minutes; burgers are made to order.

Capital Mall.
Herh 's, new to the mall and calling itself "the new,
"
or iginal Herfy's," is a "burger bank machine" with
no ind oor seatin g facilities. To eat, the customer
must sit on one of th e ever-sa-comfy backless brick
" .'
benche~. This does not encourage loitering. The Heftyburge r ($1.49) arrived in five minutes, not very quickly for a store calling itself "Expre~s." The burger included a five-inch wide sesame seed bun, two small rectangular patties, gummy melted cheese, a small amount of
grca .'>Y chopped lett uce, one ~ Iice of tomato, and the infamous secret sauce. The burger was built at a rakish angle, betraying the haste with
which it was prepared, It tasted like Thousand Island dressing. All in all, a very greasy burger.

photos by Dave Peterson

"

.... ,..., '

w ' .. ,... ,,-

_.-'

'.

......



'"-

pretty pa i (ltahlC'

! 1.11 I i \ l ) n ,.\ I ell U C .
I ill' " Bii! I uln" hurger (SI . ~W) i. . al..,o ~l'I\ed lluid.. ly. c" pcl'ia ll y for a rcady-madc burger: three minutes. This
hIli I..'l'l i... molLie up of two tast\, hurgcr pattie" that add up to about o llc-third o f round, a large, fragile sesame
"'l'l'd hUll, (\lliOIlS. letluce, Inll1:tI(), ( hec~l', amI Thou,and Is land dre ~si n g. The onions were ha rd to find ulltil
lilL' I.I . . t tllrec hile .., of the hurgel, alld thLTe wa" a hi ~ h amount or grease, but it ta~t e d good a nywa y. Yo u will
\I'l' III d 1\ \ nap I-. ins .
Ilt l' ()!1h illllnlli 'l'atlll ,l! ell La~all" is whatevCf yllll dril'c lip in, ~o don't e\ pcct much in the waY,of ambience.
It \ llli II all! ,llllhiL'11CC. L'al 111 a Cad illa c" llr a Rulh -Ro)"L"l'.

\.

'~

,

:!!is

page 6

THE FIRST EVER GREATER OLYMPIAANDEVERYWHERE ELSE WE'VE TRAVELLED HAMBURGER REVIEW
Compiled by Wendi D. Kerr from CPJ staff reports
There are times when cold pizza and stale Top Ramen just won't satisfy the appetite of a red-blooded, meat-eating, hard-working college
student. At times like these, only a hamburger will do.
Once one has decided on a hamburger for dinner, the question remains: Where to buy the burger?
To help answer the burning question of "Where's the beef?", the CP 1's intrepid staff of investigative reporters conducted a week-long
survey of local restaurants, at great risk to our pocketbooks and digestive systems.
We skipped the Big Three (McDonald's, Burger King, and Wendy's) because any self-respecting carnivore has already been there. When
we visited the other restaurants, from the CAB to the Capitol, we graded them on speed of service, price, taste, and presentation. The ratings
range from one burger (poor) to four burgers (excellent).

Ben Moore's
4th Avenue, downtown .
We tried the Cheeseburger Deluxe ($3.25, with fries). It was served 15 minutes after ordering. This burger was stunning; it contained
juicy brown meat, cheese drooping over the sides, two slices of tomato, mayonnaise, pickles, lettuce, and onions. The beef was
a bit rare, but was yummy anyway: not too greasy, not too dry. The fries were also good; they are cut fresh daily.

The Urban Onion
(formerly the Herb and Onion), Legion Street.
The Urban Onion gets beef from the Meat Store in Tacoma, which boasts of lean beef from animals that haven't
been injected with chemicals and whose food is carefully selected. Because of this, their hamburgers ($3.95, including soup or salad, cottage cheese, or hash browns) have a very good flavor. Service is prompt, and the burger
is even served on a whole wheat bun. It is rather expensive, but very good.

Bob's

Big~urgers

Tlte Greenery (SAGA)
CAB 1st floor .
The SAGA burger ($1.25) was served quickly, in two minutes and 30 seconds. It comes with a "portion-control container" that holds three
dill pickles and some lettuce shavings. The meat patty is usually shriveled to 2jj the size of the bun. There is a condiment bar that features
ayonnaise, ketchup, mustard, and tartar sauce. When we tested it, the mustard was the tastiest part of the entire burger: the meat had
almost no smell, and the bun was dry. The people who work at SAGA are really nice, but if they had more to work with, we'd
all be happier.
The best thing about eating a burger at SAGA is that they call out your name when your order is ready, so you could give them
a fake "name like Mallard or Brack or Barney and they would proadcast it to the whole world (or at least the whole cafeteria).

People's Choice Cafeteria
Capitol Rotunda.
If this is the People's Choice, then where is the People's Alternative? You must take a number and wait five minutes
for your hamburger to emerge from the nether regions of the kitchen. This burger contains lettuce, unknown sauce, a
small patty, and a large slice of tomato. Condiments come in small plastic packages; horseradish is available, but no onion.
The burger was barely warm, and had almost no grease. It was very possibly a mixture of meat and soybean, just like
the ones we ate back in high school!
If the tacky pictures on the walls of this place don't turn your stomach, then nothing will.

dangerously addictive

~Q ~

'pretty palatable

Cooper Point Road.
Flakey Jake's advertising claims that they serve" America's Best Burger." This is NOT TRUE. The Y3 pound
burger (at $2.95, the smallest burger they have, unless you're under 12) was only O.K. They will cook the patty
to your specifications, and they provide a large condiment bar, but their cheese is some vile, drippy, liquid stuff
that doesn't really taste very good, and the meat itself wasn't particularly flavorful. If you aren't a big eater,
Flakey Jake's is definitely a waste of money. If you are a big eater, have money to burn, and like neon (the
restaurant has at least 35 neon signs), it's a good place for an occasional burger. Just don't expect it to be America's
best.

~

Q

~ ~

for free maybe, but to pay for it? ~

NASTY STUFF: you really don't want to eat this!

s

8ill's PI

.

ill! Fran "liCe, 2315
the V~ CISCO """ CJerne
" I he ....
nt St
$J to $eSt C oasc"
"CSt bu
reel
5.50
are a b' rgeTs '
B
eside
a sho
It Pri
on
frenCh ~hey giVe t, but wo/eYat
they h Ties Or a You a to ' th it.
n
side o;ve the be bag '0 ch . 0 freSh
wond
DiCk' sc Shakes IpS, and
Prot ers, Bill's s. f\nd won the far
"
eln u
even ' ond
IfYou ,qeinek
serves th er or
Cisco y can afforden. What th e Green
Or a t Ou probablto get to S e helJ __
en SPOt to Y have a s an Fran_
eae at B "I Pare five
II's.
r

i,

Orange Julius
Capital Mall.
Though Orange Julius is known for cool, refreshing
fruit drinks, and for a variety of hot dogs, the
restaurant also serves hamburgers. The Juliusburger
($1.50) includes lettuce, pickles, and tomato, and it
looks great. Unfortunately, it doesn't taste quite as
wonderful; The meat was too chewy. Service took
7-9 minutes; burgers are made to order.

Capital Mall.
Herfy's, new to the mall and calling itself "the new,
original Herfy's," is a "burger bank machine" with
no indoor seating facilities. To eat, the customer
, J
""
must sit on one of the ever-so-comfy backless brick
benches. This does not encourage loitering. The Heftyburger ($1.49) arrived in five minutes. not very quickly for a store calling itself "Express." The burger included a five-inch wide sesame seed bun, two small rectangular patties, gummy melted cheese, a small amount of
greasy chopped lettuce, one slice of tomato, and the infamous secret sauce. The burger was built at a rakish angle, betraying the haste with
which it was prepared. It tasted like Thousand Island dressing. All in all, a very greasy burger.

Q

getting down there

Eagan's

Flakey Jake's

~

addictive

Harrison Avenue.
The "Bob's Big Burger" ($2.20) was served quickly, three minutes after ordering. However, service inside takes
much longer than service at the drive-up window. The "Big Burger" is definitely a two-hand, three-napkin meal.
It contains two patties, cheese, lettuce, one slice of tomato, and globs of special sauce. It is a very drippy burger.
Bob's does not open on Sundays.

Harrison Avenue.
The "Big Tom" burger ($1.80) is also served quickly, especially for a ready-made burger: three minutes. This
burger is made up of two tasty burger patties that add up to about one-third of pound, a large, fragile sesame
seed bun, onions, lettuce, tomato, cheese, and Thousand Island dressing. The onions were hard to find until
the last three bites of the burger, and there was a high amount of grease, but it tasted good anyway. You will
use many napkins.
The only indoor seating at Eagan's is whatever you drive up in, so don't expect much in the way of ambience.
I f you want ambience, eat in a Cadillac or a Rolls-Royce.

Q

photos by Dave Peterson

/

@

page 8

May 2, 1983

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

May 2, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 9

Morrison's new album relaxed
Vonnegut tells writers to marry money
by Kun Batdorf
So, you want to be a writer when
you grow up?
You'll need to marry or inherit
money to support your wriiing
habit, because "you'll be poor.
You'll be desperate. "
This is what Kurt Vonnegut said
in his April 25th University of Puget
Sound lecture entitled "How to Get
a Job Like Mine."
Vonnegut began by irrevently calling the United States "the good ship
lollipop." That comment brought
hearty laughter from the audience of
approximately 2,000 and prepared
them for the rest of Vonnegut's
lecture.
He sa id that people who want to
write need "an urge to put

something down, not necessarily to
write for writing's sake."
Anyone can find a good writer
almost anywhere, Vonnegut explained. "You never know where a
writer is , but you won't find a
creative writer in the English Department," he said .
He sees excitement in playwrights,
but thinks most of today's novels are
"like wallpaper. They all have pretty covers," but not mueh substance.
Vonnegut also denigrated the
ongoing computer revolution . He
questioned the need for more computers, and said that when everyone
has a computer or robot. there won't
be any more jobs. "We could use a
couple of more bag ladies," Vonnegut said, drawing applause, since
very few people will be employable.

The Graph of Life came next in
the lecture. On a chalkbord on the
stage, Yonnegut drew a horizontal
line that represented the start and
finish of life. A vertical line on the
left cif the board represented utter
poverty on the bottom. with total
wealth and power on the top .
With the graph, Vonnegut
demonstrated the lives of a typical
TV character, Cinderella, Hamlet
and a character from a Franz Kafka
story. Vonnegut said that too many
people see their lives as stories and
become unhappy when their lives
don't work out as well as stories.
"Lives aren't supposed to be
stories . Stories are supposed to be
stories." People need to realize this
in order to lead happier lives, he
said .

by Irene Mark Buitenkant

by Arvid Gust

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photo by Dave Yates

But the clouds in the sky welcomed
Guthrie with torrents of rain.
Anyway, Guthrie was scheduled
to perform at the Tyee that night.
The even ing's entertainment
started off with good old George
Barner of the Trendsetters, who
stepped up to the microphone and
sta rted making Louie, Louie hand gest ures.
When the cheering died down.
Guido Sarducci. who had just
returned from a visit with the Pope

in Rome. took the stage. Sarducci,
dressed as a cowpoke, ribbed the audience for 20 minutes.
Theli Joe Tanner gave a brief
welc0me and relinquished the stage
to Arlo Guthrie.
The long haired, denim clad
Guthrie sa ng, played and told jokes
for about ninety minutes. He created
an uninhibited atmosphere. and
before we knew it everyone was singing the chorus to one of several sing
a long songs.

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would rather die than spend the rest
of his life as a virgin.
Finally, on a timely note, Vonnegu( said that the Vietnam War
proved that the TV generations are
sick of war. Having watched it while
they ate dinner, these generations
now know that war is an atrocity,
not glory and excitement.
"We aren't so ignorant and
bloodthirsty anymore," Vonnegut
concluded.

The Purple Rose of Cairo, the
latest Woody Allen film is at the
Lacey Cinema now. Woody Allen
doesn't appear on the screen in this
movie but his presence is apparent.
The lines delivered by Mia Farrow
and Jeff Daniels often seemed to be
spoken by Woody Allen as ventriloquist. Also, the unique format has
the signature of his particular
originality.
The theme is typical of his kind of
comic-pathos which generates in the
audience a sympathy for identi fiable
characters. His penchant for films
made forty years ago is obvious. The
movie is about Mia's life of "quiet
desperation" set during the time of
the great depression. Her husband,
an unemployed victim of the times
creates a personal depression in their
relationship through abuse, promiscuity, and insensitivity to Mia 's
feelings. Like so many of her contemporaries, her life becomes
bearable by being transported into
the Cinderella world provided by
Hollywood.
On a particular night at the movie
Mia experiences a surrealistic encounter with the hero on the screen.
Her eye contact with the celluloid

leading man is so strong that he is
drawn to her, from the screen into
the darkened theater. A relationship
is formed between Mia and the three
dimensional embodiment of the film
hero (who is relatively real to the audience by now). The actors and actresses in the movie within the movie
step out of character, but remain on
the screen, and complain that they
cannot continue their performance
without the leading man . This hero
leaves the screen in other cities where
the movie is playing, creating
thereby a big problem for the film
maker and distributor.
The narrative works well and the
audience (on and off the screen) is
interested by it. The photography is
very good. Like a Rembrandt painting, it sensitively provides subtle
moods by highlighting against dark
shadows such as Mia's face in the
darkend room or the closed-untilsummer amusement park in the the
half light. Feelings of nostalgia are
evoked. It dramatized the atmosphere by romanticizing the shoddiness of a depressed manufacturing
town.
Woody Allen is a sensitive man
and he demonstrates again how
capable he is of telling a story in an .
original and en,gaging wav.

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Vonnegut ended his iecture by
speaking of the fear of hydrogen
bombs and death. He said that the
fear of hydrogen bombs is the fear
of death, but "death is nothing."
He wondered aloud about what
could be worse than death. Crucifixion was ruled out because "there
aren't enough carpenters" to make
the required number of crucifixes.
Enslavement is out too. "The
slaves in America had a lower suicide
rate than their ens lavers. If people
can live through that, they can live
through anything," Vonnegut said.
Life without petroleum would be
tough, but Vonnegut believes people
would rather live without petroleum
than die.
But for Vonnegut, a celibate life
would be too much to bear. He

Allen gone, aura remains

Guthrie promotes
father's song for
Washington state
Arlo G uthrie can spit o ut a quick
one- liner.
"The longer he sleeps. the safer
we' ll be ," Guthrie sa id of President
Reagan.
"Unfortunat,ely it's the stupid
so ngs, which la st historically, " he
said of one song.
On the subject of nuclear arms in
Germany, Guthrie had these words:
"They won't let us set these up at
home, so we thought we would set
them up there!"
But Guthrie was in Olympia for
more than just to talk. He came at
the invitation of his distant relative,
State Representative Joe Tanner, to
promote a resolution that made the
so ng "Roll On Columbia, Roll On"
the official Washington State Folk
So ng .
You see, the song was written by
Arlo's father, Woody Guthrie. over
fourty years ago when he was under
contract to the Bonneville Power
Administration to write so ngs to
promote bringing electricity to rural
areas.
Woody G uthrie worked for 30
days, wrote 26 songs and got paid
$270 . But, of course, that was back
in 1941.
Arlo performed many songs at the
Capitol on Wednesday, April 24.

by Kurt Batdorf

THE
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COLLEGE
BOOKSTORE

IntrodUCing Rental Video
Movies & Players Beginning May 3rd
Contact Manager for Details

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Play Lotto wIth beer and win prizes.
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Van Morrison is back and he's
better than ever. A Sense of Wonder
easily proves that.
The album has a fluidity so often
missing in many of today's albums.
There is an easy, natural flow from
one song to another. Morrison's
voice and his band also contribute
to this fluidity because they are so
relaxed and natural.
In fact, I can't think of anything
on A Sense of Wonder that I dislike.
Van's voice is as good as it's ever
been. It hasn't been so inspired in a
long time . The band is flawless and

.eems to know intuitillely how Van
wants them to sound.
Most of the songs are Van's own

, "A Sense of Wonder" ,
is an exceptional album ...
compositions, but he does a couple
of great covers as well. One is Mose
Allison's "If You Only Knew." The
other is Ray Charles' "What Would

I Do?" "Let the Slave" incorporates
William Blake's poem The Price of
Experience. A poem within a song
is something I'd never heard before,
and this one sounds wonderful.
I think "Evening Meditation" is
easily the most beautiful song on the
album because of its simplicity. Van
simply hums, but oh, what a hum.
It is luscious .
All in all, A Sense of Wonder is
an exceptional album. It harks back
to Van's days of Moondance,
Tupelo Honey and Astral Weeks.
With those albums as reminders,
what else is there to say?

~

Youths descend on Red Square to ' rock against war
by Arvid Gust
Youth descended upon Red
Square and met with no resistance.
The armies were away last weekend,
fighting their grisly war in another
country.
Youth had come to fight against
fighting, and that was impetus for
the music show Rock Against War.
The Details, a Seattle band, led
this opposition force. Their siren
guitars wailed as the band members
sang, "I' ve got something you oUght
to try /1 've got love."
But some of the audience waited.
They felt that The Details weren't
quite right, so they waited to unleash
their unrequited dance flourishes.

Beat Happening, a local band, "is
the only way to describe the two
star vocalists who led the cavalcade
to a higher pitch. Magnificent Calvin
Johnson, with his shoulders arched
backward, sang lyrics that could
have stopPed a locomotive. Heather,
the other of the two, sang through
the thick beat in a fearsome, skullcrunching manner.
"Meanwhile, silent soldiers on the
silver screen/framed in fantasy are
drugged in dreams/Unpaid actors of
the mystery/the mad director
cries/'freedom will not make you
free' land what's this got to do with
mell declare the war is over!"
Next,

Communicator slam-

danced the crowd into a frenzy worthy of recognition . Circular dances,
the climbing dance--which requires
piling--and a whole lot of free expression, abounded.
Youth was renewed. Yet a colorful banner declared that we are still
not all together, in this, ouf tumble
for ecstasy: "U .S. out of Central
America."
Cause And Effect hit the stage
next with a brilliant lights how for all
minds' eyes.
Perhaps you were there, or partying in B-dorm afterwards as those
with mud on their faces and sand in
their pockets learned the ropes. Not
to mention skateboarding.

Jazz pianist comes for Heritage Week
Deems Tsutakawa, a Seattle jazz
pianist, realeased his first album in
1983. He will perform at Evergreen
during Asian-American Heritage
Week.
Tsutakawa's album, entitled
Deems, is a fine effort. I t is highly
polished and highly enjoyable.
~111I11I1I1I1II11II1I1II1I11I1I11I1I1I1I1I1II111I11II1Il1~

Deems has many musical intluences, which include soul, R & B,
jazz and pop, but a style that's all
his own. Critic Tommy Oiye wrote
in the March 2, 1983, issue of The
International Examiner that Deems
is "kind of like jamming in Zen."
In fact, the critics have been fairly universal in their praise of Deems .

And since I know jazz about as well
as I know Latvian, who am I to
question the praise of the critics?
So, it sounds as though Deems'
show should be a good one. The
show is Wednesday, May 8, at 8:30
p.m. in the Recital Hall. Tickets are
$4 general, $2 students. Hope to see
you there.

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F-

Work 4 Days
After Evaluation Week
during
Housing's Annual

FOUR DAY CLEANUP
JUNE 15 through 18
INTERVIEWS
May 1st through 15th
Ipm to 4:30pm only
A Dorm Room 205
Maintenance personnel
interviewed Thursdays
and Fridays only.

Maintenance personnel
must be available for
training approximately
June 1st.

Wages from $4.25 to $4.7S per hour

The video chronicles of Computer Graphics (also
known as SIGGRAPH Video Review) recount in
images the variety and excellence o'f Computer
Graphics. The Second Annual Computer Video Festival
will feature the latest issue of the SIGGRAPH Video
Review, published during the past year. The works
in this collection are the best and newest examples
of international ground breaking research and applications in scene simulation, computer imagery, and
computer-aided image making.
t

This show, not seen before at Evergreen, will run
for two days. It opens in The Evergreen State
College Library Lobby on Wednesday, May 15, and
closes the following day, Thursday, May 16. Hours
are all day from 9:00 a.m . to 9:00 p.m. both days.
There is no charge for admission. Everyone is
welcome.
All new videos demonstrate high levels of original
and creative imagination and artistry. Some titles are
Martian Magnolia, Tantra '84, Whispers in a Plane
of Light, Warnings from the 21 st Century,
Cranston/Csuri Production Demo, Star Rider Laser
Disk Video Game and many more totalling 44 in
n!.lmber.
The Second Annual Computer Video Festival is
co-sponsored by the Computing Resource Network
and The Evergreen Student Chapter of the Association for Computing Machinery.

page 10

page 11

11IE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

May 2, 1985
May 2, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Dept of Energy needs to dump
By Cindy Davis
Nuclear power in America "is
championed by the U.S. Department
of Energy (USDOE).
The USDOE needs a repository
fast or the buildup of waste will

force them to close currentlyoperating plants. The money and influence behind the nuclear power
and defense industries is motivating
the USOOE. And their proposal to
place a nuclear waste dump at Hanford has the health and safety of the
Northwest on the line.
Currently, studies are being done
by a variety of agencies, covering the
possible environmental and socioeconomic impacts of a national
nuclear waste dump at Hanford.
Some are being done by USDOE-ultimately in charge of the

repository location process. Others
are being conducted by the Nuclear
Regulatory Commision (NRC), the
U.S. Geological Survey (uSGS), and
independent scientists.
On the basis of these studies, the
decison whether or not to dump
700,000 tons of high-level waste at
Hanford will be made . .
The US DOE studies show that it
is likely to take 81,000 years for
radioactive material released from
the Hanford site to reach the Columbia River via groundwater. Yet
other studies indicate that travel
times could be as low as twenty years
before the river would be radioactively contaminated.
The USDOE specifically ignored
information showing unfavorable
conditions for mining and rock
charactistics at Hanford, and then

Central American students
share share their views
by Chris Darrow
Last Wednesday three Central
American students asked evergreens
for help in their struggle to improve
their society.
Dean of Student Services Gail
Martin welcomed the three students
and honored them for their social
responsibility . Then three Evergreen
students welcomed them with gifts.
Gary Wessels, of the Northwest
Indian Center, compared the oppresion of Central Americans with the
o ppression of Native Americans .
"We will continue the struggle,"
Wessels said. "We can make a
change and the time is now."
Hoover Chambliss of Ujjama
gave the students posters of Martin

Mother's Day
May 12

Luther King, Jr., and said, "Dr.
King stood for peace and the rights
of all people."
Then Kathy Shields, an interpreter, sang a song in Spanish about
world peace .
Angelica Alba, from Guatemala,
was the first student to speak. She
told of the poverty and oppression
her people face .
"In Guatemala one sees a great
disparity between wealth nd poverty," Alba said . "Guatemalan
students, who help the poor, are
persecuted and many people have
been murdered. Our struggle now is
for survival. Human rights violations are the main form of government in Guatemala."
Alba described the "model

even admitted to the uncertainty of
its own data. Other studies show
tendencies for bursts and cave-ins
due to high rock stress levels, plus
danger from the possibility of punctured aquifers.
Many people argue that Hanford
should never have been named as a
possible waste dump site at all, considering how close it is to the Columbia River. USDOE selected Hanford largely because it is convenient.
Hanford may look like it will
serve the USDOE's interests in the
short run, but over time, it is the
pe.ople of the Northwest who will
suffer. Leakage from Hanford will
not only affect the environment of
the Columbia River and the Pacific
Shoreline. It will very directly affect
the lives of Indians dependent on
Columbia River ecology. It will afvillages" in Guatemala as resembling concentration camps. "Refugees
displaced, when the army destroys
their crops and homes, are
relocated," Alba said. Then civilian
troops search out "subversives" and
everyone is suspect, and all aspects
of life under military control.
Alba also accused the U.S.
government and media of giving
false information, but there is
respect for human rights here.
"U .S. students have a great
humanitarian responsibility to stop
U.S. intervention and open the
doors of peace between our
peoples," Alba said.
Oscar Rodriguez spoke next.
After the University of El Salvador
(UES) was invaded in 1980,
Rodriguez helped students organize
to continue their education and support the popular movement. He told
of the pain his people have endured
to gain basic rights.
Rodriguez praised the denial of

c
~!
./

fect irrigation reservoirs, and subsequently the food and food industry
in Washington. It will contaminate
drinking supplies . .
Nuclear waste is a reality--a
respository site needs to be found

somewhere.

/

/

For information on how you can
let your voice be heard in the
decision-making at Hanford, contact the WashPIRG office on campus, Seminar 3152, x6058.

more contra aid, but sressed that the
providing Nicaragua with needed
Salvadorian conflict is escalating . . trade funds. The government values
Death squad killings aren't as
education. Under Sarnoza, 14,000
numerous, . but many casualities
were enrolled. Now there are 34,000.
result from the government's bomSpending on education is up 500 perbing of civilians, and the $1.6 billion
cent," said Sarmiento.
in U.S. aid has prolonged the
The U.S. is threatening
bloodshed.
Nicaragua's gains, Sarmiento chargRodriguez claimed that Duarte's
ed. Fourty percent of the
image is a mask to gain continued
Nicaraguan economy goes for the
U.S. military aid.
war, instead of basic needs.
"As commander in chief,
Nicaragua hopes that U.S. students
Duarteshould control the military,
will oppose Reagan's support-for the
but he allows the death squads to ex- contras.
ist. Duarte suspended the peace
Sarmiento asked, "How can those
talks, increased the air war, and who murder and torture women,
ordered the Universities' invasion, children and the old be freedom
causing over 600 student deaths and fighters, and how can Nicaraguan
$20 million damage," Rodriguez bishops who support the contras call
said .
themselves servants of God?"
"Students have been at the
The Audience thanked these
forefront of the revolution and are
students for sharing their experiences
dedicated to improving the people's
with a standing ovation, and
condition. They taught 120,000 to
read, lowering the illiteracy from 54 chanted, "El Pueblo unido jarnas
percent of the population to 12 per- sera vencido." (The people united
cent. Students harvest export crops, will never be defeated.)

(7 r~f It T

R..(L ! (7!O NS

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The CPJ would li ke to thank all the
people who turned in cartoons for our
contest. We regret that we couldn ' t
print them all this week, but we would
have if we could have.
We couldn't believe the response we
got, it was really fantastic. It proved
to us that, yes, this is a liberal arts
school, and, yes, there are a lot of really creative people here . '
If you turned in a cartoon, but don't
see it in this issue, watch for it in our
coming issues. We promise to print as
many of them as we can, and all of
them if we can.
And, if you get an idea for a cartoon, remember that the CPJ has a
humor issue coming out on May 31.
Once again, thanks for making the
cartoon contest so successful.

7

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Media
cpj0361.pdf