The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 20 (April 11, 1991)

Item

Identifier
cpj0525
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 20 (April 11, 1991)
Date
11 April 1991
extracted text
Evergreen result of 60's vomit,


SEEPAGE is so very pleased, young 9 nes.

'Each wee k I g r ow i n stature and

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magnamlnlty. My presence 'rocks the o a ks to their roots and my blazon burns

Spring Flowers

.

Freeboxfire. fills
CAB with smoke

Do spring flowers say to you
Words unsaid though true?
Their message is one of cheer
Apparent and so clear.
Daisies orange, and yellow, too
Abundant, mixed with blue
Finding way to rise to earth
Showing beauty and their worth.

Ceiling and
walls blackened

Theophelia



by Claire Littlewood
One-thousand ceiling tiles and
approximately 10 gallons of water later,
the free-box CAB fire of March 24, was
under control.
"It was maliciously set," said Captain
Patti, fireman from the McLane Fire
Department Although the flIe marshal's
report has not yet been filed, Patti said
no ttace of accelerants were found, "It
could · have been started with paper,
cigarettes, or just a match."
George
Leago,
maintenance
supervisor, came to work Monday
morning, March 25, to find he and his
crew had a lot of cleaning up ahead of
them. "It was a mess. The walls were
blackened with smoke. You wouldn't
have recognized it," said Leago.
According to Leago the fire was
localized within a 12 ft. radius, "I would
say most of it was smoke damage."
Initially, Captain Patti estimated the
cost of damage at $200,000. Patti said he
based his estimate on the size of the
building, amount of smoke, and .the fact
that the Greenery, Deli, and Bookstore



Wipeout #4

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Tarzan swings upon a vine
Made of stronger stuff than twine,
The jungle hears his mighty yell,
A warning clear as any bell.
Jane, she tries to cope with his
Mighty thews and bulging fists
But still his insane angers issues
When they're out of toilet tissues.

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You told me you loved me
But I know that's a lie
You told me you needed me
But you told me goodbye
And your fire burns lies in my heart

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Kisses of fire
.
Heating the flesh
Burning your mind
You're mine without end
A victim of lust
Chained to life'S rumpled bed
And your fire burns lies in my heart
Like a wasted amber phoenix
Love has burned away
Wings mounted with soot
Feathers bedecked with ash
The last embers turned grey
And you fire burns lies in my heart

Heart beating bleeding
A rabbit clutched
In the talons
Of your smoking passion
Soaring in victory
At rrzy conquest
And your fire burns lies in my heart

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Stand or be alone
in the first occurrence
of death
Feel soft feathers
embers floating on the
wind whipped furiously to
strike with the sensory
image of invisible thin
razor blades
They now occupy your
space 'in the void
a whorling vortex of
incandescent nothings
painting a spray of tiny
red droplets upon your
flesh
This is how
the new savior was
inJtiated
birth came from death
and into the ceremony as
a shapeless mound
of human substance
slowly taking form under
the chisel of god-fury
Death
creative death

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Area where freebox stood before being burned by vandals. photo courtesy
Evergreen Security

RIDDLE:

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Multicultural reprn-sentati9n

How many Greeners does it ta ke to
screw in a lightbu l b?

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ANSWER:

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One, just like any other
co l lege undergradua t e, damnit .

B)

Zero--Greener's use
homemade parrafin candles and
don't support big indu s try
(especially G.E. 1)

C)

Four. On e to suggest t he bulb
be changed, one to overburden
the ensuing seminar with odd
references to "Western Culture",
and two to organize the potluck.

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by Claire

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Anything

THIS WEEKS RUMINATION:

A roulette rookie
with a dead dick's eye
haywire hands
a violent shrug's puppets
in a shaky man's stab
a thin dice try

If you feel small and angry
in the shadow of what you may
feel to be the giant of American
government, try this. Around
11:00 at night when the pizza man
comes, realize that George Bush is
asleep, in D.C., at 2:00am. What do
his pajamas look like? Is he in the
semi-fetal position? And even ... of
what does he dream?

a quick fix sloppy joe nose dive
last ditch onion eye hitter switch
scrambled egg tear jerks
a lockjaw jury's untouched potluck
lost cause blindfold gauze
weaves through loose drooling
pigeon holes



Molly McCloy

This weeks Creature Feature, The Ligress,
was drawn for a tattoo by Heidi Markert.

PAIN is so easy to ...
Attain .

Sri

Li~lewood

Last week Evergreen sbJdents, staff,
and faculty actively debated the validity
and
purpose
of
multicultural
representation on the Presidential Search
Committee. The exchange took place
during an open meeting of a D1F
charged with defining the composition of
the Search Committee.
At issue were two plans .that would
guarantee diverse groups at Evergreen a
voice in committee member selection and
committee representation.
In the preamble to his plans, D1F
member Eugene Fujimoto emphasized
that the composition of the Presidential
Search Committee must go beyond
representing sbJdents, faculty, staff,
alumni, and community members .
"In order for this to be a successful,
inclusive search process, groups that have
been historically denied aCcess must also
be an integral part of it," Fujimoto,
director of First Peoples, said.
Representation must be based on
protected classes recognized by the
federal government, Fujimoto said in the
preamble.
Those are women, disabled, veterans,
African-Americans,
Native ·
Americans/Indians, Chicano/Latinos and
Asian-Americans. Fujimoto said he also
would add Gays/Lesbians.
One of his plans also would
guarantee the Tacoma Campus a vote in
selecting committee members.
The debate basically broke down
into two camps: those who supported
Fujimoto's draft proposals, and those who
didn't
The emphasis needs to be more on
selecting "wise" committee members than
on cultural representation said TESC
faculty Paul Matt. He wondered why
students, faculty, and staff do not trust
one another to make decisions for the
Evergreen community.
""; S K

Page 16 Cooper Point Journal March 14, 1991

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TESC
faculty,
Alan
Nasser,
questioned why the two plans did not
include Arab Americans. Nasser described
the two plans as "morally objectionable."
Lila Hi1al, an Evergreen sbJdent,
also questioned lack of Arab American
representation. Otherwise, Hilal said, she
supported the plans.
Lee Hoemann, staff member for the

,'"" .- ~- .~'

debatea'''~
Process D1F. "There's no best answer."
"What I've seen here is that people
are not willing to compromise" said
Hoemann. She hopes that this search does
result in a failed search as it did before
the college hired fonner President Joe
Olander. "That's a lot of wasted effort"
said Hoemann.
Claire Ultlewood is a staff writer for
the CPJ.

Survey ,s hows TESC grads do well
Survey by Paul Mott aDd Steve Hunter
A survey of alumni and their
supervisors (employers or graduate school
faculty) shows Evergreen graduates do
well in the outside world. The survey is
part of a project to asses Evergreen.
Alumni and their supervisors were
asked how well Evergreen prepared
students in eight different areas. The
survey
also asked the alumni's
supervisors to compare Evergreen
graduates to graduates of other colleges.
The survey resUlts suggest that
Evergreen should focus more attention on
preparing sbJdents for the transition to the
work world. The alumni specifically
suggested that more time be spent in
Academic Advising and the classroom
helping sbJdents prepare for a world that
often operates differently than Evergreen.
Also, the alumni suggested students spend
more time in internships and be given
more infonnation about jobs and how to
interview for them.
Out of 1171 randomly ' selected
graduates from the years 1985-1988, 771
responded and were interviewed over the
telephone.
To the right is a small sample of the
survey's results.
The complete survey results are
available from Ubrary Reserve.

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Presidential Search Process D1F, said
following the public meeting, "I was real
pleased that there were as many people
as there were, because at the ftrst
meeting only three people showed up,
considerable
and that was with
advertising. "
"It's been a very complicated issue,"
said Hoemann of the Presidential Search

were in the vicinity.
Serve-Pro, an outside contractor
brought in by the college to assess the
damage, gave a ball-park estimate of
$8,000. Leago said the cost to date is
$}3,963, the money coming from
Maintenance and Facilities budget.
It took about three days, with both
Facilities and Custodial staff working
around the clock, to get the area c~ed
up. "We had to repaint the walls, and
'replace ceiling tiles. There was a lot to
be done," said Leago. "We're basically
understaffed all the time. So, when
something like this happens it takes away
from other things we should be doing."
Leago feels that vandalism has
increased within the nine years he has
worked for the college, "The thing that
bothers me is just the senselessness of it.
Why anyone would want to do that."
Capt. Patti recommended that if the
free box is to be replaced that it be made
of non-combustible materials and have a
lid. He also suggested the free box
should be moved away from a stairwell.
Although the CAB building was
locked up at night, the week of the fire
clean-up, it is now open again 24 hours
a day.
Claire Littlewood is staff writer for
the CPJ.

.



Employer/Faculty Comparison Ratings:
TESC Grad with Comparison Person

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Much Beller
Somewhat Bew:r
Same
Somewha l Worse

D . Much Worse

0%

Writing

100%

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Critical
Thinkin~

Listening and
Underslandin~

Thfory with

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Inlegrale
Inrormation
Lrarnin~

New Skills

How Well Prepared in Skill Areas:
Distribution of Ratings
Writin&
Alumni

0%

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Very Web! (~ )
Fair.y Web! (3)

CZI Not Too Woll

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CJ NotatAIl Wd ) ( Il

25%

100%

75%

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--~~N~E~W~S~B~R~IE~F~S-----Quote of the Week

Olander teaching
science fiction in
Australia
AUSTRALIA--The latest Joe Olander
sighting finds TESC's ex-president at
Queensland College in Rockhampton,
Australia, as reported by Peter Brock of
the El Paso Herald-Post. Joe is teaching
"science fiction" at Queensland and is lecturing on a college circuit about
"Refonns and Delusions in Higher
Education."
On his new resume, Olander uses
Governor Booth Gardner as a job
reference. When asked about this,
Gardner said that he did give Olander
permission to use his name, but .promised
to be "straight-forward" in his report
about the Evergreen incident if ever
asked to write a recommendation.
Why is El Paso interested in Joe
Olander's whereabouts? Before coming to
Evergreen, Olander was vice president of
the University of Texas EI Paso where he
was "celebrated as a space-age eccentric
and is best remembered for donning a
Darth Vader costume before leaving
UTEP."

"Evergreen offers a four-year college degree to ~yone who
wants one... Students dress like hippies and protest
anything they can. The campus looks like the Sixties [sic]
came back to life and threw up on It..A lot of Evergreen
students like to claim they were accepted at UW but
chose Evergreen because it was better. We all know the
truth, but no one says anything."
Fonner Evergreen student James Pierce, now enrolled at the University of
Washington, describing Evergreen in the UW newspaper The Daily.

Higher education '
receives surplus
OL YMPIA--Governor Booth Gardner
proposed allocating more than a third of
the state's revenue-forecast increase to the
state's
colleges
and
universities,
dramatically improving their overall
funding for the 1991-93 biennium.
Gardner would allocate $85 million
of an estimated $226 million in newly
available revenues to higher education,
reducing its proposed cuts in the next
biennium from 6 percent to 3 percent.
This $85 million includes $68 million to
restore cuts proposed in Gardner's
December request; $2 million for timber
worker training through the community

Security Blotter
Sunday, March 31
0006: A report was received that several
high school students had tipped over the
large cement ashtrays between the CRC
and the CAB .
0451: The tires were slashed on two
vehicles in F-Lot.
1658: Two transients, originally thought
to be students, started a fire behind the
reservoir.
Monday, April -}
0846: The Print Shop reports recelvmg
unusual phone calls, hang-ups and
breathing, for the past 8 months.
0950: The air was released from the tires
on a vehicle in F-Lot
1239: Oil on a stove burner caused a fire
alarm in Q-Dorm.
Tuesday, April 2
0534: A woman reported a naked white
male outside the Housing Community
Center running around and screaming.
The man was taken into custody by
Thurston County.
Wednesday, April 3
0016: Security disposed of a blanket with
various bodily fluids currently in a white

plastic bag.
Thursday, April 4
1215: A vehicle was vandalized in FLot.
1312: Obscene graffiti was reported
across from Library 1302.
1355: A vchicle in F-Lot was broken
into, a stcreo and ski equipment were
stolen.
'1445: A vehicle was vandalized and
various items were stolen, including the
stereo and CD player.
Friday, AprilS
2210: A vehicle in F-Lot was vandalized.
1710: Water was determined to be the
cause of a power outage in Modular
Housing.
Saturday, April 6
0352: A fire alarm in Q-Dorm was
activated by the pull station located on
the exterior of the building.
Sunday, April 7
It was a relatively quiet day at security.
Campus security performed 43 public
services
(locks/unlocks,
jumpstarts,
escorts, etc.).

colleges; $9 million for work-force
training through the community colleges
for targeted populations; $1 million for
incremental
salary
increases
for
community college faculty; $3.5 million
for financial aid; and $1.5 million to
update vocational-technical institute data
systems.
"We've made some significant
advances in our colleges and universities
over the past six years, and it's important
to me to maintain that commitment to
excellence," Gardner said.

PNN available at
Peace Center
EVERGREEN--If you're interested
in the news that Gannet doesn't find "fit
to print," then you should check out the
Peace News Network, available through
TESC's Peace Center.
PNN is published independently in
Seattle and is sent to Evergreen's Peace

ACUPUNCTURE
PETER G. WHITE, C.A.
Covered by EvergreeniHortford Insurance
Questions. Consultations - Appointmenls
Radiance 113 E. 5th Olympia 357·9470

. 513 Capitol Way

N'ews

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.

.

.

'Palestinian ambassador ' discusses war

Center every week. In each issue there
are articles discussing current national
news, the Persian Gulf War, and a
calendar of upcoming ' peace events. The
current and past issues can be found
outside the Peace Center ,door (it's on the
3rd floor of the Library).

by Scot Wheat
--it is embodied in many U.N. resolutions
and represents the
will of the
The following are excerpts from a
international community ...
discussion with Mousa Amer Odeh, the
Our position was that, if the
Palestinian ambassador to Nicaragua,
which took place in Managua, Nicaragua
conference was mentioned in many U.N.
on February 6.
resolutions, it can not be, and never will
First, I would like to thank you for
be, an award for the aggressor--especially
the opportunity you have provided for me
since the call for this international
to meet with 'you tonight. I would like to
conference existed long before the Iraqi
take this opportunity to reaffIrm the
invasion of Kuwait
Palestinian position, of the slate of
... We can say that president Hussein
Palestine, concerning the war in the
gained a lot by bringing this maller up,
Persian Gulf...
especially after it was rejected by the
... We know that there are problems
U.S. administration. I'm sure you all
between Iraq and Kuwait, very old
know that huge demonstrations broke out
problems which go back to the , in almost all of the Arab countries--not
establishment of Kuwait as a sovereign
supporting Saddam's invasion, but
state. We have always tried to find
supporting his ideas about finding a
peaceful solutions to these problems-solution to the cause of Palestine by
even after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
calling for the implementation of U.N.
We also tried to find an Arab solution
resolutions.
under United Nation auspices.
At the same time, Arab people
The arrival of Foreign forces to Saudi became more aware of the incredibility of
Arabia only complicated the problem--it U.S.
policy
towards the
Middle
did not help to maintain stability or work
East...After five months, the United States
towards a peaceful solution. While Iraq
decided to wage this war against Iraq, in
insisted on continuing its occupation of order to implement, as they said, U.N.
Kuwait, we were also faced with the
resolutions. Well, particularly on the issue
position of the U.S. administration, which
of Palestine, we have never seen such
was constantly refusing any peaceful
enthusiasm on the part of the U.S. to
initiatives to solve this problem.
implement U.N. resolutions before.
The Palestinian role became more
There are dozens of U.N. resolutions
important after President Saddam Hussein concerning the cause of Palestine which
declared that one of his conditions to
have existed for 40 years now, and the
withdraw from Kuwait was finding a
U.S. has done nothing except back Israel
solution to the Palestinian problem by
in their refusal to implement these
convening an international conference for
resolutions. Moreover, the U.S. always
peace.
uses itl veto powers in the Security
President Bush refused this condition
Councif to prevent any condemnation of
and said that convening an international
Israeli policy in the occupied territories ...
conference for peace would be rewarding
...Concerning the concept of the
the aggressor. However, convening an
occupation of territory by force, we can
international conference on the issue of
see the double standard of U.S. policy
Palestine was not invented or created by
very clearly. Iraq is now being destroyed
Saddam Hussein
under the pretext of invading Kuwait,

Express' door
experiment ends .
EVERGREEN--The Express Door
entrance to the CRC closed on March 25,
1991. The Express Door entrance was an
experiment meant to cut down on the
number of CRC patrons entering the
building without being counted. Statistics
for building use are used to justify the
eRC's budget to the S&A Board, adjust
staffing schedules, and project income
from outside 'sources.
The Express Door experiment
succeeded in giving a somewhat more
accurate count of TESC students, faculty
and staff, but it did not succeed in
stopping unauthorized entry. This became
especially apparent during the late
afternoon and evening hours on weekdays
and on weekends.
The only entrance to the CRC will
be
the
main
entrance
by
the
gymnasium/business office. The other
doors to the CRC will have activated
door alarms.

BROWSER'S
BOOKSHOP
WE WILL
BUY YOUR
BOOKS

Fine
Coffees of
rpassed
Quality

Fresh
Roasted
Daily

"'

Q: Could you discuss the conditions in

territories. We have been demanding this
protection for a long tim~, but we believe
that it is even more urgent now.
We will continue to demand this
protection until Palestinian people are
able to regain their national rights, and to
regain self-detennination, which are
inalienable rights.

the occupied territories since the
outbreak of war?
The Palestinian people in the
occupied territories have been living in a
big prison since the outbreak of war. A
curfew has been enforced since the frrst
day of the war. People have not been
able to go to work. There is lack of
medicine and food. Even sick people
need special pennits in order to go to
clinics or hospitals.
Therefore, we believe that it is very
important to provide U.N. protection for
the people living in the occupied

Q: How do you feel about the peace
movement in Israel?
We have always been aware of the
peace forces in Israel and we support
them--not by any material means, of
course, but we support their ideas. We
respect any movement that acknowledges
the rights of the Palestinian people. We
appreciate the courage of these peace
activists in Israel, who confront the
terrorism of the Israeli state.
Evergreen student Scot Wheat recently
returned from South America.

whereas an international conference for
peace is being totally refustid, although
this conference aims to implement U.N.
resolutions concerning the occupation of
territory by force in 1967 by the state of
Israel...

Earth Day strives for
ecological balance
by Gita Moulton
Earth Day 1991 will focus on living
in balance with the land and at peace
with the earth and each other on April 20
and 21.
Since the City of Olympia has
accepted a challenge from the Department
of Ecology to become Washington's first
model for a "sustainable city," the events
of Saturday, April 20 will revolve around
exploring this concept.
Look for more information in next
week's CPl.
Gita Moultan is one of lhe organizers
of the local Earth Day celebration_

,

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Page 2 Cooper Point Journal April 11, 1991

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EXPIRES APRIL 30,1991

--~-----------Cooper Point Journal April 11, 1991

Page 3

News '
. .

'

'My answer inakes... as, much Sense as ' your ,question'
by Inga Musico
I: Tell me about the ring on your finger.
L: Oh, it's a wedding ring. It's got an
inscription in it and everything. ' (Shows
interviewer inscription, which reads, ,"We
shall rejoice through all Seasons. ") I was
single for a long time ... and appropriately,
I married a Greener.
I: Which one?
L: Her name is Helen Nahoopii, in the
Hawaiian language, you pronounce every
vowel.
I: Been to Hawaii?
L: Ya, I usta go there a lot. My entire
professional career has been in higher
education.
I: What reminds you of a used car?
L: What do you mean, "What reminds
me of a used car?" I always buy 'em. I
haven't had a new car in a long time.
~h, heh, heh, what reminds me of a
used car, hmmm ...When I was going to
go to Hawaii, I had this car that was
literally falling apart. Me an' my wife
an' kids were gonna drive to L.A. and go
to Disneyland and we were gonna give
the porter at the airport the keys to the
car as a tip. But instead, I drove it to
Olympia and the damn thing lasted six
years. I don't think I even changed the
oil in it one time. It ended up in the
junkyard.
I: What's the best thing you ever found
on the sidewalk?
L: Huh ... (thinking) Probably a wino in
Cleveland. I was there for a conference
and this guy took a beam on me. I was
with two other guys from other colleges.
And this wino NEEDED the whole
sidewalk, weaving allover the place. An'
he comes up to me and says, "Brutha I
don;t need a dime for a cup of coffee, I
need a dollar for a bottle of wine." And
I gave it to him, I loved his honesty.
I: Mind if I smoke?
L: No. Not at all.
I: Who would you marry, Leo Daugherty,
Joe Olander, or Bob (the metal orb of
mystery)?
L: Huh?
I: You HAFfA choose one.
L: I have to choose one, huh .. Joe

Olander.. Leo Daugherty ...or Bob... Well, . layers and layers of legal complications,
I think I would probably pick Leo. Cause I: Didja spank her?
I don'1 believe much in the cosmos, so L: Pardon? God--Haha. No. She's too old
to spank.
since I'm a Leo, I'd probably pick a LCo.
In other words, my answer makes about I: When was the last time you got
as much sense as your question. Besides, spanked?
Bob 'would force me to live in the L: So long ago ... My folks didn't spank
me much.
woods. I'm not into that And uh .. Joe.
I: Ya, but why did they, when they did?
L: My parents were very tplerant. And
very trusting. It was a very rare
occurrence. I don't even think my mom
ever laid a had on me. And the last time
my dad did, I was in , 1st or 2nd grade.
Can't remember why. I had an older
brother and he cut a huge swaft for me.
I just kinda walked through it. He got in
a lot more trouble than me an prolly
Joe lives beyond the cosmos.
deserved it less. There's almost a curse
I: What's your favorite cuss word?
with, me for growing up in such a
L: To me, a swear word is a word like
supportive and comfortable environment.
"nigger" or "wop" or "spic" ...But my
favorite swear word is ...Hmm ... What's my
favorite swear word. Probably "horseshit."
I: Ever own a horse?
L: No. But I might. I's love to own one.
I: What weather condition disturbs you
most?
L: Rain. Hahahahahaha ...Hard rain. I need
to add that word. This is one of the only
places where we classify rain ... Soft rain
is nice. Actually, I would say that the
worst is wind when you're in an R.V.,
going through Kansas.
I: What's your favorite purchase from
The Deli?
L: Popcorn. That's kinda my only
addiction. I'd mainline it but I' don't
know how I would explain the bumps in
my arms.
I: What was the last thing one of your
kids did that worried you?
L: My daughter driving my wife's pickup
truck that didn't have insurance.
I: Why'd that worry you?
L: Cause a wreck would have led to, uh,

Popcorn.. .I'd mainline it
but I don't know how I
would explain the bumps
in my arms.

There's a part of me that's almost too
comfortable with life and l really, value
it
,
I: Like it's a curse cause you're afraid of
losing that comfort?
L: Well .na, I mean, here I am, I'm , in
mid-life and it's a part of me. an I'm ' a
part of it. There's a ~ that's kind of
terrified cause I don't know what I'm
gonoa do next
I: Tell me a jingle.
L: There usta be this thing on T.V. (I
don't even know why I remember this)
and it said, "Buy Kraft Cottage Cheese,
you'll love it, love it." That's all there is
to it.
I: Do you love, love Kraft Cottage
Cheese?
L: Do I? I don't eat cottage cheese.
This issue's mystery interview was
with Larry Stenberg.



Indoor soccer In seventh
season and still kicking-said. This year's eight week session
attracted teams from Chehalis, Centralia,
Shelton, and every high school in the
immediate area as welI as various teams
comprised of Evergreen students.
Zoske attributes the success of the
Indoor Soccer League to the game of
soccer becuase it is fun, exciting, and
mentally and physically challenging. He
also stated, "During the winter months
when the weather is not very conductive
to going outdoors, it represents a good
option to stay active and get in a quality
workout in a short time."
Ruth Frobe is Evergreen's sports
information director.

WI-lAT

~2

AW

T~~ CPJ

__"'~'<r
CAN GtTYOU:

CIL~RaD

by EUzabetb Nyman

having a repeat · pap within three to six
the smear is a random sample, not all
most likely ~ held, on Thursdays at
This month TESC Women'$ Health
mondts in order to mOnitor the .changes · vaginal and cervical 'tissue will be
noon, . so keep an ·eye out for Curtbel'
Clinic is sponSoring "Pap Month." This . and see if they persist.viewed. So it is important that women
notice. The Women's Health Clinic is
idea stems from the apparent need fOl:
It is important to, remember that
have this done every twelve months or so
located on the firSt floor of the Seminar
questions to be answered about the pap, this test is justa screening; · not . a
and it is not a bad idea to try out
Building. Come in and see us, or give us
smear; silch as: What is it? Why do . I diagnosis. A diagnosis can be made only differe~t practitioners and evaluate their a call (x6200), we'd be happy to answer
need it? and What do the results mean?
by ex3mining tissue with a colposcope (a
. any further questions.
technique.
There has been a significant increase . greater magnifying lens) or by a biopsy.
Elizabeth NYl1Uln is the Women's
This month will be devoted to
. in the incidence of cervical cancer among
There is a false-negative rate of
Clinic
coordinator.
answering questions you might have,
women. .Currently, there is evidence that approximately twenty percent This is
giving workshops and handing out all
certain types of papilloma virus (cervical largely due to the teChnique used. Since
kinds of information. Workshops will
warts) may initia~ or promote the
transformation of a normal cell into an
irregularly shaped or "dysplastic .cell."
Early detection of cellular abnormalities
News Release
of the cervix has been shown to be
The Asian/Pacific Isles Coalition is
associated with a gradual decline in the
sponsoring a series of events through
incidence of new cases and deaths from
April, which is designated Asian/Pacific
cervical cancer all across the country.
Islander Heritage Month.
The screening test is called the
Heritage Month is not just to
Papanicolaou Smear or more commonly,
celebrate the different ethnic backgrounds,
"The Pap Smear." This is a screening
but to share the different cultural
procedure which most women generally
perspectives as well, according to A/PIC
have once ·a year as part of their annual
organizers.
gynecological exam. The procedure
PACIFIC OCEAN
One Heritage Month highlight
involves taking a sample from the vaginal
happens from 6 to 8pm, Saturday, April
wall, the cervix, and the endo-cervix. The
....
27, when you can feast on authentic
sample is then sent off to a ' laboratory
o
foods during a Luau ($6 general, $2 for
.
for analysis.
Housing residents), then dance to
When analyzing the sample, the
"Common Cause" (post-Evergreen staffer
technicians are looking for cells that are
Steve Bader's band) and a popular group
irregularly shaped as they undergo the
normal cell changes. If no abnormalities from Hawaii called "Brother Noland," a
dance band that performs contemporary
are detected, the results come back as
"class I," if there are a few irregularities, Hawaiian and Reggae music. Admission
$2.
the results come back as "class II" and
Brother Noland is a big name band
so forth up through "class V," which is
in Hawaii and students here will really
invasive carcinoma.
A number of paps at our clinic come like their music, say A/PIC organizers.
Stay tuned Jor future announcements
back as class II. Since any infection
which causes inflammation of tissue of fun and educational fllms, dances,
lectures, and exhibits scheduled through
could affect the appearance of cells, it is
April by the Asian/Pacific Isles Coalition,
a important to follow up class II paps by
Next week's AsianlPacific Islander Heritage Month events
or call x6033 for details.

Heritage Month celebrates backgrounds

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April 10
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Cooper Point Journal April 11, 1991

Page 5

Columns
REDUCE

.Columns
~

RE-USE cY~
RECYCLE ~Q

by Christopher Fondots
To recycle effectively in your living
space it is a good idea to separate your
recyclables into as many c~gories as the
campus recycling program will accept. At
Evergreen we currently accept glass
bottles and jars, aluminum cans, tin cans,
corrugated cardboard, newspaper, mixed
paper, and PET plastic soda-pop bottles.
In the campus housing it works well
to set up a series of cardboard boxes in
the common area, such as a closet, where
they will be close and accessible but out
of the main traffic areas. You can label
them paper, metal, glass, and #1 plastic
(PET) so that there is no confusion as to
what should go where.
The boxes should be emptied at the
nearest drop-off point on a regular
schedule to avoid dealing with loads that
are too heavy to carry. In the housing
area drop-off areas for aluminum, glass,
tin, cardboard, and PET are located at the
recycling shed in the Mods, behind the
community center, and in the courtyard
below. A-Donn.
When recycling cardboard please .
break boxes down and stack in the
designated areas. Milk cartons and waxed
cover cardboard are not recyclable
because they gum up the machinery in
the remanufacturing process. Glass must
be washed clean of food and beverage
remains, then separated by color into the
appropriate barrels. The lids should be
removed but the labels can remain.
Aluminum cans should also be emptied
of their contents, preferably smashed to
conserve space, and placed into the
proper receptacle.

. Tin also . need to be. free of food
remains. They should have the paper
label peeled off of them, and in addition
remove the bottom lid and flatten. This
not only saves volume in the recycling
barrels but keeps the hydrochloric acid
used in de-tinning from being diluted
from labels and needlessly collected in
the intact cans which leads to acid spills
within the plant
PET plastic should be placed in side
galvanized garbage cans at these stations.
Unfortunately the CAB is the closest
place to housing to recycle paper. We are
working to improve this and will
probably have paper recycling throughout
the housing area, but for now this is
where it must go if y.ou wish to recycle
it
Newspaper can be tied in small
bundles with bailing twine or stacked
inside brown paper grocery sacs. Mixed
paper collection is also available and
includes all other types of recyclable
paper such as white ledger, colored
ledger, magazines, phonebooks, junkffiail,
books, etc. Again, it is a good idea is to
bring it there fairly regularly so that you
don't have to wrestle with unmanageable
loads.
Evergreen has been mandated by
Governor
Gardner's
G.O.L .D.
(Government
Options
to
Landfill
Disposal) plan to recycle 50% of its solid
waste by 1995. There is currently a
Disappearing Task Force addressing how
we are going to improve our existing
program so that we can recover as much
material as possible while making it easy
and convenient for everybody involved.
We would like to hear any of your
questions, concerns, and thoughts on this
subject and invite you to call the campus
recycling coordinator Glenn Duncan at
extension 6782.
Christopher Fondots is a student at
Evergreen.

Hypnotized Shelton
wom.en recalls abduction

~~~~~~iiI ~.......;:::.....-_ _ _ _...... .

by Chris BQder
Susan is a thirty year old former
Shelton resident who recently moved to
New York to pursue a career as a
costume designer. A couple of weeks ago
she told me of the strange UFO
experience she had while visiting
Manhattan in 1989.
It was St Patrick's Day. Susan and
her boyfriend had stopped their car near
a restaurant when they noticed a strange
light over the harbor, which appeared to
be headed in their general direction. As
it approached Susan noticed that the
object appeared to be a sort of
boomerang shape, with rows of lights
along its und~rside.
She grew excited at the possibility of
seeing a "real UFO" and wished that "it
would come a little closer".
No sooner had the thought -OCcurred,
than the object moved directly over
Susan and her boyfriend.
Staring s\Taight up at the thing
hovering above her head, · Susan again
noted the absence of any sounds and
decided the it was not a blimp as "there
was no silvery surface to the object, just
darkness".
At one point. Susan looked away
from the object to see if anyone else
noticed it, and was shocked to find no
one around; there were no cars on the

streets, and no people on the sidewalks!
(It is actually quite common for UFO
witnesses to note that their physical
surroundings change significantly).
After what seemed like a couple of
minutes, the object slowly rotated and
moved back to its original position over
the harbor. The amazed couple got back
in their car to sit down. It was then that
a shocked Susan noticed that over an
hour had passed in the brief period that
they had viewed the object
Susan felt that something may have
happened to her during that "missing
time." Recently she went under hypnosis,
as do many UFO witnesses, in an attempt
to recover any lost memories. The
hypnotist happened to be her mother,
who is the head of a UFO organization.
Susan subsequently recalled being
taken aboard the UFO during the period
she observed it. The first thing she
remembers is being in a room with a
rounded window that faced the street.
Looking down, she noticed that her
boyfriend was still standing by their car,
apparently in a trance. The rest of the
room was bare except for a table "with
no visible means of support" and a large
red curtain.
It was then that Susan was drawn
into another room, inside of which were
three bodies ....
(Next week Susan's story continues.
Greeners, you only have a few wecks left
to tell me your strange stories! Contact
Chris Bader care of the CPJ.)
Chris Bader is an Evergreen student
who has consistently written a column for
the CPJ for five quarters.


military·
defends
right
.
to
refuse
AI
service
Conscientious
objectors jailed
over ideals
by Scott Douglas

Over the course. of the year, I. have
written about human rights abuse cases in
thirteen countries. I have received some
follow-up reports on a few of these
cases.
Albania: Hysen Gjoci and Gjerg
Gjikopolli--jailed for terms of fifteen to
twenty years for their alleged role in prodemocracy demonstrations. There is hope
for their release due to the current refonn
movement in Albania
EI Salvador: I received a response
from the military stating that Erick
Romero Canales' name does not appear
in any police register, and they assume
that he either gave a false name when
arrested, or is a member of the FMLN
and is trying to make the government
look bad. Amnesty International has not
been able to obtain further accurate
information.
Swaziland: Sabelu Dlamini and Ray
Russon were moved from prison to a
hospital after an extended hunger strike.
Three other cases reported in this

Want to
advertise with
the CPJ?
Contact Chris Carson
regarding display and
classified advertising
866 · ·6000
X60S4

.-

column remain in prison without charge
over 540 COs for breaking the mandatory
for
60
day
periods,
renewable service law which applies to every male
indefinitely.
. between 20 and 50. This is not a lottery
Burkina Faso: B.oukary Dabo died
draft, it is compulsory for every mwe.
from maltreatment while in custody.
Sentences for COs USUally run nme to
China: Wang Dan has been sentenced
tw.,elve months.
to four years imprisonment for his role in
Switzerland, like Greece, hears all
the Tienanmen Uprising. BUT,.. .
CO cases before military tribunals, not
Lu Jianmin was RELEASED by
civilian courts.
Chinese authorities and is now free!
Readers are asked to write to the
United States: Zenaida Velasquez, a following addresses and urge that the
Honduran, was granted political asylum
following steps be taken to meet
after a great deal of pressure was put on
international human rights standards:
the Immigration and Naturalization
--the immediate and unconditional release
Service (INS) by Amnesty members, of all imprisoned conscientious objectors
Sanctuary Movement workers, and other --the establishment of a non-punitive
activists.
system of alternative civilian service
Thank-you to everyone who has
written I~tters this year, on behalf of
Amnesty International and prisoners of
conscience world-wide.
New business:
Amnesty International believes that
the right to refuse military service is
inherent in the concept of freedom of
thought, conscience, and religion, as
spelled out in Article 18 of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Amnesty by Scott A. Richardson
The trilliums arrived on schedule-therefore includes as prisoners of
Tona
reported the first on-campus
conscience persons who are imprisoned
blossoms
near the dorm loop on March
for refusing to serve in the military
27.
Since
then they have popped up all
because of ethical, moral, philosophical,
religious, or political convictions, and over campus, wherever conditions are
whose nations have no alternatives to moist and shady. If a trillium is picked,
compulsory military service. (Of note: its ability to make food is lost since the
Amnesty adopted as a prisoner of leaves are removed. Without the
conscience a U.S. soldier who was jailed sustenance gathering leaves, this member
for refusal to serve in, or partake in of the lily family may take three years to
flower aga;"n.
preparation for, the Gulf War!)
The five inches of rain we received
The focus of this weeks column is
in
the
ftrst ftve days of the month may
on Conscientious Objectors (COs) in
have
delayed
some springtime activity.
Greece and Switzerland. Neither nation
Several
expected
bird songs have not yet
has alternative service plans for draftees.
been
heard
and
early
ground nesters such
In Greece, over 400 COs are in jail.
All men betWeen 18 and 40 are liable for as winter wrens may have had their first
conscription for 18 month tenns. nests flooded.
A white-crowned sparrow was
Although Greece does have an "unarmed
military service" option, there is no reported at a donn area feeder on
Monday, which means the Puget Sound
civilian alternative service for COs.
of this songbird has returned from
race
Switzerland is currently imprisoning

which conscientious objectors may choose
in lieu of military service.
Le Pr~ident de la Confederation
Helv6tique
Monsieur Ie Coseillor Federal
Flavio Cotti
B undeshaus-West
3003 Berne, Switzerland
Constantine Mitsotakis
Office of the Prime Minister
Maximou Palace
Herodou Atticou Avenue
Athens, Greece
Scott Douglas is a student
Evergreen.

at

UNDER THE
EVERGREENS
its wintering grounds in California.
Robin flocks probably have reached
their peak numbers. Pairs soon will
disperse, building mud and grass nests for
their famous blue eggs.
Among the northern flickers seen
around Red Square is a hybrid between
the yellow- and red-shafted form of the
species. Formerly regarded as separate
species, the yellow-shafted is typically
found in the East and North, while the
red-shafted is a Western resident. Check
color of the wing linings and the
underside of the tail for a flash of yellow
(or red) and look for the color of the
"mustache."
The arrival of warblers and
flycatchers is imminent; let me know
when you see or hear them.
Thanks TOM and Jenny. Scott
Richardson receives messages at Library
2510 or x6213.

GOING-

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American Library Association

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal April 11, 1991

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-----------O.e COUPOIl per

• LD. Required

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Cooper Point Journal April 11, 1991

Page 7

Forum.
SPAZ penises censored by vandals
by Gartb Colasurdo
Violence against objects is an odd
action. Emotionally, it can cause a variety
of
responses;
amusement, ' fear, .
motivation, or even hopelessness. We can
watch a television being smashed and
laugh, or see a community center that has
been trashed by hateful vandals and be
disgusted. Our emotional response is
directly based on our relationship to the
violated object. As a result our response
may be limited by the distancing that is
presented by second hand accounts. But
please think of something close to you
that has been attacked and remember.
Two very odd incidents have
occurred in the display cases on the fIrst
floor of the CAB. Two separate pictures
were censored by unknown person(s).
Someone actually painted over the parts
that they did not want to see. No reason
was given. Neither an artistic concern
was issued, nor moral reasons. No

communication to the Art . Gallery was
attempted. No thought was perceived by
the attacker for the victims of their
actions. ~n that mattered was the force
of their opinion over all others.
Two very different portrayals of male
genitalia were defaced. The fmt was a
picture of a nude male draped in the flag
of the United States holding · a penis
which appeared to be removed from his
bleeding crotch. The second was a
photograph of a nude male torso with
various removed sections, including the
greater half of an erect penis. In both
cases, only the penis was targeted. Each
covered by an application of paint on the
glass panel. Interesting enough, a pencil
drawing of a nude woman as a landscape
with an exposed vagina was not
disturbed, leading me to infer a sexist
comment on the position of women in
art. Each statement, and sub-text, that the
attackers made was loud, frightening,

banal, and senseless.
Overall
I
am
shocked
and
di&heartened . by all aspects of these
actions, but specifically . I am · concerned
with how it will affect the operation of
the Student Art Gallery. The Student
Produced Art Zone has had ·· a rough
season this winter. We are limited by the
size and formats we can show, and a
hostile environment does not help an
already diffIcult space.
Will other students want to show
their work in a hostile environment? With
only second hand information I can not
really know. But I do know that the
4ttacks affect me as an artist and a
person. I feel angry and violated. I feel
reluctant to continue working with the
display cases. I would like to know what
caused these people to preempt the work
and expression of the artists.
In spite of these developments, the
Student Produced Art Zone is going to

continue to provide access and services to
ariis:~ on this campus. We want to
continue to show student's ' work. We
need the strength and support of the
people who' participate in our activities.
But we also need a greater diversification
of voice and opinion. We- have had some
good shows this year and are planning on
more. With your ideas and participation
it will only get better.
We hold general meetings on
Monday afternoons from four to five in
the Gallery offIce: Lib 3212. Mondays
are also the day we usually hang new ·
shows. But please feel free to drop in
during business hours. We are open to
individ1Ulls or groups who want to
organize their own shows. In addition we
can provide resourees and information
about art on campus.
Garth Colasurdo is a SPAZtic
volunteer.

Proposed government: one student one vote
by Damon Rosencutter
Alas! The governance of The
Evergreen State College student body has
been given back to its rightful owners;
the students.
Gone are the days of segregated
politics and color-coded votes. Gone are
the days of Robert's Rules of ,Order and
its intrinsic disorders.
Welcome to one student one vote
politics.
On April 4 the student government
planning committee became the interim
student government Mter approval from
the proper bureaucracies, we will bring a
referendum to the student body for
approval. This would ~low the students
to send a mandate to the administration
and to any future leaders that believe
segregation brings people closer together,
and that democracy oppresses.
Mter considerable thought into the
dynamics of the cultural caucus system
and its-predecessor government, we think
we have some possible solutions for a
government that is all inclusive and one
which would not deny the right to
representation.
There are several ways students can
use their votes:
·Individuals may show up to a
student government meeting and cast a
vote directly.
·Individuals may vote through a

representative by proxy.
• Indi viduals may sign their votes
away to a representative who would act
as a 'vote broker' on their behalf.
.Individuals may choose not to vote.
The new student government is
attempting to be as flexible and creative
as possible.
At the beginning of Fall quarter we
would like to bring a campus-wide vote

to the students of Evergreen. This vote
would be for an election in choosing
executive offIcers. All students would
have equal oppOrtunity in running for
these paid positions. Mter the election
those individuals chosen will be
considered 'reverse dictators.' The student
body will dictate, while the executive
officers listen and do the footwork.
The new and improved student

government wants involvement and equal
opportunity for ALL. To be successful in
this endeavor, we will require input from
the most important element of this
campus; the student.
Damon Rosencutter has been actively
involved with Student Government this
year.

Work to change 'other' country
by Josb M. Silver and Robert Markey
If you think Saddam Hussein was the
biggest threat to world peace, think again.
There is another country which is a far
greater threat. This "other" country claims
its right to intervene anywhere in the
world in order to protect its own
interests. In order to do this, it maintains
the most powerful military in the history
of the world, including more nuclear
weapons - than all other countries
combined.
It is the only nation to use nuclear
weapons, which it did twice, both times
against civilian populations. It has an
intelligence network which operates in
every country in the world, whose
business includes sabotage, drug dealing,
teaching methods of torture, organizing

coups and assassinations.
This "other" country has led the' U.N.
security council in vetoes during the last
twenty years, including vetoing every
major peace initiative in the Middle East.
It
has
unilaterally
blocked
a
comprehensive nuclear test ban treaty,
and in 1974 became the last major power
to sign the 1925 (I) Geneva Protocol
prohibiting the use of chemical weapons.
Since 1960 it has bombed, napalmed,
or invaded Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos,
Iraq, The Dominican Republic, Panama,
Grenada, Libya, and El Salvador. During
this same time it supplied weapons so
that
governments
could
massacre
thousands of their own people in
Nicaragua, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Indonesian, Iran, Turkey, Haiti, The

Philippines, South Africa, Chile.
For some historical perspective, this
"other" country was founded by invading
a continent, massacring the inhabitants,
stealing their land and breaking every
treaty made with them. Slaves were used
to create wealth for this new country
until barely a hundred years ago.
Now in' 1991 this "other" country has
the highest per capita prison population in
the world. It is the only industrialized
nation with no national health policy, and
in the "other" country every fifteen
seconds a women is battered.
Just one question: if you lived in this
"other" country what would you do about
changing it?
Joshua M. Silver and Robert Markey
are students at Evergreen.

SPEECH celebrates first Olympia anniversary
by Rob Richie
In April SPEECH (the South Puget
Education Clearinghouse) is celebrating
its first year of keeping its Downtown
Olympia doors open to the community
and acting as a resource and information
center for local environmentalists. With
11 issues of its newsletter Green Pages
mailed to members, a second edition of
its Green Guide environmental directory
due soon and its individual and
organizational members steadily growing,
the private, volunteer-run center's future
existence is assured.
SPEECH volunteers are proud of
their accomplishments, but would like to
try to make SPEECH's second year an
even better one for protecting the
environment, informing the public and
assisting the work of other environmental
groups. SPEECH has hired an interim
staffer to expand membership, coordinate
creation of a Board of Directors, and
improve office systems; a full-time staffer
should be in place by summer's end.
Meanwhile, co-founder Gita Moulton
has shrugged off her award of
"Conservationist of the Year" from the
Black Hills Audubon Society and plunged

into planning events in honor of Earth
and accessibility to the public, SPEECH
Day on April 20-21. Other projects -could house any number of such projects
underway include the Legislative Action by already existing environmental group
Committee that monitors the state and energetic individuals; already several
legislature and the Education Committee Evergreen students have gotten involved
that collects environmental education in SPEECH activities. People interested
curricula and shares it with local teachers.
in volunteering or initiating a project
With its office, volunteer resources
should call Ann, Barb, or Rob.

For more information on SPEECH
and
upcoming
events
in
the
environmental
community--particularly
Earth Day events at the Olympia Center
on April 20--please stop by SPEECH at
218 W. 4th Avenue on Tuesday-Friday,
Noon-6 pm, or call 786-6349.
Rob Richie is a Speech member.

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Forum

Talk directly 'to 'responsible persons
Recently. 88 individuals from the
Sheriffs Office petitioned the Thurston
CoUnty Commission to stop distribution.
of the Cooper Point JourfllJl on the
County Courthouse grounds because of
'unacc~t8blejournalism: Specifically;
the petition signatories were upset with
the content of articles on Andre Dworkin
and a cartoon showing a "Bush Booster
Strap on Phallus" in the March 14 CPJ.
The · commission was sympathetic to
the petition but was unable to take any
action because the courthouse is public
property and thus distribution is protected
by the First Amendment.
A copy of the petition was sent to
Interim President Les Puree, who
appropriately responded by sending a
letter to the signatories suggesting that
they' . write . an .article for the CPJ
outlmmg thetr concerns.
I also invite the signatories, or
anyone else concerned with the CPJ, to
respond .with an article expressing their .
point of view. I strive to make the CPJ
a place where people of opposing
viewpoints can publicly debate issues that

concern them.
We at the CPJ were never directly
approached
about .the
~gnatories
concerns. Instead, I was forced to do my
own investigation to discover the origin
of rumors I was hearing.
Believe it or not, I and the other CPJ
staff are reasonable · people, and are
willing to ~ten and discuss people's
concerns. All you have to do is ask.
Instead of talking to us like human
beings, irate community often lodge
complaints with people they perceive as
having power over us. Fortunately, or
unfortunately, depending on how you
look at it, the CPJ and other college
newspapers are fairly well insulated from
attacks from the outside.
Dworkin's words were meant to
inspire people to rally against the sex she
describes. I would like someone to
explain to me why violence against
women described by a women working
against such violence is damaging to
society. But, as of yet, no one has.
How can I be expected to change, if
no one will explain to me why I should.

As always, I eagerly await discussions
attempt to bludgeon me into their
with those who want to help me .grow.
viewpoinL
However, I do not respect people who · Tedd KeUeber, editor
r - - - - - - - - - - - - , . . . ; . . - - -------:---==.--..:-===--=-=-=---==:-7-,

8,"'/IJ' DII(TY

HIV positive women neglected by CDC
by Diane Asseln
AIDS is a disease that is blind to
gender and sexual preference. Though
gay men are often stereotyped as major
carriers of HIV infection, heterosexual
exposure now accounts for 60 percent of
HIV transmission worldwide and women
currently make up the quickest growing
segment of the epidemic. In fact, the
World Health Organization estimates that
more than 3 million women are now
infected with HIV (30 percent of all
those infected).
Despite the fact that women are now
at such great risk., women with AIDS are
often denied access to government
benefits and services for people with
AIDS. This is because the CDC (The
Centers for Disease Control) defmition of
AIDS; relied on by doctors, researchers,
and care/services organizations; is based
entirely on male symptoms.
The CDC definition of AIDS states
that a person has not offIcially contracted
AIDS until they acquire one of the
illnesses on a list of AIDS-related
opportUnistic infections and illnesses the
center has compiled. Most of these
problems affect men with AIDS, but very
rarely show up in HIV positive women.
This means that possibly 65 percent
of HIV positive women die before they
acquire an official AIDS-defining illness.
The statistics for women dying from that
disease
are,
therefore,
grossly
undercounted.

While PCP (pneumocystis carlnii
pneumonia) and KS (kaposis sarcoma)
are among the most common symptoms
of AIDS in men, women tend to have
gynecological
complications
and
infections: chronic, persistent yeast
infections; pelvic inflammatory disease;
sexually transmitted diseases which resist
treatment; abnormal pap smears; and
cervical cancer. KS, when it does appear
in women, is vulval or vaginal skin
cancer which usually goes undetected
since most HIV positive women lack the
resources for regular gynecological
exams.
Due in part to this bias, women with
AIDS die faster than do men who have
the disease. Medical and scientific bias
has created a situation in which women
with AIDS aren't -receiving the same
quality and quantity of medical and
research efforts as men with AIDS.
On toP of this problem, many women
with AIDS will care for their families
before seeking health care for themselves,
and often lack the resources For medical
treatment once they do decide to get
help.
So, women contracting the disease
continue to die much faster than their
male .. counterparts. The average woman
diagnosed with AIDS survives four
months past diagposis, while the average
white male with AIDS lives 1.3 to 1.7
years past diagnosis.
One third of women diagnosed with

AIDS die within one month of diagnosis.
Several specifIc communities of
women are at an even greater
disadvantage than the majority of women
for getting help with AIDS prevention
and treatment. Sex workers are often used
as scapegoats in our society, but have
been very conscious of safer sex when
given the power to choose safe sex.
Often, for these women, unsafe sex is an
economic choice because men will pay
more for sex without condoms.
Women
of
color
are
disproportionately represented in the
epidemic (72% of women with AIDS in
the U.S. are either African American or
Latina). These women die even faster
than white women, possibly because they
lack the fInancial resources for medical
treatment.
Lesbians have diffIculty
obtaining information on safe sex and
safe-sex items for woman-to-w()man
contact because many experts believe
them to be at almost no risk for
contracting AIDS.
The reality, however, is that the
CDC doesn't track lesbian transmission,
so the number of lesbians dying from
AIDS they contracted from other women
is unknown. Lesbian transmission does
happen, however,
and has been
documented in medical journals.
The development of more effective,
woman-controlled safer-sex items could
help to decrease the number of women
who die from AIDS. The spermicides

Nonoxynol 9 and Octoxynol have killed
HIV in laboratory settings. but can irritate
the vaginal lining. Such irritation
increases the risk of transmission.
The intravaginal pouch or "female
condom" offers more hope. It is currently
being developed in the U.~. and may
prove to be a more durable,and effective
barrier against AIDS than the male
versioJl. When marketed, howev~r, it will
cost about ~l.tlU--a price too expensive
for most sex workers and other women at
_
high risk.
Funding for the development of such
safe-sex items will help to prevent AIDS
among women but, as this article has
shown, funding is also needed to treat
those women who already have AIDS.
For these women to receive the help they
need, pressure needs to be put on the
CDC (through groups such as ACT-UP)
to include women's symptoms.
Reliable fuformation on the effects of
AIDS on women has been available
(some of it as early as 1987!), but the
CDC is not paying attention. The
inclusion of women's symptoms on the .
CDC's list of opportunistic infections and
illnesses will help insure that adequate
funding is directed toward preventing the
disease among women and treating those
who already have the disease.
Evergreen student Diane Asseln wrote
this article - using information from a
presentation given by Evergreen student
Tara McColloch titled "Women and
AIDS."

Response
VOLUNTEER
Comics Page Editor: Edward Martin ill
Blotter Compilation: Rebecca Randall
"Seepage" Page Editor: Mike Mooney
News Briefs Compilation: Linda Gwilym
Proofreader: Doug. Smith
EDITORIAL--866-6000 x6213
Editor: Tedd Kelleher
Managing Editor: Rachel Nesse
Entertainment Editor: Andrew Hamlin
Production Manager: Giselle Weyte
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Typist: Linda Gwilym
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Business Manager: Edward Martin ill
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Ad Layout: Paul Henry, Deborah Roberts,
Julianne Revel
Distribution: John Dempsey
ADVISER
Dianne Comad

AdvertisIng
For information, rates, or to place display
and classified advertisements, contact 8666000 x6054. Deadlines are the Monday prior
to each Thursday's print.
The CPJ is responsible for restitution to
our advertising customers for mistakes in their
advertisements in the first printing only. Any
subsequent printing of this mistake are the
sole responsibility of the advli!l1islng customer.

The User's GuIde
The Cooper PoinJ Journal exists to
facilitate communication of events, ide8l!,
movements, .and incidents affecting The
Evergreen State College and surroWlding
communities. To portray accurately our
community, the paper strives to publish
material from anyone willing to work with
us.

Submission deadllne Is Monday noon.
We will try to publish material submitted the
following Thursday. However, space and
editing constraints may delay publication.
All submissions are subject to editing.
Editing will attempt to clarify material, not
change its meaning. H possible we will
consult the writer about substantive changes.
Editing will also modify submissions Ip fit
within the parameters of the Cooper PoinJ
Journal style guide.
The style guide is
available at the CPJ office.
Written submissions may be brought to
the CPJ on an mM formatted 5-1/4" disk.
Disks should include a double-spaced printout,
the submission file name, and author's name,
phone mnnber, and address. We have disks
available for those who need them. Disks can
be picked up after publication.
Everyone is invited to attend CPJ weekly
meetings, Thursday 4 pm in the CPJ office

Library 2510.
H you have any questions, please drop
by Library 2510 or call 866-600()'x6213.

Conference Services thank Facilities
All of us in Conference Services
wish to thank Ute. Facilities staff people
who worked so hard during Spring Break
19 correct the damage done by the ftre in
the CAB 1st floor. These people worked
day and night to clean, replace, paint,
polish, etc.
It is hard to imagine why anyone
would want to cause this kind of problem
. for our college. If there is a message, we
all missed it.

We always appreciate the amount of
work it takes to maintain our
environment at Evergreen. The incredible
transformation from extensive ftre and
smoke damage to a. once again, clean
and shiny area, makes us respect the staff
involved.
Hats off to all the maintenance and
custodial staff.
Conference ~ervices

'Surprise' needs clarification
While I appreciate the CPJ's
coverage of the transition of the Olympia
Anti-Intervention Coalition in the March
14 issue, I would like to clarify a . few
statements, or perhaps I should say
attitudes, attributed to me in the story.
Ms.
The
most
disturbing ' - was
Littlewood's assertion that I was
".surprised at the number of politically
active and aware people in Olympia."
This is an important, point to me, in part
because I am always disgusted by the

arrogance of some "big city" activists, but
mostly because the statement does not
reflect the respect I have for many of the
people I am working with now in
Olympia.
Prior to my moving here, I had
the
rallies,
attended
some / of
demonstrations, and educational forums
organized by -activists in the Olympia
Anti-Intervention Coalition, and I always

see coalition. page 14

Cooper Point Journal April 11, 1991

Page 9

Arts &Ent
.

ainm$nt

,

Arts & Entertainment

Wa in' 1m
.croons about
grizzly .bears
and desert
sunsets,
rainbows and
Mother Earth

Eddie Harris whm baa whmbaas tonigllt in Seattle
by Sam Loewenberg

Sometimes I open my window and
pul on an Eddie Harris albmn at top
volume, with the hope that passerby will
hear the music iInd pay attention to it It
begins with tenor saxophone, sparse,
high-pitched whm baa whm baa, and then
lower whm baa buhba - aaahf ...bass and
drums crash in: bum baa bum buh
bumbum, and again with ultra-slapping
bomp ,bbass and crash cr:ash high hat,
now beating the ride cymbal for dear life
oom bah oom baa oom baabbaa ...and
again. Primus and the Chili Peppers don't
even come close.
Eddie Harris. He's coming to Seattle.
If you like jazz, funk, world beat. Latin,
R&B, or are a musician I suggest you
see him. His music encompasses all of
those classifications and many more. He
plays sax, electric sax, reed trumpet, and
piano. Eddie pioneered the electric sax

by John Wulfers

On April 19, 1991 at 8 pm in the
TESC Recital Hall, The Environmental
Resource Center is proud to present
Walkin' Jim Stoltz and his Forever Wild
multi-media show. Watkin' Jim gets his
name after more than 18,000 miles of
trekking through North America's wildest
places carrying a guitar and writing
inspirational songs.
Walkin' Jim is
known ' for his powerful baritone and
emotion-packed vocals and gives a
rousing celebration of wilderness in his
performance.
In 18 years of performing, Watkin'
Jim has toured throughout North America
singing songs about grizzly bears, wolves,
desert evenings and rainbows. Jim's trek
through wilderness areas has given him a
close relationship with Mother Earth and
a deep commitment to preserve
wilderness, protect the planet'S creatures
and fight for the right to a clean and
healthy environment.
An evening with Walkin' Jim's
music, poetry and stories is a journey
into the wilderness and a powerful
motivator for all of us to fight for
remaining wilderness areas in the Pacific
Northwest.
The Forever Wild show,
besides consisting of music and poetry, is
backed by Watkin' Jim's own stunning
wilderness photographs. As Watkin' Jim
says "It all fits in some way, give back
to the Earth what you take from it, and
listen to what it has to say."
As Edward Abbey once said, "Jim
Stoltz is a music man of exuberance and
passion with more to say in one song
than Frank Sinatra ever managed in a
whole bloody concert!"
Tickets will be $5 at the door - See
you there!
John Wulfers is coordinator oj the
Environmental Resource Center on
campus, and reminds readers to check
Gina Moulton's article this issue Jor more
environmental issue.

and reed trumpet. and they really ' have
to be . heard in his ' hands to be
understood. He also sings, scats, sings
through his electric saxophone, and even
plunks rhythm solos on the sax pads
without any blowing.
Does that sound we'ird? How do I
describe this music? This is my favorite
music. , It is very accessible, don't let
words like "jazz" scare you. This isn't
far-out ava~.t-garde stuff. His grooviest
songs have some of his most beautiful
melodies. And if you're interested in funk
or "dance music," check out Eddie's
seventies albums, which are way funkier
that most of the metronomic crap they
are playing on the dance floor today,
Funkadelic i!lcludcd. These albums not
only groove, they have amazing
musicianship.
Two songs that might get you
grooving if you happened under my

window at the right time are "Get On
Down," off of the 1975 .albmn 1 Need
Some Money,and "Ambidextrous," from
the 1989 album Eddie Harris--Live in
Berlin. The two songs are as different as
the two decades which spawned them, the
former an improvisational low-down
groove funlR&B thing mvolving congas,
an electric piano, a ' six-string bass (one
of the originals, it was tulled like a
guitar). a Quica, a guitarorgan (which I
assume to be some kind of early guitar
synthesizer), and electric saxophone. The
live version of "Ambidextrous," which I
attempted to describe in the opening, is
what it is. You really need to buy the
album.
.
.
Another thing about Eddie Harris:
most of his work is out of print There
are several CDs available though, and I
recommend them all, especially Eddie
Who? and Live in Berlin. Much of

Eddie's catalogue can be picked up at
used record stores, and it is thoroughly
worth the time invesbllenL One of my
favorite Eddie albums cost me all of 99
cents.
Eddie Harris is playing at the New
Orleans Jazz Club and Restaurant in
Seattle April 11-14. I'm going. When I
saw him in Long Beach back in
December he played mostly straight-ahead
stuff, but towards the end of the second
set he grabbed the mike and seaUed
while the rest of the band packed up
their instruments. If you closed your eyes
there was a sax, a bass, and several
instruments from Pluto.
Sam would be happy to play you
some Eddie Ha"is. Just Wflnder under his
window and start grooving, he'll get the
message.

Aerobicize your eye w-ith new- KAOS calendar
This week, "Mouthing Off' considers
"Marine Mammals: Are they Still
Coming up Jor Air?" with guests Allen
ReichmanJrom Greenpeace, and John
Calambokidis, of the Cascadia Research
Collective. Join Eppo 'n' Eli and mouth
off by calling in! Friday, 10 AM - 1
PM.

Friday
5-9:30 AM Dancing Barefoot -variety
& suchlike
9:30-10 AM S~nd Opinion with
Erwin Knoll -interview
lO AM-I PM Mouthing Off -call-in
public affairs
1-4 PM The Rhythm Rug -R & B,
rap, reggae
3:15-3:45 PM crossroads -multicultural public affairs
4-7 PM First Peoples' Coalition Native American & more
7-lO PM Bring the Noise -rap to the
max!
.
lO PM-12 AM
Outernational/Synergistic Roots -reggae

12-2 AM Borscht Circuit Radio techno-folk
2-4 AM Cream of Broccoli -soup to
nuts
Saturday
7-1O...AM Light Breakfast -New Age &
acoustic
10-11:30 AM Round Table -storytelling
11:30 AM-I PM When You Wish
Upon a Star -showtunes
1-5 PM EI Mensaje del Aire -in
Spanish, music & news
5-8 PM Othersounds -bizarre noises
from all over
8 PM-12 AM Hideaway -blues 'n'
news
12-2 AM Mish Mash -rock 'n' stuff
Sunday
7-10 AM The Classic Hick -classical
and more
10 AM-I PM Sister Sound -women:s
music
1-3 PM Hands on the Dial -new

LISTEN, WE STILL SELL

RECORDS

~e;

Walkin' Jim Stoltz. photo oourtesy Wild Wind Reoords

1farbinger Inn

Take your best

'Bul & 'Brt4i:fast

photo Co~test
For further information
& submissions
contact 866-{)()()() x6422
TESC Seminar 4154

1st Prize $50
2nd Prize $25
3rd Prize EF t-shirl
O•• dline: ApriI15, 1991
All photo enlrie•• hould aim 10 caplure Ihe following :
1. the essence of .~udcnt life on you r campull
2. II,e local navor of the .e1,onl'. geog;aph;call oc.li otl
3 . th e EF ItuJenl population on yo ur ca mpul
In addition to elii ihility ror winnil1l!1 ca.h priu. and
IIwanl., .11 p), oto c ntric. may qualify for publication in the

199 1·92 Ef Inl e,:".lional Language School. brochure.

TAPES. CD'S
& RECORDS

WE BUY 'EM
WESEU'EM
WE TRADE 'EM

SWAP YOUR LP'S
FOR OUR CD'S
DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA
420 FRANKUN SE
943-8228 • FREE PARKING
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

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

246-6580

programmers on the air
3-5 PM EOC's Foundation Gospel feel the spirit!
5-8 PM Gyrimbo Sessions -Afro-Pop
& world beat
8-11 PM The Beat -goes on
11 PM-I AM Keep This Frequency
Clear -rap, R & B
1-3 AM The Festering Umlaut punctuating rock 'n' roll
Monday
5-9:30 AM Notes from the
Underground -folk & variety
9:30-10 AM New Voices -news &
public affairs
10 AM-1 PM Kaleidoscope of Sound world music
1-4 PM Asthmatic Putrefaction
Grimace Show -world beat
3:15-3:45 PM New Voices -news &
public affairs
4-6 PM Ritmo y Mas -salsa & samba
6-8 PM Radio Babel -latest sounds
from Africa
8-10 PM Indigenous Peoples' Network
-Native American music & news
10 PM-12 AM World of Sin -really
depraved rock 'n' roll
12-2 AM Cheez Death -oh-so-heavy
metal

J

J

2-4 AM Bob, the Man who Hates
Calculus -hate it with him
Tuesday
5-9:30 AM a brand new morning
show, starring Milo!
9:30-10 AM Cycle-Babble -call in with
your bike questions
10 AM-1 PM Wimmin Do This Every
Day -women's musiC,interviews
1-4 PM Global Perspective -pUblic
affairs & music
4-5 PM Drive-Time Story Hour _
sometimes very strange!
5-7 PM Swing Ses,sion -big band
music
7-9 PM Tuesday Night -tomorrow's
classics tonight
9-10 PM Hello Olympia -live comedy
10 PM-12 AM Jigsaw Radio -rock,
roll, & rock
12-2 AM Lawrence of Olympia -roll,
roll, & rock
2-4 AM The David Pleiman Show _
rock, roll, & roll .
Wednesday
5-9:30 AM Wednesday Morning -folk
& great stuff

see KAOS, page 12

J~.fJln

Home Ownership:
From Mortgages to Remodeling
A Fre~WSECU Consumer Seminar w~h Joanne Mesojednik, Rea~or,
Virgil Adams ReaHy; Kathy Taylor Reed, Taylor Appraisal, lnc.; Gene
ca~son, builder, G.M. Ca~son Co.: and Dawn Anderson, WSECU
mortgage supervisor.
.
Let this expert panel help you with the purchase of your life, including
vacation homes and home equity.
.
Wednesday.ApIiI1 7. 7pm

Otympia Branch

ReseM! Your Place Today!
Call Our Olympia Branch. 943-7911

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

Want a little?

Need a lot?

754-6480

-Super PItza Slice
(One Slice. One Meal)
-Large Pop - 701. Frozen Yogurt

Only Olympia
ShoIN! '

$2.99

_

(Reg. $4.28)

LIVE • THURSIl4Y
APRIL 18th

~~"::'"~~

The Food Co-op has ' OlympIa's largest selectIon of whole,
natural, and organic bulk foods Including grains, nuts, drIed \
fruit, cereal, chIps, natural sweeteners and morel

.

Open 1 days· a week • 9 'a.m.-S p.m.
Ask about member benefitsl

'fu!~'" '~'fo",;mc~e'hIL7Ji$~

lIr 1rpdilee--r;r;r:;P. - - u.~~

Acute and Chronic AIlments
eCovered by Hartford Insurance

.'

1XNINTOWN • OLYMPI4

352-8247

Page 10 Cooper Point Journal April 11, 199.1

Cozy 1300tlis

'lJeCicious
:HomenuuU
{undies, tfin,mrs &
dtsserts. 'Dim in
or~out.

(i)~~~'!!~~r north Shore Sur~ Club Olympia Food Co-op
IIARx JANARDAN PINJDIAII C.A.

EMPLOVEES CREDIT (JI'f1ON

. Bulk foods are always the right amountl

SUPER COMBO!

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i

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(We use no styrofoam products.)
OPEN EVERY DAY
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WASHINGTON STATE

921 N. fIoMI • Olympia • 754-7*

~:=!!!!!-

Scnunptious 'Daily
Spuiofs. Join us.

For more infonnation .
about humane alternatives
to animal dissection
in classrooms,
CALL TOU-FREE
DISSECJ10N INFORMATIONROnlNE 1-8fHJ-922-Rl()(; (3764)
A sludtmt outreach project ofthe Anima} le[(aJ Defense Fund

-Cooper Point Journal April II, 1991

Page 11

"

Arts & Entertainment

r

Motorhead, Queen
still
old,
still
slightly
mad
e
an
. wistful, like

MOTORHEAD
"1916" ,
SONY/WTG

by E. Robert Wirsing
For 14 years, Motorhead has been
one of the heaViest acts in metal Led by
ex-Hawkwind
member
"Lemmy"
Kilminster, the band has continued to
kick out some of the most energetic and
raw punk/metal crossovers that the world
has ever heard, with lower budgets than
many "underground" thrash bands. They
still prove to be rebellious as ever, for on
the inside cover is print in Olde English
font: "This Album is Ozone Hostile."
Afld how can you not love a band whose
drummer is named "Philthy Animal?"
For those of yO\) familiar with
Motorhead's skullcrushing style there i~ a
surprise waiting inside-1916. Lemmy has
actually attempted to write ballads, and
succeeds admirably. The first, "Love Me
Forever," is a message-oriented power
ballad (whoever CaIJle up ' with that term
should be shot) that points out paradox
with paradox. The verses on "Love... " are
semi-acoustic, with no percussion, while
the chorus is a literal assault on tlte
senses. "1916," on the other hand, is a
. complete
turnaround
even
from
rock'n'roll. The anti-war song 'sounds

KAOS, from page 11
9:30-10 AM This Way Out -news of
the gay community
10 AM-I PM Wheels of the World Celtic
1-4 PM The Umoja Show ·-AfricanAmerican music & public affairs
4-7 PM Linger Awhile -just the jazz,
Ma'am!
7-9 PM Texas Gumbo -sounds from
the Southwest '
9-10 PM Comme C'est Bizarre -French
language & Afro-Pop
10 PM-12 AM 4th Dementia -rock .
from the Beyond
12-? AM All You Can Eat -delicious
rock 'n' rap
Thursday
5-9:30 AM The Us Show -variety
music for Us
9:30-10 AM Crossroads ' -multi-cultural
perspectives
10 AM-I PM Canto Libre -music of
Latin America
1-4 PM Afternoon Delight -public
. .
affairs & music
3:15-3:45 PM This Way Out -news of
the gay community ,
4-7 PM Jazz Medium -rare 'cuts!
7-9 PM American Anecdotes -bluegrass
9-10 PM Tap Skram Comedy -funny
business
10 PM-12 AM The ,Good, the Bad &
the Smug -rock
12-2 AM-5ereams in the Darkness .
hardcore & punk

English folk ballad
Replacing
the
usual
guitar-heavy
Motorllead style is an organ and string
arrangement; James Hoskins .(who he?) is
,listed in the credits as playing cello on
that track. The closest thing to "1916"
that I can think of is "The King is Dead"
from Nazareth's rust back in '72. Track
five, "Nighunare(fhe Dreamtime," is not
really a ballad, but it is much slower
than most Motorbangers would expect.
The song is, however, replete with
backwards messages, for those who
giggle at the thought of an enraged
Fundamentalist
The explanation is best said in
Lemmy's own words: "To the people we
left behind--we didn't want to leave ya,
but we really had ·to go! This album is
the better for it. Stale and on a treadmill
in our career,a change was needed." And
whether or not Ha change was needed,"
, one has taken place. A foretaste of the
new band was given on No Remorse,
their 22-track greatest hits album,
The rest - of the tracks are
straightforward,
raw
and
brutal
rock'n'roll, Motorhead style. "Going to
Brazil" and "Angel City" are fairly
typical rock band life-as-it-s songs, while
"Ramones" is a tribute to the great band
who redefined the boundaries of punk.
With this album, Lemmy has shown
us the diversity of Motorhead, as well as
the same sounds that we rocked to in the
pasi and will rock to for years to come.
QUEEN
"INNUENOO'"

WARNER BROS.
20 years is a long time for a band
to be together, much less still playing,
much much less with the original four
members. Yet this incredible feat only

begins to describe the band known as
Queen. They've had many top 20 hits
since 1971; most notably "Bohemian
Rhapsody," and "We Will Rock ' You."
By the by, "Bohemian Rhapsody" 'was
voted the best 'song to be released in the
last 25 years [by whom? --Edl, which is
quite an achievement. Their previous
albums, for the most part, have contained .
basic, quality rock'n'roll.
Their new album, Innuendo, is no
exception. Their guitarist, Brian May,

... tracks are more showy
than normal; seemingly
bloated with self

Importance ...
believers it to be their best album ever.
The first thing you notice, however, is
the lack of hype. They've got one single
out, and there's a Seattle radio station
(KXRX) that's made a deal with Tower
Records to sell the album at a reduced
price, promoting it as their "Eargasm."
Other than that, you've got no full-page
ads, no cardboard stand-Up racks
promoting the band, and generally no
word at all about its release except for
the occasional review. And despite the
secrecy, Innuendo has already gone gold
in Canada.
With this release, Queen has proved
once again why they were popular, and
will continue to be. The tracks tend to be
quite guitar-oriented, yet with that highsounding quality that makes one wonder
if the melody were lifted from an opera.
Which is all well and good, because their

main influences are Jimi Hendrix and
epic c;>~. This also seems to be the
heaviest album they've ever done. When
"Headlong" (their first single from the
album) was released, it took me awhile
to figure out who perfotrned the song. It
certainly has more guitar in it than in .
previous tracks. Its assaulting style makes
one wonder at first if Queen had gone
the way of many .hard-rock bands, hoping
to get Popular by going glam. But a
cursory walk through Innuendo corrects
that· error quickly.
Songs like the title track, "The Show
Must Go On," and "Ride the Wild Wind"
are great examples of the operatic style.
They bring one back to the days of
"Bohemian Rhapsody" and "Bicycle"-with a twist. The former two tracks are
more showy than normal; seemingly
bloated with self-importance (if I may
anthropomorphize a bit),"high-sounding
and epic-like. "I'm Going Slightly Mad"
is a strange song. It starts with little
noises echoing in and out of the
background, then a gentlemen's voice,
contained and calm, sings mildly that
he's "going slightly mad." It almost
would be comical if not I for the
somewhat somber mood that the song
evokes. "Delilah" is fun-loving, like "Fat
Bottomed Girls" from bygone days. You
don't actually know what the song's
about until the middle. As to its meaning:
I'll leave that to you, dear readers.
Suffice it to say that its nothing that
you'd expect.
Queen has achieved an all-time high
in their career. The album is a tour-deforce all to rare for today's simplistic
music industry. On Innuendo, they really
show what 20 years of togetherness and
creativity can produce.
E. Robert Wirsing is a bum posing as
a student at Evergreen,

• music~s, aildtheater peq>le from NOI ...
and South America. The show features
Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel, Hazel
Wolf, Janet McLoud, UMO, The Weeds.
Daryl Cherney, Timothy Hull, One World
Theater, Dancing Colors and many more.
. Presented tonight at 7:00 in the Capitol
Theatet:; a $5.00 donation will be
accepted/expected.

.-

15

The 1991 SPRING CLEAN UP, courtesy
the City of Olympia. runs from today
through the 19th, and features free
services involving collection of yard
waste, scrap metal, and tire recycling.
Place material you want collect at your
curb on the same day as regular garbage
service. All material must be bagged,
canned or bundled with twine; no bundle
should weigh more than 70 pounds-except for entire appliances. For
information call 753-8377.
READING HISTORY, a painless way to
learn and discuss our history, meets the
second Monday morning of each month
at the Washington State Capital Museum
Coach House, 211 West 21st Avenue.
Call 753-1998 for information .

16
/

,j

'\

'.

\

Campus Co-ed League
-Players of all abilities are Welcome!

.

-Optional Pick-Up Practiqe
games held April 12th
-Games Start April 19th
TO REGISTER
• SIGN UP AS INDIVIDUAL OR WITH
FRIENDS AT CRC OFFICE
• COST IS $1 PER PERSON
• DEADLINE TO REGISTER IS APR. 16
@lUJ~~@[N]~~ ©~!L!L ®~@@OO ~U'

downtown olympia
210 east 4th •
786-1444

Are you crazy

eno~gh

to be CPJ

EDIJO'R?

ApPLICATIONS
'FOR 1991-92
COOPER
.
.
POINT JOURNAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF ARE
AVAILABLE AT THE CP J OFFICE,
LIBRARY '2510.
DEADUNE: NOON FRIDAY APRIL

26

ApPLICANTS MUST:
.. BE A TESC STUDENT IN 1991-92
• HAVE NEWSPAPER EXPERIENCE
• FULFILL, EDITOR ,JOB REQUIREMENTS
(REQUIREMENTS INCLUDED IN
APPLICATION PACKET)
,

Page 12 Cooper PoPtt Journal April 11, 1991

11

THURSDAY

Bil..L POST AND WYNN WRIGHT
(haven't we heard these names before?)
play . the Asterisk and Cheese Library
(preViously known, I think, as just plain
the Astensk) at Harrison and Division
today 6 to 8. Presented by the Olympi~
Live Music Society.

·Short fields are used

Jr.

,

.

' ~'

:. !
,.'~
Okay, he doesn't really look like this, but he does play some weird instruments, like electric saxophone and reed
trumpet. Oh, and he was singing weird a capella things a long time before Bobby McFerrin, He's Eddie Harris, and
he plays at the New Orleans Jazz Club and Restaurant in Seattle, Thursday night through Sunday night (see related
story on page 10). photo courtesy Atlantic Records
'.

' 7-a-Side Soccer

MONDAY

ERIN SHRADER plays Irish fiddle and
guitar while TIMOTHY HULL fiddles on
guitar at the Comer tonight, 7:30 pm.
CHRISTINE LAVIN, the "amusing and
talented singer-songwriter," performs at 8
pm tonight in the Library Lobby. Tickets
are $7.50-$10. Call KAOS at 866-6000
'
x6397 for info.
SEA WEED, who swing chains on their
poster,. play tonight with SUPERCHUNK
and CRAYON at the redoubtable 'North
Shore ~urf Club, 116 East 5th Avenue, in
Olympia. All ages, $5.
The Hubei song and Dance Ensemble
presents IMPERIAL BELLS OF CHINA
song and dance based on the musi~
chatllber of Marquis Yi, tonight at 8 pm
at , the Washington Center for the
Performing Arts. Tickets are $13-$17;
students and seniors $11-$15. Half price
tickets available to students with ID one
hour before show-time. Call 753-3329.
The New Lacey Timberland Library now
offers an AFI'ER SCHOOL STORY
TIME for elementary school kids ages 6
to 9, beginning today and continuing each
Thursday afternoon 4:30 to 5:15 pm until
May 23. For m<n information call the
Laqey Library at 491-3860.
The state PERSONNEL BOARD holds
its regular meeting at 10 am, the State

Personnel Board Room, 521 South
Capitol Way . in Olympia, Call Jim
Heitzman at 586-0402.
The Childhood's End Gallery at 222
West
4th
in
Olympia
hosts
NORTHWEST AND SOUTHWEST, a
show combining tfiemes from those two
areas, through April 30. Artists are Carol
Dawson (watercolors), R.T. Freeman
(paintings, furniture), Alec Clayton
(paintings), and the Mud Bay Pottery Cool> (ceramics).
MUSIC IN THE PARK is now accepting
submissions for its Summer 1991 Concen
Series. Concerts throughout July and
August in Sylvester Park, Fridays at noon
and selected Wednesday evenings. Send
demo tapes and publicity material before
April 30th to: Terry Preston, 203 East
4th, Room 321, Olympia, WA 98501.
ERIC MADIS, who is "releasing an
alb~m of original blues material," plays

tomght at the Latona Pub 6423 Latona
Avenue N.E. in Seattle. Admission is a
buck or two, they never tell me which
and they've been sending me things all
year. Call 525-2238.
'

Peter Greenaway's zoo: A ZED AND
TWO NOUGHTS and THE COOK, THE
THIEF, HIS WIFE AND HER LOVER
play at Lecture Hall 3 at 8 pm as part of
Mindscreen Productions' Spring Quarter
International Film Festival. Free.

13

SATURDAY

The MlISterworks Choral Ensemble
Mozart's REQUIEM MASS at the
Washington Center for the Performing
Arts, 512 South Washington in Olympia,
8 pm. Tickets are $5 for adults, $10 for
children. Call 753-8586,
ON THE BOARDS celebrates its 13th
birthday
on
the
13th
with
INTERMISSION IMPOSSmLE, a nonstop performance benefit featuring a
dozen shon performances of this and that,
from Amy Denio, Norman Durkee, Matt
Smith and Ed Sampson, the Billy Tipton
Memorial Saxophone Quartet, and more.
Tickets are $15, call 325-7901.

CBS badass DAN RATHER is the
banquet speaker at the 1991 RadioTelevision News Directors Association·
Society of Professional Journalists Super
Regional Conference (I know, but I
couldn't just put in the acronyms,
everybody would be confused) tonight in
Portland, Oregon, at the Marlott HoteL
For info call Jennifer Brandlon of SPJ at
MOUTHING OFF goes off again as Eli
503-236-4280 or Craig Kuhlman of
and Eppo host Allen Reichman of
Greenpeace and John Calambokidis of the . R'INDA at 503-464-0742.
Cascadia Research Collective, for a show
call~ "Marine ~mals: Are They Still
Commg Up For Air!" Mouthing Off airs
every Friday 10 am to 1 pm on KAOSPM, 89.3 PM. Call in at ~22 or
ANCIENT
FOREST
866-5267, or address comments to The
CHAUTAUQUA,
a
coalition
of Native
KAOS-FM, Evergreen State · College,
Olympia, W A 98505.
speakers, scientists, environmen~sts~

12

FRIDAY

14

SUNDAY

TUESDAY

The Washington State Museum Coach
House
sponsors
CONTEMPORAR Y
LITERATURE, an opponunity to talk
with others about the ideas in good
books. Both talkers and listeners
welcome. For booklist and info call 7531998.
STOP NECK AND SHOULDER PAIN,
especially related to desk work, today 7- .
9 pm in the physical therapy room at St.
Peter's Hospital, $10. Call 493-7587 to
register.

17

WEDNESDAY
. ,

WashPIRG sponsors a Teach-In ' on
poverty, nunger, and homelessness today
in Lecture Hall 5, 6 pm, featuring
speakers, the film "Shelter Boy," and
leaders from area activist groups who
need volunteers.
CREATING YOUR CAREER workshop
at Library 4300, noon to 1 pm. Call the
Career Development Center at 866-6000
x6193 for info.
A . COMPULSIVE
EATING
EDUCATIONAL PROORAM is offered
at S1. Peter Hospital on Wednesdays
starting today, 7-9 pm in rooms in rooms
200-20l. Call 493-7979.

18

THURSDAY

NEW
HORIZONS
CANCER
. EI?UCATION SERIES for patients and
their family members available Thursdays
starting today 7-9 pm at the St Peter
Hospital Regional Cancer Center, third
fl(jQr. Call 493-7587.
BOOMSLANG
plays
with
SUGARBooM and THE NOSES tonight
at 9 pm, the North Shore Surf Club, 116
East Fifth Avenue, Olympia. all ages
welcome.
A F.I.S.T. (Feminists In Self-Defense
Training) workshop today in CAB 110
from 5;30-8:30 pm, including info, selfdefense against verbal and physical abuse,
and a ffiscussion period. Up to 35 women
can participate; call Student Mairs at
866-6000 x6296 or F.I.S.T. at 438-0288
to reserve a space.

Cooper Point Journal Apri111, 1991

Page 13

.Ie

--

News

Survey
·
examin'
e
s
.students'
background
. .
I
--

Pare nts earn ess
but are bette r
d
ted
eby Rafael
ucaMarino
.

'W1T N BSS

[~8

~
r ;)

'J:

25.000 ·30.000 ," .OOUI.I"

f AT ~ERI ·

Suo,.
~h

10:1'1001

d.
Of

niDf!
tdDDI
......._

dIIry

_

QOIIQe

HA~

_

.

HoOh
~

gr.w..t.

l O~' C A11O'"

~

.sorr.

dary

~

ICIlOOI

~

Son-.

gt~ Ql a..o;ili.

00 .a....1.
dtgi!'e

K no.Joi

Again, mothers of Greeners tend to
have more education than mothers of
students from other colleges, although
less than fathers. The mode now is
"college graduate."

F"'f\ Cl'loXe

'- . .

-

RfQURa)
Classified Deadine: 2 pm Mond~
TO PLA~ AN AD:
gTC~:> BY /~ ts'0 TO ~ CP...l
LIB 2510. a. YMPIA. WA 98505.

Ir'".J

~.

NEEDED: seed spreader. Call Tedd at
866-6000 x 82t.3, and leI's make a deal.

78 Puch Moped. Excellent Condition.
LoW Miles. $250. 866-9136
IF Matt Groening, Linda Barry. Charles
COmput ...lPrlnt.... etc. I have so much stuH that Bums, Kenta Hadley. Craig Bartlett, Steve
goes with this computer !hat I can't even list it alii Willis; and Eric Martin can all be
Performs splendidlyl Call 866-14S3 and we'l
respectable cartoonists. then so can you.
negotiate a lair price.
Bring your cartoons andior portfolios to
Library 2510.

This histogram is even more
interesting although probably not very
surprising. While students in other
colleges tend to be more normally
distributed in their political positions,
Greeners are definitely loaded to the left.
What is a fact--and this could be
surprising--is that we also have a number
of far right students. I worry that they
might feel inhibited in expressing their
ideas in public, which is an undesirable
situation for an institution of learning.
One myth that these statistics might
destroy is that Evergreen is full of far
left students; the mode is "liberal," not

~

preferences, in what kind of activities
they usually engaged, their opinions on
all kinds of issues, etc. I will be glad to
show interested readers these other
statistics.
Rafael Mario 'is The Evergreen Srare
College Math Coordinator.

<:?.)(O)(

Looking for Diplomacy playera (the second
most written about board game)- like a
combination of chess and Woodrow Wilson
making peace during Worfd War I. Call Steve
866-8644.

~

~

THE ANCIENT FOREST SURVIVAL SHOW
LOST~2 TICKETS ON TESC CAMPUS to
WILL BE IN OLYMPIA FOR ONE NIGHT
Neil Young concert PLEASE, PLEASE tum
ONLY. SEE IT SUNDAY, APRIL 14. 7 pm
these in to TESC campus security. Thank
CAPITOL THEATRE. THIS INCREDIBLE
you.
~IVE SHOW IS ONL YT $5.00 PLUS F.REE
. CHILD CARE.
Found Oriental wallet Describe to claim
x6140.

LOST COCKER SPANIEL HAD RED
COLLAR. LAST SEEN IN LACEY ON
SPONSOR ME. I'm going to drive to South APRIL 5th AND ON SLEATER-KINNEY A
America, taking pictures and.writing a travel FEW DAYS LATER. DOG ANSWERS TO
guide for students. a donation of 1 dollar or SANDY. PLEASE CALL 456-5659.
more would be greatly appreciated. 1 dollar
= 35 miles. Please hurry up I'm leaving April
THE CPJ WANTS TO HELPI NO CHARGE
29. Send to Leopoldo Catano, 605 South
FOR LOST/FOUND/
Bay Road, Olympia. WA 98506. Tel:
STOLENIFREE
ADS.
866-7098 after 9 pm .

A FIR[STORfo")
01= cONTI<ovr:l6 y
[fLUpn IN ~fAJ A

~

STU Dt/VT G~ou
uSES :50ME orIT5 SJ;'A "10NEY
TO

Hous/nll

~

WANTED: TWO BEDROOM APARTMENT
IN OLYMPIA for summer (June-Sept)
Willing to sublei or housesit from
renter/owner. CALL 866-4276.
FREE SUMMER RENT. WE SEEK
STUDIOIONE BEDROOM APARTMENT
FOR THE SUMMER. WE'LL KEEP YOUR
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INTERESTED? 16&-1453

HOY

4

5Pf.o,r.

n-l E
" ) 0 clE'lY f=ot<. THE
VfbLE.v 1 OV[~T~ R0v-!
of=.THr; U. 5.
GOIIEfl(J' ftI1ENt "

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While students in other
colleges tend to be more
normally distributed in
their political position,
Greeners are definitely
loaded to the left.

J.ost/Found/Free? Personals

fOUND POOL CUE SEE CAMPUS
~ECURITY.

.

The data from which I have
produced these histograms include other
interesting statistics: how the students see
themselves, what are their religious

l hi1d CI"ocIoQ

FOUND RAINGEAR AND OUTDOOR
Vocalist/performance artist desires
BOOTS. CONTACT CAMPUS SECURITY
nonfunctlonlng kitchen appliances. Don't
trOCLAIM.
I
throw them away. give them to Dan in 0114
Eyeglasses found in Seminar xerox room .
or call 866-9926.
Call x6140 to recover.

FE/3RuA Rt' I~H

:5P.1rRE

Fa' r\ghl

dropped five Hiroshimas worth of bombs
fascism with which the world is being
we can think of that we are not only
that killed over two hundred thousand . controlled, I have been grateful many
opposed to what they are doing in every
Iraqi people and devastated the entire
times for the people in my life· now.
little comer of the world they can slime
country.
Ms. Littlewood misunderstood me: I
or bomb their way into, we are going to
These past few months have been a
did not have alot of friends in- Olympia
actively resist what they are doing and
quite bizarre and frightening time for me.
when I moved here. I do now, however,
try to stop them.
Mter many years of awareness of what
and many of them are Evergreen students
You should have stayed with the
the government of the United States will
(and a few faculty) working with the
group, Steve. The emotional haranguing
do' to any living thing that stands in its
newly-named Olympia Movement for
we' ve gone through in the past two
way, I felt a heavy hammer of shock
Justice and Peace, formerly the Olympia
months has brought many of us closer
come crashing down on me over the
Anti-Intervention Coalition. What 1 wish
together and has certainly put precious
early days of the war, the forty-day war.
Ms. Littlewood had conveyed was the
new life into my vision of a culture of
And at the end, when there were color
sense of my amazement at my good
resistance. This is the vision that has
pictures on televisions and in newspapers
fortune in finding the people I am now
supplanted the more lovely, wistful dream
of totally-bombed-out highways with
living, working, and playing with. People
of every living thing living out its natural
pieces of bodies flung throughout the
who are as outraged and as sorrowful and
and beautiful existence without the threat
wreckage; when hotshot bomber pilots
as committed as any I have ever known
of genocide or extinction. But it is a
from Whidbey Island joked about the
to' refusing to accept that this is just the vision . And it is possible.
And I
"sitting ducks," the stupid Arabs that
way things are.
believe it is our only chance."
don't even know how to put up a fight
I don't know Steve Manthe, but
One more picky little thing: much as
(sound a bit like the violent, snickering
from the article, I imagined a I love whales, especially Orcas, I resent
LA cops with a whole country' full. of
conversation with him in which I would serious activists such as the ones I work
Rodney Kings?); when I realized that yes,
respond to his statement questioning ~ur with here being described as a "transient
indeed, all the reporters from all the
success
(but apparently
acceptmg community." Yes, some of us just got
news services in our country, blessed as
responsibility for his debilitating apathy). here and some of us arc leaving, but we
we are with a free press, really are the
I would say to him, "Steve, you should do not move about the country as one
kind of people who can stroll through
have stayed with the group. It's true,' we attached unit. There is a community of
carnage (synonyms are bloodshed,
didn't stop the war, but then we never ' resistarice growing in this country, of
butchery, killing, slaughter) and report
really believed we had much of a chance, many colors and many ways, and I hope
what they have seen through a thick haze.
at least not until alot more people come that those of us who leave Olympia will
of lies and praise for the slaughterers; at out and stay out.
find in their path others like those I
the end of the war until now, when all
But we ARE a group of people
found here.
my friends debate only the degree of tryi~g to make known in whatever ways Jackie Wolf

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.

::

_

We can observe in this histogram that
Greener's fathers tend to have higher
education than fathers of students from
other colleges, a statistical fact that seems
to agree with the previous statistics of
parental income. Even more, the mode
(the largest category) is "fathers with
graduate degree."

~PAY/lllENT

HelD Wanted

. Il
Ii
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.". .
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'

The

"far left." We should also keep in mind
that these five political categories are the
ones in which the students have classified
themselves, which are not neCessarily the
same categories in which a political
scientist would classif): them.

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percentage of students that had their
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for Greeners than for other students.

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went back to Seattle with a little less
despair about the state of "the movement"
in this country.
The surprise I've
experienced since moving here is not
because of discovering active and aware
people in Olympia but rather stems from
the sense of mutual warmth, respect, and
commitment I've felt as I have begun
working in an entirely new community of
activists during a very difficult time,
during a time when the United States has
gone to war in the Middle East.
It has been difficult for me because
there are people I love in the Middle
East, and they are not there representing
the United States in Operation Desert
Storm; they live \here, in the West Bank
and Gaza Strip of Israeli-occupied
Palestine. They are people I lived with
for five months in 1989.
They include 6-year-old Kadeeja, her
younger sister Ashwa, aQd their mother
Ilham, my best friend in Palestine. They
include Majeda and Ra'ed and Adli and
Amal. They are family to me.
They are Palestinians, Arabs, the ones
demonized, misrepresented. dehumanized
by the govern~ent I am told to be proud
of, the government I am told to love or
leave, the government whose fighter
pilots I am told to support as they

~

· .

-- .

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. 0

coalition, from page 9

CLAg~D

.
-1 - '.

lV1AT1TEtvlATll'CAL

Histograms are pictorial ways 0 f
looking at statistics; they depict data
more clearly than tables. I will illustrate
the use of histograms by transforming
some of the data that was used in the
form of tables in the statistics workshops
of the programs Society; Social Change
and Expressive Arts and Cultures in
Collision last Winter Quarter. These data
were produced by Steve Hunter in the
office of Institutional Research and
Planning at TESC with the cooperation of
the American Council of Education.
For all the histograms, the value axis
(the vertical axis) represents percentages
corresponding to the categories along the
horizontal axis. Black bars correspond to
flTSt-year students in the Fall of 1990 and
white bars correspond to first-year
students in other public four-year
colleges. Out of 390 frrst-time, full-time
freshmen that enrolled at TESC last fall,
135 volunteered to complete the
questionnaire. Therefore, the .sample does
not constitute a true random sample.
The frrst histogram does not show a
significant difference between Greeners
and other college students, except that
there is a slightly higher percentage of
high income students at Evergreen.

-

~
..

THE

lOUCA_

Comics

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~~

College Life by Chris Fiset

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Andy's World by Andy

I
Strip by Heather-Irene Davis

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Bullets Are Cheap by Edward Martin III

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FutuR. ~ero.+i~.s

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fr
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PIZZA

ANATOMY

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Page 14 Cooper Point Journal April 11, 1991
Cooper Point

Jo~l

April 11, 1991

Page 15

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Media
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