The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 8 (November 15, 1990)

Item

Identifier
cpj0513
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 8 (November 15, 1990)
Date
15 November 1990
extracted text
. ' ;"~

...... ~ '"
f

.~

-:1 , _" ;



...... _, ~,

'/

.

. "

.{ .
~' ~'f)~~ ""i

>'~~' \
II

\



....



~

..... ,

_ .... ~ _ •.,. "'"7

\ ......

i'he "v er9r ~ "' r · I.~,.-· , ·

Nin~te~n . ye3:rS·.-.~
. An(I,wwej~e·.
-

.;.



••

'.'

'.

',-

'.

'

, " ' . '

..

'. .



••

,'.

;"

\

.'



~ '.

"

. ....

j

,

".





'.



still
,

' , '

seep~ge

';

Cooper Point Journal
. November IS, 1990

.. Volume 21 Issue 8 ' -\

.

Students affected..by housing crunch
do.v bA"t'55 ...
W1 4Ce

;-t

vtV'y
fv ;l'..-.d ~

So \)

:;;t

wet""1..,
, ',

.

;:,

r'\), : . . ' "

1 ".- -

.

~O()

.3

T

,

, .

,.

,

-

left shacking up in tents, cars, or friends'
houses.
l1avid has been living at a friend's
house for the past two months waiting
for a room to open up in a house he
wanted to live in. "I feIt like the house
guest that wouldn't go away," he said
"It was very diffICult not having a space
all to myself." At the same time he's
thankful he had somewhere to live. It
took David one and a half months 10 find
an apartment Considering he arrived in

Olympia towards the end of September
he was lucky it took him only that long.
By scanning the newspaper cIassifieds he
discovered there was simply nothing on
either the west side or east side of town.
However, if he didn't mind a 20-mile
commute there was a place out in
Tumwater. But David, like so many other
students, was looking for somewhere a
little closer to campus, and priced under
$200 a month.
Bob Shary, a prospective Evergreen
student, lived out of his van' for two
weeks while trying to find a place to
live. "It was fun." (Referring to living out
of his van.) However, he does admit that
living in his one bedroom apartment
downtown is a much warmer experience.
Not only are houses difficult to come
by, but vacancies in apartment complexes
are rare. Betty Murray of Coopers Glen
Apartments on Overhulse Road has seen
a rapid increase 'in the demand for
apartments in the last year. She said the
apartments were at 100% occupancy in
July of last year· thus accounting for a
50% decrease in apartment turnover.
"Once people get into apartments they
stay in them for the summer," she said.
Of all the tenants in Coopers Glen, Betty
estimates that between 80-90% of them
are students. Quite a few of them are
Student David Mosely anguished by housing situation. photo by Claire Littlewood families with either one or both sPouses
studying at Evergreen.
.

eC(sy ~

(ha lAjf" .

-fo

by Claire Littlewood
.
"It's been a psychologically traumatic
experience," said senior David Mosely of
the problems he had finding affordable
rental housing in Olympia. He's not alone
in his frustration.
According to the Thurston County
Housing Authority the vacancy rate in
rental housing is about 4% in Thurston
County, malcing this area one of the
tightest markets in the state for rental
housing. SUldents like David Mosely are

,

Vacation week hours
INCESSANT DREAMS
-

Bound For Hell

Thorns snap beneath my souls as I wander through
Glitter of an onyx wing ~-TII1-ilmi.minA-------a- famitfarwood.
---~----------~SIT()WS proor-ot1He's fabled sllille
Faithful hark the heralds, while angels sing
And insist that it's all divine.
My thoughts are metamorphosed with each breath
of menthol.
Preachers preach and prayers pray
convinced that their lord will rise
But not one disciple is free from doubt
I've seen it in their eyes.

And once again the day opens with purple
porcelain shattering against a crystal vanity,

"Do you swear to God", they ask
"Whose God?" I ask in return
They stare at me expressionless, aghast
And promise me that I'll burn.

Everyone dreams of mirrors hung on the cypress,
although only a few recall the day of their
resurrection.

Insist that I am bound for hell
To me it's all the same
I don't hear God's redeeming bell
And I don't feel the heat of hell's flame

I was present that glorious day, and shall never
forget how precisely each mirror was hung,
The sun waltzed thrQugh my mind and held me
silent, the wake of the beam opened my heart as I
drifted down a path of many cherished revelations.

But there is one question
I hope you'll answer true
Was it you that created mankind?
Or man, who created you.

I learned not to sleep on blankets of purple
porcelain, and promise never to wrap my head in
cellophane, for I will not be able to see the
dove that flies incessantly above my head, or
hear the rage of the falls that run through my
veins,
Brad R Burkett

~~

••••••••••••••••••• ¥¥¥ •• ~

il Anyone who would like to contribute poetry to
~
il the Cooper Point Journal for possible publication
~
il in the poetry section Is invited to drop off your
ic submissions at the CPJ. Library 2510. Please
~
il include. your name and phone number or address on
ic your typed submission. Remember, original 9OI\g
iclyrics and other forms of verse are not· only _
ic acceptable, but are. most refreshlngl Thank You.

*

**
*

~¥¥ ••• ¥ •••• ¥ . . . . . . . ¥¥.¥••••

Page 16 Cooper Point Journal November 8, 1990 -

Anthony Brown

, Library
Monday-Wednesday 10 am-5 pm
Thursday-Sunday CLOSED

Both Coopers Glen ~d Evergreen
housing suffer huge waiting lists during
the summer months. Judy Holman, who
has .worked in Evergreen Housing for orre
and a half years, said the waiting list this
past summer was several hundred in
number. She did stress that one has to
take into account · students who simply
apply for housing and don't end up
attending Evergreen. Yet there has been
a marked increase in the demand for
campus housing in the past couple of
years.
Judy sees the increase due in part to
the younger population now attending
Evergreen. "Eighteen . year olds fresh out
of high school don't want to be living
away from campus," she observed. In
dealing with students who arrive and
have no place to live, Housing manages
to accomodate. "This year we overbooked
and had some people sleeping on
mattresses for a few days while we tried
to place them. " The Housing staff
attempts to march similar students looking
for housing, they also have a current list
of apartment complexes off campus, as
well as a roommate board.
In the long range plan, Evergreen
will eventually add more housing. For the
time being rental housing in Olympia will
remain a headache for many students.
Fourth-year student Claire Littlewood
is a staff writer for the CPJ.

Servicesrewm to regular schedules on Monday.

Computer Applications Lab
Monday-Tuesday 9 am-5 pm
Wednesday 9 am-noon

Greenery
CLOSED
Deli

Media Loan
Monday-Tuesday 7:45 am-4 pm
Wednesday 7:45 am-noon

Monday-Wednesd;ly 8:30 am-6 pm
Thursday-Sunday CLOSED
Campus Recreation Center ' .
Monday-Friday CLOSED,

Thursday CLOSED
Friday 7:15 am-5 pm .
Saturday 9 am-6 pm
Sunday 11 am-5 pm

Lab Stores
Monday-Friday CLOSED

_ _-----J~--fil!lDleL.'CaI'.e------'-------.....JIiO!· Jksror:e.....-------___:_--M[o.nday-W-OOn6-S~-6-pm--1llilfsday-Sunday-€LeSEB'--

CLOSED UNTIL SUNDAY
Computer Center
Closing Wednesday at midnight
Re-open Saturday--regular hours

At-Iargepositio'n s open
by Brian Almquist
In order to encourage more
applications for the eight at-large
positions for SUldent Governance, the SG
has extended the deadline for application
until the end of fall quarter. The at-large
positions were created for students who
feel that they are not being adequately
represented by the cultural caucus system.
At-large representatives are not elected
through the caucus system, but are
selected through the following process:
I) Gathering of 30 signatures of
registered students on a petition stating
that the signers support the candidate for
representative.
2~ Submittal of a letter of intent to

CPJ
Monday-Tuesday 10 am-4 pm

Red Square shanty

the SG outlining the person's reasons ' for
running and h~r/his goals for governance . .
3)" If more than eight students follow
the procedure, an all-sUldent vote will be
held during which the eight candidates
receiving the most votes will be selected.
4) Candidate's letters of intent will
be available as the only voting guide, and
independent campaigning is not permitted.
Letters of intent are being posted at
the Student Communications Center, right
next to the Deli in the CAB. Students
interested in the at-large process can
reach the Student Communications Center
at x6785.
, Brian Almquist is Qne of the current
"at-loose" representatives of the SG.

Representatives selected

As The Pogues slur their way through another incomprehensible number,
I sit at my keyboard and watch the rain jump in the puddles outside my wind~w.
My car waits patiently in it's leaf-ridden ,place beneath th~ yellow maples,
, waiting for me to get tired of this wet, miserable place and drive home.
A maroon Citation hisses past, heading for the Interstate,
hoping not to meet an example of its namesake.
(Get to the point)
The Unhomed collect in strange places,
like the dead leaves in the comer parking spaces,
and I could join them, but I tell myself I'm just passing through,
and soon I'll be home, and the people here won't matter anymore.
(It's Poetry, dude, it doesn't have to rhyme)
Erika Barcott

by Scott A Richardson
Cultural caucuses held their initial
meetings last week, and several groups
selected representatives for Student
Governance.
These are the selected r,epresentatives:
.
Latino/Chicano
Cinnimin .Arena and Roberto Enriquez
Jewish
Suzanne Saines and Becca Gross
LesbiaolGaylBisexual
Laurel Irwin and Clif Messerschmidt
American Indian
Maia Bellon and Gayle Clemons
European-Anierican
Mark McKechnie and Kelli Smittle
The four other caucuses have not yet

selected representatives; They are: older
students, students with challenges,
Asian-Pacific Islanders, and AfricanAmericans.
Of the eight at-large positions, two ,
have attracted attention from members of
the community,
.,
For information on the SG contact
the Student Communications Center in
CAB206 or cau x6785. The information
board outside the SCCoffice is for SGrelated material; the SCC coordinators
request that you refraiJi from posting
other information in this space.
Scott Richardson is maII!lgtng edilor
of 'he,CPJ.

The Everareen State College
.

Olympia, ,!A 98505

-<1'

Address Correction Requested

Evergreen CIS PES (Committee In Solidarity with the Peoples ot EI Salvador)
has erected a shanty to commemorate tl)e->killing of student~ at the University
of EI Salvador (Evergreen's Salvadoran sister university) one year ago. Over
twenty students will be Iivl
in the shanty until
by Leslyn' Lee

Internal SeePage
Sexual harasSment DTF
Swimming and soccer
Kelleher's editorial
Amnesty Interriqtlonal
Open Door series
A&E extra: Rock shows
Mystery Interview
Another Wasnlngton

4
5
5
6
6
6
7
7

Counter-cultural center
Mangling Editorial
Another Henry cartoon
Hamlin views films
Mould forms
Woofer review
Calendar
FMLN cartoon response
Homegrown comics

8
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15

Nonprofit Organization
U.S. Postage Paid
Olympia, WA 98505

Permit No. 65

r

... NFWS ·. BRlFfS.~. . . _____-----.

News ,'

"Messiah to. hQQieless kills self at age ·46

rr=~====~=Qu;:;::::===.:==~f~7h~~W;:=i=~~k======~====;1 state logs. '.
S&A JJoard
ote' 0 t e ee '
"It's likely that the state will take in
more
money in the ' future than in the
members selected "It was the perfect opportunity to tell ' 20
past," said Governer Gardnez. "That's

EVERGREEN--The Student Activities
good· news, since state · timber sales in
office has announced the selection of the
recent ,years have I10t geqerated enough
1990-1991 S&A Bap-d. Students who
money to cover school and university
serve on the board deteimine le\!Cls of
" c o n s t r u c t i o n needs."
funding for stu.dent groups " and otha
S&A organizations. This year's bod
members are: Lauren Town, Janice Sakai,
Geraldo Rivera in an interview discussing his and his wife's
Jennifer Gilke*, Margaret Garrett·, Curtis
infertility problems.
Goodman, Garth Irons·, Jerry Price·, Son
EVERGREEN--The photographs of
Mai, Lia Fierro, and Javier Salas. Those !J:;;=========================~=~ David J. Capers will be on display in
marked with an asterisk are alternate promise safe driving. A permanent Gardner has adopted will take effect
Gallery II in the Library building through
board members.
memorial scroll will also be established January 1, 1991.
November 29. ' Many of Capers'
photographs were taken while he was still
I
to remember those who have died due to
With federal timber harvests in
drugs or alcohol. Evergreeners will be Washington state being reduced by more
a student at The Evergreen State College,
working under his sponsor, Bernard
invited to add the names of people they
than half in an effort to save the northern
Johansen.
In 1985 Capers was offered an
spotted owl, nearly 100 small- and
wish to remember.
opportunity to go to India, for six
EVERGREEN--Using the slogan,
For more information on the Jurassic
medium-sized mills that have depended
months, as a photographer for a Fulbright
on the supply of federal logs that are
"Dinosaurs, Not Drugs" a group of Group, contact Shary Smith, Evergreen's
Advance Research Project and has
threatened with closure. The mills employ
students are mounting a campaign to drug and alcohol coordinator and mental
included some of those images in this
sa(e
driving
over
the health counselor, at 866-6000, x6800.
thousands of Washington workers and are
promote
Thanksgiving week holiday. The group,
some of the state's few exporters of exhibition. Following his return from
India in 1986, he studied video at TESC
which began last year, sponsors a number
fmished wood products.
of activities including a Friday night
"It's critical that we maintain and returned to Orissa, India in 1989 as
Jurassic Cafe, a place for students who
S
diversity in the industry--to save jobs, to photographer/videographer
on
an
OLYMPIA--Governor Booth Gardner preserve our rural communities, and to
American Institute of Indian Studies
don't use drugs or alcohol to relax and
get a cup of coffee in a lively and has approved state rules implementing a
keep timber prices stable," Gardner said. projeCt After recording five hours of
supportive atmosphere. .
,
new federal law that bans exporting most
"These rules will help preserve a way of classical Orissi dance in the TV studio at
The Jurassic Group's cuqent project, of the logs that are harvested from
life which formed the foundation of this TESC, live performances in Seattle, and
thirty hours of raw footage in India, he
"Tie One on For The Holidays," will publicly owned lands in Washington. The state and which we all value highly."
promote awareness by giving out green federal law, which Congress passed
Timber revenues, which fund a has concluded that the only way to truly
ribbons to tie onto car antenna to earlier this year, prohibits exporting more portion of county budgets, university and experience dance is to "be there."
symbolize a "Greener who doesn't drink than 25 percent of the timber that is sold . common-school construction projects in
and drive." Plans are also underway to each year from lands owned by the state Washington state, will not suffer a loss
continue the campaign during the weeks of Washington for its local governments. of revenues from the ban on exporting
before Winter Holiday Break.
,. The law also called on the governor 10 state logs, according to a draft study
The CPJ reported Jurassic ' Cafe
The group will also distribute adopt rules for administering and compiled by the Governor's Timber
Team. The study found that revenues meeting time incorrectly. Meetings are
"Contracts for Life," covenants that enforcing the expo{t ban. The rules
would dip slightly due to the export ban, held from 5:30 pm to 7 pm in the
but that cutbacks in federal timber faculty/staff lounge on the first floor of
supplies would more than compensate for the CAB. We apologize for any
the loss due to increased competition for inconvenience.

million Americans that we have the same
problem and that we are all fellow
travelers.

by Carolyn 'andPaula Lang
'
Concern is escalating in America that
the citizens of this country may return to
the apathetic mentality of the 1970s
concerning the homeless. Shelters across
the nation are feellhg a loss since the '
death of Mitch Snyder in July. In
Olympia, ' Mark Dooley of aread and
Roses HOltse of Hospitalit:rstated that
Snyder's deatb was "demola1iziilg to the
cause."
Who will take the lead, and carry on
his work? The c.hurches, synagogues and
·mosques of this land could make a

Phot() exhibit in
Galle·. ry· 2

o

· on on I.or the
T Ie
holidays

(

I
Booth bans og '
rt
expo

.



only one replied in the affmnative.
Furthermore, convincing the Reagan
AdminiStration to cooperate took drastic

by Jerry Price
This weekend Hugh Moag and I
participated in a meeting of the
Washington
Intercollegiate
State
Legislature, an Qrganization of students
from colleges and universities around the
state who are interested in the legislative
process. One of the goals of W.I.SL. is
to send a message to the legislators on
both the state and the national level about
what is impqrtant to the students of the
state of Washington. During the course of
our meeting with other students from
around the state, Hugh and myself
.
introduced
a resolution to be adopted b Y
W.I.S.L. and I am pleased to say that
after a long debate the majority of
students supported this resolution and that
it was passed. The resolution reads as
follows:
Whereas: Our nation now finds itself
in a position where the interest of its
citizens and econo.my have 'been

Fresh Roasted
Daily

. 513 Capitol Way
<

~

$ecurity Blotter

Monday, November 5
1235: Suspicious person reported in dorm
area.
2018: Woman reports a purse stolen from
a vehicle in C-Lot.
Tuesday, November 6
1019: A pumpkin was 'exploded' on Red
Square. '
Wednesday, November 7
1445: Student reports being verbally
harassed by a male student
2212: A student in respiratory distress
due to an allergic reaction in Modular
housing, 911 called.
Tbursday, November 8
1300: Female student is allegedly
harassing and mentally abusing her
roommates and their male friends.
Friday, November 9
0245: A power outage, at the Organic
Farm and in the surrounding area, was
caused by a fallen tree at Lewis Road,

Puget Power notified.
2312: Back window shattered on a
vehicle in the Mod parking area.
Saturday, November 10
0529: Female studen:t reports
intruder in her apartment
missing. See page 9 for details.
'1920: Burnt rice causes a fire alarm in
D-Dorm.
Sunday, November 11
0351: Woman reported to be causing Ii
disturbance in the dorms.
1832: Two wallets stolen from an
apartment in A-Dorm.
1900: Woman reported to be causing a
verbal disturbance at The Branch.
1946: A checkbook was reported stolen
from housing.
2058: A phone in the Housing Commons
BIg/Community Center is missing from
its previous location.

OPJ4S

SEWING
CENTER

OLYMPIA POlTERY & ART SUPPLY

AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR

CC1J'o&uPllL5f!TI()J(S

&'

'Warm !J{ofitfay 'H-tsliu

_.

2742 Pacific Ave. S.E.

WIDE SELECTION
10% DISCOUNT TO STUDENTS

M":~:~: I
1822 W. HARRISON • 943-5332 '
HOURS: MON,FRI 9·6 SAT 10·5

i

(in Pacific Center ne~
to Puget Power)

943-8131
OPEN TIL 6 WEEKNIGHTS

this legislature in the future you are more
than welcome to. If you are interested ,
call me (Jerry Price) ~t 866-4158.

Jerry Price has been selected for this
year's S&A Board.

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

T1.aKt rIC, E~ e_«u/~ p,. ~tk«'irJ d (,~ ~4'.

REBUCK-DIXON TRAIN

/lie. M

r~

HARRISON & DIVISION • OLYMPIA • 943-8700

BILL POST

NEWSPAPERS

PUBLICATIONS· COMICS
(10% DISCOUNT ON ALL MAGAZINES)

~~~~~~==~~=-~~~~

I

400 COOPER Pt. Rd. SW

~ ~««_ttil(4'~'6##(<<""(,.

.,l/afH, a (!~I 1/0/111 Tft,QI(iAfj4U,lirj

":::

• Accomplished Folk Musician
• Come Early and Enjoy Pizza By The Slice

BIG CITY SHOPPING WITHOUT THE HASSLE
FULL LINE OF
.LOCAL, OUT OF STATE, and FOREIGN
·UNCOMMON • HARD TO FIND

d"

(, 6#tfttit«lirJ (, ~".. PIu.,,, ~ ( k4',ra(" ·

fww~

(, lir~
; :

f~11r

.

Illv'FMIefu-tl';ee efta/!« tlfal(~eJ(t

7-9 p.m.
CO-SPONSORED BY THE
OLYMPIA LIVE MUSIC SOCIETY

THE GREENERY WILL BE CLOSED NOV 19-NOV 23

Corner of Legion Way and Washington in the Hotel Olympian

THE DELI WILL BE OPEN

943-9242

SERVING FULl MEAL ENTREES. BREAKFAST. LUNCH. DINNER
(CLOSED THANKSGIVING DAy)

• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~=:D=E=:T=R=.;O=:I:T=:':S::;;=:~r::-;:-;:-;:-~-:;:-:;:-:;:-::-::-~-~-: - - - - - - - - - - _. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -,

· ~iirE~~~~M~i

BERNINA.BROTHERSoELNA
KENMORE·NECCFI·NELCO
NEW HOME·PFAFF·VIKING ,
WHITE·MORSE·RlCCAR
" MANY MOREl

• SEWING VIDEO'S
• CLASSES
• HONEST, EVERYDAY PRICES

experience for both of us. The chance to
argue with fellow students from the more
"conservative" universities was a hoot, if
l!Jlyone else would like to take part in

t

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

• SERVICE & PARTS FOR

'ToJ{[£

jeopardized by rhetoric and special
interest politics, and
Whereas: The young men and women
of our age are being asked to place their
lives in jeopardy for a policy witlwut
clear definitions, and
Whereas: We, as students, have a
moral obligation to both support and
demand the immediate .return of our
brothers and sisters now deployed in
Saudi Arabia and the Middle East, and
Whereas: Our nation urgently needs
to invest more of our resources fighting
the social, economical, and political
problems within our own nation.
Let it be resolved by the Senate and
House of the W.I.S.L. in internal session
assemble that:
We as student legislators strongly
urge our national and state leadership to
reconsider its present offensive posture in
the Middle East.
We implore these same legislators to

,
bring our brothers and sisters Iwme, with
the understanding that some American
troops may be required to stop Saddam
Hussein's possible aggression into Saudi
Arabia,
However, we demand that these
troops revert immediately to United
Nations control, and that our troops not
be proportionally larger than tlwse of
other nations present in such a
peacekeeping force .
This was a very interesting learning

f

• VIKING
• WHITE

Cooper PoitI.t Jou.nuzi
On ?,our 19t1i. ?,ear

In 1985, he stood before a shelter in
our nation's capital and claimed, "What
we're doing here is very dangerous." This
unusual human being of compassion,
energy, and religious conviction was, at
age 46, ironically found in his shelter
bedroom dead by noose.
Paula Lang is a regular writer for
tlUs paper. Carolyn is a first-time
contributor.

Resolution op'p oses Mid-East policy

t

Correction

life... [and} you don't argue with God."

Pray~r was a mainstay in his life.

~~a::a.e:c~
1~~~~e~e~i~9~~
Washington, D.C. area for support, and

I

I

achon. '
spoke regularly to college students Qnthe
In the midst of the 1970s, America plig~t he was' fighting, and as a result,
was blatantly ~ ignoring the issue of its maily of those students volunteered their
homeless population. The crisis situation time at soup kitchens and shelters. '
had been steadily increasing u · n t i l
In 1984, after a 51-day fast, he was
advocate Mitch Snyder vigorously effective in persuading,Ronaid Reagan to
emerged in Washington, D.C. and became provide the necessary funds for a shelter
profoundly involved with the Community to house 1200 residents. In the course of
for ere8tive Non-Violence and began to . his cauSe,'he battled a succession of fasts
provoke public awareness.
.
and court suits.
.
This devoted messiah struggled
Snyder was dedicated to making a
tirelessly on behalf of the less fortunate
difference and was often quoted as
in . our society. He n9t only labored for
saying, "God told me to do it ..! have
the displaced but with them. Snyder ~~ beencalled-to live' a different kind of

. !

rt.
For more infonnation
'about hUmane alternatives
to animal dissection
in classrooms,
CAll TOU-FREE

EDOiEGSHAW

:

$UNDAY11/1e·$5,8P.M.

:

THE ARNOLD
"
BROTHERS

••


WI:D.11/21 • $3,8 P.M.
PORTLANO'SSCION OF SOUL





'CALVIN .WALKER



FRI.-8AT. 11/23-24 • $2, 9 P . M . :

AND DON'T FORGET •••

EVERY THURSDAY AT If

i

Join -the Readers of .
The Cooper Point Journal

:
:

You receive The Cooper Point Journal
at your home each week ... and get to
support The Journal at the sar:,e timel

, .,, -





Name:
Address:


:

$5





Send to: Coope,

:>int Journal, LIB 2510, TESC, Olympia, WA 98505

:

.iII • • _ • • • • • • _.: _.. ~_._ • • • • • • • • • • • • _ • • ~ • • • __ •

Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

Page 2 Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

•• '

• Regular Subscription $15
• Patron Subscription $30
• Angel SubsCrlptlon $50



COMEDY:
P.M.,

, DISSEC110N INFOIlMATlON H01llNE I-BOO-922-J:lROG (3764)
A student outreocb project ifthe Anlmallegal Defense Fund

SUBSCRIBEI

'

d

'

Page 3

\

News

Sexual harassment at Evergreen
Present sexual
harassment policy
under review
by Libya T.M. Taylor
"Sexual harassment happens . at
Evergreen,"
says
campus
Interim
AfflJ1l1ative Action Officer Masaharu
Jones. However, in Jones' three yeru:s at
Evergreen, not one faculty member has
been dismissed due to sexual harassment
.charges.
.
Sexual harassment is a form of

an

not wish to have a meeting, the offended
party can talk to the afflJ1l1ative aCtion
officer. The officer can act as a mediator,
or assign a mediator to the case. The
mediator will meet with the · parties
involved and try to reach Ii solution.
Evergreen's Sexual Harassin~~t Policy
has been su~essful in this respect. Most
cases never progress beyond this point. In
the event that a solution is not reached,
there are other options. The victim may
. file an official complaint, hire an "
attorney, or contact the state Human
Rights Commission, among other options.
At this time, a Disappearing Task

discrimination. "It may consist of
individual using the influence of their
pOsition, such as that of faculty over
student, to pressure others into sexual
situations. It may · also involve drawing
attention to another's manner of dress or
physical attributes in a sexual manner.
When faced with a situation that one
believes to be harassment, Evergreen's
Sexual Harassment Policy recommends a
meeting between the offended party and
their offender. Many times a situation
may be a case of miscommunication.
In the event the meeting is
unsuccessful, or the offended party does

person, and were interested in helping me
develop something for myself even though you knew so much about me and my
past. Instead you listened to me tell you
the degree of my vulnerability and my
lack of understanding of personal boundaries and roles. You weren't helping me
at all, you were only reinforcing the
abusive patterns I knew so well.
At one point I asked if I could kiss
you, not in a sexual way, but out of the
friendship I thought existed between us.
You should have said it wasn't appropriate, that you would be my friend
and teacher without my having to do
anything but be your student and do my
work. I kissed you and let you hold me,
because I thought a friend would teach
me how to be a real person.
I figured that a real person didn't
always have to be sexual. Each time you
moved around to the front of your desk
and stood in front of me I felt awkward
and uncomfortable. When you took my
hand and placed it on your chest and at
other times, moved it below your waist I
was confused and felt ill-at-ease. I ignored these feelings because yoll were a
"teacher." You thought I had a crush on
you and decided to see how far you
could push it. Because I trusted you, I let
you see how vulnerable I was. I let you
touch me and stimulate me and then
dismiss me from
office. Later I tried
uncom
I was about the situation between us. I
was hesitant to question your motives,
afraid that you would no longer work
with me academically. You listened and
acknowledged that there was some truth
in what
was saying. I thought you
understood, so I felt better. Then you
would walk over to me, and give me a
hug and move my hand against you, and
so the ' Cycle of Abuse continued.
I left school a week before the quarter was over, confused and unable to
figure out what was wrong. Whef! I
fmally returned to school, a quarter later,

cycle. I am also convinced, that awareness of the cycle of abuse is important
for those students who haven't quite
rcached the poirit of figuring out that
behavior such as yours is out of line and
unprofessional.
As a new student, I realized that for
me 10 get the most out of your program
academically and to grow personally, I
had to become vulnerable, take some
risks, letting you and others get to know
me, and ' trust that I was in a safe environment. An underlying message that
you seemed to be making as you spoke
in class is what helped me bridge the gap
of fear and distrust. Presenting yourself
as a father figure, you spoke of personal
experiences and encouraged us to do the
same, to exchange infonnation and learn
from each other. I began to trust you and
eventually, I stopped by your office to
talk to you about the difficulty I was
having with my feelings about my class
work.
I had heard other female students
talk about their various relationships with
you as well as with other instructors. I
felt you were less serious about their
studies, because they talked about their
more casual relationships with you. I
somehow felt left out, but at the same
time safe because we were focusing only
on academics. At that time I didn't realize you were encolll!lging sexual themes
our
in my
Sexuality is not new for me. As you
may recall from our many conversations,
I grew up in a physically and sexually
abusive environment At one point during
the quarter I noticed that if my work and
responses revolved around sexual themes
you would spend more time with me. I
expressed interest in other themes, but
you encouraged me to discuss and work
along sexual themes. I continued to work
with "you because I figured. you would
eventually help me learn to appreciate my
own academic"efforts.
I thought you really liked me as a

A student's
personal account
of faculty sexual
harassment
The following letter was sent by a
student to a faCUlty member. We are
printing the leller anonymously due to the
nature of its content. The author of the
letter is not filing a grievance . She wants
the letter published to raise campus
awareness of sexual harassment. .
I am writing to tell you why I am
not continuing to work with you or be in
any of your classes. In the past, I spoke
to you several times about your sexual
behavior toward me; it was uncomfortable
for me in the context of our teacher/student relationship. You seemed to understand what I was saying but your behavior did not change. I was confused
and not sure of what was happening,
until recently. Let me explain further, as
it was explained to me by my therapist
A process called the cycle of abuse
goes something like this: You as a teacher, behave in an ' inappropriate way
toward me, a student At some point I
recognize that I am not comfortable with
your behavior. You acknowledge you are
~behaving inalW[oQriately•..Jill!Lyour concession makes me feel that the situation
between us is okay. I feel better; you feel
safe. However, because I identified the
behavior and said no, you now think I
am responsible for anything that happens
between us from this point forward. You
have given me the responsibility for your
behavior, and this is not my job. I am an
adult but you have the "power
differential" of the teacher/student
relationship. Your inappropriate be~vior
reoccurs and the cycle begins again.
I decided that the most effective way
to stop being abused by you is to remove
myself from the situation and break the

r

r------------ .
Jewelry, Crystals,
Esiential & Perfume Oils,
Cards, Inrense, Candles
Unique T-Shirts
T-Pots, T-Mugs, T-Balls
Cruelty Free Body Care/Coimetics
Relaxing o>ntemporary Music
Massage Supplies & Books
Potpourri, Bulk Herbs & Teas,
Natural Medicines
Children's Toys, Tapes & Books
and more...

I
I
I
I
I

I
I



I
I.

M-S 1O·8pm

Covered bV ~/HCIIfford Insurance
Queslionl • Conaultatlona • AppoIntments
Raclance 113 E. 5th Olympia 357-M70

(

Tsitika Valley assaulted by .logging
by John Wullen

" The lower Tsitika valley, on the ~t
coast of Vancouver Island,' . ~ritish
Columbia. is ~ing assaulted by tunber
giant Macmillan Bloedel . Ltd. The
company has began logging huge sections

"

Commentary

of temperate rain fo~ in this region
despite public outcry. The upper Tsitika

.. h ·
h· .
etlc
Voter apat -Y- -pat
- - - - - - - -.------t
.

by Tedd KeUeber

Editorial

Evergreen student voter ,turnout ·for
the November 6 election was pitiful, and
made me wonder what the point of our
education is.
Out of the 952 students living in
campus housing, only 452 (47%) were
registered to vote. Only 161 (16%)
bothered to actually vote.
People say to me, "Probably most of
those people are registered elsewhere, and
~ot absentee ballots." I'm sure there are
Isome, but after asking around I have
[been unable to fmd a single person who
!Used an absentee ballot
Face it, most people around here are
~ull of hot air. Sure, we all love to spout
pff in seminar about how awful 'the
system' is. But when it comes to voting
in your local election to rectify some of
the very problems you bitch and
complain about, you sit on your butt and

Evergreen

nothing.
It's true your decision to vote one
way or another on many ballot items is
inconsequential, especially when it comes
to the Federal Government. But when it
comes to local issues and candidates,
your vote makes a difference.
I hear, "I'm waiting for the
revolution." Guess what, the revolution
isn't coming anytime soon, and your
apathy does nothing but perpetuate the
present system.
If as an 'educated' college student
you didn't vote, you should stop whining
about the world's problems, and accept
what you deserve.
Tedd Kelleher is the editor of the
CPJ.

dO



SWIm

valley is already scarred with 500 hectare
clearcuts (850 football fields in size). The ,
remaining lower valley ~ a significant
ancient forest that shadows Robson Bight, ·
the premier killer whale habitat and
research area in the world.
The lower Tsitika forests are 'the last
surviving fragment of an intact valley
ecosystem on the east coast of Vancouver
Island. The area is a '''last chance" for the
sanctuary of wildlife including elk, deer,
black bears, wolves, and the rare
Vancouver Island wolverine to follow
non-disrupted
seasonal
movements
between valley bottoms and mountain
forests.
The Robson Bight, the inlet of water
at the "front" of the valley, provides a
killer whale habitat area that is not found
in any other region of the world.
Scientists from around the world have
n researching killer whales in ~obs~n
BI~ht for 12 years. The local1on. ~s
umque becau~ the whales VISit
underwater rubbmg beaches close to the
shore to rest and feed. Logging the steep
mountains around Robson Bight would
jeopardize the whales' use of the area.
Industrial disturbances and logging roads,
providing humans. with direct access to

tx:e

highlighted the performances of Ken
1990, who placed second in the 100 yard was at the end of last year's season."
Cheney, a first year swimmer who swam
breaststroke and Craig Erickson, who Melchiori is enthusiastic about the 199091 season and predicts that Carlson,
season best times in the 200 yard
place second in the 500 yard freestyle.
individual medley and the 100 yard
AIdo Melchiori, the Geoducks' coach, Erickson, Leonard, and Byron are all "on
freestyle, and ' Kim Byron, a middle
highlighted the Performances of two f11'st schedule for some good times at the
year swimmers, Josh Bernstein and Ken " P:L.U, Invitational Meet December 7 and
distance swimmer, who is a team leader
for the women. Byron is "improving the
"K.C." Cheney, in Friday's meet. Friday's . 8."
, •••••••HH,.••••••••H ••••• ,.••••••• ,
fastest of all the swimmers on the team,"
meet was Bernstein's first experience
The Evergreen men's and women's
said Melchiori, and "is way ahead of
using starting blocks, and Cheney had
begun learning f1iptums just a few days swim teams completed the second week
where she ended the season last year."
' The swimming Geoducks will face
prior to competition. Melchiori is of the swim season in Walla Walla
Simon Fraser University and Willamette
enthusiastic about these two swimmers competing with Whitman, Whitworth, and
Lewis and Clark colleges in the Whitman
University at home this Friday at 5 pm
saying that the Evergreen team is "a
and will then travel to Spokane on
developmental
program
for
these; Pentathlon on November 10. The
...and
are in for lots of Pentathlon, and early season annual event, Saturday to Whitworth College for a 1
~::---~~~;;;nf.;'
as~h learn and compete."
fea:wres five-indiyiduaI-events-and-two---pm, neeLWith-whitworth-and-bewis-and- - - Clark.
Melchiori is also predicting a season relays, all of which are open to any and
all swimmers. No team scores are kept
Ruth Frobe is the information dire,:tor
of improvement for the women's team.
The .Geoduck men were led by Tim
at the CRe.
He is looking toward Sarah Leonard who
is "coming on strong after just one week Pretane, a fourth year swimmer, who
OPEN~T
of practice," and Kim Byron, a butterfly swam in all five events and recorded
LoBBY - OLD OLYMPIAN HarEL
and distance freestyler who is "stronger season best times in three of the five.
116 LEGION WAY 352·2887
than ever and picking up now where she AIdo Melchiori, the Evergreen coach, also
DELIVERY SERVICE

by Ruth Frobe
.
"
The Evergreen men's and women's
swim teams opened the 1990-91 season
Friday evening with losses to Pacific
Lutheran University. The five member
women's team struggled to score in a 554 loss, while the men suffered a 89-18
beating. The men Geoducks were led by
Brad Carlson, a national qualifier in

Soccer players
earn recognition

THANKSGIVING BUFFET
N.W. FOOD SERVICE
INVITES YOU TO DINE
WEDNESDAY
NOV. 21
4-6 P.M. '
DELI LOBBY

Corttemporary ClotfWtB
&

'Marvtimls 'MisuU.aniil

• Ea·r th Watches wI Dolphins
• Earth In 43 Languages
on T's & Sweats
• Lotsa Cottons
• Exode Glft'i
(1 % for Environment)

"SPECIAL HOLIDAY FOODS" PRICES"



I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

~~~~~~~~~~~

*

I
I

HERBS ant! MASSAGf :

13 E . 5th Downtown I

.. _----------_.

MAIn_oaKS
CHOIW.

**
Washington Center
December 1, 1990
8:00 p.m.
Tickets $,10
Available at all
Washington Center Ticket Outlets
Or Call 866-0266

INSIMIU
featuring

* *

>;:>;:

Emerald City
Brass Quintet

*

* ** * *
*
*
>;:

Page 4 Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

f STANlEY"H.

Take Kaplan OrTakeYOllr

CIa. ._ . Evenings and Weekends
1107 N.E. 45th '440, Seattle
Stucly Center in Taco. .

832·0634

the rubbing beaches, would destroy the
killer whales' habitat in Robson Bight
forever.
The Tsitika-Robson Bight wilderness
area is ii1 grave . danger of being
devastated by the irresponsible logging
practices of Macmillan Bloedel Ltd. The
company has announced plans to continue
to clearcut large sections of the lower
Tsitika and. resume road construction
toward Robson Bight in order to clearcut
forest that will be visible from the water
in 1992.
As a follow-up to the · "Justice and
Land Without Borders" demonstration at
the U.S.-Canada border, November 4,
1990, the Environmental Resource Center
is organizing a 'Carpool to the Tsitika
valley, tentatively leaving Friday,
November 16 in the morning. If you are
interested, please contact the ERC
(x6784) immediately! We will be
"assisting" forest activists at and around
base camp in the region.
John Wulfers reminds readers: ONLY
YOU CAN STOp ·CLEARCUTTING OF
THE REMAINING
TEMPERATE
RAINFOREST ON THE NORTHWEST
COAST!
.

team begins new season

I
I

I
I
357-9470

was over.
At that point I realized that both
situations were sexual abuse and. harass- "
ment respectively. My vulnerability and
trust had been exploited each time. Because of my background I had minimized
your behavior and carried the blame.
Your behavior was not okay. As a faculty in the role of academic sponsor, you
also put yourself into"the role of a counselor and you abused both roles. You
violated your boundaries and mine.

PETER G. WHITE, C.A.

I
We'll be open Sundays
• Nov. 25 thru Dec. 23, 12-5pmJ

I
I

we ran into each other and all the turmoil
inside me began again. I lost confidence
in all the academic work I had done
while I was your student I was beginning to feel hopeless. I started seeing a
therapist I told her I was disillusioned
about school and was concerned about
my future. Eventually, I talked about you.
I couldn't understand why my therapist
was so shocked at your behavior. She
explained the Cycle of Abuse and what
had happened. I heard what she was
saying but it didn't really make sense
until about a week later.
I was in a new program. I was excited about the possibilities that were
offered. The program faculty introduced
themselves and were impressively professional. Several classes later I made a
point of talking to one of the male facuity after a class. I wanted to talk about
my project for the quarter. He said we
could walk over to his office and talk
there. Then he suggested coffee, and that
we meet off campus. He said he would .
stop by my place and we would go frof!l
there. He had just arrived at my apartment when he looked around, made a
comment (something about my living
alone) and said that I was attractive and
smart As we were leaving he "jokingly"
suggested that we should sleep together.
However, I told him that there are only
that

ACUPUNCTURE

:
Gifts
I
: to delight the I
•• seeking mind... I•




'.

Force is investigating the campus policy.
The present policy was ratified in 1985,
and is due to be updated. The task force
is studying gender influences in
curriculum, both . positive and negative,
and the educational side of the matter "as
best they" can, n ' according to Rita
Pougiales.
"
Victims of sexual harassment should
contaCt Masaharu Jones in Library 3104,
(x6386).
Libya T M. Taylor is an Evergreen
student studying journalism with Tom
Foote .

News .

by Ruth Frobe
One . player from the men's soccer
team and four women soccer players
recently
received
recognition
for
outstanding play during the 1990 fall
soccer season. Chancellor Sims, a
freshman midfielder, was named by
coaches' votes to the AIl Conference'
team, an honor shared by fourteen players
from six schools in the Northwest
Collegiate Soccer Conference. Heather
Taylor, a defender from Corvallis,
Oregon, and her twin sister, Anna
Boatright, a center midfielder, were
named to the AIl District Second Team,
a team" also selected by coaches .
Receiving Honorable Mention in NAIA
District 1 were Kirsten Roberts, a junior
defender, and Cami Smith, the goalkeeper ,
for the Geoducks. Boatright and Roberts
were the women Geoducks' co-captains
. for the 1990 season.
Ruth Frobe is the women's soccer
coach.

r--------"'(I;€NI-------~~l
I
I
I

HAIRSTYLISTS
mTWSFYL'FS P'E!1l.50?{iIU/Y tfYESlqJ(J;'D 'IV 1'" YOW<. Ll1''FSrztYL'E

$5.00 OFF

.

:

SHAMPOO, PRECISION CUT a STYLE

:

I

Capital Mall • 7S4-eB33

I

..-----------------------.- -• NO 'OOUBI,.E' DISCOUNTS

EXPIRES NOV. 29, 1990 •

Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990
"

.'

I
I
I

Page 5

I '

I

r

Columns

Open .DoorLectur~s
.
. and Films
Rim : "Ba"ad of Gregorio Cortez"
Zeffirelli: and "Thriller." Sally Potter

Film: "Crime and P.unishmenr
Mon. 11126. 1-3 pm. LH 3

. Tues. 11127. 12:30:3:30. LH 3
Society. Social Change. and the
Expressive Arts: Paul Matt .

RussialUSSR: Pat Krafcik
Lecture: "The Background of Regional
Governance in Washington"

Film: Shakespeare. ·Richard II"
Tues. 11127. 3 :3~ pm. LH 3

Tues. 11127. 9-11 am. LH 1
Environment. Regions. & and
Governance : Ken Dolbere

Shakespeare and the Age of
Elizabeth: Nancy Taylor
Lecture: ·The Struggle in South
Africa;· and Film TBA
Wed. 11/28. ·10-11:45 am. LH 1
Political Econ. & Social Change:
Fred Dulle

Leciures : "Theories of Underdevelopment;" "The Logic of Imperialism"
Tues. 11/27.9-11 am. L1612
Political Econ. & Social Change:
Pete Bohmer. Larry Mosqueda
Lecture: ·What is History?"

Musical Presentation: Verdi.
La Traviata

Tues. 11/27. 9-11 am. CAB 108
Cultures in Collision:
Brian Price

Thurs. 11/29. 6:30 pm. LH 5
Music Drama: Charlie Teske

"Pop solid' band at SUrf.Club
by Ian Dickson
HOLY ROLLERS AND CHEsHIRE, AT THE
~

1990. .

SURF 0lJB, llruRsDAY Nov. 15,

The Holy Rollers are a pop-solid
rock band from Washington D.C. Their
record is on the Discord label; they call
it" As Is". They have a clean, jazzy .and
percussive · sound typical of the Discord
label. The songs have octopoid structures
that bounce allover the place. This kind
of music is hard to listen to at fust, but
it gets better and better as you learn the
parts. They also have a 7" ep out on
Simple Machines. This tiny D.C. label
has only a handful of releases out, but
they are all really great. The one that
Holy Rollers is on is called "Wheel."
"Wheel" is cool because it features
this performance artist/poet: I uliana
Luecking. She does sweet and haunting
spoken word poems before each of the 2
songs. One is about being chased home

by meanies 8fter gra<Je school ("The
The other one is about
Chase").
Baltimore.
.It's entitle<l "so fucIdn'
peifec:~ and in it she says: "I'm gonna
build a houSe on this Iake--with a pool
. table, some maids, and it real niCe stereo.
. i'm gonna not be a 'drug addict or a
alcoholic and live · in this house with
coffee .. .and maybe some cocaine." The
irony, which is so obvious in the words
as they appear, disappears in her delivery.
The words are delivere<l into a romantic
misty-eye<l love globe.
Also at the show on Thursday will be
the local band Cheshire. Cheshire is part
of Olympia's underbelly, street-kid,
teenage rock scene. They are into the
psyche<lelic freak-out. But they also play
the· heavy throb-throb. I'd say they are
more of an Iron Butterfly then a ·
Iefferson Airplane.
fan says: "Brothers and sisters, if we
come together in love and happiness we
can work it oUl and change the world."

Am.nesty .International: Free im.prisoned Li Haitao
Submitted by Whitney Ware
Li Haitao, a professor imprisoned by
China since the events at Tianamen
Square. was sentenced on August 29,
1990 to four years imprisonment on
charges
of
counter-revolutionary
propaganda and agitation and disruption
of transportation during the 1989 prodemocracy protests.
Li Haitao was arrested on Iune 16,
1989 by the Public Security Bureau of
Wuhan Municipality. According to
official sources, he was accused of
making public speeches and of organizing
students to demonstrate against the
suppression of the pro-democracy in
Beijing. Later, Li Haitao 'was also
accused of organizing a memorial
meeting at Wuhan University on Iune 5,
1989 for those killed during the military
intervention in Beijing. The charge of
disrupting transport was made by the
authorities in connection with a sit-in
allegedly organized by Li Haitao on the

Yangzi River Bridge.
Li Haitao is a Doctor of Philosophy
at Wuhan University, in central Hubei
Province, and has been described to
Amnesty International as a brilliant
philosopher. He was born in 1956 and
has a four year old child He is currently
being held in the No. 1 Detention Center,
Wuhan.
Amnesty International believes that Li
Haitao is being detained solely for the
peaceful expression of his right to
freedom of expression and association.
He is not reported to have used or
and
Amnesty
advocated
violence
International is calling for his immediate
and unconditional release.

You are urged to write a respectfullyworded letter to the Prime Minister of
China. Li Peng Zongli. Please do not
send appeals after DeCember 4, 1990. We
wish to remin,d you that letters must be
polite. for if they're not, they may have
a detrimental affect on the individual on
whose behalf you have written.
Address appeals to:

LiPe!1g Zongli
Guowoyuan
Beijingshi
Zhonghua Renmin Gongheguo
People's Republic of China
(Suggested salutation: Your honor)
Whitney
Ware
adapted this
information from Amnesty International
Urgent
Action . 426/90.

I

--

Interview: Gentleman, in .a blue sui.t
The folwwing is the first of a series
0/ non-tra4itional interviews.
Interview by lop Muscio
I: Do you drink coffee?
,
J: Yes--it depends on h0w much time ' l
!)ave. Sometimes ' a couple of cups,
sometimes never. .
I: What was your favorite dish your
.mother made for you?
I: Pulao~ It'·s rice and meat It's cOOked
a lot differently than it is here. You cook
the meat for several hours. It's a pretty
long-drawn process.
I: Was it just for special occasions?
I: Yes.
I: Where is your accent from?
I: From Pakistan.
I: What waS your mother's maiden name?
I: Fatima.

by Chris Bader
I was beginning to wonder if
Washington really was the strangest state
in the United States .. It had been months
since I had heard a good UFo story, the
Satanic cultS had kept pretty quiet, and
ACUPUJlfC'roRB

a:

IIERB8
Hol1atlc ntempy for
Acute and Chronic Allmenla
Cow:n:d by lfIortfoni InorurmJce

MARK JANARDAN PlNJUIAII C.A.
S52-8:M7

RECORDS

OPEN YOUR HOME and HEART
THIS THANKSGIVING

WfS

HOST AN
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT

TAPES. CD'S
& RECORDS

EAGER TO JP[PERIENCE
THIS AMERICAN TRADITION

SUZANNE ADAMS, N.D:
Natural • ",aUn. Na.-1a.Ic 'BInpIM

For Further Infonnation: EF INTERNATIONAL

..........., • N~ • IlaUnIcal MedIdIIe

459-9082

WE BUY'EM
WESEll'EM
WE TRADE 'EM

ScHOOL

TESC • 866-6000 x8422

DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA

PHOTO SERVICES FOR ALL YOUR

SPECIAL

& IN A

420 FRANKUN SE

HURRY PHOTO NEEDS

9G8228 • FREE PARKING
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

INTRODUCES ...
A NEW WAY TO EXPAND YOUR CREATIVITY

Canon~
COlOR lASER COPIER

START

wrrn AN IMAGE, PHOTO, SUDE OR NEGATIVE.
IN ONI.Y A FEW MINUfES YOU CAN ...

CHANGE COlORS. ADD NEW COlORS. CHANGE SIZE • SlANT • S1R£TCH •
SQUEEZE • REPEAT. MAKE TRANSFERS FOR CLOTHI~... and a whole lot morel

2103 Harrison Ave. SURe 3 (Behind Skipper's)
754-4646
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

ERGR.E.~N.E..A.·~··· .. ·.. .......... . . ...... . ...

DEAFtE.V... .

..' .......... .

~,,~O~\~~9;~7.:t;:~·'~~~=~~

\0 \to\lel

....... ..... ........ set\lice . ~,,~....... .
...... .....
.........
leSS bUS
." .. .....
.... .
.. ............ .. " ..... ·o{1aco"'~.~~~ ........ ·.. ....... I'd een\e.I .. ..
........... ,....... : ltOnsi'·S.?I~~~.I.. .. .. .. .. ... .. '0 and s?~~ .~~~ ..... .. ·.. · .
11'/ In\~I~~~. .......... . v-In,ov-ln 01'l.~p'1 .. ... .... ...
n ",o~e .. ' .. ..
dO
...... '0 'Iou cO"'.'.........
e\le ..... ... ..
........... .. ' 'Io\le\s"I'OM
"................
H?les~ ..... " ..... ...
. nd 10CO~.. :.. ..........
.. ..
.. ............. ood. ~0rt..~~VJ\~ .~ .. ·.... ·.. pietCe e~u.n.~.... ... . ......... ,
\0 lO~e~ ....... ... ,
d 0\\ O\lel....... ......
..
.. .....
seo\\le on .... ......
.. .. ......
connec\iOn.S..'.?........ ..........
.............................. ",0 £~ple~~: .. .
.. ..
.. ...........
......... ·..
. ..... ........
,ne 0~'1.Mni0{10~~
".~l:'... ....
,
....... .............. need 0 1~~e.I'()~~.'. '.I'/.. .... ...
.. .................... " ... .
nen 'Iou......
.. ....
.............
.
so ..>,'J. .. .....
....
.. .. ......... '
. et\l\Ce IS:.:: ...... ·.... ..
..
..... .......... ,ne tide. l"IS. ~ ........ ..
..... , . " ............ "e noS ond..~{)iO~ .. ........ ·.... ·· .. ·
................ .... .
50\1

'iii

! .. .. . ..

S<!"~",~I1Ilj, ....... ....•..... ~..... ....... ... ..

c~ ~a'l-

maRIA

......... .

b9t'l'Jee~:............... ·..

"

, :2.'I» eO
~0
01\\'1 ~.
co~ 0 ,

\~an \~e
\e~
. ~as\
~0
~\ol\ 0\
, \01 IOU

~a 1&'-'&&
(l\a\\OI\·
• ea\\
e6U\0 \1\\01
al\l\ sc'r'

.

. .'

352-0440

Page 6 ,Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

the 'same kind of things together. We
played together, we w;nt to monvies, we
prayed together, we harrassed ~le
together. One ~ .become the Bngadier
~neral ~f the mili~.
I: What IS your religIOn?
Islam.
.
'
1. Who w~ a famous movie star when
you were little?
I: Muhammed Ali.
I: The boxer?
I: No--heh, heh. He never went to
Pakistan.
I: What do you think of McDonalds?
I: It's a fad. It's like any other fad in
America There's no nutrition in the food.
I: Do you watch TV?

I:

I: Not that much. The place I'm living
here, I don't get anything. But mostly,
I'll watch the educational channel.
I: Do you have children?
- I: Three.
I: What'd ya name 'em?
I: My oldest son is 14. his name is
Kahlid, my daughter will be 9 next
month, her name is Naz. Then I have my
youngest son his name's Ahmir he's 4.
"
I: Do they like Olympia?
I: The youngest, yes. The other two are
still struggling. They were born and
raised in Colorado Springs.
I: What's your favorite color?
I: Orange.
I: Tell me a song or a rhyme you
remember from your childhood.

J: I don't remember. That's what happens
to people when they leave their coimtry,

they become misfits. It's difficult for
'.
.
them 10 adjust .
I: What do you love to look at?
J: I really enjoy when the SWLcomes up
in · th~ morning. Beautiful gardens.
I: Do you have a garden?
I: No. The house we have, there's no
space there. And I'm not sure how much
time I'll have to soend in the garde~.
I: Well, if you did have a garden, what
would you plant?
'
J: I always like the roses.
This mystery interview was with Vice
President for Finance and Administration
Jamil Qureshi. who began at Evergreen in
1990.

Bigfoot wasn't stealing anyone's pigs.
And then I found a gem, quite
possibly the weirdest Washington story I
have ever come across.
I know I've said that before, but trust
me on this one.
\
Way back on Saturday Iuly I, 1893,
seven men, William Fitzhenry, H.L. Beal,
W.L. McDonald, . I.K. Bell, Henry
Bla~kwood, and two others who remained
anonymous, went on a fishing expedition
off of Point Defiance in Tacoma Without

~~~~~~~~::=~::=::J
having much success, the crew weighed
anchor at Black fish Bay at 9:30 pm.
They set up .camp and prepared to spend
the night.
Sometime after midnight, the men

UNDER THE
EVERGREENS
by Laurie Haoaw aod Eric M. Larsen
have been heard singing at night near the
As fall weather forces itself upon us, library loop. Mice are taking up residence
the once fresh greens of deciduous trees in local dwellings; the occupants of one
and shrubs yield to the brilliance of reds westside home reported finding a cache
and yellows. What mystery lies behind . of halloween candy in the center of a
this annual phenornenon?
ball of twine. Another'reported a meadow
chlorophyll and red and yellow
carotenoids. Chlorophyll is the site of the
photosynthetic conversion of light into
energy. Because it is the dominant
pigment, we see leaves as green through
most of the year. Carotenoids assist in
this process but remain masked by the
abundant chlorophyll. For reasons most
probably linked to the shorter days of
approaching winter, the chlorophyll
declines and the carotenoids become
dominant Hence, we see the yellows and
reds of autumn's glory.
The arrival of the new season also
brings change to wildlife. Locally, crows
are aggregating into flocks and the
numbers of Canada geese are rising
noticeably. Over the weekend, Indian
Summer brought about the buzzing of
yellowjackets again. and winter wrens

Common mergansers add their
presence to the growing number of
species arriving to winter at Budd Inlet,
and a visit to McLane Creek should
reward one with the presence of ringnecked ducks.
Unusual local sightings include the
fly-overs of 50 brant and an egret of
unknown species from south campus
locations. Also. witnessed at Totten Inlet
on Sunday was the successful predation
by a bald eagle .upon a gull. Although
the kill was complete. haras'>ment by
other
gulls
present
forced
the
abandonment of the prey item.
Thanks
Eben . Mona.
"Dr."
Richardson. Shelby. and Steve. Natural
history observations and short essays are
welcomed and encouraged. Submissions
can be dropped by the CPI office.

awoke .to what they described as, "sounds
and sights more horrible [than) ever seen
by mortal man." Offshore was some sort
of monster. The group gathered at the
water's edge to see it.
In a July 3, 1893 article in the
Tacoma Daily Ledger, the creature was
described as being 150 feet long and 30
feet in circumference. The head was
"shaped very much like the head of a
walrus," and its entire body was covered
with coarse hair. It had six eyes all the
size of "dinner plates." Strangely enough,
at eight-foot intervals along its serpentlike body were what appeared to be
copper bands which gave off a "powerful
electric current" and at its head two large
horns, which spewed electrically-c~ged
water in all directions.' Finally -the
"monster" seemed to move by means of
a propeller on its tail.
Two of the party were struck by
water from the creatures horns. They both
fell unconscious and "lay as though
dead." The rest of the party panicked and
ran for the woods.
frightening fiSherman, swam · off into
Puget Sound and disappeared under the
water. The party eventually went to the
aid of their downed comrades who
recovered ,from the "shock." All of the
men noted that their' watches had stopped.
It is impos.sible to verify the men's
bizarre story. It could simply be a
journalistic hoax prepared by a bored
Le~ger reporter. Nevertheless the report.

whIch suggests some sort of cross
between a sea-serpent and a machine. is
the strangest I have seen.
Some quotes 'are from Curious
Encounters, by Loren Coleman. Hey. have
any of you seen a ghost? Bigfoot? A
leprechaun? Drop Chris a note at the
CPl .

TRAVEL
ELEPHANTS • PANDAS
JUNGLES • FORESTs
MOUNTAINS • OCEANS
RIVERS • STREAMS
ISLANDS • PALM TREES
. FLOWERS • BIRDS '

....

· . . . . . ·. ··. . ...... jry Transit
From Intere
We donate 1% of every ticket you
purchase to help protect
the environment

GREAT PIZZA • YUMMY PASTA

8.th and Plulll, Olympia

I: Tell me about a friend in PalQstan.
I: There were ~ people, we all did

Electric serpent spooks Tacoma .anglers

LISTEN, WE STILL SELL

NATUROPATH

Columns

42A WNIow Wrcy E. a.l1'Ibridge \oland. WA 118110 .
TELE 1142-1711 • 1..aoo-..5e 8850' FAX 2Q6.8042· 1217

HAPPY 19th
BIRTHDAY WrSHES
COOPER

PO~NT JOU~NAl

&

A HAPPY THANKSGIVING
TO ALL
FROM

Olympia's largest supplier
of whole, . natural and
.
organic bulk foods
~ OPEN EVERY DAY I

Oly'm pia Food Co-op
921 N" Rogers • Olympia • 754-7666

-$-3------$-2---~;:
OR .
OFF ANY
OFF ANY
LARGE PIZZA MEDIUM PIZZA
PTeMftt ....
sa.ted oNer Offet
....,-.oIt.- f111'1'1Ud .....
.. nocntl .......
CcuporIl"d .~ • .".

.... 1O-go,'4ItII...... w

IIIhCI dPl"e"OurS INI~ v""'1 NCl4 ....., WI!I'I

C~I'I

ItJdros Pizza

The Northwest Funily Pizza Restou"",t.

EXPIRES NOV. 30.1990

----------------754-3711
CAPITAL MALL • OLYMPIA

Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

Page 7

\

,.
'.

'
"o f



"

F Qr"3=.=1-1--=-L__~~~_____

..;

,

Exploitation builds
imperialist
economy
.
.

by Emily Susan Manning
In a recent opinion piece 1 argued
that we should prioritize international
issues and the fight against imperialism.
I said that because global capitalism is
the major cause of oppression today we
should focus on struggles which
effectively challenge global capitalism. I
suggested that these struggles will more
likely be based where oppression is more
severe, in the "Third" rather than the
"First" world. Radical change in the
"Third" world could end global
capitalism, since capitalism relies upon
the exploitation of cheap natural resources
and cheap labor in the underdeveloped
countries. And U.S. imperialism is the
major force standing in the way of
radical change in the "Third World."
Thus, I argued, we should prioritize the
struggle against U.S. imperialism.
Here I wish to add some caveats to
the argument I made earlier. Due in part
to space limitations, I presented an
oversimplified analysis. By way of
modification I want to raise several issues
which must be considered in discussing
strategies for radical global change.
·Just as the U.S. economy depends
on the exploitation of the "Third World,"
so does it depend on exploiting the cheap

.

'

resources and labor of African-Americans,
Native Americans, Chicanos and other
people of color within its own borders.
These communities, sometimes called
"internal colonies" of the United States,
suffer a level of oppression similar to
that of the underdeveloped countries and
are likewise subject to imperialist
domination and repression. So solidarity
with colonized peoples in the United
States on the ~f ' members of the
dominant classes is just as important as
solidarity with . peoples of the "Third
World."
·There is no direct correlation
between the level of oppression suffered
by a community and its potential for
radical political action. People who are
most oppressed may have the fewest
resources with which to wage a political
struggle, and they may face to greatest
obstacles to creating change. 1 do think
that the most effective challenges to
global capitalism will be based in
colonized
areas
(although
these
movements may involve many privileged
people). But that doesn't mean that every
colonized area will pose an effective
challenge to capitalism. Strategically we
should focus our solidarity efforts where
radical movements are well-developed or

at least where they show significant
potential.
. -Differences of class divide both
colonized and colonizing peoples. A small
fraction of. people in the "Third World"
"and people of color in the United States
benefit (materi8Ily, at least) . from
imperialism. Conversely, it &eems likely
that the majoritY of European-descended
people are ultimately hurt by imperialism.
Imperialism maintains the capitalist
system which exploits the majority of
Europeans and European-Americans even
while it "super-exploits" people of color ..
The racism which emerged as an
ideological justification for imperialism
grants all people of European descent
"skin color" privilege. Nonetheless, it
seems likely that on balance imperialism
serves the interests of only a minority of
U.S. and European people. Politically,
this means that while some people of
color are not our allies, working people
potentially are.
.Imperialism may be the primary
obstacle to radical change at this point in
time. But colonized people along with a
small contingent of anti-imperialist
activists will not by themselves be able
to end imperialism. Solidarity is needed
from all sectors of U.S. society, and

achieying this solidarity means building a
movement which addresses all forms of
oppr~ssion and reSponds to the perceived
ne¢s of . a majority of people in this
country. Focusing On imperialism alone
will not end imperialism.
·Capitalism is eroding .the quality of
life of everyone, privileged as well as
exploited. As the destruction of the
environment and
the spread of
dehumanizing technology negatively affect
the lives of relatively privileged people
more of them will become potential allies
in the struggle against capitalism and
imperialism.
These considerations point to both
the need .and the potential for a true
coalition of progressive forces in this
country. We need to break down the
divisions between issues and movements
which pctvail among progressives and
radicals today so that we can work
together for local and international
change. Only by coordinating our efforts
"";ill we truly pose an effectiye challenge
to global capitalism.
Emily Susan Manning is a regular
contributor to the CPJ.

Counter-cultural · center development begins
by Jim Allbaugh
by all, will serve all people's needs, ruling class as well as economic coercion. collective agendas as possible. I am
We all need something more sustaine<\, talking about true concrete diversity and
Popular culture today is a pre- wants, and desires.
packaged,
already
rolling,
and
Feminism, environmentalism, gay supportive, and enriching to bring such a not the growth of abstract rhetoric and
commercialized consumerist culture, and lesbian liberation, racial. f!quality, change about We are going to have to implicit oppresSion.
which is presented to you via the TV ethnic justice, worker ' rights, 'labor consciously and materially build a culture
There are many socia
. IIy progressive
screen, newspaper, and newest mall. This unionism, and social equity all have a , of resistance. Why not begin in our own factions out there in the Olympia area.
cultural
'de I . alcatastrophe is a result of voice,but do not currently have the back yard? Downtown? Perhaps an Th ey are, however, currently factions and
I ooglc and cultural hegemony. In Establishment's ear.
abandoned store front?,
could become diverse elements of an
particular, this oppressive hegemony has
If a subversive counter-culture,
What exactly this place will be I'S
.
mtegrated
and coherent whole.
I
been channe
ed
through
the
mass
media
which
is
inclusive
of
these
elements,
entirely
up
to
you.
The
content
of
a
.
Questions, comments, and concerns
d d
were to emerge, the elite myth-making counter-cultural center is up for grabs. It about this proposal can be addressed to
an
Hegemony
'deole ucatIon.
. al
l b "-is defined as
logIc contro y a mmonty whom apparatus would dissipate and deteriorate.
is hoped, howev,er, that the context and
Jim at EPIC (1..3222 or x6l44) or mailed
popuIar c ul uu:e curren tl y serves, i.e. the
Perhaps. a . culture that would be diverse the power relationships within a counterCRC306
Th
S
mteIl tuaLelit
d th
who-be fi
d..e Chinn f~r...alLw ukl-tak'
ln~~
_
to _ _. _ at
e Evergreen tate
-~f
ec
e a?fose- . . . ne :1 t-illl DIlW
~
'0 II
.e-lts-p~ukur-al-eenter--would-be-one--of--non---COtlege wlili EPIC as ilie recIpIent.
e must, as a co ecllve ..whole, hierarchy, mutual aid, and cooperation.
.
Jlm
' Allbaugh is desperaleiy trying to
rom
. I th e perpetuatIon 0 soclo-economlc
VIO ence.
engage,
and
intervene
in
the
economic
It
is
vital
that
such
a
center
does
not
Val
such
turn the tide and not drown from apathy,
ues
as
marketplace
and cultural realms, so as to change and become a hangout for a handful of self- cynicism . and the re-election of Jesse
competltIon,
egoism,
individualism,
improve our respective realities. A cultijl'e in~ulged radicals. A counter-cultural Helms.
sexism, imperialism, class, race and
of resistance is, in fact, an attempt to center should be loose ended and
gender oppression, objectification, etc.
resist the ideological hegemony of a inclusive of as many personal and

~~~~er~m~~~~:tr~:h
R~~~~n;~
such immoral and violent ideals have

Nature worshl pre:gressl-ve

been brushed aside by American popular
culture. They
are deemed as being by Dennis Giooza
irrelevant and irresponsible.
With the coming of a new decade,
Envision a place where progressive (I the destruction of the Earth's environment
use
this
term
loosely)
artists, seems imminent. Indeed, 'concern for the
environmentalists, activists, homeless, health of the planet is the most prominent
street youth, students, faculty, and sentiment expressed here at TESC. Yet,
Olympia citizens can socialize, learn from while the danger to the Earth's
.is
indispu~~le,
~e
one another, strategize and help to create env~on!'lent
a progressive, critical, and creative motIvatIons behmd many actIvist groups
counter-cultural alternative. Such an are flawed.
.
alternat,ive is direly needed to replace an
Here I refer to those organizations
increasingly alienating, capitalist intensive, that argue for the preservation -of the
marginalizing, and consumerist culture.
environment for its own sake. Already
There needs to be a place where the world has seen a proliferation of
those who feel as if they are in the groups which proclaim that Nature is a
cracks of society can fmd solace and force akin to God, self-justifying and
support to help-bring about social chOOge, inherently righteous. These groups go on
personal growth, and spiritual well being. to claim that humans should prostrate
Such an idea has taken on many themselves and grovel at the wonders of
different names from many different Nature, much as early Christianity
people--"new age mall," "subversive demanded that its adherents bow to the
,institution," "coullter-cultural center," and . will of God. Like the Christian religion,
many others. The possibility of creating several environmental groups propound
such a place has been loosely debated in the belief that humanity, in its inability to
comprehend or manipulate the forces of
an off-handed way for quite some time.
The actual creation and sustainment Nature, should therefore worship it; such
of a counter-cultural center will occur groups merely substitute "Nature'" for
only if you help its ideological "God." Yet it was exactly this kind of
development and assist in its actual anti-rationalism which shackled humanity
creation,
for c,enturies in an irrational and
Culture defines what information is regressive system of thought. For, while
prevalent and what knowledge is worth it is obvious that the Earth's environment
learning. If knowledge and ' information must be saved, the justifications offered
are controlled by those who benefit from by many environmentalists are obsolete.
current socio-economic injustice and mass
What makes them obsolete is their
ignorance, then culture will serve them. If proposition that humans return to a state
knowledge and information are controlled of blessed ignorance, a Garden of Eden
by all, then culture, which is truly created

e

in which men and women worshipped
Such statements are obviously
forces greater than themselves. Such a controversial, especially on this, campus.
condition doubtlessly comforted those Controversy, however, has no influence
human beings who existed within its on truth. Until lIumanity realizes that
confmes, yet it was akin to the situation there are no answers to be found in
that babies experience in the· womb. With "God" or "Nature," mankind will be
the advent of Science and Reason, locked into seeking answers rather than
humanity was forcibly ejected from this creating them.
womb and made to stand on its own.
Dennis Ginoza is a student woo
The stance taken by
many believes in human effort and the nobility
environmental groups is one which would of man.
have us try to re-enter the womb and '--=----::-::---~=-=--~-=--,
seek the solace offered there. This is
impossible and, even if it were not, by Scott A. Richardsorl. ME.
undesirable for, while mankind may
suffer from the ' knowledge of his
limitations, it is this knowledge that
makes us human. To approach Nature as
a servant does a master goes against all
that is uniquely ours as human beings.
We must view Nature for what it is, a
force which derives its meaning from
humanity. For, while humanity'S abilities
are narrow and uncertain, at least they
are ours.
Thus, while the goals of certain
environmental 'activists are noble, they
must be pursued with the proper
motivations. Nature has \ no intrinsic
worth; its value must · be determined
within the context of hU\1l1lnity to be
valid. The only reason to save the Earth's
environment, therefore, is humanity'S
need for a healthy living space in order
to survive. The preservation of Nature is
not an end but a means to a larger goal,
that of advancing ' human beings.

Mangling Editorial

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

.-

".

&

Concept.' of ' truth
rela.t ive to media

... &.

. ~E!.~p~nse

'7

~E
~·'

I agree with the article by Paul
?tF- ~ . ,{'
Slusher one hllllQred percent I have been
a subscriber to In These Times, The
~ ,;
?:
Nation, and Harper's for some time now
and I only watch the "mainstream media"
for local news and to get updated on the ·
latest government propaganda. As lam
writing this letter, I have one of the local
TV stati,ons on the. news reporting on the
possibility of a first strike in ' the Persian
Gulf by the United States and the further
build-up of troops by approximately
100,000.
The story I am listening to and the
stories Mr. Slusher quoted from in his
article are from the so-called "liberal"
press. The press in this country is as
liberal as Jesse Helms. I have reached
this conciusion after watching local and
network news as well as reading
newspapers this last year or more. The
frustrated ... and angry, very angry.
only way I, personally, can get anything one of my roommates sneaking a snack.
Rachel Nesse
close to the real "truth," if that is You weren'l Now I'm sitting at the
possible, is from the publications computer (an activity I've begun to
mentioned previously. Anyone thinking detest), because there are some things I'd
U
they get the "truth" from the media in the like to know.
Un.ited States needs to re-examine their
Did you think that no one would care
concept of truth.
if you snuck in? Do I have to lock my
AAARGGG!!! I'm angry, very angry,
If truth means only what the door to keep you out? The nice guy from
real mad! Generally after reading the CPJ
government wants one to know, then that Security thinks so (you bel I called · I can vent any frustration I feel with my
is what you get. However, if one wants Security, after you traipsed .out the door);
friends, but last week was just too much
and I feel I must write and share my
more than one point of view, one must personally I don't want to think so. Yet
look for those alternative points of view if you were to happen by my room
feelings of exasperation with my fellow
and that means alternative publications today, you'd find it locked.
readers of this newspaper.
Since when has Evergreen allowed
like the ones mentioned in this letter and
There are jobs off campus. There are
Mr. Slusher's article. To not look for work/study jobs on campus. There are
people to make statements in its
newspaper anonymously? I am, of course,
alternative points of view means buying jobs downtown and there are jobs at the
everything one hears or reads or at least mall. I won't pretend to know your
referring to the "graffiti" on the back
not being totally informed on issues.
situation,
maybe
you're
between
page. I am a fum believer of one's right
to express one's opinion, however, i
I read and listen to every side paychecks, but regardless, there are better
possible and make up my mind after ways of fllling your stomach than grazing
believe that if you are unwilling to put
looking at all evidence there is to find. I in the fridge of a dark dorm room.
your name behind that opinion then it
think that any other way is shortchanging
For instance, if you had knocked at
should not be printed.
'
I took offense at the swastika,
yourself. We are lucky in this country to a decent hour and said, "Listen, I'm
be able to see and read various points of hungry, will you feed me?" chances are
assuming it was the Nazi symbol of hate,
view and it surprises me to no end how I would have.
not the Hopi symbol of unity. But I grow
If you aren't a student, or don't want
furious when I read the "statement" about
many people do not take advantage of
that right!
to seem destitute before your peers,
white males.
- - - - - --\lWynn-Wrightt --- - - - - - c - - ---1hereLalwa}'S-Thurston-CQunty-FoOO~)- --11 -Rrefer-the- writer--of..-.the-inev:itable
Bank at 413 Franklin or The Salvation
response to Ryo Imamura's letter
Army Food Bank at 1522 East 4th (near
"Perceived oppressors planned up week"
to that statement. I'm assuming that the
Thriftway). Check them oul Certainly
response will mention our glorious
anything's better than resorting to
thievery amongst penniless students.
Evergreen tradition and the "fact" that
Dear Burglar,
With these options open, why choose
racism cannot exist here. However, is it
It's 5:35 ' am on a fucking Saturday to sneak in and scare me? Never again
possible that such a callous response to
morning, and let me tell you, you are not will i be able to yell, "Come on in,
our racist, sexist and homophobic society
my favorite person at this moment. Mter door's open!" Now I'll have to go peep
as "I have never participated personally
a stressful week of paper writing, I was throU,Rh the peephole before de-bolting
in the oppression up then Fuck You" is
~
precisely the ,reason that Professor
looking forward to sleeping in toda){< As the lock.
you can tell, I am not asleep. The
Regardless of intention, you've taken
Imamura writes that Evergreen is not
jingling "diet bells" tied to the fridge away some of my freedom. And as I sit
creating an atmosphere where we can
door woke me up; I thought you were here typing in the pre-dawn darkness, I'm
to others,
learn from
our
.-_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ honestly
historical listen
mistakes,
and attempt
to build

STATE

B IIe t·In B oard
draws response

Don't pilfer fO,o d;
visit Food lIank

VOLUNTEER
Entertainment Production: Rachel Nesse
Blotter Compilation: Rebecca Randall
Poeay Editor: Mike Mooney
EDITORIAL--!I66·6000 x6213
Editor: Tedd Kelleher
Managing Editor: Scott A. Richardson
Entertainment Editor: Andt~.v Hamlin
Production Manager: Giselle Weyte
Photo Editor:- Leslyn Lee
Typist: Linda GwilYm
BUSINESS--866-6000 x60S4
Business Manager: Edward Martin III
Assistant Business Manager: ' Katrina Barr
Advertising Manager: Chris Carson
Ad Layout: Paul Henry, Deborah Roberts,
Julianne Revel
Distribution: John Oimpsey
ADVISER
Dianne Conrad

AdvertislnR
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 qf this mistake arc t'he
sole responsibility of the advertising customer.

The User's Guide
The Cooper Point JOfU'I101 exists to
facilitate communication of events, ideas,
movements, and incidents affecting 11te
Evergreen S~ College and surrounding

conununities. To portray accurately our
community, the paper strives to publish
material from anyone willing to work with
us.

Submission deadUne Is Monday noon.
We will try to publish material submitted the
following Thursday. However, space and
editing constraints may delay publication.
Responses to the content of the CPJ
which are longer than 300 words and Forum
pieces bringing up new topics which are
longer than 500 words are subject to editing.
Editing will attempt to clarify material,
not change its meaning. If. possible we will
consult the writer about substantive changes.
Editing will also modify submissions to fit
within the parameters of the Cooper Point
Journal style guide. The style guide is
available at the CPJ office.
Written submissions must be brought to
the CPJ on an ffiM formatted 5-1/4" disk.
Any word processing file compatible with
WordPerfect 5.0 is acceptable. Disks should
include a double-spaced printout, the
submission's me name, the author's name,
phone nwnber, and address. We have disks
available for those who need them. Disks can
be picked up after publication.
Guidelines for cartoons and poetry can
be obtained at the CPJ office.
Everyone is invited to attend CPJ
weekly meetings, Friday at 12:30 in CAB306.
H you have any questions, please drop
by Library 2510 or call 866-6000 x6213.

L

in the bIanIc with a friend or loved one)
>off to fight and die in it ~nseless war to
protect greed. To me personally, this is
unacceptable.
' The ftrst day of cancelled classes
and missed education should be the ftrst
of a long series of sacrifices for those of
..-- us ' in college. But if we are unable to
sacrifice even that little amount then the
members of our society who don't have
the money or privilege for "education"
will be asked to sacrifice much more. My
God, I thought it was horrible that
George Bush thinks oil is worth the
blood of Americans, but now I hear that
a day of class is also worth their blood.
What next?

... and speaks out
on Sgt. Savage
Larry's back, and much richer at
that (though not quite as rich as Joe). I
assume that one can buy a heck of a gun
with 20K. All kidding aside, I can only
hope that Larry' s return does not bring
with it a return to the "give me a gun or
I will go talk to the Olympian" era of the
last few years. I also sincerely hope that
Larry Savage's return does not affect the
employment of Security's newest officer.
Bob Webb is the perfect example of what
Evergreen should have in a security
uniform. His close to 20 years of law
enforcement experience makes him an
extremely competent officer. His status as
an Evergreen student makes him '
understanding of students. His personality
makes him both approachable and
someone to count on in a pinch. Rather
than complain about the gun issue Bob
has spent his ftrst months on the job
getting to know fellow students and
learning how he can make the campus
more safe for us.
Why do I mention this? Because
there is a good chance that Bob will
leave us and Larry will stay. There is
only so much money in Security's
budget 1 hope that if you feel strongly
about this then you will let both Gary
Russell and Gail Martin know how
students feel about losing.....o.uLolL-O.u-_ __
security.
Hugh D. Moog

Cartoon ' invokes
scathe factor

by William Kramer and Scot Wheat
We would like to congratulate the
creator of last week's editorial cartoon
regarding the FMLN for providing us
with an opportunity to discuss the
influence of state propaganda and sexism.
The message and imagery of the cartoon
was a tour de force of these heinous
social diseases.
a better future for our children?
Considering the resources available at
In additio~, I do not buy the TESC which document the actual
argument that anyone in our society is situation in EI Salvador, it is
of
racism,
sexism
or disappointing to see Students regurgitate
innocent
homophobia. We ate all guilty. The fust myths that serve to sustain the pipeline of
person I apply tIiis to is myself. Only U.S. aid fueling government repression in
when we admit this will we all (yes, EI Salvador.
including us white males) be able to get
In the past two years, several
together and learn from each other how Salvadorans have visited our campus to
to create a nation that truly has "Liberty provide frrst hand accounts of the
and Justice for all."
situation in their country (Salvador
Rodreguez, Maria Pena, and Victor Hugo
to name a few). There have also been
many films, documentaries, and slide
shows on the subject Additionally,
several students and faculty have recently
Item two is a response to the
returned from El Salvador.
editorial "Symbolic gesture not worth it."
In the midst of these resources the
In this letter Michelle Spangberg states
that while she is, of course, against war, cartoonist chose .to broadcast a crude and
her education is more important than inaccurate depiction of the FMLN as a
taking a ' day off from class to protest group . which murders women and
America's involvement in such..a war. As children--thus being no different than the
a veteran whose friends will be coming ARENA government. Implicit is that we
home in body bags due to this . should not support organizations that have
unfortunate obstacle to my education I been compelled to use violence. Such an
have to strongly disagrye with you analysis, no doubt formulated in the
Michelle.
.
peaceful atmosphere of a cozy dorm
I believe that what you write is room, merely serves to rationalize
exactly what the war-mongers, who are , i.naction towards repression funded by our
so eager to shed our brother's and sister's tax dollars.
One need only tum to former
blood, want to hear. If they think that we
have better things to do, like feed <;Jur Salvadoran Archbishop Oscar Romero to
children, go to work, wash our hair, tIlen see· cartoon. page 14
they will not hesitate to send
(fill

Moag continues...

Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

?

,

,

Page 9

"

Arts Be Entertainment

Arts & .· Entertolnment

Bob belts brazen brilliance 'in Portland

Memorable movies mesmerize media (Andy) .

a couple of guitar changes aild the
obligatory introduction of the, band Mould
kept the momentum of the show running
forward. As the distortion from each song
faded , out Mould would walk over to
Fier, nod, then he and the band would
crash into the next song without looking

by Mark WiDford

..

across the screen, plenty of it, for this is, t) Nicholson vehicle), and this time he has
BOB MoUIDWTIlI ULTRA VIVID SCENE
after all. the grandaddy of splatter films, an excuse. Did he really drop acid to
SATIJRDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1990, THE
i(is all the more disquieting. Lewis knew prepare, himself fot this film? Is it an
ALL FREAK!N' NIGHT MOVIES: "HELL's
MELODY B~OOM, PoRTLAND
how , to create horror, a refmement his accurate portrayal of the psychedelic
ANGELS ON WHEELS," "2,000 MANIAcs,"
progeny wbuld forsake for flying guts ~xJJ:C~ence?1 leave these questions to the
Bob Mould has always taken an
, "THE TRIP," AND "PLAN 9 FROM OUTER
and garden tools.
mdiVIdual VIeWer.
uncompromising working class approach
SPAm" SATIJRDAY NKHf,&JNoAY M::RNHJ AT
back.
"Maniacs" exPloits the fear and
Finally, Ed Wood's "Plan 9 From
"Hanging Tree," with its apocalyptic
mE 1m ANNuAL OLYMPIA FILM FEsnvAL,
to his music. His for;mer band Husker Du '
distrust Northerners hold for Southerners- Outer Space," is, in my opinion, not
riff spawne<! the evening's first stage
THE CAPITOL THEATER.
released five brilliant albums--two of
-Confederate flags wave in every worth watching. Yeah, ' the Medved
dives from the crowd '(who were perhaps
them double LP's--during their three year
"You're gonna stay the whole nigh~
direction, and the three masterminds use brothers called it the worst film of all
heyday from 1984 to 1987, took every
a little to used to. Sub Pop ' shows)
right?" said some guy who introduced
every good 01' boy homily in the book- time, but "Robot Monster" is funnier,
album on the road, and gained a
halfway into the set It became clear that
"Hell's Angels on Wheels" with
-Tobe Hooper must have watched this "The Horror of Party Beach" '- is
reputation as an amazing live act (an
Mould and his band wanted just to play
before he made "The Texas Chainsaw funnier ...just about anything is 'funnier. I
Lawrence of Olympia. but that's another
astonishing feat in today's lugubrious
their songs as best as they could
story. "Angels" came on after a short
Massacre." In a way it resembles mean, "Modern Problems" with Chevy
music industry). After Husker Du's
undisturbed. When one fan got up on
subject, Gus Van Sant's ("Drugstore
"Invasion of The Body Snatchers," too. Chase is funnier than ....Plan 9," and I
breakup Mould took a year off, then
stage and triumphantly raised his arms
Cowboy") portrait of William S.
The noisy, knee-slapping, o~erzealously h~te "Modern Problemj,." Bela Lugosi
released his aptly-titled return to the
and basked in the spotlight, bassist Tony
friendly and raucous Georgtans are as died halfway through tlie ftlm (he was
Burroughs reading "A Thanksgiving
grind stone "Workbook."
Maimone rushed over, tight-jawed, and
Prayer." You'd hate William for his
alien to the tourists as any men from replaced by , a six-foot unemployed
So it wasn't surprising when Mould
gave him a kick in the rear that sent him
scabrous condemnations of everything if
Mars, but the identities are reversed. In chiropractor with blond hair who holds a
_strode onto the stage at Portland's
toppling back into the crowd.
he didn't look and sound like your
"Body Snatchers," the otherworldly ~ings Dracula cape over his face), ex-wrestler
Melody Ballroom with his ~d (bassist
Surprisingly it was Mould's acoustic
grandfather. He also has humor and a
invade a small town and threaten its Tor Johnson shows that he can't walk
Tony Maimone and drummer Anton
twelve-string guitar that stole the
humanity; here it's the monsters who and talk at the same time, VampiCa
sense of exactly where to plant his high
> Fier), strung his guitar over his shoulder
electricity-dominated
show.
His
Missouri twang. Some of Van Sant's
have the homestead, and the tourists, with totters on spike heels she isn't really
like he was punching into work, and then
performance of "Sinners and Their
their newfangled (to the lnmdred~year old wearing, and Criswell, the psychic, makes
images have been much recycled, but
went into an adrenaline-charged, uptempo
Repentances" from "Workbook" was the
that's not important so long as the thing
ghosts) automobiles, who invade the Ramtha look like a deep thinker. I kept
version of "Workbook"'s "Wishing Well"
Mould
showcased
five
of
only acoustic num~r on his playlist, but
looks like an old newsreel, which it does.
sacred place. Lewis squeezed impressive trying to fall asleep and freaking out
without saying a wOrd to the crowd. "Workbook"'s war horses and eight from
the reflective and p'ainful song achieved
"Hell's Angels on Wheels" was
things out of a very low budget: and I'd because I didn't have a ride back to
Mould walked out onto the stage like he his newest electricly charged album
a power that none of the other songs
apparently written by Jack Nicholson
like to see his other works.
campus. Thanks to the two people who
had a job to do and like he has done in "Black Sheets of Rain"--the sprawling,
played could touch, and Mould seemed a
(under the pseudonym "R. Wright
"The Trip," also written by Jack gave me a lift f1S I listed out the door at
little broken up as he walked to the edge
the past, on vinyl and live, he did his job distorted title track from that new album
Campbell"?) and stars his own awesome
Nicholson, stars Petef Fonda as a dude eight in the morning: We were three of
of the stage to fetch his electric gui~.
damn well.
unfortunately never appeared. Except for
personage as Poet. When we first see
who tries LSD, Bruce ("Silent Running") perhaps ten people who had lasted the
Dern as his mentor/connection, and a' distance.
Poet, he is pumping gas, but Nicholson
wears the brown leather jacket and black
young. relatively clean-cut Dennis Hopper
Andrew Hamlin exhorts the reader to
jeans he wore in "Five Easy PieceS" (or - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - as everybody's freaky friend. Character "remember Ray Dennis Steckler, Cash
was it "Easy Rider"?), so he doesn't look it's 1965 and Pleasant Valley has swirled development? Peter directs commercials Flagg, and Rat P/ink!"
like a grease monkey. Doesn't act like back into existence, complete with a and he's getting divorced--he drops the
one either; forty-five seconds later he bellicose mayor who makes Boss Hogg
acid ten minutes into the film and the
GOINGgets fired, jumps on his bike and follows look like a catatonic, and two bumpkins rest happens on the fly. Trick
the Hell's Angels, who are zooming in overalls who do most of the dirty
photography, astral plane carousels, films
down the highway in a convoy one work. They throw up detour signs and
projected onto white nude bodies, and
quarter of a mile long.
lure six passing Yankees into their fold,
milk with an insomniac little girl at three
? E
th'
d patting them on the back as everyone
in the morning? Oh we gotta lotta that.
What happens next. very mg an
celebrates the "Centennia1." Before sunup,
"The Trip," like "Hell's Angels," is pretty
in let
the him
gang,ride
so one 0 f the women ends up the mam' dish
&
all'Its plotlessness.
PLACES
nothing.
wants
he
beats Nicholson
one guy up,
they
damn good lor
'
Director Roger Corman loves nonlinear
Books. Maps ,. Gifts '
\
,
with them but make him wait outside at a barbecue, and her husband is pulled
while they trash a go-go bar, so he apart by four horses running in four
Arthurian scenic stuff with lots of beach F
i
Lan
R
I
directions.
shots (check out "The Terror," another
ore gn
guage esources
strikes up an existentialist conversation
Surprisingly I found "2,000 Maniacs"
Outdoor Recreation
'
,
with a pretty biker momma, they fall in
,
. '
----flove-sort-oHut-she!s--the-gang-leader~----.1lli)J~eSSlVe
~ the~o~th~e!-r~thr~ee
~--;::========================;--I--Travel-6utdes. Cookbooks-t- - - -t - - --1.-- IF"""""l-T=H
'";;;;;;E-~;-;F;;;;\;;-;;;r;;;;I
U ;;;;'UR
;;-;;;;;;;':-;E
=--';;;D
; ;: -:E
; =P;;:CE
=N
;-;I~E=D
D =--O
-=-CN
;;-;;;-cr-T
=-.-,
...
fIlms. It largely avOIds
the "gee golly
glfl so that s tr~)Ublethnght there ..., ,
goshers whiz" dialogue of other 50's and
Pierre
I~
'I
Travel Accessories
PoetsocThcuPles e .samh~ posI::;;n. as 60's films, so it hasn't dated badly, and
'ElectriC
~se
H
unter...
0HmllP~nAnm ls~ AnoS Ictlon it's still more disturbing than laughably
~~1IT',1IT'~~
515
WASHINGTON
account The e s
ge.
trange
'll Le . h
nl Ii
..
1
""\a-~IW
'bl
S
"H
be
"
Sl
y.
WIS
as
0
y
our
victIms
to
p
ay
.
St".F.w'
(across
from
the
Washington Center)
ecause it does. Smart investors
gro~th through dividends. CREP's
an d ,Tem e aga.
e wants to
. m with (two esca in the end) and can't
UUi
know that your future depends on variable annuity offers opportunities
(unlike ,Hunter, ~e seems to have no~mg pump out ~ nonstop, so he does
1159>(prtli. Capito{ Way 786.8282
357 -6860
else gomg for him at ~l), and some~mes something scarier; each death comes at
.....- - - - - - - - - - - - -....
how well your retirement system for growth through four different '
they seem l? a~ept him,. but oth~r Urnes the end of a long, sadistic, and usually
investment accounts, each managed
perfonns: TIAA-CREP has been the
they play With h~s head. Ignore ~un. The public torture. Not sadistic in a sexual
With the ]oilg-tenn perspective essenpremier retirement system for people
woman pushes ~Im away, pulls hun back. sense; in the. sense of protracted
for
over
70
tial
to sound retirement planning:
in
education
and
research
torn between h~ and the, gang leader. awareness of impending death, something
years. We have enabled over 200,000
The CREF Stock Account
The gang leader IS everythmg on~ could very much like a nightmare. One of the
ask ~f ~ father fI~: . qu~et . yet men is made to crawl through a barrel at
people like you to enjoy a comfortable
The CREF Money Market Account
a~thontanan, a ~uS8l~y ~XlSt pig m a a shindig-~then the two bumpkins pin him
retirement. And over 1,000,000 more
The CREF Bond Market Account
tnbe of such ~unal~, . ~scrutable, the inside. the mayor hammers nails through
are
now
planning
for
the
future
with
h~d on the SWitch divldmg peace and one side of the barrel, and it's released to
The CREF Social Choice Account
TIAA-CREF.
Violence.
,
"
roll down the hill. Will the man scramble
In a film With. no. ~l~t ~ut, ~1V1d out when-.no, the men rung alongside it
CALL 1~2·2776
SMARr MONEY LOOKS FOR SECURITY,
DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA
colors, tones, and ~ttIngs, It..S m~vldual until the "barrel roll" reaches the bottom
10 FIND OUT MORE
moments that stIck espec~y m the of the cliff. When the blood does run
@il@'ii' ~1r:l1.\lJ(f(f @(f
407 E 4th Ave
GROWTH AND DIVERSJTY FOR
by Andrew Hamlin

, as the pointy arrow nc<;>n signs from the
1950's, captured just before that decade
slipped away from a recognizable past
into ancient history.
"2,000 ManIacs" was written,
directed, and photographed by Herschell
Gordon Lewis, great-~daddy of the
splatterfilm doyens--so why does it begin
with a catchy banjo-pluckin' theme song
the Holy Modal Rounders could have
recorded? Because unlike the Rounders,
this song isn't ironic or sarcastic; the
South is gonna rise again, and six
Northern tourists are gonna be caught in
the tsunami. When the towheaded' boys
hang a black cat with a "Damn Yankee!"
sign on it and save the noose, you know
the game's afoot.
In 1865, y'see, the town of Pleasant
Valley, Georgia, was wiped out by a
band of whoopin' Union soldiers. Now

The gang
leader is
everything one
could ask of a
fa ther figure ...

HERE'S WHY

~
-==

THE SMART MONEY XT

I

I

EVERGREEN ST'XrE COLLEGE

-------A
-·-S
---..

s

IS GOING WITH TIAA CREF



He
closed
his
set
with
"Disappointe4." a pQDky song from
"Black Sbeets" that peels oUt and roars
like a dragster and created a sizable mosh
pit. Then returned for the ftrst of three
encores.
Mould's cover of Cheap Trick's
~Surrender" wasn't that much of a curve
ball when you remember that it was
covered by the same guy who covered
the "Mary Tyler Moore" theme as a
Husker Du B side, but many people in
the crowd seemed surprised. One thing's
for certain: it blew the roof off the
house. A l]eavy burden was noticeably
lifted off of Mould's shoulders during his
encores. He smiled as he played
"Surrender" and rocked away.
Mould appeared alone with just his
acoustic twelve-string to play his last two
encores and reached back into his Husker
Du catalog. The desperate "Hardly
Getting Over It" came across as an
anthem without the accompaniment that
Husker Du gave it. Mould returned again
and started to play "Last Night" from
"Black Sheets" then stopped saying "I
don't wanna do that one," and after
cogitating for a awhile said "I'll see if I
can remember the ,words," .and did a
version of "Celebrated Summer" that
made you wonder why he didn't do it
:lCousticaly to begin with. He actually did
forget a couple verses, but smiled and
lCreamed "shit" and "fuck" to make it all
worth while. He ended the night ,with the
Husker Du classic and frequent Mould
~core number "Makes No Sense at All,"
with the crowd making a sizeable vocal
::ontribution.
When the show was over Bob
Mould did what so few rock and roll
artists do these days. He gave the crowd
one hundred and one percent emotionally
charged rock and roll, no bullshit added.
While the hardest working man in show
business rests in a halfway house, I'll
give the interim title to Bob MoUla.
Mark Winford dances naked in the
forest to Irish folk music under- a full
moon.

'
B

so.

FUN
WILL BE

fringe gives
bikerstage
a James
Brown
memory.
Theone
go-go
s collapsmg
cape. The Angels hitch saddle to Nevada
for a biker wedding, with a reluctant.
florid priest and two rows of Harleys
arranged in salute. Later the groom
watches from his motel window as his
mates stomp local yokels around a
drained swimming pool. In the bathroom
his bride strips down to black lingerie,
fretting about the motorcycle parked
beside their bed ("Well if I left it outside
it might get stolen."). Poet sips a longnecked Coke and watcheS police cars
ease into the parking lot around him:
one, two, three, four. In a slappedtogether apartment with cold wood floors
,and a white gas oven, a beatnik without
'beret paints the bodies of undulating
women.
"Hell's Angels" is a slice ' of
American life and fllmmaking that may
look bener now than it did twenty years
ago. It captures the relics of the 1960's
(the long-necked Coke bottles, the gas
ovens, the brown leather jackets) in a
nonsensational manner the makers of
"1969" would do well to study; as well

_~========================::::==I

*

*

The 4th Annual
Cooper Point Journal's

*

• *
*
~~~~ \}!{.~ " i'~oliday Shop~ers
*,-.~
*
lit
*

Page 10 Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

Entertainment Guide

*

, Is ' on Its way

*

PUBLISHED DEC. 6th
TO RBSERVB DI8PIAY AD
SPACB OR TO rJiimOlJT ABalJT
on anew. BiJDOBT UIITUIQ8

*

RETIREMENT SAVINGS.
Security-so the resources are there
when it is time to retire. Growth-so
you'll have enough income for the
kind of retirement you want. And
diversity-to help protect you against
market volatility and to let you benefit
from several types of investments.

THAT'S EXAffiY WHAT YOU GET
WITH TIAA-CREF.
TIAA offers you the safety of a
traditional annuity that guarantees
your principal plus a specified rate of
interest, and provides for additional

Our experienced retirement counselors
will be happy to answer your questions
and tell you more about retirement
annuities from TIAA-CREF.
Experience. Performance. Strength.
Your future is protected by the largest
private retirement system in the world.
We have done so well, for so many, for
,.so long, that we currently manage
some $85 billion in assets.

SELECT/ON
OF
RECORDS. TAPES
COMPACT DISCS &

SPECIAL ORDERS WELCOME

~~

~

J

o

o

-

IIJ~OM

Ensuring the future
for those .who shape it.....

For more complete infonnation, including charges and expenses, call I 800 842·2733. ext 5509 for a
prospectus, Read the prospectus carefully before you invest or send money,
'

S

~

--------l ....'

OLYMPIA'S BEST
SEILE(:TIION OF FOREIGN FILMS
2FORlI .
RENT 1 MOVm - GIIT 1 FREE
(with ,this ad)
Expires Nov. 29, 1990

------

One coupon per cuatlllller
357-4755

Weabicle Center
rnvilion "" Hurbon

~~
2 ~==========================~======~
Cooper Point Journal
15, 1990 Page 11
Nov~mber

Arts &. Enterta'i nment

"Woofer" woos Walter's heart

never

we're

thighs down--and WHERE is that

n .. L,ali

dog? photo courtesy Allison Halstead
by Leslyn Lee
If you walk around campus you have
no choice but to notice the posters
advertising "Woofer The Psychic Dog." I
myself was wondering .what ~is pooch
was all about My rust lmpresSlon was a
dog on ' stage, answering ques.tions
directed by the audience, and r~eiv~g a
Raw ' Hide doggie chew from hls tramer
for each correct response ... not quite.
"Woofer the Psychic Dog" is a zany
comedy about, you guessed i~, a psyc~ic
dog. Glenda, his owner, falls 10 love ~lth
Walter and the two of them get mamed
within the rust three minutes of the
show. Now that they are married, Woofer
comes between the two of them, first by

Walter's jealous nature of Glenda's
feelings for Woofer, and secondly when
Woofer decides to reveal his psychic
abilities only to Walter. Poor Glenda
doesn' t realize why Woofer won't talk to
her, why only Walter? Walter has always
wanted to be famous so when he
discovers the dog's powers he uses them
to get his foot in the door of stardom.
Woofer is his runaway ticket to tinsel
town. This of course puts a major wedge
between the couple as Walter and Woofer
rap on talk shows and lead the life of the
jet set. The action takes place after the
initial plot set up can only be seen and
understood as a member of the audience.
I would hate to ruin it for you anyway.

Overall this show was most hilarious.
My mother , would have been rolling in
the aisles. It had a high energy quality
that .was maintained by each actor (with
the exception- of Glenda, Walter, and
Woofer), portraying more than three
chamcters during the course of the event
Beyond being hilarious it was adequately
corny not to mention oozing with cheese.
When I say cheese, I mean a sort of
endearing goofiness that transcends the
ridiculous and might be' summed up as
"it's so stupid it's funny." The most
important thing I can say about this show
is that it made me laugh almost the
entire time I watched it. I wasn't
expecting sometlUng so funny to happen
when I entered the Recital Hall, I was
very much pleasantly surprised.
If you missed the special Evergreen
preview this past weekend you can still
catch it up in Seattle at The Washington
Hall Performance Gallery on Capital Hill
from November 15-25, call (206)5238474 for reservations. I know that it's a
long drive, but I would have to say GO
GO! You will love it and if you are
depressed it would do you some good to
laugh so hard you cry. Besides the fact
that all the actors and actresses in this
production are exceptionally good
looking.
"Woofer the Psychic Dog" is
produced by a theatrical organization
called
AHA
(Association
of
Heterogeneous Artists). One of our
esteemed alumni, Allison Halstead is
r~Ponsible for bringing us this unusual
arid diverse production as an employee of
the organization. You see, there is life
after Evergreen!
Leslyn Lee is changing her name
from Les/yn L. Logan to Les/yn Lee, and
now would like to be called Bunny. Why?
Because she wants a nickname.

Valueatthesmiling '0' .

(~'YllPlCDRUG
• BEST CARD SELECTION IN TOWN
·PROMFTPERSONALSER~CE

Wisfiing
fJ3irtfulay

• LOWEST PRESCRIPTION PRICES
Callfor no obligation price quote

• lARGE INVENTORY
• POSTAL SUB-STATION
' • FAX MACHINE

¥:

2104 West Harrison 943-3820

15

than 5 pm today. No postmarks will be
accepted. For info call 866-6000 x6310.

THURSDAY

BIKES NOT BOMBS: Holds its fllSt
meeting tonight at 8 pm in the Campus
Bike Shop, basement of the CAB
building. "Come help determine 'which
direction this new group is going to go.
We hope to focus our efforts upon
helping to provide sustainable,. ecoconscious transportation to Nicaragua and
other countries in Central America...and
to promote increased bicycle use here at
home in the smog-filled kingdom of the
car gods." All-u-can-eat popcorn provided
gratis. Call FLAT-PEG, or 866-2218.
NELSON ON THE MIKE: Frank Nelson,
massage therapist, will speak on massage
and self-realization. Four Seasons Books,
5th and Water in Olympia, 7:30 pm.
Free. Sponsored by the Olympia Friends
of Poets, Writers, Artists, and Performers
(OFOPWAP). Call 786-0952.

\



BEER-MAKING
SUPPLIES
IMPORTED WINE. BEER
GOURMET COFFEE. ESPRESSO
GREATDEU

Capital Village
400 Cooper Pt Rd

352-8988

I
I

THE
HOLY
ROLLERS
AND
CHESHIRE:
The Dischord label
impresarios from Washington D.C. team
up with local people Cheshire, whom Ian
Dickson says are "into ~ psychedelic
freak-out. .. but they also play the heavy
heart-throb." Tonight at the North Shore
Surf Club, 116 E; 5th Avenue in
Olympia. $5.
CHRISTMAS WREATHS: Are available
through the Comer Cupboard at Black
Hills Community Hospital. Sales benefit
the hospital's Charitable Support Fund.
Call 754-5858 x1024 to order or reserve
wreaths.

GRANTS AND CONTRACTS: Got a
question about funding? Call the ~pus
experts~:Don
Chalmers, Director ·of
Corporate ' and
Foundation
Relations/Grants, at x6568, or Audrey
Streeter, Grants Coordinator, at x6501.
Their offices are Library 3114 and 3122
respectively.
1ECH INTERNSHIP INFO:
David
Zook, Evergreen alumnus, gives the
lowdown about a computer programming
internship with Tokyo's MP Technology,
and some general info about Japanese
internship
opportunities
too,
MP
Teclinology is a small technically oriented
firm; its products include the hypermedia
software GUIDE and various Windowsbased
applications.
Prefer
strong
background in programming, C language
especially. Internship includes monthly
stipend of 110,000 yen (approximately
$730), plus a furnished apartment, utilities
and daily transportation, <?ne month of
Japanese lessons, and round trip
transportation from Tokyo. Today from 12 pm in the President's Board Room,
Library 3112. Call the Office of
Cooperative Education, 866-6000 x639l.

16

FRIDAY

BARB
PRESENTS
IMPROV:
Compositions and improvi~tions by four
area performers--keyboardist John Aikins,
trumpeter Remus Glaude, drummer Mark
Vale, and pedal steel guitarist Rene
Bressieux. At
Barb's Soul Cuisine, 204 W. 4th,
downtown Olympia. 8 pm.

festival members, $6 for non-members,
$2 for kids 13 and under. The Capitol
Theater, 206
5th Avenue in Olympia,
754-6670.
NEW WORK BY NORTHWEST
At 5:15
WOMEN FILMMAKERS:
today, the Capitol Theater (see address
and "prices above). Sixteen short fllms,
including Ann Marie Fleming's "New
Shoes" (later expanded into a feature),
Janice Findley's "Triple Time," and
Sook-Yin Lee's "Escapades of One
Particular Mr .. Noodle."

and don't forget these important holiday
events...

"LONGTIME COMPANION":
This
1990 fUm deal with a group of gay
friends and their reaction to the AIDS
crisis. Applause to the Film Festival
people, without whom you' d never see
stuff like this ' in Olympia. Capitol
Theater, see address and prices above.
FILMS,
VIDEOS
AND
OTHER
"Please note: the
ATROCITIES:
following program may prove to be
offensive, if you are easily offended,
don't bother." Christian Gore, editor of
Film Threat magazine, brings over some
of his personal favorites, including "Don
From Lakewood," a 25-minute mm of
prank phone calls set to paper cut-outs,
"Apocalypse Pooh," in which Milne
meets Coppola, and Gore's own "Ouch,"
about a guy with a fear of needles.
Regular show starts at 9:30 pm, the
Capitol Theater. At midnight comes The
Big Party, ($5 cover charge, I.D.
required) with Mr. Gore, a keg ,o f
microbrew and some even odder visual
fare. Sayeth Mr. Gore: "Forget the Rob
Lowe' video, here's the Go-Go' sf"

23

FRIDAY

BELL RINGERS NEEDED:
The
Olympia Salvation Army Corps prepares
its J990 Christmas Kettle Bell-Ringing
Campaign, to raise funds for programs
for the homeleSs and hungry. Volunteers
needed. All you need to do is give two
hours of your free time between today
and December 24. Call Rhonda at 3528596 for info.

BENEFIT BOWL-A-THON:
The '
Knights of Pythias live again. Whatever
MARK
CANFIELD,
SHANNON
that means. 2:30 pm at the Westside
MURRAY,
AND
J.C.
ADAMS:
Lanes, comer of Harrison and Division.
Aooea:rin~ tonight at the Asterisk ("unless
Proceeds benefit Leisure Resources an~ANbffiD-G(XID-OONA'FI0NS~-Make- - CP5\-----+--~~;~~~;i;~1~;:n;"-;;;i~~~;;_;;d-___tl;:_~~00iIT_rn=selitmnjffijiffi;~di:~~'Fi Call 752-5272 for a pledge yours at all through the h6liday season at
Division, Olympia, 6 to 8 pm.
benefit for SANE!Freeze. ,Rumors of the sheet.
the following locations: The Washington
"Traditionally untraditional music."
Big Wave opens. Tickets at Ticketmaster
Center, The Olympian Hotel, Ken
tfie Cooper Point Journal a Jlappy 19tfi
or Red and Black Books.
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
Schoenfeld
Furniture,
Meredith's
HOLLY
NEAR:
The
esteemed
singer
AUCTION:
7-9
,
pm
at
the
United
Stationers,
Radiance,
Intercity
Transit,
and 'Everyone a Joyful'TfianJ&giving
comes
to
Evergreen's
gratuitous THE MUMMIES AND THE PHANTOM Churches of Olympia, llO E. 11th
Selden's Furniture, The Olympian, lind
Recreation Center Gym, tonight at 8 pm. SURFERS: Halloween was two weeks
Avenue. All proceeds benefit Amnesty
Farmer's Market. Coordinated by the
International, Olympia.
Downtown Olympia Association, all food
Opening acts are John Bucchino and ago but these guys were stuck in
Patty Larkin. Call 866-6000 x6397.
Transylvania with a thrown rod, so
goes to Bread and Roses, Safeplace, and
This
the Thurston County Food Rank.
now ... "dig that every Mummies' show is CHILDREN'S STORYTIME:
SCHOLARSHIPS:
Three scholarships required by law to be a hard-hat area, week's stories will center around
(one for an African-American female and the site condemned immediately Thanksgiving. Four Seasons Books, 5th
head of household, one for an afterward." So long, ,Capitol Theater at and Water in Olympia, 111:30 am. Call
African/American,
Asian/American, 206 E. 5th Avenue in Olympia, nice
786-0952.
Hisoanic, or Native American student, knowing you. Should be quite the night
and one open to all students) __ a,re for frugging, shy tuna-ing, and blind
available to new and/or currently enrolled ponying (a la Equus). The Mummies
DOWNTOWN
OL YMPIA
OPEN
undergraduate
students
attending have "hellish vocals," the Phantom
HOUSE: Today from noon to 6 pm.
Evergreen full-time during the 1990-91 Surfers play an all-instrumental set, like
Events include a Christmas parade at
school year. $500 each. Submit letter of the Shadows and Link Wray. Midnight.
noon from the Farmers Market to
.
application listing your qualifications $3. A presentation of the Seventh Annual ALL-CAMPUS
POTLUCK
AND
Sylvester Park. Various musical and
, (with name, social security number, Olympia Film Festival.
WELCOMING PARTY: Library 1400,
performing groups, from carolers to
'.- ,"
.>
curent address, and which scholarship you
noon to 1:30 pm, for the new people
bagpipers, a horse-drawn hayride with
are applying for), two letters of LEGISLATIVE BUDGET COMMITTEE: about "Bring you favorite dish and your Santa around
Sylvester
Park,
recommendation from two sources, and Regular meeting in good 01' Olympia, 'the favorite joke."
complementary cider, and the annual tree
proof of fmancial need (Financial Aid O'Brien Building, Heanng Room A, 9:30
lighting (hmmmm ... ) at 5:30 pm, also in
Form) to the Dean of Enrollment am. Wear a blue g-string and batwings
Syl~ester Park. Fun for the entire family.
SOLOMON 1ELLS IT LIKE IT IS:
Services
Library 1221, no later on your head.
'
Call Susie Archibald at 943-2707.
Nprman Solomon, co-author of Unreliable
Sources: A Guide to Detecting Bias in
News Media, speaks in Lecture Hall 1, 7
WASHINGTON
CENTER
OPEN
pm. For more info call the Evergreen
HOUSE: Tonight from 2:30 to 5 pm at
Political Information Center at 866-6000
the
Washington
Center.
Carolers,
,6144.
musicians, hot spiced cider, and what
have you. Call Meg Kester at 753-8585
for info.
"THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA":
Andrew Lloyd Webber is a sissy, sorry
to break the news like this. Today at 3
pm you get the real Phantom, Lon
RAlNR)REST MEETING POSTPONED:
Chaney Sr., who walked with the queen
The Rainforest Action Group will not
and distorted his nose with fishhooks as
part of his makeup. Originally -released
meet today because of the Thanksgiving
A CHRISTMAS CAROL:
The
holiday. Next meeting is on the 28th,
in 1925, this is a brand new print, tinted
Washington Center presents the Nebraska
(not colorized), and for no extra money
7:30 in the CAB 3rd Floor Pit. Everyone
Theater Caravan's production of Charles
BOOKSTORE HOURS:
you get a Technico10r "Phantom" promo
welcome.
Dickens' classic Yuletide tale, complete
reel, a special introduction by Christopher
'Mon-Thurs 8:30-6:00
with seasonal songs. Tonight at 8 pm at
, Lee (who played both Dracula and the
INTERCOMMUNITY
INTERFAITH
the Center's Mainstage. Tickets $15-20,
Friday 8:30-5:00
. Frankenstein ~onster, I think), and a new - THANKSGIVING
CELEBRATION:
group discounts available. Contact Meg
Saturday 10:00-2:00
soundtrack by ex-Yes keyboardist Rick
Fifteen local Protestant, Catholic, and
Kester at 753-8585.
Wakeman. Pass that Tub-O-Corn. $4 for
Jewish
congregations
celebrate

19

HAPPY 19TH BIRTHDAY
COO PER POI NT JOURNAL

Thanksgiving in a joint worship service,
today
at
the
ne~
Westminister
Presbyterian Church, 1925 Boulevard
Road S.E., Olympia. All cash from the
offeririg goes to the Bread and Roses
group for assistance to the hungry and
homeless. For info call Associated
Ministries at 357-7224.

-~.

25

SUNDAY

30

FRIDAY

MONDAY

,

'<

17

ANNUAL HOLIDAY BOOKSALE
NOW IN PROGRESS '

T URKEY TROT THIS
THANKSGIVING
.
NOV , 22
WITH THE OUTPATIENTS

!cover $3 ,00 I

1HE. OU1PA11 E.N1S
RE TU RN FOR MORE ROCK 7HERAPY

NOV. 23 & 24

2JO e. 4t h. downtown.
\

~Th.
!
: Evergreen
I

I

...

I

State
College

Bookstore

786-/444

Page 12 Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990

Hundred of Titles at
Major Markdown Prices

SATURDAY

21 -- ,WEDNESDAY

Cooper Point Journal November 15, 1990 ,', Page 13

C

Cartoonist duped .by -propaganda·
Response

by Jason Summers "
If we look closely at the infonnation
industry in the United States, we see that
less than 29 major corporations control
virtually all media. Through this virtual
media
monopoly,
corporate
and
conservative interests are expressed, but
disguised as objective in that infamous
mythic institution--the "objective media."
But I think the most glaring example of
how effective propaganda can be, is when
people take certain things as facts, reprint
them, and thus act to perpetuate
disinformation while serving as a voice
for right wing interests.
Over the summer I had an incredible
opportunity to participate in a national
delegation to El Salvador and to see first
hand the effects of U.S. policy towards
that country. The revolutionary movement
in El Salvador is multifaceted, but each

.approach taken is involved in the same
of
an
struggle--the , establishment
economically and politically just and
'democratic society. In reading lasi week's
CPJ, this disinformation that I'm talking
about was blatantly evident in a certain
political cartoon. This cartoon depicted
the revolutionary army in El Salvador,
the FMLN, as a terrorist organization,
committing the same gross human rights
violations as the Salvadoran government
I was utterly disgusted by this right-wing
garbage.
In my trip to El Salvador, we visited
many different organizations that are in
active opposition to the Salvadoran
government. Since early 1980 there have
been just over 74,000 civilian deaths
committed by the Salvadoran military and
carried out with arms from the U.S.
government. These policies of repression
have only created in the population more
resistance, which right now is stronger
than at any 'time before in history. The
popular movement includes union
federations, teacher and student groups,
peasant
organizations,
agricultural
workers, homeless people, Christian
communities in the countryside, etc.
These are the people that organize in the

face of severe repressIon. These are the
people that are at the forefront of the
revolution. These people themselves say
that the work . of the FMLN is a
necessary part afthe whole struggle.
In visiting these organizations, the
people we met with were very Clear in
telling
t if the FMLN were not
un their wn organizations would not
able to perate. They told us that ·if
the
were to lay down their arms
before the conditions for a ceasefJre were
met. the Government would have free
reign to kill aU .the people in the popular
movement. They told us that the FMLN
offensive of last November pushed the
government to a point where all it could
do was . to bomb the poor communities
and repress the population. In the
longterm this enable<J the popular
organizations to increase their organizing
activities, and to take to the streets.
The Salvadoran and United States
governments
practice
an
intense
propaganda campaign against the FMLN.
In all, the government controlled areas in
El Salvador there are posters denouncing
the "terrorism" of the FMLN. The Human
Rights Commission (CDRES) that we
met with said that the government calls
their office frequently to tell of atrocities
committed by the FMLN. But when the
commission goes to investigate the

crimes, . the testitriorues of the peojJle
reveal that the govemmentsoldier$
cOmmitted the atrocity, 'not the FMLN.
Amnesty:lntemational-~ this
practice of propaganda by the Salvadorim
government. m iis most recent report 9n
El Salvador (1990). AI spells out the
system~c human righlS violatio~ of the
government The very small section that
they reserve for,FMLN abuses concludes,
"In SOffi.e Cases reports .sugges~ that
those respOnsible were in fact government
agents." When the military killed the
Jesuits last November, the FMLN was
blamed. This is just the most well-known
example of this practice.
The Salvadoran people are in the
midst of an 11 year old civil war. The
rise of armed organizations to defend the
people did not occur overnight but was
the result of years of election fraud,
sb'ikebreaks, murder and a virtual
blocking of any means to peaceful
change. For one to see the 'FMLN as a
terrorist
organization
shows
the
effectiveness of the propaganda system.
To reprint such obvious lies is an
irresporisible · action that serves elite
interests here in the United States and in
El Salvador.
Jason Summers has just returned
from El Salvador.

".

DogearbyShan~on

' ..

. . ,I. .C.,..)m·
'.

.

.'

.....

,.
~..

CLASSIFIED

mercy of two male aggressors. The male
figures are fully clothed and active. The
woman is portrayed as a passive if not
helpless inanimate object
It seems that instead of viewing a
political cartoon, we are getting a glimpse
into one of the authors misogynistic
fantasies. This insulting portrayal of
women is a cause of outrage unto itself.
It also further ·reveals the artist's
convoluted view of the situation in El
Salvador.
Instead of being scantily clad objects
and/or the "innocent" victims of
leftist "terrorists," women
are
Salvadoran society. Within movements for
social change, Salvadoran women play a
dynamic role in both the armed resistance
of the FMLN and as leaders of trade
unions and other organizations.
Rather than using his time and
access to campus resources to formulate
an accurate view of the situation in El
Salvador, our resident cartoonist chose
instead to parrot the official "party line"
while spicing it up with some not so
subtle sexism.
Delegitimizing the
FMLN with the "terrorist" label has been
the time-honored method of justifying aid
to repressive Salvadoran governments. It's
sad to see that some 10 years and 74,000
corpses later, this old myth is still
embraced.
William Kramer is leaving the
country. Scot Wheat can still be found
roaming the campus.

30 worda or I..a - $3.00
10 centa for each additional word
PRE-PAYMENT REQUIRED
CI...lflad Deadline - 2 pm Monday

TO PLACE AN AD:

'.

PHONE 86&-8000 XI054
STOP BY THE CPJ, UB 2510
SEND INFO .TO CPJ, TESC, UB 2510
OLYMPIA, WA 98505

Wanted
VocalistlPerformanca Artist desires nonfunctioning kitchen -..pllancee. Don·t throw
them away, give them to Dan in 0114 or call
866-9926,

WANTED - Reps to promoeelow-priced Sunand
Ski packages. FREE TRIPS AND CASH.,Call
Great West vacations. 1-800-667~235 .

NEEDED: Rota-tilier, pick axes, and seed
spreader. Call Tedd al 866-6000 x6213, and
lars make a deal.
, SPERM DONOR WANTED. Musl be willing to
have medical testing and sign legal contract,
Fees negotiable. Serious inquiries only please.
Wri\le : Donor, PO Box 403, .2103 Harrison NW,
Suite 2-403, Olympia, WA 98502,

.

Help Wanted
Thinking of taking some time off from school?
w. nMel MOTHER'S HELPERSINANNIES. We
have pr&.screened families to suit you, Uve in
exciting New YorX City suburbs. We are
eitabNshed since 1984 and have a strong
support netwot1<. 1-800-222·XTRA.

NANNIES
1-aoo.e&M128
East Coast. Airfare paid.
Classic Nannies (1974) Ud.

-..

. ~.

v'

~,,·l

•... ,

The, Future·of Evergreen by ·Paul H. Henry
.

I

.~

.

\

The Fascllt·,Clleml$tsby Morgan Evans ,:

,,

Ghoul~s : World

~

by Chris' Wells '

1I

.
I

~

,

Edward Martin III

I

.'

,v

"
\'.

"

~G_O_d_~~a_R_~_b_tt~
. b_y_R~,O_n_A_~~ti~n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~H~~~~OO~~

OO(s(Xj 'vlJlJGcr&~OO

i

F~e,.,DS WITH

•. (ElIEiN

~e-

AND:r tJl;OPEiD
ilfE B6YS IN out.

WIIO ~ ~'/

AfTE~

7HAT WE"

JVSr S'r<XJ::. To PiA'IINfi
CWWUE-S AIV~.-

t

I

Osco.r
ROr'lero

1
Cartoon by William Kramer

Personals

Lost and Found

Anyone who is unable 10 be al home lor Thanksgiving. come see me, Mike in C404, and you can join
us in the Absentee Holiday Gala. Food. Folks, Fun.

Four Reacued Klnena Need a Good Home.
Two Siamese cross and two grey tabbies.
Have shots and wormed. Call 753-6458 days
and 446-:2185 evenings.

Finding Your Voice-Manifesting Your Vision. A
six-week therapy group focused on new models lor
Power & Leadership lor Women. For more info call
Julia Brayshaw or Peggy Goldberg 956-9285.
PROTEST U.S. NAVY'S CRUEL, UNETHICAL,
ABUSIVE USE OF DOLPHINS FOR MILITARY
PURPOSESI SEND LETTERS CALLING FORAN
IMMEDIATE HALT OF SUCH PRACTICES TO:
PRES, GEORGE BUSH, 1600 PENNSYLVANIA
AVE NW, WASHINGTON, D.C. 20500: FOR MORE
INFO CONTACT PAWS: 206-743-1884.
Tough paying lor college? We can still help you
get IIChoIarshipigrantiloan money. We actually
GUARANTEE itl Call 357-1203 ext. 311 lor free
details. Recorded message 24-hours.
ALERTII A rash of mounU!in bike !hefts havehh
campus reeendy. Security 'enCOUrages you to license your bike .,.. o' charge and to lock it.

\
Any cartoonist wishing to submit cartoons for emit 0'
WOrlDS issue #2, corne to the CPJ office (Library 25{O) and
pick up submiBBion guidelines!! Yowzal Also, keep your eyes
peeled for final sales of IBBue .11

1

j

ADS

CLASSIFIED RATES:

OS
,······· ....,.

."

Gr8:Y

cartoon, from page 9
discover the truth about the armed
resistance carried out by the FMLN.
Often misrepresented as a staunch
pacifist, Romero realized, "the church
cannot simplistically say it condemns any
kind of violence ....When a dictatorship
seriously attacks human rights and the
common good of the nation, when it
becomes unbearable and channels for
dialogue, understanding, and rationality
are closed, when that happens the church
speaks of the legitimate right of defense"
(last pastoral letter of 1979).
In 1980, Romero identified the
_ __ groups which would soon form the
FMLN not as a force of the "left," but as
"forces of the people (whose) anger may
be a product of social injustice." As
Romero suggests, the formation of the
FMLN was a defensive reaction to the
government's war on the general
population.
Fortunately, the United Nations is
not oblivious to these conditions when
making policy towards El Salvador and
thus recognizes the FMLN as the
negotiating body of the Salvadoran
opposition. This suggests that the FMLN
has substantial domestic and international
support and is not a group of "terrorists"
(as George Bush, Jeanne Kirkpatrick, and
Paul Henry would like us to believe).
_ _ Turning to the imagery of the
cartoon itSelf, it seems that the "artist".
has taken some lessons from the
dominant male gaze school of cartooning.
A shapely woman in a tank top and a
~ini skirt is bound and gagged at the

,.

l

~i _S~ " \C,"~EO~

13~ITelrL. PLACE, r . \ OST oF' VolHI <' 1-1 I S
B UT

Female Blllck Cat, spayed and current shots, .
needs a lot of love and a one-cat household in
which to be a member. Call 866-9061.
, .

KIC K 01" THE SE "<.O.,}/ ~\JT...

1HEo"l2.E' I~ ",,-oT OF STuF ~ THA, ~o€B)!'
-r 0 S {; t;)o r-- I E "1'0 r'\.' AI '.l.. ~ ,Hf"" v.)C)IiC..L.D P.
N £Fif)£"-.,

H£LP

$,O"O'l',

THAI I ~€Au.."(", ~Nyf)Nt
C.AN

Co

IN

Tti.E:

.,fV\£

""-<EY "'" 'e; HT 0'-1*81. WI~E SPt=NO T"'LKIN<:,
''''SOUT
'T .

"

4 full grown cata n.-cI good homes. 3 males,
1 female. CaIl"352-1038.

"

(

Found: 3 month old female black & grey tabby
kitten. We can't keep her, but will help pay lor
&hois & spaying.,438-9046 . .
Affectionate, mild-mahnered, part Black Lab pup
needs a Happy, loving Home. Call 956 0547.
THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP I THERE IS NO CHARGE
FOR LOSTIFOUND.'STOI.E~FREE CLASSFIEDS.

)

Page 14 Cooper Point Journal Noyember 15, 1990

Cooper Point Journal N,ovember 15, 1990

Page 15
Media
cpj0513.pdf