The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 23 (May 3, 1990)

Item

Identifier
cpj0501
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 23 (May 3, 1990)
Date
3 May 1990
extracted text
offices and governing bodies regarding
campus services
new SU I from page 3
4) soliciting popular student opinion
regarding campus services
4) The SUJdcnt Union will appoint
5) making recommendations to the
Student Union representati ves to standing Student Union on student policy
committees.
regarding campus services
5) The Student Union will charge
STRATEGIC
PLANNING
DTF's on pertinent campus issues.
COMMlTfEE
6) The Student Union will excexcise
The Student Union Strategic Planning
the responsiblity of confmning the Committee consists of five members of
appointment and recalling, if necessary, the Student Union. The Committee is
S&A Board Members.
oriented towards long tenn planning for
7) The SUJdent Union will confinn students at the college. The committee is
the hire of the S&A Board Coordinator
responsible for:
8) The Student Union will approve
1) Selecting a chair from among its
the S&A budget.
membership
9) The Student Union will retain a
2) making appointments to DTF's
coordinator.
related to strategic planning
STANDING COMMITTEES AND
3) communicating with campus
APPOINTMENTS
offices and governing bodies regarding
Each representative to the Student the Student Union strategic plan
Union is obligated to sit on at least one
4) soliciting popular sUJdent opinion
standing committee or hold one position regarding the Student Union strategic plan
'
on a related governance body.
5) making recommendations to the
ACADEMICS COMMITTEE
Student Union on sUJdent policy
The Academics Committee consists of regarding strategic planning
three members of the Student Union. The SERVICES
AND
ACTIVITIES
Committee is responsible for:
BOARD LIAISONS
1) Selecting a chair from among its
The Student Union will select from
' membership
among its representatives three members
2) Making appointments to DTF's
who will sit as ex-officio members of the
related to academic affairs at the college S&A Board. Liaisons will be responsible
3) Communicating with campus for:
offices and governing bodies regarding
1) Communicating between the
academic affairs at the college
Student Union and the S&A Board
4) Soliciting popular sUJdent opinion
2) Serving as members of both the
regarding academic affairs
S&A Board Member and S&A Board
5) Making recommendations to the
Coordinator hiring committees.
Student Union on sUJdent policy STUDENT UNION COORDINATOR
'regarding academic affairs
SELECTION
PROCESS
FOR
CAMPUS SERVICES COMMITTEE
STUDENT UNION COORDINATOR
The Campus Services Committee
During May, the standing Student
consists of three members of the Student Union will conduct a hiring process for
Union. The Committee is oriented The Student Union Coordinator position
towards general services of the college for the following year. The selection will
ranging from security to facilities. The follow all student personnel hiring
committee is responsible for:
procedures and Aff1Il1lative Action
1) selecting a chair from among its guidelines.
membership
PROVISO:Upon approval of this
2) making appointments to DTF's
amendment the SCC will immediately
related to campus services
initiate the hiring process for the Student
3) communicating with campus Union Coordinator. The newly selected

caucus representatives will intelView and
hire the next year's Coordinator.
STUDENT UNION COORDINATOR'S
TERM
The Student Union Coordinator's
term of employment will normally begin
in July and end in June. No person will
serve as Student Union Coordinator for
more than one term of employment. If
necessary, the Student Union may
terminate the employment of the Student
Union Coordinator prior to the end of the
term of employmenL In the event that
disciplinary action or termination should
occur the Student Union will follow all
relevent
institutional
policies
and
procedures.
STUDENT UNION COORDINATOR
.
DUTIES
The Student Union Coordinator will
serve as The Student Union's staff. The
Student Union Coordinator will be
accountable for providing information and
services for The Student Union, providing
facilitation for SUJdent Union Meetings,
preparing agendas, retaining a minutes
taker,
disseminating
information
concerning actions of The Student Union,
preparing and managing The Student
Union's operating budget, organizing
training and orientation for new Student
Union Representatives, to liaison with
related campus offices and committees,
and preparing and submitting the Student
Union budget to the S&A Board.
VOTES AND POLLS
The Student Union may refer a
question to an All-Student-Vote or Poll at
any Student Union meeting. The call for
such a vote or poll must follow all
Student Union decision making rules.
ALL STUDENT VOTES
For a vote to be considered a binding
decision at least 1/4 of registered students
must vote and there must be a 2f3
plurality for a particular side of the issue.
All currently registered students are
eligible to vote. Prior to a vote, students
shall be provided with at least one short
(200 words or less) argument for each
side of the issue. These arguments are to
be submitted to the SUJdent Union
Coordinator.

POLLS
A poll can also be initiated by a
petition signed by at least 10% of
currently registered students, attached to
a statement requiring The Student Union
to conduct a poll about the issue in
question. Polls exist to gather information
and opinions from students without their
voting for one or the other choices.
Having received such a petition 1be
Student Union is obligated to conduct the
poll. Such polls will be supervised by a
coordinator to be appointed by The
Student Union Coordinator.
RULES AND REGULATIONS
The wording of the ballots must not
be biased toward one view or the other.
Votes and polls paid for by S & A fees
will be conducted in accordance with the
document entitled Regulations regarding
the conduct of referendums and polls
administered at a ballot table and
involving the expenditure of S & A fees.

May 3, 1990

Volume 20 Issue 23

Cultural caucus supporters dominate
meeting called to question new system
by Tim GlbSOll

In an all-carnpus forum attended by
150

students many opinions were
expressed on an array of issues, but very
few decisions were made on the new
"cu11Ural caucus" student governance

system.

AMENDING THE STUDENT UNION
CONSTITUTION
To amend this Student Union
ConstiUJtion, the proposed amendment
must be approved by the Student Union
using the established decision making
process. Upon approval amendments must
be ratified by two thirds of the existing
caucuses. For an existing recognized
caucus to change its name it need only
follow its own existing decision making
rules.

l
Todd Buckley, 22, who was a sUJdent
at Evergreen for two years between 1987
and 1989, died Friday, April 20, at
Virginia: Mason Hospital in Seattle. A
classmate remembers him as a clear
thinker with broad interests and a
personable nature.

L

~

hi

My Love
While she has been far away
Lesson has been to see the flowers,
Cool, budded in a furled fold, and
leave them rooted in perfection
without watering them in expectation
of blooming for my delight_
On a lapel, in a containing vase,
Their evaginating colors, fragrant musk
Honey sweet ambrosia consumed greedily,
Better left living than tainted by possession,
Pinned up, admired, lost to vanity.
Then their bodies are thrown away with the trash.
Wolf Egidy
Dinner
Her room was quiet
unlike her roommates
the clatter of pans
and the scent of spaghetti
crept under the door
clouding our conversation
and shading our words
This won't work
I said
No
She said
and someone dropped a glass
I heard them swear
and grabbed my coat
simultaneously

sometimes I just let it ring lie back and wait
letting someone else be
frustrated for a while
wondering it the person
on the other end can tell somehow
I'm here listening
For the ringing to stop hell I pay for the thing
at least sometimes
it's mine if anyone's
and just because
'
something's yours doesn't mean you have to use it
could be a bill collector a relative
a wife an old employer
who finally figured it out
bad news more likely no news
just another drunk
trying to make contact
let it ring although then again
it could be you
but you never let it ring that long
only my love for you
rings that long
if it's my love for you let it ring
I can't answer it
if you won't

I'm not staying for dinner

I'll call you when
the ringing stops

Eric Knudsen

Michael McNellley

Page 16 Cooper Point Journal April 26, 1990

Photos from
the films
A "Looking for
Langston" and
.... 'Westler--East
of the Wall"
showing at the
Third Northwes
International
Lesbian Gay
Film Festival.
See page 12.
photos courtsy LGBPRC

GOVERNANCE
CAUCUSES
-African

American

Caucus:

Thursday May 10, 1990 5:30 pm in
L3205

-Asian/Pacific

Island

Caucus:

Larry Savage
'terminated'

CompDed by CPJ staff
On Friday, April 27, Security
Sergeant Larry Savage was "officially
terminated" after having been placed on
"administrative leave" an April 14,
-European American Caucus: according
to Security Chief Gary Russell.
Wednesday May 9, 1990 5-7 pmL3200
Savage has been accused, in a leuer
-Jewish
American
Caucus: signed by Russell, of 19 counts of
Wednesday May 9, 1990 1-3 pm in inappropriate behavior (see Vol. 20 Issue
L3200
19).
An earlier report in The Olympimt
-Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual CaUCUS:
indicated the allegations included
Tuesday May 8, 1990 7-9 pm in L3200
iDapJxopriately t.esIifyiJ1I before a
-Native
American
Caucus: legisJalive
oommittee and allowing a
wedDcSday May 9, 1990 3-5 pm in
rqIOl1et on campus to view security
L3200
Tuesday May 8, 1990 5-7 pm in L3205
-Chicano/Latino Caucus: Monday
May 7, 1990'6-7 pm in L3205

The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested

conditions without Russell's knowledge.
Savage has indicated he will appeal
the peI'SOnnel decision to end his
employment at the college, taking the
case to the highest court possible. He has
until mid-May to file an intention to
appeal.

Savage has also filed three claims
against the school including a $1.5
million ton claim for defamation of
character, harassment, and discrimination.
CPJ stqff are Evergreen students who
Just hang OUi in the CN office and
anempt to stay in the blow.

After forum facilitator Ken Basset
read through Evergreen's social contract
and laid the ground rules for discussion,
he opened up the microphone to the
forum and invited everyone to voice their
views and opinions on the new student
government.
One of the fIrst topics of discussion
focused on the legality of the new
student union.
Brendon Williams raised questions as
to the legality of the new student
government in relation to State and
Federal Civil Rights laws.
However, Mary Lou O'Neil asserted
the new government's legality. O'Neil
said that Evergreen legal counsel and
Assistant Attorney General Mike Grant
had assured Vice President for Student
Affairs Gail Martin of the "cultural
caucus" system's legality earlier that day.
Many people also voiced their
concerns over being linked to a specific
cultural group that does not necessarily
reflect their interests.
Adrian Cheeks, who said his views
differ greatly from those of most AfricanAmericans in Umoja and on campus,
contended that he would not be
represented in the now- system.
"[The caucuses] should not be based
on race, creed, religion, or sex," he Said,
"it should be based on ideology."
Jeff Richards, who was vocal
throughout the meeting, questioned the
fact that the seven "arbitrarily selected"
caucuses didn't fully represent the student
body.
However, supporters of the new
student government, such as Hugh Moog,
1990-91 S&A coordinator, pointed to the
amendment procedure and contended the
document could be expanded to include
more cultural caucuses.
"It's a living document,· he said,
"It's not carved in stone."
In a meeting plagued with
interruptions
and
loud
emotional
outbursts, Debbie Dillenbeck, SCC
volunteer, spoke of her frustration with
trying to speak ha mind.
"I den't think what I meant to say
got across," she said.
Dillenbeck said she meant to relate
her misgivings about the equal
representation of the caucuses, but she
also didn't believe the old SU represented
the students equally either.
Tempers flared at one point in the
meeting when Rooke Adenkanbi berated
ePJ cartoonist Paul Henry, after he took
the microphone in an etIon to explain his
latest editorial cartoon.
Adenkanbi vehemently criticized
Henry's portrayal of the new cultural
caucus system as being comparable to the
racist system of South Africa She
described the cartoon as racist.
Mark Sullivan, S&A coordinator and
cultural caucus co-author, summed his
position on the new system toward the
end of the two-and-a-half hour forum .
"The concept of majority rule is no
langa
an
acceptable
form
of
governance," he said.
The meeting broke up after a

see caucus, page 14
Nonprofit Organization
U.S. Postage Paid
Olympi~ WA 98505
Permit No, 65

~~mna a!!p!~~S to r!~~~~a1.,ow~~~~e~~

NEWS BRIEFS
Quote of the Week

''The only time you will feel
outside the discussion is
when it comes down to a
vote."
Jennifer Helpenstell answering concerns about the
end of the one student, one vote system.
See story on cover.

Security Blotter
Monday, April 23
0507: A "sleeper" was found in a LAB n
classroom, having pulled a couch in from
the lounge.
1029: There was an attempted entry to a
car parked in the motorpool area.
234(1: A transient in the Housing
Community Center was apprehended by
security. His name was taken and he was
found to have no warrants.
Tuesday. April 24
0729: Green marking pen graffiti was
found in one of the classrooms in the
Library
0944: "AIr' was wandering on Red
Square, violating the pet policy. His
owner was contacted.
1221: A tripod missing from Media Loan
was thought to be stolen.
1718: Two pieces of women's clothing
were found on the beach trail gate.
Wednesday, April 25
1332: Somebody's mountain bike was
stripped while parked in the bike shop.
1630: Obscene phone calls were reported
made to a female on this campus.
2049: Graffiti was found in the flI'St floor
men's room of the Library building.
Thursday, April 26
0055: Burning food caused a fire alann
to go off in N-Dorm. 911 was contacted
and the fire alarm was thought to be
malfunctioning.
1336: Tbere was a report of a flag
burning in Red Square.
1436: A verbal disturbance resulted from
the flag burning.
2010: $150 was missing from a wallet
that a woman left in the flI'St floor
Library women's room. A custodian
returned the wallet which he found in the
garbage.
Friday, April 27
0047: There was a student missing from
a field trip to Bowennan Basin. His
parents were contacted and he was
discovered sleeping in his room at home.
0314: A distressed person called Security

• EXPANDED AUDIO &. VIDEO
SELECTION
• TESLAR WATCHES
(Electro-magnetic pollution protection)

COMING SOON
FRESH JUICE & ESPRESSO

News Release
The Wilderness Resource Center is
sponsoring a 2 day white-water river raft
and kayak trip on May 11 and 12. In
conjWlction with The University of
Oregon, the inter-<:ollegiate riVel' trip is
currently scheduled for the White Salmon
and the Klickitat rivers. The Wilderness
Resource Center has obtained the use of
a large cabin for Friday and Saturday
nights.
The trip will be very
inexpensive, costing only enough to cover
gas and food for the 2 day event. All
those interested in participating must
attend the planning meeting tonight at
5:30 p.m. in ·the Wilderness Resource
Center located on the 3rd floor of the
Recreation Center. For more mfonnation
contact Elisa 866-8731, or Greg 8662944, or Justin x5114.

Greens seek help
for Mother's Day
celebration

!
requesting
a
psychologist.
Crisis
Intervention made contact with the caller.
1044: A bike was stolen from the Mods.
1637: Graffiti was found on the walls of
the third floor Library men's room.
News Release
During the civil war Ann& Reeves
Saturday, April 28
0007: An anonymous caller reported that Jarvis of West Virginia (8 border state
A-Dorm's pool table area was trashed.
between the north and south) envisioned
1125: A burned out light on the fIrst a day where sons fIghting on both sides
floor of the Library set off 8 fire alann would come home and not fight for a
day in honor of their moth~. She
there. 911 was notified.
worked toward this her whole life. Her
1323: Two females spotted a male hiding
his car in the woods near the Evergreen daughter, Anna Jarvis, took on her
Parkway. The area was swept thoroughly
by Security and they found nothing.
2019: Someone was found illegally
picking mushrooms near Driftwood and
Geoduck. roads.
Sunday, April 29
0104: A non-student drunk male was
reported to be banging on a window and
swearing at a woman whom he had
grabbed at in the Mods. Security arrived
and before they could talk to the suspect
he hopped on his motorbike and drove
into a curb. He again ran from Security
but was stopped, arrested and charged
with assault.
1050: Graffiti was discovered on the first
floor of the CAB near the pay phones.
1606: There was a fire alarm in T-Dorm
due to burning chicken.
2227: Men's and women's restrooms in
the HCC and the CAB were defaced.
- -- - - - - - - -- - - -

mother's wolk after she died. Fmally.
under President Woodrow Wilson" a
Mother's Day proclamation was enacted.
In keeping with this original idea for
a day of peace, the Greens of Olympia
wou1d like to honor mothers' concern for
the lives and well being of their children.
We would like to wlIk in coalition
with other Olympia organizations in
producing a meaningful and effective
celebration in Marathon Park. We are
seeking co-sponsors who will assist in
promoting the event and speakers, music,
etc.
If you or your organization is
interested in assisting in the planning
and/or production of this event please
contact Helen Ficalora at 866-2278.

\

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786·9700

STUDENT UNION
COORDINATOR
POSITION
FOR
THE 1990-1991 STUDENT UNION

TRAVEL
ELEPHANTS • PANDAS
JUNGLES • FOREm

MOUNTAINS • OCEANS
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A major opportunity to impact the growth
and direction of The Evergreen State College
While increasing your skills,
knowledge and experience in
group facilitation and policy
development.

Applying to a rabbinical college,
Robins said, "is like applying to any
graduate schooL It's like geuing a PhD.
in theology." Accmling to Robins, it
takes five or six years to complete the
program, depending on how much
Hebrew one knows.
Mlcr hel' application interview,
Robins plans to learn Hebrew when she
goes to Israel for four months. She will
visit her sister, who has lived there for
ten years, and plans to live on a kibbutz.
According to Robins, kibbutzim are
collective settlements and each has its
own industry, such as farming. The
kibbutz she plans to live on makes bread.
After Israel, Robins plans to spend a
month in Greece for "fun in the sun."
When Robins first came to Evergreen
in 1985, rabbinical college was not in her
plans. Instead, she "rebelled for a couple
of years" and Judaism was not a focus
for her.

made it easy for Robins to put less
emphasis on Judaism, it also brought
Judaism to the forefront. "It's the first
time I really acknowledged this is a nonJewish world. The world really does not
get who I am."
But that didn't stop Robins from
understanding herself. "Coming out as a
lesbian helped me to come out again as
a Jew," she explained. It was a matter of
"being honest with myself as I am."
While at Evergreen, Robins acted as
coordinator of the college's Jewish
student group, Maarava. "I've thoroughly
enjoyed !he nearly two years I've spent
coordinating
Maarava, "
she
said.
However, "I'm not leaving with 8 lot of
energy," she added.
That lack of energy Robins attributes
to what she thinks are people's
misconceptions about prejudice on
campus.

t

by Dawu Rains
Students for Youth in Crisis is a
newly fonned student volunteer group on
campus. We are proud to be the fIrst
group to utilize the facilities and
resources offered by !he Community
Network Organization as a starting point
for our various projects.

Students for You!h in Crisis was
formed as a result of two separate group
projects that merged toge!her. Tbe fust
of these )X'Ojects was a group of students
working toward opening an emergency
youth shelter in Thurston COlUlty. The
second was the group of students that
started
the
Community
Network

EXPERIENCE THE CHINESE
CULTURE IN YOUR OWN HOME
HOST A TAIWANESE
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT EAGER
~........"",,~T~O~EXPERIENCE AMERICAN CULTURE

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ttJ

APPLY BY MAY 15th

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: DEEANNA BOURGAULT 491-7056

SPIC!)ER

Theater

Organization. The CNO is a new student
group on campus that provides support
services to students working on
community service projects. .As a group,
we acknowledge there is a tremendous
gap between the needs of the youth of
this community and the services that are
currently being provided. These needs
include everything from education on
various issues to a youth drop-in center
to increased emergency and transitional
housing.
Because of the gro\\<lng
awareness of youth issues, there are many /
opportunities to begin programs and I
projects wh~ch could ~tly ~pact
youth of this commuruty. Havmg been
~trated .by.,,:orking on these issues an.d
projects mdiVldually, we. fonned this
group to network, org~, and wlIk
together to make a real difference.
We came together wi!h many

CAB 305

By SPM, Friday, May 18, 1990
Interested Eveagreen Students are encouraged to apply
regardless of sexual orientation. race, sex, age, handicap,
religious or political belief or national origin.

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Wednesday
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Page 2 Cooper Point Journal hfay 3, 1990

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individual ideas and dreams about what
this organization could accomplish.
Already, we are working with other
people and agencies in the community to
open a youth drop-in center. One of our
ultimate goals is to implement our
proposal to open an emergency youth
shelter. In the future, we hope to stan
and support many other youth oriented
projects.
If you are interested in youth issues
or any of the projects mentioned above,
please contact us. We will be holding
our first official meeting Thursday, May
3, at 4 pm in L3213. We invite all
interested students, faculty, staff and
community members to attend. If you
have any questions or concerns, please
contact us at the Community NetwlIk
Organization, x6556.

eftn


Submit Applications:
Student Activities

unwilling to admit the reality of antiJewishness in the world," Robins
explained. "Jews are in a difficult
position because most have light sldn."
Because of this, many people do not
recognize Jews' ethnicity, she said.
While some Jews do have societal
privileges due to their skin color, Robins
said, she believes it is a simplistic
approach to look at Jews by the color of
their skin "considering Jewish history.
Before the holocaust Jews were very
integrated into Gennan society."
. Anti-Jewishness is not as easy to
pinpoint as other forms of bigotry,
Robins said. She said she prefers the
tenn "anti·Jewishness" to "anti-Semitism"
because she considers the latter to be an
ethnocentric term. Not everyone who is
Semitic is Jewish, she explained.
Tina Cook is an Evergreen student
and a cn staff writer.

New group seeks to address youths' needs

Instant
Passport Photos

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERV/~E,

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Planning meeting
for river trip

Rochelle Robins is well aware of the
understatement when she says becoming
a rabbi is something "8 lot of people
don't think about as an optioo."
The 22-year-old Evergreen alumna
estimates that 10 years ago, there were
10 to 20 women rabbis in the United
States. She thinks the number is close to
200 now, and plans on pushing the
number up one more by becoming a
rabbi herself.
Why does she want to be a rabbi? "I
feel there are a lot "of Jews who do not
fIt into mainstream Judaism." These
people include African Americans,
lesbians and gays, and !hose in interfaith
marriages, Robins said. "I want to find a
way to reach those people and help them
find a comfortable place in the Jewish
world."
Robins left Evergreen on April 25
for an admissions interview wi!h the
Reconstructionist Rabbinical College in

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I

~~-----Page 3

Cooper Point Journal May 3,1990

Beyond 'special interest group' politics
by Sean J. Starke and Scot Wheat
As the Earth day hype wanes, there
are many fundamental questions which
are yet to be posed. much less addressed.
If we are to believe corporate and mass
media dogma, "we" are all equally
responsible for the destruction of the
environment It is undoubtedly important
to make people aware of environmental
issues, but to claim that we are all
equally responsible for its degradation
amounts to yet another "blame the
, , " argumen t.
H umans are not
VlCbm
inherently bent on destroying the ' planet
(as some would suggest), rather it is the
current socio-economic structure which
has produced the crisis that we now
face.
If we are serious about our attempts
to solve the environmental crisis, then we
must develop an analysis that goes to the
root of the problem. We must look at
those who produce the most waste and
reap the benefits of the current
Our economic
production structure,
system is focused on the production of
material goods for profit, which leads to
a discounting of the human and
environmental costs of the production
process,
For the corporation in this society, it
has become a common practice to focus
on reaping the highest profits at the
fastest rate. In this way, investors in

"public" corporations are able to make
the highest returns on their investment
(these are called "public" corporations in
business jargon, because anyone with

Analysis
enough money can purchase stock in
the)
mTius leads to the degradation of the
environment and large portions of society,
because CEO's and presidents of major
corporations must maximize profits at any
cost or lose their jobs. This structural
condition leads to an emphasis on
lowering the cost of production, which in
turn leads to the destruction of people
and the planet in the name of profit.
Who benefits from such a system?
In the United States profits go to those
people and institutions which. hold stock
in major corporations. In "third world"
countries. those who own the land benefit
from selling cash crops to the "ftrst
world. "
Who suffers in the United States?
Everyone. Yet some suffer more than
others. For instance. while Peabody coal
and the residents of Los Angeles benefit
from the extraction of coal on the Four
Comers reservation, Navajo and Hopi
Indians witness the destruction of their
sacred lands, their way of life. and their
health. While oil refineries and petro-

chemical plants in Puerto Rico fill the
gas tanks of the east coast for profit, the
island and its people suffer from
contaminated ground water and massive
air borne discharges; which has made
Puerto Rico one of the worst victims of
pollution in the world (for more
information refer to the April 25 edition
of
the
Guardian;
"Environmental
Racism ... ").
Who suffers in the "third world"?
We hear much about the destruction of
ram' fiorests . We also hear about "death
squad democracy."
Yet, the crucial
element that is often left out is the
relationship between the two.
In countries like EI Salvador,
Honduras. and Guatemala, the most fertile
land is owned by an extremely small
portion of the population, who produce
cash crops (i.e, coffee, bananas. cotton,
etc.) for export. Massive amounts of
insecticides and fertilizers are sprayed on
the crops which poison the ground water.
The shortage of land due to cash crop
production forces the poor majority into
the mountains where they cut down trees,
erode the top soil, and destroy natural
watersheds in the attempt to feed
themselves. The call for land reform,
which amounts to utilizing the fertile land
held by oligarchs for subsistence
agriculture, has been consistently met by
state sponsored violence and repression.

OIYlllpia and Pskov to exchange
by Carol Burns
The city of Pskov in northwest
Russia has been visited on several
occasions by people from the Olympia
area. Evergreen students were received
at the Pedagogical Institute two summers
ago. Another delegation visited a day
care center, sports facility, law court, and

individual study, video project, etc. In the
opportunity requested by
visitors from here has been successfuUy
arranged.
Several Olympians are going to
participate in an orienteering competition
in the Pskov region in May. While there
they will also try to arrange a more

past, every

=~~~~7~:r:!:.=

detailed agreement with. the En~
Language Club. If you think you nught
like to participate in an exchange, please
send something in writing before May 7
to Carol Bums, South Sound-Pskov
Oblast Association, 4311 C~ Point
Rd. NW, Olympia 98502. pesaibe w~
opportunities you would like to have ill

The call for social justice in "third
world" countries is in conjunction with
more sustainable environmental practices.
which have been forgone in the name of
profit. Thus, environmental destruction
and human misery are the result of a
production process which focuses on
profit maximization.
To claim that "we" are all equally
guilty of creating the environmental crisis
is simply false. However, it is true that
we all must become aware of the
envtrO'nmental crisis and take an active
role in creating a sustainable future for
all societies. Certainly one component of
this effort involves fundamental changes
in our personal habits. Yet, this alone
will not solve the problem.
It must also be realized that human
misery and environmental destruction are
interconnected in the sense that they have
the same roots--an economic system
based on production for profit. A society
based on social justice would necessitate
an ecologically sustainable production
structure.
This realization is a
fundamental
step
towards
uniting
environmentalists and "political activists"
in order to create a future based on the
health of the planet and humanity.
Scot Wheat and Sean J. Starke are
stIIMnts al Evergreen and CPJ staff
writers.

e.duca~ors

R~ and !"~ opporturubes you could
provt~ to VlSltors here. . If you have any
questiOnS call Carol at 866-7645 ~tween
9 and 9:30 am weekdays. or any time on
the weekend.
Carol Burns is a resident of Olympia,

SPAZ mural to celebrate cultures

Oblast Committee want to return the

by ADaela Leonard
An awareness and recognition of
common ground between people of all
ethnic origins is an ~ntial ftrst-step
toward unifying people instead of
separating them. We must be guided by
the wisdom that all people are members
of an universal family. The importance
of communication within this family must
be restated continuously. until the
message is understood.
A multi-cultural mural on the campus
of Evergreen. appeals to me for a few
reasons. Ftrst, it will provide a forum
for co-operative interaction and creativity
among all students. faculty, and alumni
who wish to participate in painting the
mural. Second, this mural will serve as
a "pictorial storyboard," in which the
Evergreen community will have the
opportunity to depict the influence and
importance of various co-cultures.
Cost of the mural is estimated at
$300. This is for paint, brushes, rollers,
and general supplies. The mural will be
located at the Organic Farm, and will be
painted on plywood or masonite. This

hospitality.
There are few obstacles to foreign
travel by Soviet citizens. The JXOblem is
that rubles will purchase only a few
dollars on the free market. The English
Language Club of Pskov has proposed a
"no currency" exchange. They will cover
all costs for a delegation of fifteen people
for twelve days and arrange requested
activities during the visil American
participants would need to pay only their
travel costs to Moscow and back.
However the American group would also
be required to help cover costs for fifteen
members of the English Language Club
to come here.
Because most of the members of the
club are teachers. one component of the
exchange would be an educators'
exchange in which participants would
visit classrooms and compare educational
methods. This exchange could also be a
unique opportunity for anyone who wants
to study some specifIC aspect of Soviet
society for the purposes of a dissertation,

~ ' I

. O~E

will allow the mural to be mobile and is also a plea for financial support for the
perhaps. at some time, it can be project, so please explore the possibility
. displayed in a more central location OIl of giving some of your student
campus.
organization budget money, to the mural
I believe this project offers great . projecl
potential to all students on campus. It is
This project is sponsored by the
an excellent way to show autonomy and Student Produced Art Zone and The
solidarity as it exists on campus.
Ecological Agriculture program.
If you are interested in working on
Angela Leonard is an Evergreen
the mural, contact the Student Produced studelll and the coordinator o/the Studelll
Art Zone at L3212, x6412. This article Produced Art ZolU! (SPAZ).

Racism Awareness Day
News Release
Here is the tentative schedule for Racism
Awareness Day on May 23:
-9:30 - 10:30 Consciousness-raising
Rally
disc .
-10:30 - 12:00 Panel
uSSlon on
issues of racism
-12:00 - 1 Lunch
-I - 3 Participatory seminars and
workshops
-3 - 4:30 All campus meeting to put
forth concrete resolutions for combating

racism at Evergreen
We are still organizing speakers for
the panel and facilitators for the
afternoon seminars. We (there are about
5 of us) need all the help we can get in
order to make an impact with this leaCh-

in.
Please attend our regular meetings,
Tuesday at 7 pm in CAB 110. We invite
and CIICO\D'88C students to come to our
meetings and to help out however much
you can.

Masonry heater conserves wood
by

Jonathan Bruce

control. 'blMost
are
'f th of these
be kgases' t h
bus
com b e l
ey can
ept ill e
firebox long enough for them to combine
willl oxygen. 3) Charcoal (carbon) is
what remains at this point, and contains
the majority of the heat output. All three

a log

of these stages act together as

:--~~'::'xEoto~~n;,.;,.~

temperature swing is quite large, 200
degrees, and its ' mass is measured in

~!J/' \\,"o~

PROaSSIRG
'at GREAT PRICKS

explain. A masonry heat« boasts an
overall effICiency of 80-90%. The basic
principal behind a masonry device is
thermal mass.
In a freestanding metal stove the

hot burning fire for a short time, instead
of a
fire continuously.

damped

by Lee Portnofr
We are used to thinking of energy
resOurces as the resources which fuel

Energy Toptcs

power plants. To think that conservation
is an energy resoW'ce is sometimes hard
to conceptualize; but the energy that one
person saves through conservation can be
used as a resource to be sold to someone
else. In this respect, conservation is an
energy resource; whether or not it is cost
effective, must be shown through LeastCost Plann.'ng.
Least-Cost Planning aims to fmd the
least expensive energy resource. This is
accomplished by analyzing the cost of
various energy resources and choosing the
one which provides energy at the least

societal cost.
In the Northwest, the best way to
provide the least expensive energy is
through conservation. New power plants
are so expensive that by spending money
on conservalion, more energy is saved
lhan could be produced by buying new
I I
Leasl -Cos t PIannmg
'
fior
power pans,
the Northwest has shown that by taking
better advantage of existing power
facilities, energy is cheaper to the
community.
The Northwest Power
Planning Council has analyzed many

combustion, and that depends on how
well the above three stages are managed.
The second, heat transfer efficiency, is
how much heat is actually usable. Both
are combined to give an overall
efficiency. This is how a particular
burning device is rated.
Burning devices for wood are
numerous, from the negatively efficient
fireplace to my favorite, a masonry
heater. It's this type of device I'd like to

by Felix Rodriguez and Star BosweU
The
Community
Network
Organization (CNP) is one of the newest
student groups on campus. Two students
frustrated by the lack of academic
support for people working on community
based projects initiated the organization.
Evergreen continues to integrate
learning opportunities with service needs
by providing internships ~ community

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project work in programs and individual
contracts across the curriculum. Student
activism and involvement with such
projects is prevldent, especially in core
programs. Unfortunately, most students
are unfamiliar with the Evergreen
institution
and
its
bureaucracy.
Therefore, when a community project is
initiated, students suffer a serious set
back, not knowing where to start.
Evergreen also -lacks the non-academic
facility necessary to connect TESC
students with volunteer iqterests in the
community.
The CNO hopes to
break down some fears of administration
at TESC and provide linkage between
stu~nts'_ facul!Y..~.Jhe.__Student Activities
oftiCe,-alid the community.
The CNO will support student
initiated
volunteer
efforts
and
collaboration on community service
projects. The CNO student based and
run office will function primarily as a
resource and referral center and act as a
clearinghouse for volunteers.
In an effort to achieve these goals,
the CNO will provide a legitimate and
accessible work area. The office will also

COUNSELING It THERAPY
BARBARA J, MONDA M.S., M.A.
AIIu. - o.p. ...............

I~A



a=;,;

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Bookstore

maintain ftIes of prior projects to prevent
ore-inventing the wheel." These files will
include pertinent names, phone numbers,
and addresses of professionals and
agencies in the community. Students will
have access to a phone line and
answering service where community
contacts could leave messages, and a
campus mailbox.
The CNO will open channels to reach
untapped potential of human resource.
Students can utilize one another as
information sources. The center would
prevent feelings of individual isolation
and foster integration instead, acting as a
link to S&A and other student groups.
The CNO believes an office with such a
community service emphasis wOul
enhance the spirit of TESC college
students and their sense of empowerment
to .mpact the community around them.
The office is located in Library 3213
and can be reached by phone at x6556.
Please, all comments, suggestions, and
ideas are welcome.
Felix Rodriguez and Star Boswell are
the co-coordinalors of lhe Community
Network Or anization.

ACUPUNCTURE
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Covered by Evergreen/Hartford nsurance
QuestIons - Consuttat1ons - Appointments
RadIance 113 E. 5th 0Iympla 367-947Q

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Friday 8:30 - 5:00

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conservation programs which produce
energy at less than three cents per
kilowatt hoW', That is over 33% less
than Olympia's current electrical rate of
four and a half cents per kilowatt hour.
Least-Cost Planning shows that
conservation is an economical energy
resource,
Conservation is not only
economical, it also has less impact on the
environment than other energy resources.
Therefore. conservation should play an
important role in providing inexpensive
and clean energy for the future.
Lee Porlnoff is an Evergreen sludent
enrolled in the Energy Systems program.

r--=-~--------------. . . . .---------~~-------------..........,

IN THE PUGET SOUND
(206) 352-7725

student enrolled in the ElU!rgy Systems
program,

Conservation: Future fuel

WIDE SELECTION OF THE FINEST
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FREE LASER PRINTING

mass and volume, a

pounds. But in a masonry device the . retrofit to an existing home. But for new
temperature swing is a lot less, 80 construction with careful planning, this
degrees, and it~ mass is measured in
can be an attractive device for heating
tons. This is how the masonry can be your home very efficiently.
charged with heat by using an effICient
Jo~han Bruce is an Evergreen

BOOKSTORE HOURS

CASUAL TO FORMAL ATI1RE

With its large

masonry heat« is not recommended as a

Community Network Organization
~:ien~~ ;!~nis.ru:ge~~~;~ to support student volunteers

SEE
SUNSHINE!

PROOF , EDITING ON REQUEST

Energy Topics

Wood has been a fuel since fire was
first discovered. Unfortunately mankind
has a record of burning it very
inefficiently. Due to this, our planet is
filled with areas that have been denuded
of all trees.
Mother nature has a beautifully
simple process for creating wood. called
With
the
basic
photosynthesis.
components of water, carbon dioxide, and
solar energy. an extraordinarily rich fuel
source is created. With all the advances
of technology, humans have not been
able to recreate this fantastic process.
One area that technology has made
progress in, is the burning of wood.
There are three stages associated with
wood burning. 1) The moisture in the
wood needs to be boiled off. The wetter
the wood, the more energy is consumed
at this stage. 2) The gases in the wood
distill and combine with oxygen,Aor
combustion, It's here that recirculation of
these gases is important for pollution

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Cooper Point Journal May 3,1990

Page 5

ORDS FROM

A

acist Cartoons Bree
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WE" r>o,,'T MIND "NIE BLACKS u .. ."rIJ.c:1
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~igfoot

encounter

by Chris Bader
It was in February of 1989 that I met
"D.P.," a man who has claimed over a
dozen Bigfoot sightings. He lives in the
small town of Carson in Slcamania
County, Washington.
My research partner and I pulled inlO
his snow covered driveway. A group of
dogs converged around the car, barking
excitedly.
Timber covered hills
surrounded the farm and extended into
the distance.
D.P., a man of about eighty, emerged
from his home and strode towards me,
extendinJ[ his hand. He wore a "safari"

hat and a tattered green jacket with a
patCh that said "Bigfoot Country."
His pants were tom and held together
A pure white beard
by duct tape.
surrounded his wrinkly face; his hands
were gigantic compared to his arms and
had a leathery texture.
Bigfoot has become an inextricable
part of D.P.'s life. His home is filled

with Bigfoot clippings and paintings; his
shed holds a nine foot tall, "life size,"
says D.P., hair-covered model of Bigfoot
D.P. IOld me several stories about
Bigfoot, including his closest encounter:
,He was paddling down a river in
Canada in late 1976, on his way to a
deserted mining cabin when he ~oticed a
still, dade shape among the bushes on the
riverbank.
He paddled closer 10
investigate.
There, he said, was a 9 1/2 foot tall
"Sasquatch. "
It had broad shoulders and jet-black
hair which formed a "cone" on the top of
its head. Its face was leathery and also
It stood with its hands fumly at
its sides.
D.P. observed the creature for 20
mitlutc:S, all the while trying to keep his
near 10 shore.
He was close enough to see its eyes
noted that the creature appeared more
human than animal.
. Eventually becoming bored with his
stand-off with Bigfoot, D.P. began to turn
his boat around. When he looked back,
the creature had disappeared.
--Next week D.P. tells me about
Bigfoot's habits, likes, and dislikes.
Chris Bader is a student at Evergreen
and a staff writer for the CPl.

Stop oppression by TESC 'star chamber'
by Brendan Williams
Last Thursday there was an
intelesting presentation in Red Square. It
was a demonstration of support for the
right, as m<:agoized by the United States
Supreme Court, to bum the American
flag.
I find it very disingenuous of some
people to complain about flag blJrning.
. An American flag is most likely a piece
of polyester, produced in Asia, that is
owned by' the persop who bought it. He
or she can Oy it, use it as a dishtowel,
or set fire to it. It's personaJ piopetty.
It is ironic that a person can bum the
far more
Constitution, which is
substantive than a flag. Worse, many of
thoo~ complaining about desecratioo of
the flag step on the values it supposedly
symbolizes every day. They decry
Affirmative Action, the right to an
abortion, and undermine other aspects of
our civil liberties. They endeavor daily to
suppress freedom of speech to the point
where we only have the freedom to say
what they want to hear.
One person with whom I've argued
these iSsue& is Mary Lou O'Neil. We
disIlgreed openly on the recent campus
safety bill; SSB 6234. I suppmed the
creation of an armed police force on
campus because I saw an Administtation
doing nodting in , response to safety
problems, particularly assaults and
harassment victimizinll women. I also
pm:eived the alternative to be the

Thurston County Sheriff's Department on

campus daily, mtber than our own
community force. I may have been
wrong. Yet I had the ript 10 be wrong.
Mary Lou espoused the popuJar
position. Unsurprising, Most importantly,

Opinion
though. she asswned power in her
opposition to the bill. She testified before
committees saying that she rep-esented
the Student Union--and thus students as
a whole. She negotiated on our behalf.
This despite the fact that memory
dictated she had only been given
pennission to bring the student
govenunent's position to a hearing in
Bellingham. She said that there was an
"understanding" that she waS the lobbyist
This does not equate to appointment
through process.
Remarkably, Mary Lou told the
Senate Committee on Ways & Means
that we'd agree to have an "armed
security" (frightening concession) if the
legislatlml would pay for it. This deflated
the mOOll argument, making it a fISCal
one. Accordingly, the Senate passed the
bill overwhelmingly; 39·10.,
Things changed on February 20
when I wrote a memo to the House
Committee on Higher Educatioo pointing
out that Mary Lou had not been
authorized to represent the Student Union.

Oh, how quick hez response wasl
I'd had all sorts of fallout from taking
my unpopular position. Obscene phone
calls, defamatmy mai1, a break·in attempt.
A ~ed lawsuit 'That all seemed to
pale in comparison to the fact that
someone had finally told the truth as they
saw it about Mary Lou.
We met for an effort at conciliation
at Capital La1ce one sunny Sunday. She
assured me that she had never
backstabbed me, or anyone for that
matu'Z. Under pressure, though, she
admitted that she'd tried to have me fired
from my internship. What she didn't
disclose, amidst all this blustery good
will, is that two days prior she had
submitted a proposal to censure me to the
Student Union. She didn't accord me the
right of the accused to confront her or
his accuser. She had presented allegations
of illegality as statements of fact.
Although she withdrew it after I found
out about it, the damage had been done.
The accusations were phrased as an edict,
it appeared as though I'd been found
guilty.
The frivolity continues. Now she has
fIled a grievance against me: alleging
violations of the Social Contract and the
Student Conduct Code. I'd tried to
discourage her. I'd pointed out that the
Social Contract is so vague that anyone
can hide behind it to mtionalize their
efforts at persecution. I'd told her that
the Student Conduct Code is monstrously

unfair, because it holds that the "Formal
rules of evidence do not apply."
In plain English this means that
students at this wonderfully progressive
institution can be accused on the basis of
hearsay, and kicked out Wling gossip
instead of facts. In light of this, I pointed
out to Mary Lou that by fIling a
grievance she could be reinforcing and
validating through her ' actions an
illegitimate and injudicious process. She
could set back the cause of student
empowerment. She fIled anyway.
I went in last week to talk to the
campus grievance officer. I told him that
I bitterly resented student disagreements
being brought before and judge(! by the
Administration. I noted that college policy
cannot be at variance with state and
federal law which protects my freedom of
speech.
Unremarkably
he
didn't
automatically throw out her complaint.
After all, I'm threatening the status quo.
I see this as a dangerous possibility
for establishing terrible precedents. Where
one member of the Evergreen community
cannot comment on another. Where the
Administration dermes the parameters of
free speech. This is social fascism. I will
ftght it as I have fought all repression
directed at students.
I'm sick of gossip behind closed
doors. No secrecy. Here's the truth; let
the light of public scrutiny shine on it.
Allow no student to be oppressed in
some "star chamber" by Administrative
inquisitors and their abetting puppets;
students who pay lip service to protecting
minority viewpoints.
Burn the flag? Sure, if you want to.
But burn the Student Conduct Code while
you're at it!
BrendLJn Williams has challenged
school administrations and their lackeys
since the third grade when he refused to
say .....under God" during recital of the
Pledge of Allegiance. Mrs. Solomon gave
him detention.

EnVIronment President.

by Paula Lang
Earth Day 1990, recently celebrated,
sharpened
the
nation's
awareness
concerning envirorunentaJ issues. We can
only hope that this awareness and

Analysis
enthusiasm does not wane in the days
and months to follow. Pollution is
constantly increasing, and global wanning
is threatening all of us. Unfortunately, at
this point the bulk of the burden remruns
predominantly on the public sector to
recycle, ride bicycles, and whatever it
takes because President Bush is not
committed to the cause.
Factories of all sorts continue to
spew out an overwhelming amount of
deadly chemicals, and little is being done
to stop them. Mr. Bush has decided that
doing something about the environment
would fit better in some other president's
budget
Nevertheless, America desperately
needs a responsible leader to take charge
of the present environmental situation and
to encourage those who are reluctant to
do their pan. By the time a leader has
the guts to take action, climate wanning
most likely will be right around the

comer and breathing hotly down our
necks.
Currently,
President
Bush
is
advocating a policy of 'more study--Iess
action' on the environment in favor of a
stress-free economy. In other words,
Bush is trading the death of planet Earth
for the almighty dollar!
(Sowce: Mother Earth News, 3190 issue)
Paula Lang is an Evergreen studelll
and a staff writer for the CPJ.

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acroea from Washington Center

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

Pap 7

Letters

Security· officer speaks out
by Lana Brewster

at TESC because I like it here and enjoy out of unifonn so the students feel more
I am writing this on my own behalf working with students.
safe?
Come on!
The 1ack of
and for my own peace of mind, because
When the officers decided to request communication,
understanding,
and
I believe the integrity and reputation of that we be fully commissioned police concern for each other on this campus
the TESC Campus Security Department force, we did it as a group. Then the really amazes me.
has been unjustly ridiculed.
next thing we (the officers) knew we
For example, students started
First of all, I believe the writer of were in the The Olympian and Labor and volunteet Crime Watch which only asks
the Security Blotter, James Egan, should Industries had been written to. I for one for students to give 2 hours a week of
not be allowed to put his own
their time. Last year when we had all of
interpretations and imagination and/or
the assaults occurring, Crime Watch was
unwarranted phrases into an article that is
going strong and people were involved.
by Jon Epstein
supposed to be factual. For you to allow was not pleased with the infonnation that This year Crime Watch started out really
Evergreen faculty have just returned from
a week-long retreat. I have no idea what him to write in this manner suggests yout had been given to the The Olympian nor slow but we had a number of dedicated
they talked about However, had I had the concern forthe truth is not as real as you were other officers. Since then, Sergeant students that continued the cause. Since
opportunity to address the faculty I would would like people to believe. I also Savage has taken it upon himself to do Christmas break, Security has done all of
have told them the following;
believe it is irresponsible on your part all the speaking regarding this and many the escorts and there has been no Crime
There are two important items missing not to 00 on top of something as highly other issues. I would like to say though, Watch to speak of. Now that we have
from Evergreen's curriculum. These items sensitive as our repons are and those that you should be aware what the college is again had assaults occurring there has
are missing in most educational curricula in
the repons are about
trying to propose as far as safety for you. been an increase in escons, but we are
this counay, so I am not aying to single out
I,
along
with
other
officers,
have
As
noted, in a prior issue of the CPI they still waiting for Crime Watch volunteers
Evergreen. However, I do think TESC can
requested
that
the
Security
Blotter
no
are
rewriting our Standard Operating , to come forth.
We do have new
play a leadership role in the educational
community by strongly incorporating political longer be a part of the cn since you are Procedures (SOP) manual to make a coordinators and hopefully that will help!
Believe it or not, there are security
participation and recycling into the unable to be objective and therefore is major change in how we (Security) assist
not obstructing the freedom of the press. you in the future.
officers that work here that really enjoy
curriculum. These two things are related.
For example, Security will no longer working with the students, faculty, and
Recycling is something that requires For example, Egan states such things as:
cooperation and involvement in many levels "Security was not sure what it meant," be responding to emergency situations staff of this college, but as I indicated
of society. Educators can provide substantial "There was a case of unusual driving on such as domestics (male/female fight), before, it is the more boisterol1s ones that
leadership by incorporating this issue into the Evergreen Parkway," and "Olympia vandalism (if it occurs in the parking lots are always heard, so I finally decided to
their classrooms.
I would like to see Police responded." These are all Egan's we will probably be able to observe but come forth. We, which also includes
introductory economics courses considering
sentences and have not come off of any not to apprehend), prowlers, and other Officer Anderson, care about the well
·'environmental costs." and other related
topics. I would like to see students receiving incident log we have. Also, Olympia such dangerous incidents. In the first' being and safety of the community, but
academic credit for developing practical Police does not respond out here, draft of the SOP, they had us responding with the lack of support (well deserved
recycling in their programs, and faculty Thurston County Sheriffs Department to the Dorms for a Domestic and honking sometimes but not always) Vie must
working with the college administration and does.
our hom! I bet that would make you feel fmally put our foot down and say enough
the Legislature to increase the collection of
Egan also insens little phrases into real safe! This is what they believe you is enough.
recyclable materials on this campus by 100% sentences which would indicate Security want, I don't think so.
I must remind everyone, just because
in the next two yean;.
does not know what they're talking
we wear a uniform does not mean that
They have since rewritten another we don't make mistakes. But taking our
The Legislature has already mandated that about, such as: "said to have been,"
all state institutions have a full·time recycling
"Thought to be," and "appeared to be." draft which was better but still has a uniform away will not solve the problem
person.
His use of inaccurate information is ways to go. I feel I am performing a of communication between students and
It is time for Evergreen faculty to jump uncalled for and unprofessional.
very essential function and I also believe Security. Unfortunately, it looks like the
on this bandwagon! Just think of the great
Now, I would like to give you a little there are a lot of students that support college will have no choice because of
possibilities for program titles. Advanced
Ornithology: bird dung heaps, Research inside information about the officer's Security but are unheard voices because the Labor and Industries claim to which
Methods and Recycling, view point, at least this officer and most people choose not to listen to those who they must adhere. I am angryl How
can we do our job correctly without it?
Aigebra/I"rigonomeay/Compost, and America; of the others, regarding the issue of are not loud and boisterous.
becoming
a
police
departmenL
Also,
I
I
also
do
not
put
too
much
validity
It will be really tough for bolh you and
Full of Shit
Political participation is the other area read the article that was written by on the Campus Safety DlF that was us.
absen1 in most curricula I would like to see Brendan Williams and was impressed. I supposed to have been done because
I, along with other officers, who do
political participation in campus, local, and want to make one thing perfectly clear, many students did not get a survey. I care would like to see those that
regional affairs as mandatory. Maybe faculty Sergeant Larry Savage is not our also have to agree , with Williams when normally do not come forth and are
and students should be required to get urested
spokesperson. He has been speaking he says DTF stands for Disappearing suppooive of Security go to Gail Martin
at least once a year at a political rally. When entirely on his own behalf and has not Task Force, Disappearing being the and let her know that Let her know you
it comes to campus or even local politics the consulted with the officers as far as what significant word. Security has had two do not want to see us taken out of
amount of apathy on the part of TESC faculty
steps we would like to take to peacefully DTFs perfonned 00 us since 1985, the unifonn but would rather like to see a
and students seem to be about the same. Most
faculty just want to teach and most students resolve the firearms issue. I do believe it fust one stated that we needed more better equipped and trained security
just want to be left alone. It makes me is in the best interest for both the officers and a nwnber of other changes department Those that are not supportive
wonder where they learn they have no students and the officers to have a fully that should be made. That was in 1985, · of Security, I would like you to come by
responsibility to the community they live and commissioned police force. I do also since then the college's enrollment has and talk to me and I will try and answer
work in. We learn in school that being on agree that being a police officer means increased along with the number of any questions I can. Those that are
time and doing what we are told to do are being fully equipped and trained, which students that reside on campus, and we entirely against a police department, all I
the important things. It is okay to study hard, includes a weapon, but I do not agree still do · not have more officers. can ·ask is, "What do you have to hide
become a nuclear physicist, and build with the manner in which Sergeant Approximately two months ago we were ,and/or what are you afmid of'!"
weapons for destruction. It is okay to be a Savage decided to try and achieve this. allowed to finally hire a temporary.
brilliant professor and teach your students I am very proud of what I do and I work
Now, we are told we should be taken
about social science and not be able to tind
the time to elect your school board or city
council representatives.
I do not think this is okay. I think as a
member of this society we each have a by Cbris Cbandler
something (vote) was only going to be tha~ I h~v~ foun~ ~.the SU constituti~
responsibility to engage in discussion. to take
I had heard that the Student Union granted to certain people based on certain ~hlch limIts an mdiVldual to membership
time and communicate our pleasure or was changing its voting policy. I read the categories (race and sexual orientation), ~. ~ne caucus, unless perhaps an
displeasure with elected officials and to amended SU 'constitution.'
then I must figure out which category I indiVldual ca~us elects to do so.
challenge ourselves and the people in oUI
I thought about the fact that I could belong to and concentrate my sphere of Perhaps the Idea . a person should only
lives to understand other points of view.
Many of these principles can be learned no longer just drop in and vote. I have influence there. My friend had pointed have one vote IS unportanL Then. a
through involvemen1 in campus politics right rarely done so, but I have done it and it out I had assumed I could only voice my person w?~d have. to choose which
was fwl. Admittedly, I am of the opinion opinion, in the sense of a republic, caucus to Jom. What if that ~tSC?n fel.t as
here in greenerllll\d.
though he or she was admiSSIble mto
Faculty should inform their students of that my involvement in SU is not worth tIuough the , person who was of my
more than one caucus? I wonder. !'Ow
what is happening on this campus and faculty the time it would take for me to attend. cultural background.
This situation is analogous to our that person would make s.uch. a declSlon?
should keep themselves informed as to what However, I do see this amending of the
is going on around here. I think the
SU as a clear example of a broader relationship with federal and state ~rhaps Ihe more of a mmonty a person
involvement of the students and faculty in misguided effort toward counteracting government. If one chooses to talk to a IS, the mo~ they should get to vote.
college politics over the past fifteen years has prejudice against minority groups.
member of congress who represents a Then certam people wouldn't have to
been pathetic. There have always been some
As
my
story
goes,
I
then
thought
that
district
other than the one in which you
choose.
people willing to stand up and take a point of
if
I
wanted
to
get
my
representatives,
reside,
then
that
person
loses
the
power
I have had some exposure .to
view, but they don't get very many followers.
corresponding
to
my
cultural
background,
of
using
his
or
her
vote
as
an
added
cultures
other than the one I ~w up m.
Instead. people take no point of view, that is
to vote my way, I would just have to get argumenL But ideally it shouldn't matter I am at a loss as to what conSUtutes ~y
to say that people avoid making decisions.
Unfortunately the world does not wait to know them and then try to convince because what is being discussed should personal. culture and those cul~s whIch
for these indecisive people. U you avoid a them through argument. O! money or apply to people in general, whether they have Imbued themselves m me,
decision you have given up your political what-have-you that my O~lIUO~ should be live in a given congressman's district or unbeknownst ~ ~e.
.
power and have given it to someone else who supported by them at vOting tune.
noL At least when the discussion centers
~ ~temng to ~ muSIc
will make a decision. I may not be the one
A friend of mine pointed out the fact around general issues of what is just (fair con~utute ha~g some expenen~ of the
you want A bunch of students j\l81 learned that I could Ialk to any of the or ngnL).
African/Amencan culture? I don t .know.
this lesson the hard way when the Student representatives. I said, "No, they are
An assumption in the United States I usually don~t find m~elf trying to
Union was reorganized by a small group with breaking it up into different cultural Constitution is that it is possible to treat ans'Yer those ~d of quesu~ns. My o~
the will to speak with one voice. There is backgrounds ... "
people equally with respect to their ~ular belief sy~m' ac~vely avOIds
power in action!
He
repeated
what
he
had
said
and
humanity, the law, and nationwide moral poSIting whether a gIven tru,ng 18 ~f one
Jon 'Eppo' Epstein is an Evergrem
it
finally
sttuck
me,
"Wowl
I
opinion.
I happen to agree with this culture or anoch~ unless I m ~g to
then
stlUlent who worries aboul campus apathy.
had Wlintentionally limited my sphere of belief.
stud~ the culture as a whole.. That IS not
influence to people of my cultural
I suppose even though each caucus my mterest, usually: When ~t comes .to
background·
(as the different constituencies of cultural how I personally mteract . m a social
Obviously, this is not a case of groups are called) has its own meetings, context I do not find It useful to
prejudice. I simply had made the it would be okay for a person to join
assumption that if the ability to do more than one caucus. There is nothing,

Opinion

SU challenges ingrained ideals

see Ideals, page 9

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

Students of
color; slow down
I was pleased to read Joshua and
Kirstin's letter in the CPJ today, I mow

that you have spoken for me--I also felt
fear when I knew the students of color
were going to take over Ihe Student
Union. I too am an American. I too
feel this is an affront to democracy and
fair representation. As a Catholic and a
heterosexual I want to say YEAH!!!!
MANIII RIGHT ON BROTHER!!! Ever
since I heard about the decision I can no
longer sleep at nighL I fear the day
when we true Americans will be
delegated to mere token positions in the
councils of this great country. As an
SI'AFF BOX

Editor: Kevin Boyer
Managing Editor: Tedd Kelleher
Business Manager: Edward Martin III
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
Ad Layout/Calendar: Tina Cook
Asst. Ad Layout: Heather Candelaria
Production Manager: Scott A. Richardson
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Distribution: Ron Austin
Typist: Catherine Darley
Arts and Entertainment: Andrew Hamlin
Headline Writer: Dan 'Toasthead' Snuffin
Poetry Editor: Katrina Barr
Cartoonlsts:environmentally sound
Advisor: Dianne Conrad
Staff Writers: Tina Cook, Scott A.
Richardson, TlDl Gibson, Paula Lang.
Elisa R. Cohen, Andrew Hamlin, Chris
Bader, Carol Hall, Jon (Eppo) Epstein,
Dan Snuffin, Stephen Martin, Sean Starkel
Barrett Willce, Scot Wheat, News Release.
Editorial Polky:
The Cooper Point Journal (CPJ) editors
and staff may amend these policies.
Objective:

the CPJ editor and

staff

are

American whose family has been here for
at least one hundred years, I feel I can
say, yes we had slavery, yes there is
racism, yes I believe that racism has kept
many people of color out of positions
and decision making bodies that they
maybe should have been included in. It
seems that this is changing though.
There are some people of color in
power in places outside of Evergreen. I
can't tell you where but I am sure that
they are there. Things can't change
overnight This country needs time to
get used to the new position that people
of color seem to be taking.
I ask of you, any student of color
reading this article, don't take the power
from white students so quickly. Be
content with a few seats on Student
Union until white people can feel secure
that they will not end up in shanty towns
like those in South Africa, be forced to
stand in anger and fear while men,
women, and children are shot down in
cold blood for asking for basic hwnan
rights like those in South Africa, and live
in depression and despair knowing that
even if they left the apartheid-like
situation that would arise here, they
would still face a world of fear and
hatred of difference ruST LIKE THE
PEOPLE OF SOUTH AFRICA.
Pamelyn J. McMillan

CPJ ad offends
reader
I realize that free advertising on all
subject matter exists on this campus.
However, I feel that it is necessary to
complain
about
the
Smartfood
advertisements. Personally I am appalled
by the fonn of advertising Ihey are
doing, mainly because it is blatantly
sexisL To be more specific, I will
comment on eacb of the three ads which
appeared in the April 19 Cooper Point
Journal [Vol. 20 Issue 21].
On page 5 there is a car on lovers'
lane. It leads us to assume that two
lovers are down in the car, getting
"down." The man, it is assumed, is in the
drivers seat thinking about getting into
her panties; she is thinking about
Smartfood. This has two connotations.
The first, that all men think about is sex,
which would make me angry if I were a
man. The second one is that women are
not interested in sex, but rather food.
The next ad is on page 7. Here
children are used to advertise sex and
food. There are three faces of angelic
boys singing in a church choir. One is
thinking about Smartfood and Ihe other
about "girlie" magazines. I consider this
to be exploitive and pornographic.
The last ad appeared on page 9. In

detenninecl to make the CPJ a student
forum for communication which is both
entertaining and Informative.
DeadliDea:
Calendar-Friday, noon
Articles-Friday, noon
~onday, noon
Ads-Monday, 5 pm
Rule. for Submilliollt:
Submissions are accepted from CPJ
staff members as well as students and
community members. Submissions must
be original; Before undertaking timeconsuming or lengthy projects, however,
it's a good Idea to contact the editors
ahead of deadline.
Submission should be brought to the
CPJ offices on an IBM formatted
dilkette. Any word processing file
compatible with WordPerfect 5.0 is
acceptable. Disks should include a
dou61e-spaced pr'.ntout, with the author's
name, daytime phone number and
address. Disks will be returned as soon as
possible.
U you are unable to comply with the
submiS8ion requirements for any reason,
contact the editors for assIstance.
categorize human beings in any way
Letten:
except
separate individuals. Again I
Letters can be accepted on all subjects. believe it is possible to interact willt
They must include the author's name, people as human beings, that is, .
phone number and address. Although the independently of their ancestry or beliefs
address and phone number will not be
published, the cpJ will not publish letters or way of life.
submitted without this Information,
Prejudice can be reduced to a
Letters will be edited for libel, personal experience that transcends
grammar, spelling and ,space. Letters intercultural relatipnships. The kind of
should be ~ words or less. Every assumption I made I feel would be
attempt is made to publish as many interpreted as a symptom of some kind
letters as possible; however, space of prejudice, but it is no different than
limltations and time1ines may Influence any other kind of assumption that people
publication.
. I
Letters do not represent the opinions might make in situations enttre y
of the cpJ staff or editors.
unrelated to this topic.
Advertising:
Anoth~ instance in which I would
For information, rates or place argue that prejudice only superficially
display and c1assfied advertisments, exists is the following scenario: I am new
contact 866-6000 x6054. Deadlines are the to a job and I have a question. I can
Monday prior to each Thursday's rint .
either ask a person who appears to be of
The ct>J is responsible for res tution Asian descent or I can ask the person
to our advertising customers for mistakes
In their advertISements in their first who appears to be of European descenL
printing only. Any subsequent printing of I decide casually to ask the person of
this miStake are the sole responsibility of European descent becaUse I might be
the advertising customer.
embarrassed if the Asian person had an
Staff Meetinll:
accent that was difficult to understand.
Open meetings are held weekly in the This is not a case of prejudice. At least
CPJ office (CAB 306A), Fridays at noon.
not in the strict sense. The reason fur not
To IUblCribe to the Cooper Point maldug contact with the person of Asian
l-.loumal
_ _ _co_nta_ct_u_._._t_866-6000
_ _ _"'_2_13_._.......... de8cent was not based on my opinioo of

ideals, from page 8

as

St

IF GEO~GE

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IS "THE [. NVTftD}.;j,ffIJTAL.
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LET I'1f 1111"'<' · ,
H,I4Ao",,· , ,

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0<7"

THE JUSTICE PRE5ICfNT ~:T,-T_H_E
this one there is a young couple sharing
a milkshake--he's thinking about catching
her behind, while she's chinking about
Smartfood.
T~ underline the b~ taste of this
adverttsement and hypocnsy of the CPI,
on page 7, the same. page as the little
church boys ad, there IS a student survey
~h~ch. I~ted the nu~ber o~ item,
Eiunmanon of RacISm/Sexism on
campus." A whole 20.4%! Let's start
right now by eliminating tJus kind of
advenising from our campus media. I
don't think that the CPJ is in such dire
need for advenising fwlds that it has to
revert to blatat:Jdy sexist, exploitative
advenising.
Judith Auslander

Greyhound
boycott in error

I believe Ro!! Jacobs and. ~ g~

people at EPIC have erred. this tune" m
urging us !O support the striking
Greyhound ~vers: ~t w~ there was
anotJx:r shooting lIlCident m the south.
H~ m the northwest, the bomb ~
conun~e, ~ there has been a mysten~us
explOSion m the Tacoma ~pot. Agamst
whom are these a~ks directed? Fred
Curry? I ~oubt he ndes the ~us.People
who do ~de the bus are typ~y ~f!%Y
young children, the elderly, rrunonttes,
Wld students:.
. The unton says It dt;plores the
Vlolence~ but when GandhI S protests
turned VIolent, he had the mOOll courage
to .call them off. No on~ .should feel
obliged to support our striking brothers
Wld ~rs who are shooting at the
proletanat.
Scott Jamieson
their race.
Assumption making is usually
something that we do without being
aware of doing so. If prejudice is to
include this type of behavior then
prejudice, as a personal experience, is
psychological in nature and not purely a
matter of an individual's opinion. It is a
way to deal with fears which arise out
of a limited perspective and experience.
I believe that such movies as
Mississippi Burmng and Driving Miss
In
Daisy make this kind of poinL
Mississippi Burning, Gene Hackman's
character believes that his father's
prejudice was a way of expressing his
frustration and guilt for being poor. In
Driving Miss Daisy, the irony of not
asking hez African/American driver to
attend the Martin Luther King, Jr. speech
even though she had an extta ticket.
perhaps spurred by the suggestion that
she had a fondness for the man who had
defied h~ proud, stubborn self-assurance,
manifested itself in a delirious outburst
on a morning following that day. Clearly
these instances suggest a broader
perspective of what causes racist acts
than that of the cover-all term, covert
racism.
From my point of view most of the
people I know seem to have a prejudice

_________

..J

The• CPJ is never
bonng
Regarding your issue of April 26
1990 [Vol. 20 Issue 22]. On page 3 ~
the recognized caucuses for che student
union at The Evergreen State College:
African-American
Asian,
Chicano,
European, Jewish: LesbianlGay/Bisexual,
Wld Native American. The above are the
'racial, religious, and sexual categories
under which the students will choose
their government The net effect is that
over 90% of the students will have only
one out of seven representation. For all
of us who believe in democmcy one
person, one vote, the above sends a
shudder through us. The days of one
person, one V?te
gone,. no~ . it is
extreme left-wmg social engmeermg run

an:

am~aitl That's not all. On the cartoon

page is an eJUI1lIple of extreme religious
bigotry. Direct quote: "Milton HlDllbuglez
has lived his life as an uptight militant
paranoid, intolerant person. M~y due
to the fact that he has a rather large,
pointy crucifIX shoved pennanently up his
ass ·as he often says, it's the American
way" end quote. I am outtaged that a
religious group is singled out for such
hateful treatment in a student newspaper
in the United States.
J must confess that every week I read
the Cooper Point Journal from cover to
cover. It is never boring. Some say the
real purpose of journalism is to shock
and jolt the reader out of complacency.
I can guarantee you have done that with
me
'
P.S·. I support the people of Lithuania in
their drive for freedom.
Thomas Kenstowicz
against mathematics which stems not
frc.m che supposed general irrelevance of
the subject matter, but from an inability
to understand certain concepts which the
potential learner gave up trying to
understand because Ihey were too hard.
So now mathematicians are often
stereotyped as drab individuals wich no
sense of fun and publishers warn science
writers that for every mathematical
equation in their book, the number of
people who will buy and read the book
will be reduced by half. In my view,
machematics is one of the greatest
achievements of mankind. It is not valued
proportionally in my society.
Basic human values, as I see them,
such as the ability to question one's own
beliefs and actions, standing by one's
own beliefs and not changing them unless
you learn of a more effective, alternative
belief, expressing one's self as an
individual and not as a member of some
abstracted group, are the kinds of things
that will undennine prejudice in all of its
manifestatiOIlS. It is in this sense that we
can all say we are working together to
form a just society.
Chris Chandkr Is a student aI
Evergreen
and
enjoys
debating
philosophical Is~s ill the CPl.

Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

Page 9

nmen

Harmonious Take 6 double take

... -

-

'=
AkJrnow'
' 79
Albany, NY' _ _ _ '\39

AI..............
AI_'
,t.moriISo·

Shuler gets double dose
of a c~pella gospel and
leaves hoarse.

'79

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'\39
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ttustrl

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TAKE 6 WITH TUCK & PAm

'139
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_ _ '\39

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Bi~

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PARAMOUNT THEATRE

TAKE 6 AT GREEN RIvER COMMUNITY

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Buffalo
'139
Burlington. VT _ _ _ 'l39
Cosper'
'7 9
Cheyenne' _
_ _ '79
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OWcogolO'Hate _ _ ' I19
Oevetand
'139
Cody'
'79
College Stotion' _ _ 'I19
CoIo<odo Springs _ _ '79
Col~, OH _ _ 'I19
Corpus Christi _ _ _ 'I19
DoBo",'- ~fh _ _ 'I19

Denver

'79

Detroit

'139

'79

Durango'

£1 Poso

'119

Elmira'

'139

Erie'
'09
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'139

APRIL 19, 1990

COWlGB

APRIL 21, 1990
by Eric Shuler
It's no wonder Take 6 asked Tuck &
Patti to begin a night of unstoppable
gospel. Imagine the guitar sound of
Stanley Jordan with a strum thrown in
every third or fonh no~. Add the rich
voice of a gospel choir soloist and you
get an idea of the duo's sound.
The two played a mix of their own
songs along with a few covers. Their
own songs included, "Take My Breath
Away," and "My Romance." Patti led the
audience in a perfect three part harmony



ISO,

during a cover of Cyndi Lauper's, "Time
After Time." She then left Tuck alone
with his guitar to play his interpretation
of, "Over The Rainbow," from the
Wizard of Oz, interspersed with riffs
from, "If I Only Had a Heart." The two
played for an hour including the encore
and left the stage hand-in-hand to the
applause of a satisfied crowd.
I saw Take 6 at the Paramount and
at the state vocal/jazz choir competition
at Green River Community College.
They're an acapello gospel group from
Nashville. Never self righteous, they sing
only about God. They are all young,
black, and handsome, a combination the
women in the audience obviously liked.
In fact, while backstage with the group

aftez the first show, I was shocked to see
yOWlg women become positively giddy
aftez meeting them. The group has a
complete rhythm section, complete with
drmns and bass that shake the house
seats, but the instruments are their voices .
As their chief arranger, Mart Kimble
said, "With six voices, we can sing full
chords.
There's
something
about
harmonies that moves people." The
audience at both shows were defmitely
moved.
.
The show flowed easily on both
nights as the group sang songs from their
self-titled first album such as, "Getaway
Jordan," "If We Ever," and their
crossover hit, "Spread Love."
They
extended nearly all the songs and during,
"Mary," Mark Kibble even went into the
crowd for some inspired audience
participation. During both shows, Cedric
Dent, the group's soon-to-be docwr in
music theory, showed his considerable
piano skills on, "Oh Danny Boy," without
vocal accompaniment.
The two shows were very similar.
Even the jokes and song introductions
were almost the same. The Green River
show was abbreviated by one song which

actually was an improvement from the
first. Rather than ending the encore with,
"Something Within Me; a song from
their upcoming album which; of course,
no one had heard, they ended with,
"Mary," a soloists' dream, from the fust
album.
At the Paramount, all six were
impeccably dressed in suits while at
Green River, they opted for t-shirts and
jeans. At both shows, though, the
message was the same--the happiness
they've found through Christ At the
Paramount, the audience responded to the
message with shouts of, "Hallelujah!"
and, "Tell it, brother!" At Green River, I
was suprised to hear the audience give
even more epthusiastic applause to the
group's words.
Take 6 probably will not return for
a while since they aren't on tour. They
just pick a city and show up. There are
certainly some newly inspired singers,
though, (with very hoarse voices) in
Seattle, Auburn, and even in Olympia I
suggest warm water for the pipes and lots
of practice for the sound.
Eric Shuler is an Evergreen student
and does concert reviews for the CPJ,

ft lauderdcle _ _ 'I19

Thank God TESC snares Spiderwoman
fat lady
sang

'n9

ft. Myeo'

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'19
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-

_ _ '1J9

Continental announces outrageous
student fares. $139 or less each way.
You've studied hard 011 year Iwell, almost), Now it's lime to toke of! for"the
summer. And Continental wants to give you a break, Wherever youre
headed, there's a good chance you can hitch a ride with us, For only ~139 or
less per person each way. And you can bring along a friend 01 any age
lor the same price, whether they're in school or not.
But don't procrastinate. You have to purchase tickets within 24 hours of
making your reservation and no later than May 25. Plus trovel must be completed by June 20, So call your travel agent or Continental at
206·624·1740 or at I·BOO·525·0280 for reservations. And as soon as you finish that last exam, we'll get you oulta there,

CONTINENTAL'
Working to be yourchoice.

'l!9

1.,...,

J!JLIII

WASHlNaroN CPNrnR FOR TIlE PIlRPoRMJNo
ARTs
MAY 3, 4, 5, 1990
by Andrew Hamlin
I enjoyed Til the Fat Lady Sings in
spite of the script, which can't decide if
the characters are real people with real

'H9

Kalamo:r.oo/8attle Cr.ek' _'139
Key

TIIB FAT LADY SINOS, A PLAY BY

Boxx

feelings, or two-dimensional prototypes to
be exploited for in best sitcom style. At
times it reminded me of TV's Family
Ties, which often featured "serious"
topics, only to sell out the hard truth for
the easy laugh almost every time. Fat
Lady's message, that we must learn to
accept ourselves and others as we are,
gets obscured by too many obvious lines
like "She'll fmd another man long before
she finds herself."
Kris Mann and Jenine Gillie play
JelUlY, a nurse who' s recently lost 87
pounds; Mann is the new thin Jenny,
Gillie her fonner fat self, who hangs
around in spiritual fonn, dispensing
strident advice as she forages for junk
food. Together they visit their family in
preparation for a high school reunion. At
the house, we meet her doting mother
(Becky Morrison), her neurotic sister
(Donna Pallo), her layabout, frustrated
writer brother (Robert Richie) and her
nosebleed-prone fiance (Michael Sacks).
It's a cast of characters with "sitcom
pilot" written all over it, and too much
of the dialogue stayed right at that level.
However, Mann and Gillie make a
lovely yin-yang personality, Mann
struggling to keep up appearances, while
Gillie, devil in her ear, tells her what's
really
going
on.
Gillie's
broad
shenanigans are a bit predictable, but silo
n:deems them through her likability and
sheet comedic energy, as when she limps
along aftez the jogging Mann wailing,
"Airl (pant pant pant) There's DO airl
(pant, pant) Where did the air go?"
Gillie also provides the poignant final
moment; having taught Jenny all she
knows, she acknowledges that "it's over"
by singing a beautiful version of "Over
the Rainbow." It's a moving acceptance
of death, sung in a surprisingly powerful
voice, and redeems, if it does not excuse,
the bald writing and manipulative laugb
pandering that went before.

Andrew HamUn's elwlesterol count is
202.

Page 10 Cooper Point Journal May 3,1990

News Release
The Evergreen State College Indian
Center presents New York's unpredictable
Spiderwoman Theater, 8 pm Wednesday
May 9, in the Recital Hall, for a series
of slapstick yarns corralled into one "wild
and crazy" wild west show.
Spiderwoman Theater will perfonn
Winnetou's Snake Oil Show From
Wigwam City. Tickets are available at
the door, $6 general, $4 for students.
This four-wom!\D group's singing,
dancing and clowning around introduce
"Indian vaudeville" with a fast-paced
show that delivers a hilarious slap at the
"Plastic Shamans" and new-age messiahs
who try to sell Native American
spirituality.
Spiderwoman Theater has enamored
critics. Seattle's Arts Focus called them
"an odd and delightful mixture of Native
American mythology and slapstick
comedy a la George Burns and Jack
Benny."
However, under all the horseplay and
frolic, a message comes through,
reminding us that a lot of people's
preconceived notions about Native
Americans are nothing but a pile of
buffalo chips.

Spiderwoman ceremoniously torches
just such piles with its fuel of satirical
skits and stories. Just like at a campfire,
the skits are roughly drawn, infonnal and
depend on the participation of the
audience. "When they're going full
throttle, the Spiderwoman Thestez could
easily be the. act David Letterman always
meant · to have on his show but never
found," said New York's Downtown
critic.
On first blush, you may wonder what
this "Indian Vaudeville" group's actiOllpacked show has in common with a
Spiderwoman's web. The link is direct.
The group took the name of the goddess
of creation who taught her people to
design and weave.
She inspires the
group's working technique, known as
"storyweaving."
Funny? You'll be woven into a
pattern of laughter, following characters
the likes of Princess Pissy Willow of the
"Mish Mash" Tribe, Rootin-Tootin
Cowboy and Mother Moon Face.
The show is sponsored by the
Evergreen State College Indian Center.
Call 866-6000,
x6105
for
more
infonnation.

MARCH TO A DIFFERENT
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~\ ~OV/E'J'
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OLYMPIA FESTIVALoFTHE ARTS:
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AND OTHER FLIGHTS OF

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Renl 1 movie - gil: 1 free
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Dlmlon a: 1larri80n

Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

Page 11

Arls

~

Enterlainnlo-n t

FilmFestival isan Ever
relationship. Speck shot his East Berlin
by Midlael McIntosh
Evergreen's third year with the scenes illegally, using smuggled-in superLesbian Gay Film Festival is a landmarlc, 8 cameras; they offer fascinating glimpses
celebrating the spread of cultura1 diversity of the city as it looked before the wall,
throughout the northwest. The festival is and the Communist government, came
also showing an extended influence in the crashing down last summer.
There are, all-in-all, 49 films and
adoption of a long-awaited community
that has been and always will be a videos from which to choose. In addition,
healthy lifestyle.
Saturday night we welcome back Rumors
This festival is more than just a of the Big Wave. at 10 pm in Library
gathering of alternative people to watch 4300. This is an all-community dance
alternative films. It represents the (open to all TESC students and friends)
different artists and audiences that wish and absolutely all are welcome! Cover
to make a change in their lives about the charge is $5 at the door. but if you have
way they see themselves and others.
a Full Festival Pass. you will be admiued
Our ftlms this year range from gay
free.
The film festival starts this Friday
narration to documentation of AIDS.
night. May 4 and continues all day
There are feminist rums. rums of music.
Saturday followed by Vito Russo plus a
rums of poetry, rums by and about
people from points all around the globe. live-music dance ending on Sunday night
The festival wants to cover a wide range
at around 7 pm.
We hope to see everyone there for
of themes utilizing the medium we
have.
We want to capture an
The Third Northwest International
Lesbian Gay Film Festival at The
audience that wants to be different and
Evergreen State College, May 4, 5, and
embrace the so-called extreme social
6 starting in the lecture halls. Let's keep
con~ts.
.
this a long-standing traditional event.
The festival premieres with "Desire,"
Michael Mcintosh is a major
a film by Stuart Marshall. which was the
organizer of this year's festival.
most watched episode on Great Britain·s
channel 4 lesbian and gay magazine
series. The film descnbes the rise of
May
Nazism, the persecution of sexual radicals Lecture Hall
in the holocaust, and the underlying
German .social structure that produced this ....Lec
- ture--HallpetSeCubon.
Another film is "Witches, Dykes,
Faggots and Poofters." Director Digby
Duncan portrays the harassment and
victimization of discrimination that
and lesbians experience. Through this,
investigates the damaging history
social and political oppression in l!:enleral. IT __ ...._
"Night
Visions,"
by
Bociwitiw, is a Canadian lesbian film
that shows the struggle two women with
cultural and racial differences endure
when imposed upon by their community.
Based on a true story from the 1980s,II.e,'tnTI!
this film shows the ttmnoil of a native 1 -- - single mother and the fight for her child
against Children's Aid and her white ex_ILec:ture Hall 3
husband.
An American film, Karen Sloe's "/fILecture
She Grows Up Gay," captures the'=~~~ ===~;=
audience's attention quicldy--the title
alone makes you look twice. This
documentary looks at a black woman
explaining her pregnancy, marriage, and
raising her daughter with a lesbian
partner.
Another Canadian film is "Salut
Victor!" by Anne Claire Poirier, which
tells the story of two older gay men
living in a retirement home--frail, lonely
Phillipe and blustery, irreverent Victor.
The ftIm addresses the realities of
physical and emotional ageing, the
euphoria of past loves, the pain of
difficult
choices,
loneliness,
and,
ultimately. loss.
F'mally, we have "Westler-East of
the Wall" a German movie by Weiland
Speck, which took us three years to
acquire for viewing. Westler narrates the
struggle of two men, caught on opposite
sides of the Berlin wall, to maintain a

tradition

ON STAGE

MEETINGS
WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT WEEK:
7:30 pm; LIB 2219; information: call
Lisa or Vikki at 866-6000 x62oo.
MUSIC
ROBIN DOWNEY & LISA HOLM:
7:30 pm;
Four
Seasons Books;
information: 786-0052.
The vocalists/musicians will perfonn a
capella pieces as well as compositions
including piano, guitar, and drums.

4
ON STAGE
BALLET NORTHWEST:
8 pm;
Washington Center, mainstage; tickets:
$101$5 students; information: 753-8586.
F'Jrebird Suite & Other Flights of Fancy.

t

I

Russo to speak
10:00 PM

Dance

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:.••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••I
Page 12 Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

The festival organizers are also
proud to present Vito Russo, author of
The Cel/uoid Closet. Russo will lecture
and take questions explaining and
entertaining us about gay cinema history.
With film clips and discussion, Russo
shows how none of the traditional
stereotypes reflect a true understanding of
gay and lesbian lifestyles. His updated
version of The Celluoid Closet film clip
packet includes excerpts from "Making
Love, "
"Beverly
Hills
Cop,"
"Victor/Victoria," and other films.
Stills from "Maedchen in Uniform" and
"Men In Love" provided by the

LGBPRC.

;·lAVE~
· TAV) ··i

' --'

.

'TIL 1lIE FAT LADY SINGS: 8 pm;
Washington Center, stage ll; tickets:
$7/$6 student; information: 753-8586.

.iiiii
r

••
••

•••
••
••
•:
•••
••

•••
••

•••
••
:• 210

3

WONDERFUL

IN

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FOR INFO CONTACT
FACULTY
FRANK MOTLEY or
VIRGINIA DARNEY
866-6000 z6163

DOWNTOWN
OLYMPIA
comer of
5th & Capitol Way

1

$7/$6 student; informatioo: 753-8586.
CAREER DEVELOPMENT

MEETINGS
JOLENE
UNSOELD:
Campaign
Headquarters Opening; 5 - 6:30 pm; 406
Capitol Way South; information:
357-7007.
DANCE

FORUMS

BALLET NORTHWEST:
8 pm;
Washington Center, mainstage; tickets:
$101$5 students; information: 753-8586.
Firebird Suite & Other Flights of Fancy.

LOU GOLD: 7 pm; Lecture Hall 1.
Lessons from the ancient forest: slides
and stories of the Oregon Wilderness.

ENVIRONMENT: The First Annual
Rachel Carson Environmental Forum; 7
pm; Lecture Hall Rotunda.
Featuring Gordan Orians, ActiiJg Director
of tho Institute for Environmental Studies,
University of Washington.
.

'TIL THE FAT LADY SINGS: 8 pm;
Washington Center, stage ll; tickets:
$71$6 studelit; information: 753-8586.
FILMS
LESBIAN GAY FILM FESTIVAL: All
day; Lecture Halls 1. 3 & 5. See
announcements.
FAIRS
LACEY SPRING FUN FAIR: 10 AM8
pm;
Saint
Martin's
College;
information: 4914141.

6

8
SEMINARS

J

"

...

:t:.S

NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR
WOMEN: Family, Children & Choices
for the '90's; regislnltion: $35 for NOW
members,
$45
for
non-members;
information: 459-9370.
Keynote speaIcer: Stephanie Coontz.

FILMS
LESB~GAYnLMFESTIVAL:All

day; Lecture Halls I, 3 & 5. See
announcements.

BALLET NORTHWEST:
8 pm;
Washington Center, mainstage; tickets:
$101$5 students; information: 753-8586.
Hrebird Suite & Other Flights of Fancy.
CLASSES
HERBS: Respiratory system; 5 - 8 pm;
Radiance Herbs & Massage; $20; to
register; 357-9410.
FAIRS

DJ DANCE: That's How We're Uvin';
starts at 9 pm; tickets: $2 before 10 pm,
$3 after 10 pm.
SponsCK'ed by Evergreen Indian Center.

LACEY SPRING FUN FAIR: 11 AM 5
pm;
Saint
Martin's
College;
information: 4914141.

CONFERENCES

MUSIC

NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR
WOMEN: Family, Children & Choices
for the '90's; Jegistration: $35 for NOW
members,
$45
for
non-members;
information: 459-9370.
Keynote speaIcer: Stephanie Coontz.

DIANNA KALLERGES: Tape Release
Patty for The /nvislbtlity of the Obvious;
7 pm; The Asterisk; free.
Live music by Dianna, Dani Kelly, Mark:
Eckert, Colm Meek, Timothy Hull, Kelly
Qui1ci and othezs.

FILMS

OPEN HOUSE

LESBIAN GAY FD..M FESTIVAL: All
day; Lecture Halls I, 3 & 5. See
announcements.

WASHINGTON
PSYCHIC
INSTITUI'E: 12:30 - 5 pm; 4604 N.
38dl St, Tacoma: information: 759-7460.
Spiritual healings & psychic readings.

MEN'S DISCUSSION GROUt>: Noon;
LIB 3500; information: 866-6000 x6040
or x6467. Men taking action on sexism
issues.
READINGS
SERENA COSGROVE: 7:30 pm; Red
& Black Books Collective, 432 15th E.
Seattle; infonnation: 322-READ.
Cosgrove will read from her new book of
poetry, Journey to Bocay.

7
FILMS

9

\

~

,

1=

ENVIRONMENTAL CAREERS: 1 - 2
pm; LIB 1406A; information: 866-6000
x6193.

COOPERATIVE EDUCATION
ORIENTATION SESSION: 3 - 4 pm;
LIB l406A; information: 866-6000
x639 1.

MAARAVA: 1 - 3 pm; Lm 3200.
Topics to be discussed include cultural
Israeli
caucus
member
selection,
foIkdancing, & bagel baking.
RAG-WOLF: Rainforest Action Group,
Watchers Over Last Forests; 7 pm;
ERCICAB pit Everyone welcome.

TURKEY: Slide presentation; 7 pm;
Going Places, 515 S. Washington;
information: 357-6860.

SPIDERWOMAN THEATRE: 8 pm;
lESC Recital Hall; tickets: $61$4
students; information: ElC x610S or S&A
x6220.

10

CHESS

HOW IT IS: 4 pm; Outside CRC; free.
A play about young relationships, abuse
issues, motherhood. and life in the
kitchen.

CELEBRAnON FOR PEACE & THE
ENVIRONMENT: 12:30 - 4 PM;
Marathon Parle; information: Eliza at
754-1880 or Helen at 866-2278.
The Greens of Olympia and R>R, with
others, are sponsoring a picnic with
music, speakers, and fun.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
STOPPING SEXUAL HARASSMENT
AT EVERGREEN: Wednesday, May
17th; 7 PM; LIB Lobby.
Share your concerns, impact the work of
the Sexual Harassment DTF.
LESBIAN GAY FILM FESTIVAL:
May 4 - 6; TESC campus; information:
866-6000 x6542. The third amual
weekend of outstanding and awardwinning films from around the world. all
featuring Lesbian and Gay themes or

characters.

T H U R § Q A Y '"
~{ftfttttfJfttJffJrr

HOW IT IS: 8 pm; TESC Recital Hall'

INFORMAL CHESS: 7 pm; TESC
Community Center.

A play about young relationships, abUse
issues, motherhood, and life in the

free.

'

kitchen.
CAREER DEVELOPMENT

SPEAKERS
SENIOR PANIC: 1 - 2 pm; L1406A;
information: 866-6000 x6193.

ELANA

MEETINGS

Seasons BooIcs; information: 786-0952.
The professiooal storytell~ will tell two

PRESIDENT'S ADVISORY BOARD:
3 - 5 pm; L3205.

JAZZ: Bert Wilson & Rebirth; 1 pm;
Red Square; free.

PRESENTATIONS

CHESS

lBNCE

RESUME WRITING WORKSHOP:
12 - 1 pm; LIB 1406A; information: 8666000 x6193.

MEETINGS

~O:lo.:NwS~T~A~G~E~_ _ _ _ _ _ __

NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR
WOMEN: Family, Children & Choices
for the '90's; registration: $35 for NOW
members,
$45
for
non-members;
information: 459-9370.
Keynote speaker: Stephanie Coontz.

CAREER DEVELOPMENT

r'A1U1J;V DEY.

THE FAN MAN: 9 pm; on KAOS 89.3
PM. Dale Knuth & Ward Johnson read
The F.QIt Man by William KotzwinIde.

5

HOW IT IS: 7 pm; TESC Recital Hall;
free.
A play about young relationships. abuse
issues, motherhood, and life in the
kitchen.

KASPAROV
CHESS
CLASS
CHALLENGE: 6:40 pm; CAB 108; $2
entry.

SOUTH AFRICA: 12 _ 1 pm; Lecture
Hall 3. Changing This CoU1Jlry: Four
South African Trade Unionists Speak.

" ·.·.·.w

STAGE

MUSIC
LAMANITE GENERATION: 7:30 pm;
Washington Center; tickets: $25 patron,
$6 reserved, $4 balcony; Information:
753-8586.
A celebmtion of American Indian,
Polynesian, and Latin American Cultures.

KAOS

-

UN

ON STAGE

ON STAGE

BRAD ROSS: 9 - 11 AM; Lecture Hall
4. A demonstralion and lecture OIl the
history and future of Stirling Power, a
clean and safe energy tec:hnology.

1!

LECTURES

. ON STAGE
INTERVIEWING TECHNIQUES:
12 - 1 pm; LIB 1406A; information: 8666000 x6193.

LECTURES

.............,

PORTLAND
, S.W. WASHINGTON

f

'TIL THE FAT LADY SINGS: 8 pm;
Washington Center, stage IT; tickets:

ON STAGE

FREELAND:

7:30;

Four

I8ils based on The Fairy Tale and the
Human Psyche.

Trip to USSR
Student delegation has
four spots open...
travel to Leningrad &
Moscow
August, part of
September
sign up before May 9
see last issue of CPJ for
details
Call Eric 866-1585

Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

Page 13

true multi-culturalism.
"If they're interested in multitentative agreement for more open , culturalism in action, it will work," she
discussion to take place on Racial said. "If they're commiti:ed to multiculturalism just in rbetoric ...it's empty."
Awareness Day (May 23).
About the new cultural caucus
After the meeting, Nancy GudaileS
spoke of her mixed feelings about the system, GudaileS said that she wasn't
lack of dialogue and synthesis in the sure of her opinion of it, but the system
meeting, and of what needs to be done if seemed to be a step in the right direction.
Ironically, in a forum called by the
progress is to be made toward achieving

caucus, from cover

opposition to the new government, the
proponents of the multi-cultural system
clearly overwhelmed the opponents in
number and emotion.
Rio Lara-Bellon, among others,
however, was quick to offer an olive
branch to those opposed to the new
govenunent She spoke of her admiration
for all willing to speak their minds on
the issues.

CARTOONS

"Everyone that came here is
she said.
She also spoke of her support fur
giving the new cultural caucuses a
chance.
"The document is amendable, it can
be enlarged," she said, "let's take it out
for a teSt drive."
7Ym Gibson is an Evergreen student
and a staff writer for the CPJ.

COIlI1lgCOUS,·

UltraCow by ~evin Bennett
~ DIP"'"

DrATH ~f HE~

<QUI1E /i1J~

"lltE Jaa ""TW T....~ EARll<
(.j'~Aue! 5/i£'J a;.,.,>JGo
f5N;,,! Go Cltl86E~ !'EAt!

~tt(e-

A ME'"SS""~

t

-Production manager-Scott left to fondle birds in the Aleutians.

sunIl ANt>

To A

KI NDElIZ/~~I'lTLs:t ~

l

Help produce seepage for the
community

M-J p.~ '10

NA.TION:

wwrr WE' NE'E'~ISI
C' R:

!

E· " .... I·v.,.T-Y.

~ YoU

HA'IE" .. ~rnWJw

aEAT,,,e- -r~L£~m
WE'Ll- PJT ~EM ib

I!

\.IS~ IN ~E CIA!
(JJ£ ~

FoL.f'S

L.I teE YC)\JI WHo <:,Jltt.a
NEW A.ND
"RtK N l QuE'S

~::":m---rl:ru2E"! SO W~

The Fascist ChemistS by Morgan Evans

INSPIg TttE:"

vJO~

To

tE'~"

rr WOru:.s 1/11

-Ad Layout Assistant-We may pay you, we may not.

,

QAVTE'iHALA, ,
EJ.$AL.\I A r>Orl-,

woltl<E",

ANIJ 11'
'N NlCA rtA i1V,4,

-Staff Writers-Go for the glory.

ur

IT Wo~

~~ Yall

!

-Photographers-obviously
-Graphic Designer-Because form takes precedence over content.

Fistful of Droolers by Kenta Hadley

Bullets are Cheap by Edward Martin III

-Or anything else you feel comfortable with.

CPJ: Seepage for the community ...

Classified Ads • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •-- • • • • • • • •
CLASSIFIED RATES
·30 wordI or 1Mt-$3.00
·10 CIntI for IICh IdcItlonal word
·PRE-PAYIENT REQUEO
.a.alftad daadl,...2 p.m. Monday

10 PLACE AD:
·PHOtE 88&«100 X8054
·STOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A

~SEHD INFO TO: CPJ, TESC, CAB 305A

OLYIIPIA, WA 118505

.....-- .......................................
HELP WANTED

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

ATTENTION - HIRING I Govemment jobs -your
area. Many immediate openings without waiting
list or IDst. $17,840 - $69,485. Call
Hl02-838-8885 EXT, R 14471.

NANNIES ~ired for east coast families.
Great working conditions. Evenings & weekends
off. 1-year contracts. Airfare paid. No fee. Min.
$1501week. More for experience.
CLASSIC NANNIES: 1-1IOCJ..e63-6128.

----------------Camp Counselors lor NW Gil1 Scout Camp.

Must enjoy working with children in ouldoor
selling. SALARYIMEALSILODGINGI
TRAINING provided. (206) 633-5600 lor
applicalion. EOE.

NANHYIHOUSEKEEPER NEEDED. Creative
outgoing, non-smoker with driver's ~celWl8, for
suburban NY City home. Help run household &
nurture 5 yr. old & new bom. Area offers
culiuraJ, academic activities. Weekends oft. Two
weeks pald vacalion. Summer travel with family.
Minimum 1 year commilmenl References
~ired. 1-914-763-5376.

"GET A JOB"
Can't you just hear it when you get home?
Does this cause you stress? Don't worry.
EXPRESS SERVICES has already done the
looking. We have fun and PIT IDmporary
positions with hundreds of employers in Tacoma
and S. King Co. We will keep ),OU as busy as
you want 10 be, on any shift you want, and
allow you the flexibility 10 take time oft when
you
need
It.
Clerical
and
light
war9house/production positions available for any
major. In Tacoma call (206) 4~, S. King
Co. call (206) 850-1344 for "II1.tratlon

de""a.
THINKING OF TAKING SOME nME OFF
FROM SCHOOL? We need MOTHER'S
HELPERSINANNIES. We have pnHIaeened
famUies 10 suit you. Uve in exciting New Yortl
suburbs. We are established since 1984 and
have a stro;¥ support network.
1-800-222- RA.

WANTED

/

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

ORIGINAL POETRY, SHORT FICTION, &
CARTOONS for
publication in the CPJ.
Please bring wortl with name & phone number
to CAB 306A.
WANTEDI 25 People 10 GAIN WEIGHT. Herbal
based, 100% natural. Call mike 456-3226.
VocalisVPerformance Artist desires nonfunctioning kitchen appliances. Toasters,
blenders, whatever. Don't throw them away,
give them 10 Dan in 0114 or can 866-9926.

-PERSONAL

SERVICES
ACUPUNCTURE & BODY WORK CHRIS
SYNODIS, certified acupunClUrist, llcenaed
massage therapiat, masters in counMliw1;
Practice of acupune1Ure InlBgratsd
acupressure, and chinese herbs. Covered by
student Insurance. 1722 W. Harrison
call 788-1116 for appl or consultalion.

PROTEST U.S. NAVY'S CRUEL, UNETHICAL,
ABUSIVE USE OF DOLPHINS FOR MILITARY
PURPOSES, SEND LETTERS CAlliNG FOR
AN IMMEDIATE HALT OF SUCH PRACnCES
1600
TO:
PRES.
GEORGE
BUSH
PENNSYLVANIA AVE. NW., WASHINGTON,
D.C. 20500. FOR MORE INFO CONTACT
PAWS: 206-743-1884.
Before you become angry and blow your stack
al someone, find out their position on gun
control. You can always change your mind IalDr.

- - - - - - - - - - - - -- HOUSING

-,

COUCh!

Ron Austin

LOST - Black, short-haired female shop CAT
from downtown Olympia area April 7. Very
friendy. Greatly mlaaedl Call 357-7117.
LOST: On April 30, Monday, around 9:46 pm,
a slide projector, box of books and numerous
notes and papers were placed accidentally in
the wrong vehicle (a truck) by a student In
Wedands EcoIog&This material is needed back
desperately by
aqunct faCU~ ID whom it
beIont;,::,- contact the ..
Jane
, (Lab I, Rm 30115, ut.. e7OO) If
you have any knowledge of IIIla.

-r.aary.

room In a spacious lour bedroom apartment.
With neal, inlBlligent, non-smoking women.
Contact Catherine at 886-2478.

present). Gold w/dart( blue hear-shaped slOnes.
Please call 866-8949.

1 person .tudlo on the 7th floor of A dorm.
Quiet, private, light, great view. $1851month, all
utilities Included. Call Peter or Helene at
866-7196 or ~ X6213.

FREE - Ac:kllt female MOUSE. Free 10 good
home. Doesn't bite, good breeder, comes with
food & bedding. NOT SNAKE OR OTHER
CREATURES FOOD. Call Mary 352-7282-

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

Found: guitar, call TESC campus security
x8140. o..crlbe to claim.

A FREE OIFT JUST FOR CAWNO, PLUS
RAISE UP TO $1,700 IN ONLY 10 DAYS.
Student groups needed for marXetiFifroject on
campus. For details plus your F E GIFT,
GROUP COORDINATORS CALL
1-800-786-3472 X50.

F.... Goldftah. Pets or feeder fish 30 fish
available. 3 inches. Call 754-8211.

SEIZED
GOVERNMENT
ATTENTION:
VEHICLES from $100 Fords, Mercedes,
CorvetIDS, Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide.
1-802-838-8885 ext. A14471.

NANNY OPPORTUNInESIl Nited money lor
school or just want a break from study? Call
me. if you really love children and can make a
1-year commitment 10 a qreat family. U.S.
locations of your choice - aniare paid. TRISH
1-(206) 759-{)843 EASTERN SU....ER JOBS
iALSO AVAILABLE.

FIDDLEIVlOUN Resurrected from the dead and
revived by Carl Applebaum. GOOD SHAPE.
Pretty reddish color. Nice tone. Has soul and
unusual pegs. Wooden case. $200 788-1776 or
788-11213.

OPPORTUNITY

STEREO SYSTEM. Sony Tuner, power
amplifierlSTR-V45 cost $200. Sony CD
TAPE
PLAYERlCDP-302, $100. SONY
PLAYERlTC-RX400, $100. KLIP SCH-HERSAYH-BK speakers $160. All good condition. Call
8110-83118.

Page 14 Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

\{

th,s hehirnl -H,e
AnJ on -the new carfcl !

THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP. NO CHARGE
LOST/FOU ND/STO LEN/FRE E
FOR
CLASSIFIEDS.

------------------------Spring quarter housing contract for sale. One FOR SALE
Ring Iostl Great sentimental value (16th birthday
-------~---------------

~ow- ar~! What is

LOST/FOUNDIFREE

ATTENTION:
EARN
MONEY READING
BOOKSI $32,OOOtyoar income potential. Details
(1) 602-838-8885 EXT. BKI4471 .
6 am - 11 pm 7 days.

"TTENTION: EARN MONEY TYPING AT
HOMEI 32.000IYR income potential. Details,
1) 602-838-8885 EXT. T-14471 .

Would your organlzalion Nile 10 make $500 lor
a one-week cam.JFus marketing project? CALL:
CORINE OR .. RA at 1-800-5112-2121.

So come on down to

Scott,,'. Red Neck Ranch.
We've been breed1ng the finest
racists for over 50 yearsl

Found wal"" Describe to claim contact TESC
campus security 88&-8000 .e14O.

Cooper Point Journal May 3, 1990

Page 15
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cpj0501.pdf