The Cooper Point Journal Volume 19, Issue 6 (November 3, 1988)

Item

Identifier
cpj0456
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 19, Issue 6 (November 3, 1988)
Date
3 November 1988
extracted text
November 3, 1988
Volume 19
Issue 6

Groce Brookman

Heather Roe

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H-I-ee
The ENergreen !'late College
Olympia, W A 98505
AddrefS Correction ftoquested

Bernadette Williams

Lorry Jefferson

Non-profit Organization
U.s. Rlstage Fl:tid
o Jympia. W A 98505
F\!nnit No. 65

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.Letters

Editor questions governance
Reading
through
the
discussions of the governance
proposals and their reactions
brought up a question in my
mind.
What is the goal of
student governance?
Power to
do what? I think much of the
discussion of student government
structure may be clearer if the
goals of student government are
established.
If I'm missing
something here, write me and
let me know but I have a
feeling that this discussion of a
structure is not as useful as it
might be without a goal in mind
for it.
The political campaigning this
year has been nasty.
I don't
like to throw stones but it
seems to me that the Republican
candidates
have
been
particularly bad thi s year. Even
our own Dan Evan ~ (who' S
leaving government se rvice) ha s
been slingin '.
In hi; ad fo r
Slade Gorton he attack s Mike
Lowry for slinging mud. Since
Mr. Evans' campaign for Senator
wasn't particularly high minded
(I know of an in stance where
his campaign staff told a fib) I
find the ads hard to swallow.
But that's nothing compared
to
the
behind
the
scenes
happenings. A woman protesting
George Bush In Tacoma was
treated very roughly by the
Tacoma police . In Montana, a
Dukakis supporter was dragged
on
the
ground
by
Bush
supporters.
Echoes of 1933.
Especially with eight former
Nazis on Mr. Bush's ad,visory
panel. Bad news.
There's weird stu ff in the
air.
At a meeting on Monday
with members of the Lesbian
and Gay Resource Center they

told me that they had felt
threatened
on
campus.
I
apologize if the letters in the
last
issue
stirred
up
bad
feelings.
However,
their
feelings of being attacked hit
home with a vengeance. When
people are upset with me they
don't write letters when they
are upset with me, they compel
me to listen, often without
having the courtesy to listen in
return.
Listen up folks, this paper
doesn't happen because of my
staff. We are just facilitators.
We help people get their ideas
in the paper, we try to allow
them the space to speak, and
we're here to help.
But we
don't have the time to create,
that's you r job.
When I started this paper I
made a commitment that I would
open it up to the Evergreen
community.
Students, teachers,
administrators, even
Olympia
people who are impacted by
Evergreen.
Evergreen doesn't
exist in a vacuum. We live in a
wider community.
The CPJ should be a journal
about
information
for
the
Evergreen community .
The
carpets
fumes
aren't
about
students, they are about every
person who comes into the
buildings.
Student governance
isn't just about students, its
about the administration and
faculty who are also impacted
and have to relate to whatever
is set up.
Deforestation isn't
about students·" its about the,
life of this planet . lind ,our,
grandchildren.
We are together; faculty,
students, staff; administration,
housing,
mice,
roaches,
and

The policy:

The Staff:

The

Cooper

Poillt

JOllrnal

editor and staff may
amend or clarify the se policies.

(CP!)

Editor: Darrel Riley .
.
Interim Advisor: Janis Byrd. .
Managing Editor: Suzette WIlliams
Photo Editor: Larry Cook
Ad Manag~r: Chris Carson
Business Manager: Whitney Ware
Ad Layout: Matt Carrithers and
Tanya Schouten
Calendar: Catherine Darley
Poetry Editor: Jeff Large
.
Arts and Entertainment: Lara MIschler
Artist in Residence: Ted Duncan
Production Manager: Audrey Anstey
Contributors: Dan Snuffin,
Maureen Eddy, Lara Mishler,
Michael Knott,
Layout: Dan Snuffin,
Lara Mishler, Gayle Warner.

The Cooper POint Journal IS published
wee kly on the Campus of the Evergreen
Sta te College , Olym pia. Washington 98505
(C AB 306A): (206)866 ·6000 ext, 6213 &
6054, COPYright 1988,
I'ag-('

2

('''<lper

Point Journal

]lio,'ember :I .

whomever
else
IS
in
the
Evergreen community. The CPJ
is a student paper first, we are
run by students, managed by
students, written, drawn, and
sweated over by students. But
we are not so insular as to
think no one else matters, we
all matter.
Even people who
aren't students. If you see an
occ;a~ional
piece from a nonstudent in the paper its .there
for
your
information,
enlightenment,
and
entertainment. I f you don't like
it tell me, write a response,
write something I can put in
instead the next time. However,
if it relates to Evergreen I'II do
my best to put it in the paper,
no matter who it's from .
A
correction
to
a
correction.
We checked with
Meriah Daria (note the spelling)
on the letter about the dog that
died of distemper. Just to clear
a few things up: her intent was
to warn dog owners of the
potential danger to their pets,
not to give a detailed report of ,
the
dog's
history;
and
no
operation could have saved the
dog, . only
extensive
and
expensive care would help, and
even that could only give him a
fifty-fifty chance.
She and
Tracy learned this when they
took the dog to the vet, and all
concurred that the most humane
thing to do would be to put him
to sleep.
My
photo
editor
has
a
picture of a nude he would like
to put OD'· the photo page. · The
pictuEe is of a woman s·itting on
a railroad track. What do you
think?

1 9~H

Object i ve:
T;,c CPJ editor and staff are
determined to make t'le CPJ a
st;)deDt forum for communication
which
IS
entertaining
and
informative.
Deadlines:
Calendar, Friday Noon
Articles, Frid ay 3:00 pm.
Letters to the Editor,
Monday Noon.
Rules for submissions:
Submissions must be original.
Submitting work which is not
original is a legal, ethical, and
moral violation, and an injury to
tho~e members of the Evergreen
community who do compl e t e
original work.
Submissions
s hould .
be
brought Lo the CPJ offices on
an IBM format.
Any word processing file compatible with
WordPerfect 4.2 is acceptable.
Disks should include a double spaced
printout,
with
th e
author's name, daytime phone
number; and address. Di s ks will
be returned as soon as possible.
Typed
double-spaced
copy
with
one-inch
margins
IS

Greeners shou.l d apprec'i ate'what they have
I graduated from Evergreen
in 1985.
I am currently in a
Master's program at a mediumsized
Southeastern
state
university ,
From
this
perspective I am looking back at
my Evergreen education .
My
purpose is not to rank on my
current school as I have many
fine, dedicated faculty . I want,
rather, to vocalize my support
for Evergreen's METHOD of
education as differentiated from
"traditional" methods or schools.
Two things in particular are
important to mention.
First, there is no better way
to
study
than
thematically.
Evergreen's
"interdisciplinary
approach" is far more than
words in the catalog.
In a
'traditional" college knowledge
is , broken down into categories:
math, science, english, etc.
It
is di fficult to syn thesize all the
material that the
professors
introduce into a coherent whole.
This
STRUGGLE
encourages
students to focus on tests and
grades. Tbis reduces knowledge

to a means-to-an-end. At TESC
ODe learns the PROCESS of
education which .is empowering
because learning ean continue
throughout life.
Usi ng the
"traditional" approach on the
other ' hand a st udent will, at
best, retain a repertoire of fact·s
but" will be unable to add to this
in any substantial way.
Second,
at
Everg'reen,
students handle the material.
Through seminars and workshops
students work with concepts
until they can understand them.
At "traditional" schools sucb
interaction is not encouraged
and
is
rendered
almost
impossible due to the structure
of classes and the grading
system.
Tests do not measure
the ability to grasp material
only material grasped . Students
are allowed in this setting to
speak in class but inostly it's to
clarify
a
professor's
point.
Thus interaction is channeled
and
limited
in
that
it is
restricted to a dialogue bet ween
you and the ,professor often

seen as an interruption by other
students_
By reducing knowledge to a
means-to-an-end
and
keeping
student interaction with material
superficial in slavery to the
quantitative
grading
system,
"traditional" schools sti fie and
almost
prohibit
independent
thihking.
A student dare not
spend
too
much
time
on
academic interests of their own
because what will be measu red
is NOT the ability to grasp
concepts and the pr,ocess of
learning but certain material
deemed relevant by , professors.
Man y people are curious
about Evergreen and a few have
heard of it.
The faculty,
especially, ask questions. Some
professors are frustrated by the
lack of independent thinking of
their students.
It seems many
students are in college to get a
job not an education. I believe
this is a societal current-- lack
of independent thinking is useful
to the powerful in society-- and
thus
reflected
In
social

America is concerned about whales, not V\Gr

I,

Few
whales
have
been
trapped by the ice under natural
circumstances.
Many
North
Americans
have
become
concer·n ed about it, and there is
a lot of support.
"Oh, poor
whales, saye tbem!" . Bl,lt south
oi . ~.q I Bravo (Rio QraJ;lde .for ,
Unit~d
States
of
North
America,) there are MILLIONS
of Women, children, and men
trapped in a putrefied war, in a
war of attrition.
Nicaraguans
are
being
annihilated with the money of
the United States workers and
the direct support of pcrsons-Reagan
and
Bush-who

"represent" the will of the
people of the United States, the
"most e vol ved" cultu re , 0 f the
earth.
For all these CRIMES,
North Americans pay little or no
attention at all, even-- I repeat
again-- when . GENOCIDE is
sponsor-ed with our economical
resources,
with
money
that
could be used for education and
health programs, here or abroad.
Are those whales more important
than the life of millions and
millions
of
NicaraguansSal v adore an s-G u ata mal a n sChileans-Bolivians-Costa RicansPeruvians-HonduransArgentineans-Mexicans?

Perhaps,
because
we
are
attached to the garbage that the
system vomits, we have lost our
human quality and bccame a
dehumanized
and
satiated
society.
A
terrible empty
society with things and more
things and very little love left.
We must wake-up, North
American friends, WAKE-UP,
before it , is too late and we
start
SOON
to
pronounce
"United States of Amerika," with
1941 German accent: Amerika,
amerika, AMERIKA!!!
Amando Barzola-Hidalgo

~eceptable.

Handwritten
copy
is
unacceptable.
If you have a que;tions a'bout
any of the submission policies
please call the CPJ office. (We
will accept work which is not in
the proper format, however ask
to be sure that we can use it.)
Because the CPJ is a college
newspaper, priority will be given
to student submissions, however
all community
members are
encouraged to contribute.
Letters:
Letters will be accepted
all subjects. Letters may be
to 300 words.
Letters will
checked for libel and may
edited
for
grammatical
spelling errors and for space.
Ad ve rti si ng:
All form s o f
will be considered.

on
up
be
be
or

ad vertising

Objectivity:
The Editor does not bel ieve
In objectivity .
Instead, the
Editor and staff believe in
fairness .
We will make every
effort to get as many viewpoints
on a subject as possible. If you
have an opinion on something
you've read in the paper , plea~e
write and tell us.

Attacking letter needed name
As your job requires you to
supervi.se preparation of the CPJ
I
feel just in holding you
responsible for it's policies.
On page two, under "The
Policy:",
you
state
your
determination
towards
"... a
student forum for communication
which
is
entertaining
and
informative." The October 27th
issue presentcd the community
with a poor example of YOUI
commitment to these policics.. .
The
letter
was
entitled
"'Other' Minorities· Repressed."
How this letter was found to be
"entertaining and informative" is
a question in itself. ·~- Besides
being a cowardly attempt to
sensationalize an is~ue, it takes
little speculation to conclude
that the authors had to other
intention ' than to revel in the
caricature of an element of the
community.
However,
the
content of the letter, in all it's
. malevolence, is not my concern.
Rather, I find you guilty of the
insidious crime of aiding and
abetting a cowardly attack on
an element of the community.

In my opinion one is just to
say anytbing they wish as long
as they are willing to accept
tbe
consequences.
This
encourages people to seriously
consider their
words;
it .is
accountability .
I
believe
accountability is essential in a
"forum."
As the ·'Reptilian
Underground"s" letter appears to
display., we ,d isagree on th is
point.
The
indiv;duals·
responsible lacked tbe integrity
to attach their names to their
rape-like
attack.
You,
as
Editor, allowed this attack on
the community to be perpetrated
under
circumstances
which
deprived the community of it's
right
to
hold
i ndi vidu als
accountable. Beyond censorship,
this is the most treacherous
crime an editor can be guilty of
You have sheltered these
individuals ~
from
the
consequences.
Because of your powerful
position in the community I urge
you to preserve the community'S
right
to
redress
and
deny
amnesty to individuals who do

not wish to be held accountable
for
their
actions
ID
the
community forum.
Ian Vollmer

structures.
I talk about TESC
at every opportunity. I do not
want to see it succumb to
societal
pressures
for
conformity.
There are enough
"traditional" schools. We NEED
Evergreen.
Sincerely,
Kathron Richards

What I
said was
Strangely enough, I
find
myself in the same camp as
Michael Dukakis by having peen
portrayed as a (gasp!) -liberal.
Last' weeks CPJ printing of
my
·opinion"
inaccurately ,
represented
my
thoughts by
leaving out key phrases and
actually making me out to say
the opposite of what I wrote.
The most glaring mistake is
the CPJ quotes me as sayingin classic liberal fashion - that
US sponsored terrorism is
a
natural aberration of America's
natural history."
In reality,
what I wrote was that the
atrocIties
of
our
National
Security State "need to be seen
as a natural expression of social
forces long in place and not as
some aberration of America's
glorious history."
America's ·glorious history"
is founded on the blood of the
Indian people and of black
slaves; of women
we
have
oppressed, Mexicans we stole
land from, Latin people we have
dominated for over 150 years,
and the victims of over 800
major CIA covert operations.
Institutionalized ·abuse
of
power is standard operating
procedure in the USA, and as I
said in a section of my piece
that was expunged, what we
need is a fundamental social
change,
not
some
kind
of
reformist
Democratic
or
Republican solution ~
Dukakis may well represent a
better alternative then the '·1933
Germany" politics of George
Bush,but ultimately the solution
lies with us - the people.
Thank you,
Austin Kellev

Ban ads for plagiarism
The latest CP J carries an ad
develop their intellects, and
they will do themselves no good
from
a company that sells
by passing off someone else's
research papers. I believe it is
work as their own.
Running
incumbent upon you to refuse to
such ads ID the CP J IS a
run such ads and to ret urn
disservice to everyone.
whatever has been paid for this
one.
Sincerely,
The use of such commercially
Burton S. Guttman
produced papers is plagiarism.
Faculty (Biology)
It is cheating.
It is a clear
violation of the Social Contract,
and it entails severe penalties.
We all know that these papers
are widely used at colleges
where most students are trying
only to get a diploma that will
net them a good job; but
Evergreen
is
designed
for
students who ' are trying to
Cooper Point Journal
November 3, 1988
Page 3

Greener makes bid for

Letters
Kiss complaint
In
response
to
Mr.
J.
Stevens' letter of October 27th,
expressing horror that the Vice
President for student Affairs
should be seen kissing another
woman in the CAB:
I submit to you, Mr. Stevens,
that it IS none of your d .. ·
business what any law ·a biding
citizen chooses to do in a public
area .
It is the fundamental
principle of this school and thi s
nation that adults are fre e to
engage in peaceable activities
anywhere, anytime, subject only
to
state
and
federal
law ,
without fear of interfere n ce or


• •
IS VICIOUS,

discri m ination .- You r suggestion
that Gail should not be holding
an office of responsibility at
TESC-- or anywhere else-- is a
blatant violation of civil rights
and
is
VIC IOUS,
ignorant,
incodite, and illegal.'
Your protest that "it sets a
poor . example
for
incoming
students" is also indicative of an
inconsonant nature . We are not
obliged to please you or anyone
else with our lives, nor are we
responsible
for
your
moral
development, however you may
define it.
Beside s that, your
mind is obviously so closed that

CPJ is superfluous
If we agree with the thought
endowed person who once wrote,
"Entertain'm ent mu st be made
entirely superfluous, considering
that it is for the superfluous
that we Ii ve, " then we m igh I be
able to tolerate a paper that
choose to devote it's pages to
the frivolous subject matter you
have been attracted to of late;
however, I find it impossible to
tolerate
the
neglect
and
demoralization
that
such
a
choice spawns.
My dear CPl,
you have consistently proven
your
willingness
to
shirk
responsibility, and yet you sti-ll
manage to don the drag of a
responsible publication. If you
can come up with anothe r way
to describe your recent devotion
to dismiss your coverage of the
issues surrounding Maarava and
the questions presently being
raised
by
Sam
Segall ,
I
encourage you to do so.
It is
in your best interest to justify
your decision, lest we strip you
of your drag that entertains us
so, and brand you suspect.
The opinIOn you expressed
that Segall's re sponse to Kathy
Ybarra was too lengthy and of
too personal a nature (what is
not personal regarding a student
grievance?) is no excuse when
you manage to bloat you r pages
vacuously (oh the magic of
oxymoron's!);
and it surely
doesn't excuse you from you r
failure to pursue the issue
yourself. Do I sense your fear
of
possibly
suggesting
that
something
is
awry?
Well
something is indeed rotten , and
your negl ec t won't make it
disappear;
at
best,
your
decisions
will
prolong
the
student body from smelling the
stink.
A st udent is asking serio us
"q uestions
about
a
faulty

would we?
Plea se, don ' t get me wrong.
I co mmend your excellent ability
to create a most beauteous
veneer, but I can't help but be
amazed at how easily issues,
pointing quite blatantly to overt
student
disempowerment,
are
ignored.
This can only mean
that the supposed will toward
"student empowerment" ~a term
by now merely a signifier} is
nothing but a chimera.
It is quite easy to claim
non-objectivity, as you do in
your "policy";
it is anot~er
thing entirely, however, to vOice
an opinion and pursue and
avenue of inquiry , demanding
answers.
If you refuse the
responsibility on this an? o~her
issues with similar impltcatlons
(i.e. the L/GRC hiring process,)
then we should prepare to
welcome superfluidity ad nauseam.
Rob Halpern

bureaucratic process, a process
acting in the name of stud e nt s-bUI hard ly for st ud ents-- and
you are choosi ng to ignore it ,
and you tell us that we can get
more in forma t io n by calling
Maarava ourse lve s.
Well, if
students owned the magic to
receive even
residually tru e
a nswers, or, if st ud ents knew
even the right questions to ask,
th e n we wouldn ' t need you now ,
Page 4

Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988

by Suzette Williams
One Evergreen student is
personally
involved
In
the
Thurston
County
elections.
Terrell Ann Erickson, a Masters
of
Environmental
Science
student, is running for Thurston
County Public Utility District
(PUD) Commissi.oner.
Erickson began
the MES
program at Evergreen in 1985
and is currently completing her
thesis, a lake study in South
Th urston County . She recei ved
her BA in Political Science from
the University of Washington in
1985.
She says Evergreen helped
prepare
her
for
office.
"Particularly the way classe s
were taught in which you work
in
groups,
and
the
oral

ignoran.t , illegal

you don't NEED any "examples"
to , help you make your life
choices.
You've a lready mad e
them.
I don't expect this letter to
change
any
of
your
selfrighteous attitudes, nor will I
interfere with your right to say
what
you
please,
offensive
thoul!:h it mav be.
But I am

telling you now that I will
continue to be "deviant" in any
way I choose, that
will
continue to diHegard your highhanded notions of propriety, and
that I applaud everyone who
exercises civil rights in defiance
of bigotry, hatred and prejudice.
Devin Bennett

Governance becomes
grudge match
student
attended
the
governance meeting on Monday,
October 24, and was terribly
disillusioned by what I saw. As
a concerned student, I wanted
to participate in determining
what type of government I will
be · living with . This looked like
a wonderful opportunity to start
fresh in creating an effective
system that would unite the
studentry at Evergreen .
To my disgust, I discovered
at this gathering that to get
in volved in the process now
would not be starting fresh.
Old power struggles, embittered
personal attacks, and a long
history of politicking emerged in
the course of this meeting-things I want absolutely nothing
to do with. The people in volved
have lost perspective of the
purpose of student government;
they have too much personally
at stake.
It seems as though
these people believe that the
creation of a government is an
end in itself, instead of a means
to the end of uniting the
student body. Both sides are at
fault.
I

We , as a student body, do
not have time to play childish
games. If the parties involved
were
to
work
ou t
their
differences somewhere besides
the governance
forum, then
something
might
be
accorn plished.

Let students
pick governance

'Ross Farr

Joe Olander
has no time
for students
Friday October 21 I stopped
by President Olander's office to
' ask how much power student
government would have. I asked
for an appointment to see the
president.
I was told, "The
president doesn't have time to
meet witb students."
Since this is the kind 0 r
'respect that the presiderit gives
to students, how much respect
do you tbink student government
will get. Think about it.
David Henshaw

presentations we had to make in
classes prepared me:
"The MES program has been
very supportive of this too,"
Erickson
says.
"[Program
Di rector]Tom Rainey is ha ving a
fund raiser for me. The whole
MES
crew
has
been
just
wonderful."
Since July 1987
Erickson has worked at the
Washington State Utilities and
Transportation Com mission as
Special Research Assistant to
the Chairman. In this position
she researches water quality
policy
and
deals
with
conservation and future policy
questions. She has also been a
research
analyst
for
the
Institute for Public Policy and
worked on the Environmental
Affairs Committee in th e 1985·

.,

by Katn Martin
It is with the utmost misery
and reluctance that I sit to
write
this
letter
to
my
colleagu'es,
the
students
of
TESC.
The subject of this
letter isn't dogs, it isn't the
changi ng ai r 0 f EVergreen (less
smoke, less patchouli), and it
isn't
berating
Greeners
for
having , disillusioned me as to
their ultimate coo ln ess
It's
about governance.
Yeah, yeah . So what else is
new.
I've got an attilude about
governlince . In fact, .the more
attitude' I cultivate, the better I
feel.
Two weeks ago, my
response to the word governance
was: "I don't gi ve a shoo. Let
the ego-invested fools struggle
for dominance.
All political
systems
are
doomed
to
corruption and failure."
Last week my attitude was:
"No!
I didn't come back to
school to sit in meetings.
[
hate meetings. Go away."
This week, a fter wearing a
track in my carpet from pacing,
I realized I'd lost my attitude,
and that J could at least write a
letter. Hello.
The reason I ooze angst on
the subject of governance is
because I was around last year,
active in the anti-Master Plan
campaign , and observer to the
squalid mess often S&A Board,
several
member
of
which
spawned
the
bureaucratic
Student Forum proposal and got
paid a lot of money to do it.
Even after the authors of the
Forum resigned from the Board ,
wholesale
adoption
of
the
Forum, without comment from
other students, seemed ,possible
because of tbe power of tbe
S&A.
The S&A Board is supposed
to allocate funds, not govern.
In the absence of another group
of students with institutional
authority, they took it upon
themselves to make governance
decisions.
And ,the S&A Board
had succumbed to the pressure
of false hysteria introduced by
the authors of the Forum. They
are using the sa me tactics now.

In last Thursday's CPl, excoordinator of the S&A and
Forum co-author James Martin,
accidentally
printed
on
the
Governance page without the
opinion label, which perfectly
expresses ,tbis verbose hysteria.
When he writes, "Not everyone
can
be
in vol ved
at
every
moment forever!" I think, 'How
ludicrous. Of course not."
I f the people who this
governance structure is intended
for, i.e. TESC students) take a
couple of months to figure out
what will govern them , the
college isn't goi ng lG fall in to
the sound. rm sure that James
.a nd the others pushing for the
immediate implementation of the
interim proposal are aware that
it is ferociously difficult to
dislodge a bad idea once it is in
place.
Many people have done
invaluable
governance ,work,
James among them.
But it is
time for ,him to step aside and
allow ("in loco parentis" indeed)
currently enrolled students to
make
rational,
even
wise
decisions about which aspects of
the different proposals will work
bes t.
Different
should
be
emphasized here.
Having read
all tbe proposals, I can ' safely
assert
that
the
interim
governance structure compiled
over the summer resembles the
Forum a bell 0 f a lot more than
the ColIeetive or the SIGN.
When Thang Nguyen and the
others
involved
decided
to
suspend the interim structure
until it was agreed to by those
it will effect, tbey showed a
fundamental
respect
for all
TESC students, and democratic
process.
I 'applaud

PU D Commission

86 legislature.
The PUD Board is composed
of three commissioners who
serve six year terms. The terms
are staggered, with elections
every two years. Erickson is
competing for a position vacated
by Commissioner Tom Allen. Her
opponent
is
David
Combs.
Erickson would be the first
woman to serve on the PUD
Board.
The Board has broad taxing
authority throughout Thurston
County. It has a contract with
the city of Olympia to get water
from McAllister Springs and
supplies two .subdivisions in
Lacey with water; Tanglewilde
and Thompson Place .
Erickson
is
concerned
about the Board 's treatment of
water quality issues. She says
recently a developer wanted to
build a big subdivision very
close to McAllister Springs. One
PUD Commissioner drafted a
message to the remainder of the
commissioners
stopping
deve'lo'pmenr " un'til all of the
environmental
impact
studies
were done. After this was done ,
she
says,
the
other
two
commissioners voted it down.
Erickson calls McAllister
Springs
"the
main
water
resource we have ID all of
Thurston
County,"
and
IS
concerned
about
future
environmental problems resulting
from this decision .
"A nother Issue that I'm
conc'e rned with: she says, "is
that there hasn't been much
participation In the PUD fo'r

yea'rs and years." Erickson says
many people in Thurston County
don't even know that the PUD
exists.
Erickson emphasizes that if
elected, she would look at more
options for the Board . She says
an example of the present· Board
not exploring options revolves
around a feasibility study funded
In 1959 comparing public vs
private ownership of utilities.
She says the PUD Board
assessed a tax on Thurston
County ID 1959 and
rai se d
$100,000 for this study . Although
the study has never been done ,
she says the interes t from thi s
money pays PUD Commissioners
salaries and election costs.
"Last
F a ll
th e
city
of
Olympia came to the Board and
asked it to share the costs of a
$10,000
prelim i nary
stu dy,"
Erickson says. This study would
have begun using th e Board ' s
money for its int e nd e d purpose,
comparing public vs private
ownership of utilities. She says
the Board declined.
"My greatest" concern is that
one commissioner said 'Let's at
least have a public hearing on
this,' and the other two voted it
down," Erickson explains. She
says she wants the public to
know that they have a choice
about the money used by the
Board.
Other options she would like
to explore are the possibi lit y of
the
PUD
supplying
sewer
services and public ownership of
"some of the small, struggling
water companies. "

( NOTICE

NOTICE

TAKE AN ACTIVE PART
IN GOVERNANCE
STUDENT BOARD MEMBERS
and
ALTERNATE BOARD MEMBERS
for
The 1988-89 Services and Activities Fee Review Board
are currently being solicited.

APPLY NOW!
S&A ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE CAB 305

866-6000 X6220

Purtu_nt

10

EAC 17-i - 162-230

MEET

IVAN DOIG
NO KTIIWt;ST Al'TIiOK
FRI. NOV. 4Ih

4-4:30pm
TESC BOOKSTORE

Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988

Page 5

Geoduck golfer strokes through laid · bO'ck open
by Phyl Hower
I've just been thinking and
thinking about whether or not I
should tell anybody about the
Great Geoduck Open which took
place last summer, and which,
by the way, I won. Nobody will
ever know it I guess, because I
never won a single solitary
thing; not even a note from
President Olander thanking me
for my donation. See -- well,
maybe I'll begin more at the
beginning and not just jump in,
you know, like I see people do
in Letters To The Editors where
they
seem
to
just
think
everybody knows what they're
talking about, but everybody
doesn't.
The Great Geoduck Open is a
kind of golf tournament put on
by
the
staff,
faculty
and
students
here
at
Evergreen.
Maybe I shouldn ' t say "kind-of"
golf tournament, though by gosh
I
never
heard
of
a gol r
tournament where a person won ,
and that person never got a
prize, did you? So okay, it' s a
tournament. And it's to raise
money for a good cause like
keeping students interested in
education, or something like
that.
Right away I should tell you
that I've always had a really
major prohlem with gol f. I lovl!
to
play,
but
I
h a te
th e
institution. Kind of like politics.
if you get the parallel. When
you think about how golf is
strictly an eliti st, white male
organi zation which refer s to us
female players as girls or ladies,
and you think about all that
beautiful
and
valuable
rea l
estate being used for such a
silly purpose, then right awa y
you see where a person with a
conscience would be a little put
of f. So can ' t you .
Just '
picture

Maybe he'll even tell people at
the new place he won them, to
impress them. I went up twice
to his office to ask for my
prize, but I guess I'll never see
those golf balls now that he's
all set in his new career. And

I tb row this in so you'll realize
how knowledgeable I am.) But I
never even got that.
The guy who had them in his
brief-case took a job somewhere
else and apparently took my golf
balls off to his new position.

I'm not going to ask anybody
for them again. I mean, you may
not think so from reading this
letter, but I do have my pride.
Well, I'll see
you
on the
fairways, 'cause if I gave up
easily, I wouldn't even be a
'student at Evergreen.



Soccer men win district, tie for leag.ue
by Michael Papritz
When Arno Zoske, coach of
the
Evergreen
men's
soccer
squad, went home after the
sunday loss to nationally ranked
Portland
University
he
was
slowly
seeing a
tremendous
season slipping away .
"It was a very mentally
challenging game for us; Zoske
said. "They were ranked second
in the country."
But when he heard the
results that night of another
district game between Whitworth
and Pacific Lutheran University
he became elated .
"For 6 years the team has
been climbing to the caliber of
play which would warrant a

my joy when I found out there' s
a golf group right here among
th e kind of people I love to be
around ?
All us free spirits?
Boy, I ran right down and
put my money on the line and
couldn' t wait for the sunshiny
day
when
we
started
our
tournament!
was the only
student entered , although all the
other participants thought that
I was either staff or faculty or
the mother of one of them, but
I didn't care. Nothing could
spoil that day: playing at last
with laid-back types who could
laugh at the organization of golf
and have a few beers afterward
and just bond. And without a
potluck, even.
I won that day, for th e
women. (Notice, not ladies ' or
girls, I take heart from that.)
But th e golf course where we
pla yed must have heard about
Everg reen's casual , irrevere nt
attitude and they ran us off
before we could have a beer,
e ven . Much less before a firsttime winner could be pre sented
with a pri ze .
It's sad, you
know .
When I le arned I'd won , I
fantasized seeint my picture and
name in the paper, maybe a
trophy with a little geoduck on

Jump to page 18

Ever'green belongs outside 1110instream
by Thomas Mitchell Freeman
In
my
short
time
at
Evergreen,
I
have
heard
numerous complaints about the
CPJ - how it doesn't represent
the student body, but rather, is
a
mouthpiece
for
the
administration.
I'm
not
interested in criticizing the
intent for the paper. But I am
greatly . annoyed by a couple
items I read in the current

In spite of your assumption
that Republicans would never be
asked on this cam pus, I am
interested, with the help of
EPIC,
in
having
senatorial
candidates Democrat Mike Lowry
and
yes,
Republican
Slade
Gorton visit Evergreen to speak
to and meet with the students
on Campus. Lowry, as a senior
member of the House Budget
committee,
has
consistently
voted in favor of funding for
education from pre-school to
college and post-graduate.
As
senator, Gorton voted time and
time again to cut or oppose
programs
for
education,
including
special
education
programs for the handicapped.
I'd
love
to
give
him
an
opportunity to explain his voting
record to the student populace!
The letter signed by Lee S,
Pembleton is most troubling.
Pembleton
seems
intent
on
attacking the school for its
cultural
emphasis
on
social
change.
Pembleton
uses
language as an attack on those
who disagree with his viewpoint,
much
like
the
current
administration does when trying
to justify their policies in
Central America (Sandinhtas are
"Communists"- etc.).
You see Lee, when you
label someone or something, you
dehumanize them and remove
any opportunity for intellectual
though ' or dialogue. Evergreen
was founded on the premise of
creating a holistic environment
of relearning, an environment

is~ue.

In his editorial, Mr. Riley
cri ticizes tbe notion 0 f free
speech at Evergreen by asking
'when was the last time there
was a figure from the Reagan
Administration here," following
his question with the connection
that some Republicans, most
notably former Governor Di\n
Evans, helped to found this
institution.
Well Darrel, that' s all fine
and dandy. And I'm sure that
some Republicans actually do
value the concept of higher
education.
But not Ronald
Reagan! .. Reagan has been on
record for years' in opposition to
funding for higher .eduration,
saying at one point, "why should
we fund intellectual curiosity?"
(although what I find curious is
how someone with so little
intellect
can
be
elected
president).
In 1987, Reagan
submitted a budget proposal to
Congre-ss which called for an
immediate 46% cut in federal aid
for higher education. What kind
of effect do you think this
would have on schools such as
Evergreen?

that does not foster competition,
but rather, co-operation.
An
environmerit that challenges the
status-quo thinking of each
person for themself and, instead,
lets people examine their role in
the betterment of society as a
whole.
A~ environment that
emphasizes connection making
between
disciplines
and
community
building
between
d iff e ren t ideologies.
Evergreen was originally
though of as an institution
where ·the dis-enfranchised could
go and find themselves and
learn what they have to offer
the world we line in . But Lee,
you can't get beyond name
calling, such as 'pseudo-radical,
paranoid,
anti·establishmen t
utopianism."
You throw these
labels around . as if wishing for a
better world is' something that's
subversive or suspect.
I don ' t
think that having a radical
ideology
or
being
against
establishment, or even wanti.ng
to reach the unlikely status of
utopianism makes one paranoid.
And even if some 0 f us are
paranoid,
as
you
seem
to
believe, could we bave good
reason to feel that way?
Do
N ati ve Americans have just
reasons
to
not
t rust
our
government? How about Blacks,
people on welfare, the homeless,
the ill, the elderly or anyone
else who isn't White , Male,
Heterosexual and making 6J
grand a year? Does rejection () f
the mainstream values mean that
we are bad people, or does it

Maarava extends
by Rochelle Robins
Maarava Coordinator
Do you know than there is a
Jewish cultural organization on
campus?
Maarava
translated
from
Hebrew into English
means
slightly west, or west ward, to
be more exact. We are here to
provide a place
where all
students can go to learn about
and experience Jewish cultu ral
identity,

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Il.

I learned , after we' d been
shunted off from the club , th at
I' d won th re e golf b a lls (a
"sleeve' of ball s, t hey ca ll th em.
l' uR:e 6 Cooper Point Journal
Nove mber 3.

one point in the season ranked
12th nationally, with more then
350
com pet i ng
s c h 001 s
throughout the United States.
After Evergreen tied Paci fic
Lutheran
University
October
26th, Whitworth had to beat
P.L-U, by a certain amount for
the Geoducks to ad vance. The
end
result
was
a
district
championship for the Geoducks
and a league co-championship.
"The intensity on this year's
team has been greater than in
the past," stated Andy Gaston, a
third year player.
The team's leading scorers
include Shawn Me'd ved with 14
goals and 4 assists and Mike

playoff birth," Zoske continued.
"We've finally done it. We had
an outstanding returning group
plus good oncomidg freshman
players."
There are only two seniors
on the team this year.
The
squad is made up of mostly
juniors, which i will bring a
veteran force ' for next year.
The Geoduck record stands at 11
wins, 3 loses, and 4 ties.
In
preseason play the clambakers
traveled to California to capture
the Redwood Invitational and in
the process tied the 3rd ranked
team,
Sacramento
State
U ni versity.
The Geoducks also took the
Evergreen Invitational and at

Opinion

"18&32 ],02259

No Matter What Your
Platform is .--. We've Got
the Book for You!
107 N. Capitol Way

357-7462

invit~tion,

:EARN MONEyi;
l~~ Jt ~ ..\ i .1l $ $8:

.: 'f j SEE THE

sets hours

Maarava is an unaffiliated
organization.
This means that
people
from
different
backgrounds are invited to take
part in out activities. The more
ideas and opinions we get, the
more
well-rounded
our
perceptions of the modern day
American
Jewish
role
will
become.
Maarava is mainly here to
provide FUN!
Israeli folk
dancing, Chanukah parties, and

**********************

mean that we have a VISion for
a better and just society.
The point is this. There are
thousands of higher educational
institutions in this country that
profess
Mr.
Pembleton's
ideologies
and
values.
Evergreen is unique in that
viewpoints other then those that
are considered ·winners"
1D
society can be recognized and
heard.
If this
di fference
offends
Mr.
Pembleton's
seemingly
conformist
sensibilities, then I suggest he
evaluate whether .Evergreen can
meet his needs. A fter all, the
number of schools that represent
are definitely in the majority.
And finally, let's try to stop
labeling each other.
Let's try
to know each other as human
beings
and
respect
th a t
sensibilities
are
going
to
occasionally be offended. In my
seminar there are at least three
people who are going to vote
for George Bush, and while I
will never
understand
their
decision, it's clear that they
have their own reasons for
supporting him .
Which IS truly narrowminded, totally believing and
following the constructs of the
dominant culture, or believing
that we can expand social
consciousness and work for a
higher moral order where all of
society is heard and respected?
I believe the answer is crystal c11'?r.

Passover sedars are only a few
of the many activities that can
be scheduled for this year. It's
not a matter of finding things
to do, it's a matter of deciding
what we'd like to do the most.
Our scope is broad, and your
input is wanted!
Maarava's office hours are:
Monday 10:00 a.m. to 1:00
p.m.
Thursday 12:00 a.m. to 3:00
p.m.
Friday 12:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
We are located in Lib. Bldg.
Room 3214.

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Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988

Page 7

Minimum \Nage
by Suzette Williams
An initiative is on the
November 8 ballot that would
raise tbe state's minimum wage
from $2.30 to $3.85 an bour in
1989, then to $4.25 in 1990. The
initiative drive began in the
Spring after a similar bill was
defeated in the legislatu reo
The new law would effect
only full time workers over age
18, and include agricultural
workers. If voters approve the
initiative, it would be the first
raise in the state's minimum
wage since 1976.
Campaign
worker
Steven
Aldricb says the initiative has a
broad base of support. "lnitiati ve
518 is sponsored by a coalition
of
labor
organizations,
community organizations, church
organizations
and
women's
groups." Aldrich says Senate
candidate
Mike
Lowry ,
Representative Jennifer Belcher
and
Lieutenant
Governor
candidate George Fleming are
su pporters of the I nltlati ve .
Governor Booth Gardener is the
campaign's bonorary chair. Ted
Kennedy, Michael Dukakis and
Jesse Jackson have all expressed
support for the initiative.
Tbe initiative is opposed by
the Association of Washington
Business,
Washington
Retail
Association and the Independent
Business Association.
Aldrich says "chalices are
pretty good " for passing the
initiative, and emphasizes that it
is not a Democrat vs Republican
issue. "The y (the op posi tion 1
couldn't find one Republican
state legislator who would sign


laser acupuncture·

a statement in opposition to the
campaign
in
the
voters
pamphlet," Aldrich says.
He
says a June poll by the Analysis
Group, a Washington DC based
polling organization, showed 80%
of Democrats and 60% of
RepUblicans in favor of raising
the minimum wage.
J an Gee, Executi ve Director
of
tbe
Washington
Retail
Association says raising the
minimum wage would cause lost
jobs and inflation. She says
prices would "have to go up" if
the initiative passed. Gee says
although Western Wasbington
has a very healthy economy, the
east side does not and would be
especially
hard
hit
by
an
increased minimum wage.
"We
support
our
state
minimum wage increasing to the
level of the Federal minimum
wage," Gee says. She feels any
higher
wage
would
put
Washington businesses in a less
competitive position with Oregon
and Idaho industries.
She says there is already a
difference in sales tax, (Oregon
has no sales tax) and neither
Oregon's
nor
Idaho's
state

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minimum
wage exceeds the
federal minimum. "There's no
way for f ur Washington state
businesses to be competitive,"
Gee says. "The bottom line is,
somebody pays; the consumers
are going to pay."
Aldrich disagrees with his
opponents' argument about lost
jobs and rising inflation. "Every
time the minimum wage has
increased
it
(the
argument)
hasn't
held
out,"
he
says.
"People working for $2.30 an
hou r are working at jobs that
have to be done - they won ' t go
away."
Aldrich
. counters
that
raising
the
minimum
wage
actually helps an economy rather
than hurting it. He says an
increase in wages would "pump
nearly $200 million into the
economy
in
the
form
of
spending: He says this would
stimulate
the
economy
of
Washington'S
individual
communities.
Gee also disagrees with the
removal of a "tips credit" in the
initiative. Under the present
state law, tips received by
restaurant workers are counted

ballot

towards the Federal minimum
wage of $3.35. She says if the
initiative passes this credit will
be removed.
Gee says this would have a
"severe impact on restaurants,"
and they would
have two
options;
raise
p rices
to
compensate for increased labor
costs or add an automatic 15%
gratuity to patrons' checks. She
says restaurants have already
been discussing the possibility of
a ·15% tax on meals. This
gratuity
would
go
to
the
restaurant, not the server.
Aldrich says the Washington
Employment
Securities
Department estimates that 46,500
full time workers over age 18
are making $2.30 or less. Gee
calls these numbers "erroneous."
Aldrich calls the initiative "a
basic quality of Ii fe and morals
issue." He says the poverty level
is $4.47 an bour; in 1976 dolla~s,
the minimum wage is worth only
$1.22. Although he would like to
see the minimum wage higher
than $3.85, he says the initiative
was an attempt to compromise
with opponents.

Internships for second year law students.•.and
graduate students in Public Admin~tration and Public
Policy, are available for th~ upcoming summer.
Interns
will be 888igned projects from the following Senate committees:
Agriculture, Commerce and La\M>r, Education. Energy andlltllitlea, Fjn..nclalln.
stitutions,
Govemmentsl Opemtions, Human Services and Corrections, Judiciary,
Natural Recourc"", Parks and Ecology, and Ways and Means.
.
Projects will involve research, report writing. and bill dlafting. Committee
weekends are ~heduled monthly during the summer and some additional meetings
are held. Interns work with staff in prepantion for these meetings and may present
research results at committee hearings.

SEATTLE
FULL TIME: 3294130
PART TIME: 329·2612

TACOMA

To apply for 1989

Submit resume and writing sample by Nov. 7, 1988 to Joyce
Weston, cloHillaire Student Advising Center Ll·nO. Interviews
are ~heduled for Noy. 22 in Ll406A.
Call X6560 to schedule.

FULL TIME: 272· 1127
WASHINCTON

~

FAIR SHARE

7rlUrUB,e

Internships

Olympia 'drugl.ords' protest against Bush
by Austin Kelley
It's almost election time, and
a iocal continent of "Druglords
for Bqsh" came to Olympia to
show their "support" for George
Bush's presidential bid by their
presence.
The · "Druglords" were brought
to Olympia by the Olympia
Contragate Alert ·' to show their

support for Bush's role in the
Iran-Contra scandal, in which
drug runners were part of the
effort to aid the Nicaraguan
Contras.
These "Freedom
Fighters",
who have been fighting against
. freedom for many years, were
funded with millions of dollars

--...

.***************

1-3 p.m., November 9, 1988
LibraI)' Lobby, second floor

~***************

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

f'O~~~~
'"{

WHAT? ____________________________

. - - - : " ' _ - - . ..-"'"'-1.
nc..uA1'~
,I

~ii~

628-0888

Also available at:
The Washington

Center Box Office

./:'Their infectious

./' humour makes their

serious moments all
the more striking .. .
p.owerful stuff'"
The Scotsman

(Edinburgh)

All Washington
Center Outlets

Charrs:ui;,orte:
."
/'

j /

~
November 3, 1988

J.#ot .N&HS "t;1'?

WHEN? __________________________

f

Cooper Point Journal

II'

56t t;

LET US KNOW ABOUT IT AT THE CPJ.
WHO? _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ DATE _ _ _ __

,. ,r

Page 8

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •J

in Olympia willi W

Portland, Oregon
Are you.readyfor the challenge?

Evergreen Law School Fair

kept the Contras going after the
American Congress passed a bill
which banned American funding.
The
"Druglords"
re ferred
individuals who are interested in
knowing
more
the
film
"Coverup," showing daily until
the elections.

"----Wa.shington State S<:natc> - - - -

Lewis &; Clark La\\! School
Paul WIlson, Director of the Natural Resources Program at Lewis ~ Clark,
will be on campus to answer your questions about:
• A generous merit scholarship program, the Dean's
Fellowship for Excellence.
• Our nationally known program in natural resources and
environmental law.
• Externship opportunities.
• An international business law specialty that is part
of an already solid business cuniculum.
• Career opportunities in public and private law.

in drug profits. Those profits
were diverted to the Contras by
their active and "retired·· CIA
supervisors, including one former
official in Bush' s office.
The
diversion
was
done
to
supplement the Iranian arms sale
skimming, and the donations by
right-wing millionaires which

8:00 pm Saturday
November 12, 1988
The Washington Center
; for the Performina Arts
/ . Olympia, Washington

~n~~~~s~

South Puget Sound
Communily College

ADDRESS ________________________ PHONE ___________

P.......t ... by the Auoc:iat'"
Studenl Body

Tickets: $14, $11, $10 For more information contact:
. Students and 754-7111. ext. 306
Seniors:
$12, $10, 58

HOW
CAN WE CONTACT YOU?
NAME ___________________________________________



BRING THIS BY OUR OFFICE (CAB 306A)
or MAIL DROP (CAB 305)

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

LQUICK! QUICK! QUICK! THANKS! THANKS! THANKS!
Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988

Paxe 9

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Republican for Treasurer

, by Jim Albaugh
I

Andy McLauchan (R)

Andy McLauchlan

nave to staff and put together a
well managed office.
Wby are you runnln!! for
oUlce?
Too
frequently
elected
leaders overlook accounting and
book
keeping
systems
and
appropriate ' money man agement.
I have that experietlcl!.
I've
had the opportunity to work
with
other
state
treasurers
around the' country and have
found what they provide as well.
If you are elected, what do
you hope to achieve?
My goals are best re flected
in the platform.
When I get
into office my number one
priority would be to reduce the
4.7 billion dollar deficit in the
which
are
pension
system
I
don't
retire ment benefits.
want that deficit on to the next
generation.

Wbat do you believe to be
tbe responsibilities of tbe State
Treasurer?
The State Treasurer is the
chief - financial officer of the
state.
He IS responsible for
issuing
bonds
for
capital
projects
undertaken
by
the
state,
and
to
in vest
cash
balances.
I believe that a
treasurer can do more than
those bare minimum activities,
like an education trust program
InitIative, or help finance a
child's college education, or
using the cash balances to help
small businesses throughou't the
state.
Wbat
experience
do
you
have?
I hav e a Bachelors degree In
finance from the University o f
Washington, a Masters degree In
Management from the USc. I've
worked
three
years
in
the
Governor's budget office.
For
the past fi ve years I hav e been
Dan Evan's chief budget and
financial ad visor.
I have the nuts and bolt s
experience both in Olympia and
Washington D.C.
I also have
the detailed knowledge.
1 was
the project leader in sett ing up
the departments of corrections
and the financial systems, both
information systems as well as
personal
structures.
That's
important, whoever win s the
treasurer's office IS going to

Republican for Lt. Governor

Joe r Pr'ifc-hard

by Jim Albaugh
Joel Pritchard Spokesperson: Rus
Hokanson
Wbat do you believe are the
responsibilities or tbe Lieutenant
Governor?
The Lieutenant Governor's
job is to back up the goverilor
... to preside over th e se nat e.
The Lieutenant Governor is t~e
president of the Senate.
Mr.
Pritchard believes that he IS
uniquely qu a lified .
He
h as
had
12
years
experie nc e
in
the
Sla le
Legislature, 12 years In th e U.
S.
Congress,
and
25
years
cxperie nce in private businesse s
in both sales and management.
Hi~ st rength is that h e is ab le
to bring people together. He is
person
Democrats
and
a
RepUblicans
can
talk
and
communicate with to solve tough
problems and issues.
Wby run as a RepUblican aud
not as a Democrat?
Joel entered the public lifc
in the 1950's. The Republican
party fit his ideals and beliefs.
He likes to call the Republican
party
the,
"party
of
opportunity."
What
makes
Joel
more
qualified or better experience
tban his opponent?
Joel bas a very broad range
of experience. Let me make it
clear that Joel runs a positive
campaign,
not
a
negative
campaign.
He runs on his
record and not on that of his
Page 12

Cooper Point Journal

opponent.
He was a ranking
member on both the merchant
marines and fi sheries committees
and the sub-committee on Asian
and Paci fie relations, as well as
the
House
Foreign
Affairs
Committee.
He has a broad
range of experience in dealing
with the Pacific Rim countries.
Joel believe s that he can

Democrat for Treasurer
by Jim Albaugh

-Dan Grimm

Dan Grimm (D)
Wbat do you believe to be
tbe responsibilities of tbe State
Treasurer?
The
State
Treasurer
has
many
responsibilities.
The
treasurer must keep track of all
accounts and ' make sure a:e
recorded and accounted
for.
Debt management is also a
major
responsibility .
The
Treasurer is the chairman of the
State Finance Committee and
the Treasurer is responsible for
a 14 billion dollar port folio.
Wbat
experience
do
you
bave?
I was first elected in 1976 to
public office. I have 12 years
of experience as a legisbturc,
SIX years as the Chairman of
the Ways and Means Comm ittee.
I
also
had
two
years
of
experience in 1981 and 1982 as
the Democratic caucus chai r,
and two years exper ience as the
chairman
of
the
Higher
Ed ucation Comm i ttee.
VVby are you running for
office?
I feel as if I am the best
person able to be a financial
watch dog, a person who will be
the chief financial offic.:r who
makes sure that tbere is a
decent debt management plan . I
am very able to plan for future
financial benefits or problems.
If you are elected, what do
you hope to achieve?
I have four main goals r.eallv .

1

Number one, I hope to refine
and improve the college s.avings
bonds plan.
Secondly, I wish to create a
long term debt management plan
for
our
colleges
and
our
universities.
We
need
to
maintain ~ur universities an'd
community colleges.
Third, I want to increase the
in vestments inside the St'a te of
Washinltton through the State
In vestment Board. We need to
have the State Investment Board
rcspond to more proposals.
Finally , I want to pursue ' a
Constitutional amendment that I
first introduced in 1985.
This
amendment would require full
funding for our pension systems.
Those are th e four main issues
of my campaign . .

Democrat for Lt. Governor
by Jim Albaugh

George Fleming

has employed by the U.S. West
company for over 23 years
which
gives
bim
a
strong
What do you bl:lieve are tbe business background .
Wbat will George Fleming
responsibilities of the Li~utenant
acb
ieve
for
tbe
Stllte
of
Governor?
Wasbington If be is elected?
It is a unique position, pa'n
George wants to help in
legislature, part ·executive. The
Lieutenant Governor presi{!es the fight against drugs. George
over the Senate.
When tl:e . wants to make it into a full
Gove
rnor
leaves,
it
is
the time position . He will be very
help
Washington
State's
acti ve io traveling the state to
responsibility
of
the
Lieutenant
businesses.
He was a U.S.
be with the people, to make
Governor
to
fill
that
positio01,
to
congress ional representative to
some
real changes. He wants to
provide
a
warm
welcome
to
the United Nations in 1983. He
George create, "O ne Washington, one
al so has local , national , and vi~itors and guests.
believes that th e Lieute::ant state, one economy." He wants
int ernationa l experience.
What will Joel Pritchard Governor should travel abo ut to be a champion of the people.
achieve
ror
tbe
State
of' t he s tate to communicate and
George's other experie nc es
build
a
better
s<!nse
of include; chairman of the se nate
VVashington if he is elected?
As
Lieutenant labor committee, founder of the
Jo el wants to bring pe ople community.
together.
There has been too Governor George w0uld build on Rainier Valley en terpri se center,
much partisanship and bickering the idea of comml:nity as well past president of the economic
in the legislature. We have to as promoting Wa s hing State. development
of
Washington
look beyond short term political George would work hard at State, and current chairmen of
breaking down the barriers that the Washinl!;ton con feren cc. He
gains and work together.
divide ' Eastern
and
WC3tern is "the" senior mem be r 0 f the
Washington.
Senate
and
b as
been
Wby run as a Democrat?
uninterrupted in his years of service.
George has been a Ii fe lung
Democrat.
He is in fact a
strong leader in the Democratic
party. He has held the Senate
Caucus chair since 1980. George
has been in' the state legislatu re
for over 20 years.
What makes George more
qualified or better expulence
tban his opponent?
I
George has over 18 years of
experience in the senate.
He's
very effective in getting ta~ks
accomplished. He is eons~dered
).~

----u
·,

November 3, 1988

George Fleming,
Teresita Batayola

Spokesperson:

Opinion
1-97, 97 -B: Another explanation
by Hector Douglas
The debate between Initiati ve
. 97 and 97B became even more
confused in the October 20 CPl.
Measure 97B; To 'B' or not to
.:Jr1 furnishes many distortions
in
the assertions of Joann
Hamick, identified therein as the
issues 'd irector for the 97B
campaign.
vote Initjati ve 97-it's your best choice committed
foibles in attempting to simpli fy
a complex issue.
Both articles were mistaken
about the initiative process.
The present law,
which is
similar
to
97B,
is
not
a
compromise
between
en vi ron mental
groups
and
legislators.
There was not "a
strong feeling that everybody
had won," (as the first article
asserts)
unless
you
de fine
"everybody" as all the lobbyists
of
tbe . oil
industry
a~d
hazardous waste generators. "A
coalition of environmental and
public interest groups began a
drive to 'place Initiative 97 on
the 1988 ballot," in June of
1987, before there was a state
superfund law, not afterwards,

.
'
as the second article asserts.
In
1985
and
1986,
en vironmentalists had came to
persuade
the'
Washington
Legislature
to
pass
good
legislation for the regulation
and cleanup of hazardous waste.
The the bills never got out of
committee.
A
more
comprehensive measure worked
its way through the House in
1987 but ran into problems in
the Senate.
Jolene
Unsoeld,
State
Representative
22nd
District,
Democrat,
negotiated
a
compromise
between
business
interests, the legislature and
some
environmental
groups.
Corporate lobbyists diluted the
strength of the legislation, but
the bill still failed to pass even
in extended session . Joe King,
Speaker of the House, killed the
legislation
when
it
became
apparent
that
it
favored
polluters so much that it was
toothless; environmental groups
bad dropped tbeir support long
before.
The
legislature
also
adjourned
without
approving

.
necessary
fund 109
for
the
Washington
Department
of
Ecology'~
(DOE)
Hazardous
Waste Cleanup Program, pushing
that program into a financial
crunch and forcing them to use
austerity measures.
Important
cleanups were halted wbile they
were still in progress.
DOE
personnel
felt
frustrated
in
fulfilling their tasks, some felt
insecure about their futures in
tbe agency.
Meanwhile a coalition of
environmental groups and public
interest groups including the
Association
of
Counti~s,
Washington
Labor
Council,
WashPIRG, Sierra Club, and
more than 20 others, launched
an initiative drive that met with
early success. Business interests
fought back with a lobbying
blitz on the governor.
Enter the "Gang of Eight",
a special legislative task force
created by tbe governor to draft
a hazardous waste law behind
closed
doors.
Corporate
lobbyists were consulted, but no
environmen.tal
groups
were
invited and no public were

*************************************

~

,t

EVERYONE TALKS

a

THISVEAR

:

'~

ABOUT CHANGING THE WORLD.

~

3750 PEOPLE WILL
ACTUALLY DO IT.

!
!
~
~ .
~

~

~
~
~

~
~
~

~

~

~

~

~
~
~

~

Not everyone is cut out to change the world. After all, it takes education, skills
and a spare two years.
'
Also a willingness to work. Hard.
. ~i$ yea~ 3,750 Americans will join the Peace Corps to do just that. They'll do
thl~gs like bullc:t roads, plant forests and crops, teach English, develop small businesses,
tram community health workers, or even coach basketball. However; what they'll be
doing isn't half as important as the fact that they'll be changing a little piece of the
world . .. for the better:
And when they return, these 3,750 Americans will find that experience doing
hard work will have another benefit. It's exactly what their next employers are
looking for.
So, give the Peace Corps your next two years. And while you're out changing
the world, you'll also be making a place in it for yourself.
.

INFORMATION TABLE
November 2nd & 3rd • 9:00am-2:00pm • CAB
SPECIAL EVENTS

~

November 3rd • 3:00pm-4:00pm. CAB 110

~

"Peace Corps in the Pacific" (0 slide presentation)

~
~

~

~
~
~
~

i

*

INTERVIEWS
November 16th & 17th • 9:00-4:00pm • Adviling Center (LIB 1401-A;
866-6000 ext. 6193)
Sign up in advance 01 the Student Advising Center.

~!=!If§~

~

a

a
*

*
**
**
**
**
***
*
*
**
**
'''''-

JIIf""

""'::::
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~*

present.
Among the "Gang of
Eight"
were
Senator
Mike
Kreidler of Olympia and Rep.
Lorraine Hine of Midway and
Federal Way.
Under
pressure
from
political action committees, the
legislature adopted tbe measure
produced by this Gang of Eigbt
task force in a special one-day
session in October 1987. Critics
called it a crisis in democracy,
a subversion of the normal
lawmaking process, and a ploy
to defuse the initiative .
"It was [done) to make the
initiative inviable, to make it
impossible
to
gather
the
required number of signatures
within the allotted time," said
Unsoeld, co-chair of Phase I of
the Initiative 97 campaign.
The flow 0 f 1-97 signatu res
leveled off in autumn. Initiative
supporters then battled to get
their in formation and petllion
tables
into
the
politically
'neutral' shopping malls. In the
final week of the campaign
signatures topped the 200,000
mark .
The legislature, however, did
not adopt the measu re but
instead passed an alternati ve
proposal, 97B. Which brings us
to
the
present
situation.
Money, and lots of it, versus
Initiative
97's
volunteer,
activists.
It is impossible to correct all
of Hamick's 97B distortions, but
a few should be attempted:
• Petroleum products, whether
exported
or
consumed
domestically,
are
an
environmental
risk
for
Washington.
Transport"ation of
oil, into the state as crude and
within the state as re fined
materials,
poses
dangers.
Management
practices
at
re fineries are another risk.
Regulation of those activities
is essential. The uncovering of
a major scandal in 1987 resulted
in a record fine for an oil
refinery near Anacortes.
For
many years, a cbemist at the
refinery bad
falsi fied
water
quality
reports
to
the
Department
of
Ecology.
Wastewater had been discharged
down a well witb materials that
exceeded
the
permitted
standards.
Tbese
types of
practices
threaten
the
groundwater and in the long run
cost citizens a lot more money
tban doing things right.
• Petroleum products are not
necessar ily
"the
si ngle
most
simple substance to clean up."
Some
crude
oil
can
be
bibdegraded, bu t prod ucts Ii ke
gasoline contain lead, benzene,
and other dangerous and longlived substances.
• Hamick asserts that petroleum
accounts for 15 to 20 percent of
the hazardous waste problem in
Washington.
Actually
the
percentage is probabl y a lot
higher.

~• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Point Journal

Jump to page 15
November 3, 1988

Page 13

r

Republican for Treasurer

, by Jim Albaugh



Andy McLauchan (R)

And~avN.\~h~d~~bg!~~

What do you believe to be
the responsibilities of the State
Treasurer?
The State Treasurer is the
chief - financial officer of the
state.
He is responsible for
issuing
bonds
for
capital
projects
undertaken
by
the
state,
and
to
in vest
cash
balances.
I believe that a
treasurer can do more than
those bare minimum activities,
like an education trust program
Inillative, or help finance a
child's college education, or
using the cash balances to help
small businesses throughou't the
state.
What
experience
you
do
have?
I have a Bachelors degree In
finance from the Un i ve rsity of
Washington, a Masters degree In
Management from the usc. I' ve
worked
three
years in · the
Governor's budget office.
For
the past five years I have been
Dan Evan's chief budget and
financial advisor.
I have the nut s and bolts
experience both in Olympia and
Washington D.C.
I also have
the detailed knowledge . I was
the project leader in setting up
the departments of corrections
and the financial systems, both
in formation systems as well as
personal
structures.
That's
important, whoever wins the
treasurer's office IS going to

well managed office!.
Why are you running ror
offIce?
Too
frequently
elected
leaders overlook accounting and
book
keeping
systems
and
appropriate · money management.
I have ' that expetiel'lcp..
I've
had tbe opportunity to work
with
other
state
treasurers
around the ' country and have
found what they provide as well.
If you are elected. what do
you hope to achieve'!
My goals are best reflected
in the plat form.
When I get
into office my number one
priority would be to reduce the
~.7 billion dollar deficit in the
pensIOn
system
which
are
reti rement benefits,
I don 't
want that deficit on to the next
ge nera tion ,

Democrat for Treasurer
by Jim Albaugh

-Dan Grimm

Dan Grimm (D)
What dn you believe to be
the responsibilities of the State
Treasurer?
The
State Treasurer
has
many
responsibilities.
The
treasurer must keep track of all
accounts and ' make sure ' a~e
recorded and accoun ted for.
Debt management is , abo a
major
responsibility .
The
Treasurer is the chairman of the
State Finance Committee and
the Treasurer is responsible for
a 14 billion dollar port folio.
What experience
do
you
have?
I was first elected in 1976 to
public office. I have 12 years
of experience as a legislature,
six years as the Chairman of
the Ways and Means Comrnitlee.
I
also
had
two
years of
experienc(' in 1981 and 1982 as
the Democratic caUCliS chair,
and two years experience as the
chairman
of
the
Higher
Education Committee ,
Why &re you running for
office?
I feel as if I am the best
person able to be a financial
watch dog, a person who will b e
the chief financial officer who
makes sure that there is a
decent debt management plan. I
am very able to plan for future
financial benefits or problems.
If you are elected, what do
you hope to achieve?
I ·bave four main goals re_a-llv.

1

Opinion

Number one, r' hope to refine
and improve the college savings
bonds plan.
Secondly, I wish to creale a
long term debt management plan
for
our
colleges
and
our
uni versities.
We
need
to
maintain qur universities an'd
community colleges. "
Third, I want toincrelJ,se the
investments inside the St'a te of
Washin~ton
through the State
Investment ~oard.
need to
have the State Investment Board
respond to more proposals:
Finally, J want to pursue ' a
Constitutional amendment that I
first introduced in 1985. This
amendment would require full
funding for our pension systems,
Those a re the fou r main issues
of my campaign. ,

1-97, 97 -8: Another explanation

by Hector Douglas
The debate between Initiati ve
· 97 and' 97B became even more
confused in the October 20 CPl.
Measu re 97B: To 'B' or not to
.:Jr1. furnishes many distortions
in the assertions of Ioann
Hamick, identified therein as the
issues director for the 97B
campaign.
Vote Initiative 97-it's your best choice committed
foibles in attempting to simplify
a complex issue.
Both articles were mistaken
about the initiative process.
The present law, which is
similar to 97B,
is
not
a
compromise
between
environmental
groups
and
legislators.
There was not .. a
strong feeling that everybody
had won," (as the first article
asserts)
unless
you
de fine
"everybody" as all the lobbyists
of
the
oil
industry
and
hazardous waste generators. "A
coalition of environmental and
public interest groups began a
drive to 'place Initiative 97 on
the 1988 ballot," in June of
1987, before there was a state
superfund law, not afterwards,

We

I

Republican for Lt. Governor
by Jim Albaugh
Joel Pritchard Spokesperson: Rus
Hokanson
What do you believe are the
responsibilities of the Lieutenant
Governor?
The Lieutenant Governor's
job is to back up the governor
... to preside over th e senate.
The Lieutenant Governor is t!:e
president of th e Senate.
Mr.
Pritchard b€1ieves th at he IS
uniquely qualified.
He
h as
had
12
years
exper ience
In
the
St a te
Legislature, 12 years .n the U,
S. Congress,
and
2:5
years
expe r ience in private businesses
in both sa les and management.
His strength is that he is ab le
to bring people together, He is
a
person
Dem ocrats
and
Republicans
can
talk
and
communicate with to solve tough
problems and iss ues.
Why run as a Republican an d
not as a Demncrat?
Joel entered the public life
in the 1950's. The Republican
party fit his ideals and beliefs.
He likes to call the Republican
party
the,
"par ty
of
opportunity."
What
makes
Joel
more
qualilled or better experience
than his opponent?
Joel has a very broad range
of experience. Let me make it
clear that Joel runs a po~itive
campaign,
not
a
negative
campaign .
He runs on his
record and not on that of his
Page 12

Cooper Point Journal

Joe I Prifc-hard
opponent.
He was a ranking

member on both the merchant
marines and fisherie~ committees
and the sub-committee on Asian
and Paci fie relations, as well as
the
House
Foreign
Affairs
Committee.
He has a broad
range of experience in dealing
with the Pacific Rim countries.
Joel believes that he can
help
Washington
State's
businesses.
He was a U.S.
congression a I re pre se ntati ve to
the United Nations in 1983. He
·a lw ha s local, national, and
int e rn at ion a l exper ie n ce ,
What will Joel Pritchard
achieve
for
the
State
oC'
Washington if he is elected?
Joel wants to bring people
to ge th er.
There has been too
much partisanship a nd bicke~;!lg
in the legi slature, We have to
look beyond short term political
gains a nd work toget her.

November 3, 1988

Democrat for Lt. Governor
by Jim Albaugh

George Freming

has employed by the U.S. West
company for over 23 years
which
gives
him
a strong
What do you believe are the busi ness backgrou nd.
What will George Fleming
responsibilities of tbe Lieutenant
achieve
for
the
State
of
Governor?
Washington
if
he
is
elected?
It is a unique posi tion, part
legi51ature, part ·cxecutive. The
George wants to help in
Lieutenant Governor presides the fight against drugs. George
over the Senate.
When tl:e , wants to make it into a full
Governor leave s, it
is the time pOSitIOn. He will be very
responsibility of the Lieutena!lt active in traveling the stale to
Gover'nor to fill that position, to b e with the people, to make
provide a warm we lcome to some real changes. He wan ts to
visitors and guests.
George create, "O ne Washington, one
believes that the Lieutenant state, one economy ." He wants ,
Governor should travel a bout to be a champion of th e people.
the state to communicate a nd
George's other experiences
build
a
better
se nse
of include; chairman of the senate
community.
As Lieutenant labor committee, founder of the
Governor George would build on Rainier Valley enterprise center,
the idea of community as weI! past president of the economic
as promoting Washing State. development
of
Washington
George would work hard at State, and current chairmen of
breaking down the barriers that the Washinl!;ton con ference. He
divide
Eastern
and We,tern is "the" senior member of the
Washington.
Senate
and
has
been
Why run as a Democrat?
uninterrupted in his years of service.
George has been a lifelong
Democrat.
He is in fact a
strong leader in tht Democratic
party. He has held the Senate
Caucus chair since 1980. George
has been in the state legislatu re
for over 20 years.
What makes George more
qualified or better experience
than his opponent?
George has ovcr 18 years of
experience in the senate. He's
very effective in getting ta~ks
accomplished. He is considered
George Fleming,
Teresita 'Batayola

Spokesperson:

, .
.
as the second article asserts.
necessary
funding . for
the
In
1985
and
1986, Washington
Department
of
environmentalists had carne to
Ecology's
(DOE)
Hazardous
persuade
the'
Washington Waste Cleanup Program, pushing
Legislature
to
pass
good
that program into a financial
legislation for the regulation
crunch and forcing them to use
and cleanup of hazardous waste.
austerity measures.
Important
The the bills never got out of
cleanups were halted while they
committee.
A
more
were still in progress.
DOE
comprehensive measure worked
personnel
felt
frustrated
in
its way through the House In
fulfilling their tasks, some felt
1987 but ran into problems in
insecure about their futures in
the Senate.
the agency.
Jolene
Unsoeld,
State
Meanwhile a coalition of
Representative 22nd
District,
environmental groups and public
Democrat,
negotiated
a
interest groups including the
compromise between
business
Association
of
Counties,
interests, the legislature and
Washington
Labor
Council,
some
environmental
groups.
WashPIRG, Sierra Club, and
Corporate lobbyists diluted the
more than 20 others, launched
strength of the legislation, but
an initiative dri ve that met with
the bill still failed to pass eveneady· success. Business interests
in extended session. Joe King,
fought back with a lobbying
Speaker of the House, killed the
blitz on the governor.
legislation
when
it
became
Enter the "Gang of Eight" ,
apparent
that
it
favored
a special legislative task force
polluters so much that it was created by the governor to draft
toothless; environmental groups a hazardous waste law behind
had dropped their support long
closed
doors.
Corporate
before.
lobbyists were consulted, but no
The
legislature
also environmen.tal
groups
were
adjounied
without
approving invited and no public were

*************************************

*
EVERYONE
TALKS
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:

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ntiS YEAR
3750 PEOPLE WILL
ACTUALLY'DO IT.

Not everyone is cut out to change the world. After all, it takes education, skills
and a spare two years.
Also a willingness to work. Hard.
This year 3,750 Americans will join the Peace Corps to do just that. They'll do
things like build roads, plant forests and crops, teach English, develop small businesses,
train community health workers, or even coach basketball. However; what they'll be
doing isn't half as important as the faq that they'll be changing a little piece of the
world ... for the better.
And when they return, these 3,750 Americans will find that experience doing
hard work will have another benefit. Ifs exactly what their next employers are
looking for. _
So, give the Peace Corps your next two years. And while you're out changing
the world, you'll also be making a place in it for yourself.
,

INFORMATION TABLE

November 2nd & 3rd • 9:00am-2:00pm • CAB
SPECIAL EVENTS

November 3rd • 3:00pm-4:00pm • CAB 110
"Peace Corps in the Pacific" (0 slide presentation)
INTERVIEWS

November 16th & 17th. 9:00-4:00pm • Advising Center (LIB 1401-A;
866-6000 ext. 6193)
Sign up in advance 01 Ihe Student Advising Cenler.

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present.
Among the "Gang of
Eight"
were
Senator
Mike
Kreidler of Olympia and Rep.
Lorraine Hine of Midway and
Federal Way.
Under
pressure
from
political action committees, the
legislature adopted the measure
produced by this Gang of Eight
task force in a special one-day
session in October 1987. Critics
called it a crisis in democracy,
a subversion of the normal
lawmaking process, and a ploy
to defuse the initiative.
"It was [done] to make the
initiative inviable, to make it
impossible
to
gather
the
required number of signatures
within the allotted time, " said
Unsoeld, co-chair of Phase I of
the Initiative 97 campaign.
The flow ' of 1-97 signatures
leveled off in autumn. Initiative
supporters then battled to get
their information and petition
tables
into
the
politically
' neutral' shopping malls. In the
final week of the campaign
signatures topped the 200,000
mark.
The legislature, however, did
not adopt the measure but
instead passed an alternative
proposal, 97B. Which brings us
to
the
present
situation.
Money, and lots of it, versus
Initiative
97's
volunteer
acli vists.
It is impossible to correct all
of Hamick's 97B distortions, but
a few should be ,attempted:
• Petroleum products, whether
exported
or
consumed
domestically,
are
an
environmental
risk
for
Washington.
Transportation of
oil, into the state as crude and
within the state as re fined
materials,
poses
dangers .
Management
practices
at
refineries are another risk .
Regulation of those acti vities
is essential. The uncovering of
a major scandal in 1987 resulted
in a record fine for an oil
refinery near Anacortes.
For
many years, a chemist at the
refinery had falsified water
quality
reports
to
the
Department
of
Ecology.
Wastewater had been discharged
down a well with materials that
exceeded
the
permitted
s tandards.
These types 0 f
practices
threaten
the
groundwater and in the long run
cost citizens a lot more mone y
than doing things right.
• Petroleum products are not
necessarily
"the
single
most
simple substance to clean up."
Some
crude
oil
can
be
bibdegraded, but products like
gasoline contain lead, benzene,
and other dangerous and longlived substances.
• Hamick asserts that petroleum
accounts for 15 to 20 percent of
the hazardous waste problem in
Washington.
Actually
the
percentage IS probably a lot
higher.

ie
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Point Journal

Jump to page 15
November 3, 1988

Page 13

·.

Murphy promises new tough land stand
by Allisa J. Drybouin
Mike Murphy is running for
what he terms "the second most
important office in the state"
because
he
believes
the
incumbent
Commissioner
of
Public Lands hasn ' t lived up to
his campaign claims of four and
eight years ago.
other
job
touches
No
economic
development,
environmental issues and schools
like the Commissioner of Public
Lands, Murphy said.
Yet, he
added, voters seem to know very
little about the position.
He
said there's a reason.
"The
public
does
not
understand tbat there are five
million acres of lands it can use
for hunting, fishing and hiking
because of the influence of big
timber
companies
over
th e
years," Murphy stated.
For the last 30 years the
commissioner's office has been
filled by people, who "in a very
real sense ,s upport all of the
policies" of timber business, he
added.
That's important to
know, according to Murphy,
since the commissioner oversees
the Department
of
Natural
Resources
and
it 's
biggest
revenue source is timber.
runDing
because
"I'm
understan~ public lands," Murphy
said, referring to his own
current experience as County
Commissioner in Grays Harbor.
"We are the only county that
manages out own timber and
aquaculture lands."
Essentially, Grays Harbor has
its own Department of Natural
Resources that does the same
job and manages the same
resources as the state, just on a
smaller scale, Murphy explained.
"It's a great program," he noted ,
adding, "It's very successful and
has a cash surplus."
"I
want
to
stop
slash
burning,"
Murphy
said,
explaining that he'd phase it out
and replace it with mechanized
clearing and the planting of
older plants that are better able
to resists the elemen ts.
Murphy said he will change
the ratio of log exports from
public lands , too. "In 1980 he
(tbe incumbent, Brian Boyle) was
against log exports, against over
cutting
of
timber
on
the
Olympic Peninsula. He was very
much
the
environmental
candidate.
Now he supports
unrestricted
exports,
pretty
much," Mu rph y explai ned .
Under
Boyle's
current
policies, Murphy said old growth
timber will be gone in five
years and it will be 20 years
before there is any secon d
growt h on state lands. Murph y
acknow ledged the need to log;
however, he wants to slow it
down.
"H is position has changed
along with the big contributions
from big companies and it gives
at least the appearance of a
conflict of interest," Murphy
said, regarding Boyle 's campaign
promise of clearly separating the
Co mmissioner of Public Lands
post from the in f1uence of big
business, whether timber or
aquacultu reo
Page t4

Cooper Point Journal

Referring
to
his
own
experience in Grays Harbor
County,
Murphy
said
he's
worked with the big guys like
Simpson Timber Company, but
working with them requires
being separate. Separate is key,
Murphy said, when you're in a
POSition to regulate like the
DNR is supposed to do.
The Commissioner of Public
Lands is charged with protecting
the state's natural resources.
Murphy
doesn't
think
his
opponent
is
doing
that,
particularly the last three years.
Mu.rphy said Boyle has been
looking for a change in office,
and was interested in running
for a higher pOSition and in
doing so, he's neglected his post
here.
"We're paying him $66,000 to
run for whatever," Murphy said.
"I th~nk ' he is doing a terrible
job.
I think he is -bored. I
don ' t think he cares. I think
he IS negligent in the very
least."
Again citing his 12 years of
e -x per i e n c e
as
co un t y
commissioner and responsible for
a $40 million budget, Murphy
said he'd work to cut out the
extra
spending
In
DNR.
Through
attrition ,
he "d
investigate the elimination of
approximately 100 jobs, he said.
This, according to Mu rph y, is a
direct contrast to Boyle's having
increased the DNR staff by 50
employees. This, he explained,
would cut the public lands
budget by $8 million and make
that much more available to
schools.
"A hiring freeze would allow
me
to
personally
look
at
vacancies as people leave to see
if they need to be filled," he
said,
suggesting
that
departments be consolidated and
streamlined to save money . "I
would bring the department
heads together and get them
excited
about
being
more
efficient."
have managed
"Because
public lands for so long, I really
believe I am the most quali fied
for this office," he said.
Adding to his credentials,
46-year-old Murphy said he is a
graduate of Central Washington
University; spent from 1974 to
1976 as district assistant to
Congressman Don Bonker; has
been a member of the Forest
Practices Board for foul' years'
was named Outstanding County
Commissioner in 1984; is founder
and director o[ Citizens First
Bank; was past president of
Washington State Association of
Counties;
and
received
an
Environmental "Good Guy" award
from Governor Dan Evans for a
beach
patrol
and
cleanup
program known as Operation
Shore Patrol.
Murphy said his connection
and
experience
1D
local
government
will
ensure
his
sensitivity to counties and their
concerns when leasing land or
considering uses of public land.
'Tm
a
product
of
local
government
and
know
that
counties feel they need to have
November 3, 1988

more input," he said, particularly
when it comes to issuing permits
for aquaculture uses.
As a member of the Forest
Practices Board, Murphy said he
played a big role in the creation
and
implementation
of
Ti m ber / Fish/Wi Idli fe Agreement
which is the first of its kind.
Murph y said he's bothered about
his opponent's taking so much
credit
for
the
agreement.
Murphy said Boyle wasn't even
in attendance at many public
hearings across the state.
The environment, Murphy
said, will come first if he's
elected.
He
criticizes the
incumbent for waiting until
election
time
to
release
a
marine plastics cleanup plan and
announcing a new construction
fund for schools . Murphy said
Boyle's just recently got on the
slash burning band wagon too.
Murphy
is
promoting
mechanical scari fication which
has an estimated $110-per-acre
cost while slash burning has an
$150-per-acre cost. Murphy said
he
would
requITIng
logging
towers, too, because they would
take care of a lot of debris.
"We will have to have cleaner
logging
practices,"
he, said,
adding that more chippers would
be in the woods as well.
"It's wrong that we have
unemployed and off-duty firemen
going around to spy on people
using their woodstoves when
they are not supposed to and
slash burning has kept going
on," he emphasized.
Murphy also wants to phase
out log exports. Public timber
should ' be sold to mills in
Washington
to
prevent' the
continued loss of woods products
jobs, he said.
His opponent, according to
Murphy, is not a tough enough
enforcer, he said, CIting the
recent
claims
of
missing
geoducks from Puget Sound.
Allegations,
and
civil
and
criminal charges, Murphy said,
have been filed against several
clamming corporations who have
contributed to his opponent's
campaign.

Murphy is critical of Boyle'S
suppor.t of the Everett home
port project, as well.
Murph y
claims Boyle planned to allow
toxic dredge spoil to be buried
in
the
Sound
using
an
experimental process that has no
safety guarantees.
"I am opposed to that. We
are
taxing everything
from
cigarettes to sewer rates, for
cleaning the water," he said,
questioning then the advisability
of the public land commissioner
risking
another '
form
of
pollution. Murphy said it's the
waste prod ucer's responsibili t y
to find proper, environmentally
sound,
disposal
processes.
Murphy suggested sanitary land
fills.
"I'm for 197," Murphy said,
again critical of Boyle, saying,
"Nobo dy knows where he is:
"I think it's a really tough
step in the right direction,.. he
added. "97B is a cop out. It
bothers me a lot that big
companies are being deceptive in
advertising for 97B." According
to
Murphy
the
law
isn ' t
effective
yet,
but
the
ad vertisers for 97B are sa ying
"it's working."
Murphy said he's used to
taking stands that aren't always
popular.
He .said he was the
first local person to oppose the
WPPS plant even though it
meant opposing approximately
5,000 jobs in his own backyard.
He also fought for making
Bowerman Basin a 1,700-acre
bird sanctuary, he said, in spite
of being called crazy
for
opposing an industrial park that
would
have
brought
in
considerably more revenue for
his county.
As
Public
Land
Commissioner, Murphy said, "You
have to be tough. You have to
fight a WPPS or a big timl;ler
company, or someone swiping
geoducks."
That's part of the
job, he noted.

Boyle cites eight years of
successful land programs
by Allisa J. Drybouin
Washingwn
State
Land
Commissioner Brian Boyle wants
to serve another four-year term.
If he's elected, it will be his
third .
"You are able to protect the
environment
and
keep
the
resou rce-based econom y stable,"
Boyle said , referring to the
balancing act that is one of the
land
commissioner 's
key
responsibilities.
Four eight years, Boyle said
he's been doing both.
"I' ve put the interest of the
economy
and
environment
together and tried to find some
common ground bet ween them ,"
he explained.
But that's not
easy, he said, referring to the
an tagonistic approach used In
governing.

"The
processes
that
are
established take en vironmental
interests and pit them against
people who are trying to use
resources for economic reasons,"
he continued.
"The factor left out is the
public," Boyle said, noting that
"public good " is the whole
reason for resource management.
"In fiscal 1988 we made $195
million that went directly into
school construction funds," he
said.
"Fifty percent of our
state education mo'!ey comes
from DNR, mostly from state
timber lands."
The
land
'commissioner
oversees a $200 million business
which includes Washington State
Department
of
Natural
JUrJ1) to page 15

Boyle cites success

(from page 14)

Resources.
"We manage two
million acres of forest and two
million acres of agricultural and
range Ian d.'
Also
under
the
land
commissioner's purview are 2
million acres of aquatic land and
navigatable rivers and lakes, he
said.
"We (his office) are part and
parcel of every resource-based
industry in the state," he said .
This includes oil, gas and an y
other subsurface resource and
its drilling or surface mining;
wheat !lroduction on dry land
leases; shellfish growing on
leased tidelands; and forest fire
fighting.
On
the
surface, Boyle
admitted, his background appears
not to fi t with the job.
With a bachelor of science
degree
in
metallurgical
engineering
garnered
from
Montana School of Mines in
Butte, Montana, Boyle went to
work at Reynold's Aluminum in
Longview.
That was in 1967.
While with Reynold's, he earned
his master's degree in business
from the University of Portland.
He also served as a Cowlitz
County Commissioner [rom 1975
to 1978.
But
it's
precisely
this
experience that Boyle points to
in proving his abi lity to do the
job.
"My engineering, science
and industrial background and
management experience I have
has been 'really well used in this
position.
Boyle said when he came
in\ll . <;>ffice ~hing,s were okay

197, 978

bet ween
timber
and
the
commissioner; however, between
environmentalists
and
the
commissioner the situation was
poor.
"They
needed
someone
coming in with a different
background,"
he said.
"My
seemingly unrelated background
made
me
look
at
things
di fferently.
I
had
an
understanding of what makes
industry tick. It's stability.
Stability, he said, is also
the key to protecting wildli fe
habitat.
"What people are really
looking for is stability of supply
and stability of government
regulation," he said.
"People
are willing to have change when
change is justified and if the
change brings more stability."
As chairman of the Forest
Practices Board, Boyle said he
was the organizer behind the
landmark Timber/Fish/Wildlife
Agreement signed just over two
years ago.
The agreement came about,
he sai d, because in re-writing
new
regulations
for
forest
management
he
found
no
interest group felt it would be
served under the new rules.
And all three were increasingly
an tagonistic.
Bringing together Bill Frank
of the Nisqually Tribe , Stu
Bloodsoe of the timber industry,
Pam
Crocker-Davis
of
the
Audubon Society and attorney
Jim Waldo, Boyle said the core
group negotiated for one year.
"What we came up with were

new regulations with better
enforcement: Boyle explained.
Everyone got what they were
asking for, he noted.
"The key is getting people
together in a non-combative
environment,"
he
continued.
"When you do that you find
some things that are off limits.
Each group has things that are
nonnegotiable." When you know
what those are, you can also see
the ground that has yet to be
plowed, Boyle explained.
Recently Boyle kicked off a
33 member commission to study
indicator species such as the
spotted owl and old growth and
its contributions.
And just this month he
released
the
Marine
Plastic
Debris
Action
Plan
for
Washington State. This plan is
the first of its kind in the
nation.
The purpose, according to
Boyle, is to increase awareness
of the serious problem and set
about cleaning up current waste
and
establishing preventativ'e
measures and alternatives to
disposal of plastic debris.
"Mari ne plastic isn't the
worst pollutant in the water,"
he said, "but it's one of the
most
visible
and
it 's
symptomatic of that fact that
we have not come to grips with
the fact that we are spoiling
o u r greatest asset which is
water.
We don ' t have an

is stronger, however, and would
be more difficult for the agency
to bypass if a political appointee
was made director.
• There is nothing in Initiative
97 that implies that it would
"hurt the littl e guy."
The
initiative
speci fies
mixed
funding, including some money
from the state, for companies or
individuals that can't afford the
cost of Cleanup.
The
article
su pporttin g
Initiative
97
has
foibles
reSUlting from misinterpretation.
• Ecology doesn't cha rge fees to
polluters for cleanup.
People
are taxed on thei r possession 0 [
hazardous sub!>tances. The tax
provides funding for cleanu p.
• Hazardous doesn't necessarily
mean toxic.
• Citizens may sue DOE for not
fulfilling pon-discretionary acts.
They are not entitled, under the
act, to sue on the basis of
DOE's discretionary actions.
• Initiative 97 may raise $725
million over twenty years, but it
certainly won't accomplish that
each year.
• Technical assistance grants
are not provided to community
groups to Cleanup hazardous
waste. Community groups with
their yard rakes, etc., are Dot
equipped to cle,anup hazardous
waste. Funding is available to
community groups, under 1-97,
to assess and critique ' cleanup
plans.
• 97B is forecasted to raise less

money
than
1-97
due
to
exemptrons-- for both big and
1mJ!!! oil companies. Howev er,
it's difficult to say how much
revenue either version might
generate, since neither 1-97 or
97B have been implemented.
• The article states: "As for the
comparative
effectiveness
of
cleanllp under both 1-97 and
97B, 1·97 forces polluters to
meet
with
federal
cleanup
standards
and
97B
allows
polluters to go below federal
cleanup standards."
There are
hundreds if not thousands of
substances for which there are
no federal standards. Sometimes
that is because of the medium
that they're in, for instance
soils.
Under 97B deviations from
cleanup levels are allowed if the
responsible parties convincingly
d~monstrate to DOE personnel
that
their
measures
are
protective of the public health.
This may open the door for the
highly-paid legal and scienti fie
staffs of large corporations to
strain
the
state's
limited
resources.
By putting the
burden on the state to contest
expensive studies and corporate
conclusions about what is safe
the state is faced with an
expensive
task.
And
the
companies are willing to go to
court.
"The differences (1-97 and
97B) are substantial but often
very
subtle,"
says
Wishart.

overall
public sense
of
it
belonging to everyone."
Boyle said he's endorsed by
the
Washington
State
Environmental
Council
and
supported by all the major
en vironmen tal organizations in
the state. "That's a pretty good
indicator
that
the
e~ vironmentalists feel that the
environment has been improved, "
he said.
"I have helped them
achieve some of their goals," he
said.
"But major industries also
'support me," Boyle said .
"It
goes
back
to
stabilization.
Conflict
between
environmentalists and industry
ends up being de habilitating and
things grid to a halt."
Boyle endorsed Initiative
97, a bill requiring toxic waste
cleanup by pollutants, which will
be on the ballot November 8.
He 's not opposed to Ballot
Measure 97B which is sponsored
by many in the state legislature
and is running against 197.
The bills have many things
in common, he said, noting that
both
aim
at
cleaning
the
environment
and
protecting
natural resources. It's a matter
of process and legal issues that
really delineates them, he said.
He endorsed 197 before 97B was
introduced,
and
though
he
prefers some individual aspects
of 97B, he is st ickin g with 197,
Boyle said.

(from page 13)

According to EPA studies
and the st udi es of other states,
the underground storage tanks
at gasoline stations begin to
le ak as early as 15 years after
installati.on.
Speculating on
these studies, thirty to forty
percent of the gas stations in
this state might have ' problems.
We may find that petroleum
product's are a major threat to
ground water.
• Hamick claims that the federal
Superfund law is a failure. Is it
a failure because cleanup takes
a long time and costs a lot of
money? Certainly more cleanups
are being accomplished now than
before the existence of the law.
Hazardous waste sites were not
created ,. overnight and they're
not going to go away quickly
either.
• Covenants are not inducements
for
out-of-court
settlements.
All settlements are court-filed
consent decrees.
• Covenants not to sue are
mandated
under
97B
when
contaminants are permanently
destroyed,
eliminated
or
immobilized, which is about as
rare as
four-leaved
Clovers.
Under 1-97 all covenants would
be discretionary.
DOE would
ptobably
interpret
covenants
under
the
two
laws
in
essentially
the
same
way .
Responsible parties, therefore,
are not necessarily more likely
to litigate than cleanup under 197. The statutory intent of 1-97

"They (97B su pporters) modeled
a law that in a superficial way
resembles the initiative, and
they play this up.
But there
are major loopholes hidden all
the way through 97R. and the
polluters intend to take full
ad vantage 0 f those loopholes
when
the
time
comes
to
negotiate. Under 97B we would
see quick and dirty cleanups:
It is important to realize
that without Initiative 97 , there
probably would not be a state
superfund law even now. Those
who
created
97B
weT{
responsible for defeating an
even
weaker
law
In
the
legislature in 1987.
They
realized, perhaps through their
own polling services, that they
could never have won a yes-no
vote on this ballot initiative.
So a weaker and confusing
alternative to the initiative was
created.
"Initiative 97 is a tough law ,
with tough fines and no deals.
The altern ati ve is based on a
deal that was cut in the dead of
night by the corporate polluters
with no public presence," said
Unsoeld.
This ballot issue is not just
an InItiative about hazardous
waste and who is goi ng to bea r
the environmental costs of doing
business.
It is also about
.democratic ideals and whether
the voters of the lobbyists
controls the legislature.

Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988

Page 15

"8

Career Development:

j

Job seekers can use two lace' netvvorks

u

Local artist show
opens next Friday

,.,.
8

u

C
...

'>."

~

.0

The title "New Paintings in
Acrylic
and
Egg
Tempera ,"
brings to mind a variety of
rather odd images Lo the novice
art
connoisseur
(break fa stry
Naah ... ).
If I knew I what it
was ( wouldn't tell you b eca use
you can go see thi s ex hibition
of artist Anne Belo v's work in
Olympia soo n.
Showing at the Marianne
Pa rt low
Galleries
beg in n ing
Friday
November
II,
th ese
pai ntin gs a re large ly inspired by
a rece nt Irip to Italy where th e
art ist captured uniqu e visual
moments.
She
treats
the
romantic
details
of
ag in g
architecture
to
cool
contemporary
color
and
surprising poin ts of view.
Belov receiv ed her MFA form
the University of Washington.
Recently her work was di sc uss ed
in the Watercolor '88
of
American Arti ~ t Magazine. The
artist was exhibited widely a nd
current ly livts in Seattle, WA .
This is h e r second exhibition at
the galle ry . .
A
preview
and
art ists
reception will be held on Friday,
November 11 form 5-8 p.m. Th e
artist will also be in th e gallery
for an inform a l discussion of
her Saturday, November 12, at
11:30 a.m. The ex hibition will
be from November 11 throu gh
Wednesday, December 7, 1988.
Gallery hours
are
TUeSdayFriday 10:30-5, Sat urd ays 11 -4.

...
0
0

..c
p...
j

\

by Maureen Eddy
We
have
two
terri fie
Job/Career Network systems in
our office called the ACE and
PIN program.
ACE · is an
acronym
for Alumni Career
Educator and PIN is Parent
In formation Network.
Members of ACE are TESC
graduates who have volunteered
to serve
as a
con Lact
or
network
for
current
TESC
students and alumni.
ACE
members provide in formation
allowing students to explore
career options with professionals
in the i r fields of interest. PIN
members are parents of TESC
graduates who have also agreed
to act as resou rce people for
"Greeners:
ACE and PIN is a referral
program designed to help answer
such questions as, "How can I
find out about a particular job
field?", "How can I decide if
this is the di rection I want to
go?", "Should I devote two to
four more years to that area?"
And "Should I go on to graduate
school right away or get some
work experience fi rst?"
It is
network
to
obtain
also
a
positions in their field.
We
originally
began
the
networking program with · the
ACE and limited our contacts to
just Olympia alumni and had 55
members.
Two years ago, we
added
the
PIN
program,
increased our outreach
and
expanded
the
programs
nationwide. We now have 305
members. It is now possible for
greeners to network with other

greeners
(or
parents
of
greeners) from Boston to Alaska
on a variety of career fields.
You are welcome to come to ou r
office to access this program.
Speaking of career fields,
one of the publications we
received in our office, wrote the
following,
"The
US
Postal
Service recently honored one of
its former employees, William
Faulkner, with a commemorative
stamp in the Literary Arts
Se ri es.
One
of America's
greatest authors, Faulkner was
one of
the WORST
postal
workers. Soon after taking the
job, Faulkner devised schemes to
avoid work ...An ambitious postal
inspector finally caught up with
Faulkner during a visit to
Oxford,
Mississippi
in
the
summer of 1924. He discovered
Faulkner had thrown mail with
return postage guaranteed and
all
other
clas5es
into
the
garbage can. People have gone
to this garbage can to get their
magazines.
Faulkner
responded,"1 will be damned if I
propose to be at the beck and
call of every itinerant scoundrel
who has two cents to invest In
a postage stamp.
This, sir, is
my resignation."
JOB OF THE WEEK:
KOMO Radio and Television
- Seattle are looking for a ENG
PHOTOGRAPHER - Minimum of
two years shooting and editing
television news required.
For
more in formation, come to
our office. L. 1401.

New shows come to KAOS
by Keith Bearden
It takes 25 years for Earth's

radio and TV signals to reach
Alpha
Centuri,
the
closest
galaxy to ours thought to be
capable of support ing ad vanced
life forms.
In 25 years, alien beings
(who tune into KAOS) will be
the
following
enjoying
programming:
Another KAOS exclusive! A
unique 10 week series called
"Tusouka" will be playing every
Sunday evening starting October
30th (yeah, last week ... sorry
guys).
Miki Pohl will present
souvenirs of her trip to the
USSR in the form of tapes of
every
conceivable
form
of
unauthorized
Soviet
music,
poetry, and her first hand
information on Soviet art and
life. You'll get a taste of the
thriving
Soviet
underground
culture every Sunday from 8 to
9 p.m.
Also new on the KAOS

daytime
agenda
is
Nancy
Gudadis's show on Wednesday
from 1 to 4 p.m.
Gradually
Nancy will be moving from the
regular classical format into a
concentration on rap (!) and
soul music. This is a first for
Southwest Washington radio so
be sure and check it out.
This XMAS KAOS wil! be
airing a full fledged radio
dramatization
of
Charles
Dicken's "A Christmas Carol:
The casting for this show is
going on even as you read this.
Does you or your child have a
knack for dramatic vocalization?
If so, call Neil at 866-600
extension
5112
for
more
in formation on how you can be
on radio. Everyone is welcome-,
so gi ve it a shot!

ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF LAW
NEW
YORK
UNIVER SITY
SCHOOL OF LAW
NOTRE DAME UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF LAW

More info on jobs. Many
students want to know what
type of jobs can they get with
a
BA
in ....... ?
With
the
information we receive from our
annual surveys, we prepared
HANDOUTS
entitled,
Job
Opportunities with a BA in ..... .
which list categories such as
Business,
Communicatio n s,
Ed ucati on,
Media,
N atu ral
Sciences etc . that will give you
a list of positions now being
held by TESC graduates.
PLACEMENT REPORT TRIVIA:
According to our statistics,
TESC graduates are working
with or involved in a total of
146
Volunteer /C ommunity
agencies
in
the
state
of
Washington.
UPCOMING EVENTS:
The
Career
Development
office proudly presents their
third annual Law School Fair.
h
is
clear
th at
TESC
graduates are highly regarded by
the response to ou r u pcom i n g
Law School Fair.

THURSDAY,NOVEMBER 10
Orientation to Career Planning11:30 - 12:30 L. 1406
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER II
Resume Writing Workshop 12:00
1:00 p.m.

Treat yourself to the finestl
• Private Hot Tub Rooms
• Therapeutic Massage

WEDNESDA Y, NOVEMBER 9
LAW SCHOOL FAIR from 1:00
p.m. to 4:00 p.m . Second Floor
Library Schools participating:
HARVARD LAW SCHOOL
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON
SCHOOL OF LAW
GONZAGA SCHOOL OF LAW
UNIVERSITY OF PUGET SOUND
LAW SCHOOL
LEWIS AND CLARK COLLEGE
OF LAW
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
AT DAVIS SCHOOL OF LAW
WILLAMETTE
UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
CALIFORNIA WESTERN SCHOOl
OF LAW
GOLDEN GATE UNIVERSITY
SCHOOL OF LAW
NEW ENGLAND SCHOOL OF
LAW

GIFT
CERTIFICATES
from $7.75
HOURS: J J am·JJ pm Sun-Thurs
J J am- J am Fri·Sat

-

BOOKS • MINERAL SPECIMENS • JEWELRY
SPHERES • COLLECTOR PIECES • HEALING TOOLS

A CORNUCOPIA OF CRYSTALS
& GEMS AWAITS' YOU

10% OFF

TO COME BY THE C.P.). O"FFICES CAB .306A ANYTIME FOR A VISIT OR
TO SEE HOW YOU CAN BE A PART OF
THE EXCITING WORLD OF MEDIA PUBLICATIONS!

I
I

OPEN PLANNING MEETINGS
EVERY MONDAY at 6:30 PM
. SEE YOU SOON!

Page 16

Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988

~--------------~~~~~.~
Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988

Page 17

,

·Calenaar
The Calender Policy
All calender in formation needs
to be submitted the Friday prior
to publication.
Please include
the date and time of the event,
the location, cost, and a con tact
number for more information.
Space for the calendar is limited
therefore events in the Ongoing
section may not be listed every
week.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3
The Peace Corps presentation
will be at 9 a.!D. in the CAB
Lobby.
There will also be a
film at 3 p.m. in CAB 110. For
more information call X 6193.
Resume Writing workshop at
11:30 a.m. in L 1406. For more
information
contact
Career
Development at X 6193.
Medical
school
advising
session at noon in L 1406. For
more information contact Career
Development at X 6193.
A recital by Hilary Field and
Nancy Zylstra which feature s
works
by
modern
English
composers will be at 8 p.m . in
Ingram Hall on the Pacific
Lutheran
Uni ve rsity
campu s.
For more information call 535760l.
Mike Dash, who traveled with
the Veterans' Peace Con voy to
Nicaragua,
will
speak
and
present a slide show abou t the
economic war against Nicaragua
at 7:30 p.m . in the Olympia
Timberland Library.
For more
in formation
contact
Austin
Kelley at 357-3928.
Ed Grumbine, the director of
the Sierra Institute, will present
a
slide
show
about
the
rainforest study programs in
Belize and Guatemala from 5:30
to 7:30 p.m. in Communication
Lab Building, room 110.
For
more information contact the
Environmental Resource Center
in CAB 306, X 6784.
Koyaanlsqati
will
be
presented by the Global Walk
Film and Lecture Series at 7:30
p.m. in Lecture Hall 3.

L!.ic ~i.:f dJ ~ a c..llf"1

fc'r$lPP off

FRIDA Y, NOVEMBER 4
A dance workshop on contact
Alan
Greenbaum
will improvisation by Tom Trenda
at
CRC
307.
Prepresent slides he took of the will
For
West Bank during his travels registration is required.
in formation
and
there in' 1988 as part of the more
"Eye Witness Israel"
project. registration contact Lynn Taylor
Presentation will be at 7 p.m. in ' at 866-0817.
Free
clinic
by
the
Ed
For more
L-ecture Hall 5.
Percussion
Studio
information contact Anna at Hartman
(Seattle) on Congo Drums and
943-8386 or EPIC, X 6144.
Robert Jorgensen, pianist, Latin Styles starting at 11 a.m ..
will be giving a promotional For more information call 548concert for 197 at 8 p.m. in 0916.
Recital Hall.
Tickets are $6
general, $4 students. For more MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7
The Watershed Management
information and reservations call
866-6833.
Committee
of
Mason
and
"Hidden
Job
Market" Thurston County will be meeting
presentation
by
Career at 7 p.m. in the Squaxim Tribal
For more information
Development will be at 11:30 Center.
a.m. in L 1406.
For more call 786-5554.
fnternshlp Orientation
for
in formation call X 6193.
Ivan Doig, a Northwest students interested in conducting
winter quarter internships at 3
author, will read his work and
di sc uss writing from 2 -4 p.m. p.m .. For more information call
in Lecture Hall 3.
For more X 6391.
information contact Bob Haft at
Preschool
Story time
for
X 6474.
children ages 3 - 5 at 11 a.m.
Karen Thompson will be
every Monday at Tenino Library .
speaking the infringement of
For more information call 264 2369.
rights at 7 p.m . in Lecture Hall
3~
For
more
information
contact LlGRC at X 6544.
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 8
Vocal Jazz Festival will be
Hearts and Minds, story of
prese nted at 8 p.m . in Chris
the
Vietnam
War,
will
be
Knutzen H a ll on the Pacific
presented as part of the CIA
Lutheran' University . campus. and Democracy film series at
Cost
is
$7.50.
For
more
7:30 p.m. in Lecture Hall 3. For
information call 535-760l.
more information call 357-3928.
University
Symphony
Strings will be performing at 8 WEDNESDA Y, NOVEMBER 9
p.m . at Kilworth Chapel on the
. Internship Orientation
for
U .P .S. campus.
students interested in conducting
winter quarter internships at 3
p .m .. For more information call
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER S
Instrumental Jazz Festival
with
Gary
Shutes and
the ONGOING
The Olympia Timberline
McChord Air Force Jazz Band
Library
will hold a preschool
will be at 8 p.m. in the Olson
story
time
for children ages 3-6.
Auditorium
on
the
Pacific
These
half -hou r
programs
Lutheran University campus.
feature picture books, stories,
Have a relaxed walk at the
fingerplays,
and
activities.
Nisqually
National
Wildli fe
Preschool story times will be held
Refuge to enjoy the wonders of
from
10:30
to
11
a.m.,
the forest. Meet at the Refuge
Thursdays, October 20 through
parking lot at 8 a.m.. For more
November
17;
and
Monday
information contact the Black
afternoons, 1:15 to 1:45 p.m.,
Hills Audubon Society at 352October 24 through November 28 .
7299.
at the Olympia library.
For
more
information,
call
the
library at 352-0595.
You're a Good Man Charlie
Brown will be presented by the
Abbey Players of Olympia at the
Washington
Center
for
the
Performing Arts starting on
November 4.
Tickets will b e
available at
the Washington
Center and
at
local
ticket
outlets.
The Olympia Film Festival
will be at the Capital Play
House (357-5577) from November
4 to the 13th.

f2i~~~

41[~ fUrc.~,lSr- ~~~~~~~

l' SIO,~
P"

ryp,.~

Calendar
The Readers' Program here
at Everg'reen needs to 'borrow
books from our community this
quarter. This is a volunteer
program
which
provides
Challenged
Students
with
cassette tapes of text books.
For more information on which
books are needed contact Sharon
McBride in 1-3101-A, X 6348.
Now is tbe time to start
planning
for
winter quarter
internships.
For
more
information contact the Office
of Cooperative Education, at L1407 during drop-in hours which
are Tuesdays, Wednesdays and
Thursdays 3 to 4 p .m.
Nominate a valued wetland
for preservation by filling out
the questionnaires offered by
the
Department of Ecology ,
which is trvin~ to identify the
"most important" welland in the
Puget
Sound
Basin
fot
preservation.
For
more
in formation or the questionnaire
contact Jane Frost at 438~7429
or Teri Granger at 438-7427.
Entries
are
now
. being
accepted
for Playboy's 1989
College Fiction Contest and will
be' accepted until January I,
1989. For more in formation call
Bill Paige (312) 751-8000, X2259.
Tbe
seventh
annual
International Student Scbolarship
Competition is now underway
and will continue until December
1, 1988. This is a nation wide
essay
competition
for
international students studying
in the United States. For more
in formation, rules and ' entry
forms write: Essay Competition
Coordinator;
DSD
Communications, Ltd.;
10805
Parkridge Boulevard, Suite 240;
Reston, VA 220091.

Soccer

(from page 6)

He~phiU with 7 goals and 6
assists.
"This year has soup bone
year,"
says
Captain
Casey
Larrance re ferring to the wins
rocked up during the season .
"I . think we have a team
that can shred eternally,' says
forward Chris Saari.
"But we
need major clam support, totally
- Dude monger."
The first playoff game will
b.e contested this saturday at
home
against
Simon
Fraser
University at 1;00 p .m .
"This is the first time in
Evergreen's
history
that
we
have made the playoffs and it's
time to shred,' Medved added.

- £",i""'~
,)pt},

3D,""

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

,.

THURSDAY NIGHT IS STUDENT
NIGHT!
943-8700
Harrison and Divison
Page 18

Cooper Point Journal

November 3, 1988
,

:)

"

.

Book review:

Pre.en' your .tudent ID and ..cleve a
$2.50 admla.ion on any .how. except
.peclal engagem.n'••

Barry cartoons good novel

Cable
News
Networks County. 352-2211.
by Meriah Lynne Daria
Washington,
DC
Bureau
is
Those of you Interested In
Those
of
you
who
are
offering News Internships the
politics,
Jolene
Unsoeld's
familiar with Lynda Barry's work
1989 Spring Quarter.
The Congressional
Campaign
is probably know of her as a
internships
are
inter ·
looking for volunteers.
For
cartoonist,
and
a
former
disciplinary
and
are
not more information call 754-1990.
Greener. I know I do; so when
restricted
to
broadcast
or
Sixty fellowships will be Darrel showed me The Good
journalism majors.
For . more
awarded to full time students in
Times Are Killing Me, I jumped
in formation wri te or call Jerry
the
biological
sciences. at the chance to do a review of
Levin;
Manager
of Applications are due Novem ber it.
Later when I sat down to
Administrati ve Servi ces' Cab le
14, 1988. For more information
read it, I realized to my horror
News
Network"
111
write
Hughes
Doctoral
that it was actually a novel-Massach usetts
Ave.'
N .W .; Fellowships,
The
Fellowship
with words! It was really quite
Washington, D.C. 20001; (202)
Office,
National
Research
traumatic.
I
was , however,
898-7945.
Council,
2101 . Constitution
finally able to force my se lf to
Lesbian Rap Group meets
Avenue, N .W., Washington D.C.
read it; and I'm going to tell
every Tuesday From 7 to 9 p.m.
you what I thought of it.
20418, U .S.A. or call (202) 334. in L·2614.
-2872.
But, music certainly is one of
Gay Mens Rap Group mee ts
Heart
the
central themes.
In fact,
The
American
every Wednesday from 7 to 9
Association
is
sponsoring
a
TGTAKM ends with a ' Mu s ic
p.m . in L-3223.
Dance For Heart "aerob-a-thons"
Notebook'; which contains handThe Gay/Lesbian Community
from now until November 19.
written biographies of mu sic i a ns,
meeting will m ee t the secon d
For more information contact
and
de sc riptions of
mu sical
Thursday of each month from 7
your neare s t American Heart
styles: blues, cajun , country,
to
9
p.m.
beginning
In
Association or call toll · free I ·
etc.
This sect ion also includ es
November, loc a tion T.B.A.
800-562-6718 .
some of Lynda Barry 's ar t.
The Fund for Education
am left wondering where this
There are several informal
and
Training
was
recently sports on campu s on which
' notebook' fits into the story ;
formed to provid e financi a l aid everyone is encouraged to drop
and whether it isn 't rea ll y ju s t
a nice way for her to s how off
(or draft non-registrants.
For in, regardless of their prIOr
her work .
mor e informati o n write to FEAT, ex perience, for fun , for free.
The s tory is told from the
Suite 600, 800 18th Street NW, There is soccer every Wednesday
Washington, DC 20006-3511, or from 3:30 - 5 p.m. in Field #2, viewpoint of Edna, a teenage
I found her se mi-literate
call (202) 293-5962 .
Flag Football Sundays starting girl.
Marianne Partlow Gallery is at 11 a.m. in Field #5, a nd
voice to be rather annoying.
presenting an exhibit of carved Boomerang Throwing Fridays 2- Edna is pretty much what you
sculpture by Duane Pasco now 6 p.m. in Field #2.
~
would expect her to be: petty
through November 9.
Gallery
Tbere will be group bike and selfish with the self-interest
hours are
Tuesdays through rides each Wednesday at 5 p .m . co mmon to youth; loy a l and
Fridays, 10:30 a.m . - 5 p.m . and and Saturday at 10 a.m. meeting trusting to her parents; cliqueish
Saturday 11 - 4 p.m. For more at the dorm loop.
For more and swayed easily by the tides
information call 943-0055.
information contact Demian at of fashion.
There are two openings on 866-5222.
Although she occasionally has
the President's Advisory Board
Evergreen
Students
for the courage to break the rules
which makes recommendations Christ will be meeting every of
her
world,
she
never
about
campus
policy . Tuesday at 7 p.m. in CAB 108. questions them .
She befriends
Applications are due October 28. For more information call X one
girl
who
had
been
Contact
the
Student 5165 .
ostracized in school, but makes
Communications Center in Cab
Open Meditation will be
her "swear to God not to tell on
206, X6785.
Mondays,
Tuesday s,
and (her) for it "(5 8).
Find out your cholesterol Thur sdays
at
noon
and
Although I couldn ' t work
level , as everyone is advised, at Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. in L
up much affection or sympathy
St. Peter Hospital any day of 3225. For more in for mation call
for Edna, I appreciated the
the week from 2 -4 p.m.
For X 6145.
truth of her story.
There are
more information call 456-7494
The
deadline
for
the two line s in particular that I
or 456-7247.
Carleton
Morris
Cooley enjoyed.
In th e first, her
Thurston County
Health Scholarship ha s been ex te nd ed
father
has
just
gotten
his
Department has not received its' to December 5, 1988. For mor e brother to agree to lend him hi s
allotment of the flu vaccine but information contact th e Dean of
t a pe record er. When Edna hear s
when it arr iv es spec ial
flu Enrollment Services Office, L
this, she tells us: "I almost told
clinics
will
be
sc h e dul ed. 1221 , X 6310.
him to knock on th e table three
Updates on the situation will be
Graduate
Students times fast and say 'No take
on local radio sta tion s a nd interested in internships with
backs'''(12).
The seco nd comes
newspapers.
the Washington State Senate
near the e nd , while she is
A lire-threatening disease this
coming
s ummer
should
waiting on the porch for her
or children, Whooping cough, has contact Joyce Weston at the Aunt and Uncle to pick h er up.
been identified in a Thurston Hillaire Student Ad vising Center She observes, casually: "The sun
County child. To get your child L 1410, X6560.
was just starting to come over
immunized
contact
yo ur
The
Fighting
Geoduck
the
garage
across
the
physician
of
the
Thurston
Rhythm and Blues Band needs
st reet"(63). The first serves to
County Health Department at
trumpet player!
Contact Cr::ig
remind us of her youth and
786-5581.
at 866-9574 or come to Com. innocence, the second of just
Eaten at the Columbia Street 117 Wednesdays at 4 p.m.
how limit ed her horizons are.
Public House lately? Well , one
Slightly
West,
The
The book is broken up into
of their food handlers has
Evergreen Li tera ry i A rt s journal short one or two page chapters.
tested positive for Hepatitis B, is
accepting
poem s,
fiction,
Many
contain
portraits
of
there fore if you ate there then
black and white photographs,
teachers, friends and family .
you
ought
to
recel ve
a lithographs and drawings for its Others d escribe episodes in her
vaccination
shot
from
your . winter edition until December 2.
life that stand out in her
physician or from The Health Only typed manuscripts will be
memory: getting a record player,
Department C linic. The Pub is
reviewed.
Include your name,
her cousin getting pregnant,
covering
the
cost 0 f sho ts address, phone number and title
riding in a forbidden car -- that
administered
at
the
Health on a f.e pa~heet of pap~of her black friend's father, and
Clinic,
call
the
Health Drop off s
.
at Sligh y
e dreams she would have of
Department Clinic a t 786-5470 if Wgst, L 3229.
eing popular and loved, just to
you have questions.
name a few. The final chapter
Confidential help is avai lab le
describes her final loss of her
24 hours a day from the Crisis
best friend Bonna . She has just
Clinic, which will refer you to
entered the seventh g rad e, and
one of the many human service
a new world; a world where
organizations
In
Thursto n
they can no longer be friends,

a

because Bonna is black.
This is a fragmented novel.
There are huge sections of her
life that we know nothing about.
But it is, I believe, a very
worthwhile book to read, and an
enjoyable one. If you 've lived a
sheltered life, this will give you
a good idea of what life in the
city is like for a semi-educated
girl from a low-income, broken
home.
And, it will show you
why we still have prejudice, and
why, when you are diff e re nt,
you always get picked last for
kickball.
At any rate, if you
don't like il, you won 't hav e to
suffer for very long: the nov e l
itself is only 78 pages lon g.

CLASSIFIED ADS





CLASSIFIED RATES
30 words or le..--53.00
10 cents for each additional word
Pre-payment requested
Classifi,d deadline--2pm Tuesday
TO PLACE AD
PHONE 866-6000 x6054 or
STOP BY CPJ, CAB 306A
HELP WANTED

,

Thinking of taking some time from school?
We need MOTHER'S HELPERS.
Household duties and childcare. Live in
exciting NEW YORK CITY suburbs . Room
board and salary included. (203)
622.4959 or (914) 273-1626.
.

fOR RENT

NEED A PLACE TO LIVE? 04150 STILL
NEEDS SOMEONE TO CALL IT HOME.
BEAUTIFUL ROOM, CATHEDRAL
CEILINGS, WONDERFUL ROOMIES.
FEMALES ONLY: CALL AMY AT
866-8237 or X6114.
ROOM AVAILABLE IN STUDENT
HOUSEHOLD FOR MATURE NON·
SMOKER. RENT $215 INCLUDES
UTILITIES.
CALL 786-1649.
3 Bdrm DUPLEX. All electric. On 15
acres Fireplace. Includes appliances, $475
per month. $200 Deposit. UGRC inquiries
preferred .
357-9408
SIX BEDROOM gay male household has
openings for four roommates.

2

fireplaces, 2 baths, 2 kitchens. $250 plus
shored utilities.
943-2656
PERSONAL

HELP!!
During Spring & Summer Qtrs . I pion to
travel through Europe as port of a ca n·
tract on multi·cultural stud ies. I would like
1 or more people to travel with. If you
are Interested, PLEASE CONTACT
MERIAH 866-1965 or 1-107.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY & LOVE TO SOME
SPECIAL PEOPLE... Jenn ifer Rosen,
Barbara Nelson. James "Jamie" Boone
Jr., Grandma Marion L. Meecham,
Grandfather Roy Stillwell, Dan Snuffin and
Mott Carrithers from Darrel.
THE QUESTION and ANSWER
COLUMN NEEDS QUESTIONS TO
ANSWER. TURN THEM IN TO THE CPJ,
CAB 306A , ATIENTION DAN. THEY
DON 'T EVEN NEED TO BE TYPED, JUST
DELIVERED.
WANTED

FUTON FRAME, Double size. Good Can·
dition . CALL EVENINGS 943-9778.
fOR SAlt

SINGER TREADLE .•.•• rvic.d ONLY
$199. Also available other used sewing
machines from $49 . A-I S.wing Center
109 N . Capitol Way.
PETS

HANDSOME, GOODNATURED, YOUNG
MALE TRI·COLORED STRIPED CAT
DESIRES tONG TERM MEANINGFUL
RELATIONSHIP WITH HUMAN. CALL
NOW 357-5074. I COULD BE PURRFECT FOR YOUI

C ooper Point .loul1lal

Novcmhc,·:I. lfl8R

Page 19
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