The Cooper Point Journal Volume 13, Issue 24 (May 9, 1985)

Item

Identifier
cpj0362
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 13, Issue 24 (May 9, 1985)
Date
9 May 1985
extracted text
paye L::

May 2, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Evergreen trims off
$191,000 so far
by Charlie Campbell
Pencils, as well as word processors, will be in short supply spring
quarter as Evergreen loses $191,000
to Governor Booth Gardner'S
emergency budget cuts .
"What we had to do was figure
out how in the world we were going
to pull that much cash together this
late in the biennium, " said Dick
Schwartz, Evergreen's Vice President for Business.
The college decided to give up
$46,000 by cutting back in small
equipment, supplies, equipment
repairs and admissions mailing. It
canceled faculty training sessions
and delayed hiring iln affirmative action assistant , which risks violation
of statute.
About $59,000 to outfit computers with printers, keypads and
display screens was also returned to
the general fund.
The college also gave back
$86,000 set aside to buy word processors for program secretaries and
the admissions office.
Stan Marshburn, Evergreen's
legislative liaison, said Evergreen
took the cuts where students, facul·
ty and staff would be least affected.
The school chose not to take any
money from a promised $45,000
faculty pay rai se. I t also decided
against taking the cut across·theboard, which would have meant
layoffs.
Everg reen 's President Joseph
Olander said, "We have o nly oeen
able to return the money by curta il ing the purchase of some very important inst ructional eq uipment.
espec ially
in
the
scicn~e
department. ..

Asian Amerkan Lecture Series 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Lib 3500. lO.a.m.: York Wong will speak on the history of ~anim:tnigtants in the Northwest. 11 a.m.: Fukuyomo F~miJy-tbe
film~ story of Japanese immigrants!lJld their historical struggles and present status. Noon: Orient;l[fiJ9i:lluncheoll ,$3per plate. I p.m.: Peter Bacho and Doug Chin
wiU lecture on the current Asian c.ommunity in the Northwest. 2 p.m.: Panel-"AsianPai.ific Women: Impact .o n Northwest," with Traci tai, Verll' Eng and Namchu
Pearl, facilitated by Hisami Yoshida.
,
.
.
Ultimate Frisbee Again 3-5
p.m.,
Athletic
Fields.
Special
women's
workshop
for
beginners
and
experienc:ed
iJlayers.
.
.

Art Galleries

Trustees pull out
the rubber stamp ,

.
.
. ' , .'

Everireen Gallery Two "Dr.' Martin Luther King Jr., Peacemaker" Travelin~ exhibit from the Peace Museum in Chicago, through May 12. Admission i.s free.
Ev.ergreen Gallery Four Paul Berger/Vicki Scuri; ·throughMay~i.
. .. '
'. , . .
.
.
CAB Student Art Gallery One-person

TWilight ZOne Gallery Tenth
of the
..
The ' Q .;. •.•, ... "

sbmv by Judy Kirk.'

flY ' I"""" '" LJn ...·.,.,

Is Library for the birds?

Si'l~~~l.'.~1tift~~~$)~J~(),ir~ibr:b~~~Jt~r~~

by Carla Casper

Attention all 1985 graduates!! Do
not forget to turn in your class gift
survey--either in the box in the CAB
or the one in the registrar's office-last day to turn in your survey is May
13 . For more information, contact
Connie Gray at 866-1898

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

The most sensational sound
you'll ever ~ee!

The Franklin Plaza Theatre
Frida, 7:15 " 9:10 pm
SolI & So 2.30, 4:45, 7:15 &9:30 pm

MDD • nIlS

range from $180 to $210 a week.
Call 866-6000, ext. 6103.

August I, 1985. For a job description
contact Career Planning and Placement in LI213 or phone x6194:

Students interested in worki,ng with
children who have emotional and
behavioral problems can gain experience through work at a Residential Camp. Camp Seymour, in
Tacoma, is recruiting for counselors,
waterfront staff, arts and crafts in·
structors, and a nature awareness in·
structor. Deadline for resumes is

Jobs at Pacific Peaks Girl Scouts
Camp include assistant camp director; waterfront director, horse and
canoe triP leaders. The camp hires
both men and women. Salaries range
from $600 to $1800 for the season.
For information, see Career Planning and Placement.

Agenda of meetings of SecuritY/POlice DTF.
4/8, L2205, I pm, Perspective
of Sheriff Dan Montgomery,
report on college liabilities by
Ken Jacob, sub-committee
report on campus consultation . 4122, LI6I2, Ipm, Lidman report on National
Guidelines, DTF discussion.
4129, LI612, Ipm, DTF
Discussion. 6/6, DTF report
due. These are open meetings
and all interested perso,ns may
attend. Information considered by the DTF will be on
tile in Library Circulation, the
Dean of Student'S office, and
the Information Center.

There are some new faces on
campus this term .
Several families of cliff
sw'l-llows are building nests in the
hollows of the Library roof.
These swallows are not pottytrained and have shown a certain
lack of .restraint in regards to
humans.
People have compained about
the swallows to Facilities Director Ken Winkley. But Winkley
has said that nothing will be done
about the swallows this year
because they've already started
nesting.
Winkley has considered ways
to prevent the swallows from
nesting in the eves of the Library
roof next year, but the solutions
offered so far all have
drawbacks.
One idea is to spread vasoline
on the roof next year, but local
ornithologists argue that the
swallows may use the vasoline as
a bonding agent, and it might

Grays Harbor Youlh Home is looking for an Evergreen graduate to
work as live-in counselor for this
private group home. This is an excellent opportunity for anyone interested in a career in counseling
adolescents. Counselor will provide
intensive group and individual sessions, as ' well as day-to-day
guidance.
To arrange an Interview, contact Career Planning and
Placement.

ASH Tree

Apartments
invites you
to try our

FREE!

Fin! YlsiI

rr.

$25.95 lor 10 mill

The $191,000 the college is giving
back will help fill out the state's thin
wallet, which revenue forecasters say
is $40 million to $60 million shy of
paying for what the state bought
over the last two fiscal years.
Gardner cut 5 percent of what was
planned to be spent by all state agen·
cies over April, May and June. To
meet the cut, other universities gave
up state subsidies for their s umm er
schools. Evergreen, however, wean·
ed its summer school from subsid ies
under ex-Governor John Spellman's
1981 budget cuts.
Marshburn said, "The money that
we are giving back was done in a way
that shouldn't impact student life
other than the fact that if a film pro·
jector breaks in t he middle of show·
ing a film to a program, we ' re not
going to be able to fix it until next
year. Things will happen that we will
not be able to respond to. Somebody
will get sick and we won't be able to
hire a replacement. We won't be able
to do job searches for people. We
won't be sending people on trips ."
Gail Martin, Dean of Students,
said the cuts are not an immedi ate
problem but will become one unl ess
money becomes available to replace
old equipment.
She also said a stable higher
education system can't be built on
the current unstable tax base . Higher
education has been cut five tim es in
five years.
"Having lived and worked in a
stat e that had an income tax, the ex·
perience wa s much more positive."
Martin said. "It's not that yo u ha\c
more money. It ' s clearer ho w much
yo u do have, so yo u can pursue your
work with more purpose and les,
distract ion."

OEffectiw.e
o Convenient To U
o Relaxing
o Guaranteed

THE EVERGREEN
STATE COLLEGE
Olympia, W A 98505

Start your Ian wilh a free firll vilil and lollow up with' 10 mill lor $25.95.
Call8li6·8181 lor ~ appoinbnent Dr ceme by the ASH Apartments Office.
U you tan in natural lunliqhl we quaranlee JOu a radiant tan.

.

help the birds instead of hindering their architectural abilities.
Another idea would be to
spray gunk, a substance used to
clean automobile engines, on the
nesting area. The birds, repOrtedIy, find the odor distasteful. Yet
gunk might be discerriable to
humans or have to be applied too
often.

These swallows are not potty
trained, and have shown a certain
lack of restraint in regards to
humans.

The third and most visible
solution would be to net the area
off. The birds currently nest at
the front of the building, perhaps
only this area would need to be
neeted off.
Unfortunately, the netting is
black and might be unsightly on
the on Library roof. Winkley is

looking for grey netting, but is
unsure if it is available. He said
the netting must also have a very
small weave or the birds could entangle themselves in the material.
Student Bob Hornbein and
some of his friends think the
swallows should be allowed to
nest undisturbed . When they
heard the swallows habitat was
endanr oed they began collecting
signamres on a petition. More
than 300 people have signed it so
far.
"We feel it adds to the
Evergreen community, and people enjoy nature here," said
Hornbein. He added that the
swallows have seniority-they
were here before Evergreen was
built.
Winkley has recently sent out
over 600 surveys asking the community if the swallows should be
prevented from nesting next year,
or if people think the birds
should be left alone . So far, most
people are in favor of leaving the
eli ff swallows alone.

by Kurt Batdorf
Evergreen's Board of Trustees
yesterday approved a nearly 20 percent tuition increase and raised the
number of people who can issue cita·
tions for violation of the Criminal
Trespass Act.
With no objections, the Board
took less than 45 minutes to pass the
five "action items," which included the tuition and citation issues.
There were no students at the
meeting to raise any questions.
With little discussion, the Board
voted to increase tuition for resident
undergraduates to $404, up from the
present $339. Resident graduate
students will have to pay $570. Non·
residents will pay $1,402 for
undergraduate study and $1,698 for
graduare work . All amounts are per
quarter.
"I'll get real thin real fast because
I won't be able to afford as much
food," Wendi Kerr said about the
increase.
Margot Boyer, an out-of-state student, said , ''I'll get more money
from my family, but it (the tuition
hik e) won't alter my standard of
living ."
Nilda Godwin, secretary for Gail

Martin, said, "We have heard some
concerns about (the increase) from
students." But she doesn't know
how it will affect next year's
enrollment .
Arnaldo Rodriguez, Director of
Admissions, explained that the in·
crease had been predicted for some
time. He thought that stljdents had
probably made some arrangeri1ent
for the increase and that it
"shouldn't be much of a deterrent"
for next year's students.

With no objections, the Board
took less than 45 minutes to
decide the five " action items " on
their agenda. . . .
In another important development , the Board moved to allow
nine college administrators and commissioned campus sec urity and
police officers to is sue crim in al
trespass citations.
The administrators are: the pres ident, the vice president for business,

Please see Board, Page 8
NONPROFtT ORG.

u.s POSTAGE
PAID
OLYMPIA. WA
PERMtT NO . 65

P38e2

May 9, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Lette't6
Marine Corps.

What is the
reason?
What Is Going On?
Faculty member Mike Davis,
presently teaching in Issues, Traditions, and Change, is not being
rehired. What is the reasoning
behind such a blunderous error?
I dread thinking what the program
would be like without Mike. He gave
u s excitement, as well as a wealth of
political and historical knowledge,
that is unchallenged in my book .
Others should be given the chance
to benefit from his expertise and
helpfulness. I f he cannot be hired as
an instructor, give him a job as
janitor so other students can benefit
from hi s knowledge. What a waste
it would be to have a person of his
caliber nipping burgers at your local
bar and grill.
Don Heyri ch

Praise
Security ...
Dear Editor:

Dr. Olander said it best: (CPJ,
Apri12S) "For the staff, I want them
to be infectious, joyful, and passionate about their work ... this is a
place we come to play. If it's not,
you should find another job."
I fully agree. For those in security who believe in this vision, keep up
the good work--you have my thanks
and respect. For those of you who
don't--please do me, the security
department and the school a favor
and QUIT. NOW. Thank You.
Randy J Earwood

Reader's
questions
Dear Editor:

1 have a few questions .
Why is the clock tower (the
graphic and architectural center of
the college) never right? Was this
part of the original plan? Is there
poetry here that I am missing? Are
we trying to get other places that
have clock towers to change with us?
If so, have we sent them a formal invitation, or are we being subtle?
Why is the library open only a
very few hours on the weekend?
Doesn't the administration believe in
supply-side education?
If the free world is so great, how
come we have to give it away?

It's time someone praised the
Security Department. Most of them
are helpful, considerate, compassionate people who are dedicated to
Evergreen's unique Ii festyle.
The bad rap that security has been
getting is mostly due to the actions
of the department's few bad eggs.
These few people should, for the
good of the department and the
school, start a new police force--the
INsecurity department. The INsecurity officers could wear flak
jackets and SWAT caps, and carry
(plastic) revolvers to make them feel
safe in what is already one of the
safest places in the nation. This way,
the real security force can concentrate on campus safety and rapport,
while the INsecurity force storms
around screaming at students,
sneaking around the beach, and
hiding in trees with cross-bows, etc.
Of course, without the air of
legitimacy (i.e. POWER) that the
real security force gives them, these
INsec.urity officers would probably
quit (aw shucks) and go find more
suitable employment--like with the

Why are there so many people on
campus who can so eloquently expose the facts on anyone side of any
issue?
Does Dr·. Olander have an agent?
Do the Evergreen-etched beer
mugs available in the bookstore
mean that the college is changing?
Does Vonda really think that signs
suspended from the ceiling keep
cigarette smoke where it should and
shouldn't be? (Even Moses didn't
use signs!)
Sincerely,
W . Mackinlay Weir
P .S. If I sat behind a desk and
asked these questions in a highpitched voice, I could probably
make a lot of money.
P.P.S. If your.name or responsibility is mentioned here, forgive me,
I've held this in for a long time.

' ~y ." they so,c!, us t\.<y p:>ureJ )cotch""d drank if ,

.•, Is su ch

Q

51\1 i I.tUe MMe .

' T O CAvOld c.onf1151()(\

T heir ne W _ome

. W,fh

15

w4 th

Therefo(e,

L."vs"s blo"ket ,

~," decoded the boord.

Apathy or
.time-waste·
To the Editor,
Faced with the possibility of finding their letter published between
a letter that calls our campus security
"egocentric, paranoid, power tripping ... cops" and a harangue that
begins with "get offyoul :lSses!" in
capital letters, someone wishing to
do something useful by writing to
the CP J might wonder whether they
were wasting their time.
I might be wasting my time. But
I'll go on.
From Wendi's letter in the CPJ
two weeks ago, from the" Are You
An Apathetic Student?" posters that
WashPIRG seems so proud of, and
in general from the gossip around
campus, most people must have considered the possibility that we are an
enormously apathetic community.
I hope some have had the sense to
realize that this is not true. I hope
some have had the sense to realize
that they are being insulted.
From the evidence of lack of letters and cartoons sent to the CP J or
small turnouts at WashPIRG meettings and programs, it does not
.follow tliat, as Wendi put it , "Homo
sapien evergreenus, circa 1985 is an
apathetic creature!" It does not
follow from the argument of Francisco's longwinded letter either. If he
believes the Apathetic Greener
assessment, which he makes in the
first paragraph, he at any rate
doesn't support it.
First, he compliments Wendi .
Then, he insults the Class of '85.
Then, he insults the Class of '84.
Then, he insults Evergreen's
academic system of contracts and internships. Then, he insults anyone
who considers themselves politically aware. Then, he insults Deli Bob.
Then, he insults the UW and WSU
(nice touch). Then, he insults anyone
who has ever been concerned
because their program is full (a
legitimate concern).
I'm not making this up. Reread
his letter. Albeit in a jovial tone, the
letter makes all of these insults.
Then he lists a series of
achievements that Evergreen
students have fought for: The
Album Project; equipment at the
CP J; a faculty member. These things
go against the point Francisco tries
to make--unless he's ~ying that'such
achievements happened only in the
past. They are still happening.
Dedicated students, faculty and staff

T hu s . Of' protec:ti"9 tl.e ocO£iem,c.s •.
For peac.ekeepers they cJ,ose the best one .

Ju st a s Re"9an need 5 the MX.,

" Ever9'e<"'5 fInest
" needs th e 9""'.

Don '( forget the
Humor Issue on
May 31 ! ! ! !

Their 9U~S ihe y (,shr vlgouroU>i y fo r all th.t IS good-

Trac k,n9 down QII ",ho hove chealed . robbed, or I, ed.
An d Nhl'n they (,nd tf,e: are not beln9 o.s true 0.5 they could,
They close thew I'Y"S and let the Forc e be their 9u ide.

An&. i ~ ,n IhoJ 3reCA1 coitle he succeeds,
~ie sha" r elebrote , knowln9 tho.1 '15 deeds
W,:Ibe IJY'I11or\o.li2ed In 'he son95 of every chQr1te.r.

But, er~~ boo stins or hiS tri umphant task,

He. wdl take a. look '.l"derneo.th the mask -

to mole sure he. dido't

are running this COllege well.
Achievements that I especially appreciate include: The Student· rut
Gallery; alternative radio; the raising of the nude beach issue; the
organizing of the Salem 66 concert,
which brought together a large
group of creative people, sharing
their projects.
Comment or criticism can be
useful; insults cannot--even when
what is insulted deserves criticism.
Francisco offers many more insults
than comments or criticisms. Concerning the nude beach issue, Chris
offers insults of campus security, only comments or criticisms can help.
The CPJ publishes it.
I take issue most strongly with the
insult of apathy. Being called
apathetic hits a nerve. It does not
empower, it harms. People who
decide not to pursue their issue in the
letters column of Jthe CP J aren't
necessarily apathetic. As a forum,
the CP J is sometimes useful, often
inadequate. And that reflects on the
running of the CP J not on the community it serves.
People who don't have a table in
the CAB or their name in the CP J
don't necessarily deserve to be called apathetic.
I venture an explanation of why
accusations of apathy find such
popularity in this world where we
can never do enough. Calling others
apathetic reassures the one doing the
calling. "I'm not apathetic--why, I
am doing all I can to work against
apathy." '.'I'm standing on the correct side of the Apathetic Student
Poster. "
If catcalls of apathy can motivate
people, they motivate them falsely,
wrongly.
Though it might feel good, we
should avoid yelling at ourselves.
Sincerely,
Robert Dieterich

Ten til One
special
To the editor:
Apparently nobody on your staff
has spent any time in Portland. If
they had they would have known of
the utterly unbelievable burgers at
Stanich's Ten til One.
Despite being far relTloved from
any major business center or popular
party local, this modest little bar is
packed at every lunch hour and all
evenings. The cook doesn't wait to
receive your order. You're having
what everyone else is having and
there are already a half dozen of
them going on the grill: The Special.
Rumor has it that this burger was
designed by' Frank Lloyd Wright.
(Vegetarians, read no further.) In
addition to a juicy patty about the
size and shape of your average
economics textbook, it also contains
bacon, cheese, canadian bacon, a
fried egg, lettuce, tomato, onions
(optional), all topped with the
special house dressing and carefully
slad.ed in a bun the size of a smali
frisbee. The amazing thing is that it
all blends into a marvelously well
balanced meal.
As a cost cutting measure, in these
troubled times for the small
businessman, they have had to cut
back on the chips.
On the CPJ's advice, a group of
friends and I, all alumni of the City
of Roses, sampled the offerings at
Benjamin Moore' s, an establishment
' that had received your highest
rating . Respectable. But comparing
BM's burgers to Stanich's Special is
like comparing:·the Wright brother's
famous contraption to the Space
Shuttle. Yes, they both fly.
R. Paul Tyler

. THE CooPIo:R POINT JOURNAL

May 9, 1985
deter those who wanted only quick
access to the area.
The construction of signs along
the beach during the winter has
defined the sunbathing area. The
. designated area is good beach and
large in area. I find this a tasteful
compromise.
Occassional patrols of
Dear Editors:
the beach by security I would also
welcome so long as this is used
As a graduate student now, I am
judiciously and not to harass those
looking forward to the warm, sunny days of summer when I can . who are unattired.
I would encourage Vice President
return to enjoy the Evergreen Beach
Schwartz to meet openly with
with or without my clothes as I
students who want to see the
choose.
clothing-optional beach remain. I
As a new community resident in
would also challenge students to
the last two years, I have b~ked in
respect the administration's
the relaxed atmosphere that I have
dilemma.
found there. That good feeling was
Should there be a ban or severe
more tenuous last summer.
restriction of the clothing option, I
However, I do not solely blame the
would certainly hope that we as
school's administration for the unstudents, faculty, administrators, or
fortunate situation.
community members would exercise
There appear to be two reasons
creative challenges to achieve the
for the crackdown. One, the beach
restoration of this valuable service of
was listed for the first time in the
the
college.
World Guide to Nude Beaches and
Recreation. It may have been detailMost sincerely,
ed in another publication as well.
Bob Gragson
The beach was promoted as a
"hassle-free" environment. This
widespread information brought
more outsiders--sunbathers and
gawkers--to the beach. As a result,
the issue became a community issue
and therefore is a politically sensitive
. one
Second, there were reports of
behavior of a sexual nature visible
to visitors at the Geoduck House
which caused embarrassment to
several
members <if
the ' To the Editor,
administration.
Thank you Mike for keeping the
It would be naive of any of us who
CP
J alive and pUblishing. I know it
enjoy the clothes-optional aspect of
can be hard sometimes, but not as
the beach to deal with this issue with
hard as I imagine the next couple of
rhetoric insensitive to the political
weeks
are going to be (Le. beach
demands placed upon the school as
controversy).
a state-funded institution.
It is a reality loaded with an abunIf possible, ·I would like to resdance of both positive and negative
pond to a previous letter to the
ramifications. There are no enemies
editor, specifically to Chris
in this case. There are, however,
Bingham's letter of last week, and
varying value systems operating.
parenthetically to the" an alumni"
I think the college exercised discreletter.
tion last year in its initial confrontation with the problem. The solutions proffered were not completely
I would like to thank Chris
insensitive to student appreciation of
Bingham for sealing the case that the
the beach as a clothing-optional
security office and the administraarea.
tion had. With your statement that
The closing of the gates to the
certain pastimes and physical acts
Geoduck house entrance did help
should be dealt with in
non-

Varying
values

,A lonely
.place
Dear Editor,
Lonely Place.
To understand the convict's
loneliness you must first understand
that:
Prison is place where you must
write letters to your family, friend o ,
and loved ones to preserve both your
sanity and the remnants of those left
outside. It is a place where incoming letters slowly become fewer and
fewer, and finally stop altogether.
Prison is place where your hope
is your sanity. A place where each
parole board appearance means a
chance, no matter how slim, of
returning to your family. For many
prisoners, the parole board is the only chance they will ever have of
returning to freedom.
Prison is a place where the flame
in every man's heart tends to burn
low, for most it flickers dimly, occaisonally flashing brightly, but it
never seems to glow with the happiness that it once had. For some it
dies altogether.
Prison is a place where a man
must often endure years without
such things as feelings-feeling the
touch of a human hand or hearing
a kind word . It's a place where your
friendships are shallow and you're
keenly aware that you have a need
for a satisfying relationship.
Prison is a place where you can
forget the sound of a baby crying,
a woman's laughter, a d6g's bark,
the sound of a wooden door closing.
Prison is a place where most married inmates helplessly watch their
marriages die. It's a place where
absence does not make the heart
grow fonder. It's a place where after
a time of frustration, you stop blaming your loved .one for wanting
another man rather than a faded
memory of the one she once had.
Prison is a place where you strive
to sustain ' your sanity but find
yourself sadly losing ground. Finally you begin to feel the hatred, and
you hate through clenched teeth.
You want to kick, punch, choke, but
you never find the proper target
because the real object of your
hatred is time.
Time, it ages you, drives you out
of the lives of the people you care
about.
Finally, prison is a place where
loneliness is real enough to touch
every year, week, day, minute and
second of the life you live there. Can
you feel the loneliness? I can, I live
it.
Well, what do you think? I'm
hoping to find the one for me as I
should be out in roughly a year.
Well, take care.
Write if you wish.
Norman Field
P .O. Box 1000
286739
Steilacoom, WA 98388
3-C-2

Discussion
not libel

'.

a

interventionist manner, you have
provided security with all the reasons
they could ask for to shut the beach
down to clothing optional bathers
(excuse the doublespeak).

It is true that security has decided
that tolerance of nude bathing is no
longer in their best interest. I assume
that they have received complaints
from area residents, who have the
right to complain and to have their
complaints dealt with. I thought
your use of copulative phrases, and
the namecalling (i.e. eg<x:entric,
paranoid, etc.) only served to inflame security's desire to effect
c.losure on the beach for bathers.
And to address the thoughts of the
"alumni" (why no name?), I too
find Officer Anderson's conduct a
bit restrictive, but to offer libelous
words as a way to address the issue
is not the answer.
The beach issue should definitely
become an issue for community
discussion, but namecalling and innuendo do not help to increase the
empowerment desires of students.
Let us voice our interest in campus wide discussion, not show our
impudence' and lose our possibilities
for compromise.
R. Christopher Shaw

Forever
Green
Editor:

equivalent of an hour's wages (two
years ago) for a cup of coffee. Then
I took a free walk to class, where I
learned what I'm paying to learn.
Shortly thereafter I was sitting in
CAB trying to think of a way not to
spend money. When 'i picked up a
copy of CPJ and found that a
number of departments at the
Evergreen are lacking funds, needed to pay for labor. Apparently the
Maintenance Department is in need
of help to repair some bridges or
trails and the soccer field is coming
unglued.
.'
The thought occured to me that
hundreds of students like myself
could assist the school in such projects. In return for credit towards
school items like parking and coffee.
A free labor source for the school
and a way to make financing a college education bearable. I'm currently trying to figure out why such a
system would not work at
Evergreen, but I'm having some difficulty. Perhaps you could help.
A Student

Gods
embarrass
Re: Lois Maffeo and J.W. Renaud's
review of The Gods Must Be Crazy.
Dear Lois and J. W.
I find nothing, absolutely nothing
wrong with The Gods Must Be
Cra~. If anything, it embarrasses
the whites in the audience for being
so damn stupid and barbaric.
The bushpeople are seen as the only civilized ones in the movie and one
is enlightened beyond surface comedy to respect and admire their
culture and their people. I do not
feel in any way that I have supported
the system of apartheid simply
because I have attended the film.
Let's not get carried away here.
Maybe you should go see the film
again.

" often hear students talk about
how different they are from "the
Greeners. "
I'm different they say, I have
short hair, hate home spun wool ,
don't like sprouts, and would not be
caught dead in rubber barn boots .
The conversation then goes into
details on how normal (mediocre)
they really are.
My guess as to why some students
don't want to be a "greener" is due
to some flack they have received off Sincerely, Debbie Kremins
campus from friends or acquaintances . If they say "m going to transfer or I'm only here to
get into grad. school they can divert
the flack.
This bugs me! It's a cheap shot
that does nothing to change misguided opinions of the community.
A "Greener" is and has always
been an Evergreen student, nothing
Editor:
more, nothing less. If you don't like '
that definition because you still think
When I watched the credits roll at
you're different, you have missed
the end of THE GODS MUST BE
the point.
CRAZY, I noticed that about 30
"Greeners" are different. If we
were not, we should all be in a frat
or sorority at State University .
Please don't misinterpret me as
asking for a gung-ho, die before'
betray my school attitude,
"Greeners" first, everything else
third. I just wantto restate a definition that has been forgotten by
some.
So the next time someone asks if
you r:::_t1y go to that school
Evergreen, don't give them 40 excuses; say yes.
Forever green.

Look at

U.S.

Ot

t'
I.

1
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(t· 0rse~, O~'"
r" ",~I1~ ~
~

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I

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The Cooper Point Journal is published weekly for the students, staff
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 Journal. 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 foj!>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. Letlers and display adverti'sing must be received no later than 5 p.m. on Monday for that week's

f{

~
publication .
Editor: Mike McKenzie
Managing Editor: Kurt Batdorf .
/ ~.
Photo Editor: Dave Peterson
,IJY _ "'.....">.lfl'Oi-iiitl
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, Janine 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
Typist: Margot Boyer

Alan Kinnaman

Free labor
source
Dear Editor,
A Thought.
Yesterday, I puUed up to the parking lot attendant and forked over a
few precious coins so that I could
enter campus and attend classes.
Then I found a place to park, walked to the Deli and paid the

. page 3
percent of the people had African
names. 1 thought that was an improvement over an unacceptable
situation which existed in ·the '405.
At that time I took a stage design
course at the New School instructed
by a lighting designer, Leo Kurtz
who bemoaned the fact that he had
worked with a genius of a designer
in Johannesburg who could not get
design work because of his color.
I don't think this improvement
calls for smugness or apathy
anymore than saying that a black
should be grateful because he no
longer has to sit in the back of the
bus.
Freedom is a quality which cannot be quantified anymore than being pregnant is. I wasn't aware of a
boycott of this film and I am opposed to apartheid and don't want to
help fill the coffers of ·racists.
Some people thought blacks were
denel1:rated in this movie. I disagree.
It showed the ingenuity of primitive
homo sapiens who were Bushmen,
coping with nature as all peoples did
who survived hundreds of thousands
of years. The movie questions the
viability of the path away from
primative life to the dominant
Western culture we think we enjoy.
I understand the strategy in black
and white-right and wrong
designations . To have a sucessful
movement one must be relentless
and not deviate from the conventional wisdom of the leadership or
the cause wiu be fragmented and die.
The "end justifies the means" syndrome tolerates no grey areas.
, wonder how many blacks are
named when the credits roll at the
end of our TV shows and movies.
Irene Mark Buitenkant

Typist
urges
Dear Readers ,
I've been typing all thi s stuff
about THE GODS MUST BE
CRAZY and I have to put in my 3
cents. I saw it and I was disturbed
by the movie and the audience' s
reaction to it. I' m not sure why. I
couldn't prove that it is a racist
mo vie. The audience laughed
uproariously at the Bushmen at the
beginning of the film.
It's not a funny movie for peopl e
who don't appreciate slapstick. I
don't. I would very much like to
hear from some Third World people who have seen the film.
Seeing the movie is patronizing
South African business. But that' s
another debate.
Margot Boyer

and so are thousands of Moms, Dads, Sisters, Brothers,
Aunts, Uncles, Childhood Sweethearts and Guys-Downthe-Street-Who-Are-Absolutely-Convinced -That-DumbKid-Is-Never-Gonna-Graduate-From-College-And-WantTo-Be-There-When ,He-Doesn't.
The families are going to stay in motels and hotels
and talce the graduates and their friends to eat out a
lot. The guys from down the street are going to have
to buy the kids nice presents and tell everyone they
always knew these kids were goinq places.

. CASB 1M ON GRADUATION!
Advertise in the CPJ
866·6000 ext. 6054
Ask for Cathy

page S

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

May 9, 1985

Greeners demonstrate against
Nicaraguan embargo policies
by Nathan Jones
Last Tuesday at 12:00 noon, 300
EvergreJ;!n students rallied in Red
Square for one hour to demonstrate
against Reagan's recent decision to
embargo Nicaragua.
Bob Fuller, the first of three student speakers, broke the crowd's
carefree mood when he lashed out
at America's growing involvement in
the war in Central America.
Fuller, who traveled to Nicaragua
in 1982 to study Sp·anish and to investigate the country's political
situation, accused the Reagan Administration of deceiving the
American people about the popularity of Nicaragua's socialist
government.
According to Fuller, the 1984 elections in Nicaragua were popular
among the people and widely accepted as legitimate, but " not one
pop was heard from Reagan or his
administration about this election
campaign." Fuller added that the
present government was popularly
elected and has with stood

democratic challenges through fair
elections.
After Fuller finished his opening
address, Amy Gray, another student
who visited Nicaragua, railed to the
crowd. Gray claimed that Reagan's
statements about the tyranny of
Nicaragua's present government are
"misleading." She declared that
while living in Nicarag"ua, she saw
"the posters of 17 political parties
plastered all across village walls,"
with each poster representing the
various interests of competing
political parties .
Gray also noted how 70 percent of
the American people oppose US intervention in Nicaraguan affairs .
Gray cited accomplishments of
Nicaragua's socialist government.
For example, between 1979-1982,
Nicaragua's literacy rate jumped by
20 percent, due to the socialist
government's drive to educate rural
peasants .
After Gray' s speech, Chris Darrow spoke of the secret air war over
EI Salvador. Darrow echoed the

other speakers' themes when he
dedared, "the US government is not
telling us about what's going on
there. "
Stephanie Coontz, the only faculty member to address the rally ,
whipped up enthusiasm among the
silent crowd when she roared, "The
Pentagon Papers show that time and
time again politicians act not upon
principal, but upon the pressure of
the American people."
Coontz discussed how she and her
fellow students at Berkley
demonstrated against the war in
Vietnam by sitting on railroad tracks
to stop troop tra ins. However, she
criticized these tactics because, in her
opinion, the anti-war protestors-who were college students--neglected
to include the widespread disgust felt
by mainstream Americans about the
war .
Over the cheers of li steners ,
Coontz cried out, "We were
separating ourselves from people
who thought that they were not our
constituents, but God dammit , they

Anna and the Bananas say :
photo by Dave Peterson
"We' re Nica Bananas/ We're here to say/ If you want to stop/ the
Embargo today/ Get off your asses/ And get in the streets / Or
pretty soon/ You won't have us to eat.

were our constituents!"
Coontz asserted that to be successful "the anti-war movement requires the mass mobilization of
millions of people." She urged
Evergreen students to join Students
for a Humane Foreign Policy to
organi ze effectively their anti-war

efforts.
"We are the majorit y," Coontz
shouted, "we have to act in the interests of the majorit y, a nd we ha ve
to mobilize that majority."
Li steners whistled, a pplauded ,
a nd shouted praise as C oont z stepped from the platform .

Legislature signs intern bill
by Carla Casper

© 1983 Cook, R.-LUCASFILM LTD.
Image used with artists' permission.

The Second Annual

photo by Carta Casper

Doug Shadel, investigator for the Attorney General's Fair Practice Division

Although the State Legislature is
singing R & B-the Revenue and
Budget Blues-a few bills that will
affect Evergreen have managed to
pass both houses.
One of these bills creates an internship program for college
students. The program will be
established in the office of the
governor.
It offers undergraduate students
three to six month internship to gain
work experience in state government
agencies. The program also offers an
executive fellows program for
graduate students interested in
management.
The governor hasn't signeS) the bill
into law yet, but it is very likely he

will.
Many state agencies already have
Evergreen interns.
Doug Shadel, an investigator at
the Attorney General 's Fair Practices Division, has had Evergreen interns work in his office for the past
6 years.
Of his 7 interns, three are from
Evergreen. Shadel said he prefers to
hire Evergreen students because,
"They're more self-started, they
don't need extensive supervision,"
and "The ideal intern is one who can
act independently sooner."
The intern program is also costeffective for the office. If a student
is eligible, work-study funds can pay
all but 35 percent of an intern's
wages, and since the business of the'
AG's is saving consumers' money,

the program works well for
everyone.
Interns at the Attorney General's
office learn business law, answer
consumer inquiries, and mediate
complaints consumers may have
against business. They may also do
preliminary investigations of companies that may have voilated consumer protection laws.
Shadel said that interns work a
minimum of 6 months at the office
to learn all they need to know , and
most stay a year or longer because
they like the job.
If you have Holmesian tendencies,
you might consider sleuthing for the
Attorney General. Shadel said he
always needs interns . "It's the only
way we can really get anything
done."

Olander calls for governance symposium
May 22nd set aside to discuss past, present and future
Road to Point Reyes
directed by
Robert L Cook
Computer Division
Lucaslilm lid.

This landscape was defined using
patches , polygons, fractals, particle
systems, and a variety of procedural
models. The various elements were
rendered separately and later
composited, Rob Cook deSigned
the picture and did the texturing
and shading , including the road, hills,
fence , rainbow , shadows, and
reflections . Loren Carpenter used
fractals for the mountains, rock, and
lake , and a special atmosphere
program for the sky and haze. Tom
Porter provided the procedurally drawn
texture for the hills and wrote the
composing software. Bill Reeves
used his particle systems for the grass
and wrote "'the modeling software.
David Salesin put the ripples in the
puddles. Alvy Ray Smith rendered the
forsythia plants using a procedural
model . The visible surface software
was written by Loren Carpenter, and
the antialiasing software by Rob Cook.
The picture was rendered using an
Ikon as graphics processor and frame
buffers , and was scanned on FIRE
240, courtesy of MacDonald Dettwiler
& Associates Ltd. The resolution is
4Kx4K, 24 bits/pixel.

May 15 and 16
9 a.m. to 9 p.m.

Library Lobby
Free Admission

The video chronicles of Computer Graphics (also
known as SIGGRAPH Video Review) recount in
images the variety and excellence of Computer
Graphics. The Second Annual Computer Video Festival
will feature the latest issues 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 ,
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 21st Century,
Cranston/Csuri Production Demo and many more
totalling 44 in number.

Everyone is welcome.

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.

Evergreen President Joe Olander
has once more initiated a public
forum to discuss governance at
Evergreen. Provost Patrick Hill,on
Olander'S behalf, last week asked
the Evergreen Council to help set up
a campus wide forum on Wednesday, May 22, from noon to 3pm.
Hill said. "Joe doesn't 'want to
lose the momentum " that the Council's three day forum earlier this
quarter had generated.
Calling the May 22nd event a
"governance symposium," Hill ask-

ed the Council to report on the most
creative suggestions for changes in
governance that came out of the
earlier forums . He also asked the
Council to take charge of the first
hour of the program and recruit
panelists and speakers.
More recently : Hill has proposed
that the forum be divided into three
segments and the Council moderate
all three. He suggests separate
segments, perhaps panels, for I) a
historical perspective and overview,
2) current issues about governance

THE MAY 22nd
GOVERNANCE SYMPOSIUM
needs your thoughts. Please tell us what you like, dislike,
would like to see changed. Give us a blueprint for the
future or a grouse about the past.
Please submit typed comments no later than 5pm on
Monday, May 13th in the envelop outside Library 3113.

Time After Time
Vintage Clothing & ConSignment
presentsj\

Vintage -Fashion Show
at the ,

Seven Gables Restaurant
May 19th at 4pm
tickets $3.50
352-2349

and 3) alternatives and solutions.
When Hill came to the Council
meeting, the Council was discussing
whether and what to charge the DTF
on Governance which was to have
come from the earlier forums . The
Council heard from the students
who had attempted to pull the
membership together that many
faculty and administrative staff
members were unwilling to take on
another task this late in the year or
had already discharged their governance responsihiliti.es earlier this YC?T

on DTF's and hiring committees.
Hill told the Council that the
faculty had a study group set up for
ne xt fall which was to report back
to Olander in November. Olander
wants to have a new strategic planning process in place by January 1st
of next year, Hill said.
According to Hill, Olander intends to find "one good idea and try
it." If that doesn't work or needs
modification, Olander will look for
another good idea.
The Council decjded to participate

in the Ma y 22nd Governance Sym posium and to charge a DTF for
next fall. A committe was ch osen to
work on the forum a nd to writ e a
charge for the DTF.
The Evergreen Council as ks community members to submit written
critiques and suggestions for changes
in the envelop outside Library 311 3
by 5pm on Monday, May 13th for
consideration by the committee.
Plea s e
include a way to contact and an y
suggestions for' panel members .

page 6

May 9, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Spring Cleaning, or, Poem Where Reader May Change Any or All of the Words

TEse and UPS file for divorce

Sometimes the best words are so simple .
You would feel so relieved
>

Demeter and Triptolemos
I)

by Nathan Jones
Evergreen and the University of
Puge.t Sound in Tacoma want a
divorce. Like a feuding couple in a
sour marriage, both schools have
decided to break their partnership.
Evergreen, because of curriculum
changes, recently agreed to discontinue the joint Teacher Certification
program with the University of
Puget Sound, and has chosen
another school for the program,
Western Washington University.
Academic Dean Barbara Smith of
explained that the decision to discon.s tinue the program with UPS "isn't
5 a measure of dissatisfaction, it's just
'-'-....==-~~---------4 -g, a matter of making a bettor matrch
for Evergreen stude tll s with
Cathy and Isaac Reyes dance in beautiful Mexican costume,
Western.
"
in celebration of El Cinco de Mayo, the Mexican National Holiof this decision fear that
Critics
day last Sunday. El Cinco de Mayo is celebrated in remembrance
Evergreen
students will be the losers.
o f the Mexican defeat of the French army on May 5, 1862. The
In
their
view,
UPS is a traditional
defeat symbolizes Mexico's determination to be an independent
local reputation.
school
with
a
solid
Ilatioll. EI Cinco de Mayo is a Mexican National Holiday, and
If
Evergreen
breaks
ties with UPS,
Go v. Booth Gardner has urged Washingtonians to observe this
then
future
Evergreen
graduates
important day in Mexico' s history. The event was put on mainly
looking
for
teaching
jobs
will be
by MEChA and the Hispanic Art s Comm ittee of Thurston
without
the
advantage
'01'
UPS's
County.
reputation and contacts.
Smi th denied that students will

suffer from the separation with
UPS.
"I think those fears are
groundless. Western has one of the
finest Teacher Certification programs on the West Coast. They also
have a state-wide placement program," Smith said.
According to Smith, Evergreen's
Teacher Certification will offer three
new specialty areas in 1987:
multicultural, rural, and environmental education. Smith
believes that the new partnership will
benefit students who decide to focus
their studies in one of these new
areas.
In addition to opening the three
new specialities for students, the
Teacher Certification program will
continue to offer general studies in
elementary education and secondary
education.
Not all of the participants in the
program agree with the official explanation of the change.
A student, who requested to remain anonymous, responded, "The
real reason is politics. Faculty at
Evergreen want to teach some of the

professional education courses, but
UPS won't go along with it."
David Hostetter, a UPS faculty
member involved in the joint program with Evergreen, noted that the
current contract between Evergreen
and UPS stipulates that UPS faculty teach the professional education
courses, while Evergreen faculty
teach other necessary subjects, such
as English, math and science.
"There was some frustration
within the Evergreen faculty over the
terms of the contract," Hostetter
said.
Despite the decision of both
schools to sever the partnership in
1987, Hostetter isn't apologetic
about the success of the current
program.
"I feel positive about the program in general," he said. "There
are some excellent students here who
can teach school and can really think
on their feet."
A planning committee of local
school officia.Js, Evergreen faculty
and Evergreen students will be appointed within the next few months
to begin designing the new program's curriculum.

What do you do with half a million?
by Susan Arnold

Diane Green (left), West Coast Regional Director of New EI Salvador Today, will speak at Evergreen on Tuesday, May 14, at noon in CAB 110.
Also in t/:lis picture are Maria Serrono and Gus Newport, mayor of Berkeley,
California

Every quarter, every full-time student gives $64.50 to the Student Activities fund to recieve entertainment, educational activities, and
services.
That amounts to a half-million
dollars every school year.
The Services and Activities (S &
A) Board members have to allocate
the money to the various student
groups and services.
For the 1984-85 year, the money
was divided like this:
Student Groups: 17.2 per cent;
Student Media: 10 per cent;
Student Services: 19.4 per cent;
Rec Center and Athletics: 23.9 per
cent;
Building and Equipment: 3.6 per
cent;

RAUDENBUSH
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CAB: 6.4 per cent;
Student Activities Administration:
19 per cent.
Presently the S & A Board
members are allocating funds for the
1985-86 year. Groups and services
have made budget requests, and the
board members are discussing those
requests and .making tentative
allocations. They will be meeting
every Wednesday from 9 am to 6 pm
in CAB 104 until May 22, an<;l the
public is welcome to attend.
The S & A Board uses the consensus method of decision-making, said
student coordinator Eric Smith. It is
more "casual" than the traditional
and more rigid procedure of voting,
he said, and explained that a motion
does not pass until all members are

LSAT • IleAT • SRE
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SSAT· PSAT· A~m
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frst P"pu.tton SpetiJlists
Since Ig18

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W8gMr has • lull line of quillty brake perta,

100 Mlaty uno, Parsippany, NJ 0_

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0.00,... 101

With the buses, reverse works best after neutral,
while maintenance in the garage is overseen 'by a dark victor
who winds clocks constantly with slimy and slippery fingers.

alone with the cockroaches
the bags and piles of beer and whiskey bottles.
the woman beating her boyfriend next door '
and the girl downstairs being
raped by her foster brother,
ON AND ON
I smoke my pot, drink my beer
and turn up the radio.
I heard someone say:
HD Hosman

For lunch, Necropolites meet in the park to avoid eyes,
and scream at the few birds which fly past on the way
to the vaulted city limits.

It's not that we're not listening
It's that we can't hear
&
It's not that we're not saying anything
It's much worse. We can't speak.
I just wanted to pass this on .

J.W. Renaud

I

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Management
Motivation

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i

SELF HELP LEGAL AID Is
alooking for two student legal
§ advocates for next year. If you
== are Interested stop by the
§ SHLAP Office (L3210) on
Tuesday mornings or Thursday
§ afternoons, or call ext. 6107.

5

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A land mine is planted at random daily.
This is to spice life and breed contests and odds·
It all makes a twisted sense for the senses are twisted anyway.
The local telephone operator is of foreign tongue
and refers most calls to the Pharmacy,
which is brisk in business and flushed with profit.
She also eavesdrops softly like a candle's breath,
storing up bits and pieces to report to the Judge's chambers .
The taxi is a carousel very near city limits,
yet never near enough.
The bus depot has shadow-filled guards who cherish reason
and polish pistols intent on celebrity-hood.

• paper consumables
party needs
audio I cassettes

ASH has two-bedroom apartments lor
§ rent lor $225. Please call 866-8181. §

412 SOUTH CH~ARY -OLYMPIA

WHAT TO DO ABOUT MATTER OF CONSEQUENCE WHEN ...

5

I
_..-

The stoplights of this morbid city conspire and arrange fatalities.
The local Grange displays anesthetics in premium molds,
constant winners of ribbons that bait tiny screamsideas tied securely in neat little sacks,
forever on sale, yet illegal to dispense.

Chris Bingham

i

~IIIIIUlIIIllIllIlIlIU""nIOUII""III11"n"IIIE

943-3650

The Mayor of Necropolis, running hard and hardly winded,
has decay for a midnight snack and a toothpick of human bone.

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MAY 11

Re freshm e nt s a vail a ble

NECROLOGY CONCERNING THOSE UNCONCERNED

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Ill)
After the fire
I knew that something different was a part of me
That I bore the mark of great things
that might have been but don't quite
reach their portion
Later with other women
I would remember the Goddess
and my almost-transformation
and wish that I had been nursed
by a farmer's maid instead.

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When she gave me to the fire
I had yet to know burning
so I was not suprised to sleep among the
coals
But in my dreaming
Death
sweet and sultry
came to me as an equal
to herald the beginning
of many long encounters
and to suprise me with the burnings
of those less fortunate than I.

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I. (Shriek this out in the. woods) Oh my God, I'm so sorry!
2. (To your closest friend, so far) Get out of my life.
3. (Say this to a collaborator. No explanation necessary) I have
just decided
not to go through
with this.
4. (For whoever is in charge) Scram!

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TROUBLE IN ITS TRACKS

.

in agreement. I f there is a disagreement, members talk it out until all
are in favor, but abstaining is okay
too. Smith said "We're the only
board of student services in
Washington that use this method of
decision-making, and that makes us
unique."
Student Board members are Chris
Shaw, Carol Costello, Nan Warsaw,
Randy Storrs. Nina Powell, and
Steve
Schneider.
Michael
Huntsberger is the staff member,
Michael Hall is the advisor, and Phil
Harding is the faculty member for
the S & A board.
Smith added that "anybody can
come and request money for a project or event. Right now a group is
asking money for a large swing
set.. ,"

Here is the recipe:

I remember first her smell
sweet muskiness, woody
of earth
Yet at the same time
lofty and cool
as if the earth had rose 'u p
to embrace the sky
and kissed for just an instant.
Then suddenly
softly
she pulled me to her breast
and let me taste cool fire- black night
darkness, Iighther essence.
It was then I knew
I was in the presence of a Goddess
and that things would be different
from that point on.

us at 866-8181.

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Crisp slippers are worn by the maid at the mansion ,
only they reek of primate contempt.
She lives only to possess recipes and caress imported bowls .

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THE Joe 15 ad 16, 1985

WOMAN'S
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An opportunity for women to uncover our
power and call forth full self expression

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Olympia

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Eggs Dyed For Your Sins
This morning I went
to the Easter Mass
and heard them chant
Christ's suicide.
Jesus! Personally,
] prefer the bunny.
Craig Oare

f·or more Information stop by the CAB at Noon on Tuesduy 5121 or Thursday 5123
":\ ~
866-1611: r ,
or (011 Mary Jo S:30-7:pm at 459-5590
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. . . ".. .,

May 9, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 8

Alumni film shows tonight

May 9, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

PUREX isn't all that pure
by Shawn Powell

that was made by two film students
from this school last year. Dean
Hayasaka and WIT). Satake Blauvelt,
along with ac\~/writer Ken S.
Mochizuki adapted the screenplay
for the 43 minute comic drama from
the manuscript of Mochizuki's upcoming
noveL
The
three
writers/ directors/producers set up
production and shot early last year
in Seattle. They received funding
through Kingstreet Media, a nonprofit Asian-American group as well
as a grant and access to video
facilities from Evergreen.

A scene from the movie Beacon Hill Boys

by Gregg Osborn
It is not very often, at least in
small town s such as this, that film
viewers ge t t he opportunity to meet
the creators of th e work. In the case

of next Thursday 's presentation,

Beacon Hill Boys, we will have the
chance to see the filmakers.
As some of you readers may
know, Beacon Hill Boys is a project

The two alumni, Hayasaka and
Blauvelt will be here to introduce the
film and will also be available after
the show to meet with the audience
and answer questions.

Since the time this film was
scheduled to be shown here, it has
taken off. It had a very good showing at Seattle's Nippon Kan theater
when it opened last January , It also'
played recently at the first Seattle
Asian American Film Festival, and
will open at a similar festival in New
York, Check out the article in this
May's issue of The Rocket.
Those of you who are curious
about how a film can be made and
find success outside of southern
California as well as those interested
to see a well done story about what
growing up as an Asian-American is
like, you won't want to miss this
opportunity.
Along with Beacon Hill Boys is an
hour-long documenta'ry by Steven
Okazaki, Unfinished Business. The

subject deals with the internment of
over 110,000 Americans of Japanese
ancestry in 1942. For three years,
men, women and children were incarcerated in camps around the
country for being J apaneseAmericans. The center of this piece
concerns three men who refused to
go . Fred Kormatsu, Gordon
Hirabayashi and Monoru Yasui
defied the government and were
seperately convicted and imprisoned for their violation of Executive
Order 9066. Since then they have
been fighting to overturn the
convictions.
Both films will be presented at
7:00 and 9:30 in Lecture Hall I . Admission is $1.50. Childcare is provided in Lib. 3221 for the first show
only.

Half a million birds flock to Bowerman Basin
by Irene Mark Buitenkant
Bowerman Basin, which is part of
the Gray's Harbor estuary, is the
place to go between mid-April and
mid-May to observe a half of a
million birds feeding before their
long flight to the Alaska breeding
grounds.
The best times of day to view this
are the hours before and after high
tide (avoid low tide when the birds
are dispersed over the flats) .

Ecology-minded people and
economy-minded people disagree
about the management of this area.
Progress was made by citizens
concerned with the birds like Janet
Anthony , a TESC. student in the
Masters of Environmental Studies
program, who testi fied at an environmenfal hearing case. Continuous effort is needed to keep the
basin from being filled in for industrial development.
People who view the phenomenon

of the bird migration will be moved
by th'e experience to provide the
"eternal vigilence" needed to thwart
the rapid and gargantuan changes
made under the banner of
"progress" .
Take a drive next weekend, and
see for yourself if Bowerman Basin
is worth keeping the way it is .
Take route 101 through Aberdeen
to Hoquiam, Take 109 toward
Ocean Shores. When you get to the
Western edge of Hoquiam, there will

President holds open meetings
by Janine M . Thome

the student open forum, on Wednesday May 15, 3:30-5:00.

President Olander, in recent
weeks, has repeatedly expressed the
need for better information-sharing
among community members, and
plans to conduct forums to close the
communication gap.
Faculty, student, and staff forums
will be held the second, third, and
fourth Wednesday of each month

[n speaking to Rita Grace, of the
President'S Office, Olander (who is
out of town this week) stated he
would like the forum to be on an informal , drop-in basis.

respectively. All will be held in the
Board Room, L3112. Upcoming is

This first meeting with students
was planned on a "trial-basis" since
the interest and attendance level is
unknown at this point. "I hope the
turnout is good and that students

.

take advantage of the opportunity,"
Grace said.

Olander has stated that if no one
shows up for the forum, he will
devote that time to reading sciencefiction.
Commenting on Olander'S attempts to integrate himself into campus affairs, Grace stated that she
thinks he is "doing a good job and
[his efforts] have been well
received. "

the vice' president and provost, the
facilities director, the housing
manager, the security chief, the campus adjudicator, and the dean of student and enrollment services .
The citations are issued when
someone violates the Criminal
Trespass Act. The act states: "This
act is invoked should officials
designated by the Board of Trustees
believe that, in their judgement, an
individual's presence on college property has endangered or will endanger college property, campus
community members, members of
the public or the orderly educational
processes of the institution ,"
In an executive summary to the
Board, President Olander was not
"aware" of any alternatives to the
plan .
The summary was somewhat ambiguous. It implied that campus
security officers had no authority to

issue citations before yesterday.
But Ken Jacob said that Security
had the right to issue the citations all
along, and that today's ruling

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10 AM - 7 PM Sundays

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WESTSIDE CENTER

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yogurt quarts
honey sweetened with acidopholis

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coupon

The sta te now completely relic, on
repo n s from the State Departmenl
of E nergy (D.O.E.) (on(erning
radio-active em issions . Si n ce
radioa(tive em iss ions from PUREX
directly affect the env iro nm en t ~Ild
the people o f Washington statc, thc
sta te sho uld have th e abi lity 10 (On·
duct independent monitoring and
not rely on reports from the federa l
D.O.E.
The PUREX plant bcgan
operati ng a fte r a Iii year shutdown.
It s start up was in ac(orda nce wi th
Presiden t Reagan' s nlldea r arms
build up which called for the production of 17,000 new nu clear
warheads. Since start up , PUREX
has been plagued with probl ems
which ha ve generated much co ncern.
Immediatel y fo llowing

clarified the matter.
The summary also said that, if the
resolution did not pass, there "will
be periods of time. . . where [sic]
there will be no authorized persons
on campus to invoke the Criminal
Trespass Act on a timely basis . "
"There is a need to continue this
procedure," the summary stated.

Common Cause will play Saturday in Library 4300.

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Friday, May IOtb
9:30 to 1:30 pm
$3.50 Cover

will play
May 24th & 25th

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of Washington

Summer

• Residence crodil courses
ill almost every' field

• Maximum full-time
tuition $436
• Flexible scheduling

• Intensive /ongUIJge coursesup to a full }'(!Qr's credit

June 24-August 23

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For Information

4

Uptown Olympia

14, '85

357·7527
Starbuck's! Collee
Mon·Thura 6:30am-9pm Fri & Sat 6:3Oam·lOpm Closed Sunday
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Guilar i" t ind a Walerf"ll will r ta, ' i" e,er!!rcc,,', Rccilal il .d l ~la) 10
al X p .m .

Program to explore human questions
Arc we pn:!-progral1lmed by our
ge ne s 10 be individu a li st ic , com·
petelive, wa r- lik e, and se lf·
inlerested' Is love a trap set by our
genes to get themselve'i into t he next
ge neration?
Are
th e gene>
t hem se lves cyn ic s? Or are humam
bas ical ly good. as Rous,eau and
Marx beli eved , but co rru pted by the
world after birth?
These arc so me of the questions
that will be asked in Ih e program,
"The
Hum a n
Co nditi o n:
Sociobiology a nd Human Values"
next yea r. The program will explore
human nature, human development,
and va lue s in a hi stor ical context,
from Ihe Greeks to modern ·day
soc iobiologica l theory.
"Some faculty in the program will
a rgue that a soc iety'S values crea te,
determine, and control the sc ientifi c
theories it produces," Program
Coordinator Leo Daugherty said.
Other faculty in the program will
be Bob Sluss, Biology; Beryl Crowe,

Political T heory: and York Wong,
Computc r Scie nce and Anifi(ial
In te lli gence.
Tiley will exam in e the effe(h 01
the soc iobiological theory on today ' ,
human values and institut ions. The)
wi ll exam in e sociobiology within the
historical L'ontext of slich Al1lcriL'<lJI
ideologies as pu r itanism, individualism, and (apita li sm .
"At the celller of th e progralll wi ll
be th e st ud y of ethi cs," Daugherty
said . "we're go in g to spend a lot of
lime o n moral issues , trying to figure
o ut grounds o f value on which to
base how we behave."
It is a possibility th at a few
stud ent s may be able to serve as
aides to th e federal Senate and
House Joint Co mmit kc on Sc ience
and Technology in Washington,
D.C. during spring quarter.
The program will be "traditional,
interdisciplinary, hard, advanced,
and fun," Daugherty said.

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November of 1983, PUREX began
to experience problems.
On November 20, a stack monitor
failed and was not repaired for
several months. On December 15,
alarms failed to go off when a
sampling line froze . A week later on
,December 24, excessive moisture
caused instruments which measure
nitrate emissions to fail. Two days
later the plant was sending nitrate up
the stack and the monitor was not
working.
On January 25, 1984 PUREX was
shut down when laboratory test
re s ult s s howed
higher-than·
allowable doses of radiation were being released into the atmosphere.
Preliminary counts showed that the
levels of plutonium released were
from 10 to 20 times th e worker safety expos ure leve ls for plutonium,
Radiation fro m plutonium a nd
uranium ca n cause (31l(er . (on lamination of the food cha in. and
gcnet ic damage,
The publi c sho u ld havoc the right
10 know the current and pOlential
harm that th e PUREX planl im poses , Many (oncn ncd citi/cn; kcl
th e pas'iage of Senate Joint
Memorial no. 109 and Subst il IIt c
HOll se nill no. 3 is a move in the
right direction.
Anyone wishing more in forma ·
tion on t he PUREX plant a nd
related iss ues a t Hanford can t'cel
free to stop by th e Wa shPIRG of·
fi ce in Semin ar 3152 between 10 a nd
II a.l11. Monday thru F rida y.
WashPIRG a lso hol eh weekl y
meelings on Hanford every Wcdne;,day at noon. Everyone is Wekome,

;f;

,1\

.~

In an executive summary to the
Board, President Olander was not
"aware" of any alternatives to the
plan, , , .

PLAIN YOGURT QUARTS
reg

PUREX, an anacronym for
"plutonium-uranium extraction, " produces plutonium for
nuclear weapons.

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Nancy's .

$1.25 each

What you don't know can hurt
you·.
While the question over where to
store the nation's nuclear waste
draws increasing attention to Hanford, the PUREX plant located onthe Handford Reservation is also
receiving more attention and has
become t.he focus of much concern.
PUREX, an acronym for
"plutonium-uranium extraction",
produces plutonium for nuclear
weapons.
The PUREX plant poses the most
immediate danger to the people and
the environment of South-Central
Washington.
The recent publicity about
PUREX has raised co nce rn s
sta tew ide a nd has resu lted in S tate
H ouse and Senate passage of Senate
Joint Memorial no. 109 and '
Substitu te Hou se Bill no. 3.
Senate Joint Me morial no . 109 reques t'i that the Department of
Energy "provide co mpl etc and at:(lirale disclos ure to the public involv in g aC ILt al and poten ti a l release
(If ra dioactive material a t the
PUREX p lant on the Hanford rese r·
va ti on.' · Memorial 109 also request s
that the U.S. Department of Energy
(D .O.E.) shut down PUREX in the
event of any "abnormal release" o r
whe n monitoring devices malfunt:ti on. The pla nt shall Ihen rem ai n
sh ut d ow n until the incid ent is
remedied.
Substilute House Bill no. 3 will
enab le the state to co nduct environmental radiation monitoring
nm.pr",m< which will "verify the ade-

quacy and accuracy of environmental radiation monitoring programs
conducted by the federal government ... " This will give the state an
opportunity to monitor PU REX,
which is a fedenil installation. This
bill is especially important because
neither the Environmental Protection Agency (E.P.A.) nor the state
has the capability to monitor emissions from the PUREX plant und er
the current structure.

has moved up the street to

rI4"

921 N . Rogers Olympia

, Board, from Page 1

airfield.
DO NOT WALK ON THE
RUNWAY.
At high tide birds are concentrated
on the sand bar at the northwest tip
of the airport peninsula .

PIRANHA'S

Yogurt Lovers!

great food

be the local high school on t he right
side of the road and Paulson Road
on the left. Turn left and head for
the Bowerman Airport. Park in the
airfield parking lot and walk along
the windbreak to the end of the

page 9

CaD toll-jree 8()()- 233 - 3321

Flowers and Gifts Sent

WORLDWIDE

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1821 Harrison A•• nu.
Olympia, Wa 98502
15-4·3949

credit card orders accepted
by phone

MAY 29
Faculty, students and staff

ANTED

I~

page 10

page II

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

May 9, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

May 9, 1985

Homosexuality: Many different and conflicting views
by

Nathan Jones

His name was Bill, but we called
him Billy The Fag.
Unlike the other soldiers in our infantry platoon, Billy wore an earring during off-duty hours and kept
a male lover in the local Korean
village.
Billy wasn't like Corporal Klinger
in MASH; he was a real homosexual who liked the Army and wanted
to make the military his career.
Unfortunately for Billy, we hated
him . After all, the US Army is a
Macho organization and infantry
soldiers are supposed to be
masculine, not feminine. Billy didn't
fit. We wanted him out.
One night after Billy slipped into
his lover's house, three Gis stormed through the door, threw a bedsheet over the couple, and beat both
of them with clenched fists until their
screaming stopped. Billy returned to
the compound the next day and requested a transfer to another unit.
Our company commander, delighted
to be rid of a nagging problem, approved Billy's request, sending him
to a rear-echelon unit to finish his
enlistment as a cook. We never
heard of Billy again .
But soldiers aren ' t the only people who persecute homosexuals.
C loser to home, three lesbian
students attending Stadium High
School in Tacoma have been verbally abused and assaulted , because of
their lesbian lifestyles . In one instance, a male student recently
threatened to rape one of the women
"to teach her what it was like to be

straight. "
Despite these kinds of vicious and
irresponsible attacks by straights
against gays, many still believe that
homosexuals --not homophobic
heterosexuals--are people with
problems.
For example, Colin Cook, cofounder
of
Homosexuals
Anonymous, is a former. homosexual who is dedicating the rest of his
life to converting the gay community. Cook once stated, "More and
more psychologists and psychiatri~ts
are finding that a person experiencing homosexuality, when given proper guidance and support, can find
freedom from it."
Cook also believes that "The issue
of homosexual healing today is at
the same place the issue of alcoholic
recovery was before 1935." This
statement reveals how Cook--and
many other heterosexuals--view
homosexuality as an adjustable sexual preference. In other words, gays
can "repent" and become "normal," if they want to.
But Donna Eckenrode, cocoordinator of Evergreen 's l..esbianGay Resource Center, is i)esbian
who is proud of, and satisfied with ,
her sexual preference. Eckenrode
said, "As for myself, I feel so
positive about my ctlOice, my
discovery, and it is something I feel
very good about. I don't feel that I'll
ever change my lifestyle."
Eckenrode, like all volunteers at
the LGRC, works "to give support
to all gay people ." She is quick to
mention that homosexuals are
healthy humans with a different--not

SH O PPING CENTER

943 · 8701

OLYMP I A. WASH INGTON

943.8700

W

ES TSID E

abnormal--sexual
preference.
Eckenrode declared, "it disturbs me
when people try to make homosexuality sound like an illness ... that
premise was tossed out by the
American Psychiatric Association in
1973. "
Eckenrode also criticizes straights
who believe that homosexuals
should be "reprogrammed." According to Eckenrode, people become
gay for several reasons.
First, there is the physical aspect.
Some people enjoy the bodies of
others of the same sex .
Second, there is the emotional
aspect. Some people love others of
the same sex, and physical contact
can become a form of com-

municating this affection .
Third, there is the political aspect.
Some people, especially lesbians,
believe that personal relationships
with thl! opposite sex cannot be
founded upon equality; therefore,
they seek lovers of the same sex.
No matter what the reason or the
combinations of reasons for it,
Eckenrode is clear that homosexuality is a "valid" sexual preference that
deserves acceptance by heterosexuas. To support gays living in the
local area, she helps to coordinate
the Lesbian-Gay Resource Center at
Evergreen.
The center, funded by the college
as a student activity, offers counseling for people who are confused

about their sexual identity, support
for those who feel discriminated
against because of their sexual
preference, and speakers, musicians,
and artists who educate the local
community about homosexual
culture and issues.
Although most people who visit
the LGRC are homosexual, quite a
few aren't. Those Evergreen
students who are intolerant of difference in sexual preference are also
encouraged to educate themselves by
visiting the LGRC and to discuss
their feelings with the volunteers
who work there. As Eckenrode
noted, homosexuality' 'is not a fad,
it's not a temporary thing . It's here
to stay."

*" OLDt

\-\A!
t-\A

Tennis team takes seven to districts
by Tim Quam
Championships, they're what a
season of competition prepares you
for.
Last weekend seven players on the
Evergreen Tennis team went to the
Seattle Tennis Center to compete in
the NAIA Division One District
Championships.
Representing the Geodu.:ks were:
Coach Bob Reed , Ben Chotzen,
Gene Chong, Rocke Klockner ,
Timothy Stephens, Dan Mel vor ,
and John Ridgeway.
The Geoducks combined for four
points to tie with Central
Washington University. Bob Reed,
Gene Chong, and Ben Chotzen all

~ood. "

that, and excited that the entire team
has improved a lot."
Being successful at the District
Championships is an important sign
because there was so much good
competition.
The season does not end after the
Districts, though. Friday the
Geoducks will take their 7-10 record
to the road against Skagit Valley
Community College. Friday's match
will be the first of three road matches in as many days this weekend.

Coach Reed has been pleased with
the progress that the team has made
this year, and he looks forward to
next year when most of the team will
be returning. "I'll be excited about

The remaining tennis schedule is;
Friday at Skagit Valley at 12, Saturday at Western Washington Universityat 10, and Sunday at the University of British Columbia at I I.

won first round singles. Bob Reed
and Ben Chotzen won first round
doubles before losing a very close second round match.
District Championships are very
competitive. Geoduck coach Bob
Reed said the level of play was very
high. He was pleased with the team's
success though, "It was the best effort ever by the men's tennis team
at Evergreen. So from that standpoint it [the tournament) was really

8 EN RE MF:M BERS

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'3VE~ 5

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III

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Let Washington Mutual help with a
low cost student loan. Ask your school's
financial aid office for an application
and details or, call (206) 464-4767
for more information.You'll see it's
everything we've advertised.

Washingfon Mutual

The friend of "the fami'Y""Q"
Washington Mutual Savings Bank
and its family of financial affiliates:
Murphey Favre, Incorporated/ Washington
Mutual Service Corporation
Member FDIC
'ThiS ral e does not necessarily apply to st uden ts With
cu rren t loans.

~

II
,

2+2+2=$21.000
That's Army math. It means that after 2 years of college (60 semester hours or
equivalent) and a 2-year enlistment, you could have up to $21,000 to continue your education. Courtesy of the New GI Bill + New Army College Fund . (Effective July 1,1985).
That other 2 means you can get two years of ROTC credit by enrolling in ROTC
at the third year level (with the approval of the college's Professor of Military Science)
when you reenter college. You'll earn $100 a month in ROTC.
Qualify, and you'll start your enlistment with a promotion. And just because
you're out of school doesn't mean you stop learning. We'll teach you a skill that can help
you go places later.
'\ And you'll go places now, because we give soldiers an opportunity to travel. And a
chance tq make new friends .
Not to mention a lot of money fOT college. Plus the chance.t.Q~become an Army
officer. Contact your local Army Recruiter today.
>

EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

-

STAFF SERGEANT LOWE 456-1611

ARMY. BE A' LYOU (,jt BE.

-

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Media
cpj0362.pdf