The Cooper Point Journal Volume 19, Issue 22 (April 27, 1989)

Item

Identifier
cpj0473
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 19, Issue 22 (April 27, 1989)
Date
27 April 1989
extracted text
Students Return
from testsite
by Tim Russell
crowd, arms locked, and sat down in
Students returned safely from the
front of the officers. One by one we
Second Annual Nevada Test Site
were tom or lifted Jrom our spot,
Evergreen Excursion.
handcuffed, and divided into two mens
and womens holding pens.
The drive down to thc Test Site was
long but we survived. So many
The sun beat down as the day wore
encowllers with people giving strange
on. The time in the pen was exhausting
and empowering, as the demonstrator's
looks at gas stations and rest stops,
antics kept our spirits up. A hole
swimming in absurdly cold waters,
connecting the men's and women's cages
essential hacky-sacking to stretch and
allowed visitors to tunnel under the fence
regain sanity between the long drives,
until the police caught on.
crazed-suicidal rabbits darting between
It was a day of hilarious incidence
the tires of the van, a strict diet of
conjured up from a deadly serious
organic oranges and chips and salsa.
context. The levity made more digestible
Our van pulled into the peace camp
early Friday evening and was greeLed by
our purposes, which were never forgotten,
a sign: "Don't Tax My Ass So You Can
and more tolerable the blazing heat and
exasperating circumstances.
Blow It Up!" Tt.e desert slugs, as we
were dubbed, felt at home. Dr. Doom
The backcountry desert slugs went
and his Doom Mobile was there, offering
onto the test site grounds late Friday
laughs with his erect missile pointing to
night and were caught and detained for
thirteen hours.
the sky in anticipation. There were
The support people had a tough time
dancing
half-clothed,
mud-covered,
but not as much glory. These dedicated
dreads-hanging hippy misfits poking fun
souls did not do civil disobedience but
at the authorities (although there was a
waited under the burning sun and toted
broad age range and a diverse social
the water bottles, cameras, oranges, etc.
background).
Thank you Ted Hong, the S & A
The entertainment was bands and
board, Gail Martin, Kristin Rowe, and the
dancing into the warm moon-lite nights,
many other people who contributed to the
and speakers such as Daniel Ellsberg and
the national president of SANE/FREEZE. . success of this trip.
There was impressive representation of
many related issues such as Lesbian\Gay
rights, people of color issues, and
environmental and Native American
awareness.
The context of the direct action
Environmental Problem-Solving: The
respected the Native American rights over
Past as Prologue to the future, is coming
state and federal law. Before entering the
to campus April 27-30. This international
Shoshone land the test site is on we were
conference is a joint venture of the
granted passage by the Shoshone. When
American Society for Environmental
the authorities asked our names, many
History and the Northwest Association of
responded that we were Shoshone guests
Environmental Studies, in cooperation
and the police could ask them for our
with the TESC Environmental Studies
names.
Area.
The day of the demonstration and
Student
registration
for
the
civil disobedience was hot and sunny but
conference, priced at $25, will be waived
squirt guns were at the ready. We
for student registrants who volunteer five
Washington moles cautiously applied sun
hours of their time to the conference,
block and ate oranges. The opening ritual
perfonning services such as guide,
was led by an Evergreen friend,
working the registration table, book room
Starhawk, and was followed by a series
attendant, etc. to apply for a fee waiver,
of speakers and music.
pick up a volunteer application fonn in
We had gathered the night before to
Lab I - 3023 or SEM 3122, or call
plan our direct action in solidarity. At the
x6700.
sound of the conch shell, we approached
the cattle guard where the authorities
CHINESE ACUPUNCTURE CENTER
waited. Some went over the fence
-HEUUM-NEON LASER POINTmarking the boundary of the site while
the majority trespassed over the cattle
guard on the main road entering the test
site. We sang and danced as we walked
the road until we burst throu~h the

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Page 12 April 20, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

The Evergreen State College . .
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested

. Nonprofit Organi~ation
U.S. Postage Paid
Olympia, WA 98505
Permit No. 65

This is how the CPJ really works · .
.

collectiv~, mo~t v.isi~ly by DaVid George,

.

tho

s to create such

exclpeakteme~.o~un; =P~e is worth the

from studenis about the letters page bemg
personal, the staff decided it would give
more students opponunity to voice their
opinions. Sllch lengthy responses aren't
~~ent ~ anyone but the few

by Suzeue Williams
and at thIS pomt 1S mdependently funded.
a s
e
Last week I wrote about the CPJ's
These
are
two
separate
newspapers.
effo~
wrote
the editorial last week to
editorial policy regarding objectivity.
_
_
_
_
_
share
my
perceptions
about Nader's
Earlier this week a faculty member was
berating one of my reponers (and the
attitudes towards social change. I do not
mdlVlduals mvolved.
After a friend asked me Monday "So
The staff also agreed that rather than
essarily disagtee with his methods or
CPJ in general) for feigning objectivity.
n~als nor do I think he's an awful
printing eight letters about the s~e
I guess I'll never get through to some do you hate Ralph Nader or what?", I
thought I should clear up some confusion ~rso~. As I wrote last week, I simply
subject we would print one rep!esenta!l~e
people.
letter. The rest will be placed .m a public
But since the issue continues to arise, regarding my comments about Nader last think he has stopped challenging himself.
Whether I agree with his methods or
me in the
office. ThIS wc:ek I
I'd like to clarify some olOOr issues about week.
I
am
not
in
opposition
to
Knoll
aradigm
is
really
beside
the
point;
loo
received
t~o
le~&tl,ty
letters responding.to
how this paper works.
last week s edito~. I could only pnnt
As an editor, I make decisions each Lowney's proposal to create a speaker's ~int was I didn't see him thinking very
one so the other 1S m the Qffice. Stop by
week about which letters get printed, fund to bring prominent people to ' much about his activism.
if you'd like to look at it.
campus.
This
is
a
creative
and
workable
which stories run and where the
idea that could make this campus much Another item we discussed at the
advenisements are placed.
staff meeting was a reader survey about
Some students, and apparently some more interesting.
I congratulate Lowney on the idea
At Monday's staff meeting the staff
the paper. We are interested in w~y
faculty, think everything printed in the
people like or dislike the Cooper Pomt
paper receives an endorsement from me and greatly appreciate the work he and discussed our policy of printing all
WashPIRG
are
willing
to
put
in~
the
letters.
The
consensus
was
to
print
one
Journal
and are interested hearing
or the staff. I repeal, this is not the case.
proposal.
I
~o
~
.not
actively
letter
and
one
response
from
now
on
suggestions.
Please watch for this survey
Bylines on stories allow the reader to
in the next few weeks.
judge the news based on the source. For campaigning agamst bnngmg Nader to rather than printing repeated personal
campus. If Nader can generate enough responses. Because of comments we hear
instance each week Governance Steam
member' James Dannen writes updates of
the General Assemblies. And each week
the anicle says "by James Dannen."
The byline does not mean Dannen
endorses every resolution of the general
assembly or that he is involved in any
way in the story. Similarly, because I
write a news story about a governance
proposal does not imply that I endorse it
or am involved in it
Bylines give writers recognition and
are pan of my commitment to .fairness.
As in the case of governance 1SSUes, I
think it is more fair to know who the
news is coming from.
.
Advertisements and letters don't have
~=========:=~ r--;=;,===.=:='B=======::;---l
my
staff and
my
endorsement.
1din 37
Whee"
t~e
re9;~tr.tio"
bu.
Advertisers pay for space in the paper
11 wont to be " s1udent here I I
and help us continue publishing; they do
wont to !">tudy law and o.ttend
not represent the views of the Cooper
mixers ond f/;r1 with yuppies!
Point Journal staff. Letters are the
opinions of the writers, which is why
Janet!
WANT
they have names at the end of them.
~
~
One more misconception to clear up;
this one I find really mindboggling, but
it's necessary to state. The Cooper Point
Journal is in no way affiliated with The
Evergreen Free Press. The CPJ is funded
by the S&A Board and our advertisers
and is run by the people in the staff box
below. The Free Press is run as a

cn

___ ___--,
I

1
ITALL.

The policy:

The staff:
Interim Advisor: Janis Byrd
Interim Editor: Suzette Williams
Managing Editor: Darrel W, Riley
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
Business Manager: Whitney Ware
Ad Layout: Matt Carrithers
"
Calendar: Honna Metzger
Typist: Alexander Rains
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Arts and Entertainment: Honna Metzger
Poetry Editor: Yolande Lake
Production Manager: Joe Hughes
Contributors: Kevin Boyer, Tedd
Kelleher, James Dannen, Brian
Raiter, Ryan Finholm, Edward Martin III,
Sandra Schaad, Rudy Martin, Betty Lochner,
Wend y Freeman.

The Cooper Point Joumal is published .

weekly on the campus of the
Evergreen State College. Olympia,
Washington -98505 (CAB 30SA);
(206)866-6000 ext. 6213 & 6054.
Copyright 1989.

..

~!!!!B~

COVER:
Earth Fair candids at
TESC last Saturday.

Page 2 April 27, 1989 Cooper Pomt Journal

The Cooper Point Jonr1l.al (CPJ)
editor and staff may amend 01' clarify
these policies .
Objective:
The CPJ editor and staff are deter·
mined to make the CPJ a student
fOlUm for communication which is both
e nterta ining and informative.
Deadlines:
Calendar- Friday, noon
Articles-Friday, 3 p.m.
L ette r s -Monday, noon
Rules for submissions:
S ubmissions must be original. Submit ting work w hich i~ not original is a
legal, e thical a nd mOl'a l violation and
a n injury t o those members of t he
E vergr een community w ho do complete original work.
Submissions should be brought t o t he
CPJ offices on an IBM formatte d
diskette. Any word processing me com·
patible with WordPerfect 4.2 is a cceptable . Disks should include a doublespaced print out, with the aut hor's
name, daytime phone number and a ddress.- -Disks will be' re turne d as soon
as POSS 'bl
I e.
F or infOl'mation abou t othe r typ es of
computer s ubmissions . call the office at
86(j-6000 ext. G2 13. Some he lp is also
available a t t he offi ce.
Double-spaced. ty pe d copy with one·

inch margins will be accepted . If you
a r e unable to comply wit h the submission requireme nts for any r eason, contact the editor or managing editor for
assistance. Before undertaking time consuming projects for the CP J, it's a
good idea to call the CPJ offic.e a~~ut
deadlines , future plans and SUItability
of mate Jials .
B e cause the CPJ is a coll ege
n ewspaper, priority will be given to
student submissions; however, all com·
munity me mbe r's ar e e ncourage d t o
contribute.

Letters
Nader visit to help campus activism
There is currently a proposal
cirCulating that includes bringing Ralph
Nader to speak on campus next year.
Unfortunately
Suzette
Williams
condemned the proposal in her editorial
without taking the time to understand it
For those who want to know more
about the proposal than Suzette's editorial
headline, I want to outline the major
points in the "Ralph Proposal," who
Nader is and why the student body
should make this leap into major circuit
speakers.
I created this proposal in response to
three needs I see on campus: a
sustainable funding method to enable
students to bring major speakers to
campus, more cooperative efforts between
the often fractionalized student groups,
and a major student event to increase
activism on campus.
Suzette's
most
important
misunderstanding was her assumption that
the student money going into this event
would be "wasted." In reality, this

proposal will be more than self-funding.
It should be able to net a good size
profit that can be placed into a
"superfund" that can continue to bring big
name speakers to campus.
Suzette argued we should spend our
money on less-known activists who need
exposure. Fonunately EPIC and the other
student organizations are already able to
bring these speakers to campus. Because
we will soon have a new auditorium that
holds 2500 people we might as well
bring big name speakers in addition to
(not instead of) the quality speakers that
already come to Evergreen. However, no
single organization can afford the cost of
these speakers without pooling our
resources.
Because Ralph Nader will be
available to us in January 1990, and
because WashPrRG and myself are
willing to do a lot of the preliminary
work to get him here, he should be the
first speaker in the series.
Nader is more than just the one who

Assault bull_e tins removed
April 14th my friends and I posted
notices on campus informing people of
the assault of a woman by a male near
the Evergreen beach trail. Saturday, April
15th, these notices were taken down from
the library building entrance doors and
the CAB entrance doors- the two most
visible places for students and visitors on
this campus.
Why am I informed about the assault
five days after the fact? Why were the
notices taken down and who took them
down? Why was it the students'
responsibility to initiate the printing of
the notices, and why was it our
respondbility to post them?
It is Evergreen's responsibility to
inform students/visitors immediately is
their safety is in question. I am outraged
at the fact that the notices were taken
down from loo posted areas. There were

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a number of - visitors attending the
Karnpuchean New Year Celebration and
the Righteous Mothers concert on
Saturday, and their safety was threatened
by the mere fact . that they were
uninformed of the recent assault
I believe the notices were taken down
because Evergreen is more concerned
about appearance than safety. This is not
acceptable! People need to be informed
of what's going on in order to bener
protect themselves. Where do Evergreen's
priorities lie when it comes to the safety
of its community?
Tammie Ostrom

·'

Objectivity:
The editordoes. noLbeliev$! objectiyi·.
ty
. is possible. Instead, t h e editor' and
k
staff believe in fairness. W e will rna e
every effor t to get as many viewpoints
on a s ubj ect as possible. If you have ~n
opinion about sumething you've reael JI1
t he pape r, please write a nd tell us.

"I'm going to put aside the question
of human rights for the next hour" of my
talk. That was the opening line of Israeli
Consul General Harry Kney-Tal at TESC.
Not only was the content of his
propaganda outlandishly unjust, so too
was the CPJ anicle covering the event.
The CPJ article did not touch upon
the positions taken by opponents of
Kney-Tal. We believe what our eyes see:
the
Israeli
government
practices
systematic terrorism against milfions of
its inhabitants. We believe there comes a
time when individuals or groups · of
people must stand up to brutality and the
academic/diplomatic bureaucrats sent to
defend it on damage control missions.
Just as it is totally justifiable for women
to take FIST courses to learn to defend
themselves and to prevent a man
speaking in the board room who supports
rape, so too is it justifiable for
Palestinians to continue in their uprising
and our opposition to what men like

revealed.
With equipment loaned by local
residents and lots of volunteer labor, the
cemetery . will be rid of rampant
blackberry vines and other plants that
impede browsing. Paths to all of the
graves will be cleared. The gravestones
will also be cleaned.
If you would like to be a pan of
this, join us any Saturday at 9 am at the
cemetery on the Mima-Gate Road. If
you're not sure where this is or have any
other questions please call Andrew at
352-8769.
Andrew Poultridge

Kney-Tal represent.
Our position is that the issue of
PaJestine/lsrael is not just a question for
Jews whether in North America or in
Israel. The issue affects millions of
people since Israel wheels and deal.s with
fascist regimes from South Afnca to
Guatemala.
We should not delude ourselves with
visions of transformations. The civil
rights movement did not happen from
academics sitting in a classroom, nor
were the Nazis defeated planting our feet
on the ground. The struggle to overcome
oppression takes many forms whether
letter writing, occupying offices or
throwing stones at invaders.
What the Intifada has accomplished
. oringing the possibility of lasting peace
to the Middle East in under twenty
months surpasses any conflict resolution
courses has done to remedy the conflict
I want to assure the TESC-Oly
community that conttary to the way I
was ponrayed in loo article, I'm willing
to sit down with anybody any time to
work for peace in the Middle East I am
not closedminded, I simply come from a
special immediate vantage point given
what I've leamed from my history. You
can contact me and/or EPIC to find out
how to get involved in the movement to
bring a peace with justice for all the
people of loo Middle East.
David Abeles

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Article slights protestors

Historic cemetery clean up
It's the State of Washington's
Centennial Year! Are you dying for a
project that will give you a sense of
connection with this historic event?
Well, look no further than our own
Thurston County. In the southern reaches
of the county, the South Thurston County
Historical Association is undenaking the
clean up of Thurston County's Pioneer
Cemetery.
This small plot of land, donated to
the county by John Laws in the 186Os, is
the eternal home to at least forty-five
Thurston County pioneers. As the clean
up progresses, more graves might be

activism as a preferable alternative to the
intellectual apathy that results on most
college campuses.
'The opponunity provided by the
opening of our new auditorium and
Nader's presence in the area may not
come again soon. If we work quickly we
can secure this event for January and
look forward to an ongoing series of
major speakers and events. I can be
reached for any questions, comments or
discussion at the WashPrRG office
x6058.
Knoll Lowney

&

DIVISION • HARRISON • 357-4755

Letter s will be accepted on all s ubj ects. They will be checked for libel and
may be edite d for grammar , spellmg
and space. Letters should be 300 words
01' less. EvE!I'Y attempt is made to
publish as many let ter s as possib le;
h oweve r , s pace limitat i.o n s an d
timeliness may influence pUblicati on.
Letter s do not r epresent the opinions
of the CPJ staff or editor .

thought of PIRGs (he inspired the PIRus,
students founded them), his work kicked
off the consumer rights and good
government movement that is still
flourishing in dozens of public interest
organizations throughout the country.
I believe Nader's type of activism
and inspiration is exactly what Evergreen
needs. Suzette criticized Ralph's lack of
a broad social change vision and his
disinterest in systematic social change.
Instead he tries to make whatever small
changes he can, wherever he can.
Most "Naderheads" see this type of

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Cooper Point Journal April 27, 1989 Page 3

,
. J'

NEWS BRIEFS
The Board of Trustees ' meeting has
been postponed from May 10 until
Tuesday, May 23 at 1:30 pm. The
meeting is in LibJ'lllj 3112.
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

The US Supreme Court began
hearing Webster Y. Reproductive Health
Services yesterday, the case pro-choice
advocates fear may reverse Roe v. Wade,
the 1973 decision which legalized
abortion.
The opening arguments of the
Webster case were met with protests from
both pro-choice and pro-life advocates.
The court's decision is expected by July,
but they will take an initial vote on the
case Friday.
11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111

Fulani addresses
"myths" of democracy
by Kevin Boyer
Lenora
Fulani,
national
Dr.
chairperson of the independent New
Alliance Party, spoke on campus last
Wednesday night. In the last election she
became
the
fust
woman
and
African American to get on the ballot for
President in all 50 states.
The topic of the address was "The
Power and Myths of Democracy in the
United States." Fulani addressed not only
the Democratic system but how it affects
the social and economic status of
minorities in the United States.
FuIani began the speech explaining
the word "minority" was a political tenn .
She contends a "minority mentality" is
forced upon society by the "rich, white,
elite men" of America. This "minority
mentality" forces group autonomy, says
FuIani, and, "minorities are actua1ly a
vast majority if they stand together."
While pleased with the support from
Universities and Colleges across the
country, Fulani has also been struck at
the "ease by which progressive students
are led into conflict by the system." Se
cited a recent visit to State University of
New York at Stony Brook where black
and white students were both angry over
an incident in which a black man was
accused of raping a white woman. Instead
of having each group protest either rape
or racism separately, she banded them
.ogether to protest both. But even though
they had united, the media only portrayed
the tensions before the resolution.
Fighting for funding on campus by
"minority" groups is part of the conflict,
but it stems from the divisiveness of the
American culture as we know it, with
everyone trying to get a piece of what is
offered claims Fulani.
Fulani emphasized the importance of
third parties in the political arena and
discussed their portrayal in the media.
"Although third parties are seen as
insurgents or fringe groups by the main
two parties, they usually represent the
people."
Fulani's New Alliance Party claims
to do this as a black led, pro lesbian/gay,
multi racial, independent party. The New
Alliance, or "Party of the Rainbow" is
the fourth largest in the country.

In the 1988 election, Fulani received
almost one quarter of one million votes
and emerged from the election with two
percent of both the national black and
gay vote. She is a key architect of the
inside-outside tactic that was employed
during her Presidential bid in which she
supported Reverend Jesse Jackson in the
Democratic primary while building her
own independent candidacy. The same
tactic is currently in use in the mayoral
race in New York City, where Fulani is
running as an independent
The event was sponsored by the
Women of Color Coalition.

a

(Ne" To laf. . .,l

357-8779

Puget Sound Water Quality Authority
is sponsoring a conference May 10 and
II at Seattle Center featuring the 47
model education projects now underway
through its Public Involvement and
Education Fund (pIE-Fund.)
The conference will conclude with a
round table discussion moderated by Jean
Enerson, KING-TV anchorwoman, on the
role of education in managing Puget
Sound.
The conference registration fee is $35
and pre-registration is required. For more
infonnation call Joyce Nichols at 1-80054-SOUND.

THE

B IKE

EVERGREEN

SHOP

by Rudy Martin, faculty
I oppose the draft report from the
Smoking DTF and want to make some
counter recommendations. I recognize that
opposing a "smoke-free workplace" is a
bit like attacking the flag, Mom and
apple pie, but your report is such a kneejerk, repressive response to a real issue
that it cries out for rejoinder (from
smokers like me and from non-smokers
as well, some of whom I know agree
. with me), .
1bat the State's Governor wants such
a policy and . that the College's President
wants to line up with the Governor are
not sufficient reasons for us to adopt the
pIan you propose. Neither is the fact that
the health hazard of "secondary smoke"
is circulated by our heating, cooling 'and
ventilation systems, a fact, by the way,
which goes totally unexplwned in your
draft. Could such smoke possibly be as
hazardous as lots of the other stuff
pumped into and through these buildings
we inhabit? The fundamental fact is that
living, here or elsewhere, is dangerous to
health. Not a one of us, alas. is going to

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get out of here alive.
I believe the extremity of your
approach and its mentality--nourished by
the numerous and competing health fads,
the rampant reactiolUlJj swing of the
general society at present and what some
perceive as political exigency-- are
misguided, even dangerous. Though I
think one of the purposes of law is to
regulate certain kinds of public/social
behavior, to legislate the type of personal
action you aim to do borders on an
invasion of privacy. Your broad-stroke
approach is too broad; it assumes
everyone holds the same views; it tries to
force a too-narrow confonnity, which is
unhealthy (ironically, in the name of
health).
In addition, since no adult I know is
unaware of the dangers of smoking,
offering "smoking cessation classes" is at
best a weak gesture. Such classes are
already available everywhere, including
here, so you insult smokers by offering
small favors. And, to enforce the policy
by having people "report" violators
smacks of the worst kind of Orwellian

big-brotherism. Who/what will people be
asked to report next?
The proposals I would counter with
are the following:
Prohibit smoking in all shared campus
spaces, except for:
private offices (where occupants could
smoke when alone and with open
windows, which already happens a fair ,
amount); state vehicles when occupied by
only the driver; designated Interior
spaces out of the traffic flow; single
rooms or designated spaces in the

housing units.
This is essentially the policy we're
now practicing. As' the old saying goes,
"If it ain't broken, don't fix it" By all
means, we should avoid reactionary,
repressive moves lilce those you suggest;
moves that unintentionally but insidiously
create a climate favorable to ever more
dangerous, vicious and reprehensible
invasions by the State into what should
be protected as private matters. Let's
protect everyone's rights!

Governance votes
on S and A board

by James Dannen
The General Assembly met once
again Monday April 24, 1989 in Library
4300 from 3-5. At the meeting action
was taken on a number of proposals. The
fust proposal, eliminating the requirement
for a proposal to be seconded before it
can be discussed, passed.
Next the General Assembly passed h
pIan to modify the selection, composition
and activities of the S&A Board in the
following manner: 1) A committee will
be formed by the General Assembly in
order to select S&A Board Members 2)
The S&A Board will be comprised of
eight students and a student Board
Coordinator (thus eliminating the sraff
and faculty positions) 3) The General
Assembly will review the Spring
Allocations Budget before it is passed to
the Board of Trustees.
The fmal proposal accep,ted by the
General Assembly was a line-item budget
to be submitted to the S&A Board for
the operation of next year's Student

Government.

In addition to old business, several
new proposals were made: 1) that the
General Assembly determine the number
of hours each Steering Committee
member will be paid for 2) that the
General Assembly co-sponsor $1000
towards bringing Ralph Nader to speak at
TESC 3) that the General Assembly
operate under modified consensus (three
attempts at consensus followed by a 2{3
majority vote) 4) that the General
Assembly select next year's student
on the President's
representatives
Advisory Board 5) that all vacant student
positions under governance jurisdiction be
filled via the proposal process 6) that all
proposals must be determined legal before
being considered by the General
Assembly.
The next General Assembly will take
place Monday, April 31 in Library 4300
from 3-5.

MOORE

ATIORNEY AT LAW

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General Practice Including:
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•Divorce

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·Custody
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WE WANT
YOU!
on't tum around. We're not talking to the person behind you.
You're the one that we want. As a student at The Evergreen
State College, you are an individual. You are the kind of person
who wants an active voice in the world about you. Here is the place.
Now is the time. After 22 years of not having a form of Student
Governance, one is now evolving. Here's your chance to participate.

D

On Wednesday, May 3rd; there will be a selection of students to serve
on the first Steering Committee. This committee is going to be charged
with carrying out all of the decisions made at the General Assembly
meetings. This selection will be made by consensus, so be there to
participate and be heard. All Evergreen students are encouraged to apply
regardless of their sexual orientation, race, sex, age, handicap, religious
or political belief, or national origin,

TEse EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE

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$5.50 Students, Alumni, Seniors
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Bottom trawling in South Puget
Sound and the Hood Canal will be
prohibited under legislation approved by
the House.
"Bottom trawling threatens the entire
fIsheries resource of our 'state," says
Senator Brad Owen (D-Shelton), the bill's
sponsor. "When a net is dragged across
the bottom of the Sound, it picks up
everything in its path and disrupts the

entire ecosystem. When the sea floor
vegetation is destroyed, the bottom fish
lose their food source and it is difficult
for them to survive."
The measure (Senate Bill 5358)
prohibits commercial trawlers from
fIShing in Hood Canal and in Puget
Sound south and east of Wbidbey Island.
The bill passed the House 94 to 3
and now goes to the Governor for his
consideration.

Smoking. recommendation goes too far

c s

INFORMATION & RESERVATIONS 866-6833

. PERFORMED In .SPANISHand ENGLISH-with UV~ MUSIC.
Presented by Evergreen Expressions, MECHA, the Student
Activities Board, and E. S10ne Thomas, Dean of Student
Development,

Page 4 April 27, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

Ad Layout Trainee position open.
Find out how you can earn credit,
money, 'a nd -s · great reputat:ion in ihe- ·
exciting field of graphic design and
advertising. Contact Matt or Chris at
the
in CAB 306A, or call

en

Seminars and campus constituency groups need to select their
messengers as soon as possible. All messengers need to attend the
General Assembly meetings to keep their groups infonned of what is
happening with governance.

This is participatory democracy, so let your voice be heard and attend
the General Assembly meetings. These take place every Monday
-between 3 _and 5-polU.' in -Red Square weather·.permitting. If not, the
General Assembly meetings will be held in the CAB mall lounge.

X6213.

Cooper Point Journal April 27, 1989 Page 5

Students needed to plan college goals
by Suzette Williams
The College's Strategic Plan ouUining
Evergreen's goals and objectives is being
updated by a new planning council which
is searching for student participants.
The planning council has three
charges; attending to the unfmished
business of the existing strategic plan,
identifmg important new community
factors, and revising the plan according
to both of these.
The student
representatives would be responsible, says
Hunter, for taking information from their
constituency groups (organizations they
are involved in) to the planning council.
Hunter says he basically needs students
to brainstorm about what issues are
important to them.
The council is looking for student
and alumni representatives to serve on
the panel Hunter says the work, which
must be completed by June I, could
probably be accomplished in two
meetings.
Vice President and Provost Patrick
Hill chair the council and Director of
Research and Planning Steve Hunter;
helped organize it The Council also
contains the vice presidents; Kathleen
Garcia, executive assistant to the
president; Nancy Taylor, chair of the
faculty; Caroline Dobbs, faculty; Sally
Cloninger, faculty; Sarah Pederson, dean
of
library
services;
an
alumni
representative; a union representative of
the classified staff;
and
student
represen tatives.
Issues Hunter thinks should be
considered in the new draft of the plan

are enrollment pressures, branch campus
issues, retiring Evergreen faculty, and
fundraising.
The strategic plan's revision must be
completed before February 1990. "We
want to have it done in time that the
plan directs the next [biennial) budget,"
says Hunter. He says the plan determines
the colleges priorities in budgeting.
Student input will be gathered
through June, but Hunter emphasizes
comments can continue. ''This work is
not the end of the story for consultation
or for refmement," he says. Community
forums will be held in the Fall and more
revisions will be made at that time.
Hunter explains the last time the plan
was revised, in '85-'86, the planning
council held extensive community forums
and listlmed to community comments.
"We met with the community until
we were blue in the face," he says,
"What's really valuable to us is to hear
what students have to say. We listened to
students last time and we will again."
Enrollment pressures are a concern,
Hunter explains, because for the last three
years the school has had more applicants
than it could accommodate. He expects
this trend to continue because of
Evergreen's national recognition. "We
need to do some thinldng about how
much is enough," he says.
Branch campuses need to be
addressed because the legislature has set
aside money for branches of the
University of Washington and Washington
State University.. Evergreen's Legislative
Liason Jennifer Jeach says the budgets

Asphalt, concrete debris
may pose environmental
hazard on campus
by Edward Martin III
with that much material, that's hardly
Everyone who has walked the beach anything. "
or just adventured around campus has
He adds there are two other
probably seen it at least once. Some of it possibilities, a contractor wants to use the
has been there for years and some of it concrete as fIll- but wants to wait until
recently placed, but there is no denying after the coming winter, and a rock
that it does not belong there. It is quarry interested in crushing the debris
concrete and asphalt debris, left over and reselling it Jacob says, "We don't
from various projects such as the CRC want to wait until next winter, we want
and Lab Annex construction.
it out of there."
Some of the asphalt has been there
The debris occupies a lot adjacent to
F-lot and is easily accessible from F-lot, far longer than 1987, and has already
through paths in the woods and via a begun to melt and dissolve away. Shoots
special access road, normally locked.
and patches of grass have started
Ken Jacob, Director of Facilities, says reclaiming some of these mounds. Jacob
~om~ of the material was placed on the says he does not know where the older
site as early as summer 1987 and asphalt carne from.
oribinally slated to be used as part of
Asphalt, composed of petroleum, is
Ph~~e II of the beach bulkhead, but the toxic, and the decomposition of several
legislature pulled the funding from that tons could endanger the ecology of the
project and now Evergreen is stuck with surrounding soil or groundwater. Jacob
it.
said runoff from the asphalt could enter
Over the past year, ads have the creek and eventually the Sound, but
advenised the concrete as free fill he added that just recently all the water
material, but only a few individuals have . in the area was tested and graded as
come and removed some. "They've taken clean. The soil has not been tested and
a few pick-up truckloads," he said, "but there appear to be no plans to do so.

arc being "hammered out by compromise
committees." but that "the dispute will
really be over governance."
Hunter says it is almost certain that
the U of W will build a branch campus
in Tacoma or south Pierce County. He
doubts it will hurt Evergreen's Olympia
or Tacoma campuses.
Hunter says the branch campuses
would be focused on "placebound adults,"
those bound to an area by work or
family. Although he says this could lure
away some community college transfer
students, he doesn't see the UW branch
as a threat
"I think the Tacoma program is
going to compare favorably with anything
the UW can offer. We've got enough
students interested in Evergreen for
Evergreen's sake," Hunter says, "that
students who want UW degrees should
get them."
Another issue Hunter sees as
pertinent to the planning council is the
large number of Evergreen faculty
nearing retiring age. He says schools
ucross the country are confronting the
same issue. Within the next five years a
large number of planning faculty and
faculty hired in the early '70s will be
retiring.
"If we plan for it well it's an
opportunity for the College to add new
blood," he explains, but adds that
Evergreen must work to ensure a smooth
transition. "How do we as an institution
ensure that the mantle is passed on?" he
asks.
The retiring faculty have a large

base of knowledge about Evergreen.
Since TESC is one of the few
experimental colleges of the late '60s and
early '70s that still exists, Hunter says,
this generates both external and internal
interest "Those faculty really have a
story to tell," he maintains.
The last example he gives for the
planning council to consider is that of
fundraising. Hunter says the College
needs to recognize that they probably
won't receive the full amount of funding
they request He says the recognition of
the lack of full funding would be a major
shift of attitudes in the institution. Vice
President Patrick Hill calls this attitude
"Let's stop waiting for the dough," says
Hunter.
.
He explains that since the College is
so young, "We've had to be more
creative than expecting a few wealthy
alumni to endow chairs for us. That's not
going to happen at Evergreen for a
while." Because of this lack, he says, the
College needs to identify new sources of
funding.
The strategic plan is not revised on a
regular schedule, says Hunter, and the
planning council is just re-forming. It was
disbanded in August 1986 when the
Board of Trustees approved the last
revision. He says the planning council
has had two preliminary planning
meetings.
Hunter emphasizes that student input
is an integral part of revising the strategic
plan. Students interested in participating
should
contact
the
Student
Communications Center or Steve Hunter.

Ex-CIA agent Philip Agee speaks
by Rick Fellows
Former CIA agent Philip Agee will
speak tonight at 7:30 pm in the CAB.
Agee's 1975 boOk Inside the
Conspiracy: CIA Diary was the first
account from an agent of the agency's
deceitful and corrupt practices abroad.
His decision to speak out branded him a
traitor to some and a hero, under
Nuremburg principles, to others.
Agee instigated a debate which still
rages. Where this step carried him is the
subject of his new book On the Run.
Currently Agee is engaged in a
precedent setting legal battle over the
revocation of his passport The proceeds
from his current tours will be used to

defiay his legal fees.
Agee is also involved in a new
organization of ex-CIA agents known as
ANSecA (the Association of National
Security Alumni). This organization grew
out of the previous Association for
Responsible Dissent.
Let's crowd the CAB tonight to show
our appreciation. Call 352-8526 for more
information.

Fourth annual TESC Unsoeld seminar
plans to exp~ore multicultural curriculum
by Kevin Boyer
The Evergreen State College, as part
of its continuing exploration of what it
means to teach a multicultural curriculum,
will present the fourth annual Willi
Unsoeld Seminar and public symposium
on April 30 and May 1. This year's
theme is "The Politics of Knowledge in
the Year 2000: For Whom, For What."
The theme is based on the raging
debate abOut how Americans define
Western Civilization. The debate focuses
symbolically on last year's curricular
reforms at Stanford University. It centers
around the iJitroduction of books by
women and persons of color onto the
formerly all-white, all-male reading lists
of the courses which have been regarded
as defining our common Western
heritage.
Former Secretary of Education
William Bennett, speaking on the subject
at Stanford University last April, says
higher education should remain centrally
focused on the traditionally white malebased study of Western Civilization for
four reasons: it is ours; it is good, having
resulted in "the world's most just and
effective system if government"; it is
incomparably diverse, complex and
inexhaustible; and it is under attack.
Evergreen Provost Patrick Hill agrees
students
should
study
Western

by Honna Metzger
A women-only meeting was held
April 21 to discuss taking action in
response to the April 8th assault of a
woman.
That assault occurred when a woman
was walking alone to the Geoduck Beach
shortly after noon .. A man, also walking
alone, grabbed her. She screamed and ran
down the trail. About 30 minutes later
Security received her phone call and sent
Sergeant Darwin Eddy to search the area.
The suspect had already escaped.
Controversy arose when some
students learned of the attack from
sources other than Security. They wanted
to know why Security bad not informed
student organizations and why no
bulletins had been posted around campus.
Five days later, the notices of the

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Page 6 April 27, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

Fund enables Evergreen to bring
individuals to campus whose values ar.d
accomplishments ment the attention of
the students and Olympia community.
Unsoeld Events Schedule
Sunday, April 30:
Symposium, "The Politics of Knowledge
in the year 2()()()" 7 pm Washington
Center for the Performing Arts. Tickets
are FREE and can be obtained by calling
the box office at 753-8586, or stopping
by the Provost's office, Library 3131.
Monday, May 1:
Forum with scholars for students, faculty
and staff, 9-11 am, Library Lobby.
All Core Program Forum, 11:30-12:45,
Library Lobby
Seminars with Scholars: 2-4 pm for
interested staff and students
Johnnetta Cole's seminar: LIB 1600
Martin Bernal's seminar: LIB 3500
John Mohawk's seminar: LIB 2100
Readings are required for seminars and
are available in LIB 3130.

attack were posted.
Within one or two days most of the
notices were removed by an unknown
person or persons.
One concerned woman at the April
21 meeting said she called Security and
referred to the "attack" that happened to
the woman on the beach trail. The female
Security Officer reportedly replied "they
are not attacks; they are incidences."
This bothered the caller because she
got the impression that Security does not
take the problem of women being
assaulted as seriously as it could.
The content of CPJ article about the
assault also offended most of the women
at the meeting. It paraphrases Security
Sergeant Darwin Eddy as saying that
assault incidences increase when the
weather becomes warmer, and that he
urges women not to walk alone, even
during the day.
"What upsets me the most is the
institutional attitude that these things just
happen," said one woman.
Referring to the publicity given to the

graffiti issue, one woman quipped,
"Security cares more about the walls than
the women."
The group decided that they need to
take action to make women safer. They
are planning an awareness symposium
that will include testimonials of victims
of sexual assault and harassment,
informative films about sexual assault, a
march, and a public forum.
Security for its part has been
struggling, along with Keith Eisener of
Informational Services, to get information
about the incidences out to the campus,
according to Gary Russel, Chief of
Security.
On ·April 17, Russell held a meeting
with the leaders of various student groups
to discuss possible preventive measures to
take against further attacks. He hopes to
hire a work study student specifically to
patrol for sexual assault perpetrators and
suspects, plus to keep a look out for any
suspicious situations.
Russell expressed his regret that
Security lacks the number of officers

heeded to keep Evergreen safe. The
Evergreen campus' aesthetic appeal-shrubbery, secluded parking lots, etc. -also makes Security's job harder, because
it blocks visual access to many
vulnerable areas.
Communication is another problem.
Women walking away from campus
buildings aren't able to reach a telephone
to call Security during an emergency or
after an assault. By the time Security
hears of an incident, if even 15 minutes
later, the suspect has had a good chance
to run or hide. Russell would like to see
telephones installed along the trail to the
beach and in other remote areas.
For now, Russell says, "I can
understand their (women's) anger and
frustration.
We've
intensified
patrols...Most women understand that we
can't have a cop on every comer."
In response to the idea that Security
cares more about graffiti than women,
Russell said, "We are defmitely more
concerned for people than property."

r------~-~~~~---

I STANlEY H. KAPlAN
Cl!ances
01 encsangert'd

Johnnetta B. Cole- The fllSt Black
woman president of Spelman College in·
Atlanta, Georgia.
Cole's scholarship centers on cultural
anthropology, Afro- American studies,
and women's studies. "There is a
fundamental question at the base of the
work that I do: how can people of color,
poor people, and women become full,
productive, and equal members of the
society in which they live?"
John Mohawk- A member of the
Haudenosaunee Nation and faculty
member in the American Studies
department at the State University of
New York at Buffalo. He is also a
leading journalist and internationally
respected spokesperson for Indian rights.
"The great philosophers of the West
are celebrated, which I say is right to do.
They are celebrated, but you will notice
that only they are celebrated. Hardly
anyone can name a great philosopher
who is not a Western philosopher."
The Willi Unsoeld Seminar Fund is
named after Evergreen State founding
faculty member Willi Unsoeld A
philosopher
and
world
rf\nowned
mountain climber, Unsoeld lost his life in
an avalanche on Mt. Rainier on March 4,
1979.
An endowment was established as a
living memorial to honor Unsoeld. The

Women ask: How safe is Evergreen?

TIle
G-RE Is
WIlen?

In the consel'\lahon

Civilization, but says, "The issue is how
we should study it"
"We need to prepare our students to
I,ve and work in an increasingly
multicultural world," he says. "The issue
will affect how we teach children about
history and literature in our K-12
educational systems, as well as in
colleges and universities."
The college will present three
nationally recognized scholars dedicated
to reinterpreting Western Civilization
during a public symposium Sunday, April
30, at 7 pm at the Washington Center for
the Performing Arts and during seminars
the following day on the campus. They
are:
Martin Bernal- A professor of
Government Studies at Cornell University
and a former Fellow of King's College,
Cambridge, where he earned a Ph.D. in
Chinese studies. In the mid- 70's, his
interests
shifted
to
the
Eastern
Mediterranean; years later he was
"staggered" to learn that the version of
Greek history he had been taught was
refabricated in the 1840's and 50's.
Soon after that revelation, his most
recent book,
Black Athena: The
Afroasiatic Roots of Classical Civilization,
was born. It has become one of the most
controversial and important scholarly
works of our time.

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Cooper Point Journal April 27, 1989 Page 7

Workshop to close Earthmonth

Many options for summer jobs
by Wendy Freeman
When Spring arrives our fancies turn
to love, right? Well, Freud said love and
work. Most Evergreen students are
focussing on Summer work. Where to
fmd it? How to get ~t? How to enjoy it?
Here are a few basics for those of you
still looking.
The rules are simple. Apply
everywhere, begin now, and conduct an
organized job search. (Taken from Career
World.)
You can stan by checking the Career
Development Center Summer Jobs
Information. A large number of the
listings are for Summer camps, but there
are complete summer employment books
listing jobs in the U.S. and Alaska.
A number of employers screen and
hire early (like February), so don't be
discouraged if you meet with a few
rejections. This Summer job search is a
lot of work, but it can payoff in the
long run.
If you haven 't alr~dy contacted
Youth Employment Services, Union
Representatives, Job Service, Private
Employment Agencies (beware of fees)
or Temporary Help Firms you might
want to begin there. The Government
also hires a significant number of college
students each year. These positions are
competitive and tend to fill early in the
Spring.
Here are some ideas for contacts. Use
the Career Development Center's copy of
1989 Summer Employment Directory of
the United States or take a look at The
Student's Guide to the Best Summer Jobs
in Alaska. You could send a letter of
employment inquiry to:

'Olympia Parks and Recreation
Personnel Office
PO Box 1967
Olympia, WA 98501
·Thurston County Parks and Recreation
Sharon Hupe
529 West 4th
Olympia, WA 98501
·City of Seattle Personnel Depanment
Work Study/lntem Coordinator
446 Dexter Horton Building
710 Second Avenue
Seattle, WA 98104
For the adventurous:
Alaska Fisherman's Union
2505 1st Avenue Room 3
Seattle, WA
If you want to stay in Washington
this Summer ley:
Washington State Parks and Recreation
7150 Clear Wate: Lane
Olympia, WA 98504
Here's what you might fmd there:
Park Aide $5.87/hr 300 positions
Lifeguard I $6.14/hr 35 positions
Lifeguard II $6.72/hr 3 positions
Interp. Asst. $7.34/hr 10 positions
For some amazing jobs overseas
check out!
The Directory of Overseas Summer Jobs
National Directory Service
252 Ludlow Ave.
Cincinnati, Ohio 45220
If all else fails you could run away
to join the Circus!
Circus Kirk - Traveling Summer Circus
P.O. Box 181
East Berlin, PA 17316
Whatever . you do this Summer,
enjoy! Feel free to contact Career
Development for listings at extension
6193.

Plan now for summer and
fall internships
by Betty Lochner
Now is the time to start the planning
process for summer and fall internships.
The Office of Cooperative Education (Coop Ed.) is here to help you plan, locate,
and document your internship. We have
a wide variety of internship opportunities
available in such areas as business. public
relations, social services, environmental
education, political science, television and
radio media, art administration, and more.
A list of new internship opportunities is
publicized and distributed campus-wide
each month. WalCh for it on your
favorite bulletin board or stop by the Coop Ed. office and find out what's new.
We can also help you design and develop
your own internship.
Students interested in conducting an
internship summer or fall quarter need to
fill out a Co-op Ed request form by May
19. This includes students continuing an
internship from spring quarter. Fall
quarter internships are planned during
spring quarter to enable students to fmd
and negotiate with their faculty before
the summer break. Many faculty leave
the area during the summer and are not
available until the flIst week of classes.
That can often be too late to finalize
internship plans.
To be eligible to conduct an

internship, you must be a jllllior or senior
and have completed at least one quarter
of satisfactory work at Evergreen.
Exceptions are made for students enrolled
in programs that have an internship
component built into the program.
Orientation sessions are available for
students to become familiar with all of
the steps in internship planning. If you
will be conducting an internship ' for the
nrst time it is very helpful to attend an
orientation session. The remaining
sessions will be offered every Monday
and Wednesday from May 1 through
May 17. Sessions are held from 3-4 pm
in the Hillaire Student Advising Center
Conference Room, Library 1406A.

Scott Cossu

0

Michael Hedges

0

Alex DeGrassi

0

Will Ackerman

0

NIGHTNOISE

0

Modem Mandolin Quartet

0

Tuck and Patti

D

Puck Fair

0

George Winston

0

Ian Matthews

NOW ON
SALE!
ALL
WINDHAM HILL

small group discussions, and guided .
imagery. Ann Wescott, a long time
Innerhelp activist with an MA in
Counseling Psychology, will facilitate our
connection with the living earth. Wescott
has participated in and facilitated
numerous Despair and Empowerment
workshops with Joanna Macy throughout
the country, and in the USSR in 1987.
You can preregister by contacting the
Environmental Resource Center at 8666000 extension 6784. Please bring a sack
lunch. beverages will be provided. The
cost of this workshop will be $5-$15
sliding scale, and will go to benefit the
Innerhelp Global Network. For more
information contact Tim Russel at the
ERC.

.' Earth Week Events
May 1, noon
Red Square
May Day Celebration

Innerhelp was founded by Joanna
Macy to provide people with the
opponunity to experience and share their
deepest responses to the dangers which
threaten our planet: nuclear holocaust,
environmental degradation, and human
oppression.

Garbage ,Day In, don't throw garbage out
by Sandra Schaad
Could it happen in America? A day
where nothing is thrown away, no waste
is consumed and discarded? Could the
incinerators be starved, the landfills
emaciated? Could the daily garbage-fix
be thwarted by hundreds of addicts in
one courageous and united gesture?
The Great American Smokeout
proposes a day where smokers abstaiil, if
only for one day, in order to gain an
active awareness of their addiction to
cigarettes, and to show themselves that
healthier action is within their reach.
What the Smokeout is to lungs. No
Garbage Day. on a smaller and more
local scale. is to the land and air. It is
not a solution in and of itself, but a

oZbne-depleter, as we all know by now.
Most landfills serving urban areas in
the United States will be full within the
next five years: new sites are increasingly
hard to fmd. The garbage industry's push
is on for incinerators, which pollute the
air, produce a highly toxic ash, last only
for a short time, cost an enormous
amount, and require a steady stream of
garbage including recyclables such as
paper and wood wastes in order to burn
properly. Many cities and towns are.
saying no to the belching burners, and
are turning to recycling and waste
reduction instead.
So, what can we do about it? No
Garbage Day is a good place to start.
Abstain for a day! Become aware of your

conscious step towards finding solutions.
And our garbage certainly is a big
problem.
Four million tons of garbage are
piled into Washington landfills and
incinerators each year. Of this, 28 percent
is paper and cardboard which could be
recycled (twice as much is thrown away
as is recycled). Another 34 percent is
yard, food and wood waste which could
be compos ted. Plastics make up seven
percent of the stream, glass 5 percent,
metals 9 percent, and other inert materials
around 14 percent (Tacoma News
Tribune, April 18, 1989). A small
percentage of the waste stream is highly
toxic, coming from households and
industries. And styrofoam waste is an

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FOR APPOINTMENT CALL

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OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON 98502

-

Page 8 April 27. 1989 Cooper Point Journal

357-8884
PACIFIC CENTtR BUILDING

2747 Pocillc A•. SE.

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editor needs it. A good
way to get it is to be the editor of the Cooper Point Journal for
the 1989-1990 publication year. Earn 8-16 credits per quarter
while getting paidl Applications are available at the S & A
Administrative office in CAB 305, X6220 or stop by the CPJ In
CAB 306 for applICation Information. AppliCations will be
accepted through May 5th 1989.

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THE GLORY

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Fri
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12-5pm
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(Comer of State)

DON'T HAVB A WI' Of MONEY?

I"

garbage hablc;. , Talk to folks about
garbage (they'll be delighted). Notice
where recyclables are being thrown away.
Give your local paper mill a call or letter
and let them know that you would rather
buy paper made from recycled paper than
from virgin wood. (One excellent choice
is Daishowa of Pon Angeles--they plan
to expand the mill, and they don't believe
that recycled newsprint is in great enough
demand to be profitable. Their address:
Daishowa America; P.O. Box 271; Port
Angeles, WA 98362).
Or call up your favorite newspapers
and ask if they use recycled newsprint.

- - - - .- - - - - -,

352-9620

' WHlHMlIiLL

May 4,7:30
Lecture Hall 3
The Milagro Beanfield War

May 6, 10-6
Communications Building
Remembering Home: Our
Connection with the Living
Earth

us N. COLUMBIA

COUNSELING & THERAPY

I\0i\

0

Earth month will come to a close
May 6th, with the experiential workshop
"Remembering Home: Our Connection
Eanh."
The
with
the
Living
Environmental Resource Center (ERC) at
The Evergreen State College has provided
a month of activities in celebration of the
planet blended with an examination of the
responsibility we share as inhabitants.
The workshop will begin at 10 am
Saturday morning. and will follow Dr.
Joanna Macy's process of "Despair and
Empowerment." Macy writes in her most
recent publication, Thinking Like A
Mountain: Towards A Council of All
Beings:
"Many people intellectually realize
that we are inseparable from Nature, but
few of us really experience our intimate
connection with Nature. When we
develop empathy for the Earth, when we
realize that its pain is our pain. that its
fate is our fate, we fmd new clarity,
inspiration. and commitmenL"
This all day workshop. ending at 5
p.m., will include experiential exercises,

16
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Cooper Point Journal April 27, 1989 Page 9

Arts and En·t ertainment

Calendar

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

Nearly sexless .romance warms heart
by Honna Metzger
Do you like movies about love?
What about movies about love and sex?
Movies that show sex? Say Anything falls
somewhere between the first two
categories, and no where near the third.
"Jo"

Sure, the heroine loses her virginity half
way through the flIm, but that's simply a
tradition in this kind of movie.
Say Anything is actually about love,
with the sex in the· movie treated as part
of love. What a contrast to another movie
written by Cameron Crowe, Fost Tinus

she has done all of her life.
But back to sex. The morning after
Diane and Lloyd sleep together, Diane
comes home at 7' am or so. Her redfaced father has been waiting for her, so
she decides to share with him the details
of her date. The question of "getting
physical" had come up, but, she says, "I
decided not to sleep with him (her father
relaxes) .. but then, 1 attacked him
anyway." She shrugs her shoulders with
a smile, and prances off to her room.
"Goodnight Dad."
Lloyd has np father-like person to
confide in, so resorts instead to his two
eccentric female friends. They are
shocked because Diane has the reputation
of being a "priss." The romantic friend
exclaims, "Everything is different now.
You've had sex!"
Her eyes glaze over as she tells
Lloyd that if he meets Diana 50 years
from now on the street they will say 10
each other "hi, how are you" but what
they'll reaDy be thinking is "We've had

at Ridgemont High.
lone Skye plays the valadiclOrian
graduate Diane Court, a near-genius who
has never joined in the sleazy, drunken
merriment of her high school classmates.
She has been too busy skipping grades
and looking up words in her huge
dictionary. And then there is her
charming, manipulative, rich father,
played by John Mahoney, who is the
only family she lives with.
Surprising and somewhat disappointing is
that for such an ambitious and intelligent
person, she acts strangely indecisive,
submissive, and even plain slow at times.
Her life changes when she meets
Lloyd Dobler, played by John Cusack,
who has also just graduated from high
school. He shares a humid, tacky
aparunent with a grouchy, burnt-out older
sister and Iier affal?le young son. Lloyd
slowly exposes Diane 10 the philosophy
of indecisive, yet very idealist, drifting
(would he fit in at Evergreen?). In his
baggy, colorless trenchcoat and high-lOp
tennis shoes, Lloyd appears to be the all
around perfect person, not 10 mention
being very very cute.
They fall quickly and effortlessly in
love. The premise of Say Any/hing seems
to be the conflict Diane feels when her
possessive, perfectionist father pressures
her to get rid of Lloyd. She loves Daddy,
but also loves Lloyd. The tears flow liS
she struggles to "do the right thing," as

I cry
A. III. lO.h th".,
All "'ric .nd beautiful.
Sh. IIIIIt. In IItr bubbly·hot
Milk bath.

And Jo',
BIII&-Black hair floats,
_.. ring In I loamy mass.
And now her skin Is Isss
DlscclorBd.
Ses Jo,
Shs wlnts to bs
A paJe .tatus, breathing
TINJ .olt ICInt 01 • sl18k whit. God.
In, OUt.

And now,
W.t and smiling,
Sh.'s pile, touchBd with blu.,
And red ribbons wave solUy from
H" wrists. .
But Jo
Wants to bs clssn,
Whan slit smbrscss liberty's
Bloody arms.
Janette I yn Rosebrook

sex!

II

Say Anything is a gentle, pleasant,
somewhat thought-provoking movie. It
has some nicely strange subplots and
unusual supporting characters. But even
though John Cusack and lone Skye are
believable performers, their characters
seem somewhat undeveloped, leaving the
audience with a question not best left 10
the imagination: What do they talk
about? The audience is told that Diana
and Lloyd love each olller, but the love
seems hollow. The script skims over the
surface of a relationship that had
potential to be very intriguing.
Say Anything is now playing at the
Capitol Mall Cinema.

StrandBd

ars strandBd In the desert rBalms 01 wilderness.
LD

Hawk floats stili, stBady but for a wing tip's
IJIcksred adjustment, over a "plantBd clear cut ridge.
P,tlent concsntrltlon hangs motion"" In th. balance
01 alfltrllm .nd updraft. Hawk movss rising and lorward,
dropping Ind forward, 10110 .... the cooler bro ... of ridge
kHplng th••un on It. back. Soon th. 1II0uld« of the
ridge drop, 1*0 ... th. warming .un', "y.. fb. IItat
dllf"",tI,1 homogenlz" and ha...k .woops In , wide
circle "turnIng to th••un .bo'l' th.
Hawk
Ng/ns .galn It, IIIIIr motlDnll.. meditation on th.
"'atlon 01 wind scl8nce to posslbl. mIc. mssl••

rl..

Tenino, Aprl/ 14 1989
Jim Felton

Tbe Pbotographs sbow, curated by Evergreen pbotographers, offers an
exciting variety of images for the visually hungry. In the 2nd noor Gallery
01 the Library, we rmd strikingly beautiful landscapes; while the 4th (Ioor
Gallery segment 01 the show hosts squisby close-ups of unidentifiable skin
somethings, a large lor mat comic strip-like exploration or post-modern
"smut," plus the conrrontive peices p.i ctured above. Tbe Photograplis show
is free, and shouldn't be. missed. Its last day will be Sunday, April 30.
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BLACK AND 'IIW"'B1"""TE'""

PROCESSING. PRlNTJNG

CAPITOL PHOTO LAB
103 Harrison Ave. W .• Suite #
Olympia, Wa • 754-4646

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THEY'RE BAAAD...
THEY'RE THE

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Page 10 April 27, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

Sierra Club is hosting a program
concerning the development of ThurslOn
County's natural areas. A representative
of the Capitol Land Trust will present a
slide show, and give guidance 10
conservationists on how to protect land in
Thurston County from development. The
program will take place in the Olympia
Timberland Library at 7:30 pm.
The
Stonewall
Committee
for
LesbianlGay Rights will hold a public
meeting to discuss the court case of
Steven Farmer, the fllst person tested
exposure. It
against \:lis will flJr
takes place at the Old Firehouse, 400
15th Avenue E., Seattle, at 7:30.
Admission is free. For info or rides call
722-0938 days, or 322-6218 evenings.

mv

Scott Cossu performs at the WashinglOn
Center for the Performing Arts at 8 pm.
Tickets at the door will cost $16 general,
$14 for students and seniors.
Philip Agee will speak in the CAB at
7:30 pm. He wrote Inside the Company,
one of the fllst major insider expose's of
the CIA. That best selling book opened
the floodgates for similarly disgruntled
Agents to tell Americans the previously
unknown doings of the America's secret
international police. $3 donation, but no
one turned away for lack of funds.

Friday

28

us

Tbe
Olympic Academy XIlI needs
volunteers. This is a huge international
conference on the Olympics that takes
place on the TESC campus this summer.
If interested in helping, contact the
Olympic Academy office, in the CRC,
for a questionnaire today.

Four videos will be shown concerning
women in the CAB lobby, 11 am-3 pm:
"History in the Company of Women,"
"Jewel Graham Interview," "October 16,
1983 Dedication of the YWCA of the
USA Learning Development Center," and
"YWCA: The Year 2000."

sOl7lflthlng to locus upon
WI/

27

"Ten Little Indians," an adaptation of
Agatha Christie's And Then There Were
None, will be start its run at the
Washing IOn Center for the Performing
Arts. Showtimes are 8:15 pm except
Sunday at 2 pm through May 13. Tickets
cost $8 general and can be obtained by
calling 753-8586.

Ws are strandBd In the desert realms 0 I wilderness.
He" there are no birds or wHds or lizards.
Her. th.re are no flowers which bloom In the night or In the rain
Hsre ...s sit We .It and think.
And you art always on my mind.
Llk. tilt Ilowers which do not bloom,
And th. bird. and wHds.
You a" ,ublimatBd and archaic,
You hold no placs
You art abstract

Hsre

Thursday

DOES THIS MAN HAVE
"A BOY NAMED SUE?"
V."

Zoot Suit is being shown in Leeture Hall
#3 at 6 pm. Admission is $1.
A photo exhibit entitled "Ko domo No
Tame Ni"(For the Sake of the Children)
opens on the 3rd floor of the
CAB. The show is sponsored by the
Asian Pacific Island Coalition, and
features 55 photographs depicting the
hislOries of four generations of a
Japanese American community.

Saturday

IhII II TIm

ThoIp, I1IInIIQef of
Oold.n Oldl ••
Recorda l T. . .. .
SInae 11170 Golden
0IdIee hal lOkI
hundnIdI of "A Boy
NMIed SUe" ~
Johnny CUll. Let
Golden
ftnd
!he rec:ard 01 !ape
you 'v. b •• n
HIrc:hIng lor.

29

The beginnings and growth of
Christianity: a lecture/seminar will cover,
one hour each, the Old Testament, the
New Testament, and church history. All
welcome; admission is free.
Presentation will take place in CAB 108,
9 am-12, and will be followed by a sack
lunch Q & A. Call the Evergreen
Students for Christ, x5165, for info.

are

Old..

RECORDS· TAPES. CD's
OLYMPIA

TACOMA

420 Franklin S.E.

8024 S. Tacoma Wy.

943-8228

581-7947

FREE PARKING AT BOTH STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Common Cause is playing in the
Housing Community Center, 9 pm-1 am,
sponsored by First Peoples Peer Support,
Housing, and First People's Advising.
APIC, Key Special Services. Call x6284
for more info. $1 donation for admission.

EI Teatro De La will be performed in
the Recital Hall at 8 pm. Tickets cost
$5.50 and $7.50.

Sunday

30

The Freedom Socialist Party will
celebrate this year's May Day with a
tribute 10 the 70th anniversary of the
Seattle General Strike. Narrative, dramatic
readings, and an audience sing-along
will commemorate the fiist time in US
hislOry that Labor ruled a city. Program
begins at 2 pm, at New Freeway Hall,
5018 Rainier Ave. S., Seattle. Door
donation of $2 or $1 low income
includes a NW salmon dinner served at
4:30. For child care or rides call in
advance 722-2453 or 722-6057.
"The Politics of Knowledge" is the
theme of this year's WitIi Unsoeld
Seminar, which begins tonight at the
Washington Center for the Performing
Arts at 7 pm. Complimentary passes can
be obtained by callhg x6400 or the
WashinglOn Center Bo). Office at 7538586.
Global Walk will hold a meeting in
front of the Peace Center at 3 pm.
Everyone is welcome. The Walk won't
happen without your support!
.

Monday

1

"A World Apart" will be shown by the
Olympia Film Society. This fLIm was
written by Shawn Slovo, who grew up in
South Africa in the 1960's, the daughter
of a white anti-apartheid activist. Slovo
based the film story on these experiences.
The three main actresses in the fLIm
shared the Cannes Film Festival award
for Best Actress in 1988. Showtimes are
6:30 pm and 9 pm, and cost $4 for nonmembers, 2.50 for members.
Representatives
01
the
TESC
administration will respond to a petition
for a declaratory ruling on the validity of
the institution's Criminal Trespass Order.
Proceeding will take place
at the
ThurslOn County Superior Court, 5000
Lakeridge Dr. SW, with the honorable
Justice Berschauer presiding. Formal
attire suggested.
Tbe Maypole Dance will celebrate this
first day of May, starting at noon in Red
Square. You are encouraged not only to
attend, but to bring ml'Sical :nsuuments,
flowers, costumes, and rev dry. This is an
Earth Month event, so call the ERC,
x6784, for details.
A new pboto exhibit entitled "Thirties
and Forties Prints" opens in Gallery 2 on
the 2nd floor of the Library. The
collection includes pictures of home life,
city life, and landscapes from the 1930's
and 1940's. Gallery hours are 8:45 am 10:45 pm Mon-Thurs, 8:45 am-6:45 pm
Friday, 11 am-6:45 pm weekends.
An Internship Orientation wlll be held
in LID 1406A, 3-4 pm. All interested in
doing summer or fall must attend one of
these orientation sessions.
A National Perspective on Racial
Justice will be given by speakers
Johnetta Cole and Elaine Zakarison.
Cole's presentation is entitled "How
Women of Color Perceive the Women's
MovemenL" Cole is now the first African
American Women President of Spelman
College. Zakarison, National YWCA
Student Director, will present "Racism
and Sexism: One Issue." The event takes
place in CAB 110, 12-3 pm.

Tuesday

2

Heritage Week has its opening ceremony
in the CAB Lobby at 11 am. The week
Merle Woo and other outspoken
advocates of women's and minority rights
will hold a forum at 5 pm in the HUB of
the University of Washington. One main
topic will be the controversy over
Women's Studies programs.

Four panels on Isreali-Palestinian
conniet are scheduled for four evenings
in May at Pierce College in Tacoma.
Tonight's theme is "Being There:
Personal experiences of Jew and
Palenstinians who have been personally
affected by the contlict. The panel
consists of two Jews and two Arabs, plus
others with expertise, and will hold the
discussion in the Pierce College
Performance Lounge at 7:30.
"Curtain Call, Grandmother" wiD be
presented by the Co-Respondants Readers
Theater. Performance begins at noon at
the Westwater Inn. For reservations call
943-3628. Lunch tickets are $10, play
only $5.

lVednesday

3

A mini film lestival is !x-ing sp.:lnsored

by APIC, shown in Lectu(t; r-lall # J from
11 am-12 am.
"A Coat of Many Colors" wiD air on
TCTV, channel 31 on TCI Cablevision.
The program portrays J0wish culruraI
traditions in the SUllc of Washington . .
An Internship Orien>ation session will
take place in LID 1406.\, 3-4 pm.

Announcements
Jon Hyatt's name was misspelled as Jon
Hiatt in the "Slightly West" article of the
April 6 issue of the CPJ. Hopefully he
wiD kindly accept the. apology of both
the literary arts magazine and the CPJ.
A month-long bicycle trip through
Zimbabwe is being sponsored by David
Moser, scheduled for June IO-July 11.
The tour is offered through Leisure Ed,
with credit optional for participants. Cost
should run $2300-$2600 plus $300-$400
for optional tuition fee. Call Leisure Ed
CoordinalOr Debbie Waldorf, x6530, for
details.
The Gay Men rap group meets
Wednesday in LIB 3223 at 7:30 pm.
Crimewatch requests volunteers, male or
female 10 escort women around campus.
Please call the Security Office, x6140, if
you are interested or curious.
Adult Children 01 Alcoholics meet every
week in LIB 4004 at 5:30 pm.
The library is getting a new computer
system on May 15th. Librarians need
your help May 1 through May 14 as they
switch over. Until May 15th, please
remember to: 1) bring your library card
every time you want to check anything
out 2) bring in anything you wish to
renew 3) save your requests for specific
authors and titles until after May 15.

W~GJ[)l$[Q) £:\00
CLASSIFIED RATES
.30 words or 1ess-$3.00
.10 cents for each additional word
•Pre-payment required
.Classlfled cleadllne-2 p,m. Tuesday

TO PLACE AD:

.PHONE 866-6000 X6054
oSTOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A

.SEND INFO TO: CPJ, TESe, CAB 305A
OLYMPlA, WA 98505

....-W-A-N-TE-O---------.....
GROUP CONTRACT FORMING to product
Live ComedyNariety TV Program IlIlt fall.
We have a plan, faculty, SpOIllO....
Advanced, motivated 'tudentl-joln usl Info.
call Ke~h at 866-9644 or John at 866-8936.

HELP WANTEO
Needed AMI.tant Mllnagtr, Uftgua~c:Is,
Swim IlIItructor•. Requir8lllllllts: WSI &
Advlll109d Ute Saving or Ute (,1uard training.
Send letter of Interest and resume to
TANGLEWOOO RECREATION CENTER, 414

Wildcat Dr. S.E., OIy~1a, WA, 88503.
(DEADLfiE IS MAY 12, 1888).

Camp counselors wanted lor Gi~ Scout Youth
Camps on Hood Canal and foothills of
Cascades. Must enjoy working wlh children in
outdoor setting. Salary~eaIs/l.odginglon the
job experience provided. (206) 633-5600.
EOE.

I

I---------------i

Ad Layout PerlOn needed to work for the
CPJ on the 1989-90 production year.
Intamlhlpa avallabll. Earn wille you Leaml
Call Matt or Chris at 866-6000 X6213.

Consignments wanted: Clothing, Jewelry, Art.
handcrafts, colectibles. See Inanna's 209 E.
Thinking of taking some time oft from school?
4th 11205 (upstairs) Downtown Olympia.
We need Mothers' He~rs. Household duties
943-3147.
and childcate. Live in Exciting New York City
1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 suburbs. Room, Board, Salary included. (203)
Onginal poetry requested for publication in the
622-4959 or (914) 273-1626 or (BOO) 222CPJ. Please bring your typed poems with
XTRA.
name and phone number to CAB 306A. For
more info, call 866-6000 X6213 ask for
Summ.r Job. on CruiSe Ships Paying $300Henna.
$900 per week. Airfine poshions available also.
I---!'............- - - - - - - -... Cell (817) ~136 ext C-13.

FOR RENT

Wanlld 3 gay roommates, male or female, to
share 6 bedroom home on 16 acres. $275 +
% of udlld... 843-2656.

chri:S~fltc.nilfled Acupuncturlat,

Massage Therapist, Masters in
Counseling. Practice of acupuncture Integrated
with acupressura, Chinese heIbs, and cranialsacral techniques. Adutts $2O-$35Jhr; children
$S-$1S"reatrnent. 754-0624.

All ads In this Seelion
LOIt kty rfng wfth thr.. key. In the grass
on Red Square. If found, PLEASE TURN
INTO SECURITY OR CAll GlLE 754-7416.

Lost Embroidered Mongolian Hat wired
brim, blu.ylltow top. Call Gillian
943-8207.

W.. Duck, ON THE WESTSI>E. UCIIlIed
HoIIII Daycare. Creative home engages
lmaginalion & wondet. Lots of love, attention &
gufdance. NO T.V. Vegetarian. 357-4157.
PROFESSIONAL
Lookilg br a hous&-sitter? I'm a tidy, quiet
house-sItter looking for a house to sit. f'm fond
of animals and pIarQ & have experience with
both. Please call 1IlI, Peter, at 1I66«lOO
X6213.

Foredosl~ras,

$1.00 (U RepaIr).
Repos, Tax delinquent
"'ling In thl. ar..' Call
5-733-6064 X2110A for

Cooper Point Journal April 27, 1989 Page 11
Media
cpj0473.pdf