The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 7 (November 16, 1989)

Item

Identifier
cpj0485
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 7 (November 16, 1989)
Date
16 November 1989
extracted text
November 16, 1989

Vol ume L, Numbel' 1

Volume 20 Issue 7

Olympia, Wash i n gton

One section, one page

Interested?

EJgcr to heLp?

Nauseated?

the eve r g reen stat e colleg ('> , washington

or stop by Lib . Rm. ) 215
TIlURSOI\Y. Nov r mh e r

Ii ,

he

February 1S, \ 972

o

,
FLAG

E I, NUMBER 6

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Desire Transubstantiated
I saw you swirling through the waves
whose writhing crowds my lonesome stair.
A reluctant waif in moonsome haze,
eyes tangled among clouds, you flowed
through my stairs spectre-like. Gravely,
I lashed my stare to your shoulder
(You noticed?)
but wraithed to your gaze.
In the drowning slow dance, we sink.
Bound with naked hope, we drink.
We're intertwined in our shattered
sunken naumachia; death with grace
like flagellants hymning water
into holy lungs, twisted
into a medusa's hungry arms.
We're empty spawn of solitude,
passively trading roles of dinner
and devourer, swallowing
the other with fear.
With serpentine gestures we greet our prey.
Wishes that glistened in our jeweled eyes
shone though the smoke of the auto-da-fe
we'd smothered our souls in. The lies
were pious, honest, good. "I don't need
to take you inside," we exhaled
as rav'nous hands slithered in. We can't feed
this with silent gropings. We've failed
in spirit, dear, so shall we devour
the void that's between us and shed our vows?
Stagger to the alter with me. An hour
or five, we'll baptize ourselves. Arouse
yourself. Sweet communion, I am risen!
Sacrifice! Take me! kyrie eleison
Karl T. Steel

Page 12 Cooper Point Journal November 9, 1989

looking not touching,
your rigid lips on my own,
entangled In an act of
passion (hence. not love)
on the bridge.
above the water
your eyes touching mine.
stuck
"i love you"
Meaning nothing. hard dirty
nails in the skin
tongues entwined
loveless passion .. ,
Inside the warm coat
above the water
and you think bastard
be with me forever;
pauperize the words
And
its only warmth
above the water
one the bridge

Nora Randall

o
E
T
R

y

EVERRAIN

RELIEVES
CRASS INDIAN SUMMER
FEIGNING JUNE'S FREEDOM
BUT WE CAN ALL HOLE NOW
GET BACK TO WHAT WE CAME FOR

COOPER

POINT JOURNAL

DECEMBER
FLASHES

CWSER THAN IMAGINATION
F!ND YOUR WARM BODY
FIGHT EXISTENCES MONOTONY
BARRIER TO WltITER'S MONOGAMY
W. J. Gno8808

Alive after 18 years of DEu4
The
Evergreen State College
Nonprofit Organization
~~----~~-----------------------------------------------------.-Olympia, WA 98505
U.S. Postage Paid
Address Correction Requested
Olympia, WA 98505
Permit No. 65

_-----=N~EWS I~RIEFS~_

The 1989-90 Services and Activities
Board was chosen this week by a seven
member hiring committee.
New Board members are !sa Soltani,
Jennifer Helpenstell, Matt Green, Jon
Epstein and Frederick Rollins.
Board allernates are Bridey Briggs.
Son Mai and Diane Poner.
Board members meet weeldy during
the year and are responsible for allocating
nearly $800,000 in Student Activities fees
which all students pay with tuition. All
board positions are volunteer.
The hiring committe was comprised
of
Mark
Sullivan.
S&A
Board
Coordinator; Corey Meador, Recreational
Sports Coordinator; Margarita Mendoza
de Sugiyama. Affumative Action Officer;
NaDeau Reinertson, Wilderness Center
Coordinator; Dora Taggart, S&A Minutes
Taker; Kathy Ybarra, Student Activities
Director; and Suzette Williams, Co-Editor
of the Cooper Point Journal and 198889 S&A Board member.
Board members were approved
Wednesday by the Student Union.

A table set up in the CAB promoting
Initiative 109, or the "women's right to
know" Initiative, drew a crowd during
lunch hour Wednesday.
Brenda Sallizar, an Evergreen student,
set up the table backing Initiative 109

and the "right to life" movement. Besides
fielding nwnerous questions and attacks
from the crowd, she also handed out
pamphlets with pro-life literature.
Almost immediately. the Reproductive
Rights Coalition of Olympia began
handing out warning pamphlets to the
crowds explaining how the Initiative is
not "pro-choice."
Coincidentally, the Women's Center
had a table directly across from the "prolife" table to promote their open house
and freedom of choice for women.

Rope of Blood stars Luther James
Luckett as X. a drifter who · accepts a
. bizarre assignment: to fmd the illegitimate
child of an important scientist. The
scientist himself is ·missing, somewhere

in the great desert surrounding the town.
From there, things get slranger.
For further information, contact Patty
Kovacs at the Olympia Film Society,

754-6670.

Evergreen graduate Gregg Osborn
presents Rope of Blood, the feature film
he produced while attending school here,
at 5:15 Sunday November 19 at the
Capitol Theater, as part of the Olympia
Film Festival.
Osborn, a Tacoma native who now
works in Seattle, said in a phone
conversation that he's been interested in
mm making from childhood. He met
Rope's director. Gordon Dahlquist, when
they both attended Tacoma's Curtis High
School, formed Grilla Productions, and
began making short mms. Rope, their
first feature fllm, was shot four years ago
in Portland, on a budget only $10,000.
The screenwriter is Chuck Sullivan,
currently an Evergreen student

.

I

I
t

Security Blotter
T uesday, November 7
1356: Unknown persons taped an
American flag to the floor on the
second floor of the CAB.
1400: Two persons were in an
unauthorized area of the CRC.
1434: $10 worth of layout paper was
reported stolen from the ePJ office.
1746: A Pit Bull-Shepard mix injured
another dog on campus. The owner of
the attacking dog was given a verbal
warning.
1800: A vehicle was reported stolen
from F lot. The responding security
officer located the car in F lot.
Wednesday, November 8
1256: Burnt food in C dorm brought
fIrefighters to the scene.
1822: A hit and run incident was
reported from Clot.
2124: The Organic Farm fire alarm
rang. Several malfunctions in the alarm
system were reported from the Farm
during the following days .
2240: Cords of five Coke machines
were cut.
2325: Graffiti was found in the CAB
stairwell.
2341: Air was let out of two tires of a
vehicle parked in F lot.

concerning the use of a hall phone in
the library.
.
1822: Two decorative plants were
stolen from the CAB. The plants were
later recovered at H dorm.

0730: There was tlamage done to a
door and a wall by the Library 4300
kitchen.
1639: A complaint came in from the
weight room. There was a disagreement
over the loudness of the music in the

Friday, November 10
2132: There was a malicious fIre alarm
pulled at the CAB.

room.

Saturday, November 11
2314: A fIre alarm at J dorm was
caused by the overcrowding of a room.
2348: A large window was broken at
the Housing Community Center.
Sunday, November 12
0042: An additional report of cut Coke
cords came in.

1746: A vehicle was removed from a
ditch near the Organic Farm.
One hundred sixteen public services
were performed during the week and 3
traffic stops were made.

!

ACUPUNCTURE
PETER G. WHITE, C.A.

Covered by Evergreen/Hartford Insurance
Quest10ns - ConSultationS" - Appointm ents
Ilcdfanc. 113 E. 5th Olympia 357 ·9470

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Quality outdoor equipment is part
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Send to: Cooper Point Journal, CAB 305, TESC, Olympia, WA 98505

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Page 2 Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

MoN, ~

e

Nrune: ___________________________________________________________

~

BRAN DNE\J HOJRS!

Join the Readers of
Cooper Point Journal
You receive The Cooper Point Journal
at your home each week ...and get to
support The Journal at the same time.

Abu. • Deprallon • Parentlnll
e A • . Relalioadllps • Medlalloa

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SUBSCRIBEI

anniversary demonstration of Salvadoran
AIchbishop Oscar Romero's assassination.
People also were urged to spend
time in longer term protective escort
presence.
A group of people met later in the
afternoon to start a new solidarity group
named .'Guasito.' For information on
meetings call The Evergreen Political
Information Center (EPIC) extension

6144.
The telexes and letters should be
sent to Guatemalan President Vinicio
Cerew, Palacio National, Guatemala City,
Guatemala (telex #305-5331 CAPRESGU). demanding the students release and
a stop to the brutal violations to hwnan
rights.

Analysis:

Laws are meant to be broken
by Elisa R. Coben
of Guatemala and depend on the minimal
Julio Lopez faced three options: labor cost the impoverished Indians will
immediate execution. torture and then provide. Wages stay constantly below the
probable execution, or exile. Speaking to rate of inflation. The Indians who work
a group of Evergreen students and in the field are not provided meals. The
Olympian residents, Julio explained the fields are sprayed with insecticides as the
reality of lQday's life in Guatemala, his Indians tend to the crops.
home from which he was forced to flee.
These large exporters have no
Guatemala is a country dependent on incentive to pay the Indians a living
an agricultural economy. Export cash wage because in Guatemala there is no
crops such as coffee, sugar, cotton, and internal economy. In the United States
cattle dominate 90 percent of the tillable corporations are induced to pay higher
land. These crops are grown on huge wages in order to allow the wor~er to
ttacts of land on which no food crops are tum around and become the consumer.
grown.
With an agricultural export economy,
Migrant and permanent workers live such an internal market does not exist
in open-aired shacks, with only
High paying cash crops dominate ·
hammocks. They often must ttavel long huge tracts of rich tillable land while, the
distances after work in order to procure . arid alteplano is left for cultivation of
food, and a system of low wages and food crops. Individual farmers are
credit creates a caste of indentured slaves. allowed plots of land too small to support
In 1954, beginning land reforms were themselves. ine plots have been
halted by a US backed military coup described as "the size of a grave."
protecting the ~downers rights to "free
Beef has become another regular
economy." This coup established military export since Nixon eased regulations
rule for the next 30 years ensuring cheap during his term. Beef production provides
labor and minimal taxes for the the fewest jobs and requires the greatest
reactionary landowners. .
tracts of land. The production of beef for
The land-owners run Guatemala like US fast food chains has kilIed or
a huge corporate complex, treating the displaced thousands of Indians from their
Indian workers like expendable material. homelands.
The military works hand-in-hand with
These exporters account for only one
the land owners because in the thirty percent of the Guatemalan population.
years of military rule, the top military They pay the smallest amount of taxes in
officers have joined in the ranks of the all of Central America. Guatemalans have
landed minority and have a vested the shortest life expectancy due greatly in
interest in maintaining the status quo.
part to high infant mortality rate caused
Transnationals invest in the rich land by easily treatable disorders such as

dysentery and infections.
The treatments for these illnesses are
simply unaffordable to the workers.
Guatemala is applauded by the
United States for being a democracy.
Julio rolled his eyes and agreed, "Sure it
was a clean election. So what? the
Military dictates President Cerew's action
and he obeys in order to remain in
office. Guatemala has the finest
constitution in Latin American , but in
Guatemala, laws are meant to be broken.
But we are waking up. A revolution will
be deadly but so is life now."

COUNSELING & THERAPY

[) EV [ LOP JI\£~T

866-6000 X8422

in solidarity." He pleaded for people to
help in any way possible. The avenues
given first were to send telexes and
letters immediately demanding for the
release of his five comrades and a call to
respect human rights in general.
Lopez stressed coming to Guatemala
to witness the conditions flCSt hand.
International presence is particularly
called for in March during the

BARBARA J. MONDA M.S., M.A.

CA R[ E R

FURTHER INFORMATION: EF INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL
TESC •

by Eliza Reid
Julio Lopez, an exiled Guatemalan
student leadez, portrayed his experience
of his country's surging terrorist state to
over 150 people on Thursday in the
Library Lobby.
Before fleeing his country, Lopez
shared leadership in a targeted directorate
of 17 in the National Association of
University Students (AFU) at San Carlos
University in Guatemala City.
The 60,000 member AFU participates
internationally with and in alliance to: the
Federation of Central American Students,
the Organization of Latin American
Students, and the International Students
Union.
The expected protection from such
international affiliations failed when 10
out of the 17 in Lopez's executive
committee were "disappeared" on August
21 and 23.
Five tortured and muti~ted bodies
were dumped in Guatemala City. The
five remaining students are still at large
and are probably being "savagely tortured
by security forces now," Lopez said.
The remaining seven, including
Lopez, managed to escape by, "moving
around within twenty houses," he said.
They then fled to Nicaragua, Spain,
Mexico, Panama and to the United States.
"They disappear us and assassinate
us ... because we try to give a scientific
interpretation to the social conditions; he
said, and because, "we protest" those
conditions.
Much of Lopez's talk touched upon
crises that plague Guatemala and Central
America wilh mention of the Bush
administration' s and Americans' taxes
perpetuation of the regions terrorism.
Lopez cited dramatic data. which he
said was docwnented by the United
Nations and hwnan rights organizations:
·78 percent of the population is illiterate
·over 60,000 refugees
!t4D,OOO ~dows
.
.1,256 · professors and students killed in
the "struggle for freedom"
·220,000 orphans
·hundreds of pregnancies caused by
thousands of rapes by national security
forces
Towards the end of his lecture,
Lopez invited people to "simply join us

Z06 943-1114

EAGER TO EXPERIENCE TmS
AMERICAN TRADITION

Th ursday, November 9
1749: There was a verbal altercation

,Guatemalan exile comes to TESC

" -5

-- 4 -7

"Did you know that the TESC Bookstore
has more than just books?
WE'VE GOT: FILM, COMPUTERS. VITAMINS, SHAMPOO, CALCULATORS.
MAGAZINES, ALARM CLOCKS, BATfERIES, BACKPACKS, POSTERS, CANDY
BARS, MAPS. PICTIJRE FRAMES, PAINT BRUSHES, TAPES. BICYCLE CHAINS.
COMBINATION LOCKS, CARDS OF ALL KINDS, FRISBEES. WIND-UP TOYS,
OTHER TOYS. GIF1WRAP. T-SHIRI'S. SWEAT SHIRrS. ARf SUPPLIES,
OFFICE SUPPLIES, and a whole lot more. . .

~Jr
Bookstore

"G ... Gosh!
I didn't
know that!"

We now welcome

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Ad Layout Tminee part lime position
available winter quarter. Fmd out
how you can earn credit, money, and
a great reputation in the exciting
field of graphic design and
advertising. Contact Suzette or Kevin
at the ePJ in CAB 306A, or call
X6213. Closing date MOD, Nov. 27
(5 PM)

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Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

Page 3

What


IS

the College's ideal size?

by Scott A. Richardson
The Evergreen State College is able
to support 4500 students, according to a
Florida consultant contracted to study
Evergreen,
Central
Washington
University, and Western Washing IOn
University.
"I think that is inaccurate," responded
Evergreen President Joe Olander at the
fITSt in a series of community forums
held to discuss the ideal size of the
college.
About 40 members of the community,
including faculty, staff, and students,
gathered Monday 10 listen to Olander,
faculty member Paul Mott, and Dean of
Enrollment Services Arnaldo Rodriguez
as they discussed Evergreen's growth.

hislOry, often had difficulty in attracting
prospective students. Recent years have
seen a surge in the college's popularity,
and many community members have
become concerned about capacity.
Two and one-half years ago a multiconstituency commiUee at Evergreen
determined that the ideal size of' the
college would be 3,200 FfE (full time
enrollment). During the last four years
the FfE has increased from 2,400 to this
year's 2,950.
With future education demands in
Western Washington the legislature may
delegate responsibility to Evergreen 10
enroll even more new students. The
question is: How can Evergreen grow
while retaining its values and traditions?
Olander stated that rather than deal

There is no magic in
size, ... magic is
in the composition
of the community.

with external pressures (i.e. legislative
aspects) when they occur, it would be
beneficial for the Evergreen community
10 address the issue and be prepared with
a response.
Paul Motl, a faculty member since Health and Behavior college," but quickly
1984, spoke from a sociologist's added that this concept has little faculty
perspective. He said he sees some of support.
A salient feature at Evergreen is the
Evergreen's values as its affinity for
vitality of a relatively small number of
temporariness and its ability to focus
faculty who can know each other,
energy where it's needed. Increasing the
approach student needs, and create
college's size will tend to increase formal
effective programs, Rodriguez said. But
systems for discourse and make it more
he sounded disappointed that during his
difficult for the school to actualize its
twelve years at Evergreen the school has
values, he said.
"failed
royally"
in
getting
the
Mou echoed the notion that the
panicipation of students in the design of
legislature won't recognize Evergreen's
programs.
specific needs. Legislators "already have
Finally, Rodriguez pointed out that
notions of what a University is," and
the legislature must be made aware that
those notions are directed more toward a
. present staff and technology cannot
UW or CWU style, he said.
provide services at the personal level
MoU cited some subtler effects of
people have come to expect. Evergreen's
the expected population growth in
quality of life needs to be maintained
western Washington. 1bere is a rise in
during any increase in size, he said.
average income projected for the area, a
Some comments from the assembly
greater penchant for people 10 go to
college, more older students returning to
school, and newly arriving people have a
disproponionately high nwnber of
children.
The associated pressure to grow
worries him, Mou said, "because unless
we respond in avery, very careful way,
there a few strategies where we come out
winners."
MOll outlined five possible strategies
which include building more Evergreenstyle colleges in the region, allowing
Come see this varied coUectton oj handicrqfis
Evergreen to gradually become a midgathered from the countries oj South Amertca
sized traditional institution, creating a
series of autonomous colleges in this
INTERESTING • DIFFERENT • REASONABLE
vicinity
(the
Oxford
model),
"stonewalling," or doing nothing.
• ALPACA SWEATERS
Mou advised the forum that if
• TAPESTRIES
Evergreen shows a reluctance 10 grow,
• JEWELRy
the legislature may tend to "shun us at
• AND MUC~ MORE
budget time."
Arnaldo Rodriguez agreed that the

Olander stressed that there is no
magic in size, that magic is in the
composition of the community. Any
growth that the college undergoes should
be managed so that the school may avoid
the terror often associated with growth.
Instead, he said, Evergreen must
anticipate and plan for growth, because
an increase in size is vinually inevitable.

~

Conservative ,
estimates of Western /
Washington's
population indicate
that the region can
expect 7 to 7.5
million
immigrants
during the next 70
to 75 years
Conservative estimates of Western
WashinglOn 's population indicate that the
region can expect 1 10 1.5 million
immigrants during the next 10 10 15
years, the study revealed. ThurslOn
County is already one of the five fastest
growing counties in the country. The
enormous influx of new people will
create a demand for higher education
facilities, and Evergreen is at the heart of
the matter, Olander said.
12,000
Originally planned for
students, the college has, through its

ERe holds potluck
to discuss future

by Christopher Muir
The Environmental Resource Center
is here to serve you, but it in turn needs
your support. We are eager 10 help you
with information for assignments or
discuss ecological issues. We don't
promise 10 have all the solutions but we
will make a concened effon to assist you
in any way we can.
The coordinalOrs are Mark Langston
and Rebecca Smith. Please stop by if you

have any questions (or answers) or want
to get involved.
ThUTSday Nov. 16 at 6 pm we will
be holding a potluck to discuss current
projects as well as gathering input on
your ideas.
One of our current projects includes
the instigation of recycled paper here on
campus and elsewhere. We urge you once
again to panicipate in our common
future.

2¢-~:-~'es

time to confront the question of ideal size
has arrived. He reiterated that although
Evergreen is not for everyone, more
people in the state will want access 10
higher education.
Rodriguez asked, "Who are we 10
say we don't want more people to share"
in what Evergreen has to offer?
Regarding the curriculum, Rodriguez
suggested that there be, for example, "a
Matter and Motion college, a Human

Originally planned
for 72,000 students,
the college has,
through its history,
often had difficulty
in
attracting
prospective students.

were invited, and those received were
supportive of the idea of addressing the
growth problem before it is too late.
One faculty member who has been at
Evergreen for 18 years noted that a
branch-campus concept drawing attention
may be a stop-gap measure to "put out
political fires, not educational flTCS."
He suggested that a growing
Evergreen will allow a number of people
of commitment and vision to come to the
college.
But he also stressed the importance
of figuring a raw cost per student
necessary for any increase in size,
bearing in mind staff and faculty support,
buildings, and the admittedly ambiguous
quality of life.
The community forum was abruptly
ended by two fire alarms. But Olander
stated that another will be held in about
a month. The series of dialogues for
discussion of the ideal size of Evergreen
will continue with specific issues such as
curriculum, staffing, and communications.

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Page 4 Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

Govern"a nce
;

SU passes guidelines for voting
by Scott A. Richardson
The month-old proposal to allow
campus-wide votes and polls to be
conducted by the Student Union (SU)
passed
unanimously
Wednesday.
"Initiative and Referendum: All-student
votes and polls" will amend the SU
document so that a broader constituency
may voice its opinion on student
concerns.
Votes will become binding SU
decisions if a minimum 25% of the
registered students on campus pass the
ballot by a 2/3 majority. Polls are meant
as infonnative devices and are nonbinding.
Votes and polls must be conducted in
accordance with the "Evergreen Electoral
Guide," which passed with the proposal.
The guide outlines regulations regarding
the conduct of referendums and pons
administered at a ballot table and
involving the expenditure of S & A
..funds.
The SU also unanimously approved
the appointments of nine new S & A

Board members (see News Briefs).
The SU endased WashPIRG's
current affmnation drive and gave support
to the continuation of the campus
WashPIRG chapter which is funded by a
waivable fee. The SU endorsement does
not preclude the all-campus petition drive
by WashPIRG next quarter. Knoll
Lowney, who brought the item for SU
endorsement, indicated that the drive will
still require a minimum 25% of the
student body to vote in suppon of
WashPIRG in order to keep the chapter
alive.
Discussion ot a request for Hearing
Board members took place. The Hearing
Board structure is changed this year and
provides for three student members, an
unprecedented high, which will create a
student majority on the board. Selections
will be made at the fITSt SU meeting of
winter quaner.
The SU deliberated on the fact that
the Student Art Gallery has no advisor or
coordinalOr and will need both before the
SAG can begin to display an. Scott

.,

.

Richardson will chair a committee to
investigate the status of the SAG
situation.
Lydia Cooley, student liaison to the
Board of Trustees, reponed on the
Board's meeting of November 8. Among

. items of interest were how to introduce
the three newly appointed board members
to Evergreen.
There will be no SU meeting during
Thanksgiving break.

The SU wants you!
Student Union Board member applications
are being solicited. This is a great
opportunity to learn about government
and group dynamics and to gain
experience with administrative and
academic aspects of the college. Plus.
you get paid! $4.50 per hour, 8 hours per
week. Positions include:
Board Member for Facilitation: This
position serves to facilitate, or arrange the
facilitation of, each Student Union
meeting. S/he will also ensure the
efficiency and fairness of each meeting.
This position also has the responsibility
to do outreach 10 historically excluded
persons or groups.
Board Member for Education: This
position functions primarily to educate ·
students so as 10 enable them to fully
utilize their Student Union. The position
also serves as a liaison between the
Union and the Academic area of the

Next Student Union
Meeting Wednesday,
November 29 at 3pm
CAB
108
(new
location)

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Page 5

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Pro-Choice marchers gathered in Seattle November
12, including a strong contingent from Olympia. The March
coincided with similar gatherings across the country.

Pro-choice lD.archers
gather in Seattle
by Honna Metzger
An estimared 5,000 - 6,000 people
attended a pro-choice march in Seattle on
November 12.
Newly elected Mayor Norm Rice
spoke at the rally, along with Todd
Schneider of the Rainbow Coalition,
renowned feminist Bella Abzug, and
Cynthia Sylvian.
In Olympia, About 275 men and
women loaded into buses headed for the
rally, after a send-off at the Capitol. City
Council members Sandra Romero, Nina
Carter, and Senator Mark Kreidler spoke
to the crowd, often emphasizing their
belief in standing up for reproductive
freedom.
At the main rally in Seattle, men and
women of all ages heard Norm Rice
warn pro-choice supporters not to be
complacent about the preservation of
abortion rights.
Three pro-life supponers protesred the
march by peacefully holding signs on the
sidelines.
As the marchers headed through
Seattle streets, many observers cheered
from doorways, and some stepped from
their homes to join the throng as it

passed by.
President Bush recently velbed a bill
which aimed to provide poor women with
federal funds for abortion, if pregnancy
resulred from rape or inCl'.st.
As the law now stands, federal
funding for abortion is provided, but only
when the woman's life is deemed
threatened by pregnancy or childbirth.
The U.S. Supreme Coun will soon
consider three cases which could limit
women's current access to abortion. Two
involve the issue of parental consent for
minors seeking abortion; the other case
could result in states placing new
restrictions on the operations of abortion
clinics.
Planned Parenthood is planning a prochoice activity to take place January 12
at the Capitol building, on the day
Legislature opens.
Olympia National Organization for
Women (NOW) chairwoman Jamie
Moore said many bills are expected to be
introduced this session which aim to
restrict
abortion
through
the
implementation of mandatory parental
consent and restrictions in state funding.

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Page 6 Cooper Point Journal NQvember 16, 1989

complained that the picture and caption
was sexist. One of The P~r's staff
members repliec1 ~ the writer hadn't
intended that interpretation.
.'
. An early opinion piece bemoaned the
fact that there :was no sense of
community at Evczgreen. Evergreeners
were" too individualistic, sometimes to
their own detriment. and there was no
official way to canvas opinion to find out
what students really thoughL
Reading it one gets the sense that the
more things change, the more they stay
the same. Almost 20 years later students
still face many of the same dilemmas.
The early issues of The Paper are an
interesting exercise in nostalgia
Nixon was president, and hanging on
with every bit of power he could muster.
Hitchhiking was a popular form of
travel until young women began
.
disappearing.
One young Evergreen woman
disappeared on a walk from her dorm.
Campus security was concemed and
published a missing persons bulletin.
Shonly thereafter came the first
reports about a man named Ted.
Shonly before his execution in
Horida, Ted Bundy admitted that he had
captured and killed the Evergreen student.
Patty Hearst had been kidnapped and
some argued in The Paper that her
kidnapping was a positive thing, a small
token of retaliation against the capitalistic
oppressors.
An early issue had a piece criticizing
smoking at Evergreen written by a
studenL
At the time, from the writer's
perspective, smokers were rampant and
ruining the campus. The Paper's editorial
collective published what was supposed
to a humorous picture showing them
collectively editing the writers piece,

by Darrel W. RUey
From the year Evergreen students
arrived on campus, 1971, some students
wanted a campus newspaper. They argued
that academic programs were closed
social communities. Evergreeners had no
method to find out what the people
outside their programs were thinking. The
paper would be a vehicle for community
interaction.
The paper they envisioned was
volunteer, run by committee. It involved
staff, students, and faculty in an allencompassing media. It would be
supplemented by a community radio
station, and by the student groups.
The new newspaper, called The
Paper, wanted everyone to work on the
paper. Students were welcome, but they
were not to be the only members, The
Paper wanted staff and faculty as well. It
waS imponant to them that it be a
community paper, in the broadest sense
of the word.
One of the early supporters and
contributors to The Paper was the student
group MECHA. MECHA not only f111Illy
supponed The Paper and contributed
reports of their activities, but seems to
have had a role in influencing the newly
fopned S & A Board to fund The Paper.
But there were few other contributors.
The first papers mainly were
comprised of snian announcements and
complaints about Evergreen or the newly
formed paper.
The first issue of the paper published
an advertisement with a picture of a
young woman captioned, "Buy a used
book from this woman? The presence of
Sandi Calof behind the bookstore
checkout counter is ~n enough to take
advantage o( the special sale extending
through this week."
The first leuer to the editor

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every one of them with a lit cigareue.
And back came the outtaged
response from the writer. The picture
wasn't funny, they were all
etc.
Soon only a few dedicated people
were working on The Paper. Even among
the students with a conttact to work on
the paper some were fulfilling their jobs,
some weren'L Issues were iJ:regular and
it was clear a new structure for the paper
was needed.
Within two years The Paper's
organization changed from a collective to
an editor and staff.
Looking through the early issues of
The Paper, renamed in 1973 The Cooper
Point Journal, there are definite trends in
staffmg.
First some gullible person believes
they could become editor and improve
the paper. They get the job and begin the
exhonation for input and for reliable
people to staff the paper.
Slowly they change the paper with
their ideas. Since they have little writing
to work with, and must publish most of
the writing they receive, they instead
work on the typeface, page layout,
editorials, and .the overall style of the
paper.
The paper usually consists of small
news pieces, long editorials, and a few
long news pieces written by some
intrepid soul who almost inevitably is
severely criticized for the bias in his or
her effon.
(One notable exception in the early
issues was the series of well-done stories
about the sullied and sordid history of
ASH, with its consistent gouging of the
students it was supposed to be serving.)
Criticism builds. One person, in
particular, writes letters and editorials
complaining about the quality of the
paper and giving ideas for how to do
things better.
This letter writer usually builds
his/her criticism to a crashing crescendo
about how bad the paper is.
The leuer writer often then becomes
editor and suddenly there is a panicky
cry for input because this year he/she
wants to create a different paper, a better
paper then the one run by those idiots
last time.
Eventually he/she repents the earlier
rash remarks, and begins to appreciate
how hard the previous staffers work. But
by then its too late to back out, he/she is
stuck until the end of the year.
And so the cycle begins anew.
Early on, the staff at the paper
decided that concentrating on Evergreen
was too lirnired, especially as no one at
Evergreen was writing. They shifted their
focus to the largcz community. But what
did the larger community mean? No one
was quite sure.
Some issues have excellent articles or
opinions, some are merely disorganized
rambling. 'I}Je issues ranged without
warning from international policy to
complaining about the animals on
campus.

biased:

Without a history of reporters the
paper has had to work with whatever
people produce. The paper, therefore, has
always been very uneven its quality and
focus .
Not much of this is directly under
the editor's cootrol, it depends mainly on
the input, although occasionally the deft
hand of an editor can be detected. If an
issue concerned enough people, often (not
always) the paper could get someone to
write about iL
Early issues included some issues
familiar to students today; lack of
community,
problems
in
student
government, campus security.
However, some issues would be
alien to the recent student. For example,
providing bus service to the Evergreen
campus was a continuing problem since
so few students rode the bus.
.
The Comer, Lesbian and Gay
Resource Center (L/GRC), and a varie.ly
of other things TESC. students take for
granted today were being argued.
(The initial LjGRC funding created
quite a controversy, internally as well as
externally. The S & A Board voted
twice, once in special session so there
would be no question about their votes.)
Early supponers of the paper helped
subsidize a paper which had problems
getting enough material to fill in around
the ads.
The Asterisk was an early supponer,
as could be expecred since its founder
was Jim Holly, the former Evergreen
libraiian, and his son Mike, the current
owner,
However,
a
surpnsmg
early
supporter was Peterson's Foodtown (now
Peterson·s Shop-Rite.) They consistently
paid for advertising in the paper, week
after week, through changes in editors,
changes in format. and writing that varied
from mindless drivel to pieces which
almost reached the level of news
reporting.
Fraternities were a hot item. Many
students wanted them as a method of
creating a larger community than
academic programs could provide.
The language of racism was strong
on both sides. One article in the paper
discussed a man who had come to
campus and said all whites were racist.
An offended student wrote a
response in which he expressed his pain
at that attitude.
In 1971 a new paper was created at
The Evergreen State College. Eighteen
years late... the paper still exists. The
Cooper Point Journal is now as old as
some of the students who contribute to it
It is clear now, as it was then, that
the paper is only as good as its
contributors. If you have . something to
say, send it in.
The CPJ will nevcz be a paper like
the University of Washington Daily, or
Washington State's Daily Evergreen, but
it is a good way for Evergreeners to
communicate with each other.

Cooper Point Journal November
' .• ,

,

','. I

~.

16, 1989.

Page7

Opinion

Notes from

Joe

by Joe Olander
The Founding Faculty met with me
and the Board of Trustees on November
8 in order to listen to the Founding
Faculty's views about the conception of
the college, about where it has been,
where it is now, and where it may be
going in the future--and of things gained
and lost along the way.
The Trustees and I felt that the
Founding Faculty's views are an
imponant source of wisdom as we
continue to light our way into the future.
One of the things that has been lost
along the way, according to the faculty
present at the meeting, is a more genuine
sense of unity that existed in the early
development of the College, nurtured
partly by externally generdted crises.
Over time, the College community
has devolved into subsets of community-students, faculty, classified staff, and
exempt staff--concemed primarily about
issues specific to their constituency.
There is a general feeling that it is
imponant to fmd ways for the
development of a trans-constituency
consciousness.
One of these ways may be the
President's Advisory Board (PAB). About
four years ago, I charged a DTF
(disappearing task force) to make
recommendations for a college-wide
advisory group. Their recommendations
led to the formation of the President's
Advisory Board.
Comprised of three faculty members,
three staff members, three students, and
three persons selected at large to ensure
diverse representation, the PAB has been
meeting monthly for the last 3 l{l years.
Its purpose is to deal effectively with
college-wide issues and to act as a
college-wide communication structure.
The issues can be brought to the
Board by its membership or from any
member of the community through her
constituency representative on the PAB.
PAB members have the responsibility
to communicate with their constituency
groups and to bring that communication
into discussions with me and with their
fellow PAB members. In order to ensure
vitality through the course of time,
structures like the PAB should be selfreflective and evaluative.
Last week, current and former
members of the P AB and of the DTF
that recommended its creation met with
me for such a self-reflective session.
The group grappled with the general
questions of the relevance of the PAB
and its effectiveness in carrying out its
mission.
After a thoughtful discussion, the
group conceded that we do not need to
reinvent this wheel, but that we do need
to pump some air into it.
The vitality of the PAB rests with
all of us .
PAB members must have the passion
and the commitment to dedicate their
time to an organization central to the
health of our College. And members of
the PAB's constituency groups must
likewise take the time to use the channels
for communication and campus-wide
discussion that the PAB can provide.
With the resolution of the College
community, we may begin to gain back
what we have lost over the years.
To find out more about the PAB
members and scheduled PAB meetings,
please call Marcia Husseman at extension
6 113.

Letters

I say, Give 'em guns!
by Chris Cbandler
I voted the wrong way in the student
poll about whether TESC security should
be armed.
I believed it when my fellow peers
told me that if TESC security people
were armed that soon there would be
dead students . innocently shot. I also
believed it when I was told that some of
the TESC security people were paranoid
and rude. And that" none of the TESC
security people are qualified to carry a
gun while on duty.
Weill I've got just one thing to say
to that bunch of u-bucda. NO!
Those guys are actual police officers,
so they are theoretically qualified to use
a gun. And after talking to them I get the
general impression that it is very unusual
that they don't have them; a minority in
the law enforcement community.
Well, I would just like to say that
there seem to be a lot of people around
here who think they know more than
they actually do. And when "everybody
thinks they are more knowledgeable than
they are, then is when the nastiest social
disease known to bird or beast is a
plague in the land, sending men and
women to their graves and making
terrible TV drama interesting.
This disease causes more deaths than
any other unknown killer. Its not AIDS
or any of your garden variety of venereal
diseases. You can't protect yourself ffom
this nasty little bugger with a condom or
even with abstaining from sex all
together!
Ignorance is the iilVader, and Gossip
is the Creator!
If you have studied the history and
current methods of law enforcement or
have talked with TESC security people
themselves then you can be saved! But
if you haven't ... BEWARE!! You could
be thinking you know absolutely nothing
about effective law enforcement. The
very thought of reading an issue of
Security Today makes me want to clean
my community kitchen!
But, fortunately there is a cure. If
you are told by your friends and
neighbors that UFOs are landing in Red
Square, whetht7 they be talking about
TESC or the Soviet Union, you have to
do this one thing for yourself.
Check it out!
Now I know you don't have time to
do a whole lot of investigative reporting,
because you are probably trying to get
your school work: done. So you won't get

confused by what other people are saying
and be getting all in a fuss OVt7 in$ane
police officers knocking at your door at
night or where you can . put your
valuables until the alien invasion is over,
I'll tell you what you can do.
When someone that you know and
love comes up to you and Sllys, "Hey,
Chris, did you know that one of the
employees in the Greenery is an exNazi-hypocrite?" you just say back to
them, "You know Constance, I really like
you a lot and I enjoy the things we do
together and I will never leave you for
another, but when you start talking like
that, I mean without you giving me any
evidence or stuff like that, well I ... you
know I love you .. I really do, but when
you start talking like that, well I think
YOU'RE PLUMB FULL OF U-BU-DA!
I realize this can be hard on those
you love, but don't let them be
by
the
spontaneously
generating
miscommunication that's sweeping this
campus. Just realize that conservatives
and police officers and pro-lifers are
people. too. They have a heart and a
brain and deserve to be heard and talked
to before you believe evil and nasty
things about them.
So I say, Give 'em guns! They are
actually trying to do their jobs and they
honestly think that they ought to be able
to carry a gun so that they can protect
themselves and you and me from
whatever situations that can arise.
I certainly can not claim to have
superior knowledge of law enforcement
and even when I questioned them about
the matter they had plenty to say about
the procedures for the safer use of a gun.
Don't be watching Lethal Weapon or any
Dirty Harry movies and think that that's
acceptable. That is fiction. Talk to
somebody if you want to know.
Like the Man himself. Yeah, I do
mean THE MAN! Socrates, himself!
Everybody's read at least one of his·
dialogues, so if you want to kick some
butt and come up with some solid facts
and test out your beliefs, big and small,
conventional or radical, traditional or
new, then ASK QUESTIONS!
"Well, what about police officers in
England? I've heard they don't carry
guns."
There's a great question! '
"How come they don't have guns
while on regular duty, but only when the
are
situation arises
where
guns
necessary?"

taken



Alright, you're doing great. I'm
definitely very curios about· these
questions so I'll meet you in the library
and fight over the latest issue of
Policeman's Digest. Who knows, maybe
I voted the right way after all.

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

argued during the recent election that the
charter would make government more
"cost effective."
However, charter governments in
other areas of the country have always
cost more than the decentralized, grass
roots
city
councils
and
county
government they were design to
"improve." Soon after. the King County
Charter was enacted, King County's
budget escalated 50%, from $80.1 million
in 1968 to $113.6 million, in just three
years. Instead of just three county
commissioners, there were now ten - nine
county council members and a King
County Executive, all of whom were paid
a. total of $189,000 - three and a half
tunes. ~hat the ol~ three · county
commissioners were pau1.
Taxes were, of course, increased to
pay for this new bureaucracy. However,
although the number of bureaucrats
increased the number of police in the
county actually declined, because much
of the revenues generated from new taxes
went for salary increases for the new
bureaucrats.
In 1972, King County had 550
uniformed police officers. by 1981, this

B.S. the powers that be try to convince
us is the only way, the journalist
challenged the prevailing ideology.
lf Upton Sinclair had never
challenged the slaughterhouses, might we
still not be subjecting ourselves to worse
poisons that we do anyhow? If The
Washington Post ·had not continued its
in~estigatio~ of Watergate, might we not
still have NIxon as our Fuhrer?
Every year since I've been here
(three) the dispute concerning advertisers'
"freedom of speech" comes up. Once
again, I will ask, as I have before: How

I can't hold my tongue a minute
longt7. Your November 9 issue was
enough to make me choke.
While it may "not be the role of a
newspaper to decide for (its) readers what
is moral or" correct' for them to read" (p.
7), there was a time when journalism was
more than reporting the state line. When,
complicity in the
instead of

can something be free when one has to
pay for it?
As to "classism" - to me the
statement, "If not for the military's
educational benefits, today he would be
a coal miner in West Virginia" infers that
a coal miner lacks an integrity found in
other, more upwardly mobile jobs.
Another defmition I have difficulty
with is calling phone callers "terrorists."
If there are any terrorists to be talked
about, it is the USAF who should answer
that charge first, with the blood of
millions on their hands.

It is their system which trains men
to shoot down people as if they were
figures on a video game: it is our
acceptance of it that allows such
"terrorism" to continue.
One more thing, regarding Mr.
Riley's comments, if the patriots of the
American revolution had obtained
clearance from the proper authorities
before, say, the Boston Tea Party, would
it ever have occurred?
Ron Jacobs

Planned-Parenthood advertisement offends
Though I am not a student at TESC
I am a member of the community where
you distribute your publication and I do
follow with interest some of the activities
on campus as reported in the CPJ .
I'd like to question placement of the
advertisement by Planned Parenthood
Corporation in the CPJ for the purpose of
fund raising. I understand your
advertising policy-- advertisements do not
necessarily represent your opinion.
However, even the CPJ has
convictions-- convictions which have been
evidenced by action. Far example, I can't

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"'HOU SHALT "HOLD
NO WOVEN IMAGE
BEFORE ME"
An after-thought: If there is anything
wrong with the Evergreen Community it's
that the generally accepted epistemology
is urine-soaked u-bu-da.



Charter IS unreSpOnSIVe
by Ted Mahr, Chair, Citizens ror
Better Government
Whenever government becomes more
centralized, it becomes less accountable
to the public. In King County, although
regional government was hailed by
freeholders as a way to "insure
accountability, enable effective citizen
participation, and preserve a health
environment .. " (Seattle P-I, 10/8/68), in
actuality regional government stifled
citizen participation.
For example, in violation of the State
Open Meetings Act, important county
council meetings began to be held
secretly, " and the county's financial
records were kept from the public (see
Seattle P-I, l{l6n3 , and Seattle Times,
2/4n3).
Environmentalists who wrote
the King County charter in 1968 found
two yea'rs later that the newly created
County Council just wasn't responsive to
citizens. One freeholder who helped write
the chaner complained, "the Council has
reached the point where it is best for
persons not to work through the Council,
especially in (environmental) areas.. :
(Seattle Times, 5f3nO).
Thurston County Chaner proponents

J ournalis:m should report :more than state line

number had declined to 500. Although
crime had increased. police forces in rural
areas such as North Bend and Enumclaw
were abolished and replaced with county
police, reducing the police protection
afforded to these areas (see Seattle
Times, 11/4nl).
Thurston County Administrator Tom
Fitzsimmons recently noted that the costs
for the Thurston County freeholders will
be upwards to $100,000 (Olympian,
1119/89). If history is any gui!1e, this is
just the beginning.
The proponents of the charter sold it
as a way to control growth. LOTI n was
also marketed as a way to control
growth, although the costs could have
reached $500 million, and the public
would have subsidized developers sewer
lines all over the county. Interestingly,
some of the same people who brought us
LOTI n are now freeholders.
Thurston County voters have twice
rejected city-county charter government in
1978 and 1986. The 1978 charter would
have created a seven member city-county
council. Olympia would have the

see charter page 9

:]

remember the last time I read a GE or
Exxon advertisement in the CPJ.
Even as a community we protest the
General
Electric
Corporation's
participation in South Mrican business by
boycotting G.E. products. We also
boycott Exxon products-- you know,
Exxon, master of oilspills and gook on
our beaches.
But now, you print an advertisement
for the Planned Parenthood Corporation.
A nice, sweet advertisement signed by
Lee Minto. The advertisement patronizes
TESC and members of the community in

the hopes of a little financial
remembrance.
You may know Minto is one of the
fmancial masterminds behind exploiting
women's bodies for profit Do you have
any idea how much money she and her
organization make from their "services"?
And it's all couched in the cheap talk of
"choice". Does she really care?
Hopefully, you'll exercise some
choice and politely refuse further space
for that kind of rubbish.
John Wright

Student Union /authors defend themselves
This is in response to the letter from
Michael Perez which appeared in the last
issue of the Cooper Point Journal.
Perez made a couple of mistakes in
his letter. Specifically, his reference to
the three authors of The Student Union
document, Mary Lou O'Neil and the two
of us, as Europeans:
This was a surprising revelation to
us, given the 'fact that "we were born in
the United States. Additionally, Michael
never asked us whether we're EumAmericans. He appareDtly followed some
perverse ~they all look alike" reasoning,
asswning . that all Iight-complexioned
people must be of European ancestry.
This is not in fact so. One of us,
Brendan. has roots that go back to Israel.
James also has a
multi-cultural
background. with Siouan ancestry.
Perez's gender bias also is evident in
his persistent refusal to recognize women

STAFF BOX
Co-Editors: Kevin Boyt7 and Suzette
Williams
Business Manager: Edward Martin ill
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
.
Production Manager: Tedd Kelleher
Ad Layout: Tina Cook
Resident Artist: Heatht7 Candelaria
Pboto EdWr. Peter Bunch
Cal~dar: WE.NEED ONEill
TypISt: Cadtenne Darley
Arts and Enteltainment: Andrew Hamlin
Editorial Policy:
The Cooper Point Joumal (CPJ)
editors and staff may amend or clarify
these policies.
ObJectlv.:
The CPJ editor and staff are
determined to make the CPJ a student
forum for communication which is both
entertaining and informative.
Deadlines:
Calendar-Friday, noon
Articles-Friday, noon
Letters-Monday, noon
Ads-Monday, 5 pm
Rules for aubmlaalons:
Submissions are accepied from CPJ
staff members as well as students and
community members. Submissions must
be original. Before undertaking tlmeconsuming or lengthy projects, however,
It's a good Idea to contact the editors
ahead of deadline.
Submissions should be brought to the
CPJ offices on an IBM formatted diskette.
Any word processing file compatible with
WordPerfect 5.0 is acceptable. Disks
should Include a double-spaced printout,
with the author's name, daytime phone
number and address. Disks will be
returned as soon as possible.

Headline Writer. Dan Snuffm
Poetry Editor: Kauina Barr
Staff Writers: Honna Metzger. Scott A
Richardson, Tim Gibson, Barrett Wilke
Elisa R. Cohen, Dan Snuffin, Chri~
Bader, Carol B. Hall, Joe Olander
Contributors: Chris Chandler. Elisa
Cohen, Ted Mahr. James Dannen
Brendan Williams, John - Wright, R~
Jacobs. Darrel W. Riley, Gilligan Malden,
Christopher Muir, Elisa Cohen, Eliza
Reid, Ron Austin, Teresa L. Taylor
If you are unable to comply with the
submission requirements for any reason,
contact the editors for assistance.
Lattars:
Letters will be accepted on all
subjects. They must include the author's.
real name, phone number and address.
Although the address and phone number
will not be published, the CPJ will not
publish letters submitted without this
Information.
Letters will be edited for libel,
grammar, spelling and space. Letters
should be 300 words or less. Every
attempt is made to publish as many letters
as possible however, space limitations and
tlmelines may influence publication.
Letters do not represent the opinions
of the CPJ staff or edItOrs.
Advertising:
The CPJ is responsible for restitution
to our advertising customers for mistakes
in their advertisements in their lirst printing
only. Any subsequent printings of this
mistake are the sole responsibility of the
advertising customer.
Staff U..tlnga:
Open meetings are held weekly In the
CPJ office Fridays at noon.

as having been a group that has been
oppressed, continues to be oppressed, and
that has its own cultural identity.
: In addition, we never "saw to it that
funding was given to these positions," in
reference to the Student Union Board.
That was decided unanimously under the
Geo-Voice governance structure, and
endorsed by the Services and Activities
Board under Perez's leadershiJr. .
When we began work on the Student
Union, we did so with the intention of
creating a system that would pull people
together, not push them apart. Therefore,
we have been dismayed at how
monochromatic and male the attendance
at the meetings has been. Homogeneity
was not our goal.
Another disturbing factor is the
apparent coalescing of a "governance
clique," a small group of students that
exercise power in the name of the larger,
non-participating student body.
We have no deSire to furthec
perpetuate this power elite that many
people, prominent among them Darrel
Riley, haVe been afrIIid of. Therefore,
neither of us plan to apply for a Student
Union Board position.
We want to emphasize to students
that The Student Union is your student
government In allayin~ people's fears

that we might dooiinate the process we'd
like to encourage a greatc7 divezsity of
participation. Particularly needed are
applicants of color as well as women for
the SUB positions. These positions will
represent some nominal authlxity, and we
need strong student advocates who
haven't necessarily participated in
governance meetings up until now but are
willing to do so.
In fact, it would be invaluable to
have fresh, new people in those positions.
Especially people who will work for the
students alone, and not the administration.
It's going to be tough enough gaining
concessions without being sold out or
compromised by one of our own.
Weenco~e~~to~d~an

application for the SUB in CAB 305, the
Services and Activities office. You can
also contact the Coordinator of Hiring,
Larry JeffClSOn, at extensioo 6781.
We'd also like to discourage any
memo wars. since they symbolize a
breakdown in both communication and
community. We'd be happy to address
specific concerns in person, and can be
reached eitha by phone (extension 6785)
or through the governance mailbox in
CAB 305.
James Dannen
Brendan WilHams

charter. continued from page 8
numerical superiority in four out of the
seven council seats.
Lacey, Tumwater, and nnl Thurston
County would have had the numerical
majority for only one seat each. Thus,
Olympia would have assumed control
ovt7 the rest of the county. As in 1978,
if a regional government is formed,
Olympia will likely control the rest of the
county, and some of the same Olympia
city officials who were behind LOTI II
would resurface in any regional
government.
What would happen if Olympia
controlled the rest of the county? Again,
we have to look at the history of the
Olympia City Council.
Olympia city officials: (1) Forcibly
blocked the "Let's Vote on LOTI"
initiative from the ballot last year. The
initiative would have given Olympia
voters the right to a say in sewer lines
and development issues. (2) Changed the
zoning in Grass Lake and Rolling Fields
to high density to accommodate
developers.
(3)
Allowed
Seattle
developers to illegally destroy state and
federally protected wetlands at Grass
Lake with bulldozers while Olympia city

officials stood idly by.
Only afta many citizen complaints
was this bulldozing halted. In addition,
Olympia wants to annex 400 acres of a
nnl residential community along Mud
Bay Road for the benefit of the Pace
Corporation
in
Bellevue
(see
"Improvement Could Mean Destruction,"
Cooper Point Journal, Nov. 2, 1989).
In the process, families and
businesses which have existed for
generations will be wiped out for this
corporation's business park.
Further, if Olympia controlled the rest
of the county, and there were conflicting
budget priorities - e.g., funding police
services in the rural south county vs.
paying for Olympia city needs - the rest
of the county would likely suffer, since
Olympia officials would likely make
Olympia's needs first priority, with the
rest of the county second.
History repeats itself. If you ignore
history, you are bound to repeat it's
mistakes. If history is any guide, the
prospects for better government under a
regional city-county chaner government
for Thurston County are not very good.

Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

Page 9

CPJ February 24, 1977

The Man Who Wants to .Close Evergreen
Senator A.l. "Slim" Rasmussen is the
man who seems most responsible for the
drive to close down Evergreen and turn it
into a satellite campus of the University of
Washington, Yesterday morning Managing Editor Brad Pokorny stationed himself
outside Rasmussen's office and secured a
briel interview with him. Pokorny reports
that Rasmussen was friendly . The interview follows.

CPI: Why do yo'u want to turn Evergreen into a graduate facility of the University of Washington?
. Rasmussen: I think thars a temporary
move, to make it a branch of the UW.
Right now the university is overloaded
with graduate students. This will allow a
temporary shift in the load, and then
probably it'll be made into 'a satellite campus for state office buildings. Bert Cole's
office needs more space. We can use the

-------------::-=:-=-----------'--------.

·
d
d
.
d
e
a
I
MO r
,
S t U de n t na b b e d

CPJ April 19, 1973

by SHEILA LUNDIN
Bernard Boreman, 19, was
arrested at his apartment in
Modular Housing Saturday night ,
April 7, and charged with
viol a tion of the Controlled
Substance Act and Desecration of
the American flag, both
misdeameanors.
The arrest came after Campus
Security men James Carpenter
and Andrew Daley received a IO
PJll. phone call from Detective
James Flint , Narcotics Division of
the Olympia Police Department,
who asked that they meet him
and five Thurston County
deputies at the intersection of
Kaiser Road and College
Parkway.
Carpenter and Daley followed
the officers to the Modules,
where the deputies surrounded
the apartment.
Carpenter said he was asked to
ente r the apartment at this time,
where he observed an officer
taking photographs of a cluster of
2·3 foot plants , which we re next
to the living room window.
Boreman was then arrested by
Flint and taken into cust ody by
Sergeant Jake Medved of the
T h u r s ton Co unty Sheriff
Department.
According to <Security sources,
Flint then asked three deputies to
re main at the apartment while he
went to get the search warrant
changed. The original warrant, it
was reported, read 3178 instead

large American flag with a :tole cut
in it and a small knapsack that
appeared to have been made from
it.
At the conclusion of the
search Security was asked to lock
up the premises.
According to Det. Flint , an
off· duty Washington State
patrolman driving through the
campus earlier in the week saw
the plants in the living room
window and ' notified Thurston
County officials.

of3 188.
A search o f the apartment on
Flint's return one hour later
uncovered various paraph enalia
including: four pipes, one roach
clip, baggies containing residue,
two bags 0 f see ds, five plants
ap proximately 2-3 feet high,
numerous seedlings and letters of
so rt s th a t identifi e d the
occupants to the apartment. In
one bedroom officers found a

DOES THIS MAN WEAR
"PINK SHOE LACES?"
Yes . this is Tim
Thorp, manager of
Golden
Oldies
Records & Tapes.
Since 1970, Galden
Oldies
has
sold
hundreds
of

·Pink Shoe Laces·

legislature that we have, apparently, only
79 [freshmen in fall quarter direct from
high school) from in-state, and it seemed
rather foolish to keep a school open that
only could attract that many students
from in-state.
CPI: Are there any political motives,
at least on your part, with Evans being
appointed as the new president?
Rasmussen: No, I don't think so. It's
iust purely a matter of cost. Do you keep
four colleges open and run them at halfload, or do you concentrate the load and
run them at capacity7
CPI: What are the bill's chances of
passing?
Rasmussen: I think it has an excellent
chance. The chairman of the Ways and
Means committee is very much interested
in the dollars savings. [Senator Hubert
Donohue (D) is chairman of the Ways and
Means committee and a co-sponsor of the
bill. I
CPI : The biD is in the Higher Education
committee now. If it fails there, could It
go around that?
Rasmussen: Yes. It could come up any
number 01 ways.
CPI: Did you vote for Evergreen in
1967 when it was founded?
Rasmussen: I thi~ I did. We had high
hoPes . .. At that tiine our school population was going up rapidly . But right
from the primary grades on up it's now
on a downward curve.

CPJ December

~==~==~==::======.==~13, 1971

~Ra~t=e==co=m=Rarls0n Radio calls
HOUSING RENTAL RATES - 1973-75

Type of Unit

Fall

3 student apt.
1973-74 rate

5279
$210

Spring

Winter

5192
$210

Annually

$575
$570

5154
$200

$301
5210

5208
$210

$166
$200

$570

$301

$208
$190

5166
$180

$625
$510

$324
$205

$222
$205

$179
$195

$675
$550

$324
$220

$222

$675

$220

$179
$210

$600

2 student apt .

$335
$210

5230
$210

$185
$200

5700
$570

5 student apt.

$358
$220

$245
$220

$185
$210

$750

4 student apt.

2 student studio

$190
1 student studio

Duplex (mods)

S62S

Evergreen

but I know
a little something

new
A
mean s
of
communicati o n
is
being
developed
at
Evergreen.
Possibiliti~s of an F.M. radio
station are being investigated to
co nvey news in stantly without
delay to the TESC commu nity

~.

about economics."

You've doneyour homework. You know where the
best values are. You also
know that with AI&T, it costs
less than most people think
to stay in touch with your
family and friends.
In fact, you can make a
la-minute, coast-to-coast
call any time, any cia); for less
than $3,00 with ARff..And
who else can promise immediate credit for wrong numbers, the fastest connections,
and the largest worldwide
long distance network?
Nobody but A1&T.
fur more information
on AI&T Long Distance
Products and Services, like
the AI&T Card, call 1 800
525~955) Ext. 100.

Tuition change proposed
1975~:,,;.I: r.-·~~-::~:::- f-·- -· ;:~:~'~~;~:;·- · -·

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OLDIPIA PUBLIC RADIO I'M 89,3
TD ~ ALDRNATIVII:
PRESENTS

ONE ENCHANTED EVENING

Lei Golden Oldies
find the reoord ()(
tape you'lle been

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flOWN

Appeared in the CPJ April 8, 1976.
Done by former CPJ editor Matt
~~~r:,i:c,i.WhO is now a famous

coming november 17th

Club

METRO
young adult nightclub
on 5th ave. between Washington & Capitol Way
in downtown Olympia

LlJJl L r"h..t

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so dear. Consider that without these
institutions,
which
have
proven
themselves allover the country, we lack
a considerable stabilizing influence. I say
that Evergreen cannot long survive
without some steps being taken in this
direction. It is my intention to begin
taking some of those sters as soon as I
can muster the support, am sure that I
am not alone in my stand on this issue.
There must be a large silent majority that
would welcome the chance to be charter
members of the first Evergreen FraternitySorority.
. Ailyone interested in helping me with
this great enterprise and carving a place
for themsel~s in the history of this
wonderful school of ours can contact me
at Evergreen for the Pacific Eight
Conference, room 3502A, TESC eet.
signed
A.J, Moore

t1 "l l j ~ CS

II'It;ef"IJ iew

i '.>

"I n music we hope tu du the
ionl!(,",ible and [1leasc almost
everyone with name music and
college talent : ' accordi ng to
orga n i Zil tio nal
so urces.
A
quest io nn ai re wil l be o ut soo n to
help the radio sta ti on orga nizers

.

1I i1 1lt.

want

~~I~Jl

CPJ April 19. 1973

eN November 9,

)
LooKIN6-

The radio voice uf TE5C is still
in the plann ing stage, bUI within
the nex t f~w munth s it wi ll be
opera tio nal
throu ghllut
th e
Eve r g r ce ll
c a In [1 u s a n d
neighbmin g Olympia.

, __- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' -·...:.
·f...:,ee.:.,.l\_
vl_1
at_·s_in_t_hc_3_ir_
." _ _~

Dear Sir:
I have, over a period of time beginning
with my first day of school here, become
more and more concerned with a serious
lack in the social fabric of the Evergreen
Community. It would seem with the
beginning editions of the school paper
that now would be a most auspicious
time upon which to mention this problem
and call for some serious discussion of it.
The deficiency of which I speak may
not seem so crippling to some and there
may well be those who will attempt to
' ridicule my speaking out in favor of
filling this void. Let them, I sayl What is
needed here at Evergreen more than any
other thing is the establishment of a
Fraternity-Sorority.
The arguments for .this proposal are
many. Consider that the establishment of
a fraternity here rould go far toward
furthering many of those time honored
and time-tested traditions which we hold

Prog nl '" 'feu.

!S~~~?
~
~:~

~~~:;~2de an access to music of ~~~\
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rt>P~~~

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Page 10 Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989
"

dormitories for a c.c. camp, and it just
~ms like an excellent way of utilizing
those buildings.
CPI: You don't think that the buildings
are fully utilized now?
~
Rasmussen: No, the class load is down
there, and d course one of the problems
is that there <Ire very few in-state students.
Most of them are out-of-state.
CPI: Why not pass a law limiting the
number of out-of-state students, and limiting the educational costs, instead of d05ing Evergreen?
Rasmussen: You hit lipon a very pertinent point ther". It costs us $1,000 more
per student to educate a young person at
Evergreen. I think that the solution is, with
the decreasing college population, we don't
have the need lor that facility any longer .
Class loads are down at Eastern, Central.
Western, and the community colleges. 50
irs going to be lIeCl'Ssary to close down
some of the institutions and run the others
at capacity.
CPI: Why not dose down one 01 the
other institutions instead of Evergreen?
Rasmussen: The logical thing, of course.
would be to close the one that has the
smaller class load.
(PI: Did the leave that President · Meeann got have much to do with this bill?
Rasmussen: I think that it probably
pointed out more than anything the fact
that they're wasting money out there. And
then that brought to the attention of the

From the CPJ August .8, 1974

$ 1.00 off

8 PM - TESC

firs' 100 people only
wi'" , ..is coupon

TICKETS:
*10.00 GENERAL
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6397
Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

Page 11

Arts & Entertainment

'§J8Ic())CDJR': Craven bites hard
by Edward Martin ill
Parents who have always warned us
that watching too much MTV and going
to heavy metal concens should, as their
last argument, take the whole family to
see Wes Craven's new film Shocker.
Craven, who began a lucrative career
with A Nightmare on Elm Street and
Deadly Friend, has generated a highpowered
bolt
of
entertainment,
transfonned it into a tight little package
and called it Shocker.
With
Megadeath's
thrashing
soundtrack and Craven's nightmare
imaging and hyperactive camera shots,
Shoclcer bashes you repeatedly with bad
craziness from square one and doesn't
stop until eight seconds before the
credits, when you let out all of your
breath, which you had been holding since
the fJrSt twenty minutes of the film.
Shocker is a story of a nasty
psychopath who lives in a peculiar world
of TV snow and victimization and the
All American Football Jock who catches
him, gets him strapped to the electric
chair and killed and then has to survive
while said nasty psychopath, complete
with an all-new attitude and weird TV

Powers, does his level best to maim,
mangle, terrorize and otherwise mess it
up with our All American Football Jock.
Pretty crazy stuff and definitely worth
two hours out of your life.

Shocker does what a good movie
should.
It makes you jump, twitch,
squinn and scream.
There are the
occasional pizza-scenes, but Craven does
all the best things without tossingi>uckets

0' blood in your lap.

It hasn't left me with ugly
nightmares, but I haven't watched TV
since.

Lupo rules at Oly Fest
by Andrew Hamlin
This year's Olympia Film Festival
kicked off with Drugs/ore Cowboy,
filmed in Portland. Cowboy stars Malt
Dillon as junkie/scam artist Bob Hughes,
who begins the film lying in the back of
an ambulance trying to sort out how he
got there. He laments the loss of his
criminal quartet--"r carried the whole
outfit on my back like it was my own
newborn son."
Flashback sequences show Hughes
and his crew robbing pharmacies, hiding
out from the police, running and
scamming their way through fights, road
trips, and the youngest member's suicide.
Eventually Bob tires of the action and
checks into a Portland methadone clinic
to get straight, only to be shot by a street
scum from the olden days. At the end, he
smiles up at the passing street lights; he
may die, but he has finally known real
life.
Dillon is strong in the lead, rasping
out his interior monologues, barking
orders to his henchmen, cooing softly to

his wife (Kelly Lynch), who's aiways
frustrated by Bob's chemical-induced lack
of libido. Also impressive are James
Remar (Dutch Schultz in The COl/on
Club) as a police detective and William
S. Burroughs in a brilliant cameo as a
junkie priest. When Dillon brings
Burroughs a cache of inj~tabl~, the old
man shoves most of It asJ(le, then
reverently holds up a bottle of Dilaudin;
"This should earn you an indulgence, my
boy," says Burroughs in his turkey-like
Southern honk.
Drugstore Cowboy's dialogue is
stilted in places, but on the whole it's an
honest look at the junkie lifestyle.
Director Gus Van Sant uses extreme
close-ups and surrealistic sequences to
render the lust for drugs, the free-floating
release they bring, and the mayhem they
cause. This film should mark Dillon's
comeback, and it's one of the best films
on drug culture in years.
Monday at 9:30 pm came "The
Golden Oly Awards", a mini-festival of
short films picked by the festival staff.

The evening was marred by sloppiness;
of the 22 films listed in the program only
14 made it to the screen, and the
projectionist had troubles throughout. But
nonetheless, the festival had a wide
assortment of live and animated shons,
many of them stunning.
Jonathan Reiss' A Bitter Message of
Hopeless Grief features dinosaur-robot
hybrids build by Survival Research
Laboratories (a perfonnance art group),
against a distwbing, Eraserheadish
background. Reiss and S.R.L. succeed on
the same ground where the Brothers
Quay fail with their Leos Janeck:
Intimate Excursions, an overlong and
undertranslated tribute to the Czech
composer.
Che/' s Romance, by Bertrand Fevre,
is an intimate black-and-white study of
Chet Baker singing "I'm a Fool To Want
You." Baker's once-beautiful face is now
gnarled and sandblasted from years on
heroin; his eyes sit at half-mast under

see OFS page 16---

Arts & Entertainment
'Phantom of Opera' should be burned
by Gilligan Malden
I sholild have expected something
ghastly as I stumbled into the sparsely
poplilated auditorium at Capital Mall
Cinemas.
The disclaimer on the lobby poster
of Dwight H. Little's Phantom of the
Opera read "the ' ftlm is not in any way
associated with the novel, stageplay, or
previous motion pictures. Rumors of an
international production put me into a
generous frame of mind.
r thought this might be an ample
opportunity for Robert Englund to stretch
his acting ability rather than his gory
latex. The film's credits pay homage to
the Gaston Leroux novel, boasting a
screenplay. based on a screenplay?!! If
the first rendition is any example of the
second, then both copies sholild be
burned in the catacombs along with the
Phantom himself.
The acting is a terrific companion to
the script, both are vile and sophomoric.

Newcomer Jill Schoen plays the
Phantom's unrequited songbird, and she
has neither the singing voice nor the
acting talent to convince us of either. Her
operatic voice is obviously dubbed, and
she flails about on the stage like a mad
stork trapped in a snare.
One is almost relieved when she is
knocked out by a sandbag, mid-song
during the film's prologue. Yet there is
no relief, as the fumbling continues
joined by Englund and a cast of other
hack actors who will probably end up on
next season's Hollywood Squares.
There is no attempt to display the
Phantom as a sympathetic character ' with
a rea'ron for his butchery, only that the
butchery get under way - and that
Englund reprises his Freddy third degree
burnt look so that the producers are
assured a return of hefty greenbacks by
morons like me who expect something
resembling a movie.
Veteran actor Wylfred-Hyde White

by Cbris Bader
Jerry Redfern, a twenty-eight year old
Seattle man, has managed to turn his
bizarre hobby into a viable job.
From the time Redfern was a small
boy, he was fascinated by the
unexplained and wolild spend his time
reading about UFOs and Bigfoot Redfern
also became quite proficient in the
practical sciences, and began thinking of
ways to combine 'his interestS. - - " .
When Redfern began to notice that
some "frin~ scientists" were beginning to
discuss the invention of certain
"incredible devices," he decided to
become
a
free-ilmce
"scientific
investigator. "
Nowadays,
when
a
scientific
corporation hears rumors about a strange
new inventiQn, they can hire Redfern to
discretely handle the investigation. Most

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large companies, Redfern says, wolild
rather not be connected with research into
"anti-gravity," '"alternative energy" or
even "life extension" devices.
Most often Redfern is hired
confidentially to fmd obscure reference
materials, or even to find the inventors
themselves.
For example, Redfern is in the
proc~s of tracking . 4~wn an invention
which a "very famous person" created.
Redfern said that he cannot reveal the
inventor's name, but that he comes from

OFFICE WITH A VIEW

by Tim Gibson
Evergreen alumni John AIkins, who
returns December 1 to the recital hall,
defies music labels like "Northwest" and
"New Age" by composing solo acoustic
piano music that is truly his own.
AIkins perfonns at 8 pm, December
1 at the Evergreen State College recital
hall.

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"If I tried to change myself to fit into
a musical category, everythimr in my
music would unravel," AIkins said.
AIkins has been establishing his
identity as an artist ever since he started
playing piano at the age of five, when he
wrote his first original composition.
Living in Walla Walla in the years
after he started playing, AIkins worked
hard to develop a sound of his own, and
after High School, he emerged with a
"sweeping ciIcuIar motion" to his sound
that, as he said, "just made me feel
good."
On a tip from a Japanese exchange
student who compared AIkins' original
compositions to traditional Eastern music,
John enrolled at Evergreen in 1972 to
discover the hidden links between his
music and the music of Middle and Far
Eastern cliltures.
After graduating in 1976, AIkins said
he worked many small jobs until deciding
to tour the West Coast on the
connections in the "cutting edge, modern
jazz ciIcuit" he'd established by playing
as a regular at one of Olympia's fJrSt
alternative restaurants.
For two years, AIkins said he lived
as a "piano hobo," hitchhiking up and

For the most part, however, the
majority of the inventions and inventors
which Redfern tracks down turn out to be
frauds. Most of Redfern's work is "sifting
through all the B.S.".
Nevertheless, Redfern has managed
something which most seriouS students of
the unexplained never do; he has created
a workable career.
I repeat my plea, if you have had
any' bizarre experiences yourself, please
contact Chris Bader care of the CPl.

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down the West Coast until he eventually
gathered enough of a reputation and
enough of a support network to get "into
the college ciIcuit"
During his travels all over the West,
AIkins developed his sound constantly
until it became, as he said, "an
expressionist painting ...where each listener
becomes a participant and fills the holes
in the music themselves."
Now, AIkins drives to gigs and his
patrons put him up in hotels, but the way
he feels about music remains the same.
"I believe my music has more to do
with nurturing and well-being than
entertainment," AIkins said, "It's music
from the heart"
Music as expression. Music as
therapy. Music as art Jolm AIkins offers
all these in his all-original, only acoustic
solo piano compositions that, according to
his press release, "blend Western
classical, ethnic folk and modern jazz
with Eastern undertones."
John
AIkins
has
performed
everywhere from the Governor's mansion
to the State Penitentiary, and on
December 1 he brings home his unique
sound to the TESC recital hall.

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INFORMATION TABLE
November 28-29, 9:30am to 2:00pm
PRESENTATIONS
November 28th 12:00 noon - 1:OOpm
Film Presentation, "Let it Begin Here"
Library Room L1406
November 29th , 3:00pm , Slide Presentation
" Putting your Biology Degree to work in the Peace Corps'
Library Room L1406
INTERVIEWS
December 6th , 9:00am - 4:00pm
Sign up in advance at the Student advising Center (Library Room # 1401-A:
866-6000 ext 6193).

a family "which developed several
common house-hold objects."
This person has purportedly created a
vacuwn tube which can put out more
energy than is put into it; a theoretical
impossibility.
Redfern is also in touch with a man
who is working on an "anti-gravity
device" and is helping the inventor to
raise funds for the project Redfern
speCulates that the invention of such a
device could explain the proplilsion
mechanism behind Flying Saucers.

Alumni has piano recital

786-8321

FILMS
MUSIC VIDEOS

Psycho-Circus, Dorian Gray (the hipster
'70s -British-Spanish-West Gennan-Italian
quickie, remember?)
As an interesting postscript, Towers
was jailed in 1980 for running a
prostitution ring, providing escons for
political big-wigs and U.N. diplomats.
Shortly thereafter, he was placed on
probation. I think they sholild have
locked him up for life, or at least out of
the studios.
I left the theater holding my
stomach, as two toothless inbred wonders
sneered at me for laughing at such a
serious picture. Perhaps it was the fJrSt
horror ,film they had ever seen.
I pity them, but I pity them more
for sitting through this celluloid travesty.
Oh, well you can't please everybody, but
you can please Harry Allen Towers pretty
easily.

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plays the stodgy detective, roaming
around the opera house as if he were T J.
Hooker in search of a dimestore thug. A
very bad element, especially for a period
piece which is already rampant with
anachronisms.
The gore quota is so poorly done that
I was reduced to tears of laughter for the
remainder of the film. I have never seen
an '80s comedy in the last decade that
induced so much laughter.
Englund's rendition of a poor man's
Jack Palance could've had me in stitches.
Too bad it wasn't intentional.
Yet, what can one expect from
Harry Alan Towers, the distinguished
producer who graced the unsuspecting
world with such astounding classics as:
The Castle of Fu Manchu, The Brides of
Fu Manchu. The Face of Fu Manchu, The
Blood of Fu Manchu, The Vengeance of
Fu Manchu, The Million Eyes of Su-Muru,
Eugenie: the Story of Her Journey Into
Perversion, Five Golden Dragons,

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Cooper Point Journal November 16,
Page

12

Cooper

Point

Journal November

16, 1989

1989

Page

13

Calendar
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 16
The Olympia Film Society's Festival
continues today and tonight, please refer
to schedule for movies and times, or call
754-6670.
The Great American Smokeout
comes to the Evergreen campus today.
The nationwide event, which is sponsored
by the American Cancer Society, urges
people to quit tobacco for a day. The
Wellness Center is inviting people to be
"buddies" and adopt a smoker for a day.
For more information, contact the
Wellness Center at ext. 6528.

• '0

crunchers. He will appear as part of the
Friday night speaker series sponsored by
Four Seasons Bookstore, 421 S. Water
St. at 7:30 pm. For more information,
contact Steve Charak at 357-4683.
Career Development drop in hours
today, 9 am to 12 noon. Call X6193.
Barb's BBQ and Soul Cuisine
features the Mailhotia Unit for an
evening of jazz. Call Barb's for more
information.
"Interviewing and Joh Search
Skills" workshop offered by Career
Development, noon, Lffi 1406A. Call
X6193 for more information.

The Boys Next Door, a play,
premieres at 8 pm at the Ethnic Theatre
at the University of Washington, 3940
Brooklyn Ave. NE, Seattle. The OffBroadway comedy hit about four mentally
disabled men will be performed by the
Seattle Group Theatre. Showtimes:
November 16·Dec 10. Please call the box
office at 543-4327 for times and prices.

SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 18

The second meeting of the
Evergreen veterans support group will
be from 5 pm to 6 pm in LIB 2101. All
veterans and reservists are encouraged to
attend. We will be discussing group goals
and objectives. If you are interested and
cannot attend, send a letter to the S & A
office at CAB 305.

Windham Hill recording artist
Pierce Pettis will perform in the Student
Lounge of the College Center (Bldg. 22),
at South Puget Sound Community
College. Tickets for the Penis concert
will be sold in advance, at the Book
Exchange in the College Center, or at the
door. Cost is $2 for students and $3 for
general admission.

Barb's BBQ and Soul Cuisine will
feature Donelle Baldwin and Cole Jacobs
for a refreshing evening of JAZZ. Call
Barb's for more information.

Barb's BBQ and Soul Cuisine will
feature Will Hwnphries for an evening of
Jazz. Call Barb's for more information.

All motorcycle riders are invited to
attend the meeting of the Rider Club at
9:00 am at Nickelby's Restaurant, Tyee
Exit off 1-5, Tumwater. Order your
choice of breakfast from menu. For
information, please call Ed or Zane at
264·2750 or 264-4869 or Bob at 491·
0522.

FRIDAY NOVErvIBER
17
The Olympia Film Society's festival
continues today and this evening, please
see their schedule for movies and times,
or call 754-6670.
The Olympia Film Society is
sponsoring a Spoken Word performance
as part of their Fringe Festival. If
interested in performing, call 352-1546.

The Olympia Film Society's
festival continues today, please see their
schedule for movies and times, or call
754·6670.

The Tacoma Youth Symphony, with
Harry Davidson conducting, will open it
27th concert season at 7:30 pm in
Tacoma's Pantages Centre.
NIX NAZIS PARTY. Advocates of
ci vi! rights are invited to "Do the Right
Thing" at a United Front Against Fascism
party at 7:30 pm at the home of Trisha
and Jim Coley, 6543 Seward Park
Avenue South, Seattle. The evenings
festivities include: a delectable, multiethnic smorgasbord ($5 donation),
dancing, video showings of '60's civil
rights documentaries and Costa Grava's
movie "Betrayed" plus a lale-night
performance by Seattle songwriter and
folksinger Laura Love. Proceeds will
benefit UFAF, a grassroots anti-Nazi
group. For rides or information, call 7222453 (days or evenings.)

Prepare for

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The Olympia Film Society's festival
wraps up today and this evening, please
see their schedule for movies and times,
or call 754-6670.
The Olympia Chapter of the Gold
Wing Road Riders will meet at 9:00 am
in the upstairs banquet room at the Red
Bull Restaurant, South Sound Center,
Lacey. Buffet Breakfast served, all you
can eat. PLEASE NOTE TIME
CHANGE
FOR
THE
WINTER
MONTHLY MEETINGS. All Gold Wing
motorcycle riders are invited. For
information, call Larry and Linda at 4915978 or Bob and Ann at 491·0522.
Capital Area Youth Symphony will
perform at the Washington Center at 4
pm, tickets are available at the door and
run from $4 - $7.
Marjorie Prince of the Cburch
Council of Greater Seattle will discuss
South Africa and Apartheid, 3 pm, at St.
John's church, 19th & Capitol Way;
sponsored by Olympia FOR. Call 491·
9093 for information.

"No Sweat" a local citizens group
concerned with global warming meets 7
pm at the Olympia Library (1RL). Will
have a slide show and panel discussion
on the roll of recycling and other citizen
actions can have on global warming.
EVERYONE invited. Call 352-9351 for
more information.

WEDNESDAY
NOVEMBER 22
Barb's Soul Cuisine, 203 W. 4th
downtown, will be serving FREE
Thanksgiving Dinner. Call 786·9835
(eves) for details.
Sixth
Annual
Community
Interfaith Celebration; "Thanksgiving
1989, An Emerging Mosaic of Praise,"
7:30 pm First Baptist Church of Olympia,
Washington ST. SE and E. 9th.

Do your holiday shopping In the
Middle Agesl
Sat., Nov. 18 -1·5
Sun., Nov. 19 - Noon·4
Society for Creative Anachronism

THANKSGIVING
BREAK!!!!!!!!
FROM
NOVEMBER 20TH THROUGH
THE 26TH. ENJOY.

TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 21
Barb's BBQ and Soul Cuisine
features the Mailhotia Unit for an
evening of Jazz. Call Barb's for more
information.

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recruiting for 1990 programs on the
TESC campus today and tomorrow,
accepting applications for nearly 3300
overseas positions that will be filled in
the next 4-12 months, including the firstever Eastern European Peace Corps
program for Hungary. Recruiters will be
located in the CAB lobby from 9:00 am
-- 2:00 pm both days and hosting a
special film and seminar set for the 28th
from 12 - 1 pm in the LIB 1406.
Inquiries can be directed to the Seattle
Peace Corps office at 1-442-5490.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
AsianlPacific Isle Coalition in
conjunction with WA ETS brings "Shared
Dreams," The Asian and Pacific
American Experience in Washington
State. This Washington Centennial Exhibit
runs Nov 3-28th in Gallery 2 in the
Library.
Due to unfortunate circumstances,
the visit to Olympia of joumalist
Alexander Cockburn has been pushed
back to Saturday December 9th, 1989.
For further information contact the Free
Press, Media Island, or call 352-8526.

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TUESDAY
SATURDAY NOVEMBER 28
NOVEMBER 25
The U.s. Peace Corps launches its

_

----------------- .. ------------------------MAIL OR BRING WITH PAYMENT TO:
CPJ, CAB 305, TESC, OLYMPIA, WA 98505
WRITE EXACT WORDING HERE (30 WORDS MAXIMUM):

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Tbe Diabetes WeUness Center at
Black Hills Community Hospital is
holding a support group for persons with
diabetes starting at 7: 15. The group meets
in the Diabetes Wellness Center
classroom and is run by Helen Metcalf,

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M 0 N DAY
NOVEMBER 27

WOMANTREK

~
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Barb's BBQ and Soul Cuisine will
be featuring Donelle Baldwin and Friends
for an evening of Jazz. Call Barb's for
more information.

Tbe Seattle Youtb Sympbony
Orchestra will perform at 4:00 pm in
the Seattle Center Opera House. ThiS
performance of over one-hundred yOWlg
people from the ages of 12 to 21 will
open the 1989-90 season of the
Orchestra. Ruben Gurevich will be
conducting works by Ives, Nielsen,
Schubert, and Rimsky-Korsakov. For
ticket information call 362-2300.

Downtown
Olympia's annual
Christmas Open House will begin
festivities at noon today. Hayrides,
Christmas carolers, and hot cider will be
just some of the activities, with the
highlight of the event coming at 5 pm
when there will be a tree lighting
ceremony in Sylvesler Park, featuring
decorations form area schools and
caroling by the renowned Carrie
Richardson.

KAMCO PROPERTIES
WE WELCOME STUDENTS

AUMAR APTS.

FRIDAY NOVEMBER
24

"Peter and the Wolf" with the
Tacoma Youth Symphony and Magic
Circle Mime Company will present the
annual MERVYN'S Children's concert in
Tacoma's Pantages Centre. For more
information contact Shirley M. Getzin at
627-2792.

Shellon, on HWJ 101

ELKS BUILDING
C.pltol Way
·N_ly renovated
·In the • of downtown
.on buallne

The People Concerned For Others
(not affiliated with any church or other
organization), are sponsoring a free
Thanksgiving celebration and dinner at
the Olympia Community Cenler from
12:00 to 5:00 pm. The celebration is
being produced for all who need food,
warmth, cheer, .and companionship on
Thanksgiving. Please come if you are
hungry, but just as important. please
come if you are alone this holiday.

SUN DAY
NOVEMBER 26

Mason County Fairgrounds

e11 s.

THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 23

Barb's BBQ and Soul Cuisine will
be featuring Barbara Donald and Will
Humphries for an evening of Jazz. Call
Barb's for more information.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~w~~
~
~

Eric Tingsted and Nance Rumbel
will perform original and holiday
selections during their performance at
TESC Recital Hall at 8 pm. Tickets are
on sale now, GA $10, $7.50 for students,
seniors and }(AOS radio subscribers.
Economist, TESC faculty, and
KPLU radio commentator Russ
Lidman will show that economics need
not only be for professors and number

SUN DAY
NOVEMBER 19

Calendar

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Page 14 Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

The Olympia Storytellers GilUd
holds a "story swap" every third Sunday
of the month from 1 pm to 3 pm at the
Olympics West Retirement Inn 929
Trosper Road. For further information
call 943-6772.

Student Activities is looking for
volunteer help. Stop by Student Activities
at CAB 305 or call 866-6000 X6220.

A community poUtical support
group is held every Thursday from 5:30
to 6:30 at the TESC Lm 3224. "We are
all affected and affect others by what is
impressed upon us and what we impress
upon others. Sometimes it get's difficult
to sort out what's going 011. This is a
group committed to supporting each
individuals' sorting process." For more
information call 866-6000 X6098.

Share the gilt or Thanksgiving and
open your home to an International
Student The EF International School has
European. Latin American, and Asian
students eager to share a traditional
Thanksgiving Day experience with an
American family. To volunteer as a host.
or for further information, call 866-6000
X6422 and ask for Helena or Judith.

~!BJ~~~

SERVICES
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SYNODIS, certified 1lCUp1DlCturist, licensed
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.Prt-payment req~rtd
oClulltI8d dIadIInt-2 p.m. Tuesday

TO PLACE AD:
·PHONE 866-6000 X6054
·STOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A
·SEND INFO TO: CPJ, TESC, CAB 305A
Ol VMPlA, WA 98505

- When you want !he readrz to read what

you meant when you wrote it... The
Roving EdItor 7116-8321 ON CAMPUS
THURS. NOV 16 CAB LOBBY

HELP WANTED
Financial

, and being your own

CHIMNEY CLEANING SPECIAL PRICE
THROUGH NOV. $29.95. Modem Day
Chimney Service 352·5309.

boss is possible with Network Marketing.

Call Jerome 459-4035.
ATTENTION - IDlUNGt Govenunent
10bs - your area. Many inunedil1e openinp
without waiting list or tesL $17,840 69,485. Call 1-602-838-8885 EXT RI447.

FOR RENT
We are clean. studious, non·smoking
students looking for someone to share our
quiet three bedroom Ipartment in ASH.
Rent is $131.50/month plus utilities. Call
Peter or Pat at 866-7196 or Pek% at the
CP1.

MARKET DISCOVER CREDIT CARDS
on your campus. Flexible houri. Eam as
much as $10.00/hour. Only 10 positions
available. 1-800-950.8472X3.
ATTENTION: EARN MONEY
READING BOOKSI S32,00/year income
potential.- Details, 1-6Ol-838-8885 EXT.
BK 1447L

HOUSE TO SHARE
• WESTSIDE·
• NON-SMOKER •
• NO PETS •
$165 . 185 call TONY
786-9466

.Jobs In Alaska

HIRtNG Men· Women • Summerl
Year Round. CANNERIES. FISHING,
LOGGING, TOURISM. CONSTRUCTION
up to $600 weekly, plus FREE room
and board. CALL NOWI call refundable.

1-206-736-0775, Ext.

ROOM for rent In large house on Cooper
Pt. FIREPLACE. Wuller, dryrz, ca!hedral
ceiling. $200.00 (utilities included) call
357-3358.

'_'IISH

Room for RENT in ASH aplS. Smoke.
drugs, meat hang·ups, TV ICKI Music.
bikes. kayaking. VW's, Rockclimbing.
Earth Mother, spontaneity, intelligence.
Yuml SI8S.00/mth and utilities. John 866·
2803.

FOR SALE
1974 SAAB 99. Very dependable. BDI;Iy
needs some work. $1350.00 or best offrz.
Call Fran 754-1319 (eve.) or 426-9789
(days).

Lu~ IIt"UI INO/t"HI:I:
THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP. NO
CHARGE
FOR
LOST/FOUND
/STOLEN/FREE CLASSIFIEDS.

ATTENTION--GOVERNMENT SEIZED
VEmCLES from $100. Pords, Mercedes,
COIvettes, Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide.
1-602-838-8885 xAI4471

hee box trained, 2 month Old, bWICh 0'
fun kittens to good home. Call 357·5832.

1986 TRAC·5OCC street bike with helmet.
Like new. Only 300 miles. SSOO.OO call
866-9326.

Lost a jacket or eye glasses? Contact
Security X6140. Describe to claim.

Two studded snow tires for Large Ford
Vehicle. 866-1453.
An oldie but goodie. 1967 Travel Queen
Motor Home. Clean, very good condition.
sleeps 4. Self-(;()Jltained, 2500.00 or best
offrz. Bonita X5703 or 491-6705 .
I

MISCELLANEOUS
Herbal Weight Loss program. Safe and
Effective. Money back guarantee. Call
Jerome 491-5754.

LOST green back pack containing essential
school books and notes. Contact Donn D,
Room 214.
LOSTI LOSTI set of keys on blue key
ring. Left in upstairs CAB smoking area.

Please return to Taze B·203 or call 866·
, 2763.

PERSONAL
Lonely7 Need a Vate" Meet That SpecIal
,. someone todayl Call DATETIME
(405)~.

WANTED

NAME _ _ _ _ _ _ _ PHONE _ _ _ _ _ _ _--i

PRE-PAID AND RECEIVED BY MONDAY
PRIOR TO PRINT DATE. $2.60 CHARGED
~DDRESS---------------~
I
FOR EACH PRINT.
I _________________________________________________
OHOV.3Oth
L
~
I
o DEC. 7th
CITY
STATE
ZIP _ _ _ _ _~

The Black HUIs Community
Hospital Guild is pleased to announce
that their annual Christmas Wreaths are
how available. Prices start at $12 and go
up to $30. For additional information call
754-5858 XI024.

383·9501.

3210 Cooper pt. Rd. NW
888-3999

ORIGINAL POETRY, SHORT rl... I1Ul'I,
&: CARTOONS for publication in the CPJ.
Please bring typed poems &. art work with
name &:
phone nlDDber to CAB
30M.

.

Save NlsquaUy ",alnl Land between
Refuge and Weyerhauser on auction block.
SALE SCHEDULED NOV.ISTH. CALL
OR WRITE TODAY (Encourage
fair/federal purchase): Senator Slade Gorton
(202) 224·26Z1, Rep. Jolene Unsoeld (202)
225·3536 (Rates are cheap before 8 am).

Cooper Point Journal November 16, 1989

Page 15
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