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Identifier
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cpj0488
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Title
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The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 10 (January 11, 1990)
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Date
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11 January 1990
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extracted text
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SATURDAY DECEMBER 16
The Washington Center continues
with "A Christmas Carol" by Ballet
Northwest with a perfonnance at 8 pm.
Call 753-8586 for more infonnation.
SUNDA Y DECEMBER 17
Pianists Lee & Lynn Meyer and
the
Olympia Symphony Orchestra
perfonn at 7 pm in The Washington
Center. Seating prices vary, call 7538586 for more infonnation.
MONDAY DECEMBER 18
Timberline High School holds its
Winter concert tonight at 7:30 pm in The
Washington Center. Tickets are $2.50
general, $5 family, call 753-8586 for
more information .
of entrance being Food Bank Donations.
Call 753-8586 for more infonnation.
through 23 at 8 pm. For Reservations,
call 967-849l.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
An Olympian Artist's Present,
selected drawings--watercolors--poetry, by
Dolores O. Fieber, starting on Saint
Nicholas' Day, December 6 through 10.
Viewing hours 10 am through 6 pm,
Sunday 12 noon through 5 pm.
Thompson Gallery 215 East 4th Ave.
Olympia, 943-4747. Proceeds are for
local childcare project
"A Christmas Carol" will be
performed twice each day, through
December 24, except on December 4. 11,
and 18; tickets range from $7 - $18 and
are on sale now at ACT's Box Office,
285-5110 and Ticketmaster, 628-0888.
ACT is located at the comer of 1st Ave.
. W. and W. Roy near the Seattle Center,
at the foot of Queen Anne Hill.
and address on each page, to: American
Poetry Association, Dept. CT-90, 250-A
Potrero St., POBox 1803, Sanla Cruz, CA
95061.
SligbUy West, Evergreen's Literary
Magazine, encourages you to send or
drop by your experiments with words
before December 13, 1989. They are
located in LIB 3210.
Tropical Rainforest Action group
meets every wednesday 7:30 pm in the
pit 2nd floor Cab building. Everyone
welcome.
The American Poetry Association is
holding a poetry contest with the deadline
set for December 31, entry is free and
everyone is welcome to enter. Poets may
enter the contest by sending up to six
poems, each no more than 20 lines, name
The Chinook Theatre presents
"Scrooge" the musical by Leslie Bricusse,
and "Christmas Cheer, A Seasonal
Celebration. Performances December 7
All human beings are Invited to
see creative student art December 8 at 3
pm in Gallery 4- 4th floor of the Library:
TUE SDAY DECEMBER 19
The Winter Solstice Concerts,
fea turing Windham Hill recording artists
Nightnoise, Liz Story, and Philip AAberg;
at the Moore Theater at 8 pm. Reserved
tickets $16.50 at all Ticket Masters
outlets or charge by phone: 628-0888.
Tickle Tune Typhoon, sponsored by
the Woodland Elementary PTA, will
perfonn at 7 pm in The Washington
Center, tickets are $4 general admission.
Call 753-8586 for more information.
Joe Olander, president of Evergreen, and Herb Gelman, Board of Trustees Chairperson,
speak at a press conference In December regarding Olander's resume.
WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 20
Tumwater High
School wiD
perform a holiday cOlx:ert at '?'30 pm in
The Washington Center, tickets are $3,
$1 for students and seniors. Call 7538586 for more infonnation.
, :
\
,
THURSDAY DECEMBER 21
The Olympia Chorale & Light
Opera will perfonn the Olympia Choral
Christmas, a benefit for the homeless, at
7 pm in The Washington Center. Tickets
are $7.50. Call 753-8586 for more
information.
FRIDAY DECEMBER 22
The Olympia Chorale & Light
Opera will perfonn the Olympia Choral
Christmas, a benefit for the homeless, at
7 pm in The Washington Center. Tickets
are $7.50. Call 753-8586 for more
infonnation.
SUNDAY DECEMBER 24
The Unity Churcb will perfonn a
Christmas service at The Washington
Center, starting at 10 am, with the cost
by Edward Martin ill
It's that time of the year again
and many of us at the CPJ have
decided to publish "The Official
Cooper Point Journal Guide To
Christmas Selections That You Have
Probably Already Heard Far Too Many
Times, But Must Be Subjected To
Every Year Because They Are The
Only Christmas Albums Your Parents
Own."
*
Chevron's Christmas Album
Selections
* True Value's Christmas Album
* Elvis ' Christnlas album
* any Christmas album by The
Carpenter's
* The Chipmunk' s Christrna.>
Album
* Firestone's Christmas
Enjoy these as you are carried
back along the tender lanes of memory
to a time when it didn't matter so
much that you would butt your head
into the wall until you passed out
Page 8
Faculty accuse Olander
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a
by Tina Cook
Evergreen President Joe Olander is
one of four finalists for the position of
chief executive officer of the Monlana
state university system.
"When I leave Evergreen I simply
don' t want to leave to go to a place
that's not a challenge," Olander said in
an interview last Thursday. "When I
came here the first thing I faced at
Evergreen was a severe financial crises ....
The challenge would be the same."
"The prospect of being able to be
involved in choosing half of the
leadership of the university system is an
incentive," he added.
Montana has one central governing
board
which
supervises
its
six
universlues, fi ve vocational-technical
schools and three community colleges.
The commissioner of higher education,
the position for which Olander is being
considered, heads the governing board.
~r~W~J~J~.WW'JJ~~:J~}f~~Uh'~~~'JJ~~
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The Board of Trustees Tater reviewed
the accusations made by Hitchens and
Carlson and unanimously supported
Olander.
A written statement made by the
trustees read in part: "Our review of the
material submitted by Hitchens and
Carlson, and our review of Dr. Olander's
background and credentials, show no
evidence that Dr. Olander has lied and no
evidence of fraudulent misrepresenlation
of his academic background.
These
allegations are totally unfounded and. in
our opinion, have been irresponsibly
made. We find a few technical mistakes
from the past, but no pattern of deception
or fraud."
The trustees also stated, "These are
not claims that Dr. Olander does not
have degrees he says he has received;
rather, their claims concern such things as
exactly wlfell he' recCivoo them and ill
whai area of study he received them."
In an interview Tuesday, Hitchens
said he had hoped the trustees would
institute a disinterested third party
investigation. "I did nol anticipate that
they would dismiss us as insignificant or
irresponsible .... These allegations are not
irresponsibly made."
On November 22, 1989, Hitchens and
Carlson had presented their concerns to
trustee Herb Gelman through lawyer
Jerome Buzzard, according to a statement
the professors distributed on campus
January 9.
"We waited thirteen days before a
response was given, and felt the matter
was to be swept aside," the professors
said in the slatement. "We took our
allegations to a public forum bciCause we
feared the Board of Trustees was going
to ignore them."
Hitchens
and
Carlson
have
threatened to go to court to have Olander
removed from his position.
"We have been in consultation with
legal counsel and in effect they've said
wait and see," Hitchens said Tuesday.
"Is the faculty going to move in any
direction, is it going to lake a position?
If so, what's that position?"
"The
response
so
far
has
been ... direct angry attacks from some
sources and ' my real close friends ...
supporting me and then there's this big
mass of unheard from folks in the
middle... "
When asked about student response,
Hitchens said, "They're quiet Amazingly
quiet
It's possible a lot of students
wonder what the big deal is."
Olander applies to Montana
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by Tina Cook
Two faculty members who publicly
accuSed Evergreen-President Joe Olander
of falsifying items on his resume and
demanded he be fired want a
disinterested third party to investigate the
matter.
Olander has denied intentionally
misrepresenting his academic record and
offered explanations for each point raised
by the professors.
According to a series of articles in
The Olympian, Dave Hitchens and Craig
Carlson made their allegations during a
Faculty Agenda Committee meeting on
December 6, insisting the Board of
Trustees fire Olander.
Olander responded to the allegations
by holding a press conference December
9. He denied intentionally falsifying his
resume and presented explanations for
each discrepancy.
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested
Washington has a separate board of
trustees for each of its four year colleges.
In response to recent allegations
questioning the integrity of his resume,
Olander said he changed Jtis resume
when he submitted it for the Monlana
position.
"I don ' l want the things that were
confusing to people to be a source of
controversy or hurt
A matter of a
bachelor of arts degree being general
studies or English - it' s a bachelor of arts
degree."
Olander said he is not sure how the
recent controversy will affect his chances
of being offered the position in Montana .
"All I can say is I ultimately have faith
in people and in people's good will. I
have a belief that people there will be
very professional and look at all the
candidates equally. I have no reason to
think otherwise at this point."
When asked if he had any advice for
Evergreen students conceming resumes,
Olander said he has thought about it a
great deal. "I have seen resumes from
students here which say they have
different specialties depending upon the
job for which they apply."
"I would just say that the students be
true to their own instincts about what
they have to offer and list the degrees
they earned with an emphasis listed. 1
think a resume is not only a description
of who you are but of how you want
I don't mean a
others to see you.
fraudulent public image ... but if you have
a number of areas of interest..and you
decide at graduation that you really want
to apply for a position that would be
enhaoced if you emphasized [on a
resume] that you had the capacity, the
qualifications, the interest, I think you
should do that"
Nonprofit Organization
U.S. Postage Paid
Olympia, WA 98505
Permit No. 65
New policy ignites reaction
Smoking banned on campus
Last weekend, the residents of P-107
and P- 108 were evaluated from their
donns because of flooding. By Tuesday
morning-- while students were still
removing their materials-- the water
reached about one-half inch depth and
covered the entire floor surface of both
donns.
.
According 10 HOll~ing. repairs are
expected to Lake a minimum of two to
four weeks. The cause of the leakage is
yet to be detennined .
Evergreen State had its accreditation
reafflnned in December by the Northwest
association of Schools and Colleges. The
summary and critique of the college will
be published in a future CPJ.
Governor Booth Gardner announced
the week of January 22 through 26 as
Washing !On Student Financial Aid Week.
A hotline will be set up with financial
aid professionals on the line to answer
questions. Toll-free calls will be accepted
from 10 am to 7 pm daily during the
week at 1-800-356-6924.
A series of weekend book seminars.
sponsored by Evergreen's Master of
Public Administration Program. continues
this winter with a January 20 seminar
about Nonnan Clark's The Dry Years:
Prohibition and Social Change in
Washington.
The series features one book seminar
from 10 am to 12 noon each month
through May. Seminars are followed by
a potluck. Local community members are
welcome to attend.
The book for the February 24
seminar is Derrick Bell's And We Are
Not Saved: The Elusive Quest for Racial
Justice.
"For more infonnation. contact Lucia
Harrison at 866-6000 X6486.
Security Blotter
~onday. January 1
2023: A car stereo, speakers, purse,
stamps. and tapes were stolen from a
Toyota in F lot.
Tuesday, January 2
0820: A Toyota pickup went into a
roadside ditch and a Honda Civic ran
into a barricade at the west end of
Evergreen Parkway.
Wednesday, January 3
0235: There was an aUlOmobile accident
near the main campus entrance. The
driver of the vehicle had been drinking.
1551: A Pioneer tape deck was reported
stolen during the winter break.
Thursday, January 4
1317: $50 of damage occurred to a
Mazda pickup parked in F lot due to a
hit and run accident.
1447: Gas was reportedly siphoned from
two cars in F lot. One of the cars also
had its cover slOlen.
1624: A man broke a tooth after tripping
on a concrete paving block which left
by Tim Gibson
As of January 1. 1990, all people in
all non-residential buildings at Evergreen
are breathing a little easier. and it has
some people smoking mad.
The new no-smoking policy, drawn
up by the Smoking DTF last year, sets
aside CAB 104 as the only indoor haven
for smokers, while banning smoking
everywhere else on campus. The
residential halls and mods maintain their
own procedures for smoking.
Ken Winkley, the Vice President of
Finance and Administration. said the
implementation of the plan cost the
school $6.000 for the installation of a
separate ventilation system in CAB 104.
and another $8.000 to $14,000 for the
new covered outdoor smoking areas
around campus.
The Smoking DTF file in Winkley's
office claims these costs will be
recovered
through
the
reduced
"maintenance and utility costs in the
buildings" as a result of the smoke-free
environment.
In addition, ,the plan calls for the
initiation of smoking cessation classes to
help those on campus who are interested
in quitting.
So far. the public reaction to the 00smoking policy, according the DTF
A staff member. Jean Eickholt,
was driving her station wagon through
B lot on Tuesday January 9th when a
tree branch crashed through her
windshield. She suffered minor injuries
to her hands, elbows. and knees.
unflush by workers.
2341: Medics responded to a possible
incident of ingested poisonous mushrooms
at the Housing Community Center.
Sunday, January 7
0029: The driver's side window of a
Subaru parked in B lot was broken.
0102: A VW in F lot had a window
broken.
0258: In F lot four cars had their tires
slashed. Another car had a siphon hose
left in it.
0745: Donns P107 and P108 were
flooded by heavy rains and will be
uninhabitable for several weeks.
1511: VW engine parts were stolen from
a car in F lot.
2030: The dumpster at the Geoduck
House had been pushed down the hill.
During the week there were 14 traffic
stops and tows made. 80 public services
(jump starts, lock/unlock doors. etc) were
perfonned during the week.
ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.
HARRISON Be DIVISION
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON 98502
THIS WEEK'S WEATHER
Rain
with
occasional
clearing.
Highs in the 50s, lows in
the 30s.
by Elisa R. Cohen
On Saturday December 9, in the sun-
COUNSELING & THERAPY
J. ~ONDA M.S., ~.A.
Abuse • Depression • Parenting
• Relationships • Mediation
866-1378
..
The
ou~ide
influence
',
'
.
warmed public room of the Olympian
Hotel, radical journalist Alexander
Cockburn shed some light on the fate of
the Brazilian rain forest and the
inadequacies of the American media.
The
standing-room-only
crowd
enjoyed an infonnation double feature, as
Cockburn - uplained - with examples and
humor the myriad of problems inherent in
both the deforestation of the min forest
and the infonnation bias of mainstream
mass media.
Dividing his presentation into two
parts, Cockburn began his lecture by
revealing the ways by which the
perpetuates its
mainstream
media
inadequacies and fallacies. Its first
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Page 2 Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990
0
0
~
..c
E
2a.
Student takes final drag on Cigarette before having to put
it out to enter CAB.
Chairperson Jim Johnson. has been
mixed. with most people supporting the
new policy.
"There wasn't much opposition in
the public hearings." Johnson said.
However, not everyone around
campus supports the smoking ban.
"We should ' be intolerant with
method. Cockburn said. is to simply
ignore the movements on the street.
"How many of you knew that the
PislOnn coal miners on strike took over
and
occupied
a
plant
during
Thanksgiving?" Cockburn asked the
audience. A handful of arms went up.
"Here was the most dramatic union action
since 1937 and it was ignored by the
New York Times and the Washington
Post, the two top opinion- fonning
newspapers in the nation. The miners
asked 'How can we get this covered? We
even sent in a video tape.'" Cockburn
replied to their question. "Next time do it
in Poland. then surely it will be covered."
Continuing in a mute manner about
the news surrounding the Pistonn Coal
strike, the press ignored the fact that after
Senator McGlaughlin's father, a judge.
fmed the miners $37 million. the senator
lost his race to a man who wrote in on
a ballot, three weeks before the election,
supporting the striking miners. It was an
unprecedented political victory according
to Cockburn, yet it went virtually
unreported.
Another method of infonnation
manipulation by the mainstream media is
accomplished by changing the emphasis
of the events by shifting the focus of the
questioning. asking who did it instead of
ACUPUNCTURE
PETER G. WHITE, C.A.
OlympiCOulnn"" has Ihe clothes and gear with
thai outside influence. \I\: have Cross Countl)'
ski packages 10 fil your chaJiengc. Jackets and
boots thai breath " winler spon clothi ng
engineered for comfon and function on the
tIlil or the slopes.
w;g~[L©©[KyAJ ~ ~ffi\©~
B
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Covered by Evergreen/Hartford Insurance
Quesl10ns - Consultations - Appointments
Radlane.113 E. 5th Olympia 357-9470
Being prepared is pan of thai enjoyment.
THE CLOSEST STORE TO CAMPUS!
n.,
intolerance," said faculty member Bob
Sluss. a notorious pipe-smoker who
protests vehemently against the new nosmoking policy. Sluss said in a memo to
the administration last year that he feels
a smoking ban would be a severe
infringement on individual rights.
As a part of his protest. Sluss
Cockburn enlightens, inforllls
BARBARA
~A
ffi
refuses to serve as a guest lecturer and
refuses to accept any student contracts.
"Living is dangerous to your health,"
Sluss continued. and he referred to those
on the DTF and in the administration
interested in banning smoking as "Health
Fascists."
.
The issue of creating a smoke-free
environment at Evergreen was born with
Governor Gardner's executive order 8806 which banned smoking in all state
facilities, buildings, and vehic les early
last year.
The executive order was a reaction
to the ever-growing proof that secondhand smoke is a cause of lung cancer,
heart-disease,
and
pregnancy
complications.
However. since Evergreen. along
with other colleges, is run by a board of
trustees, the order was non-binding. A
personal letter from the Governor to the
college requesting that the college comply
with the order anyway saw the birth of
the Smoking DTF last year.
It is too early in the new year to
gauge the success of the new no-smoking
policy. but while the air around campus
will cenainly begin to clear, the protests.
like Bob Sluss', will surely smolder.
Tim Gibson is student at Evergreen
and a CPJ staff writer.
~
-==:PLACES
THE
TRAVEL
STORE
BUDGET VACATIONER ?
ARMCHAIR TRAVELER?
PARLEZ-VOUS ANOTHER
LANGUAGE? HIKE? BIKE?
OR CUMB MOUNTAINS'!
COME SEE US/
BOOKS • MAPS • FOREIGN LANGUAGE RESOURCES
TRAVEL GUIDES. OUTDOOR RECREATION. HISTORY
COOKBOOKS • GIFl'S • CALENDARS
515 S. WASHINGTON
DOWNTOWN • across from Washington Center
357 - 6860
why. said Cockburn.
When the Salvadoran priests were
executed and mutilated by the Arena
government right-wing military death
squads. the mainstream media did not
investigate the lives and work of these
men in order to ascertain the motive for
their murder. These men worked for
negotiations with the FMLN. The
motivation the press would have
uncovered.
Cockburn
assured
the
audience. is that the U.S. backed Arena
government wishes to continue its
repressive agenda without the interference
of intellectual priests or pushy, rights
seeking rebels.
Considering the horror of the murder
and mutilation ' of the churchmen. the
press needed 10 mystify the incident in
order to draw the public's attention away
from the fact that the United States
government endorses and fmances these
atrocities. said Cockburn.
of
media
Another
example
manipulation occurred in Nicaragua when
18 military militia men, on their way 10
the polls, were blown up by U.S. backed
Contras.
The press debated who did this.
Cockburn revealed the ridiculousness of
this debate. Speaking with his tongue in
cheek for President Onega. "Yes, I better
blow up my militia men now. Who
knows? Pemaps in five years they will
becomes Contras. Yes I better kill them
now."
When Daniel Ortega called an end
to the cease fire. the press did not repon
that he was reacting to the fact that
during the cease fare over 700 people had
been killed by Contra attacks. Instead,
the mainstream media shook their
collective heads and said, "Just when we
were beginning to like Ortega, he goes
ahead and stans up the war again," said
Cockburn.
A third way the mainstream media
fails the American population is by taking
an issue and . blowing it up into such a
grand dilemma, the solutions become too
This method. Cockburn
unreachable.
explained was "thinking too big which
produced no thinking at all." If faced
with a globe superimposed with a
question marlc, the average reader will
shudder and then quickly turn the page
in order to contemplate smaller debates
which he might have some power to
change. The fate of the Brazilian rain
forest has been a subject of this type of
journalism.
Implying that the world's oxygen
supply is the reason the Brazilian forest
be
protected.
hoists
the
should
environmental
burden
of
western
excessive carbon dioxide production onto
the passive limbs of the giant forest.
Cockburn did not believe that oxygen
production was reason the current rate of
deforestation should be stopped.
Researching his newest book, The
Fate of the Forest: The Developers.
Destroyers. and Defenders of the Amazon.
Cockburn has found that basic human
rights are the main reason the forest
should be left intact. The attempts to
develop the land by huge corporations for
and
general
farming,
ranching,
development have all met with failure
due to the unsuitability of the forest and
the earth. Mining has caused the mercury
poisoning of over 400,000 Indians,
Cockburn said.
If .utilized as the giant rain forest it
is. the Brazilian Amazon could suppon
more individuals v.:~,... .~t; rubber tappers,
selective logpjilli;-and hunter--gatherers as
opposed to the current wasteful pillage of
the land in huge tracts for the profit of
speculative developers. Cockburn said.
Although indicting the mainstream
of population
misguidance.
media
Cockburn encouraged the audience to not
give up the pursuit of infonnation and
see Cockburn, page 4
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OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990
Page 3
Governance
Glenn Duncan explains ...
How to recycle on, campus
by Glenn Duncan
Evergreen's recycling program is
once again in operation. Although a
cursory look might suggest otherwise,
as the recycling coordinator I can
assure you that in actuality the wheels
of recycling have begun 10 turn.
Materials are being collected and
consolidated at sites around school.
Vendors from the Olympia area are
again picking up our recyclables from
these locations and hauling them away
for reprocessing.
Poor coordination with them up 10
this point has led to material build-ups
that has glutted some areas where pick
ups occur. Hopefully we are nearing
the end of this phase, and from now
on there will be barrels available for
all who want to participate in TESC's
recycling efforts.
'Don't give up on the
recycling efforts going on
here at TESC.·
Because the campus proper is
served by Evergreen staff, it has
managed to function to the degree that
the system is set up to do so. The
housing complex, on the other hand, is
faring far worse. There, it is each
recycler's responsibility to see that
materials are prepared correctly and
placed in the containers for pick up.
It hasn't been happening that way.
One reason is lack of container
space. Another is lack of knowledge on
of what is
the participants part
expected of them. Hopefully, now that
snafus with vendors are being resolved
we can get these messy details cleared
up and get on with what needs 10 be
done.
I apologize 10 any and all who
have been inconvenienced or offended
by the mess and will do my best 10 get
the system operating smoothly and
work toward improving those areas that
could use it. Until then, please, don't
give up on the recycling efforts going
on here at TESC. Everyone is
encouraged to participate. There are
from Cockburn, page 3
the power to change the world He
expressed a belief in the power of local
community papers, alternative presses, the
community meetings of activists and
observers who return from war-tom
nations with first-hand accounts of the
events occurring on the streets.
He also felt as if the truth could be
heard on community radio, national
public radio, and on local talk shows.
Real political change occurred in the
communities, with local elections and
actions spreading out into national
policies.
Cockburn ended his lecture with a
question and answer period which drew
questions about events occurring around
I ••
the globe.
Elisa Cohen is an Ev~reen student
and a CPJ staff writer.
collection sites for cans (aluminum),
glass, mixed paper and cardboard
located around the campus. Please take
advantage of them.
Please remember that the people
that are collecting your recyclables are
doing just that; they are not here 10
sort through your trash. To make it
easier for them 10 do their job please
follow these guidelines:
·Clean all cans and bottles before
depositing them in recycling container.
Sanitation dictates that this be the case.
If you're not going 10 take the
responsibility 10 clean them please take
the responsibility 10 garbage them
yourself and save others the time and
hassle of doing it for you.
•After cleanillg, be sure 10 separate
the glass by color. There are separate
barrels for clear, green and brown
colored glass. Please use them.
Separation by color is important
because the color purity required for
the remelt into new containers is quite
high.
Again, it requires that each of
us do our part Please note that many
wine bottles and some beer bottles
Tin (hi-metal) cans are not being
collected at this time by the people that
service the Evergreen campus. To those
folks who have been diligently
cleaning, flattening and bringing them
to the collection centers I have 10 say
that it's to no avail. Call me and I will
direct you to locations in the area that
will accept them. To those that have
been hauling in tin cans with the rest
of your trash this creates another
opportunity .
It involves learning the difference
between aluminum and tin, separating
the two, and turning one into dumpster
food and the other inlO another new
and exciting aluminum something.
Flattened cardboard is being
collected on the loading docks behind
Lab I, behind the Library. and below
the CAB, as well as in the new shed
being COilStruCted behind the· Comer.
The shed will remain locked but
flattened boxes can be left under the
eves out of the weather behind The
·Comer and will be transferred inlO the
shed. Cardboard beer containers will
get picked up wil,h , ~ empti.es in them
.as noted above: ,.The :Vendors that
collect our cardbOard wruit 'it flattened
for shipping puCposes and, again, I ask
for everyone's help with this. I'll add
here that the shed b$:hind The Comer
is still unfmished due to its own set of
snafus but I'm hopeful that some time
soon we will have the use of it.
At this point there is no collection
center for paper of any type anywhere
in the housing complex. I will try to
make inroads into the matter as the
year progresses; for now please take
advantage of the collection facilities
which do exist on the campus proper.
Please feel free to contact me with
If there are not empty
barrels available, please do
the following: Note location
and
time,
take
your
materials back home or be
willing to dumpster them,
and please let me know
about it. Getting back to
me is important because at
this point the lack of
containers is the main
bottleneck to an efficient
system. Your feedback
justifies my haranguing for
more equipment.
More ·equipment!
.'
have a greenish tint 10 them . It is
easily discerned by sighting across the
bouom of any container in question.
These tinted bottles are green bottles,
and as such go in the green bottle
barrel. Bottles in the six pack, twelve
pack or case can be deposited at the
pick up area as they are. Please put the
cases inside the shed in the Mod area, .
behind the building under the eves at
the Comer area and 10 the left of the
barrels at the A dorm recycling center.
If they get wet the cardboard blows out
of them and they become a problem 10
handle so please keep them under
cover.
Bottles and cans not in their cases
must be deposited in· the containers
provided. Again, the staff is not
responsible for doing it. Bottles and
cans left lying around will be
dumpstered, so if you're not going to
take the time to sort and deposit the
materials yourself at least expend the
energy 10 dumpster them instead of
leaving others to do it
comments, questions, criticism and/or
inspired ,ideas. My name is Glenn :
Duncan and T!IY extension number is l
- 6201'. :' My:-b.iJii:~ tJours are erratic but :
a message can be left at this number
which does, by the way, belongs to the
print shop staff
Earth Day 1990
Earth
Day
is
a
worldwide
environmental movement that began in
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
anniversary 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,
PiL'l'Ui
£f.t.cl.rk .::.RenE.
tlI:~u!t~e
~
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't.!it:
786-8282
' . '.
.
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BEST WISHES
FOR THE 90'S
SERVING
El:2=
•
WELL AS OUR EVER POPULAR
TERIYAKI'S, CURRY and
CHOW MEIN
Page 4 Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990
AIRPORT BROKERS CORPORATION
plan.
February 21 st
Apartments
New 1" 2
Bedrooms with
January 17th
• Fireplaces
• Spa & Sauna
• Washer/Dryer
• Racquetball Court
SU meeting
January 24th
Infonnal
January 31st
meeting
SU meeting
February 7th
Infonnal
February 28th
Infonnal
meeting
SU meeting
meeting
• Sun Beds
• Covered Parking
• ASK ABOUT OUR
MOVE·IN SPECIAL
1221
EVERGREEN
,A week of WednesdaYI. ,
786·8477
Professionally Managed by
Griflln Management Company
Informal meetmgl are for agenda·sewna. No propoaalJ lI(iI1 be d.lCUlsed or voced 00 dunna thoce weeki.
by Scott A. Richardson
At the 3 January meeting of the
Student Union (SU) a restructuring of
K A MC 0
PROPERTIES
We Welcome Students
. ·APARTMENTS A VA/LABLE
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ELKS BUILDING
LAWTON APTS.
711 W. Pine
• Downtown Shelton
• Reasonable Rates
611 S. Capitol Way
• Newly renovated
• On busline
• In the. of downtown
357-8039
purpose was established for the weeldy
sessions. Full meetings of the SU will
be held every other week beginning 17
On alternate weeks the
January.
meetings will be less formal.
The policy was spurred by a proposal'
brought by Mark Sullivan. In the
proposal Sullivan sought 10 "allow a
broader range of individuals to participate
more in real policy development."
After debate the 15-20 students
present voted unanimously to adopt the
new schedule.
Full meetings will operate as they
have since the inception of the SU at the
beginning of this academic year. The
alternate meetings are meant to be an
DOWNTOWN
(next to the Smithfield Cafe>
opportunity for various committees 10
discuss their respective issues.
It still will be possible for the SU
10 vote when emergencies arise, even at
informal meetings. To be determined are
the conditions under which a proposal
requiring "emergency action" exists.
It is hoped that freeing SU time for
discourse and focused committees will
help 10 prepare everyone for the full
meetings on following weeks.
The SU also unanimoulsy passed two
proposals brought by the Student Art
Gallery action committee. In the first,
SAG coordinator Angela Leonard has
been directed to establish criteria for
selecting art and locate an appropriate
space for displaying student work.
The other proposal was addressed 10
Vice President of Student Affairs Gail
Martin, Dean of Student Development
Ernest "SlOne" Thomas, and the
Academic Deans. It calls on them to
establish the Visual Environment Group
(VEG) in accordance with the Evergreen
Administrative Code and 10 form a
Disappearing Task Force 10 investigate
new operating guidlines for the VEG.
YOU DON'T HAVE TO GO TO THE
ENDS OF THE EARTH TO GET WHAT
YOU NEED!
WE'VE GOT: Fll..M, COMP1JI'ERS. VITAMINS, SHAMPOO, CALCUlATORS,
MAGAZINES. ALARM CLOCKS. BATIERIES, BACKPACKS. POSTERS, CANDY
BARS, MAPS. PICTURE FRAMES, PAINr BRUSHES. TAPES, BICYCLE CHAINS,
COMBlNA110N LOCKS, CARDS OF .Ai..L KINDS, FRISBEES, WIND-UP TOYS,
OTHER TOYS, GIFlWRAP, T-SHIRrS, SWEAT SHIRrS,.ARI' SUPPUES,
OFFICE SUPPUES, and a whole lot more. . .
BOOKSTORE HOURS
Friday 8:30 . 5:00
Salurday 10:00 - 2:00
EAT IN OR TAKE OUT
214 W. 4th Ave.
SU meeting
New schedule ·adopted
PARK DRIVE
(LIMITED AREAS)
l1AM-8PM
February 14th
• Satellite T.V.
Man - Thul'l 8:30 - 6:00
FREE DELNERY
Monday-Saturday
Let Alrpon Brokers save you on the
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ocean ral8l on O'ItI"I8IIlhlpmenll.
BetoN ,au IhIp CII .. far • 1'1181
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Student Communications Center in order
to ensure that adequate outreach is done.
Final decisions which will be made at the
next meeting concern office space for the
Free Press, sexual harassment, CAB open
access, and the revision of the strategic
Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday
ARIAN DISHES
MOVING OVERSEAS
TO STUDY?
RETURNING HOME?
SENDING GIFTS TO
FRIENDS?
I
SHERWOOD
* GLEN·
which called for the SU 10 sponsor a
referendum on El Salvador. The proposal
failed three times to gain consensus, but
passed a founh vote with one objection
and two abstentions.
Appointments to the President's
Advisory Board and to several search
committees were turned over 10 the
JUST TR'f THE TESC BOOKSTORE
......
COME SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER...
On January 10 the Student Union
(SU) held its second meeting of the
winter quaner. The meeting was intended
to have been an abbreviated work
session; however, due to a mix-up, a
had
been accepted · for
proposal
delibemtion. The SU voted to suspend the
rules in order to consider the proposal,
OTHER UNITS ALSO AVAILABLE
overpopUlation, ozone holes, loss of
species and what 10 do about them. The
ERC would apPfl?Ciate the participation of
any persons interested in getting involved.
Meetings are Mondays at 6:00 pm.
in CAB 306. For more information call
the Environment Resource {!eI1~t at 866-
6000, ext. 6784.
SU passes referendum
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SKI
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AND
OFF THE SLOPES
§
JOIN THE
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22.00 Head of household
14.00 Additional family
• Male I'OOIIIata
,FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
866-6000 X 6087
5 TESC RECREATION CENTER
7
Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990 Page 5
'Bird man' sightings
plague Chehalis
by Chris Bader
Chehalis that mid-sized industrial
town a few miles south of Olympia is
home to some of the stranger stories of
monsters I have heard about
In 1948 a Mrs. Bernice Zaikowski
approached army officials at McChord
Field and told them a bizarre story.
A few days earlier, on tuesday
January 6, 1948, ZBikowski had been at
her home in Chehalis. Around 3:00 p.m.
several small school children asked if
they could enter her back yard, so that
they could see the "bird man" better.
. ZBikowski went outside to see what
the children were talking about and it
was then that she heard a "sizzling" noise
and saw a weird creature hovering over
her barn.
The creature looked like a man, but
had long silver wings attached to its back
with a strap.
As the small crowd
watched the "bird man" performed aerial
acrobatics and toyed with controls
attached to its chest The creature did
not appear to be equipped with a
propeller or any other son of engine.
Although Mrs. Zaikowski and the
children watched the bird man fly into
the distance, no one else in Chehalis
reported the strange beast Officials at
McChord Field, naturally, did not have
much to say about the incident.
The bird man reappeared in April of
1948, and this time he brought a couple
of his buddies.
It was April 9 in Longview, a few
miles south of Chehalis, when Mrs. Viola
Johnson, a laundry worker and Mr. James
Pittman a janitor saw three men in "drab
flying suits" circling the city.
These creatures also had apparatus
strapped to their heads and wore strange
helmets. They kept moving their heads
as if looking . around and their feet
dangled as they flew.
Johnson and Pittman called to fellow
laundry workers, but they arrived too late
to witness the flying freaks.
So far as I know, flying men such as
these have not been reported since those
1948 sightings. Who the bird men were,
if they existed at all, and why they chose
to harass the poor people of southern
Washington is beyond me.
Chris Bader is a student at Evergreen
and writes a weeldy column on strange
events in Washington State.
Replace obsolete coins with quinter
by Sylvia Darko
More than one attempt has been
made 10 abolish the penny. The
supporting arguments are still sound.
They're inconvenient By themselves
pennies can't buy anything.
They're outdated, inflation and
automation have made pennies obsolete.
You're smart
enough to write
about AliceWalkers
use ofMrican
stor~elling
traditions.
.Andvou're
still smoking?
us. Oe~r1menl ~ Ht-~hh & Hunwn Srrvke-§
317 E 4TH Ave
Downtown Oly
Call 943-SHOW or
352-1900 for more
information.
Tickets available at:
Crackers Restrauant
Positively 4th Street
Rainy Day Records
Venny Music Co
Music 6000
They're annoying to bam: clerks, cashiers
and anyone who ever cleaned a sofa. The
penny should be scrapped, and the merits
of such a good idea can only be
enhanced by taking it further.
One) The penny, nickel and dime
should all be retired. They are all
inconvenient, obsolete and annoying.
Penny arcades, nickel phone calls and
dime stores no longer exist, why should
the coins?
Two) The quarter is still useful, in
fact it's important 10 American life. The
quarter is more than a coin, it's a
passpon to communication, refreshment,
entertainment, information and clean
clothes. With quarters you can even learn
your potential lifespan, biorhythm, stress
level and the state of your sex drive. The
quarter should be kept, but . only
temporarily.
Three) The Quinter. The quinter
would be the new and only U.S. coin. It
would be worth twenty cents, or a fUth
of a dollar, hence the name. Prices and
taxes could easily be adjusted to this
relatively tame alteration. Most businesses
would save money with only one coin to
handle.
Phone companies could afford to
lower the price of a call 10 one quinter.
To be realistic, I'm certain they would
raise it to quinters instead. In any event
the price would go up eventually, so why
not hasten the inevitable? (post Office
and soft drink companies, take note.)
The quinter would be a lxlon to
clerks and cashiers, making change would
be a snap. Ten quinters per two ~llars
would also be more consistent with the
metric system.
Now for some details. The quinter
should be the same size, shape and
weight as the quarter. It's what we're all
used to and no machines would have to
be altered. But whose face should be on
the quinter?
It's a hard decision. The feminist in
Copy of the memo sent out to the ''Evergreen community"
this week by the two faculty accusing President
Olander
of misrepresenting himself in his
Joe
resume. The memo shown is the first official statement
issued since . the Board of Trustees came out in support of
Olander.
(MIG B. OR.!DI MlJNID L. Hr1OB5
As th! cD.)Ects r:# I vaiety r:# stat.t.rJts nI sentiIBJts,
c1rifiCllli~ r:#
discussi~ iltnJt mmt ewmts .... OfffJ" ar Eterial in Iqles It will IIlil1 to clEill'", dil'l!ct.
full, nI qm f awlty talk IJl 10 Jiruary-talk rei ie\lBl of tre I"B:l5S i ty fer ci!scribil9 to.
M! aniWld
11 ...
me says, "Redress the Susan B. Anthony
dollar coin farce. It was clearly a
conspiracy
against . commemorating
American women anyway, time to settle
accounts. This seems reasonable, but not
Anthony again, too confusing. If the
powers-that-be could manage to celebrate
another American woman, I feel it should
be Abigail Adams.
She was never President, but she
came as close as a woman of her time
could She spent her life, happily, as the
woman behind the man. She raised
children, managed farms and investments
while her husband agitated for revolt, and
generally kept the home fares burning.
John Adams read her letters to Congress
and relied on her advice. Her son John
Quincy Adams consulted her about
everything.
Abigail Adams is the only woman
who married a future president and gave
birth to another. She was a remarkable
woman who lived as countless American
women still live. Commemorating her
would be con~tu1a!ingthell], and high
time, too. (Well, I said this was the
feminist in mel)
Another pan of me wants the quinter
to stand for what America is really all
about Politics has more than its fair
share of space on our money. It's time to
immortalize the other great pursuit of this
nation - big business.
The obvious choice for this is
Andrew Carnegie. He was a shining light
of Ihe monopolistic era, he was greedy,
he was corrupt and he was philanthropic.
The righlness of his image being shoved
into phones and vending machines is
undeniable.
If you want the quinter, please clip
this article and mail it to the Treasury
Department
Who
knows,
maybe
something will get started that won't end
until ''Exchange Your Change" day!
Sylvia Darko is a · student at
Evergreen and a contributor to the CPJ.
M! felt SIR
ar pasitilJllli!#Jl be helpfu) tD Ue College Cmulity ~ Ue ewe r:# Ue first full Fawlty
at ar pasitilJl.
st.Td by ar criginal alll'l]illia'lS as
(XJIJlarI!! ~ differmt I1!SlJIE5
fI!IXII'1ed in 1lI> Ol)fl!liafl 7 1B:mtJer. 1!H1. IE
usm by ~.
Olcni!r beb&n 1979 inl 1~ to see!<.
8!P10)II'B1t. Hi s ~ lEn' 1llisrept!SEJJtej IJl all t:IW'H' resures.
51
Hi s IImrs
lEn'
intEgral part of his d:xlJImt.s lIltil 1'lI4. nI his IWliCiltim to E~. At ttIirt.
hi~ ClJ'TerIt. EvergrtBl
re5lJI(>
as5e'ts he ~
SUII1il
~ lad>--ar PWylinl <inmm
says, in Ergl i g" "wi ttl Hig, It:ro"s.. (U- III", i~ ~ Vi ct.icrery (2n::I ed.) tmlslates "wi ttl Hi!ll tbus" as ~ am Ian, nI says
Iftatest Prai se. • A 9IBII. te:rnic.al
e
inl is still in use , 16Ilike thE Phi Beta
j(J?
K.:wa
I.ui: tmlslates "wi ttl
that has rut 'bi!m corre:ta1
SUII1il QJIl
~.
but
(IE
claim. FurtIEr' ,
WI'
IhlJImtmy EYIQn:e
irx:h.des itans with th> official sails c:lll:lllins 'CollE,}i' iHl tre lkli~ity of 19y1.rd.
Ii: beliewe it si!JliflC41l ttIiII. Ir. OliHi!r's 8 r:e:ertJer,
Ol.nEr"' s
IEsixnse to
lem press
~Iease: "PresicBTt
lrQli rie; IIIrut Hi s CnUmial s" ~ rut l1"f lJU>
Hi s statarmt tries tIl ecpl ilin Illy hi s re.;un:> d:I3 rut
credmtials.
WI'
a lleg.rtia'lS.
state th> tne IliIt:ure
0( hi S
-
... ~ tre OliIi IWB1 c:I th> E'If!IVtBI IOmJ of Trustees ttrtlql ar i!tt.mEy. .8ulE
2)
l. !lJzzard.
IJl
22 1tMMler. !!HI. ... believed ..
\Ere
folicwiFY;l Chai I11irl (£ lnm' ~
<Wl
Sunre-- il1'litntim: tD aJIIIUlicate an:aT6 Cltwt th> I~ip of th> Ccllege Itl !:· "l:J
to him di redly if
IE IIBl!
1I'OJItcrt.able dl scussi FY;l II'IIt\.e!"s di I'l!ct Iy wi tIl IX. Ol.ne-
hunself .... felt th> IBtte" ~ seiws Em.gl thrt afl ~ ttrtlql ar
iIttIJTl»
ladd IRIerline thrt sei~. Ii: lEn' told to eq:e::t a rt'StXflS€ wi t1Hn a IEB; . Ii'
ttli rt:eefl days '1I!fQ't> a n!5PTI5e was gi wm. ern f e lt thE mtte" was to be ~
~itEd
asicE . ... tid ar al ieg;rtia'lS to a Jl,blic ferun ba:aJse :L fearW tre !bard of Trustees
was !J)iFY;l to 19D"e 11Bn. Ii: bel iewe tre Jl,blic has thE r ig,t to krDo thE C1'"E!dIn i al~ of
state arplo,oees, enllE believed th> intqity
0(
ar College enl its fan:liFY;l !TirClples
was at stace.
3)
IE CIJJld see
II)
clear rn::o.J"SE wittlin tre Coll~. In 1!l!7. 11-., IOmJ of 11'\5tees ~Ied
all rules a:n::emiFY;l EYalUiltlm t::ft iltninist:ratcr'l. . crd tre lIlt.ema! lHliatu:f1/a::nflict
resol ut.im I7tO!SS CD'TE'ct.e:l to th> <i?f'ln:t "E~ Co.n: i !. .t1i en. i tse 1f ha:! IJeg;
~ I iminataJ fl'Ul1 Col leg: rule ~ IX. OJ.nEr" 1n 1<lf, . As rn 1 rusta> irti m ha:! ~l a::aj th>
~led segJmt.s . inl ex.iS'.irJ;! Wastllrgtro Mru mstrat l~ C.ai: ~I"", an' s J!& mJt
1iI'lttEn. OliIl r1M' (£lJTi'J1' ~ 5lJrrrEr invitntlo, lIeS
e.>ff, 1II7>:;
su:n
WX)'1irr •. It· acted to t..JI<i' hilT
WELCOME TO THE 90's
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What shop has tea anytime
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I 357-7462
Cooper Point Journal January II, 1990 Page 7
Opinion
Opinion
Tuna fishing kills dolphins
by Christopher Muir
Legends of dolphins have their
origins as far back as the Mycenean age.
Homer's Odyssey tells of a time when
Telemaclius, son of Ulysses, was saved
from drowning by a dolphin.
Extensi ve research demonstrates their
playfulness and heroic actions in
defending humans from sharks and
saving
them from drowning. This
reaction is believed to be related to their
social protection against sharks and the
mother's instinct to bring her newborn up
to the surface to breathe.
To date, we have recorded roughly
thirty species in the Family Delphinidae.
They grow to two meters and can weigh
165 kg. They have large brains and there
is considerable folding of the cerebral
cortex-- a key factor in detennining high
intelligence. Marine biologists speculate
that this is due, in part, to needed
acoustical storage. Dolphins use sound
waves to detect food and identify and
communicate with others. They receive
this infonnation in the cavities of their
jaw bones as well as their ear drums.
An article in the Atlantic Mo. reports that
dolphins have been known to survive
while blind but a deaf dolphin will soon
be dead.
Of these thirty-odd species, three
have been of particular interest to
environmental groups:
the spotted
dolphin, spinner dolphin, and common
dolphin, and in this order, they face
possible extinction.
All three share a symbiosis with
yellow fin tuna as well. It's possible this
fish swims with the mammal for
protection and the latter, in ~, may use
New column
What
the rapid movements of the flsh as a
warning against predators.
Tuna boats have long used leaping
dolphins to spot their catch. This used to
. affect the dolphins not in the least Then
in the mid-sixties, fishennen began
adopting purse-sein (pronounced "sane"),
techniques. This involves herding several
groups of dolphins together using an
effective combination of speed boats,
helicopters, and underwater explosives,
then encircling them with mile long
purse-sein nets.
The buoyed nets are then pulled into
a tuna boat using a power block (this is,
in effect, an electronic winch). To avoid
pulling the dolphins aboard, U.S. tuna
boats are required to practice "backdown": To lower a portion of the net
enough to allow the trapped dolphins to
escape. This JX1ltice is often ignored.
Furthennore, the effects of the
explosives and the sound disruptions by
the boats and helicopters as well as
entangling in the nets often prevent
escape. Sam LaBudd, a biologist, went
aboard one of these boats and filmed the
results: Hundreds of dolphins were
crushed as they are pulled through the
power block onto the deck of the ship.
It would seem that purse-sein nets are
anything but SIlM. On the fllSt occasion
he witnessed the massacre of two to three
hundred dolphins for "ten to twelve
yellowfin tuna." This is an extreme
example but the dry facts are equally
frightening. Since 1959, tuna flshing has
caused the deaths of an estimated 6.5
million dolphins. This figure defies
comprehension. Greenpeace offers another
statistic: nearly 100,000 dolphins a year.
Even this is too large to fully appreciate.
One thousand, nine-hundred dolphins
are being killed every week for the tuna
we consume. That's 274 dolphins a day.
These 6.5 million lifeless dolphins
represent
the
"official"
estimates.
According to the Atlantic Mo.,
dolphins showing any signs of life are
tossed back into the sea to fare for
themselves. Separated from each other,
these dolphins die from sharks or
starvation.
This alanning situation has . been
met
with
opposition.
In
1972,
environmental lobbyists fought and won
an expensive battle against the tuna
industry to enact the Marine Mammal
Protection Act (MMPA). It demanded: "It
shall be the immediate goal that the
incidental kill or serious injury of marine
mammals pennitted in the course of
commercial fishing operations be reduced
to insignificant levels approaching zero."
In 1976 the U.S. tuna industry
given quotas and forced to create new
technologies to save dolphins. The
technologies were never implemented,
however, and in 1984, the bill was again
amended and the original goal of zero
mortality sank into obscurity. Recent
actions have restored 100% coverage and
prohibited U.S. boats from "setting" on
dolphins at night, when there is a higher
mortality rate.
In response to these pressures, many
boats have refJagged and continue their
slaughter. Eleven years ago, there were
98 U.S. "class six" tuna seiners. Thirty
remained in 1989. Tuna companies are
allowed to buy from whomever they
wish, and so the problem remains.
was
Only 5% of the world's tuna is
caught in ways that affect dolphins, yet
their peril is obvious. As participants in .
the economic community which is '
responsible for this genocide, we are
. obligated to take action: refrain from
purchasing yellowfin tuna, urge local
grocers to verify "dolphin-safe" products
ahd write to Brock Adams (513 Hart,
Senate Office Building W.D.C., 20510) ,
urging him to support the bill HR. 2926,
which will require all tuna products to
indicate whether or not they were caught
using dolphins.
There is still time to swim with the
dolphins.
Chris Muir is a student at Evergreen
and co-coordinator of the Enviromental
Resource Center.
The. Future of
Trut h in Adv~rtL5ma,nt 7
I
:
from a com pony
who (arllS enouqh
not to IL~
0
]~....,-~ I
In Your Face
•
IS
As a member of the S&A Board I
have the responsibility to read piles of
intercampus memos every week. These
memos
serve
as
an
important
communication tool since it is not
possible for me to attend every meeting.
I shall comment on one memo that I saw
this week.
STUDENT ART GALLERY
Some history will help us frame this
issue. Last year some student work was
on display outside the campus cafeteria.
Apparently, a group of community
citizens went to the cafeteria during a
break from their week-end conference and
saw the student presentation on display
and were very offended by the
pornographic nature of the display. These
people complained and the display was
removed. This incident led to the
formulation of guidelines for the Student
Art Gallery. These guidelines were
formulated with the intention of removing
offensive art displays.
Jose Gomez, in his December 5
memo to Stone Thoma", raises several
interesting issues about the proposed
process and criteria. Item #3 of the
proposed criteria states the "Submissions
which could be considered objectionable
to any member of the community must
be reviewed by committee."
'Most art IS likely to be
objectionable to someone'
(Jose Gomez)
Jose correctly points out that "most
art is likel y to be objectionable to
someone." Indeed, many would argue that
the purpose of art is to push people's
the future of SAG?
buttons, challenge perceptions and make
people uncomfortable. Author John
Dewey put it this way, "As long as art is
the beauty parlor of civilization neither
art nor civilization is secure." The
creation of an institutionalized process to
judge the appropriateness of displaying
certain kinds of art on campus sets a
dangerous precedent not far from the
ultra-rightwing position of Senator Jesse
Helms.
Although Jose brings up many
important issues in his memo, all of
which I agree with, he fails to raise what
I believe is the central issue. I believe
these misguided process and criteria
guidelines are a Band-Aid approach to
the problem. You might also conclude
that they are a smoke-screen covering up
the real problems. To create some "holier
than thou" committee to screen student
art work is absurd. Whose idea was it to
create this comm ittee in the fllSt place.
Was this process initiated by students? I
doubt it
'To create some -holier than
thou- committee to screen
student art work is absurd'
The concern of some students and
about the display of offensive art
in public places is a valid issue. Indeed,
why should I have to look at
uncomfortable or erotic art when I just
wanted to have a salad or some coffee?
I do not think that it is fair or
appropriate to subject people to this
without a choice. The real issue is not
what is appropriate to display but where
is it appropriate to display. To call the
display cases outside of the cafeteria a
ri~izens
Page 8 Cooper Point Journal January 11. 1990
Student Art Gallery is abuse of the
English language. Perhaps the real issue
is that there is no Student Art Gallery.
Only some display cases outside the
cafeteria.
If students had a real art
gallery with a door then people would
have a choice whether to enter or not.
The
importance
of
evaluating
appropriateness would disappear since
people would have a choice. If the art
was potentially "objectionable" then a
sign would infonn people before they
entered This is how radio and television
have handled this issue, why not
'To call the display cases
outside the cafeteria a Student
Art Gallery is abuse of the
English language'
Evergreen? I'll answer that question. The
reason we can't do this is that there is no
space for a Student Art Gallery. The
College is probably unwilling to give up
Gallery Four for students and space is at
a premium on campus. Can you imagine
the uproar from a suggestion that the
Faculty/Staff lounge in the CAB become
a Student Art Gallery?1 What 8 can of
wonns that would be. As far as I can see
the issue is not criteria or process. As I
said earlier this is the Band-Aid. The real
issues are space, money and priority.
These are the issues we must discuss to
resolve this problem. As an S&A Board
member I welcome comments and
participation on this and other important
issues facing the college this decade. I
can be reached through the S&A office
or through KAOS Radio. The dangers of
reviewing art as has been proposed have
many unseen hazards. dmund Wilson
warns us with this statement, "The most
immoral, disgraceful and dangerous thing
that anybody can do in the arts is
knowingly to feed back to the public its
own ignorance and cheap taste." We
would all do well to remember this sage
advice.
Eppo is an Evergreen "fossil." He is
the Host of "MoUlhing-off," a weekly talk
radio show on KAOS-FM. He ;s currently
enrolled in Graduate study in Public
Administration and serves on the
Evergreen Alumni Board and the Service
and Activities Fee Allocation Committee!
S&A Board.
QUOTE OF THE WEEK:
Clam Up, you liberal
jackass! Now its our tum, here
at the Michigan Hill Gun and
Hardware Company, to tell you
how prison reform should and
would work if you bleeding
heart, intellectually stunted,
amoral socialist
oriented
graduates from Mao Tse Tech
(also known as the Evergreen
State College and intellectual
sewage storage facility) will just
sit down and put a cork in it for
a few minutes!!
(advertisment for the Michigan
Hill
Gun
and
Hardware
Company, from the January 5,
1990 issue of the Independence
Dispatc~, Rochester, Wa.)
President ignores
greenhouse effect
by Carol B. HaD
George Bush promised to be the
"environmental president" during his 1988
campaign for ~e White House, but so far
he's shown more concern for the political
environment Bush and his chief of staff,
John Sununu, are putting the brakes on
efforts to curb the green house effect
even as state legislatures and foreign
nations are increasingly concerned about
it
Bush has not made good on his
promise to hold an international
conference on global wanning this year,
and he sent Environmental Protection
Agency head WiDiam Riley to a meeting
of international environmental ministers in
HoUand recently to put down a Dutch
proposal to cut greenhouse gases 20
percent by 2005.
Currently, the world's scientiflc
community agrees that a greenhouse of
some magnitude is coming as the result
of certain gases -- carbon dioxide (CO),
nitrous
oxides,
methane,
chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) -- trapping
heat like glass in a botanical greenhouse
and thus wanning the planet, with dire
consequences. The main sources of these
dangerous gases are automobile emissions
and industrial pollutants. The only dispute
about the greenhouse centers around the
questions, when? and how much?
Bush and Sununu are claiming that
greenhouse effect data are insufficient and
incomplete, and do not warrant a rush by
the U.S. to undertake expensive and
unpopular remedies. In other words, they
really doubt that the predicted greenhouse
will ever actually occur, and they're
willing to bet the earth's future on these
doubts.
Bush and Sununu are nitpicking
minor details. Scientific data contains
some conflicts over when the greenhouse
will take full effect and how hot it wiD
get, but most scientists agree the
greenhouse wiD be here eventually. How
much more data is it going to take to
make the Bush gang take this threat to
life on earth seriously?
If we wait 10 or 20 years to take
serious action to curb the greenhousecausing pollutants, it may be too late. As
STAFF BOX
Editor: Kevin Boyer
Managing Editor: Tedd Kelleher
Business Manager: Edward Martin III
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
Ad Layout/Calendar: Tina Cook
Intenn Production Manager: Scott A.
Richardson
Resident Artist: Heather Candelaria
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Typist: Catherine Darley
Arts and Entertainment: Andrew Hamlin
Headline Writer: Dan "the toastercidal
maniac" Snuffin
Poetry Editor: Katrina Barr
Staff Writers: Scott A. Richardson, Tim
Gibson, Barrett Wilke, Elisa R. Cohen,
Chris Bader, Carol B. Hall, Eppo, Brian
Raiter, Sylvia Darko, Dan Snuffin, Skippy
the Wonder Dog.
Editorial Po liey:
The Cooper Point Journal (Cpn editors
and staff may amend these policies.
Objective:
The cpJ editor and staff are
detennined to make the CPJ a student
forum for communication which is both
entertaining and infonnative.
Deadlines:
Calendar-Friday, noon
Articles-Friday, noon
Letters-Monday, noon
Ads-Monday, 5 pm
Ruin for Submissions:
Submissions are accepted from CPJ
staff members as well as students and
community members. Submissions must
be original. Before undertaking timeconsuming or lengthy projects, however,
Mohammed EI-Ashry, of the Washington
think·tank World Resources Institute, said
recently, "When we waited for more
research on acid rain, we ended up
realizing that everything we knew 10
years earlier was true."
Some states have taken the
initiative where the federal government
has fallen down.
New York, New Jersey, and six
New England states recently agreed to
adopt California emissions standards for
all vehicles by 1993, thus reducing
deadly gases from vehicle emissions.
Vermont,
Irvine, CA, and
Newark, NJ have voted to ban CFCs,
which destroy the earth's protective orone
layer, and are used in air conditioning
and the manufacture of blown plastic
foam. And many other states are
considering action as well.
The Bush White House also could
take steps now to lessen global wanning
in the future. After all, even if the
greenhouse doesn't arrive for years, it
would be much easier to gradually begin
switching from oil to solar energy,
practicing strict conservation of energy in
all forms, moving to more fuel-efficient
and cleaner cars, and planting more trees
right now, rather than later.
When the greenhouse takes over,
we could suffer more droughts, more
severe stonns, and increasing crop
failures. And any last-minute clean-up
efforts will be too little too late.
Environmentalists say the Bush
administration is listening to money talk,
as large, industry-sponsored lobby groups
oppose singling out American companies
to cure the greenhouse problem.
Certainly, Bush is making excuses
to avoid the greenhouse issue's high
political and economic price tag .. America
produces nearly a quarter of the worlds'
CO emissions, so real solutions would
disrupt key industries. And we wouldn't
want to jeopardize Bush's career by
dampening the economy before tI\e 1992
election, now, would we?
Ms. Hall, an Olympia resident, writes
a weekly column about African-American
issues for an Indiana magazine.
EDITORIAL
Dave Hitchens and Craig Carlson
. have made serious allegations concerning
the resume of our college's president Joe
Olander. Since the allegations have been
made public, the issue of Joe Olander
lying on his resume has been diffused
into a number of related issues. These
include the press, the process of how the
allegations were made public, who in the
Evergreen community is allowed the
information, and what, if any, the
underlying motivation is.
, Whether Hitchens and Carlson should
have brought the matter to the press at
the same time they brought the issue to
the faculty agenda committee, or whether
they should have tried harder to work
within the system and forced the Board
of Trustees to communicate with them
face to face, not through an outside
lawyer, should be debated, but · the
original issue needs to be resolved.
It d~ not matter now how
Olander's resume became public nor what
problems are involved in bringing such
infonnation to light. The fact is it has
been brought to light, and it .must be
dealt with.
The Board of Trustees had two
decisions: investigate the allegations, or
simply stand behind Olander. They chose
the latter. The Board of Trustees' private
consultation with their lawyer and
Olander resulting in their unequivocal
stand behind him leaves doubts from all
concerned.
While the Trustees may have got the
press off Evergreen's collective back for
awhile, they must have known the issue
would not die. (As I write this, an article
has appeared in the Wednesday
Olympian.)
The only way to put the main issue
to rest is an official outside investigation.
If Hitchens' and Carlson's accusations
are correct, it will be proven and action
can be taken. The Trustees won't be able
to bury the findings and Olander would
likel y be dismissed.
If the investigation shows Olander
innocent of any falsifications the Trustees
would not only quiet the press but erase
any doubts over the issue.
If the Trustees have confidence in
Olander, the investigation shouldn't be a
problem. But by denying a problem exist,
it leaves room for speculation, and the
issue will not die.
Students can play a role in the
decision process, even though much of
the infonnation has been denied to them.
Through the Student Union (which is
theoretically composed of all students),
demand an investigation and open access
to the information Hitchens and Carlson
received.
Kevin Boyer, editor
Letters
'Throwing tantrulllS'
What is the point?
The controversy over President Joe
Olander's credentials has been going on
for months. As a student, I felt that this
situation had been satisfactorily settled,
explained, and reviewed in December.
Joseph Olander was up front with the
Evergreen community, genuinely honest,
and professional. As A student I have
tried to fmd out as much as possible
about the position of Carlson and
Hitchens, short of meeting with them. I
want to know-- what is your point?
Obviously you want President Olander
replaced, but what is your real agenda,
why do you really want the President
removed from his position? To be blunt,
it's a good idea to contact the editors
ahead of deadline.
Submission should be brought to the
CPJ offices on an IBM fonnatted 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.
The portrayal of the historical
Letters:
Evergreen as a "flaky institution grounded
Letters will be accepted on all subjects.
in a doctrine of radical negatives" is
They must include the author's name,
disturbing coming from the college
phone number and address. Although the
president (Vol. 20, Issue 8, CPJ). Some
address and phone number will not be
published, the CPJ will not publish letters
alumni and founding faculty may feel
submitted without this information.
justifiably offended,
because such
Letters will be edited for libel, . revisionist histories seem to devalue theri
grammar, spelling and space. Letters
contributions.
Such a portrayal also
should be 300 words or leSs. EveI}'
suggests that the quality of education 'is
attempt is made to publish as many
based .' upon externalities • national
letters as possible; however, space
recognition and the praise of the Higher
limitations and timelines may influence
Education Coordinating (HEC) Board.
publication.
Lettel'll do not represent the opinions
Actually reputations tend to lag behind
of the CPJ staff or edlrors.
realities.
This garden (!'ESC) was
Advertlting:
,
growing before the national media and
The CPJ is responsible for restitution
the HEC Board came along to water iL
to our adverti8~ customers for mistakes
Pemaps the most important evaluation
in their adveruscmentll in ~hclr first
of
an
education is what it means to the
printing only. Any subsequent printing of
student and what they do with the
this mistake are the sole reliponslbUity of
opportunity. If education is an opeuing
the advertising customer.
Staff Meetingi:
process, then an educational institution
Open meeting are held weekly in the
produces diverse paths.
A flaky
CPJ office Fridays at noon.
institution ramrods decisions under a
what do you honestly seek to gain in
pushing this issue? You have only
succeeded in damaging the reputation of
President Olander and casting a somewhat
negative light on this college. You are
faculty members at this college, my
professors in a greater sense, as a student
I expect you to act with a high level of
professionalism and integrity. With all
due respect, from the point of the masses,
it looks almost like you are throwing
tantrums in attempt to get your own way.
As idealistic and trite as it may sound
two wrongs do not make a right Lets get
to the real issues behind this situation if
you must insist on continuing it
Shelby T. Edwards
Re-evaluate education
cloak of open discussion, provoking
student and faculty to act radically to
The results are openly
attain parity.
discussed in the media .
Hector Douglas
'Morbid'
Although I am rarely a fan of such
myself, I believe that morbid poetry can
also be quality poetry.
However,
Michael Sell's piece, "Inverted Promises"
(CPJ 11-30-89) was no such exception;
one might say that its morbidity was
exceeded only be its stupidity:
...... Baby
You, me
Growing, caring,
Dead .. ."
Dear Mr. Sell: Kindly get a life.
Vikki Townsend
Cooper Point Journal January II, 1990 Page 9
Flexing
muzzles:
About this article:
I decided to run this article
with Playboy's pennission to
create intelligent debate, not
controversy. I hope the fact that
it was published in Playboy
does not obscure the importance
of the issue. We encourage
response to Hentoff's article.
The deadline for submissions is
January 22. The Cooper Point
Journal will print all responses
two weeks from now, in the
January 25 issue.
Kevin Boyer. editor
by Nat HentofT
The ever-smiling Jerry Falwell, in
closing down the Moral Majority,
explained that its work had been
accomplished - its values had become
part of the American mainstream. He
was right, in one respecl For years, the
Moral Majority worked zealously to
banish "bad speech," targeting "offensive"
books in school libraries, as well as
"socially
hann ful "
magazines
on
newsstands.
Now, on American college campuses,
there is a new, rapidly growing legion of
decency that is also devoted to punishing
bad speech. Its list of indefensible words
is different from Falwell's. Expressions
of racism, sexism, homophobia, antiSemitism and prejudice against the
handicapped are to be outlawed. But the
basic principle is precisely that of
Falwell: A decent society requires limits
to free expression, and if that means
diminishing the First Amendment, the .
will of the majority must rule.
•
Free speech on campus IS
being attacked from an
unlikely direction the left
University Law School, among others.
The codes that have been adopted
are not limited to epithets. On most
campuses, a student can be disciplined-or even expelled-- for words that create
an intimidating, hostile or demeaning
environment for educational pursuits.
Or a student may be put on trial for
"racist or discriminatory comment.. or
other expressive behavior directed at an
individual" -if the speaker "intentionally"
set out to "demean the race, sex or
religion" of the aggrieved complainant
(University of Wisconsin).
These thou-shah-not-speak codes are
so vague and broad that just a
on
such
issues
as
disagreement
affrrrnative action or an indepenctent
Palestinian state can lead to a verdict that
a particularly vehement student is guilty
of discriminatory harassment against
blacks or Jews.
Who will judge the defendants?
Administrators will. or a panel of
administrators and students. And if they
are ideologues and find the controversial
political views of the defendant repellent,
the student can miss a semester or more
for being under the illusion that the
university is a place of free inquiry.
While the presidents of the
universities of Michigan and Wisconsin,
among others, have hailed these codes or'
prohibited ~h, Donald Kennedy,
president of Stanford, is resisting the
notion that students are best taught to
think for themselves by being told what
they can't say. When you tell people
what they can't say, Kennedy has
emphasized, they will begin to suppress
what they think.
Already, in classrooms at some
American colleges where language is
monitored~- as it is at Czechoslovakian
Page 10 Cooper Point Journal .I'_nuary 11, 1990
'A quarter of a century
after the free speech
movement began at The
University of California at
Berkeley....
some
of
today's students are
marching in the other
direction'
language. Can you imagine his asking to
be protected from somebody else's-anybody else's-- words?
I've debated black students about
these speech codes. They are highly
articulate and quick with polemical
counterpoint And I've asked them why
on earth they are running away from
language when they can tum a campus
into a continuing forum on racism by
using the vicious racist language directed
at them to illuminate what's going on
there.
Moreover, by turning to censorship
instead of challenge, these students can
well cut off the expression of speech they
themselves want to hear.
On ABC-TV's NlGJrrUNE some
time ago, debating Barbara Ransby (a
Ph.D. student at the University of
Michigan and a founder of the United
Coalition Against Racism). I posed this
quite possible scenario: A group of black
students invite Louis Farrakhan to lecture
in a political-science class. He comes and
says, "I want to explain what I said about
Judaism's being a gutter religion.
I
meant it, but I want to give you the
context in which I said it."
There are Jewish students in the
class and they claim that-- according to
the university's code-- Farrakhan has
created a hostile atmosphere. In my view,
Farrakhan ought to be able to speak
anywhere he chooses, and certainly on a
college campus. As long as the students
have the right to question him and argue
with him, they'll have sometJJing to gain
from the experience. But under the
speech codes at more and more colleges,
Farrakhan-- having created a hostile
atmosphere-- would quite likely not be
permitted on campus again.
'Expressions of racism,
sexism,
homophobia,
anti-semitism,
and
prejudice against the
handicapped are to be
outlawed. '
Accordingly, on a number of
prestigious campuses, a majority of
students and faculty have concluded that
censorship must be integral to higher
education. As Canetta Ivy - one of the
heads of student government at Stanford
University - says, "We don't put as many
restrictions on freedom of speech as we
should."
A quarter of a century after the free
speech movement began at the University
of California at Berkeley, helping fuel the
antiwar and civil rights campaigns, some
of the brightest ·of today 's students are
marching in the other direction.
This neoconservatism among liberals
and radicals, blacks and feminists, aold
even a number of law professors, has its
roots in the very real racism' that does
exist on a number of campuses. At
Brown, for instance, fliers were
dis tributed reading: "Things have been
going downhill since the kitchen help
moved into the classroom." At Smith,
four black women received vicious racist
letters. At Yale, the Afro-American
Cultural
Center ' s
building
was
emblazoned with a WHITE POWER sign
and a swastika.
In reaction , black students and many
white students have joined to insist on
the creation of codes not only of student
conduct but also of student speech.
Administrators, often enthusiastically,
have yielded to these demands.
There are now various codes of
forbidden speech at Emory University,
the University of Wisconsin, the
University of California, the University of
Buffalo Law School and New York
and Chinese colleges-- there are students
afiaid to explore certain lines of thought
lest they be considered racist or sexist.
At New York University Law School, for
example, where heresy hunters abound in
If you read Ma1colm X's collected
speeches and listen to his recordings, it's
clear that he was an extraordinarily
resilient, resolD"Ceful, probing master of
from 'flexing muzzles' page 10
committees and a generally hostile
classroom reception regarding any student
comment right of center."
At Stanford, the student organizations
insistently demanding a code of forbidden
language include the Asian Law Students
Association, the Black Law Students
Association, the Jewish Law Students
Association and the Asian-American
Students Association. From these groups
and from NYU Law School will come
some of the judges of the next decades,
and maybe even a Supreme Court Justice
or two.
The First Amendment is always
fragile-- witness the frenzy to amend the
Bill of Rights after the Supreme Court
ruled in June that the First Amendment
protected flag burning. But with students
at prestigious colleges now intent on
limiting speech for a greater social good,
the First Amendment will become even
more vulnerable to attack in the years
ahead.
But shouldn't there be some
of
especially
hurtful,
punishment
insulting, infuriating words? When he
of Chicago,
Harold
was
mayor
Washington was asked to punish those
responsible for inflammatory language
that had gone out over a city radio
station. According to his former press
secretary, he refused, saying, "If I scratch
one word, where do I stop?"
The current college codes began in
response to crude racial and sexist
scrawls. But now the language being
Ill.USTMTIOH BY CARTER GOODRICH
Aept!nted I,,,,,, I'LAYIIO'f. Jonuary 1lIII0, 01118;. PIo~.
Is that what the black students
pressing for speech codes want? To have
black speakers they invite on c.a:mpus
rejected because of what they say and
how they say it? Do women students
want radical feminist Andrea Dworkin
~ barred because of possible charges that
she creates a hostile environment for
male students?
Also
overlooked
by
students
concerned with artistic expression is that
a hostile atmosphere can be created by a
the student body, the atmosphere in some
classes is like that of the old-time House
Un-American Activities Committee. One
student describes "a host of watchdog
'One student describes "a
host
of
watchdog
committees
and
a
generally
hostile
classroom
reception
regarding any student
comment right of center. '"
painting or a piece of sculpture, because
expression can be graphic as well as
verbal.
When
the
University
of
Wisconsin's code was being debated
before the state's board of regents, E.
David Cronon-- then dean of UW-
Madison's College of Letters and
Science-- testified that the code should,
indeed, chill students' rights to artistic
expression. For example, some years
ago, I was lecturing at the University of
Wisconsin when a fierce fight broke out
over a student's exhibition of paintings in
a university building. Feminists claimed
his work was outrageously sexist and
demanded that the paintings be removed.
The administration gingerly upheld the
artist and the very core of an univeisity's
reason for being: the right to freedom of
expression. But under the university's
new code of propriety, that exhibition
would be scrapped as fast as you can say
"Edwin Meese."
Furthermore-- and this is a poigrtant
dimension of the rush to virtuous
censorship-- it won't do a bit of good.
Let us suppose these codes were in place
on every campus in the country. Would
racism go away? No, it would go
underground, in the dark, where it's most
comfortable.
The language on campus could
become as pure as bottled water, but
racist attitudes would still fester. The
only way to deal with racism is to bring
it out into the open-- not suppress it.
One approach is to examine particular
incidents on a particular campus and get
people-- and that includes blacks-- to talk
about their own racist attitudes. This
approach won't work wonders, but,
depending
on
the
honesty
and
incisiveness of the faculty and the
If you thought cigarettes were bad ...
Air is worse than smoke
by Paula Lang
The current controversy over smoking
cigarettes at Evergreen has certainly
become a big issue. There is only one
smoking lounge left on campus which is
located next to The Greenery, and it may
Soon .be 'gone also. Why? Many' people
believe secondary smoke is doing them
harm. They do not want to be subjected
to inhalirig it. I am not suggesting that it
is not hazardous. What I am suggesting
is that you take a look at the bigger
picture. I am sure we all still remember
the Exxon Valdez oil spill that occured
last year. If those ten million gallons of
oil that were dispersed into the sea had
Want to
advertise with
the CPJ?
Contact Chris Carson
regarding display and
classified advertising
866 - 6000
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_ _ _1_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
'Do women students want
radical feminist Andre
Dworkin barred because
of possible charges that
she creates a hostile
environment for male
students?'
scratched out extends to any words that
create a hostile atmosphere or any
language that "involves an express or
implied threat to an individual's academic
efforts" --whatever that may mean.
There is also the damaging effect of
these protective regulations on the very
people who are insisting they be
safeguarded. Malcolm X used to talk
about the need for young people to learn
how language works, how to dissect it,
how to use it as both a shield and a
sword. Above all, he thought, blacks
should not be fearful of language. They
should not let it intimidate them but
rather should fight back when words are
used against them with more powerful
words of their own.
been burned, sixty million pounds of
carbon dioxide would have been released
into the sky (according to the April 7,
1989 i.~ue of the New York Times.)
This is only a small fraction of oil
that is burned annually in America. In
order to burn sixty million -pounds 'of
carbon dioxide via smoking, the following
approximated number of cigarettes must
be smoked: 5,010,000,000,000- a figure I
cannot even pronounce.
When one considers the amount of
smoke and other toxic chemicals being
pumped into the sky everyday by
'... the focus of our society and
government policy is off target. Our
country has a tendency to focus
emphatically on the small issue
within the big issue; perhaps to
divert our attention... '
factories, vehicles and such, the issue of
cigarette smoke becomes dwarfed. We
are all inhaling far worse pollutants
everyday.
Last year in Connecticut alone, fiftyeight million pounds of toxic substances
emitted by industry contaminated the air,
SUBSCRIBE
water and land (as stated in the New
York Times on April 16,1989.)
The executive director of the
Connecticut Fund for the Environment,
Suzanne Y. Mattei says, "A lot of these
toxins have no odor. You can't smell
. them and ·you can't see them, but they're
there and doing us damage. I hope this
opens our eyes to what we can't see."
At least we can see and smell
cigarette smoke: If we do not want to be
subjected to it, we can leave its vicinity.
But, w~ do not have the same choice
concernmg pollutants we cannot see or
smell. If cigarettes could not be seen and
had no odor, would banning them still be
an issue?
Again the focus of our society and
government policy is off target Our
country has a tendency to focus
emphatically on the small issue within the
big issue; perhaps to divert our attention
from the real crisis.
How do we explain the deaths
among infants due to various cancers and
respiratory diseases'!
Certainly these
infants do not smoke! We now have
evidence that 30% to 70% of cancers are
environmentally caused (according to the
book Indoor Air Quality.)
Hopefully, this will promote a reevaluation of priorities concerning air
pollutants.
Paula Lang is a student at
Evergreen.
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Give Our
Kids Room
To Grow.
If we don't do something to reduce class sizes
today, our kids won't be
ready for tomorrow.
students leading these probes, whatever
happens will be a lot more useful than
squashing expression. And it may lead to
specific, durable changes on campus,
which will also be a lot more productive
then qlPbbling over who created a hostile
atmosphere and whether or not it was
done intentionally.
But the way the lemmings-administrators as well as students-- are
going, the anti-free speech movement
may intimidate and harass students for
some time to come. And it's scary. As
Lee Dembart-- a former New York Times
reporter who is now a student at Stanford
Law School-- said in the Times:
"It is distressing that the 'politically
correct' view on campus these days
seems to fav(I curtailment of speech.
Oddly, defense of the First Amendment is
now an antiprogressive view.
Yes,
speech is sometimes painful. Sometimes
it is abusive. That is one of the prices of
a free society. Unfortunately, this is a
lesson that has to be learned over and
over again. No victory endures."
Yet Demhart's views are held by
only a besieged minority. The voice of
the regulatory majority is that of Sharon
Gwyn, a 1989 graduate of Stanford who
wrote in The New York Times:
"As a black woman attending
Stanford University, I feel that no one
should be allowed to promote racially
derogatory ideas on this campus."
'Anything you say can
and will be used against
you.'
And beginning with that simple
preliminary statement, campuses are being
caught in a web of such restriction as
these from Emory University:
Forbidden
is
"discriminatory
harassment," which "includes conduct
(oral, written, ' graphic or physical)
directed against any person or group of
persons because of their race, color,
national origin, religion, sex, sexual
orientation, age, handicap or veteran's
status and that has the purpose or
reasonably foreseeable effect of creating
an offensive, demeaning, intimidating or
hostile environment for that person or
grOllp of persons."
Anything you say can and will be
used against you.
As an indication of the degree to
which America's colleges have retreated
from their reason fur being, here is a
section from the 1975 Report of the
Committee on Freedom of Expression at
Yale (the celebrated C. Vann Woodward
report):
'
"If expression may be prevented,
censored or punished because of its
content or the motives attributed to those
who promote it, then it is no longer free.
I! will be subordinated to the other values
that we believe to be of lower priority in
a university."
Yale has now reaffumed the thrust
of that report. but it is incomprehensible
to too many colleges and universities.
I lecture at colleges and universities
around the country every year, and I
intend to say what I think abut these
shameful speech codes. At some schools,
I may thereby be creating a hostile
atmosphere in lecture halls where there
are students who say they crave
censorship.
And that is precisely my intention: to
create
an
atmosphere
hostile
to
suppression of speech-- for any reason.
Recently, friends of the First
Amendment were given reason for hope
when a Federal district court in Michigan
struck down the University of Michigan's
restrictions on student speech as
unconstitutional. They are too vague and
overbroad, said Judge Avem Cohn, and
therefore in violation of the First
Amendment. The suit was brought by the
A.C.L.U.
This is the fIrst court decision on
university suppression of speech, and
since it is so clear, it may influence other
courts in other parts of the country to
remind colleges and universities that they
are in the' business of free thought. not
regulated thought.
Cooper Point Journal January, 11, 1990 Page 11
Arts & Entertainment
What are the Bad Brains talking about?
by Dan Snuffin
BAD BRAINS
"QUICKNESS"
CAROLINE RECORDS
Well dem call it Hip Hop while others
cluu:kin' Be Bop. They rushin' Go Go. I
check for One Drop. Ma jam the disco,
through Acid Rock. Mash iI up with
Hardcore . Dem rockers broke the scene.
With the quiclcness I people are here to
stay.
That sums up the Bad Brain's
musical style on their new album
"Quickness." That is, if you can make
any sense out of it. The lyrics are
certainly the strangest aspect of this
album, a combination of Rasta liDl!:O,
whacked-out concepts and IDlclear
religious undenones.
Don't blow no bubbles. Don't blow
no troubles. There's got to be a better
way. Don't blow no spikes. Ask Jah and
he'll make the change.
Quickness is a funher progression
toward hardcore for Bad Brains, a step
up from their former release I Against I.
These guys have defmitely improved over
the three years since their last album,
that's for sure. This album is tight.
On this voyage to infinity don't forget
to take your soul. Cause at the port you'll
rmd no double sign. It feels so good to
know his high life will shine forever. It
feels so good to know Rasta is not a lie.
The music here moves. It has that
heavy bass and drum beat that makes it
flow like liquid mercury. The guitar
maneuvers in and out with powerful,
pulsing attacks. All serve as a launching
pad for vocalist H.R.'s unique voice.
I'm not a nationalist. We don't trust
politics. God gives us all we want! And
level lives can live. We worship Halie
Selassie. Our Lord through and true. And
under no conditions will I and I stop!
I have only one problem with
Quickness. The last song, "The Prophet's
Eye," is a reggae tune! Yeah, it's a
catchy tune, but much too mellow to put
at the end of a hardcore attack. They try
to patch it up with "Endtro," a 15 second
instrumental burst, but it really doesn't
change the fact that this album has a
weak ending.
Oh ancient Queen of Cush. Tale .
beyond compare. What faith in du£iny.
To gain in her story. With royal bounty
and baby in belly. Responsibilities,
edificatior..
Aside from its ending, "Quickness"
rocks. The lyrics may make no sense but
the album is a musical attack on your
brain that's sure to win. With
"Quickness," Bad Brains is here to stay.
Dan Snuffin is a student aJ
Evergreen, and a CPJ staff and headline
writer.
Stevie Ray plays thing with six strings
by Erich Shuler
There was no opening band and the
show took less than two hours. It was
enough. On the only stop without Jeff
Beck on the duo tour, Stevie Ray
Vaughan rolled into Seattle last December
7 and slammed an enthusiastic Paramount
audience with his own brand of Texas
bar chile blues.
To tour wiu. Beck, a guitar player
better have his own playing down to an
art. Vaughan certainly does. Every song
. R'
..
showcased S tevle ay s ability on the
instrument. In contrast to so many other
hard rock guitar players whose arsenal is
ninety percent effects and flash,
I 'IS more along the lines
Vaug han , s stye
f
o turning up the volume another notch
and shoving raw sound down your throat.
Make no mistake, he can dash off a
lightning fast run or hammer a long solo
but he doesn't sound so damn, well,
stupid. He doesn't writhe his body on
. mock sex With
. the stage
the ground m
while he plays the guitar with his tongue
and big toe. He just jams. Granted, he
did play the guitar behind his back once.
The tempo didn't drop, and I didn't even
know he was doing il I was writing a
note as my friend knocked me in the arm
and screamed, "Look!" Even then, he
seemed to be half-joking with the notion
that guitar players are often expected to
be court jesters as well as musicians.
V
h
Ia ed
that h
aug an p y many songs
e
al
Ia
his
li
alb
f
so p ys on
ve
um, many 0
hi h
d aIik th all ha the hi!
w c soun
e- ey
ve
c e
C
I
th
Do I T bl'
d
•ee to em.
ub e
rou e s soun
. h
Th
fla I
b th
was tlg t.
ey were
w ess ut , ey
were on automatic pilot the entire night.
They had obviously done this a few
hundred times.
They gave a solid
backbone to, "Little Sister," "Wall of
Denial," and, "Hidden Charms," Couldn't
Stand the Weather," among other songs.
Stevie Ray took the time to give thanks
for being healthy enough to be alive after
h'
·th
ed th
IS boUL~ WI
e crowd
fdrugs and ask
to take care 0 themselves.
Vaughan came out for only one
AMELANPACIFICA
\.
People in Java know the mustc
lives within the fnstument.
the musfcfcuu just set it
. , .free. A l1ameian Is an
r Indonesian ensemble that
':frees" extraonUnarv mustc
N
.from bell-like fnstum-tor
Gcunelan Pac(ffca is famous
for its beaut(ful GTrGJI qf
stJIles. from intense and
rhllthmfcallll driven music to
breathtald""ly surreal
compositions. /
'
.,.r1
SATURDAY
JANUARY 13
8PM
RECITAL HALL
\
6.00 STUDENTS AND SENIORS
7 .50 GENERAL
TICKETS AVAILABLE:
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AND AT THE DOOR
\
CALL 866-6833 FOR RESERVATIONS &t INFORMA
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PRESENTED BY EVERGREEN EXPRESSIONS
Page 12 Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990
encore but he made it count. He staned
with, "House is Rockin'," and continued
with his newest single, "Crossfire," His
last song was a cover of Jimi Hendrix's,
"Voodoo Chile." After dedicating the
song to AI Hendrix, (1imi's father), who
he met the day before and who was in
the audience, he began the unmistakable
slap of the muffled strings. Vaughan
guitar players in rock and roll.
If blUt-s is your type of music, then
go see John Lee Hooker at the Moore
Theatre on January 19.
He'll be
featuring songs from his new album on
Chameleon records, The Healer. Hooker
is truly a living legend and anyone
interested in seeing a blues player's blues
player should not miss out on this one.
I
brought the song to a head Wl·th a Io,ng
solo played in unrn:... _t..-ble HenA-:-_
""......
.........
style. He worked the gw'tar like Jun'I'
right down to putting it on the ground,
standing on it, flipping it around, and
making ghostly sounds that Jimi made
famous. Although his song was plaYID
' g
and his unmistakable sound filled the
hall, Jimi wasn't there. His music was
being pal'd homage by the only bl'g name
gw'tar player with the credentials and the
playing style to pull it off without
looking like a wanna-be. It was the
sin;"e
best song I've ever seen .........
""'"*"ormed
&-'
five and ~t showed why Stevie Ray
Vaughan is one of the most respected
Want to
advertise with
. the CPJ?
Contact Chris Carson
regarding-display and
classified advertis~~g.
. .
"
866 - 6000
X60S4 ·
Whoops. I'm a headpin. Start on page 13.
"Too Bad." The first man's victim
might have conceivably done something
to deserve punishment, but the second
divides the world into decent JX:OPle
(himself) and Those Who Fornicate
With Baboons; he crowns his own
head with thom§ to jape at a world he
never lifted a finger to try and help.
Still, I dunno... maybe they do have
street preachers like that in Dallas,
where this duo hails from. Hmm...MC
900 etc. has Caucasian-looking arms
out from behind the portrait of Our
Lord...hmrn ..hmm ... maybe I better find
News ReI ease-".GirI
Friday"
is "billed
as .the
~b~ay .answer to S~y N!ght
~IV~.
This outrageous tn~ ~s
smgmg, stand-up comedy and skits .IDto a
burl.esque-style show that has debghted
audi~~ a~ss ..the COlDltry.
Gu"! Fnday plays The Evergreen
State College at 9 p.m., January 19 and
20, ~ the campus Recital Hall. The
show IS sponsm,oo by two student groups,
The . Women s
Center
and. the
Lesbian/Gay Resource Center. Tickets
are $7 general, $5 for students. Call
~,
eXl
6~.
for
more
info~110~ ,
.
Girl Fnday s Lea DeLaria .and Kell~y
Edwards are farnou~ for. th~1J' roles m
"Dos Lesbos," a LesbUIJI Sltual10n comedy
that was a smash hit in theaters from
coast-to-coasl
They've joined with
Richard Weinstock, a
fantastically
t8Iented pianist who's funny, too.
Together they're so witty, fresh and
candid, they put an audience at ease
between plDlch lines.
Although DeLaria is known as a
out where MC Ghost went on that
vacation of his ...
This disk's a little obscure; you
might wanna ask Rainy Day Records
to special order it, or something. And
while you're at it, ask for Goat Guys
From Hell tapes. The Rasp Conspiracy
needs new recruits.
Andrew Hamlin is. a student at
Evergreen. He wants to own the New
York Dolls' first album so bad he
can taste it. You know the one where
th£y're all sitting on a couch with
wedgies on? Yeah_
'
stand-up comic, her stwining jazz voice
beats the band.
On the other hand
Weinstock wasn't a comedian. He w~
known for writing music for Broadway,
off-Bro3dway, PBS, and for companies
from Europe to South America.
Girl Friday's review includes a skit
about an evangelistic lesbian, conventionbreaking stand-up routines and a minimusical called "Mascara for the
Mannish."
Bob Hicks of the Oregonian wrote:
"People likely to be offended by gay
humor and vulgarities should find
something else to do. For the rest _
straight and gay alike - this is an offbeat,
appealing and enjoyable evening of
tomfoolery with three talented and very
professional comedians."
News Release, daughter of Tension
and Conditional "Connie" Release,
was born in the Amazonians
somewhere around 1957. A former
aide to Walter Cronkite, she now
works as a quality checker for the
Stan Spoin Contact Lens Company.
Arts & Entertainment
'Because baboons have their own female species'
by Andrew Hamlin
MC 900 Fr. JESUS wrm D1 Zillm
NB1TWERK
REcoRDS.
If I didn't know better I'd swear
this was MC Ghost, doyen of
Oakland's Goat Guys From Hell.
G.G.F.H. are white rappers, but don't
mistake them for the Beastie Boys.
The Beasties grasp and emulate the
feet-shuffling hip-hop beats that the
black groups made so well known; MC
Ghost and his crew know they're
incurably white, so they don't even try.
They set their drum machine no faster
than a coma patient's heartbeat, whip
in fuzz guitar droning like a drugged
wasp, and top it off with 01' Ghost
himself hissing about drugs, bitches,
hoes, and the legendary Grarnma/crack
connection. You can twitch to this
stuff, slowly, but it'll never cut it on
the dance floor next to YOlDlg MC's
"Bust A Move" orKool Moe Dee's "I
Go To Work." Which Fro. sure, is fine
with the Goat Guys; theirs is a select
audience, with a taste for perverse
gangsterisms muttered mock-nursery
rhyme style. I have one of their tapes,
but I need more.
However, I have it on good
authority that Senor Ghost has taken a
long
sabbatical
far
from
Oakland...which brings me to these
guys. Unlike G.G.F.H., MC 900 Foot
Jesus and D1 Zero have the snap; stick
with these funky backbeats and you
will be rewarded. Adroit scratching and
Public Enemy samples abound-sophisticated touches the Goat Guys
would never dream of--and except for
the last cut, the music on this foursong ep is uninterrupted bop city.
however--there's
The
vocals,
another story. On "Too Bad," the
leadoff cut, MC 900 Ft. Jesus (who
holds a portrait of Christ over his face
on the record cover) rants and rasps in
the same hissing, over-the-phone tone
that Ghost uses. He's an obscene caller
turned righteous holy destroyer:
"You're a pervened evil menace to
society{That's why the world is so
lucky{fo have people like me/Who can
see that your life/Has very little
worth/And you should now be removed
from the face of the earth ... too bad you
gonna die now ..... Yeah, it looks silly
enough on paper, but if you've ever
answered the phone in the middle of
the night and gotten someone (X"
something saying "I'm watching you
through the window... ", you know the
scary power of an anonymous voice.
He's got a racing drum machine and
staccato ricky-tick rhythm guitar
backing him up, and it all blends into
a tense, disquieting track. You can take
the man seriously and call the police,
or treat it as merely a brilliant portrait
of a sociopath. That's what's tough
about rap music; the artists leave it to
the listener to decide if their lyrics are '
realism, fantasy, or just speculative
drama, and the stakes get higher every
year. If Eazy-E, for example, has
actually done everything he describes
on his solo album, refusing to buy it
is the very least you can do for
humanity's sake.
The next two cuts have no rapping
on them, but they do establish D1 Zero
as a cutter to be reckoned with--lhis
dude is fast, tight and imaginative,
even if some of his stuff is hard to
hear in the mix. "Do I Have Any
Witness"
uses
the
"Too Bad"
instrumental track and some sampled
evangelical phrases, "Shut Up" has a
shuffle rhythm and what solDlds like
the hand bell riff from Run-DMC's
"Peter Piper."
And then we have "Bom With Monkey
Asses," the last fmal cut, which brings
back the "Shut Up" shuffle...pan of the
time. The music woozes on and off
around the vocal pan, which is, ah .. .at
fITSt I thought they'd trundled the mike
off to a side street and caught a
frazzled street preacher berating
pedestrians in a sassy schoolmarrnish
tone, complete with a woman who
keeps trying to interrupt him. Except,
well, I haven't met a street preacher
yet who says things like "You got a
wig on your goddamn head You an
ugly mulhafucka without somebody
makin' a wig for your fuckin' head."
This is ultimately not a song about
evolutionism vs. creationism, despite
the title and some of the rhetoric. It's
a tribute to another personality type,
this one even more vile and
contemptible than the one who sang
Now, tum to page 12.
Consult a doctor before ...... ••
by Edward Martin m
Most people who study literature and
media realize that nothing is what it
seems like.
Melville's Moby Dick,
Kafka's
The
Metamorphosis
and
Steinbeck's The Pearl all fall into this
category. Moby Dick was not about a
whale, The Metamorphosis was not about
t 3!\big;jl\lg .an<) T~ J:e(lT.l,. was not ,~ut a
~P9!1. The.Y·,were about secret th'i1ikS'that
Iitekture sCientists will continue to argue
about for centuries.
Sea of Love is like that.- It is not
.
killer. The killer does not, in fact, use
poetic personal ads printed by the victims
to track them down and shoot them in
the back of the head while they are in a
compromising position. The cop does
not, in fact, fall in love with a woman
suspect who just may be the killer. The
cop's .partner does not, in fact, fmd
Jl~self . t,erobly effibilfTllSed . by certain
circumstances.
Nope. Sea of Love is not a movie.
Sea of Love is actually a diet
W31't'. I'll expIai n.
It's good for everyone to try a diet
once, but only if y()u think it will help .
Never overdo a diel Stop when you
have what you want and don't expect a
miracle.
Like I said, it's a diet.
This diet stars AI Pacino and Ellen
Barkin and is probably going to be out
on video fast enough to red shifl
.
It' s beuer than Batman.
Edward Martin 1lI is an Evergreen
student who has nothing better to do than
write movie reviews and draw cartoons.
The rest is all pretend.
Orchestra performs In C
by Brian Raiter and Andrew Hamlin
The Olympia Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Timothy Brock, gave a
concen last month of four chamber
works by Hindemith and In C by Terry
Riley, December 7 at the Woman 's
Center in downtown Olympia.
The Hindemith pieces were from a
collection specifically written for
amateur cha!nber ensembles, so they are
not too technically difficult and flexible
in their instrumentation. Such
.
practicality is unfonunately rare in
serious music, and often actually looked
down upon. But the four pieces
performed by the Chamber Orchestra
were DO less interesting for being
accessible. MorgenmusiJc~ for brass
quartet, was a reminder of how little of
the expressive range of brass
instruments is usually explored.
Tafelmusik and Abendiwnzert (the latter
for clarinet and strings only) both had
their own engaging characters. The
. fmal piece, Ploner Musiktag, a cantata
with three female voices, was quite
enjoyable. Unfortunately no translation
of the German text was provided, a
lack most noticeable in the fifth
movement, which was slDlg entirely in
"sprechstimme," a hybrid of song and
speech pioneered by German composer
Arnold Schoenberg.
During intermission the piano was
moved front and center, facing away
from the audience, for Tn C. A famous
minimalist piece, its score is a list of
53 musical fragments. Most of them are
shon--some as simple as two sixteenth
notes or a single dotted whole note-though one fragment is 29 l{l beats
long. The fragments themselves have a
specific tonal charilcter, and modUIat.e
away from and eventuaIIy back to the
key of C. However, every performer
(the piece can be performed by any
number of players, with any
combination of instruments) repeats
each fragment as many times as they
feel the performance demands, and then
waits an appropriale time before
beginning the next one. The only
requirement given by the score is that
no one person be too far ahead or
behind the rest (in this performance, the
orchestra agreed to stay within five
fragments of each other).
Instead of listening to the music of
a single composer, you are in the
presence of a roomful of composers, all
listening to each other to detennine how
to proceed. In place of a conductor, a
pianist holds the tempo by plunlcing the
top two Cs on the keyboard, four
quarter-notes to each measure. This task
was shouldered by Courtney Crawford,
who set a careful, deliberate tempo of
about 100 beats per minute. The
timekeeper's task is not an easy one; he
or she must keep a strict tempo foc the
other musicians, and In C has no set
length; tlJe performers, interacting with
each other, decide the duration of the
piece even as they play. The Chamber
Orchestra's version lasted abQut 45 '
minutes, but other ensembles have kept
it going for several hours.
The beginning of this piece is very
exciting: the entire orchestra sits silent
but for the piano, and you realize that
nobody. not even the performers, knows
exactly what will happen nexl 'F"mally
the cellist was the first to dive in, and
from there it wasn't long before
everybody else followed. Though at any
given point each insttument is doing
something different. the fact that they
all maintain their proximity in the score
keeps them together in the way that the
population of a busy downtown can
seem to all be working together, sharing
thoughts and purposes without ever
directly communicating them. I have
heard recorded performances of this
piece, but they do not compare to
actually being in the presence of one.
And this relatively young ensemble
brought it to life brilliantly.
Brian Raiter is a long-time student at
Evergreen, and a longtime aficionado
of contemporary music.
We want to thank the
community for making
1989 our mod successful
year ever.
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regular low price on I
NEW AlBUM.
1
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(6.98 Ust or higher)
I_~~.!.~!.:~.:.~!.!!~-I
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--------Olympia's Best
Selection of Foreign Films
2 FOR 11
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
JAN. 12
. JAN. 13
Rent 1 movie - g E:i i free
rental with Ihi!> f."
One coupon per customer
--------_.
EXPIRES JAN. 30, 1990
1.0 . Required
Come
I COVER
$4.00 I
In 6: Brcnne
357-4755
Weatalde Center
Division
a: BarriaOD
210 E. 4th. 786-1444
Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990 Page 13
---
"'~"---C~:a---:I:--e-n--:d:--a-r
THURSDAY, JANUARY II
SUNDAY, JANUARY 14
Folk artist Alice Di Micele will perform Civil Liberties & tbe Legislature, 11:00
at TESC at 7:30 PM in the Recital Hall. AM on cable Channel 31. ACLU lobbyist
$3.00 to $5.00 (sliding fee) .
Jerry Sheehan will be guest. Rebroadcast
of Jan. 9 show.
A new Board of Directors for Leisure
Resources (fonnerly Handicap Recreation Bacb Festival, 3 PM at Tacoma's First
Council) will be fonning at 6:30 PM at Baptist Church, 9th & Market. Tickets
South Sound Options Unlimited, 1405 $15 for a series of three concerts, $6
Harrison NW. Anyone who is interested general admission, and $3 students.
in furthering the agency's new direction Tickets may be purchased at the door.
toward nonnal, integrated participation in Call 627-2792 for more information.
the community is invited to attend and
become a member. Call :152-8567 for
MONDAY, JANUARY 15
more infonnation .
Olympians against the death penalty
general meeting at 7:30 PM at Bread &
Roses, 1320 E. 8th. Call Glen 491 -9093
for more information .
FRIDAY, JANUARY 12
Register for Geoduck Cbessfest n, a
tournament designed for beginning and
intermediate chess players, at TESC,
CAB 108, between 6:15 - 6:45 PM. First
round 7:00. $2.00 plus U.S. Chess
Federation dues if not already a member.
Prizes. Special section for pros.
An MS-DOS workshop will be held at
the TESC Computer Center 9-11 AM.
Instructor: Judy Lindlauf.
Martin
Lutber
King
birtbday
celebration, noon - 2:00 at the
Washington Center, 512 S. Washington.
This year's event will emphasize lots of
good music, including a Korean choir,
the Mt. Zion Baptist Choir, and the Peace
Child choir. Please bring a can or
package of non-perishable food for the
Food Bank. The event needs sponsors.
Call 459-1458 for infonnation.
Death penalty presentation by Bob
Zeiglar, 7:00 PM on second floor of St.
Michaels Church Parish Hall, 10th &
Boundary.
Call 491-7050 for more
infonnation.
TUESDAY, JANUARY 16
Intro to the Macintosb, a class for those
with little or no experience with the
Macintosh (or computers generally) will
be taught by John McGee at the TESC
Computer Center. 3-5 PM.
Martin Luther King Tribute. Readings
and commentary on the life and work of
one of America's greatest civil rights
activists by Heath Cobb. Free, 11 AM.
Performance Lounge, Pierce CoUege. Call
%3-6682 for more information.
The Olympia Storytellers' Guild
presents an evening of stories at the
Columbia Street Public House,
8 - 10 PM. A $2.00 - $5.00 donation
will be requested at the door. No one
will be turned away for lack of funds.
Dr. Jere Knudtsen will perform works
by Brahms, Stravinsky and Deb~sy.
Free.
7:30 PM, room 583, Pierce
College.
Call 964-6780 for more
infonnation.
SATIJRDAY, JANUARY 13 .
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17
The architects from Olson/Sundberg
Gamelon PacifIca concert at TESC, 8
will be on campus for their third meeting
PM in the Recital Hall. $7.50 general,
with students interested in the CAB
$6.00 students, seniors.
(student offices) Building ProjecL This is
scheduled for 1:30 - 3:30 PM in CAB
All Northwest HonOl's Band will play at
110.
4 PM at Eastvold Auditorium, Tacoma.
Call 535-7621 for more infonnation.
N~[(m$[p) ~
CLASSIAED RATES
·30 words or 1esI-$3.00
·10 cents for each addilional word
-Pfe.payment required
-c18ItIfIed deadllne-2 p.rn. Tuesday
TO PLACE AD:
-PHONE 866-6000 X6054
-STOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A
·SEND INFO TO: CPJ, TESe, CAB 305A
OLYMPIA, WA 98505
HELP WANTED
ATIENTION - HIRING! Government
Jobs - your area. Many inunediate
openings without waiting list or tesL
S17.840 -69,485. Call 1-602-838·8885
EXT RI447.
ATIEN110N:EARN .~ONFV
READING BOOKSI S32,()()(\ !year inall.le
potential. Details, 1-60l~H118S EXT.
BK 14471.
dobs In Alaska ·
HIRING Men - Women • Summerl
Year RounQ: CANNERIES, FISHING,
LOGGJ~~lOURISM, CONSTRUCTION
up to Saw weekly, plus FREE room
and board. CALL NOWI Call refundable.
The Older Worker Community Event
will focus on the many issues older
workers face in today's changing labor
markeL
Older workers and area
employers are invited to attend. Free,
but please pre-register by caUing 4784798. 10 AM - 3 PM, Bremer Student
Center, Olympic College.
Comedian Brian Gillis will perform
noon to 1:30 PM, College Center. Free.
South Puget Sound Community College.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Safeplace, Thurston County Rape Relief
and Women's Shelter Services has an
ongoing need for volunteers. Safeplace
operates 24 hours a day, seven days a
week. Winter Volunteer Training begins
January 16.
Call 786-8754 for an
application.
Tickets are on sale now for The Flying
Karamozov Brothers - the internationally
acclaimed troupe of jugglers - who will
be appearing at ACT in Seattle in three
separate shows, beginning January 11th.
For tickets and infonnation call ACT' s
box Office at 285-5110 or Ticketmaster
at 628-0888.
"Girl Friday", a comedy troupe
featuring gay and lesbian themes plays
TESC at 9 PM, January 19 and 20, in
the Recital Hall. The show is sponsored
by two student groups, The Women's
Center and the Lesbian/Gay Resource
Center. Tickets are $7 general, $5 for
students. Call 866-6000, exL 6544 for
more information.
Olympia Parks and Recreation is
offering two skiing trips, Jan. 17 or Jan.
31.
Ski sites include Snoqualmie,
Alpental and Ski Acres. $25.00 per trip
(includes transportation and lift ticket).
Call 753-8380 for more infonnation.
The Olympia Parks and Recreation bas
many recreation dasses for winter.
Registration ends Jan. 12. Classes begin
the week of the 15th. Call 753-8380 for
more information.
The Olympia Timberland Library is
offering a variety of storytlmes to. meet
the developmental needs of young
children.
Call 352-0595 for more
information.
Women in Communications, Inc. is
sponsoring the 1990 student awards.
Open to all full or part-time students
. in a college, university or community
college in the Pacific Northwest who
have published, broadcast or othezwise
presented their communications work in
media outlets between Jan. I, 1989 and
Dec. 31, 1989. Call (503) 244-6701 for
more information.
ORIGINAL POETRY, SHORT
FICTION, & CARTOONS for
publication in the CPJ. Please bring
typed poems & an work with name &
phone number 10 CAB 306A.
CHRIS SYNODIS, certified
"EXPLORER" BASS great condJtIoa
($120.00). 5-STRING BLUEGRASS
BANJO souads great ($100.00),
LLOYDS TURNTABLE ($30.00).
Andrew 357-6974.
Two studded snow tires for Large Ford
Vehicle. 866-1453.
ATIENTION - GOVERNMENT
HOMES from S1.00 (U-repair).
Delinquent tall property. Repossessions.
CALL 1-602-838-8885 ext. GH 14471.
LOST/FOUND/FREE
THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP. NO
CHARGE FOR lOSTIFOUND
/STOLEN/FREE CLASSIFIEDS.
LOST in Library Building heavy grey
wool hat with blue stripe. Call Cedar
866-23S6.
1-206-736-0775. Ext.118IiH
flrH
)Il
/ /
Rtkt({J
.r ~1I~~t-tt)ol
/
&~n f1.c:b f j
KJtt(,j J
S~nnJ h~ C41;~c -~jjb~i
~-----------------~I~------------------~
I F-~
YL1U
4p..i'> cCu N.EI\..\
1ZO'TT ("j(,
0,,1
/
'r-JCi
'I.Q~iL.: 'S H·!o'J.,l=,
Yuv 'l j..\ .1(;vJ 'T
t-f'eJ-.1AI"'5 :;c > ~
WOL'L(>I'--\'T
frame, 18 speed. serial 110503, DEaR XT components, Biopace Crank, was lime
green. Any infonnation helpful. Please
call 754-1772. .
ALERTI CARME manuracturer III
cruelty free products (Sleepy Hollow,
JoJoba Farms, Bon Sante, Country
Roads, Mill Creek, Loanda Soaps, &
Mountain Herbery) HAS SOLD 40%
OF ITS STOCK TO:
INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH .&
DEVELOPMENT CORP. wblch does
extensln animal testing. Jofu the
Boycottl Voice your opinion: CARME:
84 Galli Drive, Novato, CA 94949,
(415) 883-3367. I.R.D.C.: 900 Main SL
Mattawan, MI 49071, (616) 668-3336.
IlfO"Ntl.. ~3D
Bu\\ets. Areop.Ch(la
.,
The Washington State Arts Commission
is now accepting applications from
professional performing artislS and arts
organizations interested in participating in
the
1990-91
Cultural
Enrichment
Program. Call 753-3861 for more
information. All applications must be
postmarked or hand delivered by Feb. 28,
1990.
SERVICES
'67 SUZUKI X-5-2OOc:c: runs great,
really cool ($300.00). SEGOVIA
~omc.w~C!I'~
The first GMAC-AACSB Minority
Summer Institute, a six-week program
intended to increase the number of
minority students pursuing the Ph.D. and
careers as business school faculty, will be
held June 10 - July 20, 1990, at the
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor.
The students selected to participate will
have all related expenses paid, will
receive a stipend of $2,500 each and will
be granted six hours of credit from
Michigan. To apply, contact the Graduate
Management Admission Council, 11601
Wilshire Blvd., Suite 760, L.A., CA
90025, (213) 478-1433 (caU collect).
Application deadline is Feb. I, 1990.
STOLEN FROM IN FRONT OF COOP. "ROCKHOPPER" Mt. BIKE 20.5"
FOR SALE
(e diN" CoNf-utt plltt-,.oN: ,.,.. .r,..,p.~ T~f~
P~/Nt IN Eir.4y ",,.,t'''9 -Ih"f- TAteS plfC£
"Standing up for peace" writing, art,
music contest for individuals 15 - 23 yrs.
old. $100.00 - $500.00 cash prizes.
Works should be based on interviews
with people who have taken a stand for
peace by choosing not to fight, enlist,
build weapons, or pay war taxes.
Deadline May I, 1990. Contact Olympia
F.O.R. at 491-9093 for more information.
WANTED
PERSONAL
CART
Cbildren between the ages at 3 and 6
are invited to attend a half-hour program
of stories, books, songs and fingezplays,
Tuesdays, 1:15 - 1:45 PM, Jan. 16 - Feb.
27, at the Tumwater Timberland Library.
Daycare providers are invited to call to
make arrangements for their own
story time. Call 943-7790 for more
information.
ou T ?
CL (\ r-.\ l-'(--:r.J •
(:,N
[41 C;
I
F\H~Ll C. Vi'
\·M\ S ot.JE
S f-!ovLDN'I
C2O'Tl ' \N:. \
~.
r:.:..~_.;!yV\ PIj
1· 1 I ~
u1..l \'
'>
T l " _'> 7'
D ... ri"'q this sea'5on of pcz.ace al'\d
qi\linq I \'n'I ~urcz. t hcz.ra. are lots of
1"houCjhl'S you would tovL to
sh~r-cz. wi'-h 'IOUi'" cJassfl'\alcz.s",?
/
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ACUPUNCfURE & BODY WORK
acuPWlCturisl, Ucensed massage
therapist, masters In counseIlng.
Practice of acupuncture integrated with
jin shin, hutsu acupressure, cranial-sacral
techniques, and chinese patent herbs.
Covered by studen~ insurance. 1722 W.
Harrison call 786-1195 for appL or
consultation.
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Page 14 Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990
Cooper Point Journal January 11, 1990 Page 15