The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 26 (May 16, 1991)

Item

Identifier
cpj0530
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 26 (May 16, 1991)
Date
16 May 1991
extracted text
Seepage:. Once a living tree·, nolV
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May 16, 1991

3/12191

2/18/69

What do all these
animals have in common?
(*answer below)

J

ff }~
'1 __

~-­

My hand still finds its way along the narrow
straits of this page. Wandering aimlessly
,
toward the margin and back again for the same
cruel punishment of emptiness. Yet there might
be meaning in all this scribble. No. There
isn't. Just black ink bleeding as if there were
no where else to go. Like the trickle of water
running down the drain toward the sewer. Down
the gutter of a busy street in Seattle. My life
is passing the traffic and corruption and broken
glass. There will have to be a blocked drain
somewhere. Then I'll flow easily into a large
puddle,calmly waiting. Until the bus come~ and
stirs my life all around. Onto passers by, SIdewalks, and mail boxes. Off to find another stream.
Another gutter. Only this time, a better street
with nice gutters and clean sewers. Waiting to
evaporate. Death.

Patrick's Brother

Leroy Hein

by Claire Littlewood
Evergreen's budget is currently in
limbo until the Legislature arrives at a
fmal decision, and that isn't expected
until sometime in June.
According
to
Jennifer Jaech,
assistant to the president for governmental
relations, Eveween will suffer cuts of
one sort or another it just depends on
how specific the cuts are.
"The Senate budget proposal was
much more specific- because it cuts the
Labor Center, proposes funding the
National Faculty from a different source,
[and] reduces funding non-instructional
services, which basically means cuts to
administration iIIld facilities," said Jaech.

- -,;,
r:,1i;i.' -

Apparently the boud\'n line between

"A fool scss not the same tree
that a wise man sees."
-Blake, "Proverbs of Hell"

Lode
Here-·in the air,
Which is thick with moisture-·
A light time of day;
But the sun only partly
Reaches here.
In the mine-light,
On the railroad tie,
Someone is laying,
And someone behind her
In half-dark
Is fastened
The tie is his
rocking black wood.
Behind he is frowning,
And laughing
All hate and Salary
In dirt
Stuck to the wood.
Lode
Josh Pitzer

Students assembling the controversial art show Women and Body Image in
the Student Produced Art Zone (SPAZ) , on the first floor of the CAB. photo

I was a Sunday sunshiner.
Curiosities,
most unholy of Holy
curiosi ties
occasioned My Way
promising revelation of myth
and such.

by Tedd Kelleher

SPAZ art stays

I hurriedly dismayed these dangers
with a shun of improper books
and 56 Hail Marys.

1.".-- -If

I was an Evergreen Student for Christ.

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And then, then, on that most bleakest
Leroy was killed in a "classified non-<:ombat accident that is currently under investigation by
of hours,
Pentagon officials" while serving in Saudi. He had gone into the Air Force to earn college money
(when even satire proved barbed)
and was to get out this July. He had a peace symbol on his gas mask. He had just turned 22.
I stumbled upon the second path in
'. JI hope you have your own space to write now, Le, and I love you very much. But you knew that.
th e crossed road.
I miss you. Love Always, Deb.
Not paved with gold,
nor glowing red with accessible desire,
Passions old and new
but
groomed dark in logic.
Old Stills of Bighorns in rut,
shooting thunder through rarified air,
Thoughts unconstrained;
stand faded and for"l)tten, withering
no Power-of-God Hand
like the old crooked 'ee
squeezing restricted lungs
which in summer WE would greedily climb
in fear of sin.
to meet with robins nd crows
Sin?
about the theft of Ii,. e red cherries.
What the fuck? I ask.
No boundaries, no limits
Such loves which once served to bleed the day
in the sublime of mind.
lie anemic and withered
on the cutting floor of time; then
And, I said, at this awakening of
holding a prominent place in paSSions, they
the dead,
now silently stand in memory's pantry
Hail Satan! Prince of Darkness!
*answer: All of these
awaiting the flame of evening
slowly licking its way up the wall.
animals are serpents!!!
Barbara
Jean-Paul

Metaphor
SEEPAGE
SEEPAGE
SEEPAGE
SEEPAGE

THIS WEEKS PROVERBS:
When the exception contradicts
the rule, question the rule and
not the exception.
Without Rationality, there is no
way to live. Without Irrationality,
there is no reason to.
Sri

To Probe My Own Shaky Ground

Milk sticks to the back of my throat ...sometime:;
it stays there
and trickles down
one glunk after another
'till my tongue turns to saliva
and slides down my throat ,
same as the milk
it sort of reminds me of falling in love
Boil

Teacher, teacher watch me dance,
Wearing Just my underpants'
Edward Martin

m

A dedication to people past
and unspoken questions
about warm embraces ...

I've always feared
a chesrre grin
whose sincerity chatters
and can stamp my mind
with a punctuation mark
(a third eye can do more harm than good).
raise bumps on my back
when the lulls between patter
grant me time to think.
this trap sets itself
deceptively sUent
some slow burning fuses
are impossible to squelch.
Matt Plughoif

li

TESC budget in limbo

t/1e t\vo budget proposals isn't very

'Drawing 611 (B oiL

Page

Volume 21 Issue 26

u>oper Po~t Journal May 9, 1991

Review board
sites first
amendment
by Scott A Richardson
The Student An Gallery (SAG)
Advisory Committee met Wednesday to
discuss the display of "offensive" an in
the CAB's Student Produced An Zone
(SPAZ).
The Advisory Committee detennined
that the current show will remain in place
throughout the scheduled run, which ends
\'May 20.
The committee, assembled by SAG
coordinator Nana Thebus, explored two
primary issues: the ftrst amendment and
suitable space for student an.
SAG's guidelines, which adhere to

the ftrst amendment, are explicit on the
fIlSt point: censorship of "offensive"
material ' is unacceptable.
.
Rather than dwell on definitions, the
complainant and the committee focused
attention ,on a way not to ignore the
sensibilities of a significant portion of the
Evergreen community.
The crux of the solution rests on
fmding an appropriate space for student
artists to display their work, controversial
or not.
For some people at Evergreen this
rings with a familiar tone--the same
conclusion was reached two years ago
following another graphic exhibit.
The SAG is searching for an
"appropriate" location for difficult art, but
is up against shortages of space and
funds on campus.
See related story page 9.
ScOIl Richardson is a regular
contributor to the CPJ.

Scheduling' problems
Lori Anderson lecture
by Todd Carey
"So why didn't she come to
Evergreen?" you are wondering. "Is it
because she hates us, or because she is
like all the rest, and only likes large,
univefl;ity dollars?" Actually, neither.
According to John Donald, who has
negotiated contracts with the agents of
many performers who have come to
Evergeen.
Laurie
Anderson
had,
"expressed an interest in coming to
Evergreen."
.
Working
through
MonQul
Productions. the concert promoters who
brought Jane's Addiction to ~tem,
. Donald had Laurie Anderson tentatlvely
lined up for May 6 or l' to play in the
gymnasium.
Donald had asked AIda Melchiori.
who schedules rooms for the CRC, to
hold the gymnasium for both of those
dates. But by the time everything was
successfully negotiated. a proceSs that

TIle BYerpeea State CoUete
Olympia, WA 98ISOa
AdcI.reM Correction RequMtecl

took between ten days and two weeks,
the room had been scheduled for Leisure
Ed. purposes.
John Donald hopes this event will
get people to, "recognize the need to revamp the process" by which events are
scheduled and organized.
This August, a newly hired
"production coordinator" will begin work
at Evergreen, who will try to renovate
the system by which events are planned
and organized.
Jim Madison, of the AIumni
Association, is accepting comments and
suggestions from students about ways this
process could be improved. which he will
present to the new production coordinator'
in' August.
Please submit any suggestions to Jim
c/o the Alumni Association at x6190.
See related storJ page 11.
Todd Carey is'an. Evergreen student.

different "It's just that the Senate wants
to have more conttol over how
institutions are run, we'd rather have a
flexible budget," said Jaech.
Both budget proposals are about
2.5% below the Essential Requirements
Level (ERL), which is the amount of
money necessary for the college to
operate at the same le.vel as it did last
year. Jaech said that before Evergreen
can add any more new students they
want to meet the ERL.
The
House
budget
proposal
recommended adding 58 new students

over a two year period whereas the
Senate plan suggested adding 100 more
new students.
Jaech said "We just have to wait
and see. The fmal budget should be
somewhere in the middle."
According to Jaech three members
from the House and the Senate are
working on Evergreen's (and other state
colleges and universities) budgets right
now.
"We need the flexibility within the
budget," said Jaech. "We think a person
working here supports the mission of this
college and therefore can bener allocate
the money."
"There are a lot of things that go
into one's education aside from just the
classes, " ' said J aech.
Jaech cited some projects that are
likely to have the money to get
completed in the next year or two,
"Campus safety, that means increased
lighting on campus, and remote , access
phones, some more money for the
slippery bricks project in red square, and
handicapped access projects." Jaech also
foresees money for Lab Annex remodel
meaning the wood and metal shop would
be co-located increasing the hours it
would be open, and the ceramics studio
would also be remodeled.
Claire "News" UlIlewood writes
regularly for lhe CPJ.

Bare buns?

Evergreen's "Buns in the Sun" uhimate frisbee tournament takes place next
weekend. The international event will have players leaping around the athletic
fields, running after round plastic ·discs. photo by Scott Richardson

Are

yo~

Abused? .•.A Quick Test

Does the person you love...
I. "Track" all of your time?
2. . Constantly accuse you of being unfaithful?
3. Discourage your relationships with family and friends?
4. Prevent. you from working or attending school?
5. Criticize you for little things?
6. Anger easily when 'drinking oc on drugs?
7. Control all fmances and force you to account for what you spend?
8.. Humiliate you in front of others?
9. Destroy personal property or sentimental items?
10. Hit, punch, slap, kick, or bite you oc your children?
11. Threaten to hurt you or your children?
12. Use or threaten to use a weapon' against you?
13. Force you to have sex against your will?
Used Wilh permission from the Company of Women Calalogue.
See rela~ story page 5,
1/ you think you might be in an abusive relalionship, regardless of your age,
gender, or suuaJ orielllation, or have been lhe victim of rape or sexual assaull, call
the Sajepiace 24-IIOUT crisis line al 754-6JOO.
N~:PIOat

_e

OrapntAtlon
·U.S. . .
PaId
Olympia. WA 98505
Permit No. 85

NEWS BRIEFS
Seize the reins,
power awaits
EVERGREEN-~ Win · ' friends
and
influence people... or at leaSt get yourself
a rnailboxin the S&A Office.
Coordinator positions are· open for
closec-to thirty student organizations. If
.you ever thought you might be good at
negotiating fOl speakers, planning events,
or facilitating rap session--this is your
chance. Position descriptions are posted
on the Job Board on the first floor of the
Library, and you ,can get an application
in the S&A Office (CRC 306). We hope
to have coordinators for the 1991-92
academic year hired by the end of this
quarter, SO that the organizations can get
rolling right away in the Fall (when new
students may need these services).
Although hiring will be conducted for
these positions immediately, salaries for
each of them are pending the S&A
Board's spring allocation. If you have
questions you can talk to Isa Soltani
(CRC 306, x6220) or the current
coordinators for the organization you are
interested in.

Quote. of the Week
'WHeee~ee BOOM ch ch BOOM ch
ch chink BOOM BO'O M BOOM
BOOM"
An example of Rachel Jo . Nesse's (rhymes with messy) writing,
see page 11. Rachel was recently selected as the CPJ's editor for
the 1991-92 academic year.

John Terrey. Staff--Affmnative Action
Officer,
Ermelindo
Escobedo;
Representative of Employee Relations,
Judy Johnson.
Alternates will be appointed by the
trustees as the need arises.
The committee will hold its first
meeting Monday, May 13, when they will
receive their charge. The board requested
that the committee post a job
announcement in June, and that the
names of five fmalists be forwarded to
the trustees in January, 1992. The board
hopes to hire a permanent president by
July, 1992.

· I
h
P resl· d entIa
searc
committee selected Harassment policy
EVERGREEN--During Wednesday's forum Wednesday
regular meeting of the board of trustees,
the board appointed the members of the
presidential search committee.
Approximately 200 students (out of
the approximately 3100 enrolled) voted
during the two day election for the
undergraduate student representatives.
The board moved to accept
recommendations for representatives of
the various community constituencies. A
provision that individuals who served on
the search process DTF be prohibited
from serving on the search committee
was waived, at the recommendation of
the process DTF, on behalf of two exofficio trustee representatives. The same
waiver was made on behalf of the alumni
representatives.
. The following are the members of
the presidential search committee:
Faculty: Justino Balderrama, DukeKuehn (Tacoma representative), Rita
Pougiales, Nancy Taylor.
.
Alumni: 'Doug Riddels, Marilyn
Ward (foundation board member).
Staff: Exempt--Diane Kahaumia,
Nancy
Koppelman.
Classified--Judy
Huntley, Walter Niemiec.
Student:
Undergraduate--Diana
Arens, Rio Lara-Bellon. Graduate--Sarah
Bradley (MES).
Community--Delores Silas (Tacoma
City Council member).
Ex-Officio: -Trustees--Lila GirVin,

EVERGREEN--Due to the interest in
the changes being made to the Sexual
Harassment Policy here at Evergreen, the
lecture on "Politics of Gender and Sexual
Identity" has been changed. There will be
an open forum with members from the
Sexual Harassment DTF. Come find out
about the draft of the revised policy May
22 from noon-I pm in Library 3500.
Members from the DTF would like to
hear your comments and questions.

Angry parent


semInar
EVERGREEN--Do . you have a
demanding parent you cannot seem to
please? -Is the guilt you feel realistic?
How can you make decisions with and
for your parents? There are some simple
skills and information you can acquire
that may help solve some extraordinary
and complex problems. On Saturday, May
18,9 am-3 pm in Library 2503 there will
be a seminar entitled "Aging is a Family
Affair." This seminar will explore some
answers to the challenge of the role of
responsible adult children to our agmg
parents. What do our parents want, what
do they need and how do we respond to
them realistically? The seminar will be

Security Blotter
stolen from the bike rack in front of RDonn.
Thursday, May 9
2152: Two people were reported at the
Pump House attempting to light
something on fire; Thurston County was
called.
Friday, May 10
1110: A frre alarm in P-Dorm was
caused by burnt food.
2041: A mountain bike was reported
stolen from N-Dorrn.
2220: Numerous vehicles were 'egged' in
B & C- Lots,
Saturday, May 11
0800: A bicycle was reported to have
been stolen from the front of \he
Communications Building.'
1426: A bicycle was reported to have
been stolen from the front of the Library.
Sunday, May 12
A relatively quiet day for campus
security.
Campus security preformed 46 public
service calls (locks/unlocks, jumpstarlS,
escorts, etc.).

Monday, May 6
0331: A theft of sandwiches was reported
from the Deli. The perpetrator used a
stick to reach the sandwiches and
manipulate them through the security
gate.
0910: The pop machine on the first floor
of the Library was broken into and the
money was stolen.
1159: A car accident was reported on
Evergreen Parkway and Kaiser.
1208: A woman was reported to have
. fainted near Library.
..
1615: The facilities safety officer reported
that a toxic spill of phenol occurred in
LAB 1 and that the two rooms had now
been secured.
Tuesday, May 7
1013: A vehicle was ~ported to have
been broken into in C-Lol
Wednesday; May 8
0952: Stereo equipment was stolen from
a vehicle in C-Lot.
1102: The frre alarm sounded in the
Child Care Center due to burnt food.
1153: A mountain bike was reported

led by Grace Lee, M.A., Community
Health Educator and freelance writer for
the Olympian's over fifty column. The
cost for the seminar is on a sliding scale
from $21-$30.

Low tide event
Saturday
WASHINGTON--Saturday, May 18
has been selected for this year's LowTide
event, an annual environmental education
project focusing attention on the beauty
and fragility of Puget Sound's intertidal
zone. Several state agencies, local
environmental groups, tribes, and shellfish
growers are organizing this event. Most
beach walks will begin at 2:30 pm. For
more information call Paula Smith or
Clive Pepe at 586-4485.

Analysis

...

Swim team seeks
SWImmers
. EVERGREEN--Anyone interested in-

the Evergreen' men's or women's swim
team is 'i nvitedto attend a meeting on

.
~.

trom 2-3 pm. The meeting will
be held in CRC conference J"OOOl • .

Thunderstorm

comIng

. . ."patriotism is on
the lise, Americans
are returning to
traditional values--it
reminds me of the
fIfties. "
100,000 Iraqis, I was in a different part
of !,he world witnessing other effects of
"the new world order." I saw the U.S.
donated M-16's which are brandished by
every freedom-loving (and communisthating) Honduran, Guatemalan and
Salvadoran soldier. Our guns help to

Clarifications:

EVERGREEN--Collegial Teaching at
Evergreen. an essay by Don Finkel and
Bill Arney, has been published for the
community. Copies are on reserve in the
Library. The essay is from Finkel and
Arney's The Paradox of Pedagogy, a
book that came, in part. from their
teaching in the CORE program . Classical
and Modem in 1988-89.
-

BEER-MAKING
SUPPLIES
IMPORTED WINE & BEER
GOURMET COFFEE & ESPRESSO
GREAT DELI
Capital Village

400 Cooper Pt Rd

352-8988

".

,

',-

Thanks to the IMF, the chance that this Nicaraguan child will receive
adequate health care and education are bleak at best. photo by Scot Wheat
protect "democracy" from "communist"
threats-osuch as the demand to feed and
educate children and speak your mind
freely.
Our guns also helped the Guatemalan
military slaughter an entire Quiche Indian
village two days before I entered
Guatemala City--causing me to conclude
that Custer is alive and well and living in
Cuatemala (only nowadays he has
automatic weapons and helicopters).
Our guns, according to Salvadoran
Archbishop Arturo Rivem Y Damas,
enabled the Salvadoran military to murder
fIfteen peasants in the town of El Zapote.
I suspect that George Bush would have a
hard time convincing !.he 18 Salvadoran
children who are now orphaned that his
new world order creates a "world in
. which freedom and respect for human
rigbts fmd a home among all nations."
When our guns aren't able to provide
a "beacon of freedom in a searching
world," our ~presentatives on the boards
of the IMP and World bank are. Death

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE,INC.

HARRISON & DIVISION
OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON 98502 ·

may come more slowly through U.S.
endorsed and IMF imposed stnx:tural
adjustment programs, but the end result is
similar.
Cholera, which hasn't been present
in the Western hemisphere in . almost a
century, is now running rampant in Peru.
170,000 people have been infected, more
than 1,250 have died. The virus kills
those who drink water mixed with

Custer is alive and
well and living in
Guatemala (enly
nowadays he has
automatic weapons
and helicopters).
sewage, are weak from disease or
malnutrition, and do not get prompt care.
Aside from a short period of
rebellion,
Peru
has
allowed
its
"development" to be guided by IMP
structural adjustment programs from 1977
to the present By 1985, worker's pay
was only 44% of what it was in 1973.
Government spending on the social sector
(including health and sanitation) has
fallen from 26 to 18 percent of the
national budget, food subsidies for poor
families have been eliminated. Food
availability per capita has declined by
26% ~d child malnutrition has increased
from 42 to 68 percent of the child

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G'ET
ANOTHER
MONTH
,

Teaching essay
published

'

by Scot Wheat
''We're coming home. proud, confident, ..
heads high. There is much that we must
do
home and abr.oad. And We will do
it. We aTe Americans."--George Bush's
addreSs to Congress, March 7, 1991 - "We are the .only nation on this earth
thaI could assemble the forces 0/ peace.
This is the burden 0/ leadership that has
made America the beacon 0/ light in a
searching world."--George
state of
the union address, January 31, 1991

businessmen who sat beside me during
the flight from Managua, Nicaragua to
Miami international, "patriotism is on the
rise, Americans are returning to
traditional values--it reminds me of the
fIfties." After a few weeks of witnessing
the flags, Shwartzkof parades, and the
trumpeting of the "new world order" by
both the administration and the press, the
words
of
my
Cliban
American
acquaintance seem frighteningly prophetic.
While the U.S. air force caused
enough "collateral damage" to kill

Security officer
interviews

~

:"

"The war in the gulf has done good
things for America," said the Cuban born

Bluegrass festival
this ' week

G)~!?~1J!~~r

.'

,usb,

EVERGREEN--Students from ' the
Life on thy Edge of a Continent program
will present Tsao Yu's play Thunderstorm
next Thursday and Friday, May 23-24, at
8 pm in the Communications Building
Experimental Theatre.
Written
in
China
in
1933,
Thunderstorm is considered one of
China's better known plays. The play
highlights Chinese society during ,the
years of the Republic, as well as sharing
many aspects of Chinese culture.
Program students have studied China
for n~ly a year ' and are anxious to
share a sample of that country's vast
culture through the play. Dancing and
food will encompass the performance.
Admission is free.

TCTV programers
honored

.

at

_ May 22,

TUMWATER--The Annual Tumwater
Bluegrass Festival is taking place May 17
and 18 at Tumwater High School. The
festival has been expanded to include
EVERGREEN--Seven finalists for the Cajun (Saturday night) and oldtime swing
position of Campus Police Officer will be . on Friday as well as a healthy helping of
interviewed next week. Community bluegrass music. See Calendar, page 13.
interviews will be held for each candidate
on the following dates and locations.
Please attend and give your comments to
the chair of the search committee, Wendy
Last week .we printed the engagement
Freeman, in Library 4300.
announcements of two couples. Through
Terrance Bagby. Friday, May 17, 11
the grapevine, not directly (the preferred
am-noon, Library 3402.
method), I learned that some have
George Real, Friday, May 17, noon- mistakenly got the impression that we
1 pm, Library 3402.
were limiting the announcements to only
Scott Harris, Wednesday, May 22, 11
certain types of relationships. What was
am-noon, CAB 108.
intended from the start was to begin a
Gina Papke, Wednesday, May 22, forum for community members to
noon-I' pm, CAB 108.
publicly
celebrate
any
kind
of
Tim Sullivan, Wednesday, May 22, 1 relationship.
pm-2 pm, Library 3402.
It makes me sad that people think the
Robert Webb, Friday, May 24, 11
CPJ is unresponsive to their expressive
am-noon, Library 3402.
needs.--Tedd Kelleher, editor
Deborah Spruill, Friday, May 24,
noon-l pm.
The article in the May 9, 1~1 CPJ,
compiled by Scot Wheat, was transcribed
from the TCTV (channel 31) program
Panorama Latino Americana.
The
interview was conducted by Jorge Gilbert,
THURSTON
COUNTY --Programs
John Conklin, and Justino Balderrama.
produced by local residents and seen on
Thurston Community Television (TCTV)
Channel 31 have been honored by the
National Fedemtion of Local Cable
Programmers Northwest Region. The
Acute and Chronic Ailnients
programs were judged as part of the 1991
-cov-ercd by Hartford ln8unmce
Best of the Northwest Video Festival, a
IIARK JANARDAN PINKIIAII C.A.
competition recognizing excellence in
352-9247
non-commercial
programs
produced
through
public,
educational,
or
government access facilities from Alaska,
Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Montana.
Evergreen students Jan James and
Christine Sund each received Honorable
Mention foi' their program entitled
"Creating Change: ' Art in Prison."

Bankers cause of Peru's cholera. epidemic

OFF
THIS
SUMM·ER.

Rent one of our
storage units
between now and
September 30th,
and get four months
for the price of
three.

IK
l\ \VORLD
THAT'S
INFORl\lATIOK
RICH,
YOliR
LIBRARIAJ\
IS
INFORlVIATH )N
Sl\lI\RT.

SHLRGARD
S'1tR6GE CENTERS

Where Clothes Go
Manufacturer

~
/r~·Ht's
II
__-

357-7100
West Olympia
1620 Black Lake Blvd,

population.
The collapse of health care,
sanitation systems, and the nosedive in
riutritional levels resulting from these
structural adjustment programs are the
real causes behind the suffering in Peru.
The mainstream press says the cholera
virus II.rrived in Peru from Asia I would
say the virus came from the board room
of the IMF.
Peruvians aren't the only people
suffering from structural adjustment
programs imposed by the IMF. In
Nicaragua, IMP programs threaten to lay
off 25,000 state workers and cut social
programs across the. board. When sitting
in front of a computer in Olympia such
a statement sounds abstract, even
cosmetic. The very real pain caused by
such policies hits home when talking to
a Nicaraguan high school kid who can no
longer fulfil her dream of becoming a
doctor because the IMP has decided that
it is more important for the Nicaraguan
government to payoff loans than to
educate its population. The very real
pain · caused by these policies hits home
when talking to a Nicaraguan doctor who
is on strike because the government
wants him to use the same needle on five
children when giving vaccinations.
These are some scenes from the new
world order that, we are told, .should be
the cause of celebration. Rejoicing in
such a situation is sadistic. Who ever
said that it is patriotic to be sadistic?
I agree with author Eduardo Galeano
when he says that the new world order is
"an order in which the world is a
concentration camp for the majority of
the population." I don't think it is
patriotic to wave flags mindlessly at the
politicians, generals, and financial
institutions
that
run
the
global
concentration camp. Nor do I think it
productive to passively witness such
hoopla while murmuring "I hate this
country."
In both eases, the defmition of
patriotism is being surrendered to George
Bush and his cohorts. It is when
patriotism is allowed to be defmed from
above that it becomes the worship of
leaders and guns. This is also when it
becomes unpatriotic to stand for peace
through justice.
In my view, those intent on
disarming the guards of the concentration
camp and forcing the camp leaders to
surrender their power are the true
patriots. But I doubt that such a
definition of patriotism would ever come
from the mouth of George Bush.
Scot Wheat writes regularly for the
CPJ.

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Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991
Page 2 Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

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202 W. 4th Ave.

Downtown
. Olympia

352-7455

Page 3

, Analysis

)

News

Frisbee tournament .hosted by Evergreen
by Scott A Ricbardson
If you are a campus wanderer who is
alarmed next weekend by a cry of
"Ultimate!" resonating from the athletic
fields, do not worry. It's just the "Buns
in the Sun" Ultimate Frisbee Tournament.
Billed as an "almost-annual" event,
this is the first tournament Evergreen has
hosted since 1986. The revival is being
organized by Elissa Ostergaard, a 1989
alumna who has ultimate in her blood.
Elissa plays on two teams in Seattle
as well as being a regular on Evergreen's V
fields. She says the Evergreen approach
to the sport is less competitive, with
turnout fluctuating a lot more than ,in
Seattle. She also senses a little less
commitment to improving the level of
play, while acknowledging that the game
is open to people of all skill levels.
The informality of "Geodisc" is
popular among many of the regular
players, who tend to avoid practices and
drills. For many, ultimate provides an
opportunity to release frustrations. Karen
Cannizzaro says, "It's a place to just
come out and run around and release
everything and go 'Wooo-oo!'"
Others speak of ultimate in a more
revered fashion, alluding to "spiritual
oneness with the disc and the grass." The
game gives Robert Olson a chance to
explore "philosophical dead ends."
Evergreen has had a semi-organized
ultimate club for more than 10 years, and
started the "Buns in the Sun" ritual a
decade. ago.
Corey Meador, recreatioIial sports
coordinator, says ultimate is an
appropriate sport for Evergreen, since it
is grounded in "cooperative competition."
He explained, "It's the only sport I know
that the rules require there be no
referees."
Ultimate Frisbee is played by two
teams of seven players. Teammates try to
complete passes as they "work the disc"

from playing soccer in schooL"' Barry has
downfield, with a pass completed into the
been
playing' ultimat~!it Evergreen for
end zone scoring a point The pace can
five
yearS,
after beiS6 introduced to the
be intense as players weave patternS and
game
in
Tacoma
during his childhood.
cut sharp corners .while attempting to
Ultimate
is
played , virtually
shake defenders. An incomplete pass .
everywhere
in
North
America,
and aIn10st
means a change in possession, causing
every
weekend
there
is
a
tournament
everyone to start runnitig the other way.
somewhere. For "Buns ill the Sun," teams
Geodisc .player Barry Hibbins
are expected from Seattle, Vancouver
compares the game to a more familiar
(washington and British Columbia),
sport, stating, "I got a lot of my strategy

Victoria, B.C., and maybe Montana and
California.
Game~ will begin lat~ ' Saturday
morning and continue through Sunday.
Spectators are welcome to root for th~
home team. If they don't win it's a
sname.'l
Scott Richardson, former CPJ
managing editor, hqs escaped the clutches
of the CPJ office.

1:-;r-;2:~~~~:;::;:S:S~Z2:ZZ;~~~SS;~~~~~:::::::L~SS;:S~;S~~::2L~~~~~~~;:~

Chris Wells has 10 seconds to find
an open receiver down field. photo by
Scott Richardson

Instant
Passport ,Photos

The Evergreen ultimate fields have not been without controversy over the years. The CPJ Security Blotter has
documented "nude frisbee," for example, In fact, the logo on this year's specially-designed frisbees shows diving
players wearing less than a full complement of clothing, Will there be nude frisbee at this weekend's event? "I think
so .... At least a little mooning," Design by Elissa Ostergaard

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If you are looking to buy or sell thatperlect property, we'd love to help
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Nort~

American

~
~

cases of murder between a husband and
wife.
These statistics are chosen to
~Uustr:ate the severity of the problem as
It exiSts today.
Here are just a' few
historical roots .of wife-battering:
The expression "rule of thumb"
comes from a law passed in Engiand that
said that a man could beat his wife willi
a stick, as long as it was no bigger
thumb. Early in the
around than
nineteenth century, American courts
passed similar laws thai said that wife
beating was a husband's right. Other
c~tur~s had different ways of ~serting
power over women, such as foot-binding
in China, clitorectomy in EgyPt, the
Sudan, Somaliland, and in Europe up to
the 19th century.
Sudanese female
circumcision involved sewing the orifice
of the genital organs shut, leaving a
small opening for the release of urine and
menstrual fluids.
The fIrst step toward ending the
problem
of wife-battering is
to
acknowledge that it exists, and to
condemn it as wrong. Organizations such
as Safeplace are committed to ending
domestic violence. Safeplace is what the
name implies: a safe place for women to
be. It is available for rape and sexual
assault victims as well as victims of
domestic violence.
Safeplace has a .
shelter, 24 hour crisis hot-line, offers
legal advocacy, and ongoing support
groups. The organization is a collective,
which means that the decision-making
responsibility is shared between all the
members, volunteers and staff equally.
Safeplace operates on certain beliefs.
They believe that racism and sexism are
systems used to keep a ruling group in
power by denying other groups basic
well-being through economic channels.
Wife-beating
results
in
the
oppression of women. No one likes to
be hurt, and women who remain in
abusive relationships do not enjoy being .
beaten. Many of the myths about
domestic violence obscure this truth. It
can be confusing and frustrating for

his

by Siobban Glynn
Domestic violence is a general term
for violence which occurs between people
who have been living together. Domestic
violence can occur betw.een homosexual
partners, between ' heterosexual partners,
or between siblings. Often it occurs in
"traditional" homes where there is a
husband, a wife, and children. In over
95% of the incidents of marital domestic
violence, the woman sustains the injuries.
This problem is more specifically called
wife-battering. Other serious problems
that fall into the category of domestic
violence are elder abuse and child abuse.
While often directly related to partner
battering, these are separate problems
which are not addressed in this article. In
this article I will use the term wifebattering, because most of the reading I
have done thus far was based on research
about married couples. If you are being
hurt by someone you love, please feel
free to change the word wife to whatever
word applies to you.
Some of the
information may , be helpful for you and
accurate to your situation, some may not.
Please use your own judgment in
deciding this.
In 1986, as reported to the
Department of Social and Health
Services, 98% of victims of battering
were women from their teens to age 96.
Ninety-4ght percent of these crimes were
committed by men from their teens to
age 88. A recent national survey reponed
that over 2 million women are beaten
each year by their husbands. Another
study ot' hospital emergency room
services found that almost half of the
1400 women treated in the emergency
room had injuries from being beaten~
although they were not all reported as
such. The severity of battering in a
relationship tends to escalate over time,
and FBI statistics show that, of the
homicides committed in the U.S., 2(3
were cases where the murderer was either
a friend, relative, or acquaintance of the
victim. Of this 2(3 percentage, 1{2 were

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Domestic violence chronic problem
QIlacceptable, harmful, and potentially
life-threatening. Since even severely
battered women often recall the emotional
abuse as more hurtful than the physical
someone who is close to a battered
women to try to understand why she
stays in the relationship. The most helpful
thing you can ' do for a woman who
, describes being battered is to believe her.
Safeplace h3s ongoing support groups
where women share their experiences and
offer support to each other. Tbese groups
are facilitated by trained volunteers.
Abuse ,is separated ' into three
categories:
physical, sexual, and
emotional abuse. Women leam to identify
abuse with a learning tool called the
continuum. The continuum shows how
abusive incidentS increaSe in severity and
end in death by suicide or homicide. This
helps to clarify that any violence is

abuse, learning about it validates their
feelings and shows that emotional ,abuse
is also a fonn of violence. Sexual abuse
is often part of the method used by a
batterer to assert power over his victim.
By sharing their 'stories, battered
women give each other support, share
information, or provide a reality check by
pointing out danger.
Through this
process, women are empowered, and
begin to d~ribe themselves as survivorS
rather ~ victims. Safeplace knows that
empowerment happens only when a
woman makes her own decisions. The
Services at Safeplace are offered on a
continuing basis, regardless of whether a
person chooses to leave or stay in the
relationship.
Siobhan Glynn is doing an internship
at Safeplace.

The Abuse Continuums

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DATE

Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991
Page 4 Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

Page 5

Columns

Bigfoot battles threat of

It's time to ·face---evasive·racismby Anna Bachmann
We were too young to realize that we
couldn't be friends.
His name was
Denny and he W3.'! chocolate brown. I
was true to my pale gennan ancestry.
My fathes was the head librarian at the
local college. Denny's fathez probably
mopped the long aisles of its
!>ookshelves. We were perfect opposites
but didn't notice or care. Our friendship
wasn't based on issues of economics, '
'
gender Or race.
But children are only allowed to live
the dream of equality for a shon time.
Reality presses in. A look:, a word. a
motion can wake us from the dream.
For Denny and me, it happened when he
took me to his house. From the moment
I walked through his front door
everything was skewed.
We were
Batman and Robin walking into the tilted
lair of the Joker.
Today, I can't explain exactly what it
was that dissolved our friendship that
day. I followed him through the house
and up the stairs to his room. The dark,
cool stillness inside was refreshing after
an afternoon playing in the hot summer
sun.
The bedroom was empty of

fumitw:e and there was a pile of hay in , , full ,Participants in it It isn't right to ask
the comes. Two black men stood next to
who broke away from whom. Denny and
an open window. That was it. A pile of I simply paned ways. It was a mutwil,
hay, -a framed patch of sun stretching
across the bare wooden floor and fWO '
silent men staring at the little white girl
and the little black boy standing before
them. I remember the force in their eyes ,
and I think there must have bC:en shock
there as well,
Neither of us understood the message
in their eyes. I asked Denny why his
bed was a pile of hay and he led me
silently from the room. There was no
way to answer that question. Racism
was a surreal experience for me then.
An incongruous slice of existence. It
didn't fit into my limited sense of reality.
so I placed it on a shelf in my mind--a
question to be answered later.
Tbe problem in our modem society is
that those unanswered questions are
always piling up. Racism rarely
approaches us head-on. When it does. it
is easy to identify but, more often. it
sidles up and slips in through the cracks.
Before we know it, we grow up. or
rather into a life where racism is a subtle
fait accompli. And black or white, we are

acknowledgement that we could no longer
be friends.
It was an unspoken.
subconscious recognition of roles.
But when do we begin to re-evaluate
these roles? , Even in one of our most
worthy pursuits, working for a clean and
healthy environment, our prejudices
lIgainst gender, class and race simmers to
the surface.
.
Vi~tor ' Lewis, the founder of
Environmentalists Against Racism and the
speaker for the up and coming Rachel
Carson Environmental Forum this May,
believes that it is time to face this
evasive racism that clouds our society.
"We are all in the same boat, although
not necessarily on the same deck. We
need to bear in mind that women,' people
of color, and the poor have often been
unwillingly restricted to damaged and
flooding compartments of this boat, while
many of those on the upper decks have
shut their ears and turned away, looked
on helplessly, or focused their efforts on
preventing any spreading of the damage."
We live, wode: 'and educate ourselves in

a predominantly white community. But
Thurston County has 6vel'2,OOO AfricanAmerican&,nearly ' the simie number of
American Indians,
then 6,000 of
Asian ancestry, almost 5,000 of Hisp8nics
decent and nearly 7,000 from other
cultural groups. ' These fiI,lInbezs will
probably increase. When will begin to
exen our energie$ toward rebuilding the
boats that lie broken in our past?
Denny is now far away from me in
place and time but the loss of his
friendship is something I still regret But
more .importantly it is something that, to
this day, points the finger and exposes
the subtle racism in my life.
Anna Bqchmann is a graduate
student in the Masters of Environmental
Studies program. The Rachel Carson
Environmental Forum will be held on
May ' 22 at 7 pm in Lecture Hall 1. In
addition to speaking at the forum, Victor
Lewis will participate in a workshop
entitled "Building Alliances: Breaking
Barriers of'Race and Class" on May 22
at 3:30 pm. These are free events and
open to everyone. Call 866-6000 x6479
for more in/ormation.

mO(e

Chr~topber

Fondots
For the past couple weeks this
column has focused on the ways the
methodology of reduce, reuse, and recycle
can help our cars inflict less damage
upon planet Earth. The best way to
reduce the automobile environmental
degradation is to restrict its use througL.
increased car pooling and ride sharing,
expanding
your
use
of
public
transportation. as well as bicycling and
walking whenever possible. If it is
absolutely necessary for you to continue
driving, the use of unleaded fuel and the
responsible recycling of spent items such
as the battery and antifreeze can help
protect us all from the toxic effects of
these substances.
Americans drive too much!
We
have become addicted to the convenience
of our cars. Every . day we collectively
drive the distance to the planet Pluto and
back again. Commuters in this country
waste enough gasoline just in traffic jams
every year, to drive a car to the sun and
back more than 300 times. In 1990 this
was equivalent to wasting 3 billion
gallons of fuel or about 5% of our
nation's
entire
annual
gasoline
consumption. Not only did this waste
energy and stress out those drivers, but
was responsible for the production and
releases into the atmosphere of an
additional 60 billion pounds of global
warming carbon dioxide.
The most damaging auto pollution
occurs in the flfst few minutes that the
engine is running. Nitrogen oxides, a
major contributor to acid rain and linked
to forest declines the world over, are
more likely to fonn when the engine and
catalytic convener are cold.
It is
important that we try not to drive our
cars shon distances too often so as to

'REDUC~

RE-USE
.RECYCLE

~

N~

"tIQ

avoid the damage caused during the
beginning of operation.
Unfortunately 50% of all commuting
trips in this country are less than 5 miles
long, and 3/4 of these miles are traveled
by car. Since more than half of the
working population of the U.S lives
within 6 miles of their work, a greater
reliance on bicycles and mass transit for
these short daily commutes could easily
and comfortably eliminate a substantial
amount of the pollution we now are
inflicting upon ourselves and our ecosystem.
Prior to 1976 most cars in this
country used regular leaded gasoline.
Since 1976 most vehicles here have been
specifically designed to run on less
polluting unleaded. Leaded gas is very
hazardous to the environment and is
believed to lead to increased liver, kidney
and brain damage in humans. Globally,
over 450,000 tons of lead are still
estimated to be released into the air every
year from automobiles. In some place,s
such as Mexico City, lead particulates ate
so common that 70% of the newborn
children there are now found to have
dangerous levels of this metal in their
blood, which is often passed to them
directly from their mother's contaminated
.breast milk. Pre-1976 autos originally
designed to run on regular leaded
gasoline can run just, as well on unleaded
fuel and help to keep this toxic heavy
metal out of the environment. The EPA
says that the octane rating is what is

Jane writes
for the ' CPJ ·
(Jane is cool.)

George d~esn/twrite
for the CPJ.
(George is un-cool.)

important for engine perfonnance, not the can be recycled at Batteries Plus.
lead. The only exceptions they note are Interstate Batteries, Cut Rate Auto Parts
when the cars are carrying heavy loads, Central Recycling, Old Highway
or traveling at high speeds. If your car Recycling, and The Household Hazardous
was made to run on leaded premium, try Waste facility at the Thurston County
a mix of half regular and half unleaded Landfill at Hawk's Prame.
premium with a 92+ octane rating to
Another automobile by-product that
halve the amount of lead your vehicle should end up at a hazardous waste
disposal sight is the used antifreeze. In
pumps out
A second source of lead associated 1988, Americans dumped over 21 million
of
antifreeze
into
the
with autos comes from the improper pounds
This stuff, known
disposal of. the batteries. These things environment
usually contain 18 Ibs. of toxic lead, and ethylene glycol has been designated as
a gallon of highly corrosive Sulfuri,c hazardous waste in several states and
Acid. In this country over 6S million car may cause injury or death upon ingestion,
batteries are dumped into landfills every abso.rption or inhalation. Manufacturers
year, where their cases eventually crack claim it .is safe for disposal when diluted
allowing ' the lead and sulfuric acid to and washed down the drain, though used
pollute groundwater supplies. It is antifreeze often contains heavy metals
estimated that three of the four such as .lead absorbed from the soldier in
radiator. The ' recycling
and
Americans who change their own car the
of
antifreeze
is
beginning
to
redistillation
batteries throw them away instead of
happen,
but
in
this
area
we
do
not
yet
recycling them. Fortunately through the
efforts of the commercial sector, we are have this service available. The Hawks
currently recycling 80% of our batteries Prairie Landfill in Lacey accepts it with
which amazingly provides for 60% of the their hazardous substances collection
world's lead supply. Improper disposal of program, and it can be brought there
car batteries accounts for 2/3 of all the from 9-5 on Saturdays. For more info
lead found annually in municipal waste, call them at 786-5457.
Christopher Fondots writes a regular
and last , year totaled about 330 million
pounds nati6nallY. Locally car batteries recycling column. '

99

It's not
what you look like;
it's who
you write for.

as

We're looking for a few new Janes.
Write for us now. Drop by our office, Library 2510.
Write for us next year....
Our new office will be on the third floor of the' CAB.

CAPITOL CITY MARATHON

by Scott Douglas
On January 26, 1991, a 20 year old
Peruvian man named Nestor Rojas
Medina was detained by members of the
police in the town of Tocache in San
Martin province. According to reports, he
was transferred to Tocache Military Base,
but authorities there continue to deny his
detention, and have filed no charges.
His is yet another case in an eight
year history of frequent disappearances ~
Peru, which has lead the world In
disappearances
cases
since
1988,
averaging over 500 a year. The political
climate in Peru is exceedingly violent,
with thousands of deaths attributed both
to the government, and to the Partido
Comunisto del Peru "Sendero Luminoso,"
the Communist Pany of Peru "Shining
Path". Over 20,000 people have been
killed in civil strife since 1980. The
situation is compounded by an inflation
rate of 5,000% annually, plus the natural
disasters currently plaguing Peru earthquakes, water shortages, _ and a
massive cholera epidemic. (See Scot
Wheat's anicle, page 3).
from
the
Despite
statements
government condemning human rights
abuses, the situation continues to

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deteriorate.
The military has total
autonomy in most of'the nation, which is
under a state of emergency, leaving the
elected civilian government effectively
powerless.
Readers are asked to write to the
following addresses and express concern
about the disappearance of Nestor Rojas
Medina and the growing human rights
crisis in Peru. Urge that his detention
be acknowledged by the police, and that
he be given access to family, legal
council, and medical attention. Also ask
he be treated in accordance with the law,
including the filing of formal charges, or
immediately released.
Gen. EP Jorge Torres Aciego
Ministro de Defensa
Ministerio de Defensa
A venida Boulevard
Monterrico
Lima 33, Peru
Jefe del Comando PoHti~o-Militar de
Ayacucho
Gen. Petronio Fernandez Davila
Cuartel Militar BIM 51 "Los Cabitos"
Huamanga

UNDER THE

EVERGREENS
by Scott A Richardson
Recently a rhinoceros auklet was
sighted in Eld Inlet. This member of the
alcid fainily is more closely related to
puffins than to auklets, but has browngray plumage and lacks a brightlycolored bill. Rhino auklets are possible
nesters in southern Puget Sound, although
searches for nest sites have been in 'vain.
More likely this was a straggler from
wintering flocks which use Budd Inlet.
The nearest breeding colony for this
seabird is Protection Island north of Pon
Townsend.
An alcid which does breed in our
area is the pigeon g~llemot, recognized

BUNDA Y, MA Y '1 9th
OPEN 7AM-MIDNIGHT

grand 'ce (!(eath

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1107 NE 45th *"40
, Seattle, WA

came to" the . conclusi.OIl ~. the cas"ts
show a m~g, fleXIble, livmg foot.
He also surmised that the creature that
made. the tracks. was an adolescent,
standing. ~ween SIX and seven feet tall
and weIghing between four and .five
hundred ~unds.
. .
'
DesPIte the new .publicI~, however,
Freeman has ~~ tited of his ~ess
search. He IS tired of the long hikes,
expenses, and the ~dicule he has received
from the communIty at large.
Freeman may give up the Bigfoot
hunt for good, if the new footprints don't
serve to vindicate him.
' Chris Bader writes often and well.

~~~C>~~~~~~*=~~~~

Dreyers
OLD TIME FAVORITE ICE CREAM TREATS
ARE AVAILABLE IN THE DELI &
GREENERY. COMING SOON TO THE
ESPRESSO CART! GRAB ONE AND ENJOY
A BIT OF SPRING!'

MOVING OVERSEAS TO
STUDY?
RETURNING HOME?
SENDING GIFTS TO
FRIENDS?
Let Airport Brokers save you on the
transportation cost. We offer air and
ocean rates on overseas shipments.
Before you ship call us for a rate!'

I

Airport Brokers
' Corporation

246-6580

I

in summer by black plumage and white
wing patches. They find suitable nest
sites in mud or clay banks, where they
lay two eggs in a burrow. They can be
seen diving in Budd Inlet as they hunt
for fish ;
The only other alcid which might
nest in our general vicinity is the marbled
murrelet. This seabird is only gradually
becoming less mysterious to biologists,
who are beginning to find nests high !n
Old-growth trees. There has been some
conjecture that a few may nest in Capital
Forest.
To fmd other seabirds, plan a trip to
the coast. Bring a spotting scope.
For the landlubbers, starliitg eggs are
hatching and nestlings can be heard
squealing all over Olympia. Cedar
waxwings seem to be returning and
evening grosbeak flocks are breaking up.
He'mlock cones are fonning, tiny
green clusters which begin to weight
down branches, and orange honeysuckle
is blossoming witll tubular flowers atop
climbing woody vines.
And Joel's dad got a 23-pound turkey
in Kansas.
Tbanks David, Jenny, and Joel. What
do you see? Call x621 J.

ACUPUNCTURE

PETER G. WHITE , C.A.

COll8l9d by EVEIfO'een/Hortford lNUra1CG
Queltlons • conau1tot\or4 • AppoIr.tmenls
RadIance 113 E. 5th O~ 357·9'70

Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

f

o~scurity

by CIujsBader
, deep woods of Washin~ and Oregon,
Bigfoot IS backll
hoping to fmd ConClUSlve proof of
Bigfoofs existence. In 1988 he and his
This last January, Paul Freeman, a
Bigfoot researcher from Walta Walla,
son returned from an expedj.tion with
Washing«ln, located an impressivt: series
several fuz~ p~otographs of a ~
of foot-prints from the elusive beast,fi~ 'retreatmg mto the w~, w~lch
It seems that hunters had reported a
didn t serve , to change anybody s mmd.
His dream is to shoot one of the
set of large, - human-like baCks in the
IUue Mountains on the Washingtonwith Bigfoot
creatures to ' solve the mystery once and
Oregon border: The tracks wound for
Freeman resigned from his job with
for ,all.
seven miles, through farms, orchards and
the Forest Service' in 1982 after claiming
Grover Kran~, a fifty-nine y~ ~ld
pasture-land before disappearing near the a sighting of the creature. The Forest
professor at Washmgton State Umverslty
shore of Mill Creek, which is just outside
Service was embarrassed by the publicity
who is equally notorious for his intereSt
of Walla Walla.
and publicly accused him of perpetrating
in Bigfoot, recently viewed plaster casts
Freeman who was called to the scene a hoax.
that Freeman made of the Blue Mountain
llDd 'made casts of the footprints, has
Since his resignation, Freeman has
footprints.
,
himself had a Ion and dubious history
spent, the last nine years searching the
Krantz consulted with a trac}cer and

Americans addicted to automobiles

by

Columns

,

'\

Page 7

[

Response

Forum
Evergreen .conservative about . free speech
by P. H. Heary .
. "ut it flow. ut

peop~

choose to
believe wllol tltey lWJIIl. ClIallenge 1I lit
Ope1l/0nllfU. I iItW:, slton 0/ iIIcItbag a
riot, ~t ~ . say thillgs tlley lWJIIl to
SiIY. As lilly QS tlley IMJ be. TNil, to me,
is trw frudoiJtc ~ IfIUCIl. ..
-Alan Berg, die Iibenl Deaver lilt mdio
host wtIo wa
. _ cI by ~Nuia
inl985
Evergret.ll is .• very CIOIIaVaIIive
school
Whal'l you say. YOu're c:mql
is oil/(. of the most progressive, liberal
institutions of higher learning in the
United States!
That's true. But we're also quite
conservative.
I've been a political liberal all my life. I
voted for Dukakis in 1988, and I'd do it
again today. In the proud tradition of
liberalism, I've always believed in
open-mindedness and tolerance of people
of all races, genders, classes, and (and
this is perhaps the most important) points
of view. Conservatism for me has always
stood for a refusal to listen to others, a
desire to suppress opposing points of
view, and the effon to force all people to
conform to a specific set of beliefs,
whatever
those beliefs
may be.
"Conservatism" doesn't necessarily refer
to an opposition to abortion or . gun
control; rather, it can refer 10 the
illogical, intolerant means that opponents
of abortion and gun control, among

America IbM · aD one bid to do 10 flyer had a portrait of HitleF, , who was a
others, often use to try to enforce their
strict vegetarian, and the caption
beliefs on· the rest of us. This 1cind of . . . . . .. ID(Idw penoo WII caD him or
... a commUDiJt. He didli't have to ·t u
rigidity is nowhere more self-evident than
"Vegetarian of the Month." Nothing elSe.
up his chqe, bccauIe <iICC it got out I had nothing to do with the flyer, but i~
at Evergreen.
.
Ibat IIO-IDCHo was a communist. the was · a relatively simple one, and not toO
Evergreen has a long-standirig
hard to figure out.
For this to be an
lIadition of tolerance and acceptance of rumor miD kicked into high gear, and
McC!!rthy's victim's professional (and
attack on Jews, we must be able to
different races, classes, and genders. In a
somehow draw a correlation between
sometimes personal) life was ruined.
nation where racially-based violence is on
vegetarlanism and Judaism, and to
Today's PC have hit upon othez
the rise, and where women still do not
logically derive from th~t correlation an
enjoy the full protection of law that men - words which wort· just as , well: Rracist,
intent . to bring physical or emotional
enjoy; and where the right wing has sexist. Eurocentrist," ·and so 011. It's not
the words themselves that are the
harm to Jews and/or Judaism. We cannot, .
carefully drawn a clear line between the
of course. But such errors in logic ' and
haves and the have-nots, this 1cind of problem; aft.ez aU, who in his right mind
jumping to conclUsions are the hallmark
tolerance is sorely needed, and our is for racism? It's the feeling of power
campus community is . to be commended that the PC derive from the misuse of . of traditional right-wing conservatism . .
Evergreen
has
become
an
for fostering it. However, it is the last of these words to 1a~1 people whose
indoctrination center rather than a place '
my criteria--tolerance of opposing points methods of fighting injustice might differ
from the. PC's accepted norms. It is in
of view--upon which Evergreen fails
of learning, where students sit in lecture
for two hours and listen to the faculty
miserably.
Rather
than
being a this tnaDIla' that the radical leftists can ~
marketplace for diversity of opinion, considered cooservative, in the foulest
propagandize about "The System And
How It Represses The Masses." When I
Evergreen has become a place where sense of the word.
want to be exposed to Iiberallleftist
And, Iilce conservatives, the radicals
people holding points of view that deviate
opinion, I read The Nation. I do not want
from the narrow canon of the radical left have become paranoid from loo1cing for
my tuition money to go towards
are afraid to express those views for fear evil where none exists, and finding iL A
anti-establishment diatribes that are long
vivid example of this can be found in the
of .being persecuted and caUed names.
on emotion and short on logic. Perhaps
This kirid of phenomenon has become CPJ of May 2. A student wro~ in
the only hope for the future is that the
known as Political Correctness, or P.C., regarding the Adolf Hitler- "Vegetarian of
rebellious spirit that seized America's
and it has brought liberals and the MODlh" Dyers that were found .ound
young people in thr- 1960s might cause
campus receo&Iy. The writer stated. dB
conservatives together in denouncing it.
today's Greeners to reject the intolerant
Students who express opinions to the the flyers were distributed to anti-semitic
attitudes pushed upon them by their
right of the accepted dogma are treated in hate groups around the country (diarges
peers.
the same way Senator Joseph McCarthy which, it aums out, are completely false,
treated those who he did not like: with and I invite the writer to provide
P.H. Henry has never shied away
"deadly words." McCarthy's word was evidence to the contrary), and states that, from controversy,
"communist," and it was a very effective "It was a direct attack on Jews."
tool. Communism was so hated in
Let's · examine this statement. Th~

Protest Housing's. enormous cleanup fees
by James Egan and John Munyan
Attention HoUSing Residents!
Take a close look at the "Housing
AppeaJ/Grievance Petition" at the right,
because you should be filling one out this
summer and sending it in to TESC
Housing. Last year only twenty-five
residents petitioned to reduce their
outrageous cleaning bills of $50 to $100,
while many hundred were too confused
or unaware of their option to appeal.
Housing turned down about half of the
appeals they got, and reduced the charges
of the other half. Because there were so
few appeals, it was easy for housing to
deny or bicker about appeal requests.
However, this year if aU aggrieved
housing residents will appeal their
exaggerated charges, Housing will be
flooded with appeals and will be forced
to give refunds to all who pursue them.
Last summer I recei:ved an enormous
bill for my cleaning charges: $82. I
thought we had cleaned the place
thoroughly and couldn't believe the
estimates to clean certain pans of my
room. Housing said it took fony-five
minutes in my bedroom to clean the
window tracks alone! They estimated an
hour to clean my floor, and another
fony-flve minutes to clean "a paper clip,
pencil, and a pen cap" out of my desk!
And on top of this, they charged $18 an
hour to do it all. Was I the only exresident feeling ripped off! I took a poll
of the fltSt twenty residents I talked to
and found they were charged and average
of $70 even though they felt they'd left
their apartments clean.
Does this sound ridiculous? Anyone
who lived here last year knows that my
story is the same as everyone else's. So
support R.I.P.O.F.F., that is, Residents In
Protest Over Fallacious Fees. This
weekend we're going door to door to
dislribute several hundred appeal fonns to
the housing community. At the same time
we need you to sign our petition, stating
that if your cleaning charge is even
slightly higher than you expected, you
will fill out and send in your appeal, and
promise to harass Housing until you
receive a fair refund. Put your appeal in
a special place, and if you lose it or need
another, just visit Housing (in A Dorm)
or have one sent to you. If everybody
does
I can assure you that Housing

th!s

wag'5 M"'ALlg'DMCI ,nrnpl

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will be swamped with hundreds of
appeals, and be forces to refund
thousands of dollars to the students.
If you agree with the cause, tell all
your friends to do the same. And keep
your promise! Send in the appeal, like
everybody else! Be sure to write small
and be very ·precise as to why you think
the charges are out of line. Housing may
request an interview with you, in which
case you should arrange one. It will be
worth your while if you get a big chunk
of your charges refunded, and it will only
flood the Housing office with more
paperwork.
Bob Carlson, manager of Housing,
said they need money because they have
a big bill to pay for cleaning the Housing
community as a whole. He said they only
charged $16,000 tOtal to ex-residents last
year, and had a much bigger general bill
to pay. But if this is hUe, with 1000
residents, the average charge per resident .
would be $16. I know of no one who
paid near that little. Like I said, the
average charge among people I talked to
was $70.
Contradicting himself, Bob Carlson
justified high cleaning rates by saying
that "if you live in an apartment in
Olympia, when you move out, that's
what they'll do." So apparently, this

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

makes it okay to charge TESC students
outrageous cleaning fmes as well.
To ~heck up on what he said, I
called apartments in Olympia. Harrison
Park Apartments said their cleanup mtes
were about $5 and hour, because they
charge $10 to paint the walls and it takes
about two hours to do. Their other cleanup jobs are similarly priced. Two other
places I called said the avemge cleaning
charge per resident is $25 or $30, a far
cry from Housing's exorbitant average
charge. All places I called said they have
a "walk-tbtough" with all residents who
move out, and determine clean-up charges
at that time. (Housing merely looks at
your room and takes your key. A month
later they send you a bill for "estimates"-guesses at how long it took to clean.)
Housing has access to your student
account, and can prevent you from
registering. They take advantage of the
fact that they don't have competition.
This year, their lowest occupancy was

93%. If they had to compete, occupancy
wouldn't be guaranteed. If it cost them
time and money, they'd have to make
their charges more reasonable.
. "Does it concern you that students
might feel cheated by TESC Housing?;
I asked Bob Carlson. "This isn't the time
or place to discuss cleanup charges with
you," he told me. "I · think most of the
students feel their charges are fair." Well,
nQW is the time to do something I about
the charges. Let's show Bob Carlson and
Housing that the rates and time estimates
aren't fair, arid residents won~t sit idly by
as we're cheated. Support R.I.P.O.F.F.
and fill out those appeals!
If you'd like to voice your own
opinion about Housing, or recall an unfair
housing incident, now is the time to do
sol Deliver your letter to the
office
before noon on Monday!
James Egan and John Munyan are
Housing residents,

cn

Recreation Center wants
bf1o~£~~r~ibility a9!~~~at

1 can do to make 'leur
Recreation plays an imporlflnt pan for
time here at Evergreen as rewarding as
many people's lives here at Evergreen. ' possible. For example, one goal of
It helps to relieve sh;'Css, · clears the m~d
Recreational Sports and the CRC is to
an~ pl~ys an ,Important part m
adapt the weight room to make it more
accessible to pe;>ple using wheelchairs.
mamtam,mg people s overaU health and
If you feel that I can assist you in any
wellness. .However,
people. with
way 'please call and leave your name and
challenges m our school commuruty find
many obstacles between themselves and
number so we can arrange a time to
meet. 8(j6.~ x6537 (Corey Meador's
a fulm~g recreational experience.,
voice mail) Call Monday through
It IS you who I am addressmg.
C?nsider this an invitation to ~me talk . Wednesday 9 am through 12 pm or
WIth m.e a~ut your needs, ~SIreS and
anytime Thursday or Friday. Thanksl
David Nyberg is the Adapted
frustrabons m terms of recreabon. We
can arrange to meet onei>n-one and 'Recreation Coordinator at the CRC.

Co~munity

Network ' Office;
new student group
by Star BosweU
The Community Network Office is a
new Sbldent organization that received
funding thanks to Student Activities board
approval. This year we ·have attempted to
build up an office and create basic forms
to address student specific volunteer
needs. Furthel1nore, CNO played a
critical role toward recognition of

,

Evergreen stud~nt volunteers at the
National Volunteer Week banquet ~pril
22. The office sent out mailers asking for
faculty studenc nominations, and gathered
names of tt.ose persons' who , gave
outstanding volunteer time to student
organizations. CNO was able to represent

see network, page 14

It's alright to show off your body Deirdre, Heck you can even get paid
to strip dance. You didn't have to concoct this bullshit rape theme to show Disgusting I
your beautiful bod! Just go up to Seattle and tease, tease, tease while the
I IIkel
money piles up, up, up.
.
. . .
Just some adVlce.
I find this work extremely disturbing and in poor taste. This is the
sort
of thing that wimmin (as a whole) need fo fight. It seems to me
Deirdre,
that
this
sort of RArtR (pornography) only perpetuates the Rmale ego"
Thank · you 'for showing_ something that people , ~eed to see.
into thinking/beJieving that rape, and any sort of violence against
The concept of Dat·e rape that it seems most people have is
wimmln
is O.K.
. a lot more innocent and clean than they'd like to think it
is .. you shed some light on how gruesome it really is! As
Deirdre,
far as. the question of ' children viewing it.:.for the most
Seldom am I appalled at such disgusting and oppressive work as yours.
part I think it could be a positive learning experience if
Exploiting C; is unfortunately everywhere, but honestly give me a break with your
their questions w~re answered ·thoroughly and . honestly.
so called "an." The trash is a better place -for it"-maybe still too good for yOur ~
You are very brave. The idea of pornography did not even
stuff! Have you considered psychotherapy to fmd out what deep, dark aggressions
enter my mind when I looked at you work ..
toward ~ maybe hidden? Bodies are beautiful especially when portrayed as
Keep it up!
.
such ...not exploited!

The following 'are a very small sample of
comments from the comment book for the
controversial SPAZ (Student Produced Art Zone)
,show Women and Body Image, displayed on the first
floor of the CAB.-edltor

This work does not glorify oppression arid violence, It exposes It' ·

Interview with controversial .S PAZ artist
Interview with Deirdre SulkalMeister
by Ron Austin

Deirdre SulkalMeister is one of the
artists who's work in SPAZ (on the first
floor 0/ the CAB) has caused controversy.
See story on cover.
Ron: Deirdre, your an has -raised concern
about the Student Produced Art Zane
[SPAZ] once again. Did you think your
work would spawn the controversy it
'
has?
Deirdre: I would be pretty stupid to think
it wouldn't get some response, but I
didn't expect the comments I got in the
book. It is controversial but that's the
way I meant it to ·be because it deals
with a controversial issue. But I'm glad
it's in the CAB where a lot of people
can see it and not hidden away in a dark
gallery because this is an issue that needs
to be dealt with. A lot of people have to
deal with it all the time.
R: But what do you say to people's
comments that they shouldn't be forced
to view your an?

D: People shouldn't be forced to have
sex; but they are. People should pay
more attention to the issues of mpe.
R: What do you say to the idea of
removing the art from that area and
putting it in a more traditional gallery?
D: That would be great. The space we
have now is totally inadequate.
R: But doesn't that contradict what you
just said about having your art out in the
open where people could hear your
issues?
D: Yeah ...but I feel like the facilities in
this school need to be improved so
students can have a more traditional place
to display their art; but I want my art in
a more public place. So, its good for me.
I didn't have to spend a lot of money to
reach the public.
R: Although you have three pictures on
display the only work receiving much
attention is the central photo; the one
featuring the woman covered in blood.
How do you feel about this?
D: Focusing on the one ....image alone

completely takes it out of context; and it
is the context which I am concerned
with. I wish people would get just as
angry over the prevalence of date rape.
R: And your picture isn't just being
taken out of context from your own work
but from the entire show as a whole;
have any of -the other ·artists talked to
you about this?
D: No ...but I feel that because this
particular piece is so controversial it does
distract from the rest of the show, which
is a shame because there is a lot of
interesting work on display.
R: How do you feel about people's
concerns that children wiu be damaged
by your pictures? ' .
D: I think children see worse things on
TV all the time, and this gives a less
glamorous view of violence. At least I
hope its not glamorous.
R: What about people's allegations that
you're a misogynist?
D: I don't think portraying something
that is violent to women , necessarily

means I'm a misogynist. My portrayal of
a personal experience doesn't mean that
I condone violence against women;
because I don't.
R: But some of the comments say those
images are like pornography, they simply
perpetuate the problem.
D: Here I am objectifying my own
body; but its my choice to put myself in
this position and I'm very directly trying
to make a statement about rape and
coercion and living with rape as part of
your identity. I'm much more scared
about mainstream images which are
widely accepted and perpetuate sexism.
R: Would you display this art again
knowing the responses you're getting?
D: Yes. Right now I feel that I put
myself out on a limb. I'm trying not to
let people's . responses affect me;
otherwise I'd be devastated. I think its
really important for other people to
address these questions that are not talked
about and are usually not out in the
open.

SP.AZ problem could ,~be solved with new space
by Ron Austin
·
One would think that the theme of
the current art exhibit, "Women and Body
Image; should be enough to brace most
people for the collection of diffieult
gender images on display in the CAB on
the first floor. Yet, even after the
controversial photo two years ago of a
man masturbating and the pictures of
dismembered Central Americans displayed
in· 1988, a general attitude of: . 'Never
again--no one will ever put controversial
art up again in the CAB' seems to
prevail on campus. So to the shock and
dismay of many community members
once again an artist, Chris Wells, has
displayed a penis,in the gaUery--only this
time its connected to a woman's body,

and this time it's not even the most
controversial of the work being displayed.
Among the works, which include
sculpture, photos, paintings, and collage,
Deirdre Su1ka/Meister's photographs-particularly. the one of a woman looking
at a nude and bloodied reflection of
herself, has by far received the most
criticism and renewed the campus uproar
over appropriate art and the CAB as a
suitable area to exhibit it.
People have accused Deiidre of
creating an for an's scike, .purposefully
shOc1cing and forcing her art on viewers,
perpetuating pornography, exposing her
inner hatred of, females, and disturbing
the psyche of young children. For me,
none of these accusations, true or false,

The User's GuJde
The Cooper Poinl Journal exists to
facilitate communication of events, ideas.
movements, and incidents affe(;ting The
Evergreen State College and SUlTounding
communities. To portray accurately our
EDITORIAL--866-fiOOO x6213
community, the paper strives to publish
Editor: Tedd Kelleher
material from anyone willing to work with
Managing Editor: Rachel Nesse
us.
Entertaimnent Editor: Andrew Hamlin
Submission deadllne Is Monday noon.
Production Manager: Giselle Weyte
We will tty to publish material submitted the
Photo Editor: Amber Phelps
following Thursday. However. space and
Copy Editor: Doug Smith
editing consttaints may delay publication.
Typist: Linda Gwilym
All submissions are subject to editing.
BUSINESS-~ x6OS4
Editing will attempt to clarify material, not
Business Maniger: Edward Martin m
change its meaning. IT possible we will
Assistant IBusiness Manager: Doug ·Smith
consult the writer about substantive changes.
Advertising Manager: ebris Carson
EditingwiU also modifY submissions to fit
Ad Layout: Paul Henry, Deborah Roberts.
within the parameters of the Cooper Poinl
Julianne R~vel
JOW"nol style guide. .The style guide is
Distribution: Sara Steffens and Ron Austin
available at the CPJ office.
ADVISER
Written submissions may be bIought to
Dianne Conrad
the CPJ on an IBM fonnaned S-l/4" disk.
Disks should include a double-spaced printout,
Adnrtislna
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are reason to remove the an. The Student
Produced ,An Zone (SPAZ) in the CAB
haS displayed work since the beginning
of the academic year, and this is the f1I'St
exhibit in 1990-91 to receive such a
negative response.
Despite the inappropriate placement
of SPAZ, it provides a forum for serious
collections of student an. We, as
members of the community, have
accepted the space as a gaUery; and with
our acceptance comes the realization that
an, and specifically works produced at
Evergreen, ~re not always pleasing. We
should not expect only flowers and
landscapes to adorn the walls. True, the
subject of rape is extremely disturbing,
but where there is an--serious issues will
be discussed. Everyone has their own
definitions of an. If the current exhibit is
removed because some feel it contains
aesthetically corrupt and grotesque
material, then we ./lave allowed personal
censorship to infiltrate a college art
gallery.

I

If we must censor the Student
Produced An ZOne, · then it should no
longer exisL We should either relocate
the gallery or have none at all. It's
ridiculous enough having an art gallery
next to a fast food diner, but then to
expect artists to produce works which
won't offend anyone going to lunch is
hilarious. This liberal arts school owes its
students a proper gallery. There is no
excuse. Space can be created; for
example, we might make better use of
the faculty staff lounge. If you are an an
student then you have invested money for
tuition and supplies and have taken the
time to analyze and create material; you
represent the educational success of this
college. If your submitted work is passed
by the minimum four persons jury and is
allowed 10 be displayed, then it deserves
an excellent gallery where it won't
disturb the eaters and the wanderers, who
are now 'forced' to view it, and where
its entire context can be understood.
Ron Austin is an Evergreen:student.

H

£LL./
GtJ1TA

WELL)
WE

SELL MAGAzINE5

S~~fHp~?j2 "Ie S J

Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

Page 9

.

Arts, &-Entertai.nment
and -aWUlis
. MerCdith McEnroe _on keys, Paul Hjelm
on guitaf and Brad Holm on drums." His
wife Linda. not swprisingly, designed the
sets and costumes. "We have real high . '
production value standards."
This summer at 'Studio 321, they'll
unveil an evening of three one-acts,
Harold Pinter's The Dunwwaiter and
Victoria Station with Edward Albee's The
Zoo Story. In November comes Jane
Martin's Talking With, a series of
monologues for women, and in March of
, 1992 the Players hope to mount Reckless,
by Craig Lucas. What is Reckless about?
by Andrew Hamlin
"A woman who runs away from home on
Scott Whitney shook my hand and
Christmas Eve beirig chased and run
seated himself side of glass table in the
down by fate."
hallway outside of his office at Whitney
I asked him what long-range plans he
Design. Dead leaves sat in a glass bowl
had, what pipe dreams he entertained. "In
at one end of the table; behind that end, .
_ 1995 we're doing Hamlet," he said. "A
against a wall, a TV and VCR squatted
big major production of Hamlet." And
on a wheeled stand. Over Whitney's left
what new twist will"It will be modem
shoulder was the doorway to the main
and radical," is all he'll say.
office. Over his right shoulder I could
Was there anything else? "I really
see Whitney's partner James L. This,
want to direct Orphans, by Lyle Kessler.
behind a desk: at the end of a short
It hasn't been done here, probably
corridor, rolling his head this way and
because the dialogue has some, ahem,
.
that over a sheet of paper.
street lanjOlage in iL"
On one wall hung a portrait of a man Waldo (Chris Tharp) woos his girl, Jolene (Prairie Rose Zelan6), with some
"It's about these two kids, they're
who looked exactly lik~ Clark Gable-- help from Hank the ' Iguana, in Bryan Willis'_"Letters from Waldo," opening
Scott went on, "one of whom
orphans,"
except for grapelike eyes looking to the tonight at the Washington Center. photo courtesy Harlequin Productions
is mean and beats lip people and mugs
left with strong suspicion. Why Clark
around time suspension and Mahler's seen in Olympia before, one-acts, and for the younger boy, 'who believes,
Gable, I wondered.
reworked versions of classics a la Arnie because his brother h& told him since he
Ninth Symphony, called Ten Seconds in
Scott's other partner, his wife Linda,
Zaslove of Seattle's Bathhouse Theater, was old enough to remember, that if he
the Life of Fenwick Green. He wanted
darted in and out the door, preparing a
famous for his off-the-wall Shakespeare goes out of the house he'll die. It's a
one of _the Whitneys to direct it at the
poster for the threesome's latest project
shows, such as A Midsummer Night's small cast. I'm really interested in actors
New City Theaters Director's Festival in
two Bryan Willis plays, Ten Seconds in
Dream set as a 50's rock and roll revue and when you have a small cast you can
Seattle.
the Life of Fenwick Green and Letters
have the whole cast be good actors, you
and Macbeth set in the old west.
Scott took the job and premi.ered
from Waldo, at the Washington Center's
Fenwick for four nights at Olympia's
Scott's already done his "own, can really get in close."
Stage II, May 16-25. Harlequin goes back
(now-defunct) Reko Muse Gallery, then
I thanked Scott and as I was leaving,
adaptation of Macbeth, at Capitol
to 1971, that group was under Capitol
Playhouse 24 in 1988, a huge production asked who the man in the picture was.
took it to the Director's Festival. They
Area Music Club, now it is a nonprofit,
with "twenl¥- people on stage at once "Vibert Jeffers," he said--a photographer
won a "Best of Fest" accolade from the
now "we ourselves" donated money to
fighting with chainballs ana axes." who chronicled Olympia ·from the forties
judges and performed in the awards
get it off the ground. Tickets are $10, or
round. _
Scott's brother Bruce, currently enrolled to the sixties. Until his death in the
$5 for ,students; · Ben Moore's restaurant
James This
used the name
in Evergreen's Teacher Ed program, seventies, he owned the office building,
is sponsoring. It is Harlequin Productions'
wrote original music.
as his father had before him. "It's a high"Harlequin Productions" .from 1971 to
flfSt show in seven years.
"This is gonna be a really fun contrast rendering," said Linda, the artist,
1984 when he produced musicals such as
An Olympia resident since age 14,
Oklahoma! Whitney plans more adult- show," says Scott of the Willis double returning up the stairs. "He looks like
Whitney studied film at TESC for "four
oriented material for this new incarnation.
bill. "For 'Waldo' we have a combo Clark Gable," I said. "I think that was a
or five" years off and on. Assigned to
"I saw a lot of talented people hungry to
playing -soul music, from this Aretha resemblance he cultivated," ~d Linda. I
make an instructional film, he put
do something a bit different, and a lot of Franklin album that just came out, songs left down the stairs, Vibert's grapetogether a short that showed, in
theater most with family fare. We wanted . she recorded when she was eighteen--The shaped eyes looking s~deways at me all
painstakingly silly detail, how to brush
to do something a bit different." He
First Thirteen Sides. We have Barbara the way down.
your teeth. After graduation he remade
wants to direct new works, plays not
zelano on vocals, she's amazing,
this short and sold it to Pyramid Films ,
who asked him to make others along the
same line. These films featured James L.
This, a Ph.D in theater from USC, as
"Professor Einzeit" (pronounced EYENzite) , who wore a pink lab coat and a
pasted-on mustache to probe the existence
of air, the nature of water, and other
matters scientific. His assistant was a
giant hand named Irving.
While Here, Air, and Everywhere,
Water You Up To, and other Einzeit
shorts delighted kids in classrooms across
the country, Whitney also eased himself
into theater, constructing sets that his
wife Linda designed for local theater
companies. At another Capitol Repertory
,,,~(1pJ~
Theater production, of Woofer The
Psychic Dog, he met that play ' ~ c~­
~,<l1b1. ~
author, Bryan Willis a fan of the Em:e1t
{2061 7S6-U~2
series. Bryan had a new script, revolvmg
(8212)

GOING-

~
_PLACES

puhk~
-· don'tUke XTC·-it's -a shame

New
XTC
THB 810 Evuss
VlIWIN REalIlDS 1984 .

by RJNesse
The U of W coUegiate crowd swarms
in sun~inspired circles·along the crowded
the record was over...
Ave~ The side.stteet fecord:·store pours
Who cares? You might be dead
delirious music, from wide open doors,
Who cares? You stayed in bed.
onto. the tQasted cenient ,streets. I was
Who cares? You wrote the note.
twelve. Standing yoUng and spellbound in
Who cares? You might have spoke.
front of Cellophane Square, I decided I
wake ujJ ... {wake up) ...
was punk.
Wake Up ... WAKE UP!"
(
What XTC. had to do with black Sitting in a black and blue funk, their
eyelint"Z and ripped fishnets I'll never chiming voices open my eyes.
know. They never looked punk; they
The mindful voi~ become se8guUs
never SOlDlded punk; but the punks were on my favorite track of the album.
the ones listening to XTC. I listened to "Seagulls Screaming--Kiss Her, Kiss
the music. I liked XTC' I bJrned punk. I Ht"Z!" remembers the momentperfecdy.
bOught my fust XTC record on that hot It's a drizzly, dark afternoon on the pier
afternoon. A used copy of T~ Big as our hero worries about his RomeoExpress sucked $1.99 out of my poor ability. She smiles. He's nervous. Though
pocket, but left me feeling elated. My insanely happy to be with her, the
elation lasts 10 this day.
moment is awkward. Dry small talk fills
"Wake up" could have been a the damp minutes. Everywhere about him
horribly clich6 song. But it isn't. I the seagulls scream "kiss ht"Z, kiss her."
recognize the little voice in the back of
The picture grows in my mind and
my head (my superego don't you know;) I smile for his agony. I serenely grin at
I can't fmd her name on the - album his torment.

credits, but she'.s definitely singing the
Music can be subtle, similes delicate.
backup vocals. She reminds me of the "Train running low on soul coal" is
good in the wQrld and keeps me moving. . neither, and it ends -the album on a
Listen. for _the angelic "wake up" duets slamingly appropriate note. .
she sings with · your little voice through
I never thought of myself as a
out the song.
locomotive,
but
as
I
smeared
"The radio is blaring out.
blacklburgu~y
lipstick across punk
puckered lips, I was entranced with
It's in one ear and then it's out
Andrew Partridge's all encompassing
You didn't notice
metaphor. Throbbing start. The train,
s low I y s t a· r t s to move.
Friday and Saturday
Whistle blow-WHeeeeee. Engine groans
May 17 and 18
under steam pressure--BOOM. Gears
chum and start the wheels rolling--eh ch
ch ch.

9:30-1:30

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WHeeeeee BOOM ell ch BOOM ch
ch chink BOOM ch ch ctunk BOOM
BOOM. BOOM " .. .My spring to speed.
is reduced to a crawl, my rails went
straight, straight into the wall and it's the
wall on which they dash the oldez
engines.~ .. " .BooM ch ch chink (what am
I] " ...between young and old. like a thirty
year old puppy doing what I'm told•..and
I'm told there's no more ooal for your
engines.... " BOOM ch ch chink BOOM
"Train running low on soul cOal ...."
That's what we're all doing in -1ife:
Trying to shovel enough coal into our
emotional engines to keep 'us going.
This album keeps · me going. I see
it on sale at ReseRl Disk: stores all the

by Todd Carey
The Washington segment of Laurie
Anderson's new college tour took place
at the University of Washington last
.
Thursday. '
Drawing a half and half mixture of
college students and yupped-out 35 year
olds who had seen the ad in the Weekly
(In line, I actually heard the phrase, "Oh! .
They put just the perfect amount of latte
in this!") the concert toolc place in the
HUB ballroom, among the Brazil-like
duct work and the garish chandeliers.
The tour is primarily a lecture tour,
though she did play a few new songs,
and clips from her newest videotape.
Therefore, the stage set was minimal;
one keyboard, one control panel, three
miCrophones, (one normal, one augmented
deeper "the voice of authority," and one
augmented to sound like a chorus) and
four speakers which were shorter than
she.
She appeared on stage looking like
every photo of here that you've ever
seen. She was wearing a black suitjacket, black pants, a white dress shirt,
and whatever quantity of hair ,spray it
takes to make her hair do that She was
carrying a red notebook which she
referred to frequently, presumable an
outline of her lecture.

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"I'd like to talk about the future," she
began. An enigmatic statement, as it
turned out, as the bulk of her lecture
dealt with what she has been doing and
thinking about lately.
Though most of the topics she c.hose
to talk about were predictable (the war,
censorship, the Reagan years, yuppies
who talk about their latte in line,) her
observations about these topir.s were
always clever, and phrased~m Anderson's
bitterly ironic style.
But the best moments of her
performance came from· her personal
anecdotes about her life; her grandmother,
eating poisoned fish in Brazil, her
impressions of William Burroughs, faxes
she has received from the Minister of
Culture in Czechoslovakia. and one of
her songs being used without permission
by a car security systems company for a
television commercial.
When she finished and left the stage,
the audience seemed confused about
whether or not to ask: for an encore at a
lecture, and if so, whether or not to use
concert protocol. (After all, she had
performed a few songs.) Bu~ thankfully
everyone's Bics stayed in their pockets,
and they clapped without stomping,
After a few moments, the lights came up.

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All of their music is worth a listen, --- -especially at a reduced rate.
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Page 10 Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991
Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991
-

)

Page 11

I
I
I
I
I

",

Arts & Entertainment

Green ·Mind: How to ·be stupid for .fun profit
Renaud
. Pretty 'much Oreen.Mind by Dinosaur
Jr. sucks but that's only in close
comparison with Bug, which was a wild
swirl of guitar boy spunk; flip and
depressed, the listener is injected into the
tremendous bummer of J. Mascis' life, a
glimpse of misogyny disguised as selfhatred: matted against 15-finer guitar total
identification. /{ terrific . whale of
distortion, this guy knows the neck of his
guitar better than his dick. Infamous and
terrifically loud. Dinosaur Jr. really is just

there's those little bits of Supertramp,
"There never ieally is a good
WeU if you haven't , noticed this is the
time!There's always nothing much to
rage, and so many identify so readily. the
strumming strummUtg falsetto, tinkling in
say/Prelty
good,
not
doing
that Seattle Sound? .This is it, .in Boston.
regret. I don't get it. Big . guitar but
what's new? Power pop hooks are good
fme/Getting up most everydaylStepping Every droll rapuitzel across the nation
but a suspension of disgust in necessary
out tried ,to fix it/Pull the thumb out of riffin this stuff in the dark of their own
for access. Remember Danny Partridge
~t hole/Give me ingredien~ I'U mix basement bedrooms, you lcriow the type,
would sort of nod his head back and
ItlHOW can you move without a goal?"-disdaining the clubs and the mall, they
forth, a big toothy shit-eating grin?
From "Thumb."
, ...
- , got a car but it's on blocks: to sniffling
But it's faux naive'and I'm getting
, Of ~ourse you're reading this lyric post-adolescents, Bug was some sort of
tired of it There are some retards in
and saymg. to yourself, "I wonder if anthem of .craz}'. ' summer doldrums
rock, and I appreciate them as much as
the(ve canceUed that incredibly bloody alternating confusing rage. An album of
the next guy, but wasn't Spinal Tap the
comic on the back page." Of course the pure power say YEAH! I get it! from
punchline? How many out there press
lyric is stupid. He's a moron. That's the kids who'd been listening to everything
packet
swipe
Joey
Ramone/H8!lk
gimmick. It's completely inane. I'm not and hadn't yet heard a noise the liked.
WiDiams? He's from Amherst and he's - eve~ ,gOing to bring up the misogynist Kick MTV butt That's ali? Oh well.
28 or 30 and he's living in mom's
qual lUes. Frankly none of it stands up to
Of course, the more I listen to it the
basement They gotta be college . muc~ scrutiny. When I say something more I like it

J. Mascis and whoever is wiDing to put
up with him. I heard somewhere
Olympia's Donna Dresh did tour
Australia with him last year or so.
Essentially very seventies, the vocals
are heavily reminiscent of Leon Russell
(what if Leon was crossed with Chris
Elliot caught on tape carping about mom
in his basement pad. while stapling stack
of egg carton to the, paneling), and then

professors. I can smell an "alternative
education." But that's not the giveaway.
Startling images--the lyrics are
meaningless, perhaps just a distraction, a
tangent A taste of metal, the taste of a
brass key on the tip of your tongue, a
frustration,
an
unsatisfied
leftover
memory, a hash-induced slow-motion
freak-out Lazy stupid drawl, carefully
cultivated and developed.

DINOSAUJl

JR.

GIWiN MIND
REroRD LAam. (SST?)
by

is

J.

The Forest Friar by Ron Austin
5vdde",I)I- WI +'-'e
. FrnAJly- a. liltJe
d.a.to..",c..e.,o.. fo.:i>,\'"
'fiMe.
Jvst Wit..
bv.."Z"Z.j", IS hea..rd .• ·
a.~cL TH E 80eK •••
" A bu2ZIt1.3..
o h - ~o..~ve.J wha..t
Fa" I e5 0...., o..l+ ~ O\A. AI~ i ~ l-. +y :reS u oS ,
of ~a1-a..n~+ h-tlO.
thiS tiMe. ~
ehuc..l<le ••. C.ku eKle .• . ,",\IU"II'~ 'ThiS~
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regarding display and
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X6054

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&O;h.9"B o y,5. fI~Y-.,:\.\""'····

~ 0 'l~\b,l~ "
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Continued next week...

0

>

stupid, generally I recognize it as such
n0'.c:: it an~ try not to say the same· thin~ .
agam. Tl]is guy goes on tour. This guy
goes on tour. This guy makes a record
This guy is on a stupidity campaign.
suppose he's not the fIrst
So I slag the record. So what SO
it's selling miUions. Dinosaur Jr. and
Ne~ Kids ?n the Block. Sickly. Pathetic.
Whmey. :rued. Who does this attract?

. '1/

Keep )em :) o1n 9

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The Evergreen Mon-Thurs 8:30-6:00

State College

Bookstore

Friday 8:30-5:00
Satuday 10:00-2:00

SEATILE--The Seattle African Violet Society requests the honor of your presence
at the Thirty-Eighth Annual Violet Show, "Violets and Dragons." At the Center for
Urban Horticulture, University of WashinglQn campus, on Saturday May 18, 12 noon
until 6 pm and Sunday, May 19 from 12 noon until 5 pm. Free admission.

16

THURSDAY

The noisy MELVlNS stink up the North
Shore Surf Club tonight at 9, 116 East
Fifth A venue. All ages. The supporting
act is ' BRAJ:MOBILE. .
CEREMONIAL DANCE .FOR HOPE
AND HEALING is a Native American
ritual to celebrate spring, 3 to 5 pm
today in COM 110.

TUMWATER HIGH SCHOOL
700 ISRAEL ROAD
MAY 17. FRIDAY. 7PM

Th~ . HARLEQUIN PLAYERS present
theu fIrst production in 7 years--"Ten
Seconds in the Life of Fenwick Green"
and "Letters From Waldo," two short
. plays by Bryan WiDis, tonight through
May 24 (no show on May 21) at the
Washington Center .Stage II
512
Wash~gton ,Center Stage II: 512
Washmgton 10 Olympia All shows at 8
pm except the May 19 show at 2 pm.

DARYL REDEKER, "The Vashon Island
folkie with a great voice and polished
guitar work," plays the Latona Pub, 6423
Latona Avenue Northeast in Seattle
tonight at 9 pm. Call 525-2238.
'

17

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8am-

food • arts & emits
workshops' kid !un
scramble contest

Louisiana Purchase
Old Friends
Scramble
Conlest
2PM. $4.00 ·
IU~I"" •• Lonesome Winners' Sawtooth

GUS -NEWPORt
to speak on ...

'Communities under siege: from
the inner cities of the U.S. to
Palestine."

&
United Churches of Olympia
11th" Capitol .Way ·7 - 9pm

dnclade
~

of'

~
uHdt Cf}~

The Olympia Movement for Justice and Peace Presents

TESC • UBRARY LOBBY· 3-5PM

fJouoIt

PlYwk

~~~6_199L ~Limit~~.e;!'~~

"

A4da
f?euwnaI

• Former Mayor of Berkeley, 1979-86
• National Leader in African-American
Economic and Community Development
Programs
• Executive Director of Boston-based
Communily Land Trust awarded the power of
eminent domain
• National board member of : OSPIS, Palestine
Solidarity Committee and SANE/Fre!!ze

jormore .in/o call 35Z-8346

Page 12 Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

~ The Evergreen

ESt! State College

BOOKSTORE
Mon-lhlXS 8:~6:00
'. Friday 8:30-5:00
Saturday 10:00-2:00

Maarava sponsors
"BLIN1ZES AND
HOMEWORK," in honor of Shavuote,
tonight at the Edge. Food to be served
from 7 to 8 pm, donations of $2-3 will
be accepted at the door. For info call
866-6000 or stop by Library 3214.

The
SEATILE
FESTIVAL
OF
IMPROVISED MUSIC happens tonight,
tomorrow and Saturday at 9 pm,. at the
Swan Cafe and Nightclub, 608 1st
Av~ue. Admission is $6 nightly, tickets
available at Wall of Sound Records in
Belltown, Sound Affects ReCords on
Capitol Hill, The record Gallery in
Fremont, and Rubato Records in
Bellevue. Call 325-9134.

FRIDAY

GRADUATE RECORD EXAM practice
today 8 am to noon in Lecture Hall 1.
Call 866-6000 x6193 for info.

We offer a healthy variety of
delicious food and beverages
along wi th an open and clean
atmosphere. Try us for breakfast, lunch, dinner, or even
an afternoon or evening treat.

Expressive Arts. Thesis students will be
awarded a small stipend and given the
support of a team/committee, as well as
priority over contracts for equipment and
space. To qualify, you must have senior
standing for the 1991-92 academic year:
completed 36 credits in Expressive Arts
programs, and complete the Senior Thesis
form by 5 pm today. Bring your form to
COM 303A.

FILM,
PEACE,
VIDEO,
AND
SUBVERSIVES is an afternoon of films
and videos about ·labor struggles in the
Pacific Northwest after World War II
presented by the Rosalie Gittings Labo;
Education and Research Center in
conjunction with the Pacific Northwest
Labor .History Association, beginning at
2 pm 10 Lecture Hall 5. Events include
the following:
John deGraaf's video ·
Subversive ....The Terry Pettus Story. about
the Northwest ,labor leader, Michelle
. Stillings' research on Pettus, Doug
Honig's
video
on · the
Canwell
Commission, Washington State's version
of HUAC,. Betty Jean BuUert's video on
Earl ~obinson, a film survey of the
CommIttee On Un-American Activities
and a Bill Moyers video, Post-Wa;
Hopes, Cold War Fears, on the
conformity and paranoia that foliowed
World War II.
.
The
TUMWATER
BLUEGRASS
FESTIVAL yeeee-has its way into ·
Tum,,:ater High School tonight, kicking
off With a three band show with Snake
Oil! BeatsCookin', and Pumpkin Ridge
tonIght at 7 pm (doors open at 6 pm).
See additional events under Saturday
below.
The Spring Quarter International Film
Festival presents U1i Edel's "LAST EXIT
TO BROOKLYN," and Wim Wenders'
"THE. AMERICAN FRIEND" tonight at
8 and 10 pm respectively; Lecture Hall 3.

.

.

The LADY WASHINGTON, a scale
replica of a ship captained by Robert
Gmy (discoverer of Gray's Harbor), sets
sail from Percival Landing 8/.. 6 pm
tonight and tomorrow night for a 3-4
hour cruise around south Puget Sound.
The fee is $30 per person, including

21

TUESDAY

CISPES presents "MARIA'S STORY," a
portrait of El Salvadorian rebel Maria
Serrano, tonight at the Capitol TheSter, 9
pm. $3 admission.
This
.
musical envoy
Committee to Intervene
Anywhere, aka Dave Lippman, satirist at large-. Catch his new show
"Clearcutting the Gulf," Saturday night at B.in the Library Lobby. photo courtesy
EPIC and OMJP

.

complimentary beverages and hors
d'oeuvres. Limit of 40 people per cruise.
To register visit the Olympia Center, 222
North Columbia in Olympia, or dial the
Olympia
Parks
and
Recreation
Department at 753-8~80.
Seattle's NORWEGIAN CONSTITUTION
DAY celebration kicks off with a
Syttende Mai Luncheon and Program in
Leif Erikson Hall, 2245 NW 57th Street
in Seattle. For info on that and other
events of the day, call 783-1274.
SARAH WHIPPLE's "Chairs and Things"
show opens today 5 to 8 pm at the
~hildhood's End Gallery, 222 West 4th
m Olympia, and ruils through June 21.
HOUSING'S
MOONS PLASH LIVE
MUSIC FEST kicks serious butt starting
at 6 pm tonight, with GOAT KNUT
HERD OF · TIJRTLES, RED EYE
SPECIAL
FEATURING
SHUCKY
FORME, CAPPING DAY, AFRISOUND,
BRAVE NEW WORLD, SOUND DOGS,
NUBBIN,
HELLT.ROUT,
MEDDAPHYSICAL, AND SKIN YARD
going all through the night. Go to
E.vergreen Fields 1 and 2 if the weather's
DIce, the GooeyDome if the weather's not
so nice.

18

SATURDAY

The
TIJMWATER
BLUEGRASS
FESTIVAL continues today at Tumwater
High School with an Arts & Crafts Fair
from 8 am to 9 pm, a Scramble Contest
at 1 pm, an Old Time Gospel Show at 2
pm. Featured bands are Queens,
Lonesome Dove and Sawtooth in' the
afternoon, Louisiana Purchase, Old
Friends, Sawtooth, and the winners of the
Scramble Contest (go figure). Ticket
prices are $~ advance, $7 at the door, $4
for Saturday, and $5 each for groups of
10 or more (advl!Jlce only), and free for
kids 12 and under. Tickets available at
Tumwater Bands, the Tumwater Bailey's
G & G Drugs, the TUmwater Chamber
Office, . M~ical Concepts, Music 6000,
and Ramy Day Records. Call 357-9220
or 357-5153.
DAVE LIPPMAN is not blind and he is
also not George Stump, the moderate
timber lobbYist, or George Shrub, singing
CIA agent, but it's always fun to ·pretend.
His new show "Clearcutting die 'Gulf'
comes to Evergreen 8 pm Saturday, May
18 at the Library Lobby. Sliding scale
admission $5-8, and don't fCX'get the
"Surprise Sideshow With Exciting Raffle
~!!!l.?l!"
Proceeds benefit the
Olympia . Movement for Justice aDd

Peace. Call H66-6000 x6144 or 357-8346.
The incomparable saxophonist BERT
WILSON brings his horns and his
bluminished dues to the Columbia Street
Public House at 200 West 4th, downtown
Olympia. Call 943-5575.
The Sixth Annual HAZO DAY is today,
courtesy the Thurston County Public
Health and Social Services Department,
from 9 am to 4 pm in the South Sound
Center Parking Lot Bring your old,
unwanted household chemicals and
d~spose of them safely. Bring pesticides,
oil-based paints, paint-related materials
such as thinner, solvents
stains
adh~sives, etc., wood pr~ervatives:
furmture strippers, spray cans of cleaners
and pesticides, antifreeze, flashlight,
watch and calculator batteries, and car
batteries. Do not bring business or
commercial waste of any kind, latex paint
(donate latex paiJ)t to schools or theater
groups, or let it dry completely in a wellventilated area, then throw in regular
garbage), containers holding more than
five gaUons of waste, explosives,
ammunition, radioactive waste, large,
compressed cylinders, or used oil (call 1800-RECYCLE for list of businesses that
accept used oil). Come to the South
Sound Center, northeast comer of the
mall parking lot, off Sleater-Kinney Road
in Lacey.
For info call 786-5457 or 1-800-6241234.
And when you're finished detoxifying the
home, shag those 5-ton bags of cut grass
to the YARD WASTE DROP-OFF at the
City of Olympia Fire Department
Training Center behind City Hall, at 10th
Avenue Southeast, from 10 am to 4 pm.
The entrance to the site is off Eastside
Street. Bring grass clippings, leaves, sod
and small brush, tree limbs up to 6
inches in diameter and up to 8 feet long.
Do not bring dirt, rock, boards, stumps or
large tree limbs, lumber, fence posts, or
household garbage. City of Olympia
residents only, please. For info call 753,8360.
EXPRESSIONS OF THE EXPRESSIVE
ARTS tonight in the Recital Hall at 9
pm, featuring a onCo'act play about the
hardships of coming out, a dance piece
on Rap, and Seattle poet Alison Murchie
reading some of her work. The show is
free, seating is fIrSt come first served.
Call 866-4231 for info,

19

SUNDAY

Deadline today to submit your Utesis for
the ' SENIOR THESIS PROGRAM in

CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE group

meets most Tuesday mornings at the
Capital Museum . Coach House. "Both
talkers and listeners are welcome." Call
the Museum Education Department at
753-1998 for booklist and more info.
GUS NEWPORT, former mayor of
Berkeley,
e7;ecutive
director
of
Community Land Trust, national board
. member, CISPES, Palestine Solidarity
Committee and SANE/Freeze, speaks on
"Communities Under Siege: From the
Inner Cities of the U.S. to Palestine."
today at 3-5 pm in the Evergreen Library
Lobby and again from 7-9 pm at the
United Churches of Olympia. Call 3578346.

WEDNESDAY
ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS
,meet every Wednesday from 5:30 pm to
7:30 pm in Library 2103.
The
RACHEL
CARSON
ENVIRONMENTAL FORUM is today at
7 pm in Lecture Hall 1. Victor Lewis of
California's Urban Habit Program speaks
on "Why the Earth Can't Wait: Race,
Poverty, and Environmental Justice,"
Patricio Contreras, classical and Latin
guitarist, will open the Forum at 7,
Victor will start at 8 pm. Also, Victor
wiD be participating in a workshop at
3:30 that same day called "Building
Alliances: Breaking Barriers of Race and
Class." Call 866-6000 x6479.

23

THURSDAY

ACf UP meets the first and third
~ursday of every month at 6 pm, in
LIbrary 3500. Call 866-6000 x6144.
RINK-STYLE ROLLERSKATING from
7-9 pm in the Pavilion, that's the big sort
of sunk in the earth thing over by the
Mods where they used to hold graduation
when it rained but now they have the
Moneydome for that Enjoy. I'll bet
money Rene Famell shows up.
Tsao Yu's "Thunderstorm" plays in the
COM Building at 8 pm. Free.
Seattle mods and Portland rockers meet
when MoNkEy BuSiNeSs, the THIN
MEN, and THRILLHAMMER play at the
North Shore Surf Club, 9 pm tonight at
116 East Fifth Avenue in Olympia. $5,
all ages.
~S F ALLOPIA, aka Peggy Platt and
Llsa Koch, a comedic revue in black
s'Yeaters y and shad<:s, visit the Evergreen
Library LObby tonIght at 7 pm. Tickets
, lire $6 for students, $7 general. For info
call 866-6000 x6544.

Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

Page 13

Forum

u.s~

--

- - - --------------- -

------------------

and Peru, blanie the U.S. for the recent
militarization. "The anti-U.S. protest movement is in
its most radical stage ever· right now,"
Barrios said.
Many political observers, here in .
L,atin America, believe ' that this iricreased
anti~U.S . sentiment was only aggravated
by the U.S. war on 1Iaq. Such use of the
military for economic , and political
advantage has Latin America more fearful
of a U.S. invasion than ever before.
This fear was only strengthened
wh~. on ..yril 8; U.S. General Colin
Powell visited President Cristiani of EI
Salvador. Powell stated that, "The U.S. is
not abandoning a possible direct anned '
incursion in EI Salvador."
, Also in reaction to the Bush
militarization plan, the Catholic church of
Bolivia condemned the strategy, and
blamed both the Bush administration and
the Bolivian congress. Archbishop Luis
Sainz of La PaZ, Bolivia accused the

United States of , fighting a social and
economic
problem
with
"violent
measures."
Currently an estimated 150,000
peasantS in Solivia alone live ' off the
cultivation of cocoa. The events of the
p8st' few , weeks tulve served to visibly
unite them, and have prepared them for
what ' many see as inevitable...8 war in
South America
Many political and economical
observers here in South America are
critical of the Bush ' administration's
strategy. Witb l4t1e or ' no economic
alternatives for most -of this ~gion, the
only visible outcome is ' the "backing into
a corner" of the Bolivian peasant A
corner in which, these peasants are
willing to kill or be killed to get out of.

stood and clapped and then sat down
again.
A gentleman came and said
goodbye to us but no one left Hundreds
of people just remained seated for a time.
That is what happens when we are' with
something or someone who is beautiful.
Mter a feast for the soul it is difficult to
go about your business.
Marie Bernard

etemaI

--

-------

--

-

Comics

sending Green Berets to ·Bolivia

Bolivia.
by Paul Slusher
U.S. military officials have avidly
The United States military is
beginning to send its troops into South denied that the Green Berets will be used
America. primping us for yet another in any combat scenarios. They claim that
regional war.
the 56 members will serve solely as a
56 Green Berets have arrived in training squad for "light infantry tactics .,
Bolivia during the past few ·weeks. and the M-16A2 automatic rifle."
'
AcCompanying this 56-man. team was a
This recent move by the Bush
U.S. C-5 Galaxy cargo plane and a administration has sent a $hock wave
payload of 90 tons of explosives and through Latin America, with some rather
munitions.
unsettling reactions.
'
Bush administration officials continue
Peasant workers in many of the
to deny that any additional warfare cocoa growing ' regions have publicly
equipment has been sent to BOlivia by . responded by pledging ,an . anned
the CIA, or any other U.S. agency.
resistance to any attacks on ~ crops.
On April 20, the United Federation of
Military strategists in the United
Bolivian Peasant Workers announced that
States have had their economic and
they hope to build 'a self-defense anny to
political eye on Bolivia for some time.
Bolivia being the second largest producer protect their crops as well.
Raul Barrios, an author on U.S.of cocaine in the world.
It was only quite recently that the Bolivian relations, recently commented
that "there is a great danger of violence"
Bolivian Congress, economically coerced
in Bolivia right now. He said that many
by threat of aid and loan cutoffs, voted
people in Bolivia, as well as Columbia"
to allow the small training force into

-

3 New £
CA~7J OPeN
IN THE L08f3Y of. THE co"",
BUILDING", alaNGINu 771£
CAMPUStVIl.'£ COr:F£E-CA/?T
WTAl TV 177_ NO G'REfNERevER. SLEEPs A6J\TAJ.

Paul Slusher is an Evergreen studelll
continuing his education in Peru.

Response
network, from page 8

Eduardo Galeano
stills crowd

and recognize phenomenal commitment of
those individuals, although we must admit
we did not come close to recognizing all
Today (registering to register) fatigue
Evergreen volunteers. Please feel free to had crept into my body before 10 am I
get involved in planned National had been preoccupied with petty things
Volunteer Week program for next year or such as "should I bring my pillow?" and
even just provide names of those "is 6 am too late to get in line?" On the
individuals you think should be way back to my room and homework I
recognized.
saw the sign "Eduardo Galeano."
The office exists as a support
Nothing can deter me from listening
network for those students working on to a master singer. Even my resolve to
community projects in the local region only swdy, only be diverted by
(especially spring quarter) and even those necessities, only to listen to women this
persons with basic interests to seek year was shaken by the thought of
agencies which match their volunteer missing a skillful poet
objectives. This brief update is an
I went to the theater and sank into a
invitation to all, encouraging your chair. The doors need to be taped so
participation in Community Network that
Iatecoming arrivals are not
Organization, to access information or announced by a resounding click.
even intern or volunteer for Community Someone blew their nose and others
Network Office events or activities. I
shifted but around us all, this man wove
know many have been unaware of CNO a great pattern. His voice was modulated
existence, but now is the time to get to match the room and people, his body
involved. The Community Network Office so carefully controlled to give only the
is open to all student input. It's your . desired expressions and yet there was no
office folks. Stop by and chat, ask feeling of contrivance or manipulation.
questions or seek advice from Teri
The messages of hope and love, of
Ram sauer, CNO advisor, in L3234 at justice lacking and just plain people being
x6428 or Erin Gould, CNG coordinator in and above all the sharp humor softened
L3213 at x6556.
by his reading voice, were marvelous.
Thank you everyone for bringing us
such a fme workman. Senor Galeano
spoke for one hour Tuesday evening. He
used the words war, oppression, and the
poor once. When he was fmished we all

Another Christian
voice speaks
The May 9 issue of the CPJ gave
much more space to Satan than to God,
this may correct the imbalance. It also
replies to Nemo, Satan's disciple. (Yes, I
noted the reversal of "omen," like "evil,"
and "live." So?)
Christian do not surrender judgment,
though we try. God's judgment is better
than ours, just as a loving parent's
judgment is bener than a child's. A child
wants to hold light, a parent knows it is
a flame. The parent warns the child. But
the child. "knowing better," grasps
anyway and is ,hurt. In time, the child
knows the parent wants to protect and
help. Christians know human wisdom is
insufficient Bjlt like children, we rely on
ourselves instead of God. The original
sin, and all sins, arise from this.
Christians ,do not worship death. We
celebrate Christmas and Easter, birth and
re-birth, death's opposite and death's
defeat. We find worship of mortal life
limited, deat,h and life are part of the

mystery. Some clues: "God,"
"Love" and "Immortality," or "Father,"
"Son," and "Holy Spirit"
Christians do not fand things or
pleasure evil, but temporary. Making ,
them vital is evil., It inteIferes in
communion with God, or "worship."
When bodies die, things 'and pleasure dIe.
It a soul is not God's, it cannot survive
death. God wants us to go beyond fun
and joy--fun that celebrates God.
The church is often mistaken for
Christianity
itself.
Christians, like
Communism, hasn't been tried. Churches
are run ' by humans, theri histories are
sinful. Only God can answer grieving
mothers. However, some demand that
Christians be God, able to explain and
justify the unknowable.
Christians do not fmd the universe
neutral, good or evil; God made it. living
in the universe is our concern coping
with our good/evil selves. Hitler could
have stayed a draftsman and Gandhi a
lawyer, but they chose other work. Their
choices affected others, as all choices do.
Why didn'i God stop Hitler and help
Gandhi? Free will. God respects our
freedoni of choice. We may even deny
God and worship another, or not worship
at all. The choices, and consequences, are
and accept the world
ours. Christians
as it is, but don't stop there. ' W~ strive
for something better. The task will never
be done, but trying is everything.
Sylvia Darko

see

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866-6CXJ0)(6054 CQ
STOP BY/9HD ~O TO ~
CPJ. LB 250. YMPIA WA

CLAg9W:IED ADg!

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[ ®Jt_-]

985D5.

PROTECT OUR BEAUTIFUL,
IIALUABLE OPEN SPAC!:SI VOTE ,
~es MAY 28th FOR OPEN PARKS &
)LYMPIA'S GREEN SPACES LEVY-To help campaign call 753-0067

L IFE srYLti~ of ' THE
THE" 'W flltTEVE IlS 'T",I(E'

,

Page 14 Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

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Andy's World by Andy

~

~

FOUND: Siberian Husky on Ruddell Road.
Call 10 identify. 491-5078.
FOR SALE: 1967 Plymouth Fury III.
IFr.
pupp_ to good home. Very cute rott,
Automatic, 4 doors. Runs well. $550
bie &lab mix. Call 754-5714.
or BRO. King Silver Trombone.
FOUND: SilY8r bracelet with stones,binoculars,
Sterling Bell. Travel case. $450 or
1i8Mljaa
thermos,
other items. Call Security ~
BRO. Call Joe at 352-1759.
x6140, desa'ibe to claim.
HOU~E~ATE WANTED to fill the
FOliNO AT TESC: VERY FRIENDLY,
other-half
of a 2 bedroom apartment in VERY CUTE GREY CRCX>KED TAILED
~ FOR SALE: 1974 Volkswagen Beetle, FOR SALE: Smith Corona Personal Cooper's Glen this summer. Prefer
FEMALE KITIEN. BOX-TRAINED'AND
black: new paint job, new clutch, rebuilt Word Processor iooo. Does typing or male, quiet, clean, NON-SMOKING
EAGER TO GO HOME OR TO A NEW
engine, AMlFM stereo cassette. Asking word processing, two disks with
' essential. $205/mo. Call 866-3775.
HOME.
PLEASE CAll 956-3813.
$1500 o.b.o. Contact Paul at 866-4280. storage for 40 papers each, large
FOUND
wallet in 1st IIoor CAB women's rast
FREE
SUMMER
RENT.
We
seek
display screen, spell cheek, etc. Call
room. Contact campus security to claim.
studi%ne
bedroom
apartment
for
t~e
Tammy 866-2343.
~ 78 Puch Moped. Excellent condition,
LOST adlh neutered male cat. Large, lIuffy,
summer. We'll keep your apartment
Speakers: 2 ESSlAM-1 towers, from wandering off while you go home, mostly tan. Last seen Apr1I4 near ASH
low miles, $250. 866-9136 .•
44x17 heil air rootion $stem.
Apartments. Please call 866-9733 if you've
to intemship,plus pay your rent.
5-400 watts of power. 1200
seen him.
FOR SALE: computer, 286116 MHz,
Int.ested? 866-1~.
new. $400 firm also 2 EPI~lJ 1MB RAM, 40MB HD, monitor, 101
i:,.. pu ..... to good home. V8J"f cute rot!.
Room available on Westside. for'
100's bookseH size speakers
keybd, softwr inc!. $650. 866-8010.
~Iobilt &lab mix. Call 754-5714:
'
summer. House (6n bullHne near
$125. Call ,357-6898
WaHet
found
on
campus
near
library
loop. Cal
Handy Pantry) on 1.6 acres with pond, '
75 VESPA 1600 cc completely
10
ideentify.
866-769.
gardens, woods, streams, etc. Rent
reconditioned. $1200- 943-4747 days,
~ree picnic tabI8 with 4 benches. First come,
rCD8BAiti
~)(O" $200/month + 115 utilities. Available
III
943-6044 evenings.
nstl8Mt.866-6129.
immediately. Call 956-3621.

IApple J[e Computer Syatemfor
isale.,Everything you need to do lots and
ots of stuff. Printer tool Free delivery,
[. 1 .. 1'nstallation
and training. Please call after
pm and keep trying if rm not home.
~66-1453.
'

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CLAgg~D QAT£S:
30 wor~ or ~s: $3.00
10 cent:s for each crlit.iona word
~-PAY~NT Q£GUJ;£D
C1~ified Deacline: 2 pm Monday

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Cooper Point Journal May 16, 1991

Page lS

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