The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 11 (January 18, 1990)

Item

Identifier
cpj0489
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 11 (January 18, 1990)
Date
18 January 1990
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Volume 20 Issue 11



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Smoke filling the heavens from the burning city
fiickering shadows outline the prone body
laying in wait to be loved by firelight
orange tongues softly caressing every cheek
smoldering windows, signs and corpses,
leaving behind naught
but the lingering smoke of humanity
Happiness
in the cleansing fires wake
My thoughts float like leaves
of tomorrow
on a slow moving stream

John Chandler

Never have I felt so alive
as I do today
From this moment
held softly
in the thoughts of
another
Never doubtful
Always joyful
We are one
for all eternity
Katrina L. Barr

Page 16 Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990

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Flame, cinders, ash of grey
Concrete flaming, streetlights silent as
stereotypes burn, prejudices fade
differences fall away, hatreds wail
rolling clouds of change boil into the deep night sky

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REASON, PASSION, SPIRIT, HUMANITY

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Architectural drawing of the CAB 1/ expansion, which will re-organize and cover most of the third floor of the CAB.
For the story, see the top of page 3.
,

Faculty address allegations
TiD. Cook

,
search for knowledge and understanding
Evergreen professors voted at a demand that faculty strive for the highest
faculty meeting Jan. 10 , to support "a degree of accuracy in any representation
high standard of care" in the preseritation they constnlcL
of JlC8(Iemic accomplishments, but did not
"An inadvertent or deliberate pattern
take a position on the recent resume of carelessness undermines the quest for
controveISY surroun~g , college President a liberal education. Just as we attempt
Joe Olander.
,_ 10 hold students 10 a ' high standard of
A motion for a vote of "110 - care-aoout lheir work, we also hold
confidence" in Olander and the Board of ourselves 10 a high standard of care about
Trustees was made and withdrawn at the how
we
present
our
own
meeting which was open 10 the accomplishments."
community but closed 10 the press. '
The l'CS9lution was an altered version
, The faculty issued a statement whicb of one propo.sed by professor lohn
SIlJd:
,
Perkins, aCcording 10 The Olympian.
"We the faculty of The Evergreen
At a Faculty Agenda Committee
State College are concerned about Meeting last December, professors Dave '
misrepresentation
of career 'Hitchens and Craig Carlson alleged that
accomplishments in any prospective or Olander intentionally,falsified his resume.
current member ot Evergreen's faculty They 'issued a statement after the
(incl~g adminiSll8tors who have meeting.
"
faculty status).
They said: "We are pleased our '
_ "The mission o_f education ~ the co!b.~Ju~ve affmn~ ~ imYOn&n5=e
by

The Ev.ergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested

of honesty and integrity in higher
education in general and at The
Evergreen State College in particular.
We have always known our fellow
faculty have high standards and know
they will work to keep those standards at
their highest level as a symbol of
leadership."
In an interview Wednesday, Hitchens
said he had hoped the faculty would call
for a third pany investigation.
Hitchens and Carlson have threatened
10 go 10 court 10 have Olander removed
from his position. "We're still waiting
and seeing," Hitchens said.
The faculty is scheduled 10 meet for
fwther discussion January 24.
After Hitchens and Carlson made
their allegations last December, the Board
of Trustees met 10 discuss the maller and
issued a statement supporting O~der.
The resume be presented 10
Ever~n in 1984 listed a' bachelor'~

degree in English; the degree was in
general studies with an emphasis in
English, according 10 Olander.
The
resume said he had a master's degree in
English; it is a masw's degree in
teaching with an emphasis in English and
social studies, Olander said. The resume
listed his doctorate as being issued in
1969; it was issued in 1971.
Olander
denied
intentionally
falsifying his resume and offered
explanations ftr each discrepancy.
Describing his bachelor's degree as being
in English, Olander said, represented the
kind of work he had done in school. A
"T" was left off an old resume which
listed his masw's degree and the error
was copied ,onlO his 1984 resume, he
said; the incorrect date he received his
doctorate was an error in memory.

cn staff writer and

Tina Cook is a
a student at Evergreen.

Nonprofit Organization
U.S. Postage Paid
Olympia, W A 98505
Permit No. 65

CAB remodeling cost: $1.5M
The Olympia chapter of Business and
Professional Women is proud to present
its annual "Young Careerist" speak-off on
Monday, Feb. 12. Program slans with
dinner at 6:00 p.m.
To be eligible, a young careerist
must:
-be between the ages of 21 and 35
(inclusive) by July 31;
-be employed in a business or
progression at least one year full-time
work experience.
-be outstanding in. scholastic work,
community service and/or church
work; and
-support the legislative platform and
goals of the National Federation of
Business and Professional Women.
If you are interested in participating
as a Young Careerist, contact Cheryl
Penn, YC Chair, at 753-0361 (days), or
438-0210 (evenings).

Leticia Nieto-Johnson, Evergreen's
career development counselor, has been
selected as the recipient of the 19891990 NASPA Region V New
Professional Award. The award is
presented annually to new professionals
in Ihe field of student affairs.
On Wednesday, a crowd of 1,000
plus gathered at the steps of the Capitol
in downtown Olympia to support the Prolife movement in Washington. The event,
which was organized to occur on the
noon hour, involved numerous church
groups, who listened to supporung
speakers.

QUOTE OF THE · WEEK

"There are two very important things we must
keep in mind on this issue. The first is that the
values and rights we hold dear to us in. this
country, as we have found out in recent years, can
very easily slip away if we don't take the type of
actiov we're taking today. Secondly, let's affirm that
all women -rich or poor- shall have equal rights
in the state of Washington. And while I only have
ne vote, it's a big one. And as long as I am Governor, I'm going to do everything in my power to
protect the rights of all women in this state, so
that -rich or poor- they have access to the same
opportunities. "
Governor Booth Gardner at the Olympia
pro-choice rally last week.

B.eforeyou

dtssect......r~'Oil~l-J;.
m+
For inlimnation about humane alternatives
to animal dissection in classrooms,

CAlL TOU-FREE
DISSECl'ION
IN«JRMATlON H01UNE
l-SOO-9ZZ-JIIlO6 (3764)
Animal Legal Defi=e Fund

by Helen DeSmith, Co-roordinator
Women's Center
"My body's, nobody's but mine-· you
run your own body, let me run mine ... "
sang Geof Morgan, noted folk singer, as
he led the crowd of 1,000 Pro-Choice
activists gathered on the steps of the
Washington Stale Capitol at noon on
Friday, January 12. Seven bus loads of
supporters came from Seattle. Others
came from every comer of the state in
vans and car pools, to be part of the
largest Lobby Day Rally.
Despite the fact that The Olympian
reported the date incorrectly and despite
the gray, cold day, a record tum out of
enthusiastic and dedicated activists of all
ages patiently stood in th~ nippy weather.

Dateline
Olympia
During the first week of the 1990
legislative session Ellen Craswell and
17 co-sponsors introduced SB6476 into
the senate. The bill would allow people
with bachelor's degrees and five years
of work experience to teach in public
schools without teaching certificates.

RUSHMORE
N.tiTIONAL MEMORIAL
r--------SUMMER J O B 5 - - - - - -.........
WORLD CLASS GIFT SHOP • GALLERY
FIRST CLASS FOOD OPERATON
COMPETETIVE WAGES • ROOM & BOARD (minimum charge)
EARN 6 COLLEGE CREDITS

MOUNT RUSHMORE MOUNTAIN COMPANY

1-800-544-8158

Security Blotter
got stuck in it
Friday, January 12
2203: The lawn at the day care center
was heavily damaged by cars being
driven on it
Sunday, January 14
0441: New orange barricades at housing
were stolen.
near the
1914: A Honda hit a
of the Parkway and
intersection
Driftwood. No injuries were reported, but
the car and the tree were totaled.
91 public services were performed
during the week and 8 traffic stops were
made.

tree

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at your home each week
I will receive 28 exciting issues - covering the
full academic year. Please send me the next
issue right away!

~-IDEPT.

R-1

KEYSTON

S.D. 57751

TAKE CONTROL OF YOUR
DIABETES THROUGH THE 90'S.
Join the team committed to managing your diabetes. Working
together, you, your doctor and your diabetes educator can develop
a winning strategy of diabetes control that best fits your lifestyle.

Jan. 29, 7:15-9pm
Feb. 2;, 7:15-9pm

Feb. 20,
9am-12pm
In Main Lobby

i

I

by Elisa R. Cohen
. Publi~ rage and intolerance is
changing the political structures and laws
of nations around the globe. In our own
Stale. the 51st Legislature is responding
to an outraged public cry for harsher
laws
concerning
the confmement,
treatment, registration, and even castration
of sexual offenders. Incensed by the
rape and mutilation of a Tacoma boy and
the murder of a Pioneer Square woman,
Governor Booth Gardner and several
senatolS
and
representatives
have
introduced bills which will theoretically
provide greater community protection
against sexual offenders.
As of Monday, January 15, a
comprehensive bill proposed by Governor
Gardner's Task: Force on Community
Protection passed through the flI'St stage
of legislal!Jre on its way to becoming
law.
This bill includes provisions for:
I. notification of witnesses and
victims of the release of sexual
offenders.

'---- ..

*

Diabetes Wei In... Center

412 Black Hills Lane
Suite A

754-5858

Pa~e

2 Cooper Point Journal Tanuarv 18. 1990

at night to lessen inconveniences.
Collier does not know where the
existing third floor offices •• housing
the CPJ, the ·ERC, KAOS, and S & A - will be relocated during construction.
They will probably be moved to
"basements, nooks, and crannies," Collier
said.
Collier and Project Architect Walter
Schacht
of
the
Seattle
firm
Olson/Sundberg held a meeting for
interested students on Wednesday in CAB
110. Schacht discussed the project with
the 14 people present and displayed a
copy of the design scheme. Students
were supportive of the design.
Tina Cook is a CPJ staff writer and
a student at Evergreen.

Gov. Joel Pritchard, House Speaker Joe
King, Senate President Pro-Tem Alan
Bluechel, Senators Eleanor Lee, Lorraine
Wojahn, Nita Rinehart and Larry
Vognild, as well as by Representatives
Jennifer Belcher, Louise Miller, and Peter
Brooks.
Spirits soared with each speaker's
enthusiastic assurance of their own ProChoice stand to protect women's rights.
The women's right's coalition that
organized the Pro-Choice rally and State
Lobby Day was formed from some of the
groups instrumental in the successful
Seattle rally for the Mobilization for
Women's Lives held on November 12, in
which 7,000 persons voiced for choice.
The Pro Choice Washington Coalition

2. immunity from civil liability for
public employees for releasing
infonnation regarding sexual predators
who are incompetent to stand trial or
are insane.
3. reduction of earned early release
or "good time" from one third to
15% of the sentence.
4. lengthening the sentences for
juveniles convicted of sexual assault
lIS well as a return to confinement if
the juvenile violates conditions of his
post-release.
5. registering adults or juveniles
convicted of any sex offense with the
county sheriff. The Washington State
Patrol will maintain the central
registry. Failure to register would be
a class C felony.
6. extension of the victim's time to
report the crime from 72 hours to 12
months, allowing the victim to remain
eligible for the Victim Compensation
Fund
7. the prosecutor's responsibility to
label the crime "sexually motivated"
thus effecting consequent sentencing.
8. raising second degree rape, second
degree rape of a child and first
degree child molestation from class B
felonies to class A felonies, and
indecent exposure to a class C felony.
9. civil confinement in mental
instibllions of mentally incompetent,
violent pedators..

is funded and supported by members of
Planned
Parenthood,
National
Organization for Women, National
Abortion
Rights
Action
League,
Washington Women United, American
Association of University Women, League
of Women Voters, Hadasha, Northwest
Council of Jewisb Women, Religious
Coalition For Abortion Rights, Council of
Labor
Union
Women,
Northwest
Women's Law Center. Washington
Women's Political Caucus. and the
of
Reproductive
Rights
Coalition
Olympia.
Thank!: to all who attended and most
of all to those who worked so hard to
organize the successful event.

-------- ---

10. checking
backgrounds
of
prospective employees in school
districts.
II. repealing the current option for
early release into treatment facilities.
12. supervision of sexual offenders
for 2 years after release.
13. leng\hening of the sentencing in
accohtance
to
new
revised
seriousness level.
This bill entered the Rules Calendar
committee with 39 amendments to the
The
above list of initial proposals.
senate must agree on all the amendments
before it can pass the bill over to the
House of Representatives for their
inspection and approval.
Although· Ihe Rules Calendar
Committee is a place where politically
problematic bills often go to die,
Fransisco
Chatealibriand
Senate
Democratic Infonnation Officer. asserted
that because this bill has so much public
support, it is definitely on the "fast track"
and no politician will oppose it, for fear
of appearing soft on crime.
The issue of castration of sexual
Qffenders. which · brings up the issue of
cruel and unusual punishment, appeared
on a different bill so as not to not slow
of
the
governor's
the
progress
comprehensive community protection bill.
Elisa R. Cohen is an Evergreen

student.

Voice
your
• •
opInIon
by Elisa Cohen
As the 51st Legislature convened
January 8, Washingtonian's theatre of
Democracy opened and the elected
officials took their places in their roles as
law makers of the people for the people.
Throughout Ihe year Senators and
, Representatives draft bills for presentation
based on the demands of their
constituents. The bills of this session
represent the myriad of Washingtonian
problems
from
mosquito
owner
responsibility to a comprehensive health
insurance plan which would make
insurance and health care a possibility for
all Stale citizens.
According to its own brochure,
Washington State Legislature is one of
the . most open in . the nation.
All
meetings are open to the public and
provide a platform from which concerned
citizens can present their information and
opinions for or against the bill in
questions.
To testify, one must ascertain when
the bill in question will be beard. At that
time one must come to the hearing and
report to the house speaker, letting them
know that one has information or an
informed opinion about an issue.
Schedules and advice as to how to
testify can be found in the basement of
the state capitol building in the Bill

Room.

Address

.."...,.,..",.,.,.,,.,.....,...

Their signs ranged from the more
conservative "Pro Choice Washington; to
the personal "U.S. Out Of My Uterus; to
the cross generational "Grandma's-- the
Choice Group."
Early arrivals sang along with
Morgan while waiting to hear several of
the more than 50 legislators who were on
hand to give their affinnations to protect
a woman's reproductive rights. Speakers
included Governor Booth Gardner who
assured the crowd that "As long as I am
governor of the state of Washington .....
choice will prevail.
Choice for each individual woman to
control her own fertility is a human right
and that choice is not just a women's
issue ·was reiterated by all, including Lt.

COME SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER •.•

FREE PHYSICIAN REFERRAL

Nama

City , State, Zip

from banks, according to Collier.
The project will present some
inconveniences for the CAB.
Construction will be noisy, Collier
said, affecting the bookstore and offices
on the second floor most severely
because of construction directly overhead.
The noise may also reach to the flI'St
floor.
Collier
recommended
that
the
conference rooms not be used during the
, construction period because of possible
' disturbing noise levels.
In addition to noise, there will also
be
occasional
power
interruptions
affecting the entire CAB.
"We'U try and keep that to a
minimum," Collier said, adding that some
construction work will probably be done

Bill tightens sex laws

Regular Subscription $15.00 --- Patron Subcription $30.00
Angel Subscription $50.00

Please make check payable to Cooper Point Journal and mail to : Cooper Point Journal
CAB 305, TESC, Olympia. WA 98505

TESC $103,000 in support of faculty ana
student salaries. In return. the Board of
Trustees agreed to let student groups
remain in their library offices for ten
years.
In 1987. former Vice President for
Development and Administrative Services
Sue Washburn created a Disappearing
Task: Force (DTF) called "The CAB
Space Group." The DTF examined the
possibility of moving student offices from
the Library Building to the CAB. The
group recommended the student offices
be moved to the CAB before fall 1991
and the project be paid for out of S & A
reserves.
Half the money needed for the
project will come from S & A funds; the
other half will probably be borrowed

Pro-Choice rally rocks State Capitol

A sludtmt outreach project ofthe

FOR INFORMATION and APPLICATION:

Monday, January 8
1211: The door of a VW parked in F lot
was kicked in.
1858: Some girls were throwing bottles
from a parked car in Clot.
Tuesday, January 9
0902: A tree branch fell on a moving car
in B lot, injuring the driver.
1416: A wallet was stolen from Studio 3.
Wednesday, January 10
0945: Theft of a stereo, hubcaps, and a
fife extinguisher from a Subaru parked in
F lot was reported.
1035: Breakaway barricades near P dorm
were stolen.
Tbursday, January 11
1117: Four people playing in an elevator

by Tina Cook
A $1.5 million remodeling and
expansion of the CAB's third floor is
scheduled to begin in July. according to
college architect Jon Collier.
"We hope to start mid July with
completion maybe in December; Collier
said in an interview.
The expansion will enclose most of
the third floor tecrace and include
remodeling of the KAOS radio station.
The new space will be used for
student group and Services and Activities
(S & A) Administration offices.
Student groups are being moved from
the third floor of the Library building to
the CAB so their Library offices can be
used by faculty.
In 1981, the S & A Board gav~

Black Hills Community Hospital
3900 Capital Mali" Drive SW, Olympia



MICRO •

BREW

210

E. 4th



"All political power is inherent in
the people, and governments
derive their just powelS from the
consent of the governed, and are
establiShed
to
protect
and
maintain
individual
rights"
Washington State Constitution,
Section 1 Article 1.

Elisa Cohen is an Evergreen student.

Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

Page 3

HOW A BILL BECOMES A LAW
1. A bill may be introduced in either the Senate
or House of Representatives. but the procedure
by which a bill become a law is much the same.
wherever the bill originates.
In this story. the bill is introduced in the Senate
by a member. or members. that body. Alter the
bill is 'iled with the Secretary of the Senate. it is
given a number and. unless a majority demands
it be read in 'ull. it is read the firstlime by title only
in open session the Senate. It is then referred
'. to a standing committee the Senate.

2. The committee studies the bill and ollen
holds public hearings on it. The committee will
then meet to consider the in'ormation It has
gathered. /I may approve the bill with or without
amendments. drart a new bill on the same
subject incorporating the desired changes. or
take no action.

0'

0'

Governance
3. Th<t committee is now ready to report back to
the Senate. If the majority is in 'avor the bill as
introduced or with certain amendments. the
chairman recommends the bill for passage. The
the
committee report is read in open session
Senate. and the bill Is then re'erred to the Rules
Committee.

0'

0'

5. When the bill appears on the calendar for
6. Alter passing in the Senate. the bill will go

through an almost identical procedure in the
House.
II the bill is passed by the House. but is
amended by that body. the Senate must concur
in the amendments. If the Senate does not
accept the change in the bill. a conference
committee may be requested on the differences.

4. Alter the bill has been recommended for
passage by the standing committee to which it
was originally referred. fhe Rules Committee
can either place it on the second reading of the
calendar 'or debate before the entire body. or
take no action.

free con'erence committee may be appointed
with power to rewrite the amendment or even
write an entirely new bill. When the con'erees
reach agreement, they report to their respective
houses. Their report is either accepted or
rejected without any change~.

8. If the report is accepted by both houses. the
bill is signed by the President of the Senate and
the Speaker of the House in open sessions of
each body. and then is sent for the governor's
Signature.

,

Members in Attendance: Dianna Caley,
Gayle Clemens, Garth ~olasurdo, Ly~a
Cooley,
Debbie
Ddlenbeck,
Eric
Engstrom, David George, Matthew Green,
Larry Jefferson, Knoll Lowrey, ' Sara
McCallum, Kris Nordberg, Mary Lou
O ' Neil
Scott Richardson , Michelle
Shepha'rd, Mark Sullivan, Chris Wells,
Lyn Wicks

4:06 Topic: is this a proposal?
-proposals need to be turned into

SCC
4:12 Motion to accept fist page of S &
A guidelines as a proposal.
4:17 Motion to extend discussion.

passed.
Motion to table until 1!23!90 (next
mtg.)
passed -12 - 0 - 4
4:20 Hearing Board (Matthew Green)
The Hearing Board which takes care
of . grievances needs three (3)

3:20 Motion - to approve agenda
passed - 17 - 0 - 0
Minutes approval
-bd. trustees ann. added
approved -16 - 0 -1
3:26 SCC Report/Appoinunent (Knoll
Lowrey)
Intro Knoll Lowrey, Chris Wells,
Michelle Shephard as SCC
Coordinators.
Committee
Chair
Recommendations:
Dean of Student Development:
Heather Clark
Provost Search: . Larry Jefferson
Planning Council: Debbie
Dillenbeck
President's Advisory Board: (no
one yet recommended)
3:38 Move to approve SCC
Recommendations .
-add research specialist
passed - 15 - 0 -2
3:40 S & A Funding Guidelines (Mark
Sullivan)
-guidelines handed out
3:50 Discussion and QlA about
guidelines

7. If the conference committee cannot agree. a

"I'm just a bill.
Yes, I'm only a bill,
and I'm sitting here
on Capitol Hill.
Well, it's a long, long
journey to the capital city.
It's a long, long wait
while I'm sitting in committee.
But I know 111 be a law someday.
At least I hope and pray
that I .will.
But today I'm still
just a bill."
--Schoolhouse Rock

4:02 Motion to accept S & A Funding
guidelines
4:05 Motion to extend discussion.

passed

0'

second reading. it is subject to amendment. /I is
then returned to the Rules Committee where it
must receive a favorable vote before being
placed on the third reading calendar 'or IInal
passage. This referral to Rules is often bypassed
by vote of the Senate and the bill placed on final
passage immediately following its second reading. Depending upon the degree of controversy,
debate may last a few minutes to several hours
- or even several' days.

Student Union Meeting
Facilitator: Lyn Wicks
Minutes Taker: Michelle Shephard

;

students for the board.
4 :24 Student Art Gallery
(Garth
Colasurdo)
SAG's purpose: show student work,
involve students, community service,
provide a resource.
-the SAG needs criteria for its
accep/ance of work.
The SAG is in search for criteria.
4:27 Open Access Policy (Lyn Wicks)
Gail Martin's proposal not yet
received.
Memo by James Sonsalla -- should
the CAB be kept open all night?
4:31 Free Press (David George)
The Free Press needs a home base,
with phone. BOZART'S BALL
(February IS, 16)
-does S.U. wish to endorse this?
4:42 SUB Hiring (Michelle Shephard)
Applicants are desperately needed
for Student Union Board Members
and the Committee to hire them.
. 4:45 Sexual Harassment (Mary Lou
O'Neil)

tHE PROCRASTJWATOR

Womens' Safety Group meets at
12:00 Thursdays.
.
They are working on a rewrite of
the Sexual Harassment
Policy and ask for a S.U.
endorsement
4:50 StUdent Group Liaisons (Dianna
Caley)
Student groups need to send their
liaisons to the S.U. meetings. It's
part of their covenant
4:52 Process (Lyn Wicks)
-in response to Lyn Wicks' previous
memo.
Communication and solidarity need
to be fostered. S.U. members need
to talk 10 each other and avoid
"memo wars."
5:02 Motion to close meeting
passed.

The next Student
Union meeting will
be
an
informal
session at 3 pm on
Wednesday, Jan. 24
in CAB 108. ' Only
one proposal will be
considered:
guidelines for the
S&A Board to follow
when
making
funding decisions.

B.eforeyou
cbssea.
'Ul}rf
." r~
Utt-It.

For more infonnation
about humane alternatives
to animal dissection
in classrooms,
CALL TOLL-FREE
DISSECTION
INFORMATION HOnlNE
1-800-922-11l06 (3 764)
A student o,ulroach projed qf/he
Al1imal le[(a/ IJejellse Furul

THE MACIHTOSM

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TRAIT oS :

the p

9. Within five days. if the Legislature is still in
session. or twenty days alter its adjournment, the
governor may sign the bill or veto all or any
section of it. The Legislature can override the
veto by a two-thirds vote
both houses. If the
governor fails to act on the bill it becomes law
without a Signature.

IRA frs : ~G.IJ E.R. /ll\A~E.<; 'OE..C\ 510..;) 50
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LEGISLATIVE HOTLINE OPEN TO
TAKE YOUR CALLS
Do you need infonnation on proposed
laws before the Legislature? Would you
like to find out when and where public
hearings on legislative proposals are
taking place? Do you want to let your
legislator know how you feel about an
issue?

You can get these and other
questions answered by calling the
Legislature's toll-free hotline.
The
number is 1-800-562-6000. Your calls
will be taken between 8 am. and 8 p.m.
Monday through F riday and from 9 a.m .
to 1 p.m. Saturdays, while the Legislature
is in session.

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Isn't it time you got together?
So, before you fold another sock
get on d own to the TESC Bookstore.

-.
The Macintosh Sale.
Ends January 31

. BOOKSTORE HOURS

Man - Thu/'& 8 :30 - 6 :00
Friday 8 :30 - 5:00
Sawrday 10:00 - 2:00

Page 4 Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990
Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

Page 5

Professor Grover hunts
the hairy man
Another Washington by Chris Bader
Grover Krantz is Washington State
University's most notorious professor.
Krantz, in his mid fifties, has been a
researcher and professor of anthropology
at the eastern Washington State college
for over 20 years and is famous for his
interest in the Pacific Northwest's
resident "man-monster," Bigfoot.
He began investigating the topic out
of sheer curiosity, but, after talking to
many witnesses and seeing some very
convincing plaster casts of the creature's
footprints, Krantz has become convinced
of the creature's reality.

Professor Krantz cites as evidence
several sets of recent "Bigfoot casts"
which show "dermal ridges--the foot's
equivalent of fingerprints" as well as
sweat pores and patterns of foot wear.
Such details, according to Krantz, are
extremely difficult, if not impossible, to
fake.
Krantz has been in the news
countless times, with articles about his
Bigfoot exploits appearing in "The Seattle
Times," "Time," and "Newsweek".
Krantz's notoriety has hardly helped his
career, however, as he is widely regarded

as a crank by the mainstream scientific .
by
university
establishment
and
colleagues.
.
Fellow Bigfoot researchers do not
even like poor Grover; they call him a
crackpot who is in the Bigfoot search for
personal glory. Many Bigfoot fans were
outraged when they heard that Krantz
was planning to kill one of the creatures,
The
also known as "Sasquatch".
Associated Press quoted Krantz as saying,
"If at all possible we will kill it".
Since that statement, Krantz has
denied his murderous intentions and

Film remembers Kerouac

claims that he never intended to shoot a
Sasquatch. Instead he plans to fly a
helicopter equipped with infra-red
equipment over Washington's forests, in
the hopes of locating a decomposbg
Bigfoot corpse.
Regardless of whether Bigfoot exists,
Grover Krantz has proved himself to be .
a true scientist. in my opinion. He is not
afraid to investigate the unknown or to
face ridicule. Resides, he's always fun to
watch.
(Quotes are from The Seattle Times,
3/4/88 and Newsweek, 11/21/87)

by Leanne Roberts
Jack Kerouac, the godfather of the
Beat Generation, sparked the San
Francisco literary renaissance with his
novel "00 the Road." Although Kerouac .
died in 1968, the literary tradition he
began in the late 19508 still continues
today. To celebrate the 25th anniversary
of the pUblication of "00 the Road," the
documentary film "West Coast: Beat and
Beyond" was made. The film catalogs

In our pi uralistic society there is a
continuing need to understand the
thinking and outlook of others. We have
increasingly come to appreciate the value
of understanding our neighbor's viewpoint
especially with respect to racial and
ethnic minorities. There's also a parallel
need to appreciate the perceptions and
sensibility of our nation's various
churches.
An upcoming informative
lecture on Christian Science is being held
Monday, January 22 at 8:00 p.m. in
Lecture Hall 1 in response to this need.
The lecture is titled, "WHAT IT IS
AND WHAT IT ISN'T: An informative

lecture on Christian Science" and includes
a question and answer period.
The
lecturer, Bruce Fitzwater, C.S.B., is a
member of the Christian Science Board
of Lectureship. He is also an active
Christian Science practitioner, which
means he is available to members of the
church and others to assist in the
Christian healing that characterizes the
denomination. Mr. Fitzwater speaks from
the standpoint and background of having
taught university classes in humanities
and religion in both the United States and
Asia.
The lecture takes up the most often

asked questions about Chris~ Science.
Is it truly a Christian church? Or is it a
cult? What was the founder of Christian
Science, Mary Baker Eddy, like and what
do Christian Scientists think of her'?
Why is it important to Christian
Scientists to rely on Christian healing
alone and is it right for them to include
their children in this reliance?
The lecturer feels that carefully
considering these questions aids any
thoughtful individual in more deeply
comprehending mankind's understanding
of the nature of God and man, the nature
of Christianity and faith. The essence of

opinion

We
have
heard
the
words
"democracy" and "democratic" misused
so much we don't know what they mean
any more! The defmitions, found in any
dictionary, includes such phrases as: (for
democracy) government in the people, a
government in which the supreme power
is vested by the people and exercised by
them directly or indirectly through a
system of representation usually involving
a periodically held free election. and the
absence of hereditary or arbitrary class
distinctions or privileges. For democratic:
appealing to the broad masses of people
and favoring social equality.
The above defmitions refer to an
ideal, not the reality. The government,
also refers to democracy and democratic
only in terms of a capitalist economic
system. But in a recent edilOrial in The
Nation (12/4/89), it was written that
"socialism
is
inseparable
from
democracy."
Who is right? Does it

matter?
According to conservatives in this
country, socialism=eommunism=tyrnnny
and capitalism=democracy=freedom. But
what about the capitalist dictatorships in
the Philippines (to 1986) and Nicaragua
(I933-79) as well as others supported by
U.S. tax dollars? Because those countries
are "anti-communist," they are labeled
"democracies." This is hypocritical and
illogical.
Recent events in Eastern Europe is
another example of the word "democracy"
being misused. Media and government
are heralding the new "democracy" and
people gaining freedom. But the question
is, do the countries want 10 embrace U.S.
capitalism? Of course not! A woman,
who was interviewed in Czechoslovakia,
said she wanted 10 see an improved
SOCIALIST system. However, the media
ignored this and continued with the
"democracy=capitalism" line. The same
happened when Hungary renamed its

party from Communist to Socialist and
promised
reforms.
In
the
socialism=communism mode. this went
virtually unnoticed.
The U.S., itself, has never been a
democracy, it is a representative republic.
In Federalist Paper #10, James Madison
pointed out that a democracy was
unworkable in a country as large and
diverse as the U.S.
There are democratic ideals such as
"all people are created equal" and "all
people have equal opportunity." These are
ideals, reality is vastly different lf U.S.
citizens were equal, we wouldn't need
Affmnative Action and women would be
paid the same as men for the same jobs.
As the McCarthy em, the Reagan
era, and the New Right have shown,
anyone questioning these ideals is
branded a subversive or communist The
underlying statement is, "America, Love
It or Leave It!" People identifying
problems are dismissed as worry-warts or

persecuted as rebels trying 10 do away
with the system. In the past people were
thrown in jail for stating reality. This is
democracy? .
.
The
words
democracy
and
democratic have to be qualified as to
personal or national democracy and
clearly defined to the context in which
they are to be used. As long as we let
idealogues and politicians defme the
words for us, the meaning is lost in a
jumble of tloublespeak. We hope that
definition comes soon, because we are
tired of the words democracy and
democratic being used as empty catchalls.

a problem. Classes meet in areas other
than those assigned, titles of classes
change, some classes have sbJdy groups
that meet at locations off campus, a
variety of problems. It has taken me as
long as three hours 10 try and locate a
student!
I'm sure you will agree that in an
emergency situation, you would not want
to wait 3 hours to find out your child

Earth Day:
1990

u.s.

Democracy abused In
By Wynn Wright and Sylvia Darko

The
Security
office
offers
"Emergency Parental Notification" for
moms and dads who are TESC SbJdenrs.
Every week I receive emergency calls
from children, schools, hospitals, daycare
facilities, relatives, and baby sitters
looking for the parents of children who
are sick, injured, or who have a problem
and need to reach parents immediately.
Looking up class schedules is often times

religion, he states, is found not so much
in terms of the doctrinal statements
affmned, but in the spirituality it invokes.
The lecturer indicates that the most
fruitful way of investigating another faith
is to consider how the spirituality which
each individual recognizes, in degree,
within his or her own being, is developed
and fulfIlled.
Religion is always
fundamentally a question of life and
practice.
The members of Christian Science
Organization at TESC welcome all to
attend this free public lecture.



from the ERC
Earth
Day

is
a
worldwide
environmental movement that began in

j

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1970 and raised awareness that led to the
Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act. the
creation of the Environmental Protection
Agency, and other environmental laws.
April 22, 1990, will mark the 20th
ann'fversary of Earth Day. Evergreen's
Environmental Resource Center (ERC) is
planning activities for this event which
will address issues such as global
warming, deforestation, toxic wastes,
ovespopulation, ozone holes, loss of
species, and what to do about them. The
ERC would appreciate the participation of
any persons interested in getting involved.
Meetings are Mondays at 6:00 pm, in
CAB 306. For more information call the
Environmental Resource Center at 866-

6000, ext. 6784.

contribution to the state of $16 million.
The effort to achieve a complete and
accurate count of the state's residents is
of critical importance to Washington and
to each community.
The impact of the 1990 Census on
the state and the nation will be immense.
Census population figures will determine
the number of representatives to which
each state is entitled in the U.S. House
of Representatives, and Washington's
count will shape the SIiIe legislature into
the 21st Century.
In addition to the political impact,
billions of dollars in federal and slate
funds are redistributed 10 local and niba!
governments based on population, age,
income, and other census statistics, to
meet urgent community needs. Census
Day is April 1, 1990.

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

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Take a minute to drop by the office
and give me your class schedule. I think
it will benefit both of us. Thanks.

Cathy
X6140

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Need a job?
News Release
The U.S. Census Bureau is getting
ready for the Big Count in 1990 with the
opening of a district office in Thurston
County. There will be a t.otaI of eight
district offices in the state, located in
Seattle, Bellevue, Yakima, Spokane,
Olympia, Everett, and Silverdale.
The Olympia district census office is
located at 4315 6th Ave. S.E. in Lacey.
Approximately 100 persons will be
employed at the district office, which will
be the nerve center for census activities
in a five county area.
Hiring for
approximately 500 field census jobs
throughout the district will begin in
January.
Throughout the state, the Census
Bureau will recruit and hire enough
people 10 fIll wme 5,000 temporary
census positions. with an economic

was in the hospital or had been seriously
injured. Help me out There is a form
you can flll out each quarter that tells me
where I can fmd you should I receive an
emergency call that involves your child.
Believe me, it saves a lot of time-- time
that could be critical to your child.
I won't discriminate. If you have
lOmeone who is very ill in your family,
Jr perhaps a baby about to be born, let

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will also be reading.
. So pack your bags and be prepared
to take a nip on the road. The film and
reading will be presented on Wednesday,
January 24, at 8:00 p.m. and again at
\0:00 p.m. The showing is in Lecture
Hall 3 and admission is $2. For more
information, contact Leanne at the
Evergreen Political Information Center
(EPIC) in Lib. 3222 or call ext 6144.

orol)! agal;'lS1IN: Laws 04 me UnIverse, but also It'le NUf5e Gocis,

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drummer. Also featured in the ftlm are
Jack Micheline, Bob Kaufman, Gregory
Corso, Ken Kesey, a close friend and
biographer of Jack Kerouac, and Geral
Nicosia
Also presented with the film is a
special poetry reading in tribute to Jack
Kerouac. Tony Seldin, the Vagabond
Poet. will be reading from "Alone With
the Wind" and telling his life on the
road. A special guest friend of Tony's

Please help Security find you

Campus Christian Science organization
brings Fitzwater to lecture
News Release

Kerouac's life through rare photograpbs
and interviews with those who lmew him
best Appearing in "Beat and Beyond"
are: Allen Ginsberg, legendary radical
poet; Lawrence Ferlinghetti, owner of
the famed City Lights bookstore and
publishing house and himself a well
known and loved poet. playwright.
novelist. and artist; Jan Kerouac, Jack's
only child recounts from her mother's
memoirs; and Howard Hart, jazz

T.E.S.C.

LIBRARY LOBBY
TICKETS:
TESC Bookstore,
Positivelv 4th St.,
. Rainy Oay

SAG


IS

from SAG
"The absurd exercises the mind and
makes the memory work."
AlfredJarry
We, formerly known as the Student
Art Gallery, are reviving.
We are
looking for a better, fresher, kinder,
gentler, freer: GALLERY SPACE, TIUE
FOR THE GALLERY, CRITERIA,
COMMITTEE,
SUBMISSIONS
and
IDEAS. You must know this isn't easy,
but it's all worthwhile, really. Are you
one of us? It doesn't matter. Celebrate

Back!
art after your fashion. but celebrate with
us and the fish monger's wife. We have
ideas, such as painting a mural,
sponsoring a fIlm series, doing and
displaying spontaneous art. publishing an
art journal and supporting all humans in
their quest for a balance of time and
space. Our next meeting will be this
side of the soft moon at LIB. 3212.
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 24, 3:30 pm.
SAG, the Student Art Gallery. is
coordifUJted by Angela Leonard.

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Point Journal January 18, 1990

Page 7



Opinion,
L



"Political football" In gym
by Eppo
What is a "political football?" Our
new gymnasium is one example. This
new structure has been called a multipurpose facility. As far as I can tell, it is
destined to be a gym. Not too long ago
the college laid off 18 people in the
facilities department At the same time
they built the new gym.
This new
facility puts an additional work load on
facilities at a time when they have lost
18 workers. Facilities response to this has
been clear although not verbalized. I will
speak for them as it is difficult for
bureaucrats to speak clearly. Facilities
has basically taken the position that they
will clean the bathrooms, mop the floors
and dust the shelves. If you or I or
anyone else wants additional service we
will pay through the nose. During the
meeting
facilities
post-"Granding"
reported that their expense for providing
services to that event was $5,000.
At the same time our new CRC

Director, Ron Chea.am, reported that the.
gym was down for a whole week. In
other words, the time involved in setting
up and tearing down equipment for the
Granding meant the gym could not be
used for other activities. Ron said at a
minimum he was looking at three days.
One day to set up, one day for the event
and one day to clean up and erect the
volleyball nets, etc. Ron did not get any
extra money either when it came to
managing this new "multi-purpose"
facility. Facilities and the CRC Director
are using the facility as a political
football.
In other words, they have
agendas and they use the facility to push
their agendas along. Who is the loser
here? Students of course. You and me.
While facilities and the CRC battle
with the College the facility sits there
and you and I .have no access to it For
years Evergreen has needed a large hall
for large productions. Now we finally
have the space but no one can use it

You can play basketball in it You can
play walleyball in it Try to have dance
there and see what happens. Last year
S&A fees supported the CRC budgets to
the tune of over $156,000. Joe Olander
got to have his speech in the facility to
a huge crowd of abQut 150 people.
Larry Stenberg got a chance to lose
thousands of dollars in there d!Jrlng the
Granding which attracted about 500
people (very few of them students).
When students ask for use of the facility
we are told it's too expensive and it's a
"political football."
As an S&A Board member this year
I say let's playa little political football
with the CRC allocation for next year.
Let's punt the ball and see if w~ can
score a touchdown. Students should have
equal opportunity to use the facility for
dances, concerts and rallies. Our S&A
fees fund a lot of CRC operations and
we should have access to that facility. I
believe students could do an excellent job

producing evenl8 Ul Ulill l~WL'y. • ...""
believe that students could set-up, have
an event and clean-up all in one day.
Best of all we don't need facilities to
charge us $5,000. to move chairs and roll
out the carpets. A student crew with one
custodial supervisor could do the whole
thing and do it all in one day. All this
rhetoric and political posturing is
nonsense and it does nothing for students.
Right now the score is 14 - 0 and its
time for our play. Any quarterbacks out
there?
Eppo is an Evergreen ''fossil.'' He is
the host of "MouJhing Off," a weekly talk
radio show on KAOS-FM. He is currently
enrolled in Graduate study in Public
Administration and serves on the
Evergreen Alumni Board and the Service
and Activities Fee Allocation Committeel
S&A Board.

Why do we need seatbelt laws?
by Paula Lang
What is really behind the law
requiring the use of seatbelts in
automobiles?
Our state boasts "WASHINGTON
CARES - BUCKLE UP!" and "BUCKLE
UP - IT'S TIffi LAW."
But does
Washington really care?
According to my phone conversation
with the Washington State Patrol,
seatbelts are not required on busses. Is
this just a little hypocritical? I guess it
does not matter to them if the children
who ride on school busses are injured or
die in an accident Older school busses
are not equipped with seatbelts; these
students do not have the option of
wearing one. Does our state care about
their safety?
Furthermore, I have never seen a city
bus equipped with seatbelts. In fact, in

cities throughout the country, people can
be seen standing forward of the safety
line when no seats are available. Many
elderly and impoverished people ride
these busses. Is their safety an issue?
This law makes little sense.
In
other words, this state does not appear to
care about the safety of the children, the
elderly, or the poor who are often
I thought
excluded from this law.
segregation was banned long ago.
Safety is obviously not the issue here.
To stress this even further, I must
mention that Amtrak trains have no
seatbelts, and United Airlines passengers
under the age of two do not have to be
restrained. So why must all of us who
drive our private vehicles strap ourselves
into them? If this law is actually for the
protection of our citizens, then it should
protect them all. After all, those parents

who own a car are driving around
wearing seatbelts while their children who
ride school busses do not even have the
choice of whether or not to wear one.
Children should be a priority where this
law is concerned, but they are not Even
KOMO - TV and all ABC stations
nationwide have segments titled, "FOR
KIDS' SAKE." But does our society
really care? Few people I have spoken
to even question this law.
They
obediently buckle up.
Why
is the use of seatbelts mandatory? One
theory is that the states supporting this
law simply want the revenue collected
from those who do not conform to this
law. I asked ~ state patrol information
office in Thurston County what the fine
is for non-compliance in Washington
state. I was given a figure and told not

to quote it because its accuracy could not
be confumed. I found it rather ironic
that the office that issues violations does
not even know the amount of the fme.
But, according to the DMV, the fine is
$57.
Another theory as to why the
seatbelt law was passed is that it tests
our willingness to blindly accept the loss
of yet another freedom. ·A person who
does not wear a seatbelt is not
endangering anyone other than, perhaps,
him or herself. Many feel this decision
should have been left as a choice. How
can our government decide which of us
should be safer in the case of an
accident? Is my life more important than
yours or vice versa? This law needs to
be either revised or banned.
Paula Lang is a student at Evergeen.

Racism invades the 1990's
by Carol B. Hall
As a new decade begins, African
Americans are more visible in America's
media than ever before. In a oositive
light, high achievers are everywItere: the
two hottest 1V talk show hosts, Oprah
Winfrey and Arsenio Hall. The most
frequently seen celebrities in 1V
commercials, Bo Jackson and Michael
Jordan. The nation's top soldier, mayor
of the largest city, and governor of a
former Confederate slate are all African
Americans. And from Bryant Qumbel
down to local newscasters, television
journalists are increasingly black men and
women.
But you and I know that the
successful few do not put food on the
table of those at the economic bottom.
Many white Americans mistakenly see a
few visible black successes and conclude
that "black are getting all the good jobs."
This illusion combines with media
coverage of violent crime in the black
community, and especially the highly
publicized
black-on-white
violent
incidents, to create a racist paranoia
among some whites. In its most virulent
form, this paranoia translates into
membership in hate groups and acts of
violence against people of color and those
viewed as their sympathasizers.
The 1990's began with new hope for
world peace, but here in America, the
new decade has already been marred by
the resurgence of' violent racism that

reared its ugly head in the late 1980's.
Some recent events in the South and
New England are evidence that this
disturbing trend seems to be worsening.
Back in OCtober, the media flooded
American homes with news of an
especially horrendous crime against a
pregnant woman and her innocent unborn
baby, supposedly by a black man.
Charles Stuart, 29, called police on his
car phone to report that he and his wife
had been abducted, robbed, and shot by
a black male assailant on their way home
from a childbirth class at a Boston
hospital. His wife, Carol, 30, died of
gunshot wounds to the head after doctors
took her baby son by Caesarean section.
The son died 17 days later.
White outrage was fierce, and
Boston's black community was besieged
by a virtual police state for the next two
months, as all adult black males became
suspects in the eyes of police. But at
Christmastime a black man was arrested
as a suspect in the crime, and two weeks
later, Stuart's brother came to the police
with convincing evidence that made
Charles Stuart the prime suspect The
following day Stuart committed suicide
by jumping off a tridge near Boston
Harbor, and family members later said
that he confessed the murder to them the
night before.
Things are not always as they
appear. Yes, an innocent woman and
baby were brutally murdered by a very

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

sick man. No, not by a black stranger,
but by. her. own husband, who set up the
murder and blamed it on a black man, in
an attempt to make the scenario more
believable by playing upon white
paranoia What was originally presented
to the public as a vicious black-on-white
crime was in reality a horrifying .~ of
domestic violence. Murder is, after all,
the ultimate iii spouse and child abuse.
An alleged black-on-white crime that
received much publicity in the Deep
South
apparently
inspired
the
Christmastime parcel bomb murders of a
white federal judge and a black anomey.
A group calling itself "AmeriC4fiJ'"Far a
COnipetent Federalludicial System," took
credit for the murders of U.S. Circuit
Court of Appealludge Ro~ Vance of
Alabama, and Georgia anorney and
alderman Robert Robinson. A lelit7 to an
Atlanta television claimed the bombings
were in retaliation for the 1988 rape and
murder of a white Atlanta woman,
allegedly by two black men who have
been charged in the case.
The letter said two "prominent
members" of the NAACP will also be
murdered as revenge for the same Atlanta
crime, and that the group plans to kill
"one federal judge, one attorney and one
officer of the NAACP" for any future
rape of a white woman by a black in·
Alabama, Florida or Georgia. The group
said it is targeting the federal judicial
system because it has been too lenient on

black criminals and too supportive of
black civil rights. .
The F.B.I. says it is taking the
threats seriously, although it had not
previously heard of the hate group. The
big names in white hate groups, the Klu
Klux Klan, Skinheads, the Aryan Nations,
Posse Comitatus, the Identity Movement,
and the Covenant, Sword and the Arm of
the Lord, are reportedly growing in
numbers, although the KKK had suffered
some legal setbacks in the 1980's.
Experts say that even though these
groups may be brushed off as a bunch of
loonies by the general public, they have
the real potential to become very
dangerous.
Apparently, these groups are fueled
by the white public's two contradictory
images of African Americans: · the
violent, drug-motivated criminal, and the
successful professional who rode the crest
of affumative action to snatch jobs and
promotions away from "more qualified"
whites.
.
With the white. backlash reaction to
the paradox Of increasing black successes
and increasing black crime, and the
inevitable black reaction to ' the. white
backlash, it could easily be assumed that
America will become even more racially
polarized in the 1990's. For our
children's future, I hope not
Ms. Hol', an Olympia rtsident, writes
a weekly column abouJ African-American
issues for an Indiana magazlnt.



1n10n

Governance IS a failure

by Dan Snutrin
To this date, over $10,000 has been
spent on the organization of a governance
system at lESC. '
What have we got to show for it?
Very little. Ask people what the Student
Union (SU) has accomplished of any real
worth and nothing seems to come to
mind.
Participation? Governance headline
in November 9 issue of the CPJ: "A
record 35 students attend SU." Some
democracy. It should be obvious by
attendance that very few people care
about governance.
Yet the Student Union still believes

that it represents · the Evergreen
community.
This is evident in the
worthless "slatements" made concerning
world events. Slatementsthat create an
illusion that the Student Union is a
powerful organization. Statements like:
"The students of The Evergreen State
College support a negotiated end to the
war in EI Salvador. We demand a halt
to all United · States military and
economic aid for the current government
in EI Salvador.
"We further urge the faculty and
administration of lESC, local and state
governments of Washington, and the U.S.
government to support our resolution."

That the students support an end to
the conflict in EI Salvador is a safe
assumption, but what if they issued a
statement on abortion or guns on
campus?
Would that represent the
opinion of the students? The answer is
no.
Why do we need governance in the
first place? When a ·serious issue arises
on campus, the students tend to get
together, discuss it and react
The recent attacks on women on
campus are a good example. The TESC
community became aware of a problem.
Crimewatch and security reported a sharp
jump in the number of escorts performed

Self-defense classes were held on
campus.
Ovetall. people exercised
caution and common sense concerning the
problem. This represents much more
student unity and resolution than 35
people holding meetings in a room.
Low participation, no representation,
and no real accomplishments. Why are
we paying for this?
I propose a vote to end all votes.
Let's vote governance out of existence
before any more of our precious S&A
funds are wasted.
Dan Snuffin is a student at
Evergreen and a CPJ headline and
staf!writer.

Earthquake victim responds
A REQUEST FOR HELP
The Alumni Office sent a letter to
Evergreen graduates in the San Francisco
area following the recent earthquake. The
letter expressed our concern and an
invitation to contact us if we could be of
assistance. We received several letters
thanking us for our concern. Last week
we received one response that we felt
moved to share with the Evergreen
Community. We have tallced with Heide
Dring, who gave us permission to share
her letter. If you choose to be of support
you can contact Heide directly or forward
cards, donations or whatever to the
Alumni Office, Lecture Hall #10, Ext.
6190. Heide and her family will deeply
appreciate' any responses.
"I cannot express how moved I was
when I received your letter expressing
your deep concern about my family and

I as we cope with the aftermath of the
quake.
I have neither the time nor the
energy to be eloquent Yau aSked if you
could be of any assistance and that you
would certainly do anything to help.
Well, I need help!
The quake rendered Hwy 17 useless - the main commuting artery for 30,000
Santa Cruz residents who work in the
Bay Area. My husband was one of these
who was forced to commute to school
and work over a dangerous mountain
highway that served as temporary detour
while Hwy 17 was being rebuilt.
Five days ago my husband was on
the road, commuting from our home to
school, when he was in a head-on auto
accident. I say I have neither the time
nor the energy for eloquence as I have
spent the last five days in the intensive

\cOOPER POINT JOURNAL
SfAFF BOX

Editor: Kevin Boyer
Managing Editor: Tedd Kelleher
Business Manager: Edwatd Martin In
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
Ad Layout/Calendar: Tina Cook
Asst. Ad Layout: Heather Candelaria
Interim Production ,Manager: Scott A.
Richardson
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Typist: Catherine Darley
Arts and Entertainment: Andrew Hamlin
Headline Wriler: Dan "the toastercidal
maniac· Snuffin .
Poetry Editor: Katrina Barr
Cartoonists: assorted riff-raff
Staff Writers: Tina Cook, Scott A.
Richardson, TIm Gibson, Paula Lan~
Elisa r. Cohen, Andrew Hamlin. Chris
Bader, Carol B. Hall, EpJiO, Brian Railer,
Sylvia Darko, Dan SnWfln, Skippy the
Wonder Dog, Wynn Wright, Sylvia Darko.
Contributors: Alumni Office, ERC, Cathy?,
Leanne Roberts, LRC, financial Aid
Office, News Release, Michael Mcneilley,
Helen DeSmith, Antonio Domecci, Erich
Shuler, Curtis Padgett, Kim McKain,
Michelle Shepard.
Editorial PollcY:
The Cooper Point Journal (CPJ) editors
and staff may amend these policies.
Objective:
the cpJ editor and staff are
determined to make the cpJ a student
forum for communication which is both
entertaining and informative.
J)eadlinel:
,
Calendar-Friday~ noon
Articre.-Friday, noon
LeHer.-~onday, noon
Ads-~onday, 5 pm
Rules for Submlulonl:
Submissions are accepted. from CPJ

My
care unit a spinal injury dept
husband's vertebrae was fiactured. He
will be incapacilated in a body cast and
brace for nearly a year. When you wrote
to say you "will certainly do anything to
help" I was moved.
It was no
coincidence that I received your letter the
fIrst day I was able to come home to see
our two year old, gather nail, and head
back to the hospital -- Santa Clara
Medical Center.
We do need your help as we cope
with the far reaching consequences of the
earthquake. ' We need:
-Money to cover the thousands of
dollars of medical care and to provide
basics for our family who will have no
income for one year.
-Nursing help to provide 24 hour inhome care for my husband.
-Income in the form of home-based

work my husband and I could do during
his incapacitation (he can work with his
hands flat in bed).
-Entertainment in the (orm of books,
crafts, that he could use while in forced
bed-rest.
-Miscellaneous - can you think of
anything that would help?
-Prayers - your good thoughts will
help, too.
Agaiq, Thank you Larry and all for
Any
your generous offer of help.
amount of assistance will be gratefully
accepted. "
Dinah Heide Dring '88
1370 - 30th Avenue #118
Sanla Cruz, CA 95062

479-8185

I

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 diskette.
Any word processing file compatible with
WordPerfect 5.0 is acceptable. Disks
should include a double-spaced printout,
with the author's name, daytime phone
number and address. Disks will be
returned as soon as possible.
If you are unable to comply with the
submission requirements for any reason,
contact the editors for assistance.
Letters:
Letters will be accepted on aU subjects.
They must include the author's name,
phone number and address. Although the
address and phone number will not be
published, the CPJ will not publish letters
submitted without this information.
Letters will be edited ' for libel,
grammar, spelling and s~ace. Letters
should be 300 words or less. Every
attempt is made to publish as many
Eppo's fust "In Your Face" column
letters as possible; however, space
from
inaccuracies
and
limitations and timelines may influence suffers
publIcation.
.
misunderstandings. To detail where lie
Letters do not represent the opinions failed to do his homework would require
of the CPJ ataff or editors.
too much space. I am still trying to
Adverli.inJl .
unravel some of his Student Art Gallery
The cpJ II responsible for restitution
to our advertising customers for mistakes (SAG) rambling.
Eppo agrees with the statement,
in their advertfsements in their first
printing only. Any subsequent printing of "most art is likely to be objectionable to
this mistaIc.e are the aole responsibility of someone," yet he wishes to inform
anyone entering the hypothetical, "real art
the 'advertlsing customer.
Staff MeetinSI:
gallery with a door" whenever the art
Open meeting are . held weekly in the theiein is, "potentially objectionable." Cry
CPJ office. Fridays at noon.
wolf, Eppo!
Without settling his first issue, he

jdl

n

We're

Letters

Eppo skips facts
shifts his POSIUon by stating "the real
issues are space, money and priority."
Has he anything to offer for a solution to
these problems? "I welcome comments
and participation."
Is Eppo unaware that comments and
participation have been t.aking place since
Febuary 1989? He might benefit from
investigating (beyond his mailbox memos)
the issues surrounding the SlUdent Art
Gallery. His contradictory.and incomplete
comments have not helped to rejuvenate
the SAG and have misled CPJ readers.
Scott A, Rlcbardsoa

Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

Page 9

Hightower heads Symposium
News Release
Nationally
recognized
Texas
Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower
brings to Olympia his high-powered
Texas wit and populist message for The
Evergreen State College's Willi Unsoeld
Symposium at 7 p.m., February 14 in the
Daniel J. Evans Library ~bby.

Hightower ignites crowds with a form
of "prairie populism" that's made him a
favorite of downtrodden family farmers,
environmentalists, laborers and folks
across the country.
His powerful,
metaphor-twisting speaking style is
compared with Harry Truman and

scholar to Olympia each year as a gift to
the community.
This year's Unsoeld
Symposium with Hightower is entitled
"Saving Our Planet, Our Economy and
Ourselves."
Admission is free.
For
more information, call 866-6000, ext

Lyndon Johnson.
Although controversial in political
circles, he won a second term as
agriculture commissioner by a landslide,
and has set his sights on the Texas
governor's office or a U.S. Senate seat
Evergreen brings a distinguished

6402.

_Something Else_ comes to the tube
News Release
_Somethin' Else_ is a quick-paced
half-hour of television comedy, offered
biweekly on TCTV, channel 31. It is
the result of an ongoing three month
collaboration between twelve vt:teran
media students from The Evergreen
State College. Since September the 12
have polished their technical and
creative skills, preparing for the
scheduled
ten-week
run
of
p~ogramming.
They produced bit
PleceS and commercial parodies,
searched for guests, built, scrapped. and
rebuilt sets, and wrote material. On
January 11, the preparation was put to
the test, when the first _Somethin'
Else_ successfully went out to the

Thurston County audience.
The program offers comedic short
fllms, tongue-in-cheek studio sketches,
and guests, all broken up by enough
commercial parodies to make you ache
for the real thing. The hosts, Keith
Bearden and Ken White, guide the
audience through this three ring circus
with topical banter and commentary on
life in the nineties. On the January 11
program we see a celebration of the
joys of aerosol cheese, complete with
audience participation.
_Somethin' Else_ is produced by
students, but strives to avoid the stigma
of "college" humor and style. The
comedy targets a cross-section of
American culture and the weekly

learning experience for the students.
Together, they maintain the schedules
and deadlines with a minimum of
faculty involvement This autonomous
environment is made possible 'uy the
academic nature of Evergreen. The
students feel that with this structure
they will best combine learning with
the necessities of producing a quality
television program. You can be the
judge of that
Watch _Somethin'
Else'The next program broadcasts live on
Thursday, January 25 at 12:30 p.m . .
with re-broadcasts at 7:30 Thursday
and Saturday evenings.
TCTV,
Channel 31.

guests have wide appeal. The guest on
January 11 was Peter Bagge, a popular
cartoon artist from Kirkland. W A. He
is known for such underground
magazines as Neat Stuff and as editor
of Weirdo magazine.
A tentative
roster of coming guests includes Rap
artist J-I , record producer Buck
Ormsby, Seattle TV personality John
Kiester, and Seattle rockers Green
Pajamas.
The 12 people behind _Somethin'
Else fill all creative and technical
positions, with essential duties and .
taskes revolving through the group.
This group structure has contributed to
the intense collaborative atmosphere of
the show, and has been a unique

Things are happening at Financial Aid
rrom The Financial Aid Office
Financial Aid Form now at the Office of
It's tedious, belaboring, and at times Financial Aid. The forms are available
downright retching. And it can seem to Monday through Friday from 8 am. to 5
take an eternity.
p.m.
No, we're not talking about Barry
On Jan. 24, Financial Aid staff will
Manilow concerts. We're talking about be conducting the fust of four workshops
applying for and receiving fmancial aid. for students and parents on how to
If you are one of the many who complete the Financial Aid Form.
experiences the frustrations of the Anyone with question~ about financial aid
rmancial aid process, perhaps the Office programs or the application process is
of Financial Aid can help you get encouraged to attend. Workshops also
through it more easily this year.
will be held Jan. 30, Feb. 5, and Feb. 15.
Governor
Booth
Gardner
has The workshops will be held from 12 to
proclaimed Jan.~ 19 - 26 Washington 1 p.m in Library 2510.
Financial Aid Awareness Week. The
The Evergreen Office of Financial
Evergreen Financial Aid office is using Aid also will host a reception for all
this event as a kick-off to the 1990-91 members of the Evergreen Community.
application year.
The office will be The reception , will be held on Jan. 24
sponsoring a number of activities to from 3:30 to 5 p.m. in The Finantial Aid
promote early application for financial Office.
aid.
A number of activities are planned
Students may pick up the 1990-91 around the state to celebrate financial aid

The opening reception of
week.
Financial Aid Awareness Week will be
held in the Capitol Rotunda on Jan. 19
from 12 noon to 1 p.m. The reception is
sponsored by the Washington Student
Loan Guarranty Association and the
Washington Financial Aid Association.
All past and present financial aid
recipients are encouraged to attend this
reception, where they will be able to
meet state legislators and express their
support for state-funded financial aid
programs.
There will also be a statewide hotline
staffed by financial aid professionals from
throughout Washington. Toll free calls
will be answered from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
on Jan. 22 through 26 at 1-800-356-6924.
The
Financial
Aid
office
recommends that students carefully
complete and mail their Financial Aid
Forms with the appropriate processing fee

no later than Feb. 15, 1990. This ' will
help insure that students' processed forms
are received at Evergreen by the April
15, 1990 priority filing deadline.
B,e cause funding is limited. it is
critical ,that students apply early for
fmancial
aid.
Students
whose
applications are received afte~ April 15
cannot be guai'anteed full ' consideration
for all financial aid programs.
The Office of Financial Aid also
welcomes inquiries. It is open Monday
through Friday from 8 B.m. to 12;- noon
and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.

MOVING OVERSEAS
TO STUDY?
RETURNING HOME?
SENDING GIFTS TO
FRIENDS?

Learning Resource Center
offers help to students
The Learning Resoun:e Center is
available to any TESC
student who
wants individual help with math, writing
and other related skills. Student tutors are
here for those who want to work on all
types of writing, grammar, spelling,
reading, English conversation, and
essential study skills.
Math tutors can help you with basic
math up through college level calculus,
and more, Some help is also available
with physics, chemistry and computer
applications.
Would you like to:
-get feedback on writing
assignments;

-join a writing response group;
-work through your math
anxieties;
-figure out your calc
assignment;
-improve your reading
efficiency;
-finally figure out how to
spell;
-brush up on your algebra.
Come on in. You can work oneon-one with a tutor or in a group. The
LRC can be used on a walk-in basis at
any time during the quarter, for regular
weekly appointments, or for

Let Airport BrokerIlIVe you on the.
II'InIpoI1don COIL We oner air InCI

..... ,au._

0CNn ...... on 0VtII ... IhIpmIntI.
CIII .. tar 1·. .1

credit
The LRC is open Monday
through Friday, with some
evening hours. We're located in Library

,246-6580

SOON!og
MAJOR FUN! '
g

'

0
THE SPRING BREAK
0

g

SKI TRIP

PROPERTIES
We Welcome Students

,.(l~ ,,~~ARTMENTS AVAILABLE ELKS BUILDING
LAWTON APTS.
711 W. Pine
• Downtown SheHon
• Reasonable Rates

611 S. Capitol Way
• Newly renovated
• On busline
• In the. of downtown
357-8039

OTHER UNITS ALSO AVAILABLE

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Kas12arov Section
-Player1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Doug DeDestasio
William D. White
Stephen Christopher
Robert Norskog
Paul Schubert

Rating Round:
-1- -21714
W14 W6
1771
W13 Wll
1516
W4 W12
1794
L3 W9
1744
L6 W13

sections, "Kasparov· (Intermediate) and
"Seirawan" (Novice).
Doug DeStasio of Olympia took clear
rust in the Kasparov section by scoring
three wins. Tying for second by drawing
between themselves in the last round
were Stephen Christopher. Lacey, and
Bill White, Olympia .
In the SeiraW8IL section Buffy
Johnson, Geoduck Chess Team member,

Total:

Seirawan Section
-Player-

3.0
2.5
2.5
2.0
2.0

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

-3W7
D3
D2
Wll
W14

Craig Ruddell
Buffy Johnson
Scott Hungerford
Jason Davis
David Sumerlin

and Craig Ruddell of Lebam remained
undefeated to tie for first with three wins.
A four-way tie for top Unrated occurred
between Jason Davis, Oakville, David
Sumerlin and John Hawthorne, Olympia,
and Aaron Roberts, Elmo.
The next tournament in the series
For more
will be held Feb. 10.
information contact Evergreen Chess Club
president Curtis Padgett at 866-2483 ..

Rating Round:
-1-21362
W16 W9
1338
W8 W10
1277
W13 Wll
Unr.
W14 W5
Unr.
W6 lA

Total:

-3W3
W4
L1
L2

W9

3.0
3.0
2.0
2.0
2.0

S.A.D. attacks N.W. schools
by Laurel Irwin
It's here and it's serious.
SAD:
Seasonal Affective Disorder, a condition
prone to Northwestern colleges, has
struck early this year, probably brought
on by that onslaught of rain we just
underwent.
Suddenly, ' the best of
students fmd themselves unable to pull
themselves out of bed in the moming, no
matter what time they went to bed the
night before. Roommates are groggy,
grumpy, ready to snap at anyone who
smiles in their presence. Even the most
reasonable of people seem to , be
wallowing in gloom and doom lately . . '
SAD· is real, brQught on by the-short
daylight hours and WashingtOn's rainy
weather. It is a condition that can cause
an individual to become depressed and
unmotivated. College careers have ended
tragically because students suffering from
SAD feel out of control, and some have
dropped out of school in an effon to
refocus. Friendships can be destroyed
when individuals suffering from a SAD
attack blame their friends and neighbors
for invading space. Reading assignments
can seem like an overload, cooking
dinner
an
impossibility,
research
ludicrous.
Although there is no cure,there is
hope. As the days get longer, and the
sun starts to shine, SAD symptoms
slowly disperse. By early March, SAD
syndrome will ebb away into nothingness.
The catch is to hold yoUr life together
until then. During a phone discussion
about SAD with her daughter, a student
at Evergreen, a Maryland doctor

recommended keeping the houselights on
all the time, to help replace some of the
Several Evergreen
missing sunshine.
faculty have suggested throwing yourself
full-force into your studies so you don't
have time to consider how ridiculous
Simple
mere existence might seem.
realization that this isn't a joke, that it is
a "psychosomatic virus" complicating
your life might help. Don't be SAD, be
determined.

BUILDING

by Kim McKain
Rec. Sports ext. 6087
If you haven't heard, Evergreen has
a basketball team! They play in the
Olympia Pads and Rec. League, and
have weekly games at Jefferson Gym.
Coached by Steve Johnson, this team of
lanky Geoducks have already played 3
out of their 4 opponents. They just won
their first game on Monday, Dec. 3rd,
and are really starting to work together,

so things are looking exciting! The
twelve team members would love to have
you come and root them on.
So if you want to watch some fast,
exciting and LIVE Greener basketball,
come catch the hoop at Jefferson Gym
(right off bus route 41 on Conger St) on
these Monday night dates:
Jan. 8, 6:30, Jan. IS, 7:45, Jan. 22, 6:30.
Jan. 29, 6:30, Feb. 12, 6:30, Feb. 19,
6:30

~ECUR.Ir-rY

INPUT

Please read the following statement, mark your choice, and return
to the Housing Office, or your stUdent manager, as soon as
possible:
Building security is a concern and I would prefer all
outer entrance doors to be locked from 8:00 p.m. - 8:00
a. m.
I
bel ieve that Hous ing should hire a person to
insure doors remain secured during these hours.
[]

YES

[

]

NO

Additional Suggestions:

ACUPUNCTURE'
PETER G. WHITE. C.A.

THANK YOUI

Covered bV Evergreen/HQrtford InsUrance
'-'Uest1oDS - Consultatlons - Appointments
Radiance 113 E. Sth OlympIa 357-N7D

(}

0
o
(}

K A M C 0

'

~OOOOOOOOOOCOMING

~f-

by Curtis Padgett

Top five finishers at Geoduck
Thirty-one players showed up for an
Chessfest II, held Jan. 12 at evening of mental jousting in last Friday
night's (Jan. 12) Geoduck Chessfest II
TESC. Winners were awarded
held in the CAB room 108. Quite a nice
1 point, losers O. Draws eam
way to start off the series of tournaments
1/2 point. Intermediate level being
held this winter for beginning and
players are in the "Kasparov" intermediate chessplayers. In fact, so
section while novices are in
many people appeared the tournament
director had to split them up into two
the "Seirawan" section.

AIRPORT BROKERS CORPORATION

3407, X6420.

go

Chessfest II draws crowd

(MARCH 19-23)

TRANSPORTAnON
4 NIGHlS LODGING

EXCEPTIONAL MT.BACHELOR
4 DAYS OF LIFT nCKElS
RENTALS a LESSONS AVAILABLE

IDISCOUNTS FOR THE 1st. 15 PEOPLE \

WANT MORE INFO?
ATIEND MEETING
MON. FEB. 5.
5pm
CRC 306

CONTACT
RECREATIONAL SPORTS

'

666-6000 X 608

.

.

7

g

Campus Housing Residents Vote

GOING-

~

0

(}

.

0

S'l.

-=PLACES

0
0
0

THE

ow

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{:}

0

TRAVEL

STORE

BUDGET VACATIONER ,
ARMCHAIR TRAVELER'
PARLEZ-VOUS ANOTHER
LANGUAGE' HIKE' BIKE'
OB CUMB MOUNTAINS'!
COMESEEUSJ

This ballot was sent to housing residents this week. Students
and parents of students have expressed concern over security to the
Housing office.

515 S. WASHINGTON

DOWNTOWN. acrosa from Washington Center

357 - 6860

i.

~

1,'

V
>:."

BOOKS • MAPS • FOBEIGN LANGUAGE RESOURCES
TRAVEL GUIDES • OUTDOOR R.'ECREATION • HISTORY
COOKBOOKS • GIFTS • CALENDARS

~1'WJjy' ..

LOiJt'E

'-:.
-.;.

, ':~

; , Co

'
'

CONDOM MINTS FOR VALENTINE'S DAYI
DIE DEUClOVS CHOCOlATE Ct\NDlES THAT SAY,
''1 CARl!: ENOUGH TO BE CAREFUL." DIE ICE
BRE.uf:ER THAT BAS SWEPT THE NATION... A
BOX OF 12 CANDlES SHAPED AND WRAPPED LIKE
CONDOMs. 'THE TASTEFUL WAY TO MAKE YOVR
POINT." Special Valentine's Day cards

avallable-~scrilled In our

~d $7.00 check or
mail order catalogue. Send 25 cent SASE for your copy:
!D>ney order for ~
ZPG-Seattle, Dept lESe, 4426 Burke Av. North
~x. Include name and
Seattle, WA 98103
~dreas for shipping. (a non-profit service of Zero Population Growth-5eattle since 1975)

000000000000000000000000000000
Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

Page 11

Arts & Entertainment
Wrong is right on
WRONG

burning building, a man leaps to his
deathll stand above these mansions of the
dead/red tombs and above us looms/The

ALTERNATIVE TENTACLES REcoRDS

lower ... "

by Dan Snumn
NOMEANSNO

Wrong is probably the most powerful
album to one out of 1989. Yes, it's that

good.
Nomeansno is a three-piece Canadian
band that just keeps geuing better.
Nothing touches their unique style of
punk/jazz fusion laced with heavy bass
and a motivating, moving beat The
vocals are pure energy, wisdom and
insight.
The power trip begins with the
haunting tone of desperation in "It's
Catching Up," then moves right on into
the best track on the album, . "The
Tower." This tune plods on like a heavy
industrial machine that crushes everything
in its path:

"The sword of truth is just another
weapon/Let me live for one more second/I
see a woman, she's holding f/owers/A
bOUijuet of roses that is blood red/From a

"Tired of Waiting" is impatience
immortalized in song:
"I got tired of waiting because I
found out there's only a fme line
between biding one's time and waiting
one's time/Do you know what I mean?"
How many times have you felt like
that? "Stocktaking" also raises some
interesting questions:

"Are you getting what you want?/Are
you getting what you need?/rve heard it
said that love is truly sacred/But nowhere
is it written that it's guaranteed."
My feelings exactly! Next, a female
guest vocalist is brought in for a striking
change in harmony in "The End Of All
Things." Flip the disk over for "Big
Dick," a penetrating attack on those
macho studs who seem to think bener
with the other head.
"Rags and Bones" is warped poetry

ill mouon:

"Christ was married on the cross/My
father was married to my molher/And I
am married to a cigarette butt/Lying in
the gutter."
Twisted!
The Catchy Tune Award for this
album goes to "Oh No! Bruno!" Once
you've heard it, you'll never get it out of
your head. The pace slows a bit toward
the end with "All Lies," pounding your
head with its theme of lies and bettayal.
The last tune is a . bit of a surprise,
referred to on the record as "Only Sheep
Need A Leader." Actually, this song is
not by Nomeansno at all, but a band
called False Prophets. Originally titled
"Faith," this tune mocks religion ' with
defiant force and a ritualistic beat. I don't
know how it got on there; nonetheless,
it's a great song.
Other titles include the breakneck
pseudo-instrumental "Brainless Wonder,"
and that quick spurt of wailing, "Two
Lips, Two Lungs, and One Tongue."

All in all, Wrong rips, rocks, and
blenderizes your eardtums from end IQ
end. You want this album. Trust me.
And if you don't trust me, listen to
it for yourself. "Screams in the Darlrness"
plays Nomeansno and a lot of other rad
punk/thrash/metal tunes every Sunday
morning at 2:00 am on KAOS. Try it,
you'll like it!
And fmally, Nomeansno plays right
here in Olympia at Rignall Hall, January
26th. Admission is $6 at the door. I've
seen these guys live and they are even
more powerful on stage than on vinyl, so
don't miss it.

by Erich Shuler
DECEMBER

McMURTRY

5, 1989

MOORE THEATRE

Opening acts are often forgettable.
This was not the case with James
McMurtry, however. Armed with a guitar,
a unique voice, and sensational lyrics, he
needed only one song to quiet an
audience that was more than a little
excited to see the Indigos. McMurtry's
songs, from his debut album, Too Long
in the Wasteland (produced by John
Mellencamp), shone with more honesty
live than on the studio album with a
band.
McMurtry is a formidable songwriter
whose subjects are the intricate lives
from the small towns and the dust bowls-they may appear simple to an urban
dweller but they are wrought with the
universal problems of broken dreams and
unfulfIlled wishes.
Judging from the
audience applause, which grew louder
with each song, his message was heard
and appreciated. His strong performance
proved
again
that
overproduced/digitalized/stylized music is
no match for raw talent
When the Indigo Girls, Amy Ray and
Emily Saliers, walked onstage, they were
greeted with thunderous applause before
they even picked up their guitars.
Probably to get the MTV song out of the
way and to clear the way for a real
concert, the duo immediately played their
best known song, "Closer to Fine." While
the audience's attention was still at its
peak, they dashed off a newly written
song from Amy Ray about riding into
Los Angeles called, "Welcome Me."
Apparently songwriting has become easier
La Ray; it was the best song I've ever
heard from the two. The two played
songs from both their re-released album
Strange Fire, and their Epic debut, Indigo

waved off the stage hand who was ready
with a third guitar and finished the song
in a gritty a capella. The crowd screamed
approval.
Emily Saliers is the straight man 'Of
the duo. In contrast to Ray, who contorts
her body to the music and always wears
tom jeans, t-shirts, and open flannel
shirts, Saliers is polished. She has 8 great
voice, plays her guitar clean, and stands
Her songs are · even more
in place.
personal than Ray's, if that's possible.
She is more than able to hold her own
on stage.
Before starting the fITSt encore, the
two talked about their recent tour in
Europe and asked the audience which
Seattle tourist attractions were worth
seeing. The audience approved the Pike
Place Market, while the Space Needle
and the Seahawks were given a
resounding "No!" After that they played
"Secure Yourself," "Left Me a Fool,"
George Gershwin's "Summertime," and
for the second encore, "All Along The
Watchtower." The latter, played with
surprising intensity for a cover song, was
nothing short of Apocalypse Now!
The crowd left exhausted. They were
treated to one of the fmest shows of the
year by two talented women.
1 was able to meet the Indigos after
the show. Amy Ray offered to do an
interview over the phone when I told her
my plans to do it earlier had been
thwarted by their schedule. Look for that
interview with Amy Ray in next week's
CPJ.

Erich Shuler is an Evergreen student.
He does music reviews and interviews
because he gets to meet the people he
wants to meet and besides, it's all free.

Girls.
Amy Ray played every song in "Let
it all out, this may be our last show
ever," style. During "Tried to Be True,"
a song played with fellow Georgians
R.E.M., on the album, she broke a string
on the last note of the introduction. She
was handed another guitar and the two
started the song again. She proceeded to
break three more strings while she
played. Then in the middle of "Blood and
Fire," a song that Ray plays by herself,
her fourth string snapped. Unfazed, she

.f"

317 E 4th Ave
Dial 943-SHOW
or 352-1900 for
more info

by Andrew Hamlin

GAMEl.AN PACJIlICA
RBcrrAL HALL
JANUARY 13, 1989
The- Gamelan Pacifica, an ensemble
performing traditional and modem works,
came to the campus last Saturday night
as part of the Evergreen Expressions
EVBRORBP.N

concert series. After an introduction by
Evergreen Expressions director Ed
Trujillo, the musicians sat down behind
and around their black-and-brass gongs,
shiny xylophones, and large congas
webbed with thick rope. Candles burned
at the comers of the stage, the thick and
somehow cozy smell of incense drifted

I·,····· ·· ....... ~

Posies p~~~y,
A POCKET FULL OF POSIES
by Antonio Domecci
The Posies, Seattle's "Almost Very
Famous" pop band for the '90s, will
bring their show to Evergreen on
Saturday, January 20th at 8:00 p.m. in
lA300.
The Posies, who garnered immediate
local and national acclaim with their
1987 Popllama LP "Failure," have been

A mighty smashing ofknob

Dan SnujJin, an Evergreen student, is
headline writer and a frequent record
critic for the Cooper Point Journal. He is
also half of the Acid Zombies, a rock
band. Their cassette album 'Toastercide"
is one of many recordings wrongfully
excluded from Rolling Stone magazine's
'Top 100 Albums of the 1980's" list.

James McMurtry "unforgettable;"
but Indigo Girls steal the show
Th'DlOO GIRLS WITH JAMES

A



• .;:: ..:

_

hailed as the "Best band in America" by
Option magazine. The band is currently
being wined and dined by the major
record labels.
Another Seattle-based outfit, Stumpy
Joe, will begin the evening's festivities.
Tickets are $5.00 for students and $7.00
for non-srudents. Call 866-6000 X6220
for reservations. Tickets also available at
the door.

upwards over the audience; although
Christmas is long departed, the evening
reminded me of that holiday. The candles
flickering under the stage lights, and the
incense, made me pleasantly drowsy and
peaceful. The Pacifica's multilayered
hammering and plucking, more intricate
than any Christmas chimes, completed
that feeling.
They opened with a traditional
Javanese piece, Manyar Sewu. The
ensemble speeded and slowed together,
each player shifting to a new part with
the others; it was a clockwork system
with not just one chime, but hundreds, a
sound for every tick of . every gear. For
the fITSt of many times during the concert
I thought of falling rain, which has the
same distinct but unhurried rhythm. The
xylophonists tapped their notes out with
soft-headed hammers, reaching under the
instrument to mute their previous note as
they struck the new one. The gongs, six
or seven of them, hung from wooden
supports, open-ended on one side like
giant black berets, with large rounded
brass knobs in the center of each, struck
with cylindrical-headed mallets. The two
largest ones gave off tangible tones, close
to subsonic, that shuddered around the
stage. Part way through the concert a
female friend leaned over and whispered:
"Those gong heads--don't they remind
you a little too much of nipples?" I
laughed as softly as possible and
whispered back that I'd been afraid I was
the only one who'd thought of that.
After Manyar Sewu's last note the
lights dimmed slightly and everyone sat
still, waiting for the gong reverberations
to fade away. Then came the applause.
The· Pacifica's leader, Jarrad Powell of
Cornish College, stood up to introduce

Ticket Outlets:
Crackers Restraurant
Positively 4th Street
Rainy Day Records
Music 6000

IF ONLY THEY'D RIPPED
A'COIN INSTEAD.

If only we could go back in time. If only the young people in this car
haq flipped a coin or drew straws to pick someone who would promise not
to drink, a designated driver who could drive them home safely. If only...

BE ADESIGNATED DRIVER.THE OIIE FOR THE ROAD.
Washington Traffic Safety Commission and the Alliance for Safe and Sober Driving.

the next piece: Philemon and 8Ql.1Cis by
Lou Harrison, an American composer
who has worked with the legendary
modem composer John Cage, and who
Powell described as "The father of
American gamelan," the instigator of
Western composition for the Javanese
instruments. Guest violinist Beverly
Martin tuned her instrument to Tom
FaI1at's bonang (an array of cooking potlike urns topped with those brass striking
lrnobs). She played a sad melody, full of
octave swoops and striking rhythmic
figures. The gamelan players took care
not to drown her out with their sharp
attacks; they played softer here than
almost anywhere else in the program. It .
was a striking union of traditional and
modem, an idea explored further in some
of the pieces following.
After
ensemble
member
Jon
Keliehor's Gong KU/ldQli Shakti, which
used wooden f!l~tes as another excellent
addition to the gamelan timbre, the
program's first half concluded with Tom
Fallat's ~olo performance of his own
Bonang S:mata ("RoMla") #], in three
movements. With \\etounding fleetness he
rang out sixteenth-note runs on his nmed
urns, striking with his hands and several
kinds of mallets. Without backing from
the other instruments, his sound rang
stark in the theater. Once again I thought
of rain, ringing on a roof, the rhythms
shifting but peaceful, gently inevitable
throughout.
After intermission Powell, Keliehor,
Fallst, and Signy Jakobsson took the
stage to perform an untitled piece they'd
written for quartet They used specially
tuned Rototoms; these gave off 8 plucked
sound when struck lightly around the
edges, but a tympani timbre when hit
closer to center. With a sudden lurch,
two of the players switched to smaller,
bucket-shaped dtums, something like the
plastic-headed on~ you see in marching
bands. Powell explained afterward that
the piece was an exercise in "protogamelan" composition, with a strong
Western influence. I'd suspected this
when I saw the Western drums, used
only for that piece and then carried back
into the wings.
Ibu Pertiwi used three female
vocalists--Susan
Seneft,
Roxanne
Duniway, and Dana Wogksch--singing
"praise of mother earth," in Powell's
words. And the final selection, Rain (by
Jeff Morris, another ensemble member),
was a satisfying confirmation of the rainy
analogies for the music I'd been thinking
of all night It opened with a light
tapping on the conga, then the entire
ensemble jumped in with a strong,
pulsing rhythm. It featured the water
gong, which John Cage claims to have
invented: a gong is struck and then
lowered into a rub of water, bending the
tone. They only used it sparingly, in the
middle ' of the piece, but its warped
ringings form some of my most vivid
memories of the concert.
I weaved my way out of the hall
between the instruments and excited
people from the audience who spilled
onto the floor when the lights came up,
quizzing the musicians, playing with the
water gong, tapping the hanging gongs,
fmgering the brass knobs. Once again it
seemed like Christmas. If not very many
of us get the Chrisunas present of a
houseful of people interacting with
warmth, sharing their toys, sharing ideas,
no sign of tension or concealed hostility,
at least the concert proved that such
things are not entirely myth. Hats off to
the Gamelan Pacifica, Cornish College,
where the group is currently ensemble in
residence, and Evergreen's own Ed
Trujillo, for coordinating the project. May
the remaining Evergreen Expressions
events generate as much excitement as
this one.

Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990
Page 12 Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

""","",~",.••. ~'WIit~

Page 13

THURSDAY, JANUARY 18
The Respitory Services Department
of St Peter Hospital sponsors a free twohour workshop for parents of children
with asthma. 7 - 9 PM in room #200.
Please pre-register at 456-7587.
St. Peter Hospital's Parent Education
Departtnent will offer a "Community
Film Night" for all prospective parents.
The free program begins at 7 PM in the
Nursery waiting area on the hospital's
lower level. Call 456-7016 for more
information.
"The Art of Falconry" will be presented
at a meeting of the Black Hills Audubon
Society at the Capitol Museum Coach
House in Olympia. Begins at 7 PM. Call
786-8020 for more information.
FRIDAY, JANUARY 19
Girl Friday plays lESC at 9 PM in the
Recital Hall. Tickets are $7 general, $5
for students. Call 866-6000 X6544 for
information.
SATURDAY, JANUARY 20
Tbe Posies play at 8 PM in Lib. 4300.
Tickets $7 general, $5 students. Special
guest: Stumpy Joe.
Girl Friday plays lESC at 9 PM in the
Recital Hall. Tickets are $7 general, $5
for students. Call 866-6000 X6544 for
information.
Book Seminar: "Building Multicultural
Coalitions
for
Progressive
Social
Reform." The discussion will cover
The Dry Years:
Norman Clark's
Prohibition and Social Change in
Washington. 10 AM - noon, lESC.
Contact Lucia Harrison, 866-6000 X6486.
Playing With Fire, a film by Marussia
Bociurkiw, will play at the Contemporary
Arts Center, 117 Yale Avenue North,
Seattle at 7:30 and 10 PM. $51$3 for
members.
Call 682-6552 for more
information.

Learn basic audio techniques at the
Media Production Center in a workshop
starting at 11 AM in Library 1302.
Please call 866-6000 X6270 to say you'd
like to attend.

1. Letter of application explaining your
achievements and why you wish 10 be
considered for this scholarship. Include in
this letter your name, social security
number and a current address.

Etbnicity in Thurston County is the
subject at an Olympia F.O.R. monthly
gathering.
3:00 PM at St John's
Episcopal Church, 19th & CapilOl Way.
Call Bob at 491-7050 for more
information.
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 24 '
Comedian Malvi Finkel will 'perform in
the Pierce College Perfonnance Lounge at
noon.
Free, call 964-6598 for ' more
information.
History proressor Tom Rainey will give
a lecture on the Historical Roots of the
Middle East Conflict, 7:30 PM at lESC,
Lecture Hall 4.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
At the Counseling Center.
Sexual Abuse Survivors Group (for
women) will meet Thursdays 3:30 5 PM
Food & Body Image Group (for
women) will meet Thursdays 3:30 5 PM
Reaching \'our Potential Througb Goal
Setting will meet Wednesdays 12:30 2 PM

A

866 - 6000
X6054

4. Transcript materials not duplicated in
the portfolio.

4. Financial Aid Form.
meet
more

Informanon.
Stagm'g
On the Boards teaming with
Techniques present a live performance
collaboration by New York composer
Peter Gordon and his ensemble and video
artist Kit Fitzgerald. Jan. 18 - 21.
Call 325-7901 for more information.

r -'--'-- God

i

f~~t8:SJ~t8:SJt8:SJt8:SJ~t8:SJ~t8:SJ~~~"

~~~[ea~@

&00 ~ Tw~

~ CLASSifiED-RATES~

g
~

·30 words or 1ess-$3.00
·10 cents for each additional word
·pre-payment required
·Classlfled deadllne-·2 p.rn. Tuesday

ge TO PLACE AD:X6054

~

student new music concert. Original/live
work preferred See other criteria posted
in COM 347. Drop box and submission
forms in COM 301. Deadline is
Thursday, Jan. 25. Accepted submissions
posted Monday, Jan. 29.

~ PERSONAL

~

Every Monday night from 7:00 9D you
can find a game or cbess at the
Community Center. Why eat your own
cooking when you can munch some slow
food over a hot chess game?

il

tS:Sl~~~

Black Hills Community Hospital
provides a wide range or support
groups, 'including groups that meet to
discuss multiple sclerosis, panic disorders,
diabetes, heart ailments, overeating and
children who have emotional problems.
For class times and locations call
754-5857 Xll14.

I

..lobs In Alaska ·

ulI6H

g WANTE~tS:Sl~

r

~ POETRY, SHORT
.

. ~~~T;~ ~~~oo

~

OBJECTIVE: FUNDRAISER
COMMITMENT: MINIMAL
MONEY: RAISE $1400.00

~

Bulle.ts are Cheap
I n t.h~ re\lar... d trod. bon of ~h& G~u'" OlympicS.
E va.rqruo athlC[t~5 .pract\u.
t.helr $port 5 clnd oor't In
NATura.:s ALL - N-.T<H ~L

~

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g
i
i

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~P.T UNlfOP,"S

~

LOST/FOUND/FREE
THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP. NO
CHARGE FOR LOST/FOUND
IStOLEN/FREE CLASSIFIEDS.

~~~~a

STOLEN FROM IN FRONT OF COOPt "ROCKHOPPER" Mt. BIKE 205"
frame. 18 speed. serial *0503, DEOR XT components, Biopace Crank, was lime
green. Any infonnation helpful. Please
call 754-1772.

~

Crater Lake Lodge and Oregon Caves
Chateau will be recruiting ror summer
'A
FREE PUPPIES.
employment Jan. 30, 9 AM - 4 PM at
CHRIS SYNODIS, certified
RETRIEVER/SHEPARD &. RETRIEVER ~
Career Development, Ll406A. Jobs
acupuncturist, Ucensed masage
LAB. 2 mths. old. Assorted colors &.
sex. Have 1st shots &. no wonns. Call
available in food service, motels, or as Q therapist, masters In counseling.
352-0766.
tour guides: $4.2S/hr. Call Linda NOW - ~ Practice of acupuncture integrated with
jin shin, jyutsu acupressure, aanial-sacral Q
you must sign up to be interviewed.
teclmiques, md chinese patent herbs.
~ FOUND CAT male tabby. No coUar.
866-6000 X6193.
covered by student insufance. 1722 W. ~ About 10 Ibs. Call Alice 866-6000
Hanison call 7116-1195 for appt or
X6120.
Poetry prizes worth $44,000 wiD be
COIlJUltalion.
awarded to 608 poets by the American
Poetry Association in 1990. For the
current contest., poetS may send up 10 6
Q
poems, each no more than 20 lines, name
ATfENTION • GOVERNMENT
~
and address on each page, 10 American
SEIZED VEmCLES from $100.00.
Q
Poetry Association, Dept- CO-30, 2SO-A
Fords. Mercedes, CorveUCs, Chevys.
~
Potrero St, P.O. Box 1803, Santa Cruz,
Surplus Buyers Guide. 1-602-838~
Q
CA 95061. Poems must be postmarked ~.
-~.
91#
by March 31 to meet the deadline. Each
....
~
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poem will be considered for publication
in the American Poetry AfIlhology.

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PUN~15if.f~~Uftfo

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COSTS: ZERO INVESTMENT
CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS CLUBS
CALL OCMC at 1-800-932-0528/ '
1-800-950-8472 (ext. 10)

FICTION, &. CARTOONS for
publication in the CPl. Ple,ase bring
typed poems &. art work WIth name &.
~ 306A.

SERVICES

c:tnd •••

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.1-208-736-0775. Ext.

- - -----_._-

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ATIENTION: EARN MONEY
Q
READING BOOKS! $32,OO/year incume ~
potential. Details, 1-602-838-8885 EXT. Q
BK 14471. .

HIRING Men - Women • Summerl .
Year Round. CANNERIES, FISHING, '
LOGGING, TOURISM, CONSTRUCTION
up to $600 weekly, plus FREE room
and board. CALL NOWI caliretundable.

CreaJe.'!'

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Vehicle. 866-1453.
ATIENTION - GOVERNMENT
HOMES from $1.00 (U-repair).
Delinquent tax property. Repossessions.
~ CALL 1-602-838-8885 en. GH 14471.

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studded snow Ilres for Large Ford

·PHONE 866-a)OQ
f.f~~~~tS:Sl~~: ~
H'
.
·STOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A
ALERT! CARME manuracturer ~
!Storlc quilts and antique needlework ~SEND INFO TO: CPJ, TESe, CAB 305A
cruelty tree products (Sleepy Hollow,
will be on display at the Washington
OLYMPIA, WA 98505
~ JoJoba Farms, Bon Sante, Country
State Capital Museum through February
~~~~~~
Roads, MlU Creek, Loanda Soaps, &
25, 1990. This travelling exhibit, Women
~~~~~~
Mountain Herbery) HAS SOLD 4O'lI>
and Their Quilts: A Washington State
HELP WANTED
~ OF ITS srOCK TO:
Centennial Tribute, includes quilts dating ~~~~
INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH"
from 1833 to the present
f.f~~~~.
DEVELOPMENT CORP. which does
Detr~it at Crackers iooking for. eligIble Q extensive anlmal testing. loin the
Q
part tune door person. Any available
Boycottl Voice your opinion' CARME'
~
suitors contact Clayton 351-1900.
Q 84 Galli Drive, Novato. CA . 949~9.·
Adoptee talk group meets every Tuesday Q ATIENTION HIRING! Go
~ (415) 883-3367. I.R.D.C.: 900 Mam SL
from 5:30 - 7:00 PM at the Counseling ~ 1 b
- M
. edi~emment
MattawllIl, MI 49071, (616) 668-3336.
o s - your area. any unm ale
Center Lounge, SEM 2109. Call
openings without waiting list or test
866-6000 X6800.
SI7,840 -69.485. Call 1-602-838-8885
WIN A HAWAUAN VACATION
~
EXT
Rl447.
OR
BIG
SCREEN
T.V.
PLUS
\
~
Submissions sougbt for winter quarter

SUNDAY. JANUARY 21
Olympia WeDness Network Open
House 2 - 4 PM, Olympia Center, 222
N. · Columbia, Room 101.
For more
information call 352-9247.

"

Contact Chris Carson
regarding display and
classified advertising

3. Three letters of recommendation.

3. One letter of recommendation.

Q~ .

Want to
advertise with
the CPJ?

2. The student's portfolio.

story or novel segment.

o

Rainforest action group meets every
Tuesday, 7:30 PM second floor CAB Pit
by ERC. Everyone is welcomC?:

1. Letter of application including a brief
essay on applicant's health education
career goals.

2. A finished work of fiction -- a short

Men's Support Group will
Wednesdays 6:30 - 8:30 PM
~all 8.66-6000 X6800 for

Submit applications 10 the Dean of
Enrollment Services Offiee, Library 1221
NO LATER THAN March 1, 1990 by
5:00 pm. (no postmarks will be
accepted.)
,

Jess aDd Hannah Spielholz Scholarship
Available for the academic year 1990-91
to currently enrolled Evergreen students
with an expressed desire to work in the
field of health education. The successful
applicant must have at least a minimum
junior standing at the time of her/his
application, plus two terms of successful
course work at the Evergreen State
College. Preferenee will be given 10
candidates
who
have
successfully
completed academic work in health
education or a closely related field and
have
demonstrated
excellent
communication skills.

Edith K. Draham Scholarship
The Editt. K. Draharn Scholarship for
writers for the 1989-90 academic year
will be awarded in the arnount of $500.
This scholarship is available to both new
and continuing Evergreen students and is
based on financial need and demonstrated
ability in fiction writing.
Applicants should submit the following to
the Dean of Enrollment Serviees Office
no later than 5:00 pm on Wednesday,
January 31, 1990 (no postmarks will be
I accepted).

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Page 14 Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990
Cooper Point Journal January 18, 1990

Page 15
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