The Cooper Point Journal Volume 14, Issue 2 (October 3, 1985)

Item

Identifier
cpj0368
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 14, Issue 2 (October 3, 1985)
Date
3 October 1985
extracted text
September 23, 1985

notebook

Cooper Point Journal

M 0 ND A Y

h' .
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I elebration honoring the twentieth anniversary of the creation of the National Endowment
ARTSWEEK begins today and continues through the 29th. T IS IS a nallona c

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f om
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h
r ss meets a J a anese architect at Hiroshima and for 24 hours love provi es escape r.
Hiroshima, Mon Amour is presented by the Olympia Film Society. A Frenc act e ..
d t" P d the influence of memory on present reality. In French with English
dark memories Director Alan Resnais explores the effects of war on the human Spirit an Ime an
d'
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subtitles. 6:30 ~nd 9:00 at the State Theater in Olympia. Tickets are $4.00 general, $2.50 for members an semors.

October 3, 1985

Issue No.2

Vol. No. 14

for the Arts.

TUESDAY
Tuition lind Fees due by 3 :45 p.m. Pay at cashier's office, first floor of the Library.

WEDNESDAY

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,
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f
Act Coalition an alliance of 34 ratepayer and environmental groups which represents the
Sierra Club Meeting presents a spokesman from the North;est ons~r~a \O~ffordable ener~y future looks like. Olympia Timberland Library, 7:30 p.m.
citizen's voice on energy issues. The speaker Will present I eas on w a an
.
h WI' ton Center for the Performing Arts Wednesday and Thursday. Presented by the Olympia Chorale and Light Opera, this is
H M S Pinafure continues at t e a s ling
86
th~ sh;w that launched the partnership of Gilbert and Sullivan. Tickets are $12/$9/ $6 . Call 753-85 .

FRIDAY
Last day for withdrawal with 100 percent refund.

.
S
d I
h
d
.
.
.
.
is $25 for all workshops, Friday and Saturday recepuons, atur ay une ,an
Probike '85 NW will be held at the Vance-Tyee ~nn m Ol'ym~a sept.2~7 C 21~9~~~~;a~~: is an opportunity for northwest cyclists to meet with experts, educators, and clubs.
Sunday brunch; workshops only for $15. Registration deadlme IS Sept. . a
.

SATURDAY

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.

.
. ton Center for the Performing Arts as a highlight to ARTSW~EK and as an openmg celebration for
Governor's Arts Awards Will be presented Sept. 28 atthe w.~~~m~
d f r their outstanding contribution to the arts in Washington. The general pubhc IS Invlled to
the Washington Center. Six individuals and organtzatlOns WI
e onore 0
.
attend Saturday evening. For tickets and more In formatIOn call 753-8586.

SUNDAY

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M . b E
Kay and Dusty Rhodes Generica Muslca , and many others. A lso tours ot the farm, a pie contest, magic,
Harvest "air '85 at the Evergreen Organic Farm. USIC Y ppo,
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food, a raffle. and boots from many organizations. Lot's 0' fun.

FUTURE EVENTS
.

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' .'

f 60's ado lescelll"C il1 this rock n' roll romance. MUSIC by the Supremes, 4 Seaso ns,

Rah~' , It's Yuu prese nt ed by Th e Olympia ,Film Societ y. Say le, c~ l~tures tl:e ,e,sence$~ 00 enera l. · $2 .50 lor members and Seniors.

and th e Righteo u, Brolhers. Oc tober 7 al 6:30 and 9:00 at the St,lte. rlc kL!.' ar c
Th~

.

g

· h ten , t'
' October 8, 12 - I p.m., in Red Square. FREF:.
RO)'aI L IC
em ", ..If C'IIS
. p C' rl'or I11'., ·ruesdav.
,

CONTESTS

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I ' ll 11111 t)oleil ('llltilral C~n l c r , .. 22 Firs l Strl'el, Eureka , Caht o. rlll a, 95501 . T
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pellt. .lPn Srlllilsorc d tWill'
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'urthwest PIt"I"j(r~ph) (;nmllC llli()n " a JLlrlcl lO in
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." .. . "1 gl l111 pr l'III color print I)holo-sl'ulpture, blu e prmt, photo -co 3ge, etc ... ntl~
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include the re turn sh lPprngam In s uranl e .~ es ,
. ' ' dis la Plca,e make s ure there is a wire or secure hangmg devlcc. The se lecte entfi CS WI
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wo rks must he fra mcd hehl11d glass or pleXI~~3dss aTnhd read~lt~: a,j pY:r cent comm i", io n O il al l works suld. Ca ll 707-442-26 11 .
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. . h 85 / 86 Int ernational Year of Peace . Prospectus available.
. . .
he theme of PEACE. The y are we coming In I e
<.;aller)' 210 1' 2 is soiicilill g work for a jllJ'led show In October on I
Cal l 352-0193 .

ART GALLERIES

..

.,
. i "Noise from the Neighbors", is "conversation made visab\e." The images are nOI-qulle-reahty
Gallery 210\1, presents Lhisa Reish through September. Lhlsa s exh~~ I,
k' I d drawings paintings and constructions. Open from 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Fnday
in graphic blacks and whites, and in colors both subtle and harsh.
e wor IRC u es
,
,
through Sunday, and during lunch hour .
.
.
through Sept 28 with an exhibit of new large pastels, serigraphs, and linocuts. Joyce IS from Eugene, OR, studied
The Marianne Partlow Gallery presents Kaeey J oyee .
. .
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in Oregon, Spain, and Italy, and her work shows the IRfluence of Picasso and post-Cubism .

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OPAS. I•
"Welcome Back, Evergreeners
------------------------------------.943'5332"

Can you
draw this?
If you can, then a prestegious
position awaits you at the Cooper
Point J ourna!.
We're looking for a Jew fine
y.oung" pefJple who. like to .dr.(J-w.
We'll set yatJ to your craft and
publish your work. Credit can even
be arranged in exchange for thIS
valuable service.
Come on up

10

CAB 306 and see

if you can draw a crowd.

President Olander seeks' governance
input for guidance of the college
by Dennis Held

we'll have some hard data to work
with. "

While The Evergreen State College is experiencing some difficulties
due to increased enrollments and
budgetary cutbacks, this year promises to be "exciting and
rewarding ...

Gonrnance and the adolescence
of the Evergreen State College.
(page 2)

A more pressing problem for
Olander might well be maintaining
Evergreen's commitment to excellence in the face of higher
enrollments and relatively fewer
funds. Stan Marshburn, Assistant to
President Olander, says the
budgetary cutbacks were severe. The
Washington State legislature approved funding increases of under
six percent for the biennium which
began in July of this year. "With in creased enrollments, to provide the
same level of services that we provided last biennium would take
about $34 million," Marshburn
said. "Since we've been granted
$32.8 million for this biennium,
we're actually about $1 .2 million
short, at current service levels ."

HNext year I
want to devote
myself to two
things, development and
academic
matters. "

, [A Disappearing Task force, or
DTF, is an on-campus committee
which is formed to solve a specific

WashPIRG offers students a
way to affect decisions controlling their world. (page 2)

After these problems are addressed, Olander said, he would like to
become more involved in other areas
of campus administration. "Next
year, I want to devote myself to two
things, development and academic
matters ...

That's the opinion of Evergreen
President Joe Olander, who spoke to
a group of about a dozen students
at this year's first student forum on
Wednesday, Sept. 23.
Olander's optimism stems, in
part, from a series of programs he
has initiated in an effort to more
clearly define the needs of Evergreen
students, and of the community as
well.

"The issue of governance OD campus is something that needs to be addressed immediately," Olander said.
"I've asked students, faculty and
staff for input in forming a Disappearing Task Force to study the issue
and to make some solid recommendations. By the first week of October, I hope to have a group
together to address the situation."

INSIDE
INSIDE
INSIDE

photo by Aaron Zulliger

President Olander outlines his concerns and hopes Jor Evergreen .
problem, and is dissolved when a
solution to that problem has been
accomplished.)
Olander said another top priority
is implementing a comprehensive
planning program for the college. "I
intend to set up a strategic planning
process that would look into the
kind of college we have become, and
where we are going," he said. "That

kind of long-range planning hasn't
happened here in 14 years."
The third major area of concern
for Olander is identifying the needs
of prospective students in the state.
"I have commissioned a needs
assessment of higher education ·m
the state," he said. "That survey
should be done by Christmas, so as
we begin to make long-term plans,

Letters from our readers. (pages
3 - 4)

Pies were happily co nsumed at
a Harvest Fair contest. (page 5)

To deal with the cutbacks. the
Division Managers of the variou s
departments on campus presented
Olander with suggested cuts. From
those recommendations, Olander
formulated a package whi<::h he
presented to the Board of Trustees,
who passed the recommended
budget on July \0.

Carloons galore (page 5)

Bag 0 ' reviews give a miriad of
opinions. (pages 6 - 7)

Despite what might appear to be
a gloomy economic picture, Olander
said he is " looking forward to a very
exciting time in the history of this
schoo l. With revised governance
procedures in place, ,md some longrange planning established, I can get
down to the business of having some

Darrell Saxton and news of th e
soccer and sporting scencs orEvergreen. (pages 9-11)

Notebook of events (page 12)

fun. "

E.F.L. explains American ways to students
by Lee Pembleton

Students from around the world
come to America and Britain to
learn English, and there is now an
E.F. school opening in France for
English speaking students. The
schooling consists of twenty-four to
thirty lessons a week on English
language and culture. Students take
excursions around the area, and get
to meet fellow foreign students learning t he English language .

What is E.F.L.? What do these initials really stand for?Those questions have been on the tongues of
many Evergreen students this year,
and, at last, they can be answered.
E.F.L. does not have a meaning
in itself, it is apparently just
Evergreen slang, derived from E.F.,
Europeiske Frienskolan, Swedish for
European Study and Vacation
school, and E.S.L., English as a SeStudents stay in America for at
cond Language, the type of instituleast two weeks, with each two week
period costing five hundred and
tion E .F. is.
seven dollars (this price is for 1986) .
E.F. is the largest E.S.L. program
This includes room and board, inin the world. 'It was started twentytellSive language classes, and planntwo years ago in Britain by a Swede,
ed activities and excursions .
and has now spread across the free
world, with a number of students
E.F. also has a high school study
coming to America to learn. There
program, in which high school
are four E.F. institutes in America,
students spend s summer in a foreign
one in each corner of the U .S. : At
country living with a sponsor family.
the Evergreen campus, at Upsala
University in New York, at the
Right now, on the Evergreen camUniversit.y of Miami in Florida, and
pus there are 29 E.F. students,
at the U.S. International University
however, earlier in the year, there
in San Diego. E.F.'s main office is
were as many ~1I!i ?1.]hf stu~e"-~ li~e . .:.
located
in
Santa
Bar!>ara,
-.
"
- ~oil the, third and fourt hfl oors 0 fA
California,

dorm, and attend E.F. classes Monday through Friday from nine to
three, with an hour and a half lunch
break at noon. Their classes vary
widely, from grammar lessons and
language labs, to movies and lectures
on regional fauna', history, and
culture, induding a class titled
"How to. Survive in the U.S.A .",
something a lot of American
students should take.
Both the E .F. program staff and
the E. F. students have been pleased
with the Evergreel' campus and their
receptions here, and if you have the
chance, stop and talk to one of the
students, they are all personable and
friendly .
Hopefully, later in the year there
will be some joint E.F.-Evergreen
events, which should give everyone
a chance to meet and get to know
each other better .
If you still have questions about
E .F., or would like to be involved
with it, please contact Nancy
Mueller, E.F. Program Director, in
!~e Semina:~ Building, room 4!56 .
,
ext 6423 "~

phOIO by Aaron Zulliger

, AJl?erto

Rtlfn~s

EscojO isa student from
,





Me~ico


jlere. with

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E.,.F. ,

(

NONPROrtT OR C.
THE EVERGREEN
STATE COLLEGE
Otympia, WA 98505

U.S. POSTAGE

PAtD
OLYMPtA. w/\
PERMIT NO .65
L---

editorials

October 3, 1985

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL



Let your voice be heard In WashPIRG
by Allison Narver & Eva Shin agel
What kind of responsibility do we
as students have towards our community and state? Is it possible for
students to make changes in favor of
citizens within the political realm?
YES and students working with
WashPIRG are showing how possible it really is! WashPIRG
(Washington Public Interest
Research Group) is a leading en·
vironmental and consumer advocacy
organization for the citizens of
Washington State. The unusual and
exciting thing about WashPIRG is
that it's completely student run.
Now in it's third year at Evergreen,
WashPIRG has been involved in a
wide variety of activities. Last year,
students working with WashPIRG

kept the WPPSS cost overruns from
being tacked on to homeowner's
utility bills. This saved the average
ratepayer two to three hundred
dollars a year.
WashPIRG also put a two year
ban on Mandatory Local Measured
Phone service. The phone companies, Pacific Northwest Bell and
GTE, wanted to replace unlimited
local dialing with a mandatory service that would have been like having a pay-phDne in YDur living rDDm.
Phonebuyers would have been
charged for the length, the time and
the distance of every local call. For
the elderly, sma ll businesses and the
homebound, this wDuld have been
potentially disastrous. Students
working with WashPIRG did
research on the effects of this service

and found that 65 percent of the
senior citizens of the state would lose
their phones if the service was im- .
plemented. This year WashPIRG
will be working towards a permanent
ban on mandatDry measured service
and will protect fair and affordable
phone service.
Last year the proposed radioactive
waste dumpsite at Hanford was a
major focus of activity. Evergreen
students working as legislative interns wrote and passed a bill called
The 1985 Radioactive Waste Act.
This mandated that Washington
state do independent research on the
suitability of Hanford fDr hDusing
the nation's nuclear waste.
Hanford, a pressing environmental concern for Washington state,
will continue to be a major concentration for WashPIRG. Hanford is

Slides show real face of
Salvadorian people's plight

being considered because it is a
pDlitically easy choice. The government already owns the land, lowlevel waste has been stored there for
years, and the Rockwell Corporation, which is studying the feasability
of the sites, stands to gain a multimillion dollar contract if the' site is
built.
The site at Hanford, no matter
how politically easy, is a bad
geological choice. The site lies just
6 miles from the Columbia River,
5-10 miles from an earthquake fault
line and is built on a basalt deposit
which is porous vDlcanic rock making seepage more likely. BDth the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
and The U.S. Geological Survey
have estimated that within as short
a time as twenty years, the waste
could seep into the Columbia River-contaminating both Oregon and
Washington with highly toxic waste.
WashPIRG is working to ensure
the safety of the citizens of both
Washington and Oregon be
protected-the safest site possible for
the storage of the nation's high-level
nuclear waste must be found.
WashPIRG will work again this year
doing research and putting pressure
on elected Dfficials to disqualify the
site at Hanford.
WashPIRG will also be working

this year on The National Students
against Hunger Campaign. Student
groups across the country will be
wDrking in coalition with USA for
Africa to do fundraising, IDcal community projects and educatiDnal
forums on hDW to affect hunger in
Africa and the United States. October 16 has been designated Worl<;\
Food Day by the United Nations and
a hunger campaign committee is
working to set up various fundraising and forum events for the day-including a mid-day rally and foodbanking. Anyone interested is invited to get involved.
Again, WashPIRG is completely
student-run. There is rODm for
anybody concerned with environmental issues and the rights of
consumers to participate. Involvement can take many forms--from
hanging posters, to writing press
releases, to lobbying in the
legislature. Together, as students we
can continue to have a real influence
in the future Df Washington State,
and its policy decisions. We can
make a difference.
For more information on the
Hunger Campaign, Hanford or
other projects, stop by the office at
4158 Seminar Building or call ext.
6058.

such pOlitical expression . For example, in 1980 the army invaded the
university. Students and teachers
were killed, and millions of dollars
of damage inflicted during the four
year occupation.
The El Salvador we experienced
this summer is not the same country that is described by the U.S. administration and niass media. The '
supposed democracy there is actually
by Ch ris DarrDw
a stMe of terror, imposed by the
U.S.-backed military.
I went to El Salvador because I
On November 7. Antonio and
wanted to learn about the role of
Rodolfo will be at Evergreen to talk
higher education there in the strug·
gle for social change. For two weeks,
about what it means to be a student
come in. I'm asking for mail. From
by Dave Peterson
we lived and worked with members
in El Salvador's "democracy" and
you. All of you. I'd like nothing betthe role of U.S. students in addressof AGEUS, the national students
ter than to be buried under a avalanHave
you
ever
seen
something
in
ing U.S. Central American policy.
association. Among them were An·
che
of your opinions about gover·
the
Cooper
Point
Journal
that
anAlso, at 8:00PM on Tuesday, Octonio Quezada and Rodolfo Rosales,
nance,
guns, politics, faculty, budget
noyed
you
so
much
that
you
wanted
the president and vice president of
tober 8, at the Corner Cafe, I will
cuts, add infinitum.
to write a lettj:r? Probably. Have
give a report on our trip to EI
AGEUS.
Surely there's something around
you ever done it. Probably not. And
Salvador, followed by a discussion
Both Antonio and Rodolfo were
here
that YDU particularly like or
there
VIle
seem
to
have
a
problem.
on U.S. policy. I n addition, help is
among eleven students, faculty and
dislike.
Something that you rant to
Every
day,
the
mail
finds
it's
way
needed
in
bringing
the
Salvadoran
staff whose names appeared 011 a
your friends about on a regular
to my desk. There's usually quite a
students here. Please take this opdeath list published in the
basis, and that they're getting tired
bit of it. Unfortunately, not much
portunity to become infDrmed about
Salvadoran press in July. Antonio
of
hearing about. Just send some
of
it
is
interesting.
It's
mostly
press
Central America,and to learn ways
had been shot at days before we
ranting
my way. Or better yet, send
releases
and
promos
for
things
that
to become involved.
came, and a report that he had been
a rational, well thought out discusare either too far away, or cost too
much money, or just aren't very in- sion my way. It might well wind up
in print and you'll be a celebrity.
tcresting.
Here's one more way you can
Occasionally, something as amusbenefit society. The CPJ is looking
ing as a request from NATO (the
for good editorial material. I'd like
North Atlantic Treaty Organization)
to see some good opinion essays
for free advertising space turns up.
from our readers make it to the
But not very often.
editorial
pages, but first they have
What
I
usually
do
when
I
get
the
A
sccond
approach
to
the
issue
of
that
the
students
do
not
have
the
by I{ . Paul T yler
to
make
it to our office. This is a
mail is look for envelopes that have
governance, or lack thereof, has authority to make the fina l appointsuggestion
to students, faculty, and
not
been
addressed
by
a
computerizsprung up from the grassroots . Over ments of their representatives to the
The Evergrecn State College is fifo
anyone
else
who would like to try
ed
mass
mailing
system.
I
search
for
DTF. They feel that this is an exam·
the course of the summer, concernteen years old, deep into its adoles·
their
hand
at
editorial writing.
mail
that
looks
like
it
might
be
a
ed
students
began
to
meet
on
a
pie
of
just
how
little
real
power
cent years. And, like many an
Just send your submissions to the
"letter to the editDr".
regular basis to discuss the collapse students currently have in the deciadolescent, certain aspects of its per·
Sometimes I find one or two, but CPJ, CAB 306, and we'll see what
of meaningful student participation
sion making process and how much
sonality are not what its proud
wonders we can work.
IIOt
ve~ often. That's where you
in the governance process. Although - needs to be done if students are to
parents had hoped they would be.
not a body with any statuatory or
become a real fDrce, capable of
Of particular concern to many,
administrative authority, the
shaping the decisions that will affect
students, faculty and staff alike, is
The Cooper Point Journal is published weekly for the students, staff
their futures.
Wednesday forum is, at present, the
the issue of governance; how deciand faculty ul Ihe L:.vcrgreen State College. Views expressed are not
The summer participants of the
only place on campus where students
sions are made and who makes
necessarily those of the college or the Journal's staff.
can meet Dn a regular basis to discuss
forum were uneasy about developthem. The Evergreen Council, the
Advertising material cDntained herein does not imply endorsement
ing any set of procedural rules or
their concerns. Any student is
body mandated in the college's adby the Journal. The office is located at The Evergreen State Co llege,
welcome to attend these sessions and
issue agenda before classes
ministrative codes to fulfill this funcCampus Activities Building, Room 306. The phone number is
is free to bring their ideas before the
reconvened for the fall. Their overall
tion, has proved to be a dismal
866-6000, X6213. All announcements must be double-spaced, listed
failure . During the summer, college
group.
sense of the situation was that, not '
by category, and submitted no later than noon on Monday for that
Despite its informal status, the
having the opportunity to. draw
president Joe Olander and the Board
week's publication. All letters to the editor must be typed, doubleWednesday forum has achieved
members frDm the entire student
of Trustees suspended the Council
spaced, limited to 250 words, signed, and must include a daytime
some recognition frDm the adbDdy, they did not have the moral
pending major reforms in the goverphone number where th e author can be reached for consultation on
ministration and made its first tangiauthority to invoke any set format.
nance process . To quote Olander,
editing for libel and obscenity. The editor reserves the right to reject
ble contribution to the governance
Now that classes have resumed there
this process "ain't working."
any material, and edit any contributions for length, content, or style.
process at the meeting of September is every possibility that the fDrum
In response to this crisis of
Letters and display advertising must be received no later than 5:00
25. The 34 persons who attended
representation, Olander has called
will seek to formalize its procedures
p .m. on Monday for that week's publication .
and expand its influence over the
for the creation of· a Disappearing
tended the meeting interviewed, or
Task Force, Dr DTF, to rewrite the
tODk testimony regarding, a slate of coming debate. Students now have
Editor: Dave Peterson
candidates for the student positions
the pDtential of getting in on the
Covenant on Governance IV,
Managing Editor: Michael Tobin
(COGIY); the administrative code
on the governance DTF. After a
ground floor Df a new era on the
Photo Editor : Aaron Zulliger
Evergreen campus. The forum will
that provided the structure for camsomewhat lengthy, and at times
Production Manager: PDlly TrDut
pus government. A DTF is a unique
chaotic discussion, a slate of seven
continue to meet every Wednesday
Poetry Editor: Paul Pope
- - 'Evergreen irrstirution, -a committee . -tandidates . was selected~ ~ 'these J~ at J\2dOjn CAB 104.
Advisor: Virginia Painter
• ,
,
nominees will lie pre'sented to 'G'ail -,
that addresses and - issue, makes
Writers: Irene Mark CBuitenkant, Catherine Commerford, David
Martin, vice president in charge of
recommendations, then disbands. It
George, Dennis Held, Lee Pembleton, Paul Pope, Bob Reed, Polly
student affairs, who will choose
is composed of members from the
Trout
The students nominated by the
which of the candidates will sit on
student bDdy , staff, and faculty.
ProductiDn Crew: David George, Dave Peterson, Michael Tobin,
Wednesday forum to. serve on
the DTF. Formerly, student reps to
This particular DTF will be faced
Jenny Wortman Shepherd
the governance DTF are: James
DTF's were recruited by faculty and
with the massive task Df making sugBusiness Manager: Karen Peterson
Martin, Nancy Koppelman,
staff. This is the first time that a stugestions for restructuring campus
Ad Manager: David George
Nina Powell, James Mershon,
government . Olander has set a dent group has chosen its own slate
Distribution: Dennis Snyder
Mandy Goldberg, Jay Saucier,
December I deadline for the DTF's of candidates. SDme members of the
Typist: Paula Zacher
and David Koenig .
forum expressed disappDintment
report .

Chris Darrow is an Evergreen stu·
dent who went to EI Salvador this
summer with a delegation of
students and teachers sponsored by
the United States Students Association . He will give a report and
slideshnw of his trip at 8:00 PM on
Tuesday, October 8, at the Corner
Cafe.

killed was leaked to the press while
we were there.
In the I1opongo Women's Prison
San Salvador, I met an eighteen year
old woman who had been captured
by the army six months earlier. I asked her why she was being held.
"Because I am a student," she said.
"Here, learning is dangerous. To
think critically is a subversive activity". At the Mariona Men's Prison,
met another student, Oscar Chavez.
He. was one of nine students imprisoned in June for participating in
a demonstration.
We were able to obtain Oscar's
release by bribing a judge, a standud practice in EI Salvador's
"judicial" system. The YOUllg
woman prisoner was not so lucky.
Like all Salvadoran politic.!1
prisoners, she is being held indefillately, without charges. COIl~titutional rights have been suspended under a state of siege.
RepressiDn is 1I0t new in EI
Salvador . Students and teachers,
among the most vocal opponents of
the government, have paid dearly for

CPJ 'editor asks
pen-pals to write

page 3

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

October 3, 1985

letters
Vandals
addressed

This letter is addressed to the insensitive person(s) involved in the
rape of the welcoming pole located
at the Library loop. This carving was
a gift to Evergreen, dedicated to the
memory of Native American faculty member Mary Hilla.ir. It was not
meant to be attacked, only admired
and studied. The broken drum stick
symbolizes that Mary's spirit can no
longer welcome thDse who pass by.
The stolen jewelry and sacred
feathers are in the hands of people
who don't even know what they
symbolize. If they did, they wDuldn't
have taken them in the first place.
We only ask that this welcoming
pole be respected in the manner that
it deserves, not as a toy for children
to vandalize. We hope that facilities
will finish their gift and make it
more stable, and that the administration take charge of their gift and put
a plaque out to inform folks as to
why we are graced with such a
wonderful welcoming pole.
Gary Wessels

Borrowed
time

Dear CPJ and/or Wilderness
Resource Center,
I regret leaving Evergreen and
Olympia, Wa. with unfinished
business such as I'll describe. Two
summers ago I worked with a forest
ecologist from the Olympic National
FDrest. We were doing forest succession studies in old grDwth forests in
the southern part of the Shelton

District, at the base of the Olympic
Mountains. As I remember, this area
was just east-northeast of Aberdeen.
Inside that area I worked within
some of the most beautiful, peaceful
and wise old trees I have ever experienced. They still haunt me. I
. have hiked much through the Olympics and Cascades, but this place was
special, extra special. After our week
was finished the assistant jicDlogist
informed us that the Shelton District
has plans to log that entire area
within 5 years. A few months later,
1 joined the Peace Corps and left
Olympia for the Philippines.
So now I live in the Philippines,
which like most of the 3rd world, is
largely deforested. I live in a valley
which was logged Df its tropical
hardwoDd forest about 20 years ago.
I am squatting with a tribe of
Negritos, trying to get rights to this
land and starting to make plans for
appropriate land use thrDugh CDmmunity development work. It is quite
a challenge, the 'kind that Evergreen
has prepared me for. But this unfinished business pricks my conscience. I lament the emminent death
of these old trees . From here, 1 appreciate the preservation of forests
within the USA and the people's
CDncern for their natural environment. I am trying to share that
awareness in the Philippines.
It is my hope that this letter will
spur some students and professors to
seek out the trees I have described.
Locally this area is well known for
hunting wildlife. Perhaps many are
not aware of the fate of this area,
destined for clear cut in the next few
years, if it is not too late already.
PhotDgraphing and documenting
this area for public awareness is probably all that is needed to start efforts for its preservation. I appeal to
you to help save some of these great
old trees. Our planet needs more of
them. As I remember, we figured
many of the larger trees to be about

800 years old. Once gone, they are
gone forever. Thanks for lending an
ear. Peace to you from the
Philippines.
forever green,
. Mary Friedberg

"No flies
on us!"
To the editor,
The caption on the Herald
Tribune, September 18, 1985,
AMERICAN
COLLEGES
ASSAILED ON CREATIVITY was
an aCCDunt of an "unusually
critical" repDrt from the Carnegie
Foundation for the Advancement of
Teaching. The report stated that
students frequently sit passively in
class, take safe courses, are
discouraged from risky or interdisciplanary research projects and
are discouraged from challenging the
ideas presented to them.
The report is a result of a two year
study by Frank Newman, a member
of the Carnegie board of trustees
and a former president of the
University of Rhode Island. The
newspaper wrote, "the report, while
insisting that U.S. higher education
still is the best in the world, attacks
the hierarchial structure of the
American college, in which professors often lecture in large halls to.
students expected to take notes.and
repeat the professor's wDrds in an
examination." It questiDned whether
graduates are able to be innovative,
to have the willingness to. take the

Irene Mark Buitenkant

Potluck
proposed
To Whom Are Concerned,
Why is Evergreen a unique learning institution? What's the big deal?
Evergreen is unique because it's one
of the only learning environmen ts,
or sanctuaries, of its type existing in
America, that concerns itself with:
co nscious evolution, political
ecology, appropriate technDIDgy,
nDn-violent cDnflict resolution, alternative governance processes, community relatiDnships and development, wholistic approaches to learning, and mDst of all, love . As opposed to the thousands Df SChODls
that are more fDcused on training individuals in a specific field, in order
to award them their degrees, so that
they may becDme a gear in "the
machine," follow orders well, and

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receive monetary freedom at the ex·
pense of third world countries.
What is a Greener? Greeners are
people in the Evergreen community
that concern themselves with their
relationship to the Earth, as a whole
system, their ' bio-region as an integral part of the whole, their
neighborhood as a growth center for
community development, and their
life style as a model ·for a sustainable
and non-violent future. Through
hard work, responsibility, and a passionate love fDr life, students, faculty and friends becDme greener and
greener. .. it doesn't just start to. burn
in your soul when you've CDmpleted
registration and gotten YDur I.D.
validated.
Why is Olympia a unique learning environment? Olympia is a CDntemporary melting pot fDr
humanists. It's one of the la3t places
to be develDped on Earth. It's the
capital of WashingtDn, a primarily,
federally controlled state . It's four ·
teen miles from Fl. Lewis, one of the
largest military installations in the
world, approximately 60 miles from
Bangor, a nuclear subma rine base,
60 miles from Boeing, and is in the
near vicinit y of other violence
breeders and nuclear waste creators.
It is the southern most part of
Puget Sound, which supportscountless species of birds, marine
mammals, finfish, and shellfish.
However, these sea-waters are suffering currently with contaminated
shellfish beds, dead whales, ' car·
cinogens in the tissues of other
marine mammals, toxic sediments,
Jnd diseased bottom fish .
Olympia is the home of many indigenDus people of a region we call
Washington. It has become home
for many Evergreen graduates, families and friends from around the

necessary risks, have the capacity for
civic responsibility and the sensitivity
to the international nature of the
world in order to be effective in today's society.
As a member of the TESC community my reaction is "there ain't
no flies on us". The pity of it is that
those criticised institutions are endowed with millions of dollars while
this school which has striven to. provide a fertile learning environment
such as is sought after by the
Carnegie educators is dependent
upon a shrinking state budget while
coping with inflationary costs of
running and institution.

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more lett er
world, and most of all it's the host
of many guests who come to learn
at The Evergreen State College.
In 1985 The Evergreen State College may go through many changes;
changes in governance, applying ap,propriate technology on campus,
and possibly in our van system
(created by students in 1978), the reevaluation of weapons on campus,
the re-evaluation of TESC beach
usage and "no fun" signs erected
last year, campus permaculture and
edible landscaping (as opposed to
non-indigenous ornamental plants),
evaluating TESC land usage and
development of new housing, a
sprinkling system for the organic
farm, the creation of campus-wide
recycling, and a closer look at how
energy efficient our campus is.
In order to focus on these issues,
as a family and community, and not
interfere with "the neverending
course-load," I propose we star!
acampus and community "speakeasy pot luck" every Saturday evening from around 5:00 PM until 8:00
PM, at the organic farm of fourth
noar of the Library. Anyone interested in starting this activity please
talk to me or call 943-8062. Oh
yeah ... Omnia Extares !-Let It All
Hang Oul.

Bike path
a danger ,
to cyclists
A new stretch of bicycle access
now runs on both sides of Mud Bay
Road to the Cooper Point Road intersection. Previously this section of
road was marked by potholes and a
narrow shoulder. Bikers went out of
their way to avoid this section of
road because of limited riding space
and speeding traffic. Now a newly
paved bike lane has been constructed
and once again a perpetual problem
asserts bikers . Fragments of glass
from bottles smashed by careless
citizens as well as large amounts of
gravel spilled by passing trucks,
force bikers to ride closer to traffic
near the white line. II seems ,ironic
the Bicycle Action Committee
(B .A.C.) newsletter (Sept. 1985)
justi fies that the problem has been
solved. Their headline "MUD BA Y
ROAD--A CYCLIST'S DREAM
COME TRUE" is somewhat
misleading. In fact, a process to
mitigate the problem has trodden
back to the initial problem--the illusion that bicycle paths connected to
motor ways will promote bicycle
sa fety and cyclist turnout.

Love,
Hemlock Coldsnow

Inmate


InquIres
To Ihe edilor.
My name is Millard Hurd and I'm
an inmate at the Indiana State
Prison. A fellow inmate, whose
hometown was Lacey, has led me to
believe that you might be able to
help.
I wish 10 advertise for someone to
correspond wilh. I'm alone and
lonely, I have no family and receive
no mail.
I'm 25 years old and a white male,
single, 5 fl. II in. and 195 Ibs. I have
light brown hair and blue eyes.
Lonely and in need of company.
I r you can help I promise to
answer each kind soul who responds
10 my plea. Thank you for lislening
and have a really nice day.
Re specl fully Yours,
Millard Paul Hurd
Box 41 • 32376
Michigan City , Indiana 46360

October 3, 1985

SCOOPERPOINTJOURNAL

Scholarships, linandal aid,
available tltrough computer seordJ$39.00. High school studenli, college
I~men, sophomores. Details:
Evergreen SdJoiorship Services, 401
II th Ave., Kirkland, WA 98033 or
call us, . (206) 822-6 m.

COMPUTER SPACE I have on
account wI I K blotks on the
D - System. Will sell that
space. Best Offer. Phone 866 - 3610
evenings, please.
USED FURNITURE (ouch $65.

Rediner $4t, End tables $12 . each,
(offee table $30. We also' have
severol Mise. Household Goods.
(all 754 - 7909 THURS - SUNDAY

Penlades-desuibe your goods, and
you moy have them returned. (all
David, ext. 6054.
remoiling letters from home!
Send self· addressed, stamped
envelope for inlonnotion and
application to 'Associates'
Box 95 - 8
Roselle, N.J. 07203
HOME -

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end, tastebuds well saturated.
The judges staggered away as they
adjourned to an upstairs room to
make their decision.
First prize was presented
to Toni Canova (Alumni) for her
Apricot Chess Pie. Business office's Evalyn Poff drew second
place with a fresh Pumpkin pie.
Third place was given to a Kentucky Bourbon Apple pie made
for the occasion by Rav
McMakcr. Congratulations!
A Tofu Peach Pudding pip and
Strawberry Rhubar~ pie .received
Honorable Mention. Also, t:le
winner of the Raffle for 'one
cord of Firewood' was Alice
Patience. This gives you fair warning that the competition is steep
but you each have the opportunity to bake a winner next year ...
As you can tell, a good time was
had by all. See you next year!

CiassifiedAD8

or
try our Garden-fresh

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400 Cooper Point Road

EXCHANGE:

Student's parents wan I to attend
Evergreen and trode houses wi
laculty or other Olympia resident,
Their home is in Morrisville, Po.
45 min . lrom Phily. (alleges, 30
min. from Princeton N.J. and I hour
to N.Y.(. by tmin.Begin. X- Mas.
lorol info: (hristion 866 - 9761,

,I' ,

The Harvest Fair "Pie Tasting
, Contest" had the judges flushed
as they sampled a wide array of
forty - five fresh-baked pies.
Prepared by the Evergreen public at
large; and held at the Organic
Farm last Sunday, this event 'took
the Pie' _ Two long, noble tables
were decked out with this
unbelievable assortment; from
Creamy Pear Munch to 12 kinds
of Apple Crunch. Sitting at a round
table, the five judges sat eager
with anticipation. Charted on a scale
of 1 to 5, they would judge the
crust, the filling, overall appearance,
and of course, the taste.

About twelve slices into the occasion, and, the judges lips began to
p~cker on a lemon - lime filling.
Washing down the remnants of each
with a cup of water, the judges
duty became clear; determination to
try 'em all. Half-way through', and
wiping his forehead, pie- judge
George Barner was heard to exclaim
"It's all concentration .....
Meanwhile back in the kitchen, a
quiet commotion had broken out as
several women and this writer unshelved the stash of single slices.
To truly learn, what ' was taking
place in the main room, while
George began doing jumping jacks
to restore vital energy. Would it be
the Peach Cobbler or Strawberry
Tart? "No matter how much you
like pie, 45 slices adds up." spoke
a
woman in
the crowd.
At the forty-fifth slice, this unique
treat for the taste-tester was at its

pro(e»lonlAl

Found. One knapsotk; containing
fine woven doth, , . il you've lost
such items, please contact David, ext.
6054.

ReseRvations
occepteb
open 7
baNS a LVeek

Arvid Gust

The first slice of pie, once
quartered, was passed around the
circle_ From there,it was delivered
to the kitchen for safekeeping.

Needless to say, our new bicycle
path at Mud Bay Road remains. A
solution to the problem addressed
would be to have the path regularly
cleaned. If you believe a bicycle path
needs to be cleaned or have any
other questions pertaining to bicycle
paths, contact Bob Lonsbery, Olympia Traffic Engineer, at 753-8314.

uenoUJn

by

tliiE..X..A..M..f...L..E.....N
..o..""_l.. :

Public Market/Swap Meet
at the Thurston County Fairgrounds.
Every Saturday, Sunday, and holidays
9 a.m.-4 p.m.
Sellers spoce available, starting at
$5.00
491-1669

pfzza

Judges fill up on 45 Harvest Fair pies

*CON~TITYTtONA '- COM IX

Unless bicycle paths are separate
from motorways the issue of annoying glass and gravel will always remain. Bicycle paths need to be
designed as separate entities away
from motorized traffic. With a
designated speed limit, pedestrians
and joggers could also use the path.
In Seattle, separate bike paths encot.:rage citizen usage and allow people 10 escape the confusion of the city. With $50,000 budgeted by the City of Olympia for road improvements, some of this money
should be freed for the construction
of individual bicycle paths running
in and oul of Olympia ,

Rhys Allen Webb

evergreen fun'OURNAL

page 5

&elt PUPI In Town
9 Shepard I Lobmdor puppies,
Born Aug. 151h. ond looking lor
homey homes. (011 me: 866 - 9253
evenings, please.
Excellent Income for
pari - lime assembly work.
For Infonnolion: coli us of
~12 . 7!1 - 8400 ext. 1500.
Massage Training for State
Lkensing . Weekend course 10
begin on November 1st.
(in prepomlion for Slate
Licensing Exam. in February.
(all Wendy Schofield 866-4666
Individual Treatmenl available.

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photo by Aaron Zulliger

Vendors display their wares lor students' perusol outside the CAB.

rrt1.tter

wtQ.'(be

page 6

reviews

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

by Catherine Commerford

is serving a utilitarian purpose, being equipped with hard hat and
ientacles.
Bruce Houston toys with social
statements through creating minisized assemblages within cubes that
have no titles or comments attached . Very tiny plastic figures, lighters,
metal balls, candles, marbles, pebbles, an egg, sequins, pez containers,
and colored candy are just some of
the objects found in these pieces.
These pieces are set up to move the
viewer very close to the assembled
scenes, to see what is being contained within the clear cases.
Therese May creates quilts from
stitched fabric and acrylic paint.
Although quilling is usually thought
to be a calm, domestic activity, these
quilts are certainly not calming to
look at. The quilts have become appliqued collages with another dimension . "Monster Quilt No.3" is an
examp le, including metallic co lored
paint over black velvet, as an addi -

October 3, 1985

October 3, 1985

Exhibiton proves to be a wonder-ful show

The Fantastic exhibition that is in
the Henry Art Gallery at the University of Wash ington through 27 October 1985', is as its title states-fantast ic . The show is wonderful in
its diversity, and in the sense that
wonder abounds. Some might call
the work represented here surreal, as
it depicts many facets of the mind's
eye. Six artists: Susan Aurand,
Clayton Bailey, Bruce Houston,
Therese May, Valerie L. Patten, and
Paul Pratchenko show worlds where
things are not exactly what they seem
to be . There is an outpouring of fan ciful invention and spirit.
Susan Aurand (faculty at The
Evergree n Sta te Co llege) shows a
,cries of seven charcoal o n paper
drawings that inten sify and magnify
natural environments that are in habited b y c hildr e n, c r a ne s .
peacoc k.. , a nd other su rprises . These
drawin gs penet ra te another world

that is not easily accessed. There is
a fine balance of form, content and
awe.
"Carrie and the Peacock" depicts
a child's innocence and curiosity at
being confronted by the peacock "s
full plume. A chi ld hides her face,
but not her eyes, behind a mask as
she crouches to view a world filled
with leaves and feathers. Leaves and
feathers abound in this and six other
drawings that ought to be seen. The
images represented speak for
themselves.
Clayton Bailey's robots fill a room
that resounds with conflict. These
full size robots are constructed from
aluminum, electronics and mixed
media. There's video, sound, metalmotion, and plenty of co mpetition
among the robots assemb led here .
"Rohug" appears as a gigantic
fro zen cockroach who buzzes and
clamors when pressed. Not to be
alarmed. There' s "Bug Zapper"
(situated in front o f" Robug") who

tion to the tradition.
Valerie L. Patten's acrylic on canvas paintings explore certain life patterns. These paintings are filled with·
conflicting patter{ls that co-exist
within the boundaries of the canvas.
Real-life scenes are given a turbulent
edge.

To all at Evergreen, welcom e
back. I would like to thank all who
attended last week's Thursday Night
Film for a ll your suggestion s. A
" hedule for this quarter shall appear
in the ne xt iss ue of the CP J .
Thursday Night Fi lms is an Sand
A spomored program established to
pro vide entertainment and information via the cinematic medium. Part
of our budget is dependent upon
ticket sa les that are es t imated during t he a nnual budget meetings [held
each spring]. As coordinator for this
~e ries, it is my responsibility to select
and promote film s that offer an attractive alternative to expensive
and / or distant film houses in our city. I I' you have any suggestions of
films you would like to see in the upcom ing year. or know of ways the
program can be bettered, feel free to

"Phoenix by Firelight, Phoenix by
Starlight" gives a smokey illusion of
a swan trailing into and through a '
rosebush (the blossoms are flaming)
that grows through lattice. There is
a fire that two children are seated
around. The flame's smokey vapors
rise to shape the bird that emerges.
The firelight causes shadowplay. A
little girl holds the stem of a flaming rose. From a distance, the petals
are cinders and the cinders are
petals. A little boy appears alarmed,
wi~ hose in hand, seemingly ready
to extinguish the flame. Each painting has its own visual narrative.
The visual narrative appears to be
what this entire exhibition is about.
Each artist is telling a story in this
collection of work that is wonderful.

[n "The Alien Arrives Finally",
a woman sits smoking in a chair
(that is yellow with pink shot
through) facing another chair (that
is electric zebra). The walls are green
with pink shot through. The fire
moves in the fireplace. Above the
mantel, there is a picture of a Jetsonlike female with white eyes . To the
right, there is a back room patterned with orange and blue curtains .
There is a great deal more patterned color which might sound as
though there is a tipped balance. Not
so . The compositions work to unify
what otherwise might be chaos.
Visual metaphor, dreams, and

contact me at my office, Library
show, but a closer examination
3215, during my office hours of shows that the messages he stresses
Mondays 9 to I; Tuesdays 12 to 5 are still valid.
and Thursdays 4 to 6.
When Worlds Collide examined
Unless otherwise posted, Thursthe need for selflessness as the forday Night Films are shown at 7:00
tunate few were chosen to take the
and 9:30 in Lecture Hall One at a
spaceship to escape the doomed
cost of $1.50 admission for all .
Earth from the unstoppable meteor.
With all this introductory stuff
In A tlantis. Pal frames his concern
out of the way, the second Thursday
for world peace around the decadent
Night Film of the quarter, playing
and power-hungry nation that was
tonight. can be accused of a lot of swallowed by the sea.
things . What it cannot be accused
Using his experience as a masterof, however, is being art. Actually,
ful puppeteer and animator, he was
the line between high art and high
responsible for some of the most
garbage is a fine one and Atlantis. . stunning special effects of his time.
the Lost Continent walks it skillful- Though he usually had a limited
ly in its ballerina army boots.
budget to work with ($500,000 to
. Director George Pal , Hungarian
one million) he made the most of it
puppeteer and director of sci-fi
and his films were, for the most part,
classics such as When Worlds Colfinancial successes.
lide and War of the Worlds may be
A tlantis, the Lost Continent is
known today as a maker of a lot of
definitely one of his lower budget
the films one might see on the late
films . Anthony Hall plays a Greek

made , they were the state of the art.
fisherman who is imprisoned when
he returns a maiden he has rescued
If you are interested in seeing what
Star Wars will look like to you in 25
(Joyce Taylor) to her island home of
Atlantis. What he discovers and
years, come see this film . The reason
I want to see it is to hear the poetry
works to escape from is a rich nation on the verge of collapse from
of the dialogue spoken in its
timeless, classic tongue. Actually, it
its excesses and whose diabolical
prince (J ohn Dall) wishes to unleash
looks like a cast of crew-cut
American B-movie actors reading
a terrible secret weapon upon the
lines of classic-sounding dialogue
world.
I f the names of the stars are unand sounding like a course in correct
familiar to you, fret not. Frank de
diction. It's truly transcendant.
Kova plays the aged king and EdNot to negate the importance of
ward Platt, The Chief of Get Smart
the heart of the story, but when I
fame, plays the peace-loving
stumbled upon this whilst flipping
Minister of Science.
the channels this summer, I could
Like an onion, there are many
not help but admire the consistency
levels of riches in this film. I f you . of the campiness of the film. The ardon't wish to See another "message"
tificiality of the sets and costumes,
film, there are the exciting action
the stilted, melodramatic acting, plus
scenes--many taking place in
the apocalyptic conclusion combine
wonderfully cheesy miniature sets.
to make this a real treat. Do not miss
this film as no one knows when it
Well, they may look cheesy by your
will next make an appearance.
and my standards, but when it was

terns that dances by like the gypsies
in the opening pages.

One Hundred Years of Solitude,
by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, is
available in paperback from A von
Books. 383 pages. $3.80 at the
Evergreen bookstore.
"It goes in like a whirlwind. and
out like a whirlwind."
One family's circular path over
the course of a century occupies the
focus of thi s extraordinary novel.
Charac ter 's rise,and fall, but always
following the etched paths of their
ancestors. and alway s in tormented
>olitud e'. This book is a steamy and
int ertwined iungle of events and pat-

r-

One Hundred Years of Solitude
follows a Brazilian family through
a century, from their apex of power
in a small village, to ruins. The
aut hor. Gabriel Garcia Marquez, is
a South American writer and winner
of the 1982 Nobel peace prize. This
book is a favorite of the Evergreen
faculty and shows up on many a
reading list. It deserves to .
One Hundred Years is written in
a c lear and flowing style; although
the plot and themes become increasingly complex, I found it easy to burrow through, thanks to the deft ski ll

of both author and translator. In
other words, don't let it's 4OO-odd
pages intimidate you: It's easy to
read.
One fascinating aspect of this
book is 'it' s insight into the South
American culture and mind . For example. Marquez accepts supernatural phenomena as an everyday
occurence and incorporates it into
his book. For a reader with an
American skepticism about mystical
events. these casual references to
amazing occurences is disconcerting,
yet the characters deal with the
phenomena coolly. For instance, this
passage:

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seen, classical. He pointed out
Mishima. and after a bit of looking
around, I bought it.
listen to Mishima you travel, corporeally and etherally. Not from
track to track, but from mood to
mood . The breaks between songs are
an integral part of the music, the
sudden end ing of "Temple of the
Golden Pavillion" dashes all hope,
and then with nary a chance for a
breath we are transported to the
seedy, false atmosphere of "Kyoko's
House" .

Collins' tnanic energy hits the
stage at Evergreen BallrooIll

Glass's skill for complex rythyms
and overlapping themes creates a
labyrinth of familiar sounds and
structures that are interlayed
throughout the album. These struc- . by Paul Pope

I f polyester is hip, then it must be
Albert Collins playing last Wednesday night at the Evergreen Ballroom
in Lacey. One fully charged blues
show opened by Olympia's own
Midnight Rhythm Band .
Albert Collins, premier blues
" guitarist for over 30 years, acquired
tures are similar to those of Dante's
a unique bare flesh on strings style
Divine
Comedy,
repeating
adapted from playing piano as a
themselves, but never saying the
child. Later to learn guitar from a
same thing .
cousin, developing a feel for that instrument without using a pick-Like any good symphony .
indeed Albert leaves no margin for
Mishima flows but never bores. But,
Mishima is not just for classical error. Legendary among blues affectionados, dubbed "Master of the
music lovers, it is for anyone who is
Telecaster"; his beloved Louise.
interested in music, and what music,
Albert's band, the Icebreakers,
in the future, will be considered
are in themselves a complete balls
classic. Mishima IS a very fresh
breath of air in the stale world of out blues ensemble enticingly competent on their own. The piercing
music.
tenor sax of Abb Locke drills

Melody
Lee

through your inner ear with a chilling accent to Albert's sub-zero riffs .
A generous assist by guitarist Coco
Montoya (a former drummer for the
Icebreakers) holding his own against
Albert's pantheistic leads. No containment for the buoyant energy of
Albert Collins who bolts from the
stage, playing manically through the
dancing audience dragging an extension cord some 50 yards long making a snake through the crowd. All
present were absorbed as his
. obsessive blazing notes launched a
relentless melodic invasion.
After witnessing his show it
becomes obvious why a l7-year-old
Jimi Hendrix had idolized him, and
at IS, Janis Joplin would journey
from Port Arthur to neighboring
Beaumont, Texas, to hang out outside Albert's recording studio. The
intensity of his show was not to be
spent on one set. During a short

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Cranking out a grinding
metal/funk indulgence while dueling
his self-sure bassist Johnny B.
Gadsen, they ended the show with
the rude awakening that the blues is
the mother of American music.

by Robert l1i~Clins

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With what should have been ex haustion, he once again mounts the
stage wreaking havoc on all the
known myths of blues in vengeful
fury. Then, dropping pace, a classic
blues story of sorrow and learning
to live with it. rendering Louise a
near human voice.

Wedding
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orders accepted by phone

break Albert leaned against a rail
near the bar. Tiring not of his enthusiastic fans, he wipes sweat from
his face and recants to a small
gathering of his first tour of the
N.W. in 1969 with Canned Heat
regarding this region as a kind of se cond home.

~


c:kf)tJ~ri'5~ •


• and teU them you saw it ••
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With Mishima, Glass has created
an atmosphere and a mood. From
the beginning, the listener is pulled
from his home to Japan, and from
one emotion to another. When you

One Hundred Years evokes fantasy so vivid that it becomes real, of
a race condemned to solitude in a city of mirages. It will eat your soul.
~

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

''Mishima is a
very
fresh
breath of air in
the stale world
of music. "

8 AM - 9 PM Daily
10 AM - 7 PM Sundays

Another interesting aspect of the
book is Marquez's theory of time.
He states that an extremely electrifying event can produce enough
energy to shatter the continuum of
time, causing apparitions to appear
over and over at the sight of the
event, much like a broken record.
Marquez uses this to overlap
characters from different times into
each other's lives.

~

4346 Sunset Beach Dr. NW

ing for anything that sounded in the
least bit intriguing. In a fit of
despair, I turned to the young man
behind the counter, and told him my
woes. After a bit of investigation, he
lead me over to a section I hadn't

Fresh Produce Daily

'They've killed my son• • she said.

"Colonel A ureliano Buendia
wrote it in his own hand. Then he
had a glass of lemonade and a piece
of biscuit that the novices were passing around and retired to a field tent
which had been prepared for him in
case he wished to rest. There he took
off his shirt, sat on the edge of the
cot, and atthree-fifteen in the afternoon took his pistol and shot himself
in the iodine circle that his personal
physician had painted on his chest.
At that moment in Macondo, Ursula
rook the cover off the pot of milk
on the stove, wondering why it was
taking so long to boil. and found it
full of worms.

I bought the new Philip Glass
L.P., Mishima. because I was sick.
Sick of Huey Lewis, sick of Mozart,
sickofO.M.D., sickofHuskerDu,
sick of music. I was wandering
around a record shop, forlorn, look'-

On the bus ride home I was still
worried; would Philip Glass really be
a breath of fresh air in the dank
dungeon of music? [ knew that Glass
worked with symphonies, and that
he is one of the most highly acclaimed pioneers of modern music, but
with the current deluge of blah
sound tracks I wondered if Mishima
would really be that different. And
then I got home and played it, and
then I played it again, my worries
completely dispelled.

Novel sets in as an emotional whirlwind
by Polly Trout

page 7

"Mishima" delivers
moody, magical feel

symbols live on Paul Pratchenko's
acrylic paintings. The canvases
beckon and challenge the viewer to
enter finely crafted fantasies.

Atlantis sinks tonight on the silver screen
by G regg Osborn

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

'.

,-

,

-This rate does not necessarily apply to students with
current loans.

"

poems & photos

October 3, 1985

AL

USURPIA

sports

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Saxton's enthusiasm benefits men 's' soccer team

Channeled along
in grubbery
tacking down
finishing words:
whom to owe this
planet's sadness ...
to touch
the painted?

by Bob Reed
Darrell Saxton lead the Evergreen
soccer team in its rematch with
Western Washington' University in
Bellingham Sunday. Western
defeated the Geoducks 2·1 on
Evergreen's home turf in a tournament earlier this season.

Selfish among the tender
and nondescript. Do you still
eat well against misfortune
or bother comfort a convenient love?

Saxton plays "libero" or sweeper,
a position requiring both offensive
and defensive skills . According to
Evergreen coach Arno Zoske, Sax·
ton is well suited for the position.
"Darrell is an outstanding
defender and is not often beaten,"
Zoske said . "He plays hard and
clean and is one of the driving forces
on the team."

HOLLOW EARTH THEORIES

This mutilated narration weaving
a fabric for decay. Conscience
writhing in complacency, in
hairstyle. Blistered by songs
mad carcasses in snow
some gentle Thesaurian horror.
Menagerie of host faked
and fellaheen browsing
through Marx (martyred
amateur days).

I know that the earth is a hollow ball
And that if I could stretch my arms far enough
I could touch China
It would be small and it would feel like
Icing on a cake
The people in China would be afraid
As my hand came down from the heavens
To wipe clean their mountains
I am not afraid that I cupped in the earth
I am secure in the knowledge that
This is all there is
This is my planet
There are no others
The seas are blue the clouds are white
And my earth is a hollow ball

My breath rolls out
drumming then pause,
a fading St. Petersburg.
A cold like Dostoevsky knew .
Suspense is my killing joke like
songs of your mothers' that held
conviction at bay.

Teammate Kevin Schiele said ,
"Darrell's ball-handling skills and
sense for the game make him a great
soccer player. More than that, he's
a real leader. He knows how to handle the freedom of his position. He
is a team necessity."
Saxton, 21, attended Woodway
High School in Mountlake Terrace
and played three years of soccer for
the school team. He came to
Evergreen in 1981. "My fIrst year we
tied one game and lost the rest,"
Saxton said. "We had a lot of fun

Slit~ering

back streets
a passion acquired while
tramping vague lands.
'Do I look like I have
spare change?'
My mother gave me no songs.
Just as well, a smothering
redundancy favoring
winters delay.
Smiling imp overed
(in the know) Urban
whispered: No taste for gluttony.
We are voyeurs
sharing a stoned last hint
a roof top revelry
parched lips
and radio
tired.

It's that time of month
~mtri(an

Old beer stale and cold
tasteless water on the window
refrigerator cold, empty
popcorn still in my pocket
it's that time of the month you know

§ntbologp

~~

International Publications
is sponsoring a

jiational ctCoUege fjoetrp ctContest
anthologized.

$100
First Place

CASH PRIZES will go to the top flYe poems:

$50

Second Place

$25
Third Place

$15 Fourth
$10 Fifth

AWARDS of free printing for ALL accepted manuscripts in our popular.
handsomely bound and copyrighted anthology. AMERICAN COLLEGIATE
POETS.

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Deadline:

\

Please bring your drawings, photographs and good writing to the Poetry
envelope outside of CAB 306. Please type your written work and include your
IlMI"'::;7" name and phone number on all submissions. Your name does not have to be
printed, but I need to be able to contact you.
I can return drawings and photographs if necessary, but please don't ask for
your written work back . There is a Xerox machine downstairs.
I appreciate all contributions, comments and critiques of the poetry page.
.
Paul Pope, Poetry Editor

)

~orts

- - Fall Concours 1985 - -

Px

Send $2.00 for catalog of
over 16,000 topics, to
assist your writing efforts and help you beat
Writers' Block. For info.,
call TOLL FREE
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Authors Research,
Room 600. N, 407 South
Dearborn, Chicago IL. 60605

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open to all college and univanity students desiring to have their poetry

David Henshaw

WRITERS' BLOCK
CURED
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page 9

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CONTEST RULES AND RESTRICTIONS:
1. Any student is eligible to submit his or her vena.
2. All entries must be original and unpublished.
3.
All entries must be typed, double-spac:al. on one side of the p.• only.
Each poem must be on 8 separate shaet and must bear. in the upPer left·
hand corner. the NAME and ADDRESS of the student as well as the
COLLEGE attended. Put name and eddrass on envelope also I
4. There are no r1IStrictions on form or,theme. Length of poems up to
fourteen lines. Each poem must have e separate title.
(Avoid "Untitled"" Small black and white illustrations welcome.
5. The judges' decision will be final. No info by phonal
6. Entrants should keep a copy of all entries as they cannot be returned.
Prize winners and all authors IIW1Irded free publication will be notified
immadiataly lifter deadline. I.P. will retain first publication rights for
acc.pted poems. Foreign language poems welcome.
l',
7. ""'- il" initial OM doll., ~~tration f_ for the first IIntry.nd.
fee of fifty cents for. uch additlonll poem. It is requested to submit
no more than un poems pet" entrIrIt.
8. All entries must be posb".,"'" not later th.,.. the . " . deadline and
. . . be peid. C81h. check or money order, to:
INTERNATIONAL PUBLICATIONS

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P. O. Boll 44044· L

The women's soccer team claimed its first win
since 1983 with a 6 - 0 victory over Western
Oregon State College on Saturday, Sept. 28.
The next day they again emerged victorious
in a close battle with Linfield by a score of
2- r. The" season record is now 2-1. Head
coach Jane Culliton and the team are excited
about their first league game this Wednesday
at Seattle Univers
men's soccer team
a strong
as they defeated Wiffamette and Seattle
University. The young team has nine starting
freshman and sophomores and only one
senior. The players' steady development and
improvement have helped them recover from
losses to Humboldt State and Pacific during a
trip to California. The men travel to Trinity
Western this Wednesda
e x-country teams
a string
successes this season . The meet in Portland
was the first time Evergreen has ever fielded
a full five member women's team. Babs {sak
and Franny Hearn have been fighting for the
top spot. The men, with assistance from
former national-calibre runner Art Kuebel, are
starting to scare other NAIA schools. Bob
Reed, John Kaiser, Jim Schultz and Baethan
Crawford all broke the school 10K x-country
record. They will be gunning for a strong
team effort this
on Wh'
Island .
Sponsored by Domino's Pizza

people: it was a good year. It gets to
a point where you don't, care so
much about winning: but just improving as a team."
During Saxton's second year, Ar·
no Zoske took over the coaching
reins. Saxton said Zoske took a more
disciplined approach which includ·
ed mandatory practices, adding that
this approach has made the
Geoducks more competitive with
other colleges .

Engineering Program. He is interested in alternative energy, par·
ticularly windmills and tidal power.
,According to Evergreen faculty
member Rob Knapp, "Darrell is soft
spoken, reliable and quite smart. He
1s friendly, steady and a good
coworker. The program depended
on cooperation. He helped make
that happen."
Darrell's enthusiasm and positive
attitude have been present both on
and off the fIeld. Zoske said. "he is

HIt gets to a point where you don't
care so much about winning, but just
improving as a team."
For his outstanding teamwork and
defensive play, Saxton was voted
one of the two most valuable players
by the coaches at the Evergreen In·
vitational Soccer Tournament. At
the end of the 1984 season, he was
awarded the District One Scholar
Athlete Award for his academic and
athletic acomplishments. His leader·
ship and positive example have con·
trbuted to the success of soccer at
Evergreen.
Saxton's academic pursuits have
followed the sciences, and he will be
applying in April to the University
of Washington
Mechanical

and exceptional student, person and
player. He is a gentleman on the
field, is mild mannered and has a
good sense of humor. He is a
pleasure to have around."
Teammate Kevin Schiele: "he's a
fun person to have at practices, has
a good personality and good sport·
smanship. It's easy to get along with
him." Saxton attributes his positive
outlook on life to his family and to
his humanitarian philosophy: "I like
being kind to everyone as much as
I can and helping out people. I like
smiles. They make everything
better. "

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page 10

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

more sportsCOOPERPrnNTJOURNAL

October 3. 1985

.Personal and public~
victories for greeners
by Bob Reed
Four Runners Break School X~
Country Record

I

Bob Reed, John Kaiser, Jim
Schultz, and Baethan Crawford
broke the Evergreen x-country 10
kilometre record at the Simon Fraser
meet in Vancouver, British Columbia. Reed placed 37th with a time of
33:27 and Kaiser was 39th with a
time Of 33:54. Schultz came in at
34:30 and Crawford at 35:26. Other
men competing included Tom Applewhite (37:33) and John Fritzler
(39:37). The women were paced by
the strong efforts of Franny Hearn
and Babs Isak. Hearn placed 25th
with a 20:39 clocking on the 5
kilometre course. Isak's time was
20:50. Tracy Stefan, Bridgette
Young and Laura Lewis all set personal records with times of 23:34,
23 :41, and 26:28 respectively. The
race was strenuous because of the
cushioning effect caused by the loose
bark surface. Hearn said "it was a
very padded course, making for
medium speed. Babs again pushed
me and kept going." Next Saturday,
October 5th both teams will be on
Whidbey Island for the Fort Casey
Invitational.



Women's SOtter Team Wins First
Game Since 1984
The women's soccer team rebounded from a loss to WSU last
weekend and took a pair of games
on the road. Saturday, September
28th they defeated Western Oregon
State College 6-0. Meg Gallie had
three goals, Maria Gonzales two,
and Erica Buchanan one. According
to coach Jane CaUiton. "our tel'lm

...

played well. Meg ' and Maria had
some g()pd teamwork. We had nice
passing, assists and shots." The
Geoducks defeated Linfield 2-1 on
Sunday with goals by Pringl Miller
and Meg Gallie. Culliton said "Linfield was a better team than Western
Oregon . We had opportunities to
score but didn't take good percentage shots. I feel much more confident about our defense. Gala Miller
had a strong game." Culliton and
the team are excited about their first
league game this Wednesday at Seattle University.

page II

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Men's Soccer Team Notches
Fourth and Fifth Victories
Kevin Schiele, assisted by Kevin
Dahlstrom, and Adam Casper.
scored goals as Evergreen defeated
Willamette 2-1 last Wednesday in
Oregon. According to coach Arno
Zoske "it was one of our best tactical efforts. We're becoming more
awafe of who's around us and getting better movement of the ball."
Zoske said that Kasper, Sean Medved, Steve Robbins and Jim Leingang
have all improved. Tim Joyce, Matt
Louy and Kevin Sciele had good
games. Zoske said, "we had more
thought and better concentration."
On Saturday the Geoducks defeated
the Seattle University Chieftains 4-1
in Seattle. John Small, Darren
England, Matt Louy and Kevin
Schiele had goals for Evergreen.
Zoske said, "we were a little bit more
patient on offense. We're doing
more of what we're practicing.
Overall it was an outstanding team
effort. All twenty players played and
contributed." The Geoducks travel
to Trinity Western, Wednesday, October 2nd.

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