The Cooper Point Journal Volume 14, Issue 15 (February 13, 1986)

Item

Identifier
cpj0381
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 14, Issue 15 (February 13, 1986)
Date
13 February 1986
extracted text
page 12

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

note

CPJ m,agazine inside: The Groovy Tooth

Tonight, February 6

Cooper Point Journal

Christopher Bingham will bring his jazz oriented lyric originals back to "The Corner" at 8 p.m. Bingham, a senior at Evergreen, will perform his own compositions
on acoustic guitar, with accompanying vocals. Admission is free, but donations will be accepted.
"Infiltration control in new buildings" is the title of the second workshop in a three part series sponsored by the Energy Outreach Center. The workshop covers sealing
measures such as "airtight drywall construction" and "air-vapor barriers." The workshop is from 7 to 10 p.m. at South Puget Sound Community College, Building
22, Room 216.

Issue No. 15

Friday, February 7
The Christian Science College Organization at the Evergreen State College meets every Friday at 3 p. m. in the Innerplace Office, Lib 3225.
Rebecca Johnson will speak abolilthe the Seattle Peace Chorus' journey to Russia at the Bread and Roses House of Hospitality, 1320 E. 8th' Avenue, at 7:30 p.m.
The talk is free and open to all. For more information on this and other programs at Bread and Roses, call 754-4085 .
Gail Martin, Vice-President for Student Affairs,has an open office hour for students every Friday from noon to one in L-3236.

IHigh tech, new policies
pushed for colleges

Saturday, February 8
The Greater Evergreen Student's Community Cooperation Organization [GESCCO] is organizing a downtown activities center. The center is intended to function as
an informal gathering place for studenls and community members, whi le also serving as a place to stage educational, artistic and political event~. If you are interested
in being a member of the Core Management Group, or if yo u are interested in selecting its members and otherwise participating in GESCCO, please attend this meeting
at 2 p.m. in the Timberland Library , west meeting room, 8th and Frank lin . For more information , see the GESCCO bulletin board at the CAB Information Center
on campus or call 357·3898.
Despair and Personal Power is the title of a workshop to be held from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Rotundra . Preregistration at Innerplace, Library 3225, X6145, is
encouraged. Paul Fink, cofounder of the British Despair and Empowerment Network, will facilitate. Late registration will be accepted between 9:30 a.m . and 10 a.m.
before the workshop. A sliding scale fee of $5-$20 is requested at registration, but no one will be turned away for lack of funds. Fre.e childcare will be provided by
the parents center, below the Rotundra.

by Todd Anderson
Recent changes in the make-up of
the higher. education bureaucracy
may give some clues as to what lies
ahead for the Evergreen State
College.
The status of Evergreen is in the
hands of the Washington State
Legislature. When making legislation, legislators often rely heavily on
the advice of pertinent bureaucratic
institutions. In this case, agencies
concerned with higher education
have a great deal of authority both
in a legislative advisory capacity and
over the schools themselves.
Compared to other states,
Washington has had a higher degree
of de-centralized authority in higher
education. While the legislature appropriates money and sets down
guidelines, much of the specific decisions have been left up to the administrators of the individual
schools.
For years the most important state
agency for the four-year schools was
the Council for Postsecondary
Education, created in 1969 under a
different name, the C.P.E. was
given the vague mandate to "define
and develop educational policy on a
continuing basis." However, its real
authoriy was limited and the 1985
.legislature voted to phase out the
t.P.E. because it was regarded as
structurally incapable of handling
the growing complexities of higher
education .
In place of the C.P.E. the Higher
Education Coordinating Board
(H.E.C.B.) was created with bipartisan support. The enacting legislation, Senate Bill 3376, gave the
board broader authority than the
C.P.E. had. It is tasked to identify
"roles and missions for each of the
four-year colleges and universities."
It is also empowered to approve the
creation of any new degree programs
and evaluate proposals for elimination of existing programs. Setting
admissions standards and recommending tuition levels were two additional tasks given to the board.

Sunday, February 9
Consorzio Musico will sponsor a benefit concert for Thurston County"s
East 20th in Olympia. The program will feature local artists such as Jane
ingfield, Ihe Olympia LEarly Music Consort, John Morgan, Tyler Reilly,
for families . Tickets are available at Pat's Bookery, Rainy Day Records,

Rape Relief and Women 's Shelter Program at 3 p.m. at St. 10hn 's Episcopal Church, 114
Edge, Loretta Wirsing, Aelred Woodard, Elias Lien, Peg Burroughs, Paul and Edith BennLilo Peter, Helga Teske, and Angela and Gwen Hall. Tickets are $5 for individuals and $10
Yenny's Music or from Safeplace by calling 754-6300. All proceeds will benefit Safeplace.

Monday, February 10
The Olympia Film Society presents the Gold Rush, written and directed by Charlie Chaplin . Showtimes are 6:30 and 9 p.m. at the State Theatre, 204 E. 4th, Olympia.
An extra feature, "Bill and Coo," an Academy Award Winner featuring an all bird cast, will also be shown.
Internship intent forms are due in the Cooperative Education Office, Lab I, Room 1000, by 5 p.m.
There will be a bake sale in the CAB to raise money for Tim Hunter, an Evergreen student who is going on the cross-country peace march.
Any baked goods donated to the sa le would be appreciated. Please bring them to the Cab at 10:30 Monday morning.

Tuesday, February 11

F....h Produce Dally

An auction of services will be held to raise money for the peace march at 7 p.m. in the Library Lobby. The event is designed to be a fun community endeavor which will serve the purpose not only of raising funds, but a lso of establishing a network of folks who support the peace
march. Please donate written services to be auctioned.
Campus Ministries Bible study, support group will meet at noon at Innerplace, L3225. Bring you r lunch.
Tax Consequences of Divorce is the subject of a talk given by Kathy Coombs, divorce tax specialist. Meeting space is provided by the Olympia
School District, Administration Building Room 304 at 1113 East Legion Way in Olympia.
Deadline to register to vote in order to participate in the March II caucuses. Go to the Information Center.

Wednesday, February 12
Wholistic Health Career Options workshop, from 3 to 5 p.m. in Cab 108, will feature guest professionals in wholistic health fields. For additional information, contact Cateer Development X6193, L12J3.
Camp Easter Seal will be interviewing for summer jobs from 10 a.m. to 2 p :m. in room 2102. Persons interested need to make an interview
appointment and pick up materials in the Career Development Office, Lib 1214.
WashPIRG's make "Our State is a Dumpsite" campaign meetings will be held every Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the 3rd noor of SEM, or call X6058

Thursday, February 13
The Power of Theatre presents "While someone Else is Eating" and an evening dinner. Events featured will be guerilla, feminist, Chicano
and erotic theatre, and music by Cause and Effect. Come to LIB 4300 at 7 p.m. Good food for all eating styles. Free childcare provided.
$5 donation. Call Susan at 866-0859 after 6 p.m. for more information.
Parenting skills workshop will present Shari Smith speaking on "Listening to Kids" from noon to I p.m. in the Rotunda.
Applications are being accepted from professional artists interested in participating in the Washington State Arts Commission's Artists-in-Residence
Program for 1986-87. Application deadline is March I, 1986. Applications are available by contacting the Washington State Arts Commission,
9th & Columbia Building, Mail stop GH-II, Olympia, W A 98504-4111, [206]753-3860.

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One element of the C.P.E . that
was saved was the High Technology
Coordinating Board, which
although it has a short lease on life
(due to be phased out in 1987),
legislators took special care to make
sure it fulfills its functions. The High
Tech board is tasked to advise the
H.E.C.S. when it reviews "new baccalaureate degree proposals." It is
a lso charged to "advise the institutions of higher education and the
H.E.C.S." as to the educational and
training needs of the high technology
industries.
High technology is one aspect of
a general emphasis on economic
development that many legislators,
and Governor Gardner, have made
their top priority .
Gardner, who was elected on a
platform promising to promote
economic growth, makes many of
the appointments to fill seats on the
H .E.C.B. and High Tech Board. He
has said many times over that he
views higher education, including the
community colleges, as vital
elements in any program for
economic growth in Washington.
This does not mean that the state
is going to completely revamp the
curriculum at colleges and universities overnight. "I don't think that
programs are going to change a great
deal," says lack Daray, legislative
assistant to Evergreen President
Olander. He did say he thought that
the colleges and universities may
work together more in the future,
"Maybe the six four-year public institutions will coordinate more in actions
concerning
economic
development. "
While the H .E.C.B. is still in the
organizing stages, it is sure to have
an important impact in the priorities
for higher education in Washington
State. While the Strategic Planning
Committee here at Evergreen had
been planned prior to the creation of
the H.E.C.B., its findings are certain
to be of interest to the board and will
help shape the agency's view of
Evergreen in its plans for overall
educational policy.

Reviewed to the Core
A group of Evergreen faculty and staff is doing a review of
Gore (previously known as
Basic) programs offered at the
college since the 1980-81 school
year. The review group will submit its assessments and recommendations to an Institutional
Curriculum Review Team, and
the reports coming in from the
two groups may have a significant impact on ·Core offerings
in the future.
HELP IS NEEDED FROM
STUDENTS
IN
COMPLETING THIS REVIEW. A
questionnaire has already been

Aura Readings
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THE EVERGREEN
ST ATE COLLEGE

and candy on Valentines Day ...

Olympia, WA 98505

We also have an incredible assortment of beautiful cards for your Valentine

-. ,

Vol. No. 14

February 13, 1986

-

distributed to many students
who were in Core programs
prior to this year, and additional copies of the questionnaire are available at the
Reference Desk in the library.
If you were in a Core pro·
gram before fall quarter, 1985,
and have not yet completed one
of these questionnaires, please
do so soon. Your judgments are
important.
Quesfionnaires may be
returned to the Reference Desk,
to Betty Estes, LAB II, or to
Paula Buchko, LIB 2211.

"We Three" performed Saturday, February 8, at Evergreen. For a review of
the show, see Groovy Tooth, 'beginning on page seven.

CAB III stirs concern
by Kathi Durkin

issue of Cab II being out of the main
cording to Steve Hunter. this year's
flow of traffic, you can ease some
fall head count was 2,980 students
of the problem by putting sliding
Concerns were expressed over
with the full-time equivalency of
glass windows in the offices that
CAB Phase III at the February 5
2,761 students .
open into the mall area," Collier
meeting of the S&A Board, but Clay
The issue of the college being
said.
Zollars of the board and Paul Tyler,
obligated under a previous agreeIf CAB Phase III was im S&A Board secretary, are not going
ment to maintain the present number
plemented, the lobby on the first
to let the CAB Phase III issue die,
of student offices in the library and
- floor of the library building would
according to Paul Tyler.
CAB until 1991 was a concern of
be the new location" of the
"We need positive input from difMichael Hunstberger, of KAOS
Bookstore. The library lobby was
ferent directions, and I hope
radio, and S&A Board member
4,000 square feet and Dennis
students realize their longest associaBrian Seidman. "If the Board moves
tion with The Evergreen State Co llege will be as an alumnus," says
Tyler.
CAB Phase III, the proposal involving the move of the activity offices on the third floor of the library
to the space occupied by th e
David George
Bookstore, "was introduced as a
proposal to save students money,"
says Board member Pegi Lee. This
Snyder, manager of the book store on this (CAB Phase Ill) alternative
move would cost $400,000 compared
said, "We will be bursting at the
proposal right now, it's neither in the
to the $1.5 million estimated for
seems with the growth that is ex- interests of the long-range planning
CAB Phase II.
pected . We cannot go any smaller
nor good relations with the ad ·
David George, CPJ advertising
than the 8,000 square feet we now ministration," Huntsberger stated.
manager, voiced his concern about
have.
All proposals need studying, and
putting all student group offices in
The growth of the college has left
more involvement from students and
TESC with faculty office and
an area divided by partitions. "It is
student groups is ca ll ed for .
ridiculous. There would be no
seminar room shortages under the
"Everyone tells us what won't work,
privacy and it would be way too
present scheduling system, Steve
but
Clay and Paul are the only ones
noisy," George said.
Hunter, director of planning and
who have spent time looking into
10n Collier, architect consultant
research, says. 1985-86 was a record
other alternatives," says Lee. "I
for the college addressed the issue of growth year for the college, and
don't think we will find anyone
CAB Phase II being a "fiasco." The
there is a 37 percent increase over
solution that will be acceptable to
original 1978 proposal for the addilast year's applications . "With
everyone," she says.
tion on the third floor was drawn for
agressive activity on the college's
J3 offices, but that can be easily
part and the funds being available
According to Tyler , there are no
adapted into 20 by converting the
through the legislature, we could see
meetings on these issues schedukd
Cooper Point Journal and En3,250 full-time equivalent students
by the S&A Board. However, Ihey
vironmental Resource Center offices
or 3,700 total students by the end of
will be discussing the phases as new
into seven office spaces. "As to th e the 1987·89 biennium," he says. Acinformation becomes available.

HIt is ridiculous. There would be
no privacy and it would be way too
noisy."

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page 2

February 13, 1986 ·

TIlE COOPER' POINT JOURNAL

more news

DTF established to tackle new smoking law
by Sherry Hill

mitted' areas."

Non-smokers were granted the
right to nicotine-free air July 1985,
by the State Legislature with the
Washington Clean Indoor Air Act.
The Evergreen Administration is addressing the issue with the formation
of a Smoking Policy DTF to discuss
the law and its impact on the
campus.
In a memo to the Evergreen community dated December 31, 1985,
College Vice President for Development and Administrative Services
Sue Washburn states, "Evergreen is
currently in violation of this law .
While we have some areas
designated smoking and nonsmoking, we are not in compliance
because the new law requires that
most public places be off limits to
all smoking except for those
designated by sign as 'smoking per-

"It sounds like a simple issue, but
this has the potential for being a very
volatile issue," Washburn said in a
recent interview. She added that part
of the adjustment will be in smokers
consciously seeking out areas that
allow smoking -- where the reverse
has always been true. Smokers have
only had to avoid non-smoking
areas, if they chose .
"The motivation of the law is the
protection of non-smokers," noted
DTF Chairperson Larry Stenberg.
"The emphasis is on asking for
understanding and cooperation.
What we have is a controversial and
personal issue." He continued, "We
need to make decisions on hallways
and work areas where people share
the air." Sten berg noted that his biggest concern "Is that we are sensitive
to each other."

The law is defined for most areas
on the campus_ Included in the list
of "public places" are ed.ucational
facilities, public restrooms, libraries,
waiting areas, lobbies and reception
areas . Smoking areas can not be
established in elevators, office reception areas and waiting rooms "of
any building owned" by the state of
Washington, which includes
classrooms and lecture halls of colleges, as listed under Title 70 RCW.
The list continues, this is only the
portion relating to Evergreen.
In a memo to the DTF, dated
January 31, 1986, Washburn has
asked the DTF to: "I) Determine
specific public areas (if any) within
campus facilities where smoking is
to be allowed, and 2) if there are to
be any, develop a campus-wide campaign to generate awareness and support for any new policies ."
"One issue we will need to address

is what allowances will be made to
people who smoke in areas
designated 'no-smoking,' Stenberg
says. Mike Hall, member of the
DTF, says, "We need to have a fair,
but enforceable policy." Security
OfficerS are commissioned to write
citations, if that is the decision by the
DTf, according to Security Chief
Gary Russell .
DTF members, at the first meeting
February 6, seemed to agree the
policy would have to be one that
Evergreen community members
would abide by. The DTF was
chosen to have a balance of smokers
and non-smokers, though at the first
meeting, not all were there for input.
Washburn said that several complaints have gone to Rita Cooper,
director employee relations, about
smoking on campus. Cooper
presented , the issue to the vice-

presidents, and Washburn took on
the task of defming the policy. Other
complaints have gone to Mike Hall,
who is CAB building manager. A
complaint was even registered on the
library suggestion board concerning
smokers in the library, ~hough the
library already has a smoking policy.
Stenberg has charged the DTF to
look at the law, and evaluate spaces
and situations. They will discuss
these points next meeting, which will
be 3:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday in
LIB-3121. Tuesday meetings are
open to all. The committee is planning on resolving the issue within the
next 6-8 weeks, and presenting the
proposal to the campus community
for review before final approval.
Stenberg suggests checking with the
Information Center to verify the
meeting times, and encourages the
community to attend.

GREENERSPEAK: How do you feel about specific smoking sections being set up to comply with the new state law

Christopher Koller That's great! I'd
rather not see any smoking sections
at all. It bothers me to go places
where it is too smokey to breathe.

photo by James Barkshire
Michele Griffin I think it is perfectly fine because I know people are irritated by smoke. But' I also think it
should be the responsibility of the
smoker. I don't like the idea of someone infringing on my personal
right to smoke. The smoking sections are a good idea though .

photo by l ennifer Lewis

photo by lennifer Lewis

photo by James Barkshire

Faye Vaughn I think it is polite for
the people who don't smoke. I know
they get annoyed and all that shit.
But I hate sitting down and getting
all comfortable, and then noticing
it's a non-smoking zone. I can live
with it though .

Pete Staddler What I don't like
about this is that they have to make
it a law. It would be nice if smokers
would respect non-smoker's right to
clean air, and if non-smokers would
realize smokers also have the right
to their dependencies.

David Sawyer To be addressing the
cigarette smoke issue when there are
other larger issues to address is an
exercise in mutual masterbation.

Strategic Planning Council members announced
by Joseph G. Follansbee
In a meeting unusual for
Evergreen, students applying for
positions on the Strategic Planning
Council last week chose among
themselves who would represent student interests on the planning body.
Previously, most student input had
occurred through direct access or appointment of particular students by
administrators to the various boards
and DTFs.
Five students, Mark Lewin, Mattie Bloomfield, Judy Corbit, Thome
George, and Darren Lilla, were picked from a pool of 15 applicants.
Lewin will serve on the Strategic
Planning Council while Bloomfield
and Corbit will serve on the Environmental Committee. George and
Lilla will serve on the Values and
Aspirations Committee. Three alternates were chosen: Guy Allen for the
Planning Council, John Malone for
Environmental, and Jon Holz for
Values and Aspirations.
A student emphasizing computer
studies, Mark Lewin expressed at the
meeting a particular concern about
his perception of disenfranchisment
of students on the Planning Council. He said he is concerned about access of himself to the rest of the student body and brings to the Planning Council a well developed sense
of committment to the values of
Evergreen, gained through wide experience with the Evergreen
en vironment.
Judy Corbit brings to the En-

vironmental Committee academic
experience in applied social science,
psychology, urban planning, and
business administration, according
to her letter of application. She is
also a single parent. "By actively
contributing to strategic planning at
Evergreen, I can make my contribution to Evergreen and gain valuable
knowledge, skills, and experience as
well," she said.
Another single parent , Mattie
Bloom field will serve as the second
student on the Environmental Committee. a fourth year student in the
Native American Studies program,
she expects to graduate in June and
will apply for the Teacher Certi fication program and/or the Masters in
Public Administration program, according to her application letter .
"My goal is to learn as much about
this college as I can through participation ," she said.
Darren Lilla, who will sit· in on the
Values and Aspirations Committee,
is a freshman enrolled in "Development: the Aim of Education." According to his application, he an ticipates an internship teaching at the
Olympia Community School. He
said he came to Evergreen with high
expectations but overall has been
disappointed ... I see the ideals of the
school in writing, but not in action,"
he said.
The second student on Values and
Aspirations is Thome George, who
is Coordinator for Governance Information, according to his application . George is also involved with In-

Committee to choose dean
Two st udents are needed to serve on the Academic Dean Search
Committee to replace John Perkins. Please pick up an application
in Gai l Martin's office, L-3236. Women and minority candida tes are
encou raged to apply.

formation for Action and said he has
an extensive network within the student body that will assist in communication of student interests
The provost's office has also named the faculty, staff, and other
members of the Planning Council
and the two subcommittees. Serving
on the Planning Council are provost
Patrick Hill, who will chair the
body, plus Carolyn Dobbs, faculty
and chair of the Environmental
Committee, Rudy Martin, faculty
and chair of the Values and Aspira-

tions Committee, Paul Mott, faculty, Sarah Pederson, Head of
Technical Services, Robert Shirley,
a 1983 alum, Christina Meserve, a
1975 alum who will serve as alumni
alternate, Richard Page, trustee, and
Wes Berglund, a former trustee.
Serving on the Values and Aspirations Committee are Rudy Martin,
faculty and chair, Rob Cole, faculty, Rob Knapp, faculty , David
Marr, academic dean, Sally Cloninger, faculty, Stone Thomas, Dean
of Student Development, Mary
Fleischman, Systems Programmer

II, and Sandy Butler, Acting Director of Recreation and Athletics .
Serving on the Environmental
Committee are Carolyn Dobbs,
faculty and chair, John Aiken,
faculty, Greg Weeks, faculty, Nancy Taylor, faculty, Barbara Smith,
academic dean, Arnaldo Rodriguez,
Dean of Enrollment Services, Denise
Livingston, Accountant III, and an
alum yet to be named.
According to the provost's office,
interim reports of the subcommittees
are due March 13, with the Council's final report due June 15.

by Cynthia M. Sherwood
Evergreen's special concept of
education is a cause for the high rate
of community college transfer
students towards Evergreen, according to studies done from 1979 to
1984 by the Office of Finance
Management. Christine Kerlin,
Director of Evergreen Admissions,
and representatives of other colleges,
spent Thursday, January 30, 1986 at
the Bellevue Community College
providing information to students
interested in what a four-year college
can offer. "I definitely want them
to know Evergreen is serious and
they can't treat us like other schools.
They really need to think about us
before applying," said Kerlin. "I
really try to capture them and talk
to them which is something different
than what the other schools are
offering. "

Many of the students said that
they were surprised with Kerlin's
straightforward attitude. From the
very start she let them know that
Evergreen is different. "Anyone can
sell a college," said Dennis
Whitehead, a first-year student at
BCC.
"It's a totally different concept of
learning. They're less restrictive.
You get to make your own decisions,
and if you put more into it you get
more out," said Rich Adams, a
freshman at BCC. Several students
said that they could see enormous
benefits to receiving an education

through an internship program
rather than the traditional class
schedule_ "They could put me into
an internship program in my field
which I think is a great idea," said
Debrah Jenkins, a second year BCC
student. "The programs seem more
relative to the students; it gives
students more flexibility in knowing
their craft," said Whitehead.
Although most of the students
said they could see no drawbacks to
the education Evergreen was offering, they were concerned wiht credit
transfers from Evergreen. "The only
thing I worry about is I don't know
if all 48 credits will transfer to
another university," said Anne
Herkenrath, a BCC student studying in the performing arts. Doug
Swoope said that the proximity and
the caliber of Evergreen's education
were his initial reasons for seeking
information about the school, but he
also stressed his concern about credit
transfer. "I'm enthralled with the
Evergreen concept, but at the same
time reluctant due to credit transfer
to the UW," he said.
"Outside people don 't rea lize
what 's there," Herkenrath said, "I
like the idea of small classes and concentration of faculty." Adams, who
is seeking a law degree, said, "The
diversity of people that Evergreen attracts, I feel, will be a good part of
an education." Because Evergreen
doesn't require unnecessary classes
to graduate, students said it gives
people a greater opportunity to
strengthen their career foundations.
Students said that involvement is the '
one thing that Evergreen offers that
the other four-year colleges don't.
Kerlin said the questions students
ask her now no longer have the same
anxiety attached to them as they did
when she first began as a representative. Students. see that there is
creativity and fun in education when
they no longer need to pin
themselves down to a major. As the
TESC representative, Kerlin said, "I
hope they feel like they've gotten
enough information; I hope that
they get a feeling of sincerity from

me. "



<

Festivities abounded at International Toast Day.

Toast day brings joy to all
The Evergreen State College was
proud to host toast ceremonies
celebrating the first annuallnternational Toast Day presided over by
the honorable toastmaster, N. Llyn
Peabody. Framed by a homemade
banner, live plants and a halo of
sweet sage smoke, Peabody shared
{resh toast with the Evergreen community from 10:30 a.m. 10 3 p.m.
on Monday, February 3.
She had two toasters. margerine,
honey, cinnamon, brewer's yeas!
and 25 loaves of bread, 2301" which
she baked herself". "One for every
year of my life,". Peabody said.
Toast Day, coincidentally, fell on
her 23rd birthday.
Peabody also collected Toast
Folklore on tape, but, she said, "I
don '/ know how well it'll come out.
I'm beller at toasting than taping. "
-She gave out over 20 loaves worth
of toast. Judging by the smiles on
people'sfaces, the day was a success.
Her account 01" how Toast Dqy
came to be follows:

by Dennis Held

the East Coast, help insure a market
for such books, McKinley said.

Small press publishing is a viable
outlet for beginning authors, according to Carol McKinley, owner of
The Bookstore in Olympia.
McKinley, speaking at th e Feb. 6
visitor'S lunch of the Mass Communications program, said that most
major publishing firms look to
established authors for their
material. She cited Knopf, formerly a family-owned operation now
owned by a large multinational co ncern, as an examp le of the trend
toward publishing only recognized
aut hors. "Most majors won't even
accept unsolicited manuscripts from
unknown authors," she said.
Small presses, which McKinley
said generally publish one to 20 titles
each year, are often geared to well
defined audiences, such as feminists
or bioregionalists. Two major
distributers, Book People in
Berkeley, California, and Inland on

Additionally, small presses are
often easier to work with than larger
companies. "You can work much
more intimately with small presses
because the people who edit them are
often the publshers too," she said.
McKinley traced the rise of
feminist presses to the 1963 publicjltion of Betty Friedan's "A Feminist
Mystique ." "Our Bodies, Our
Selves," was the first book written
and published by women, said
McKinley, and it was an attempt to
gain control of the means of production of books. "There was a definite
lack of recognition of the work of
women by the major literature
publishers," she said.
Another option for beginning
authors is self-publi sh ing. "Selfpublishing can be a great way to go.
People like Walt Whitman and Herman Melville took it upon

themselves to publish their own
work," McKinley said.
Self-publishing allows for complete control over the entire
publishing operation, McKinley
said, and costs about $5,000 to
$10,000 for a run of 5,000 copies.
"Contrary to popular belief, it
doesn't cost that much more to
make hardcover books," she said.
The current trend in publishing is
toward ' "formula fiction" which
follows a set formula, McKinley
said. "There is a tremendous market
for quick-reading fiction: short
westerns, adventure novels,
historical fiction and romance fiction,' she said.
Large, chain-owned bookstores
pose a threat to independent stores
because they can offer discounts,
McKinley said. "For the small press '
author, that's bad news. The independent bookstore is the one
which will take a flyer on a small
press book," she said.

by N. Llyn Peabody

them; or otherwise manifest
physical knee problems as an expression of an imbalance somewhere else
in their lives. We reali zed that it is
no mere coincidence that the words
"knees" and "needs" so und so
much alike in the English language.
Then my roommates and I noticed that when we ate toast, our knees,
or what they represent, felt betler.
We felt better. We felt less lonely
and horny. Less bored and
frustrated. Less needy . Toast is like
mom; it makes you feel loved.
Hence, a whole new reverance for
toast was born . Eventually this toast
cult dissolved. We all went our
separate ways, but the toa st
phenomena lilies on.
I decided that I wanted to share
this healing art with the Evergreen
community. Hence, International
Toast Day was born. But if you
weren't able to participate, don't feel
bad because really¢¢everyday is toast
day. And if you think eating toast
is healing.-iust try giving it away!
Share some with a friend. Do it
today.
011

In this time of specialist groups
claiming support for elite concerns
like Nation a l Meat Week or United
Tulip Grower's Day, it is nice to
have a day in celebration of
so mething we can all believe in .
International Toast Day has it s
roots in the fall of 1984 when I lived in Mod Land with two nutty
roomates. It began as a joke (as
great truths often do). My friend had
a hurt knee. We were always asking
her, "How's your knee feeling?"
Somehow, her responses contained
more than a literal account of her
knee's condition; they became a
metaphor of her emotional state.
Aching knees became equated with
depression, lonliness, boredom, horniness and other related "needy"
moods.
But the longer that we share this
joke, the more we could see the truth
of this metphor. We noticed in our
friends that when they were emotionally upset , they would often iniure their knees, or develop a rash

Half-price at Capitol Rep
Tickets are available at half-price for the Thursday. February 20
performance of "loeseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,"
for Evergreen Students with a valid I. D. card.
The live musical will be staged at the Capitol Repertory Theatre,
206 E. 5th, in Olympia. Tickets may be reserved by calling the box
office at 357-5577. Showtime is 8 p.m.
Tickets for performances from February 2 I to March I can also
be purchased for half price on a space available basis.

Richard Nesbitt

D. Feb .14, 1983

Private press supports unknowns

page 3

Recruiter trying to
reach communIty

HThey really
need to think
about us before
applying. "

photo by James Barkshire

TIlE COOPER POINT'JOURNAL

February 13, 1986

«

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we pay all the"bear necessities"
water, ca
(w sate
garbage, POWER.
We also provide :
2 hot tubs, sauna,
weightroom and pool table.

754 - 3949

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Delivery Available

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. orders accepted by phone

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On the bus line. .. and rent
starts as low as $160.00/ month.

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IN CONCERT

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fj1. JERRY LEE LEWIS~· .

~

and The Diamond;'·~...,.!)

Thurs: FEB. 27th
Tickets are $12.50

Showtimes: 7:30
for info: 459·3426

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

page 4

opinions

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

letters

Evergreen should face governance reality
by Amanda Golberg
Joe Follansbee's article on three
students' responses to the re~om­
mendations of tbe governance DTF
(CP J 1123) raises crucial issues
relating to governance, that is, the
decision-making
process
at
Evergreen.
The DTF was misnamed. One
might think that a Governance DTF
would be set up to investigate the
history and problems of the college's
decision-making structures. In actuality, the president's charge was to
create a board composed of
students, faculty and st.aff, to advise
the president on campus-wide policy
decisions.
As stated in the minutes of the
meeting in which the charge was
given, the purpose of the DTF was
to construct " a community-wide
body with faculty, staff, and student
representation thai would meet on a
regular basis with the president" in
an advisory capacity; we were also
to include in the report" a structu re
for showing how this body would
relate to constituent governance
groups." Factionalization does not,
which to complete this task . This is
the charge we accepted. Thus we
became, in reality if not in name, the
"Advisory Board DTF."
People with greater expectations
of the committee, while they are
justified in wanting to see changes
in the overall governance system,
have goals which would be impossi-

ble to achieve in seven weeks' time.
I am disillusioned that the committee did not hear earlier from people
who · protested so strongly to our
work upon its near completion . The
DTF was able to improve its work
a great deal once we were able to incorporate people's comments and
responses .
There are two issues I wish to address: the idea of constituent governance groups, and the concept of the
advisory board as it relates to
campus-wide governance.
As documented in Follansbee's article, students expfessed concern that
the division of students, faculty, and
staff into constituencies would advocate the view of Evergreen as
"s plit into competing interest
groups. Factionalization does not, in
in my view, fall within the original
vision, nor that which many of
us share for this college. At the same
time, the students interviewed and
others are active in declaring student
power to choose our own representatives to the various campus committees (of those which include
students). Is that not identifying
ourselves as a constituency?
This dilemma is addressed to a
slight degree in the Washington Admlnlstrative
Code,
section
174-107-220: "The community must
avoid fractioning into decisionmaking constituency groups that
augment the decision-making process ." This is the idea that, while we
recognize the specific needs and interests of groups within the com-

munity, we need to consider them in
the context of being responsive to
the needs of our community as a
whole.
While it is beneficial to constructively criticize, I believe that as we
focus our attention on the Advisory
Board, we must confront a much
larger structural dynamic.
I am sure that, in fulfilling the

"[ find he's not only a barbarian,
but he's flaky." -- President Ronald
Reagan.
"Honk if you want Kaddafi
wasted." -- a sign along side a road
in Pasadena, Texas.
"Maybe we're at the point in the
world where Mr. Kaddafi has to be
eliminated." -- Senator Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio.
"The problem won't go away if
he does, but it won't get any better
as long as he's around." -- Dennis
Ross, former Reagan administration
analyst.
"[t sounds to me like this country wants to go to war." -- Phil
Donahue, "The Donahue Show."
Maybe the people of America do
want to go to war. Or maybe many
of th em do not realize that is where
the present American attitude is
leading us . An attitude of retribution
without thought or reason.
Americans are calling for immediate
and violent action against Mohammar Kaddafi. Apparently, many
Americans believe that the elimination of Kaddafi is what needs to be
done to solve the terrorism problem.
Jonah Alexander, a terrorism expert at Georgetown University, says,
"The Europeans don't have th~
political will, or the backbone, to do
what needs to be done to cope with
terrorism. The short-term benefits
are more important to them than
their long-term interests.
But isn't that true of America, as
well? More so, perhaps? America is
balancing on a dangerously thin
rope, between cold and active war.
Many politicians and much of the
media are calling for action against
Libya: War.
Why? The terrorism fever cited
above . We're letting it box us into
a corner . Americans are infected
with the retribution bug. Heinous
cr imes have been committed, many
traceable to Libya and Kaddafi. But,
also, many traceable to Syria, Iran,
and Israel. However, no one seems
to be aware of this last fact. And the
government and media certainly

,
."

"
11..

aren't drawing lI'Uention to it. It's
not ~ media plot, but a lack of
photogenic and stirring leaders who
rant and rave in these other nations
and the fact that the U.S. government wants a scapegoat.
[n a recent news conference,
President Reagan said that 126 terrorist attacks, which he would have
had you believe were to take place
in America, had been stopped.
However, it turned out that only 23
of those were to take place in
America. At most, nine of those
were planned by foreign terrorists.
Three of the nine the FBI attributes
to a single Libyan, and were against
Libyan dissidents. This Libyan was
the only Arab suspected. Four were
attributed La the Jewish Defense
League, according to Newsweek
(Jan 20th, 1986).
And even though one activity of.
this sort is vile, it would still appear
that the American public, as well as
the government, has singled out
Libya more as a scapegoat than as
the threat we are lead to believe.
That has created an atmosphere for
war. Indeed, the murders in the
Rome and Vienna airports that set
off the latest , and scariest, antiKaddafi activity in this country, can
not in any way, other than by imagination and desire, be connected
with Kaddafi. Abu Nidal, the terrorist responsible for the killings, has
been supported by Syria throughout
most of his career. And the two
gunmen being held for the murders
are belived to have been trained in
Syria.
However, the U.S. government
would rather not admit that, since
they would like Syria to help make
peace in the Middle East and help
free the remaining American
hostages in Lebanon . That is probably good politicking.
Taunting and threatening
Mohammar Kaddafi is not. Creating
a scapegoat, and putting ourselves in
a position where "There's nothing
short of the military option left " is
not. Encouraging an atmosphere
where Americans with Arab descendants, or who are from the Middle

Did talk
precede
protest?

part of an overall governance structure, created not by the campus
community, not by a Disappearing
Task Force, but by our president.
We should realize this when we
discuss governance; we are grappling for roles in a preconceived
system; as always, decisions rest
within the administration, the
responsibility with the president.

To the Editor,
Question about the recent SAGA
boycott: was any attempt made to
talk to SAGA officials before the
protest was called? I talked to Bob,
the Deli guy, at the time of the protest. From what I heard from him,
it sounded to me like SAGA was
willing to talk about whatever it was
that the protesters wanted to talk
about, but that the protesters felt
that they'd rather sit outside the Deli
and sing about Nelson Mandela than
talk.
Seems to me this isn't something
that Evergreeners should be proud
of. [n keeping with the Social Contract, it seems that you should try to
talk to someone that you have a beef
with BEFORE you go serenade them
with songs about Nelson Mandela.
Wondering what Nelson Mandela
has to do with cheeseburgers,
anyway,
Bruce Moreland

Evergreen transcends '80's
by Todd D. Anderson
The Evergreen State College has
become renowned for offering one
of the purest liberal arts educations
of any public four-year college in the
nation. Why should anyone suppose
this might change? It has been here
for nearly two decades, enrollment
is growing and the school is popular
with those who attend it.
[t could change because Evergreen
is in the hands of elected officials
and a,Jpointed bureaucrats. These
people have not always held the
highest regard for the kind of education Evergreen provides . However,
the school has remained much the
same as it was when it was created,
because the climate of the 1960s and
1970s was receptive to the Evergreen
style of education.
Education by most definitions
means, to give students knowledge

Don't kill the flaky barbarian
by Lee Pembleton

president's charge, the "Governance
DTF" produced the very thing that
would easily fit into a format of the
president's own design. The Advisory Board is only one element of
a system which includes a "Planning Council," an "Environmental
Committee," and a "Values and
Aspirations Committee." Who
designed these committees? They are

East and are here to escape persecution in their own countries, are being threatened and insulted, are having their lives endangered, or have
already lost their lives, is not (one
life was lost in a series of bombing
of American-Arab Anti-Discrimination COmmittee offices around
the nation after the Achille Lauro
tragedy). Letting people come
to the point (again, perhaps, encouraging them) where they will offer $100,000 for Mohammar Kaddafi's life is not.
America is preparing for war. The
actions of Rick Griffing, who is offering $100,000 for Kaddafi's life, ·
and the behavior of the president
towards Kaddafi are tantamount to
declarations of war. The Reagan administration has said that they are
just waiting for Kaddafi to give them
a reason to invade. The White
House is trying to goad Kaddafi in to attacking us so that we may attack him.
Killing Kaddafi will accomplish
nothing. Killing thousands of Arabs
will accomplish nothing. Killing
thousands of Americans will accomplish nothing.
What should we do? What will accomplish something?
Focusing on the terrorists, suc h as
Abu Nidal, and upon their elimination will.
Treating Libya as we treat the
;)ther Arab nations and watching it
as we watch other anti-American nations, instead of fanning the flames,
will.
Continuing the precautions we are
already taking against terrorism will.
Encouraging other nations to continue strengthening and improving
their anti-terrorist precautions and
activities and helping train them to
do so will.
Showing both sides of the story
and all the facts equally will.
Developing better relations with
other nations will.
I f you disagree, or feel somet hing
is unclear or not dealt with fully
enough, [ can be contacted through
the CPJ office.

and to make them more conscious
of the environment around them .
But education in the 1980s has seemed to take on a new meaning, to
prepare students for the job world,
and in a capitalist society that means
produce the kind of graduate the
business world wants. That statement probably would not bother a
great majority of college students
nationwide, since the student of the
80's has shown a tendency toward a
career-oriented education.
There are exceptions to that
outlook, and this school is certainly
one of them. However, the
legislature supposedly serves the interests of the general public. In times
of peace, pocketbook issues tend to
be the most important to voters.
Washington State has lagged behind
the rest of the nation in terms of
economic growth and employment.
Thus, state elected officials are sensitive to the issue of economic
development.
There are a number of ways to
promote etonomic well-being, but
the attitude of the 80's is: •'Provide
incentives to the private sector and
assist business in any way possible,
which will make everything
wonderful." One way is to provide
the kind of educated workforce the
business community desires.
Does this mean Evergreen is going to become like the University of
Washington, a factory producing
engineering and business administration drones for corporate America?
Probably not. But in order to insure
adequate funding from the
legislature, this school may be
pressured·to conform to the views of
legislators.
Evergreen already has as many
high-technology ptograms as
Eastern and Western Washington
Universities, but fewer than Central,

or the two research schools, the
U.W. and W.S.U. Evergreen appears to be developing a tendency
toward intensive Pacific Rim studies.
Pacific Rim issues are hot items right
now and there is increasing focus on
them at schools in this state. Increasing trade with Pacific Rim countries
like Japan, also an important topic
to Governor Gardner, is seen as a
potential generator of economic
growth and development. These programs are likely to receive adequate
support for many years.
The problem is that the state is
dealing with "the politics of subtraction," to quote Booth Garner, which
means facing increasing demands on
its financial resources without being
able to increase revenues . So an increase in spending on one program
means decreasing spending on a different program. [n higher education,
this doesn't necessarily mean the arts
and social sciences suffer so business
and hard science curriculums can be
expanded, but it is a possibility.
Evergreen does not need to
become a factory . A strong liberal
arts program can help in promoting
economic development, by producing graduates who can think and
communicate effectively and cross
cultural barriers. Evergreen can
assist the state in its goal in enhancing trade with Pacl.lc Rim countries,
but this shouldn't become the overriding purpose of the school.
The Strategic Planning Committee is developing a statement of
Evergreen's missions for the next six
to 10 years . The statement should
stress the necessity of keeping this
school as an affordable alternative
to the orthodox institutions, and that
the school can assist in plans for
economic development but that it is
not the overriding purpose of this
institution.

The Cooper Point Journal, is published weekly for the students,
staff and faculty of the Evergreen State College. Views expressed
are not necessarily those of the college or the Journal's staff. Advertising material contained herein does not imply endorsement by
the Journal. The office is located at The Evergreen State College,
Campus Activities Building, Room 306. The phone number is
866-6000, X6213. All announcements must be double-spaced, listed
by category, and submitted no later than nQf)n on Monday for that
week's publication. All letters to the editor must be typed, doublespaced, limited to 250 words, signed, and must include a daytime
phone number where the author can be ~eached. The editor reserved
the right to reject any material, and edit any contributions for
length, content, or style. Letters and display advertising must be
received no later than 5 p.m. on Monday for that week's
publication.

Editor: Dave Peterson
Managing Editor: Michael Tobin
Photo Editor: Jennifer Lewis
Production Manager: Polly Trout
Production Assistant: Jennifer Seymore
Poetry Editor: Paul Pope
Magazine Coordinator: Duane Anderson
Advisor: Virginia Painter
Writers: Todd D. Anderson, Bob Baumgartner, Janet Behrenhoff,
Irene Mark Buitenkant, Kathi Durkin, Joseph G. Follansbee, Arvid Gust, Dennis Held, Lee Howard, John Kaiser, Margaret livingston, Sharon Lee Nicholson, Lee Pembleton, Martha Pierce,
Paul Pope, Anita Purdy, Susan Reams, Bob Reed, C ynthia Sherwood, R. Paul Tyler
Business Manager: Karen Peterson
Ad Manager: David George
Distribution: Michael Flynn
Typist: Jennifer Matlick

page 5

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

February 13, 1986

February 13, 1986

~
\
I

Indians
forced from
homeland
CPJ:
Come July 1986 under the 1974
Navajo-Hopi Land Settlement Act,
(PL93531) more than 80 percent
Navajo and Hopi Indians will be
forced to relocate from their sacred
land. This land is their ancestral
homeland located at Big Mountain
in Northeastern Arizona.
Why are these Indians being forced again to leave their land? The
answer is that Exxon and the
Peabody Coal Mining Co. (multimillion dollar national corporations)
want to strip the land which contains
20 billion tons of coal lying beneath
Big Mountain. These companies also
want to extend the 4 coal strip mines,
the 5 coal fired plants, the 38
uranium mines and the 6 uranium
mills which now remain on the reservation. This uranium gives off
massive radioactive radon gas, a
dangerous toxic so deadly that it's
wiping out the few true Americans
that are left in this country.
These giant national companies
"discovered" the coal, oil, uranium,
natural gasses and other minerals in
the 1940's and have been stripmining the coal fields since 1966. They
take 3 million gallons a day and
transport the coal in a coal slurry
pipeline to a power plant,.275 miles
away. This then supplies electricity
to Phoenix, Tucson, Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, and to the casinos
in Las Vegas.
The Peabody Coal Co. pays the
Navajo and Hopi people 25 cents a
ton for coal and then sells it for $50
a ton. These Indian nations do not
benefit from these mineralleasings.
After 30 years of energy development on their land, they are still the
poorest cultural group in the U.S.
Most of these Indians will be moved to off-reservation border towns
like Winslow, Tuba City, or Gallup.
Many of these Indians live selfsufficiently off their land, do not
speak English, and have never needed to hold a wage earning job. Now,
they are once again being thrown into a society they barely relate to.
On September 24, 1985 the Senate
Appropriations Conunittee

approved a budget of 85.5 million
dollars for the continuing relocation.
Forcing these Indians to move will
cost tax. payers a quarter of a billion
dollars in direct costs plus another
three quarters ·of a billion dollars in
. social costs.
Folks, this is a reality! This is happening in our own backyard ... the
Home of the Free ... When this
Relocation Act goes into effect, this
will be an act of genocide. This can
be put to a halt! We urge you to
write to Congress and make a statement to repeal (PL9353I) and
become involved with the Big Mountain Support group on campus who
meet in Rotunda lecture hall Tuesday evenings.
Ellen Roth

Tyler shows
disrespect
for Indians
To the Editor,
If indeed R.P. Tyler is the author
of The Prophecies of Thomas
Banyacya, Hopi Elder (Jan 30 CPJ),
then R.P . Tyler is a disrespectful
person. An Elder deserves a better
tribute than was given by these
words. He may be an old man, but
he is still an Elder and deserves
respect from all who listen. I have
to wonder if R.P. Tyler was really
listening. If indeed Mr. Tyler is the
author of the above mentioned prose, then I am led to assume that this
is the same R.P. Tyler who coauthored with C. Murray "Cooper
Point Journal serves community's
needs," (Jan 16 CPJ, page 8).
Mentioned in their article was the
Nook-a-Gooey Reservation on
South Mud Bay. What??? The blatant stereotype of the American Indian, even in the CPJ, serves no purpose other than widening the communication gap between Indians and
non-Indians. I would advise Mr.
Tyler to read his articles again and
this time to actually listen to what
he is saying. I would also like to in vite him to the Northwest Indian
Center L-3221 if he still doesn't hear
anything . Wake up, R.P. Tyler.
Sincerely,
Gary Wessels

studies, the emphasis on collaboration, the seminar format, the fact
that students ·assume responsibility
for designing their own academic
pathways, and the narrative evaluation system. This is the Evergreen we
have tried "to sell" to prospective
Third World students, to recent high
school graduates, and to transfer
students from Washington community colleges; · these have been,
and continue to be, the "traditional
groups" from which we recruit.
Second, the Admissions Office
stands ready to collaborate with
students who are interested in helping us with our current recruiting efforts. We are keenly aware that current students and the alumni are our
best recruiters!
Third, neither the Admissions Office, nor any sector of the college for
that matter, has any business determining whether our applicants
subscribe to ideologies that are compatible with those held by our current students, administration, faculty, etc . This is a publicly supported
institution and such discrimination
has no place. [ hope that the curren!
student coordinators will accept the
challenge that our student body,
faculty and staff represent a great
deal of diversity. It should not be a
source of insecurity, but rather a
source of vitality and hope.
Sincerely,
Arnaldo Rodriguez
Dean of Enrollment Services

Ticket frenzy
sideswipes
Evergreen

this weekend to eaS4 my mother'S
delinquent, unruly sister (all right, so
I committed a little journalistic
embellishment there and why not?).
Is is my opinion (one I find is
shared by many Evergreen students)
that housing should have posted
notices reminding us that our permits had to be renewed.
Christine Cameron

Maybe they
won't like
you, either
To Modland:
The MODs are great! Just far
enough from the dorms to allow
quiet
privacy
and
unique
spaciousness. But, I can picture it
now, the..,future walk from the
MOD~ campus: leaving the
seciudeQ~acious, and peaceful
MOD
area ... passing
the
mailroom ... passing
the
pavilion .. . passing a few intermittent
trees ... passing new buildings E and
F ... passing
What?? New
buildings?! (Did you know your rent
is going to go up?)
Yes, more, but very different
dorms. The buildings will provide
sleeping quarters for 100 to 200
students, and not much more.
Students will probably have showers
located on each floor (like at the U
of W) and perhaps some sort of
social space ... but no community kitchens because these people will be on
a MANDATORY food service
system, if the administration has its
way. Imagine, at Evergreen, dorms
without private eating space or
apartments, and MANDATORY
food service for BREAKFAST,
LUNCH, and DINNER.
Are these the kind of buildings
you want to walk by twice a day? Is
that why we pay to live in the
MODs? According to Housing, new
dorm plans did not "directly" affect
the rent increases for next year, but,
rather, indirectly will help Housing
meet cost increases and "become
solvent" enough to build these
buildings near us. It does not seem
right that even a cent of our MOD
rent should have to pay to help housing become solvent so that it can
construct buildings between
Modland and the present dorms.
That goes against the whole purpose
of living in the MODs . If nobody
complains this plan will probably be
enacted by 1987, according to
Housing.
Do we want these buildings, let
alone the type of people who would
want tp inhabit them, between us
and the present dorms, infringing on
our seclusion and spaciousness???
Sincerely,
Kristin J agelski

Dear Anyone Listening:
What, do I ask, has generated this
recent enthusiasm in issuing parking
tickets? I am an upright, well intentioned driver of two years and had
never committed an infraction of
any sort until, I am told, three weeks
ago.
Intending to depart for a weekend
in Seattle with my family, (who will
be mentioned in detail in a few
paragraphs) [ discovered a nap of
paper intent on disintegrating on my
car window. With trepidation I peeled it off and discovered my crime .
I had failed to renew my parking
permit! My perfect vehicular history
was tarnished forever . Devastated,
I collapsed against my gUilty car,
realizing fully the impact this would
have on my future. 1 was ruined.
However, raising my shaken

countenance, I made a shocking
discovery . On either side of me were
rows of cars and trucks, and nearly
all of them sported tickets similar to
mine.
"Can it be?" I lamented, "Have
we as a community diminished in
Dear Readers of the CPJ:
morality to the extent that we have
I would like to take this oppor-. all neglected our automotive
tunity to respond to Annette Estes' duties?"
letter in the last issue of the CPJ.
It seemed we had. In class I
First of all, let me express my disapdiscovered that, without fail, we had
pointment that neither Annette nor all received tickets. In fact, distribuany of the other student coortion of infraction notices proved to
dinators talked to me or to Christine be so vast that it was a suggested by
Kerlin to verify whether their suspia classmate named Mike O'Connor,
cions/assumptions
about
who likes his name in print as often
Evergreen's recruitment plan for
as possible, that perhaps the issuers
new students were correct or not. In of the tickets were trying to fulfill a
Howdy.
fact, they are totally incorrect.
quota in order to receive a free colFebruary 21 1 will be leaving
A bit of history is necessary for
or T.V.
me to respond to Annette's conI'm beginning to believe that there . Olympia to join in "The Great Peace
March." I would appreciate your
cerns. Since 1978, the college has
may be some truth in the quota
support.
The most powerful form of
had a very aggressive recruitment
theory. When I returned late from
plan. The college was then severely
support you can give is support from
Seattle, I left a note saying I'd go to
your heart. While most of us here
underenrolled, and this underhousing when it opened in the morabhor the very concept of nuclear
enrollment constituted a major exning, which I did. Trudging to "F,"
weaponr,y and its by-products, we
cuse for those opponents of the colI soon discovered that my note had
too
often feel powerless to effect
lege to try to shut down the school.
been disregarded and I owed even
change. I ask you to reclaim your
No, we're not interested in just
more money.
power. To affect change in our inwarm bodies to fill our seminars. We
And so I, the fallen princess 0 f
ternational relations we must first
were, and still are, interested in atautomotive excellence, now find
change American social and political
tracting students that understand the
myself owing S 10. This bill makes it
thought. Support the Peace March
uniqueness of Evergreen, i.e., the
necessary to cut back in other areas
with your heart. Believe that we the
emphasis on interdisciplinary
because of it, I cannot visit Seattle

Enrollment
serVIces
talks back

Peace marcher
needs help

people can in fact steer the course of
our nation.
About 5,000 of us will focus our
energy on peace by physically walk ing to Washington D.C. Millions of
others, while n9t being physically involved in the march, can still focus
their energy on peace from wherever
they are. The more energy that is
focused on a particular thought, the
stronger the force of that thought
becomes. America's attention, as a
nation, is being drawn to the thought
of peace through this upcoming
event. This is a unique opportunity
for us to unite our hearts as one pe0ple -- a people who claim peace for
all living beings .
Reclaim your power. Stand up for
what you believe in. Claim peace in
your heart and allow it to spread
from there . Affect the people
around you. If enough of us do this
our leaders will have to follow. This
is the most important and powerful
form of support that [ ask of my
fellow members of the Evergreen
cpmmunity.
I also am asking for your support
monetarily. The "Pro Peace"
organization asks that each participant in the march contribute $3,250
to the event above and beyond personal expenses. [ have about $300.
Contributions of any amount would
be great ly appreciated.
For information call
352-1486.
Thanks,
Timothy Hunt er

Author of
poem sought
Dear Editor/s
When [ was down in the loading
dock early, early this morning [ saw
on the wall part of a poem . The title was "I Can't of my Life" and
half of it was obliterated so I
couldn't read it all. The opening
lines were:
"There is a land
populated by the words
the names of active inhuman things"
Please print this letter. I'd like 10
find out who wrote this poem, and
get a copy of the whole thing.
Perhaps the author or person who
quoted it and wrote it there will see
this letter and send a copy to the
CPJ. And you could perhaps then
print it.
Thanks lots,
Jenny Shepherd

Letters policy
The Cooper Point Journal
welcomes letters from our
readers . All letters to the editor
must be typed, double-spaced,
limited to 250 words, signed,
and must include a daytime
. phone number where the author
can be reached for consultation
on editing for libel and obscenity. The editor reserves the right
to reject any material , and edit
. any 'contributions for length ,
·colltent, or style. Letters must
be recieved no later than 5 p.m.
011 Monday for that week's
publication.

page 6

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

February 13, 1986
February 13, 1986

Committees to
shape graduation

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page 7

11IE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

by Gregg Osborn
ed; bands. caterers and staff hired
Graduating seniors, it is time to
and a few other details need to be
synchronize your calendars. Graduaseen to .
tion may be four months away, but
Music Committee -- Giles Arendt
for the past two months a group of
(866-0720). Music is planned as a
30 imminent ex-students have been
part of the ceremony and also after
preparing for this big event.
it.
Publicity Committee -- Gregg
Facilitated by Arnaldo Rodriguez,
dean of enrollment services, and
Osborn (x6220). This group serves as
Judy Huntley, assistant to the dean
a conduit between all these commitof registration. the graduation plantees and the student population. CPJ
ners have created several committees
articles, newsletters, and other notes
to handle every creative detail of the
will be generated here . Notices to
Rodriguez, Huntley, Schneider,
June 8 ceremony. Michael Schneider
and Thor Skov have asserted
Skov or any of the other committees
themselves to cooperatively head this
can be passed on through this office.
ambitious body.
Leave notices in the Thursday Night
All graduating seniors have been
Films box in CAB 305.
sent a graduation registration
Reception Committee -- Correne
packet; both Rodriguez and Huntley
F. Beaudoin (851-7251). After the
stressed the necessity of returning
ceremony, a reception will be held
them with the $25 application fee
for the graduates; caterers need to
before March 28. Without the fee,
be hired, volunteers need to be
the events of this graduation will
rounded up.
have no funding and it has been proStudent Speaker Committee -mised that those souls not paying
Celese Brune (943-1747). This group
will not be able to cross the stage
organizes and auditions students
come June.
who wish to address their class at the
Announcement/Program Design
ceremony. One senior will be
Committee -- Nina Powell (x6006).
selected.
(n the past, students have designed
The theme for this year's graduatheir own graphics for invitations,
tion, as decided by the ballots on the
programs and, some years, even on
January 9th newsletter seniors
the diploma itself. The official logo '
received, is "taking risks." (n planfor the college came from one of
ning all aspects of the graduation,
these graduations. To assist in
this
will be concentrated on. Those
feathering the graduation budget, a
who are considering speaking before
t-shirt design is also requested and
t-shirts bearing the winning design the class at graduation should conwill be sold. Competitions with im- sider personal risks assumed by being an Evergreen student.
minent deadlines are being held for
A commencement speaker has yet
both designs, and an unspecified,
to be announced.
but highly satisfying cash prize is being offered.
All these committees could use
volunteer assistance -- consider this
Class Gift Committee -- DouGlas
Palenshus (x 6784). Last year the
an invitation to become involved
graduating class gave about $1300 to with graduation.Aliy time, resources
aid Latin American refugees. This or talents will be appreciated and will
committee is investigating if a gift is bring the plans all the closer to
to be given, what the gift shall be realization.
and to whom it will go.
Mike Schneider can be reached at
357-7472 or 754-2861, Thor Skov, at
Dance Committee -- Welton
352-7494.
Nekota (x6033). This is for the "formal" dance held the Friday before
The next meeting will be held
graduation. Halls need to be bookFebruary 26 at 5:30 in CAB 110.

Issue No.2

February 1986

Evergreen's Music Magazine

II
!,

Would new site
solve problems?
by Julie Williamson
In order to improve childcare on
campus, the Evergreen community
should try not to focus its atten·
tion only on the facility and the
structural aspects of the proposed
merger of Driftwood Daycare and
the Parent Resource Center, according to faculty member and parent
Rita Pougiales.
Pougiales led a Brown Bag discussion of the "Past, Present, and
Future of Childcare at TESC" on
Thursday. January 30, at noon in
the Lecture Hall Rotunda. She
agrees, along with many present at
the discussion, that too much emphasis is being placed on the new
location of the childcare facility, and
not on the other more important
aspects of the merger such as funding and the relationship to
academic programs at the college.
"The mentality is: 'If you change the
building, you solve the problem,' "
a student said during the discussion.
Another student and parent said,
"All they see is the building and the
dollar sign."
The proposed location for the new
childcare facility is the old ceramic~
building, 201. The ceramics facility
will then be relocated to the present
Driftwood Day care building. The
estimated cost of such an exchange
\
"

and expansion and improvement of
childcare is $90,000, according to
Sue Roden, coordinator of the
Parent Resource Center.
Pougiales explained that the talk
about the building and the cost of
the merger is "most trivial when it
comes down to it." Instead she sug·
gested that we focus our attention on
the funding. Funding for Driftwood
was once provided by the S&A
Board, academics, and parents . In
1981, however, academic funding
was cut. Decreased support has led
to minimal facilities and limited
care, Pougiales said.
She also suggested that academic
programs at TESC should take a
more active part in childcare through
internships and work-study . A
strong commitment between the two
once existed during 1978 and 1979.
Since 1980, no academic programs
have been connected with
Driftwood.
Roden said at least three or four
present programs could benefit from
such a relationship. One concerned
student talked of the exciting strides
being made in the field of childcare.
"I am sorry to see it not happening
here," she said. However, too much
academic involvement could interfere with the children and "turn
Driftwood into a lab school,"
Pougiales warned.

,

~,

page 8

I

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL'S GROOVY TOOTH

February 13, 1986

page 9

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL'S GROOVY TOOTH

. February 13, 1986

-

We Three's music brings the audience to their feet
by Bob Baumgartner

The a capella group "We Three"
received a lasting splash of applause
in the TESC Recital Hall Saturday night.
getting two standing ovations and
returning onstage for an encore .
Three former Evergreen students,
Kim Scanlon, B. Sue Johnson and
Sarah Favret. put on a show as
humorous as it was musical. The concert began with a song about getting
up in the morning. While singing they
grimaced and made faces more
reminiscent of the three stooges than
an a capella group, and it helped to pull
the audience's interest into the act.
Death, sex and money was the
theme of the second song, followed by
a song that could have been (and probably was) titled "Don't be afraid of
your mind. " One line of it was : "I
couldn't find a place to sit down in my
own mind." Later they did" Bells," a
song where the three parts flowed and
wove together beautifully like cathedral
bells.
Their music is about modern
stresses everyone can relate to to one

degree or another -- being broke,
disappointed dreams and social expectations -- as well as the places we can
find solace -- pastoral songs with
beach, water and bird imagery.
Before intermission' 'We Three" had
the audience sing along. That was
good for a few social notes, seeing
everyone get nervous and start quietly singing while shifting their eyes
around to see if anyone was watching.
One man sat rigidly, trying to chew
something to the music, while a
woman who appeared to be his wife
swung and sung, flapping her mouth
like a bellows.
The same open, approachable feeling that lifted the performance carried
through to the reception after the concert, where Sarah and B. Sue explained how t8e group originated. Kim and
Jude (B. Sue's sister) met in a program
at Evergreen. They started singing in
the stairwells. Sarah heard them, and
she joined the pair. The first concert
came at the end of a half-year individual contract -- thus, the beginning of "We Three."
After five years of singing in the
original trio, there came a change. ·

Vidor makes music available to Olympia community
by Jacob Weisman

Pdsitively 4th Street, is a prosperous
record store located on 208 W. 4th
Avenue in downtown Olympia. And
while the owner, Winston Vidor, is not
taking nightly Scrooge-like swims in
vaults of horded wealth, he is making
enough money to support himself as
well as the store. As "Kidd Rhythm,
between 1974 and 1981. he was the
host of his own radio show, What It
is: Music in and Out of the '50s, on
KAOS-FM.
Outside the shop, a row of old record
covers sits beneath a tired straw curtain, their colors fading into the sun.
A Chubby Checker record announces
that it is "for twisters only. "
Inside, a series of hand made conII

photo by lennifer Lewis

Kim Scanlon, B. Sue Johnson and Sarah Favret, as We Three, sing a capella to audience's pleasure.

Jude was replaced by her sister, B.
Sue, when Jude quit the group to have
a baby and she bought a restaurant on
Bainbridge Island. Since then, B. Sue
has changed the music, adding new
songs and inspiration.
All of the members of "We Three"
live and work in the Seattle area. B.
Sue and Sarah live on Bainbridge
Island, where Sarah takes care of a
woman with multiple sclerosis and B.
Sue cooks in her sister's restaurant.
Kim has a private cooking business in
Seattle where she brings meals to
families. The group jokes: ''We'll write

when we get work."
Besides singing, their musical
backaround varies. Kim has olaved
piano for 13 years, and B. Sue has
played guitar for seven years. B. Sue
said that her father had his kids singing in folk revivals in the '60s.

tainers house scores of 45's, a great
deal of which are originals, puchased
by Vidor in the '50s and the '60s. The
rest of the store is left to 33's; both
used and new; rock and roll, as well
as country; rhythm and blues, as well
as folk; jazz, as well as blues.
Win Vidor, has obviously put a lot
of thought and hard work into the
store. Just a couple of years ago, the
store didn't have the vast stores of 45's
or half of the new records currently on
sale. As an ex-Evergreen student, he
has brought his knowledge and expertise to task and succeeded admirably.
In a recent conversation he discussed the music he sells and the effect it
has had on his life.

After the event, Lisa Brodoff of the
"Righteous Mothers" joked: "It was
one of the great moments of music."
~ell, that might be stretching it, but
IS ~as fun, and from the applause,
ottier people must have also enjoyed
''We Three."

Live Camel resurrects from the age of dinosaur rock
,

by Duane Anderson

I
guess it was about a year ago
when I bought my first Camel. ..
On a pitch black and quite cold night,
I was waiting for good 01' bus 41 at
Division and Harrison. A red sports car
pulled up. The driver, a man in a funky
hat, rolled down his window and asked if I was heading for Evergreen.
When I replied in the affirmative, he
responded with, "Well, this is the
Evergreen Express, so get on in."
As we rambled along Division, he
played a Windham Hill artist in his car's
tape deck. He gave me a history lesson
on Windham Hill.
When we got back to Evergreen and
started walking from F lot to the
dorms, he asked me what kind of
music I liked. I confessed that I've
been accused of being a musical
fascist. because, while I do listen to
other forms of music, I primarily surround myself with progressive rock. I
rattled off a few band names like Pink
Floyd, Nectar and Yes.
"If you like that kind of music," my
new companion commented, "Then
you should check out a band named
Camel. "
Well, I'm addicted to progressive
rock, so I just had to check out this
Camel.
A couple days later, the skies again
darkened and water poured down from
the heavens. The conditions were right
to make the trek out to Rainy Day in
order to search for this Camel.
To my surprise, Rainy Day had a fair
selection of Camel records. I chose one
with a nice cover, Moonmadness .
When I returned home I set my needle down on the Camel vinyl. I was
greeted by a brief fanfare that introduced Camel as a definite progressive rock

I"

1...,

band.
After the opening, however, Camel
displayed an original style of their own
with the second track, "Song Within
a Song." The outer portion of the song
was melodic and laid back, but in a
way that was distinct from other laid
back varieties of progressive rock
(such as the Peter Gabriel version . of
Genesis). The inner portion of the
song, though, was a skilled rock

Andy Latimer creates hypnotizing guitar
solo.

instrumental.
While the band's frontman, Andy
Latimer, includes a flute in his repertoire ala Jethro Tull's , Ian Anderson,
Latimer doesn't rock with the flute like
Anderson. Latimer, instead, is much
more lyrical and helps set a sunny-dayby-the-Iake-with-nothing-to-do-but-rollon-the-grass atmosphere.
In addition to mid-70s progressive
rock ballads (the album came out in
1976), Moonmadness contains two
very jammin' jazz-rock fusion instrumentals. The second fusion piece,
"Lunar Sea, " does a great job of

swaying back and forth between jazz
and rock, and then wraps them
together with an accelerating tempo
that blazes so furiously I half expected
my turntable to burst into flames'.
The Moonmadness Camel was made
up of four very talented gentlemen:
Doug Ferguson with bass and one
vocal, Andy Ward pounding drums and
percussion, Peter Bardens on
keyboards and one vocal, and Latimer
providing guitars, flute, recorders, and
vocals.
A couple weeks ago there were again
droplets of moisture falling from above
and I found myself in Rainy Day looking through the Camel records. And
what did I find, but a live recording
from 1984. The album was entitled
Pressure Points and I just had to buy
it. So I did.
This Camel, though, featured a
radically different line-l!P than Moonmadness. Latimer was the only veteran
left from 1976. Even more amazing
was that Camel now spotted three -count 'em, three -- keyboard players:
Ton Scherpenzel, Chris Rainbow, and
Richie Close.
There 's still one bass player in the
line-up, Colin Bass, and one drummer,
Paul Burgess.
Peter Bardens, of the 1976 Camel,
does show up for a guest appearance
on organ .
The real special guest appearance,
however, was made by Mel Colins on
sax. Colins has worked with at least
one member of almost every progressive rock band (he also was an
original member of King Crimson back
in the late '60s), so when I saw his
name on the jacket, I just had to race
home to hear that sucker.
I was not disappointed, to say the
least.
The album begins with the title track

and I swear alchemy was employed to
create it; monolithic, grandiose music
of that '70s age of dinosaur rock is
firmly melded together with a riveting
first-class modern sound. Ihe track
bounces open to a rocking.f)eat then
eases into a hypnotizing guitar solo.
Dangling keyboards and bass bring the
listener out of the guitar trance and
land the listener into the grassy hill of
"Drafted," a gentle yet rollicking song.
If your ears want to munch down on
some fast pace modern music,
Pressure Points offers "Captured" and
"West Berlin;" if however, your ears
want to nibble on some old laid back
style music, you can sample
"Drafted" and "Fingertips."
Pressure Points provides jazz fusion
with "Lies," and it offers rock with
"Wait. "
Camel is also still a master of instrumentals as demonstrated by "Sasquatch." "Sasquatch" has a Marillion
like opening, which is followed by a zipping express train of music that takes
one miles and miles.
Camel wrapped the show up with
two old Latimer-Bardens tunes,
"Rhayader" and. "Rhayader Goes to
Town," which burn up an ending even
hotter than "Lunar Sea" of Moonmadness. The whole band goes full
blows on these two tracks and Mel Col·
ins sends it to the edge with a no
holding.back sax solo. Colin Bass then
brings it all back home with a power·
ful and rocketing bass riff.
The album was recorded live at
Hammersmith Odeon on May 11. 1984
with a recording sound of studio
quality.
The entire concert is available on
video cassette.
Pressure Points is a fabulous introduction to Camel. Save up your
lunch money and buy this album.

photo by lennifer Lewis

Winston Vidor reflects in front of his Positively 4th Street where Olympians can find rare music.

rI Indoors
and County
OutdoorslI
Thurston

"I grew up in Tacoma, listening to ing on another radio station.
"People would request things I
music. I used to listen to Bobby
"Blue" Bland, Louis Armstrong, and didn't know they knew about; the authe Midnighters. But, back then, if a dience wasn't really ignorant at all. The
white person wanted to hear black music just wasn't available in large
music, it was only available in the black 'quantities. I would play the indepenneighborhoods. White shops had to dent labels, the small labels, the peospecial order it.
ple who were offering an alternative.
"I was trying to let the audience
"A lot of the records I used to buy,
in the mid '50s, were on the seventy- know the history of the music. If I
eight speed. During the war, if you would play Little Richard, I wouldn't
wanted a new record, you'd first have play his' 'Tutti Frutti. " Instead, I would
go back and pick up his RCA recorto take in your old seventy-eight and
have them take off the shellack for war dings, his spiritual, or his blues recordings that people hadn't heard. I'd let
materials. So, records were rationed;
the audience know that there was
gas was rationed; sugar was rationed;
another side to him, because I knew
shoes were rationed because of rubber; and cars because of the steel,
they were aware that later he became
were rationed.
a gospel singer and a minister. So, I
tried to bring out those things about
Around '65, I went to live in San
Francisco. I got a job and I was living
him that weren 't known.
"I didn't do my shows on tape.
down in North Beach. Then they raisSometimes,
I'd come over the air on
ed the price of rent and turned the
neighborhood into a "Broadway" type
the wrong speed. After a while, I decided if that happened it was fine because
atmosphere with all the topless places.
So I moved to the Russian District, a people were taping the show; tapes of
couple of blocks off Haight, right by
my show would sell for up to $6 in New
York.
I had to go out and spend money
Buena Vista Park. I lived there and I
was working at Macy's out by
just to be able to play those records.
Candlestick Park.
Once, I noticed that the Angels on Sundays seemed to have a girl group
"I moved back up here in '68, after
sound. It sounded so good that way
the Haight opened up to tourism, and
that I just let it play.
started Evergreen in '73. Before
"After that, I went to Prometheus
Evergreen, I was going to go to PLU
to get a master's. But, I didn't get it.
and major in Psychology. But, there
I got out of that because I figured I
was a fellow I knew, James Martinez
didn't need a master's; what I needed
who was a candidate to teach at
was a job. I had had to buy a lot of
Eve~green. When he got the job, I
the records that the station didn't have.
deCided to go to Evergreen.
After the show, I was stuck with a large
inventory of records.
. "I took out an individual contract on
black musicians in the media, and I
"I opened the store in December of
created a radio show. Back then, there
'82 with another Evergreen graduate.
weren't many people interested in this We had used books in here. Him and
sort of thing. This was an area I was his wife had a large collection of books.
scouting.
The books sold bigger than the
records . Of course, there weren 't that
"I played a lot of music that wasn 't
many records, or that many books, for
popular at the time. In other words, I
that matter. But he left to go manage
played bottomAO, as opposed to top
the electronics department of a Pay &
40 rock and roll. I played bottom 40
Save. The store was kept around, after
independents, records that never really
that,
to provide me with a job. lawn
made it on the record charts or through
it now; all the papers are in my name.
record sales. They made it through
"When I sold a lot of my records,
word of mouth. That would be
I
had
to buy new ones to replace them.
Jonathan Richmond or the music that
Now, I put most of my money back inLittle Richard recorded that never really
to the store. I hadn't known how much
became popular. You'd have a record
easier new records were to sell.
with Jimi Hendrix in the background
"I just love music. I'm not interested
on his guitar, and out front would be
in making money off of it. I just want
Timothy Leary, or the Supremes. You
to make the music available."
couldn't hear the records I was play-

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PHONE: (206) SUN·TAPE .

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OUT

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Downtown
elegance

OLY

February 13, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL'S GROOVY TOOTH

page 10

evergreen

February 13, 1986

Woody Allen- remembers · This is Groovy ·Tooth
Armstrong 's ' 'Stargust'

I

o

ooo! After years of searching I
finally found a copy of the original
soundtrack of Woody Allen's Stardust
Memories, I had given up forever the
possibility of ever finding this soundtrack, when last Monday I came across
a lone copy at our own TESC
Bookstore.
This copy was a German import on
the· Bella Musica label and I was
grateful to find it.
While Stardust Memories won't win
many popularity contests, Stardust is
my favorite Woody film bar none (according to a recent Newsweek article,
Stardust is one of the Woodman's
favorite Woody films).
Among his other cinematic talents,
Woody can put together a great soundtrack and Stardust is no exception.
Stardust Memories presents a filmmaker who is tired of making funny
movies (quite the autobiographical
flick). At the same time, the film is a
hilarious satire of Bergman films.
Stardust has a reflective and
nostalgic air to it and the music reflects
that by serving up the music Woody
grew up with.
The soundtrack begins with one of
my favorite songs, "Stardust," per-

formed by Louis Armstrong (actually,
I already have two versions of this
song, but I can't get enough ot it).
The album introduced me to someone I had never heard of, one
Django Reinhardt. One of Reinhardt's
two cuts on the album is a smooth instrumental version of "Body and Soul"
(I've heard an Armstrong rendition of
this song and I say it's a toss up who
does it better).
One of the most enjoyable tunes was
"Palesteena" performed by the
Original Dixieland Jazz-Band. "Palesteena" sets a delightful mood at a
scene that takes place at a zany U.F.O.
convention in the middle of a field.
The soundtrack also contains such
classics as Glen Miller's "Moonlight
Serenade" and Duke Ellington's
.'Three Little Words." The listener is
also treated to Count Basie's "TickleToe."
Chick Webb's "If Dreams Come
True" is used to bulid towards a content ending, and it works quite well.
The soundtrack ends with a beautrtul
melody of the movie's music highlights
entitled "Fantasy." "Fantasy" leaves
one in a bliss of '40s nostalgia.
If you want a fun sampler of .40s
greats or are a fan of Woody Allen
Films, you will want to conduct a
search for this fine album.

we'v~

Arion

2-17

2-20

Warmed-Over Cabbage

2-24

2-27

.A

Arion

"I had an interdisciplinary world
"Hitch your wagon to a star and
you can do whatever it is you set
view and I needed a school with that
view," said Joe Dear, Deputy Direc- your mind to," was the first thing
tor of Labor and Industry. Dear, Suzie Fears said she learned at
whose first program was Ecology of Evergreen. Her first program,
the Pacific Northwest, graduated
"Chautauqua," taught her how to
from Evergreen in the Fall of 1976. collect oral history which she has
"I wanted to be an environmental
been able to use in her own business,
planner. I discovered that economics First Light Media, which is a collechad far more to do with planning,
tion of historical photographs of the
so I shifted towards Political
Jeffers family. "Those basic skills I
Economy. " Dear sought a career learned in 1975, I loved enough to
dealing with social change. "I . continue with and have a business,"
wanted to improve people's day-to- Fears explained. She wanted to work
day lives." His last major work at in public relations and photography,
Evergreen was a group contract, and Evergreen helped her to prosper
"Taxes, Theory and Practice," in both. Fears said, "I've always
which was carried directly over into been a real self-determined person .
his career and his development of the It makes learning really fun and a
People For Fair Taxes, a progressive life time experience, not just
tax reform group. "There are great something you stqP when you get
similarities between a good meeting out of school. I think that is uniqueand a good seminar. I use the things ly Evergreen."
I learned at Evergreen every day on
the job, not just the academic. The
Spirit of Evergreen has remained
t.rue. "

Shop-Bite
Fre.h "roduc. Dally

25" Discount
on all Records
and Cassettes

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

Open Every Day
WESTSIDE CENTER

~~

I
SUE FINK I

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _r_ _-

3-2

3-6

3-10

3-13

STA~NG:

ERNESTINE ANDERSON

by
Irene
Buitenkant

II

Mark

The FREEBOX is a
drop-off container for unwanted clothing which
anyone is welcome to have.
It is a very large basket, a
curiosity located on the
stairway landing between
the second and third floors
of the CAB. Seemingly of
Victorian vintage, it would
more likely be in a setting
like the Smithsonian Institute than within the confines of a 14-year-old rein-

I

Saturday, February 15
8 p,m.
The Evergreen State (ollege
Library Lobby

Tickets:$A, $5
and $6

UBRARY 4300

Victor McCadd
(trumpet soloist)

$6 . Students,
Alumni, and Seniors
$8. Gen. I $10 . Door

TICKETS :

Date: February 21 . 1986

Refreshments and Hors DeOuvres

i"
i.,.,

I'

she said.
The balloon popped in
1980, and people spontaneously used it as a
recreational object. It was
taken to the mound on Red
Square where it was stretched out, encircled, and
grasped. Everyone supporting the ends with two
hands lifted and lowered it,
while
others
ran
underneath.
The college now has a
useful relic, evidence that
an individual, a romantic
adventurer was here.

A freebox visitor.

pho to by J(:nnifcr Lewis

A representative from Northwestern School of Law
of Lewis and Clark College
will be visiting your campus to answer any questions
you may have about law school in general and. more specifically. about
Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College,

Master of Ceremonies.'



forced concrete contemporary college. Its size
seems to defy the nature of
the technology of basket
weaving_
Inquiry about the genesis
of a college phenomenon
assumes a legendary quality. A college generation is
relatively short. Where is
the memory long enough to
answer?
Marcela Abadi, a TESC
graduate, remembered.
The basket is a gondola. It
is all that is left of a
rainbow-colored balloon
which belonged to John
Odell who was a student
here six or seven years ago.
He flew ·in it in different
parts of Washington State.
She remembered that it
first appeared on campus in
1978 . John loved balloons
and shared his interest with
people by giving them rides
on Super Saturday in 1979,

NORTHWESTERN SCHOOL OF LAW
OF LEWIS AND CLARK COLLEGE

Righteous Mothers
opening the show

II

"Being curious is a part of being
Evergreen," said Meg Imre, Pricing
Manager for Red Dot. She
graduated in 1974. The background
research required for her job was an
extension of the Evergreen tradition
of exploring ideas. As Implementation Team Coordinator at Red Dot,
Imre introduced a DTF (Disappearing Task Force) as an incentive for
her employees to complete lengthy
computer projects. "The DTF idea
was a nice way for me to remember
Evergreen," she said, "One of the
things that comes across in an interview is .your ability to be a self
starter," and "Japan In the West,"
Imre's first program, reinforced this
idea. "Evergreen made people feel
drawn together because they were involved in an experiment," Imre said,
"There's a spirit of adventure and
true joy in finding something for
yourself. "

One time hot aIr lift, now old clothes drop

II

_I

I

"I had a lot of idealistic ideas and
visions. Evergreen challenged a lot
of those by the programs and faculty," said George Barner, Thurston
County Commissioner and a 1974
Evergreen graduate. He was at
Evergreen from the very start. "During summer quarters in 19691 worked out at the school as a laborer."
Barner said. His first program was
Political Ecology. "I found myself
being a bridge between political people in the community and people in
the college." Barner said that the
Evergreen approach has allowed him
to speak with credibility now that he
is in politics full-time. "Thurston
County is looked at as a trend setter
because of its interdepartmental
communications," Barner said.
"Because of Evergreen, people are
much more willing now to look at
the reality of ~rowth."



Month of February

PBHiBSOlI'B

"I was looking for an alternative
to the usual university," said Mimi
Gerdes Warner, staff attorney for
Willia:n M. Mercer-Meidiger and a
1977 Evergreen graduate. Warner's
first program was Form and Functio,n which studied the relationships
of art and architecture. Warner said
that in her last quarter she decided
to enter law school. "I came away
from there feeling the sky's the limit;
that feeling was very important. 1
probably wouldn't have gone to law
school without it," she explained.
Even though some doors have been
closed because she was an Evergreen
graduate, Warner said, "I don't feel
as though I wanted them to be open.
Evergreen gave me the sense of being well rounded. It made me very
accepting of a lot of different things
which prepared me for law school. "

Publication Date

Deadline Date

Groovy Tooth

. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .

by Cynthia M. Sherwood

Well
put out two issues of Groovy Tooth and, while we're
not Rolling Stone or even The Rocket yet, we really don't want to be.
We want Groovy Tooth to be a music magazine with an Evergreen style.
To achieve an Evergreen-·style music magazine, we need articles fr.om
Evergreeners. Makes sense, right? So if there's an album or mU~lcal
event you want to share your opinion about, then turn in a review.
We don't want just reviews, though. We want features on people
from the music world. We want reports on the local and non-local
musical scenes. We want editorials on music issues.
What have been the results of Band-Aid, live-Aid, and so on? What's
happened to Michael Jackson since he went the way of the hula hoop?
Who's the best local band? Can you even hear good live music in Olympia
or do you have to go to Seattle or to Los Angeles or back East or as
far as London? Can people listen to whatever music they want to in
the Soviet Union or in Nicaragua or even in the United States?
If you can write out good answers to any of the above questio~s. or
can raise and answer similar questions, then you should be submitting
copy to Groovy Tooth.
.
The next Groovy Tooth comes out in three weeks and the deadline
for articles is March 3.
Groovy Tooth, though, is just one magazine in the qooper Point.Journal's new three magazine cycle and we hope to receive support, In the
form of articles, for all three magazine pullouts.
The magazine that follows Groovy Tooth is Arion. Arion is an opportunity for writers to experiment with journalism (perhaps like Hun~er
S. Thompson, Tom Wolfe or others); Arion is also a place for creative
writing such as short stories or reflective essays.
.
The third pullout section is Warmed-Over Cabbage. Cabbage IS supposed to be a humor magazine, but some have quest.ioned ho~ funny
the content is. If you think Cabbage should have funnier matenal, then
turn in funnier material.
.
The following chart gives the deadlines for turning in magazine articles and the publication dates for the magazines.
Magazine

page II

Evergreen grads make good in real world

1

by Duane Anderson

.

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL



I I II


. 1 AI • • • iIi.1 . 1

Time: 10-11 :30 am Place: Library Building. Room 2102
Please feel free to stop by

A n exhibit from the Freebox Fashion Sho w.

p ho to by Jen n ifer Lewi s

)
February 13, 1986
February 13, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL'S GROOVY TOOTH

page 10

o

ooo! After years of searching I
finally found a copy of the original
soundtrack of Woody Allen's Stardust
Memories, I had given up forever the
possibility of ever finding this soundtrack, when last Monday I came across
a lone copy at our own TESC
Bookstore.
This copy was a German import on
the· Bella Musica label and I was
grateful to find it.
While Stardust Memories won't win
many popularity contests, Stardust is
my favorite Woody film bar none (according to a recent Newsweek article,
Stardust is one of the Woodman 's
favorite Woody films).
Among his other cinematic talents,
Woody can put together a great soundtrack and Stardust is no exception.
Stardust Memories presents a filmmaker who is tired of making funny
movies (quite the autobiographical
flick). At the same time, the film is a
hilarious satire of Bergman films.
Stardust has a reflective and
nostalgic air to it and the music reflects
that by serving up the music Woody
grew up with.
The soundtrack begins with one of
my favorite songs, "StardUSt." per-

an~,

by Cynthia M. Sherwood

Well, we've put out two issues of Groovy Tooth
while we're
not Rolling Stone or even The Rocket yet, we really don t want to be.
We want Groovy Tooth to be a music magazine with an Evergreen style.
To achieve an Evergreen':style music magazine, we need articles fr~m
Evergreeners. Makes sense, right? So if there's an album or musical
event you want to share your opinion about, then turn in a review.
We don't want just [eviews, though. We want features on people
from the music world. We want reports on the local and non-local
musical scenes. We want editorials on music issues.
What have been the results of Band-Aid, Live-Aid, and so on? What's
happened to Michael Jackson since he went the way of the hula hoop?
Who's the best local band? Can you even hear good live music in Olympia
or do you have to go to Seattle or to Los Angeles ~r back East or ~s
far as London? Can people listen to whatever musIc they want to In
the Soviet Union or in Nicaragua or even ·in the United States?
If you can write out good answers to any of the above questio~s. or
can raise and answer similar questions, then you should be submitting
copy to Groovy Tooth.
The next Groovy Tooth comes out in three weeks and the deadline
for articles is March 3.
Groovy Tooth, though, is just one magazine in the Cooper Point.Journal's new three magazine cycle and we hope to receive support, In the
form of articles, for all three magazine pullouts.
The magazine that follows Groovy Tooth is Arion. Arion is. an opportunity for writers to experiment with journalism (perhaps like Hun~er
S. Thompson, Tom Wolfe or others); Arion is also a place for creative
writing such as short stories or reflective essays.
.
'
The third pullout section is Warmed-Over Cabbage. Cabbage IS supposed to be a humor magazine, but some have ques~ioned ho~ funny
the content is. If you think Cabbage should have fun mer matenal, then
. turn in funnier material.
The following chart gives the deadlines for turning in magazine articles and the publication dates for the magazines.
Deadline Date

Magazine

2-17

2-20

Warmed-Over Cabbage

2-24

2-27

Arion

"I had an interdisciplinary world
"Hitch your wagon to a star and '
"I was looking for an alternative
view and I needed a school with that you can do whatever it is you set
to the usual university," said Mimi
view," said Joe Dear, Deputy Direc- your mind to," was the first thing Gerdes Warner, staff attorney for
tor of Labor and Industry. Dear, Suzie Fears said she learned at
Willia:n M. Mercer-Meidiger and a
1977 Evergreen graduate. Warner's
whose first program was Ecology of E,vergreen. Her first program,
the Pacific Northwest, graduated . "Chautauqua," taught her how to
first program was Form and Funcfrom Evergreen in the Fail of 1976. collect oral history which she has
tion which studied the relationships
"I wanted to be an environmental been able to use in her own business,
of art and architecture. Warner said
planner. I discovered that economics First Light Media, which is a collec- that in her last quarter she decided
had far more to do with planning, tion of historical photographs of the to enter law school. "I came away
so I shifted towards Political Jeffers family. "Those basic skills I
from there feeling the sky's the limit;
Economy." Dear sought a career learned in 1975, I loved enough to that feeling was very important. I
probably wouldn't have gone to law
dealing with social change. "I . continue with and have a business,"
wanted to improve people's day-to- Fears explained. She wanted to work
school without it," she explained .
Even though some doors have been
day lives." His last major work at in public relations and photography,
Evergreen was a group contract, and Evergreen helped her to prosper closed because she was an Evergreen
"Taxes, Theory and Practice," in both. Fears said, "I've always graduate, Warner said, "I don't feel
as though I wanted them to be open.
which was carried directly over into been a real self-determined person.
his career and his development of the
It makes learning really fun and a Evergreen gave me the sense of being well rounded. It ma4e me very
People For Fair Taxes, a progressive life time experience, not just
something you stop when you get accepting of a lot of different things
tax r-eform group. "There are great
similarities between a good meeting out of school. I think that is unique- which prepared me for law school. "
and a good seminar. I use the things ly Evergreen."
I learned at Evergreen every day on
the job, not just the academic. The
Spirit of Evergreen has remained
true."

3-2

3-6

3-10

3-13

by
Irene
Buitenkant
J

I
I

I

Shop-Bite
Fre.h Produce Dally

I

25" Discount
on all Records
and Cassettes

II

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

Open Every Day
WESTSIDE CENTER

Mark

The FREEBOX is a
drop-off container for unwanted clothing which
anyone is welcome to have.
It is a very large basket, a
curiosity located on the
stairway landing between
the second and third floors
of the CAB. Seemingly of
Victorian vintage, it would
more likely be in a setting
like the Smithsonian Institute than within the confines of a 14-year-old rein-

SUE

with Jacqueline Stander

Saturday, February 15
8 p.m.
The Evergreen Stote College
Library Lobby
Righteous Mothers
opening the show

I.

I

I ~almtinc59' ~~-,J
TIME: 9 PM - l AM

I Mas~::;~:r:~OO~ies:

I
L:

and $6

TICKETS :

Refreshments and Hors DeOuvres

she said .
The balloon popped in
1980, and people spontaneously used it as a
recreational object. It was
taken to the mound on Red
Square where it was stretched out, encircled, and
grasped. Everyone supporting the ends with two
hands lifted and lowered it,
while
others
ran
underneath.
The college now has a
useful relic, evidence that
an individual, a romantic
adventurer was here.

A freebox visitor.

p hoto by Jennifer Lewis

/

A representative from Northwestern School of Law
of Lewis and Clark College
will be visiting your campus to answer any questions
you may have about law school in general and, more specifically, about
Northwestern School of Law of Lewis and Clark College .

(trump et soloist)

$6. Students,
/umn;, and Seniors
$8 . Gen. I $10 . Door

forced concrete contemporary college. Its size
seems to defy the nature of
the technology of basket
weaving.
Inquiry about the genesis
of a college phenomenon
assumes a legendary quality. A college generation is
relatively short. Where is
the memory long enough to
answer?
Marcela Abadi , a TESC
graduate, remembered .
The basket is a gondola. It
is all that is left of a
rairibow-colored balloon
which belonged to John
Odell who was a student
here six or seven years ago.
He flew in it in different
parts of Washington State.
She remembered that it
first appeared on campus in
1978. John loved balloons
and shared his interest with
people by giving them rides
on Super Saturday in 1979,

NORTHWESTERN SCHOOL OF LAW
OF LEWIS AND CLARK COLLEGE

Opener: Common Cause

Victor McCadd

Tickets:$4, $5

"Being curious is a part of being
Evergreen," said Meg Imre, Pricing
Manager for Red Dot. She
graduated in 1974. The background
research required for her job was an
extension of the Evergreen tradition
of exploring ideas. As Implementa·
tion Team Coordinator at Red Dot,
Imre introduced a DTF (Disappear·
ing Task Force) as an incentive for
her employees to complete lengthy
computer projects. "The DTF idea
was a nice way for me to remember
Evergreen," she said, " One of the
things that comes across in an interview is your ability to be a self
starter," and "Japan In the West, "
Imre's first program, reinforced this
·idea . "Evergreen made people feel
drawn together because they were involved in an experiment," Imre said,
" There's a spirit of adventure and
true joy in finding something for
yourself. "

One time hot air lift, now old clothes drop

\

PJ!t.rmRSOII'B

"I had a lot of idealistic ideas and
visions. Evergreen challenged a lot
of those by the programs and faculty," said George Barner, Thurston
County Commissioner and a 1974
Evergreen graduate . He was at
Evergreen from the very start. "During summer quarters in 1969 I worked out at the school as a laborer."
Barner said. His first program was
Political Ecology. "I found myself
being a bridge between political people in the community and people in
the college." Barner said that the
Evergreen approach has allowed him
to speak with credibility now that he
is in politics full-time. "Thurston
County is looked at as a trend setter
because of its interdepartmental
communications," Barner said .
"Because of Evergreen, people are
much more willing now to look at
the reality of II;rowth."

Publication Date

Arion

Groovy Tooth

__________~____

Evergreen grads make good in real world

II

formed by Louis Armstrong (actually,
. I already have two versions of this
song, but I can't get enough ot it).
The album introduced me to someone I had never heard of, one
Django Reinhardt. One of Reinhardt's
two cuts on the album is a smooth instrumental version of "Body and Soul"
(I've heard an Armstrong rendition of
this song and I say it's a toss up who
does it better).
One of the most enjoyable tunes was
.. Palesteena" performed by the
Original Dixieland Jazz-Band. "Palesteena" sets a delightful mood at a
scene that takes place at a zany U.F.O.
convention in the middle of a field.
The soundtrack also contains such
classics as Glen Miller's "Moonlight
Serenade" and Duke Ellington's
"Three Little Words." The listener is
also treated to Count Basie's "TickleToe."
Chick Webb's "If Dreams Come
True" is used to bulid towards a content ending, and it works quite well.
The soundtrack ends with a beautiful
melody ofthe movie's music highlights
entitled "Fantasy." "Fantasy" leaves
one in a bliss of '40s nostalgia.
If you want a fun sampler of '40s
greats or are a fan of Woody Allen
Films, you will want to conduct a
search for this fine album.

page II

everg~r_e_en

Woody Allen remembers This is Groovy Tooth
Armstrong's Stargust' '
by Duane Anderson

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Dat~:

February 21 , 1986

Time: 10-11:30 am Place: Library Building, Room 2102
Please feel free to stop by

A n exhibit from the Freebox Fashion Show.

photo by Jennifer Lewi s

February 13, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 12

i
'.

February 13, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 13

reviews
Gil Scott-Heron ~ives lesson in "Bluesology' ,
by Paul Pope
Gil Scott-Heron held a thronged
library lobby audience in anticipation last ,Friday night at Evergreen.
The show w.as delayed until nearly
9 p.m. Scott-Heron appeared onstage, casually walked up to the
microphone, and started his performance with a mixed-bag of conversational rap and poetry: a little
weather, a little politics, and a short
travelogue of his childhood from his
birth in Chicago, to living in

Jackson, Tennessee. And after age
13, he found his true calling in New
York City as abluesologist (one who
studies the blues).
"You may nQt believe I am a
scientist by the way I dress, but I can
not be responsible for the square
way most scientists look," ScottHeron said. He went on to talk
about his early encounters with
poetry and asserted that it is a form
of communication, not a means to
show how deep a person is.

The first 40 odd minutes of solo
performance included the song
"Space Shuttle," which slams
Reagan's proposed Strategic
Defense Initiative. The song blasts
the Star Trek reruns.
Scott-Heron disa.8reed with some
write-ups dubbing hi~ a protest
singer.
"A protest singer sings outside on
the steps of some official building,
protesting what goes on inside. I am
a taxpayer. That makes me part of

"Color Purple" ·.is "too great"
by Irene Mark Buitenkant
The readers of Alice Walker's
"The Color Purple" as well as film
buffs will be happy to learn that the
movie version of the book can now
be seen at the Lacey Cinema. Nearly everything in the book is in the
film and then some. Both the critics
a nd the viewers have applauded this
film. It is rich in detail. It communicates a deep human need -- the
need to love. It is a revelation about
a lifestyle in the black community in
the South during the first half of this
century, and the pressures of society on the individual.
The heroine is Celie, a black
women who was oppressed by her
stepfather, her husband, Albert, and
her father in-law. She suffered the
rape of her stepfather, who she
believed was her real father nearly
all her life, the kid-snatching of their
two children by him, and an unconsented marriage to a cruelly insensitive widower with three children
and a mistress, named Shug. Celie's
sister, Nettie, who upon thwarting
the advances of her brother-in-law,
is denied his hospitality. A series of
unshown events lead Nettie to
Africa. Continuing his vengence,
Celie's husband prevents all of Nettie's letters from reaching Celie; stifling her expression of love.
By achiev'
some financial

security, this farmer rose above the
social emasculation imposed on his
peers by white society. He treated
black women as badly as the whites
did. His father's lecture delivered the
universal message which defined the
role of women much the way the
Nazis did: "Kuche, Kinder und Kirche" -- (Kitchen, children and
church .)
The ear and eye of the beholder
is delighted by this film. Quincy
Jones, the composer, co-produced
this film . The song he wrote, "Miss
Celie's Blues," bonds itself to the
listener as soon as it is heard.
Photographic images of people moving behind screens of purple flowers
growing in a field, and shadows on
bedroom walls conveying action are
satisfying. However there were a few
disconcerting moments when there
seemed to be a lack of continuity.
When one views Celie being introduced to Albert's family and
home, one presumes that this formal
ante-bellum house, replete with
classical columns in the background,
is the home. All the action at his
home following this is in a more
modest farmhouse. Also, the ages of
the children of the various families
are confusing as the movie proceeds
through three decades. There was no
attempt to match the voice of the actress playing the younger Celie to the

deep one of Whoopie Goldberg who
assumes Celie's role as a young
adult.
Whoopie Goldberg as Celie and
Danny Goldberg as Albert deliver
great performances. They are
believable characters who age convincingly. Danny Glover does a fine
job in getting the audience to dislike
him. It is admirable that Oprah Winfrey, who acted so well as daughterin-law Sophia, is a successful talkshow hostess and had never acted
before.
The movie is, in a sense, too great.
To satisfy the appetite of
mainstream audiences who have
been dieting on the grandeur of
multimillion dollar films, areas have
been expanded which detract from
the poignancy of an economically
worded story.
However, by enlarging the story
with the big optimistic hallelujah
finale, the screenplay dilutes the
strength of the story of Celie's
plight, and empathy for her is
diminished. The book leaves one
feeling that this strong capable
human being was dealt a rotten life
having been deprived of love, education and the right to happiness. It
might have bee~ a more sensitive
film if it were made in the more
narrowly-focused manner of foreign
films made in earlier times.

ALL WAYS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.

what goes on inside. I just like to
keep an eye on my employees."
After a short break he returned to
the stage with his band, but was first
presented a plaque by supplemental
events co-ordinator, Pierre Gautier,
on behalf of all Evergreen S&A coordinators. The inscription read:
"For your never ending strength and
courage for educating the people of
the world. Although from a position
sometimes politically left, you're
always morally right."
Musically, the band assumed transitions from jazz to rap to funk
smoothly and subtlely. Scott-Heron
plays a simple keyboard supported
by Ron Holloway on sax, Robert
Gordon on bass, and Steve Walker
on drums. Each member had his
solo. Their style is uncluttered and
straightforward, keeping in focus the
emphasis on Scott-Heron's powerful lyrics. At times the band did let
loose with full-out rockin' that in·

duced a number of the audience to
dance, even though folding chairs
were a hindrance.
As it was, everyone got caught up
in the choruses of "We Don't Want
No Re-Ron, " and his anti-apartheid
standard "Johannesburg." ScottHeron proclaimed, "Nobody will be
free 'til everyone participates!"
The show ended with a serious
jam about gun control, which was
inspired by the infamous Frank Rizzo, ex-mayor of Philidelphia. And
also a poem "Pray for Gil ScottHeron" written by his friend, musician Brian Jackson, who appeared
on some of Scott-Heron's early
albums including "Pieces of a Man"
(1971).

Scott-Heron's performance was at
times comic and somber, but always
pointed and energetic. In the words
of one of his entourage, "We rocked Evergreen's shit."

. .

"Nobody will be free until everyone participates.

"

photo by Jennifer Lewis

Administrative Meeting
with: CAROL SASAKI
FOUNDER AND DIRECTOR OF

Geoduck divers inspire non-stop 'enthusiasm
Geoduck divers Erica Pickell's
and J .R. Baldwin's nationalqualifying
performances
at
Evergreen in the meet last Friday
against highline and P.L.U. brought
non-stop enthusiasm and pride from
coach Bruce Fletcher, "They were
consistent. They both have high
degrees of difficulty on their dives.
They really go for it.!'
Pickell was first and qualified for
nationals in the one and three meter
events. Fletcher attributes Pickell's
success to her perseverance in prac-

tice. He said that although she has
more than her share of wipeouts, she
always goes back for more. "I'd call
her very determined," he added.
Baldwin also won both his events
but missed qualifyi.ng in the one
meter by 17 points. He will have
another chance when Evergreen
hosts the district meet in two weeks.
The good news didn't stop there.
For the second time this season, the
Geoduck men pulled out a close victory over Highline Community College with a score of 56-47. The men
lost to P.L.U. 64-38.
"The star of this meet was Casey

Pratt," said Fletcher. Pratt swam a
lifetime best in the 200 individual
medley (1M), winning in 2:08.52. He
was third in the 100 backstroke with
another personal best time of
1:03.42. He also led the Geoduck
relay team (Robert Bruns, Pieter
Drummond, and Burke Anderson)
to victory in the final event, the 400
freestyle relay, clinching the team
win over Highline.
When asked for comments, Pratt
said the key to victory was a swim
cap loaned to him by Fletcher. On
a more serious note, Pratt said his
body told him he was swimming

-=,I
- •••••iiii.~·s~p[i6~R).TiCSIJINiT1Bi'RDTIEinF~.~.r::•.-.....~.~.~.fl ' the
well.shakes
"I t was
likeone
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got
• •••••
after
race
and a Inose
PING PONG on Valentines Day!!! Recreational Sports
Director Corey Meador is at it again with this bound-tobe thrilling event! Sign-up by 5 p.m., Thursday, February
13 in CRe 302. The tourney will be in the afternoon and
evening of the 14th. Rec-Sports also sponsors Wallyball
Monday nite from 7-9 p.m. and Thursday from 3:45-5
p.m., women's drop-in basketball Tuesday 3:30-5: 1:
p.m. in the Steamplant gym, ultimate frisbee and soccer. All levels of participants are welcome!! Contact Corey at 866-6000, X6521, or come by eRC 302 for
The Track Team Wants YOU!!! No, they are not running out of room or field space!! They could still accomodate another couple of hundred runners, throwers,
jumpers, sprinters and miscellaneous tracksters. The current crowd includes Kurt Kirstien, an experienced quarter
miler, throwers Dan Barclay, Sean Hollen, Dave Campbell and Jeff Barker (dicus, shot and javelin), and
Evergreen's first triple jumper Pat Rawusley, from Tenino.
For the women, veteran Franny Hearn will ioin Tracy
Stefan in the middle distance running events, while school
record holder Becky Burton will be sprinting with Laura
Lewis, Susie Tveter, Laurie Selfors and Bridget Young.
Selfors will also be putting her muscles to work in the
throwing events, joining Dawn Rorvik and Inger Christenson. Anyone interested in flying with this great group can
contact head honcho Pete Steilberg at 866-6000, X6531
or CRe 302.

••••••• Sponsored by Domino's Pizza ........ ...

bleed after the relays. That's what
happens when I swim my best
times," he said .
Fletcher was pleased with the 400
relay performance. "Last week I was
disappointed about our chances for
national qualifying in the 400 meter
relay, but after tonight's perfor·
mance, I'm very pleased. They ripped!" The time of 3:27.02 is only
four seconds off the national qualifying time.

,

943 - 8700

by Jacob Weisman
Team G, consisting of Tay
Hazelrigg, Dan Winkley, and Ed
Winkley, defeated the Purple Rain ,
Mike Anthony, Ben Chotzen, Larry
Dominiquez, and Kirk Carner, 12-11
in the Shick Super Hoops three-onthree double elimination tournament
finals last Friday. And when it was
over, only some of the players were
friendly.
Thanks in part to the late arrival
of the Purple Rain's Larry Dominiquez, team G took a 5-2 lead early
in the first half. But the outstanding
play of reserve guard Kirk Carner,
playing for an injured Rocke
Klockner, helped the Rain stay close
through the first half of play. The
problem 5tarted when Ed Winkley,
unable to keep up with the smaller
Carner, tried to play him physically.

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FEBRUARY
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Local Producers' Day- February 22nd .
Stop by and sample some of our fine
local products.

people attend college as a way out of poverty.)

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THERAPIES:

QUITTING. IT COULD BE
THE TEST OF YOUR LIFE.

The men finished the dual meet
season with a 6-2 record. Both the
men and women will now be pointing towards Ihe district meet,
Febrary 20-22, at Evergreen. Timers
will be needed. For more informa tion call Bruce Fletcher at 866-6000,
x6530.

Tempers finally came to a head in
the second half when Ed Winkley,
going for a long rebound, collided
with Carner. Both players were sent
stumbling toward the sideline.
Winkley, recovering his balance,
then gave Carner an added push,
sending him sprawling out of
bounds.
"Something went wrong," said
teammate Ben Chotzen of the events
that led up to the incident. "I know
there should have been referees supplied by Shick. If there had been,
nothing might have happened." The
entire tournament was played
without a single referee. Players were
forced to call their own fouls, and
teams shot, playground style, for initial possession .
Karen Denman, the referee from
the Evergreen sponsored five-on-five
in tram ural league, came

,,,\UL I/~

~

over. "If I ever see anything like that
again," she told Winkley, "you're
out of here ." Winkley tried to argue
but Denman wasn't buying any of it.
Meanwhile the clock was still run·
ning and it was running out on the
Purple Rain who still trailed by three
baskets.
The Rain managed to tie the game
II-lIon a driving lay-up by Kirk
Carner. But with 20 seconds left,
they missed an opportunity to take
the lead when Mike Anthony missed an eighteen foot jump shot.
Ed Winkley rebounded the ball
and fired it out to Tay Hazelrigg ,
who had made eight of the II
basket s scored by team G.
Hazelrigg' s shot bounced softly
down off the front rim, and into the
hands of Dan Winkley who laid it
in for a 12-11 victory over the PurDie Rain .

9:30-6:00

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Brulls aptly described the training
status of the team, "We're at a
period called break-down. We're
breaking down our bodies and getting ready to begin our taper (less
strenuous training). I feel the times
al Ihis meet weren't really super fast.
Once regionals come around,
Bingo!"

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Jerome Rigot sUlT)JIJarized the sentiments of many of the Geoduck
swimmers. "I've improved a lot. I
worked much harder this season and
I'm in much better shape." Rigot
lowered his 100 freestyle time from
a best of 1:04 last year to 59.9 this
year. His best in the 100 butterfly
has gone from I :20 to I: 15.

e

u.s. Depanment 01 Health & Human

(Helping Ourselves Means Education * I

Feb.21st.

tices, being at all the meets, and having a great attitude towards the
team," said Fletcher.

Tempers flare In 3-on-3

H.O.M.E.
Harrison and Division

Max Gilpin, fighting off a winter
cold, won the 100 breast stroke but
lost to Pratt for the first time in the
200 1M. Gilpin showed that the
rivalry is a friendly one by being the
first person to congratulate Pratt for
his strong effort.
"I think this was the best team
performance by the women all
season." The 200 freestyle relay
team of Ann Remsberg, Tawny
Young, Shawn Blaisdell and Martha
Grazier placed second to the P. L. U.
team with a time only three seconds
off of the national qualifying mark.
Remsberg had a personal best in
the 10 butterfly with a time of
I: 16.41. Although pleased with her
performance, she said she was more
excited about the men's final race.
"My highlight of the meet was
cheering for the men's 400 relay. We
had the whole team cheering at the
end of the lane," said Remsberg.
Fletcher also emphasized the importance of team spirit and positive
attitude. "Ellie Rosenthal has been
working hard all season. She's trying to be a med student. She impresses me by making all the prac-



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,

page 14

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

February 13, 1986

February 13, 1986

eXI2ressive arts network

page 15

. THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

I2oem.s
oh, romantic boy

Fumiko Kimura with Dance.

your laugh might come from the region of your heart -or perhaps
deeper yet from the region of your solar plexus
but i can tell that your sighs are lies you don't really yearn
as even perhaps you think you do and
we both know that you don't really want to be in love unless,
it's with the concept and not the concrete of thought and action
that goes with the state of being called love
not to be confused with the state of oregon
or the state of the union look closer at the state of your heart and please
do us all a favor and don't opt for love that supreme state of being called
love which has somehow gotten confused behind your sparklin baby blues
poor blue baby lose that idea that yearning is required
oh i ask you get laid today and tomorrow love will be so much easier
to not suffer for

photo by Devon Damonte ,

Sumi art exhibited

anonymously yours

by Devon Damonte

An exhibit of Sumi art by Fumiko Kimura is currently on
display in Evergreen's Gallery 2 (located in the library lobby)
through February 23. The exhibit runs the gamut from traditional
Body Mass, Terracotta sculpture
calligraphic sumi forms and characters to a more modern application of sumi inks combined with collage in richly colored poetic
compositions.
On Friday evening, January 31, Kimura visited our campus to
lecture on her beliefs and working techniques, followed by a reception which mingled the art forms of sumi with sushi.
Though at first I felt somewhat out of place at the lecture-attendance was apparently required for students of the Art as
Cultural Expression program-- once Kimura began speaking and
showing slides of works from her diverse career, her charm and
personal grace set me at ease and kept me captivated.
Kimura was born in Idaho and received a B.S. in chemistry from
the University of Puget Sound (U .P .S.) in Tacoma. After learning characters of the ancient Asian alphabets and practicing traditional sumi painting for many years, Kimura felt a need for
something fresh and new in her art.
So she enrolled in the graduate art program at U.P .S. where
she began working on larger, more contemporary pieces. These
works are thickly layered in brightly colored acrylics which she
made herself from dry pigments. Next Fumiko began to combine
sumi inks and Asian forms with the brighter acrylic colors, and
added new dimensions with fabrics, decorative papers, and gold
leaf collaged ' into her images.
She believes that the material medium creates the form, so, to
insure that her forms remained vibrant and innovative, she continued to search for new materials and new applications for existing media. For a particular quality of white paint she mixed
in ground pearl dust from jewelry stores, and began painting on
patterned metallic wallpaper as a modern version of Asian screen
painting.
Kimura currently teaches art part time at the University of Puget
Bridged, Terracolta sculpture
Sound and at Tacoma Community College and is a full time artist.
As influences, Kimura mentined Paul Klee's journals, and the
17th to 19th century painters of the Japanese Rimpa School-These sculptures were made by Laurie Clapp, the Student Gallery Coordinator, on independent conKorin, Sotatsu, and Koetsu. She said the concepts of energy as
tract with Mike Moran . Photos were taken by Devon Damonte. During the month 0/ March, Laurie
light and color as a light source were breakthroughs for her, and
would like women to submit their work/or the student gallery, which will/eature women's art about
she never forgets the sumi tenents of painting "in one controlled
women's issues through the month 0/ March. Call ext. 6412 or visit LIB 3232 to make an appointbreath," working to "find a passage to follow to come to a quiet
ment with Laurie.
end."
The impression one gets from meeting Kimura is very similar
to the affect of her art works. There is a lyrical, decorative qualilty
on the surface, but, digging deeper, one finds an immense strength
There was a major error in the February 7 CP J article "Expressive Arts Program Slashed by Fifty Percent." The story stated that "the 85-86 academic year proved to be a good one." The sentence should
in the poetry of opposing forces.
have read, "the 84-85 academic year proved to be a good one." The Expressive Arts Network apologizes
This exhibit of ancient and modern sumi art, which is accented
for this error.
by pottery pieces by Shigemi Taguchi and Kathy Lusher, is a treat
~,:_:_:_:__=_:_:_:_:_:_:_;_~_;_=_:_~_;_:_:_;.:.::.::.::-:-:-:-:-~-;?--::-::-::-::-:-:-:-:-::-::,,;-F;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::~~f~or~th~e;;;ey~e;s~a~n~d~fo~o~d~fo~r the spirit and
not be missed .
T-SHIRT AND INVITA TlONAL DESIGN CONTEST

r:

PO·ED SAYS
Popular myth No.1: The CPJ is a piece of shit. Facl: II varies from week to week. I have
been lold thai some people will not .ubmil 10 Ihis page because they accepl a common
notion that a bad repulation has haunled il for years. I prinl what I believe is the best
copy received each week. Some weeks I receive very little copy at all. I have also heard
said, that certain poets' work keep reoccurring. I cOMider this primarily as a sign of lalent.
Uyou are acquainled with any of these authors aak them if I prinl all of their submissions.
What becomes prinled and what does nol is based mainly on my own opinion . Still, I at·
templlo galher as much dive"e opinion from among as many people as williislen. Some
weeks no one listens. U you care or just want to bitch, be in the pit area outside Ihe CPJ
on Tuesdays at noon 10 join me in an open advisory (orum. As a contributor please re(rain
lrom comment on your own work. All names will be removed prior 10 (arum and held until
publicalion .

Px

..-"'-~

1
I

~
~

The
Search
For
Herb

" ,. /'

\ ~

All entries must be submitted by 10 AM on Feb 24th , at the
Bookstore or The Bronch! !Any questions? call Beth at e~' t .5017

C!?-:'

Good thru
Feb. 28,

Outside,
a tattered bumper sticker
faded with age proclaims,
liTwins are 2 good 2 be true!"

Hi, I'm your yuppy college president
I always talk like I'm hyped-out on est
I wear Amway .aftershave everywhere I go
My job is to help destroy your liberal education_
So don't create; just graduate get yourself a
demographic business degree.
Remember it's all for the good of
capital gain_
This is the future ...
of the Paciic Rim.

THIS IS NOT EVERGREEN TECH!

i

R

.- ---~~) A
WH.OPPE, i
: BUY A'"' W
· HOPPER FREE~
:•______
GET
:
coupon _______________________________
I

400 Cooper Point Rd. i
~

WELL HUNG

Welcome to Oceania phase two
with your host, Joe O'Brien:

Skank Rabbit

J ell-O Biafra

" The first person to recognize Herb in
any Burger King Restaurant wins $5.000 ':'"

:-

j

with apologies to

Is On . . .

;f(~A

In Kansas City
motels last night
People made love
and love
Bodies occupying
a space like ours
Muscles contracting
in familiar ways
In the morning
they too
crave coffee and milk.
Steve Blakeslee

Remember: Entries should use the
GRADUATING CLASS theme "Taking R is k 5' ,

~X;;!:·~ ~\,:1)~'~
W

~

Inside,
two identical brats
beat each other senseless
while mom flails back from the front seat.

Dennis Held

Correction

~~IIIINt;g)~1

J

Station Wagon Prophecy

It's scary to be
piece of DNA:
the constant unzipping
coding for fingers,
toes, brains, an eye,
some nameless enzyme
in the liver
of a grizzly bear
What if you fuck it up?
What if your GTA
mates to CAG,
G,
glycine
changes to glycine
a histidine,
fucks up a protein,
fucks up an enzyme,
fucks up a pathway,
makes your project
your darling
an auxotroph
withered and dry in a womb,
a shell,
a spore
oh boy
I fucked it up
It's scary to be
a piece of DNA
a

Steve Blakeslee

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 16

February 13, 1986

notebook

Cooper Point Journal

Tonight, February 13

Issue No. lS '

"Guatemalan Guernlca," a powerful exhibit of art by Guatemalan Indian children, opens in Gallery 2Yl in the Library with a reception at 6 p.m. Twenty original
drawings will be on display. The free exhibit is sponsored by Evergreen's Peace and Conflict Resolution Center. For more information call X6098.
"Computers and the Creative Process" is the subject of a talk by Craig Hickman, an Evergreen alumnus who uses computers in his work. The talk is from 3 to 4:30
p.m. in LH 5. Following the lecture there will be a reception for Craig in the Rotunda.
Valentines day "Light Hearted" ping-pong tournament sign-up deadline is at 5 p.m. in the REC Cntr. Call X6530 for details .
Thursday night riJms presents All That Heaven Allows, starring Jane Wyman and Rock Hudson at 7 p.m ., and Merchant oj the Four Seasons, at 4:30 and 9:30 p.m.
The
films
will
play
in
LH
I.
Admission
IS
$1.50.
Free
childcare
is
available
for
the
7
p.m .
show
only. '

Saturday, February 15
Comedian Colin Campbell will perform at The Village Inn. See Friday listing for details.
Solo guitarist Tracy Moore will perform at the YWCA, So. 4th & Broadway in Tacoma, at 8 p.m. Also performing will be the Cassa ndra Folk Trio, playing folk,
co ntemporary, ragtim e picking and spirituals. Admission fee is $4. Call 863-6617 for more information.
.
Sue Fink,singer, songwri ter and recording artist who is now at the forefront of the women's music movement, will perform in the LIB lobby at 8 p.m . Openmg f~r
Fink will be a local favorite, Righteous Mothers. Advance tickets are $4, $5 and $6, but no one Will be turned away for lack of money. Tickets are on sale at Evergreen s
Bookstore, Rainy Day Records, The Bookmark, the Underground in Tacoma, and the Red and Black bookstore in Seattle. Free childcare will be provided at the Parent's
Ce nter on the bottom floor of the LH Rotunda. For more information call X6162.
Olympia's First Annual Women's Cooking Contest entries must be turned in before 5:45 p.m. at the Community Center. Check-in is from 5: 15 to 5:45 p.m. Contestant
fee is $2 per entry, and you may enter as many categories as you wish. Categories include appetizers, entrees, salads, side dishes and desserts . Each entry must serve
eight people and be served in a container that keeps it at serving temperature. Guests fee is $4.

Sunday, February 16
Big Mountain regional meeting will be held at the Organic Farmhouse from 10 to 7 p.m.

Monday, February 17

by Cynthia M. Sherwood



Well
contamination
was
discovered during a water test on
January 16, 1986 at the Geoduck
House, 4346 Sunset Beach Dr.
N.W., by Judy Whittaker, a
Thurston County Environmental
Health Department inspector.
Evergreen rents th e Geoduck
House to the Olympia Community
School, which is a private school offering a lternative education to 25
children. "The school (Evergreen)
shou ld be testing its water on a
quarterly basis," said Phil Brinker
a Health Department inspector wh~
has been working on the well case
with staff members at Evergreen and
the Geoduck House.
II appears they, Evergreen, did
take tests, but didn't keep records
with l.D. numbers, so it is difficult
to determine when the contamination occured, Brinker said.
Evergreen's Facilities Engineer
Supervisor, Ron Wilkinson, says he
tested the well in December and got
a positive reading, which means the
water was contaminated. "I purified
the system with bleach and tested it

President's day holiday: no school.
"Bureaucratic Power and Feminist Alternatives" is the subject of talk given by Kathy E. Ferguson, professor of political science at Siena College and author of The
Feminist Case Against Bureaucracy. The talk is at 5:30 p.m. in LIB Lounge 2100.

Tuesday, February 18
Spring Quarter Group Contract "Democracy and Capitalism" information/planning meeting will be held. Contact Jeanne Hahn, coordinator, X6014.
..
Emperor Jones will be shown in LH 1 at 4:30 and 8 p.m . This film classic is an adaptation of Eugene O'Neil's play about a slave who becomes emperor of Hall!.
Free. For more information call X6002.
.
Orientation to Career Planning and Job Search workshop will be held from 7:30 to 8:3'0 p.m . in The Corner in A Dorm. For information call X6193, or stop by the
Career Development Office in LIB 1213 .

Wednesday, February 19

346
BEACH DR. NW

Peace Corps will be holding interviews. Appointments, application materials and more information is available in the Career Development Office, LIB 1214, X6193.
.

,

Carolyn Dobbswill present slides and a talk on "Forestry and Farming in China, Japan and Malaysia," at the Sierra club general meeting at 7:30 p.m. The public is welcome.
Golden Bough will perform in the dining room of Ben Moores Cafe, 112 W. 4th in Olympia, at 6 and 8:30 p.m. The second show will have a $3 cover charge. Call
357-7527 for reservations .
.
Premenstrual Syndrome Workshop will be held from 6 to 8 p .m. in LIB 3216, sponsored by the Women's Health Clinic and the Women's Center.
"Careers in Alternative Agriculture" is the topic of a workshop to be held in CAB 108 from 3 to 5 p.m. For further information, contact • _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
Career Development in LIB 1212 or call X6193.
Arthritis Self Help Course begins at 7:30 p.m. at the Puget Sound Healthcare Center, the Westside extended health care facility. Exercise,
pain therapy, stress management, medication and joint protection are among the topics discussed in the six-week program. Thecourse
covers a minimum of 12 hours of instruction and materials. Fee for the classes is $15 or $20, depending on income.
For Sale: Hoover Apt. size wosher.
Pre-registration is required . For information, call Julie Kissick at 754-9792 weekdays.
This is a % loader wi sooking tub

Thursday, February 20
Thursday Night Films presents First in the Phil/pines, a documentary on America's first war outside the Western hemisphere. Filmmaker
Robert Koglire and U.W . prof. Peter Bocho will speak. Film times are 4:30,7 and 9:30 p.m . in LH I. Co-sponsored by EPIC and the
Asian/Pacific Isle Coalition. The event costs $1.50. For more information call the Evergreen Political Information Center, X6l44.
"College Information Night" for prospective students and their families from the Olympia area will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. in LIB
3500. For more information call the Admissions Office, X6170.

Ongoing and Future Events
The Job Bank has been reopened. Its hours are 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m ., Mon., Wed. and Thurs. Call Jim Wood, X6295, for more information.
Earth Fair Planning Committee is meeting. Go to the ERC or call X6784 for more information.
Looking for Summer employment as a nutritionist, environmentalist, teacher or lifeguard in New York state? Inquire further at the Of.fice of Career Development, LIB 1214, 866-6193.
Statewide Domestic Violence Hotline is looking for volunteers interested in helping battered women and their families by providing crisis
counseling, information and referrals . Volunteer training will begin in late March . Call now for more information, 753-4621 w~kdays.
February 21. "SeU-Esteem Issues for Helping Proressionals and Students" is the title of a workshop held from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . m CAB
110. Cost is $50 for professionals, $35 for individuals with a low income , and $15 for students. Pre-register by sending registration and
check to Counseling Services, The j::vergreen State College, Olymlpia, W A 98505, along with your name, phone number, and complete
address. If you prefer, you may send $10 deposit and pay the balance at the door. For more information, call Counseling Services, X6800.
February 21. Lewis and Clark Northwestern School of Law will have a representative on campus, giving an information session from
10 a.m. to noon in LIB 2102.
February 21. "The Soviet Union Today," a free slide/lecture given by Tom Rainey, will recount his trip to the Soviet Union. The event
will be held at noon in CAB 108.
February 21 and 22.Kay and Dusty Rhodes will perform in the dining room of Ben Moore's Cafe at 6:30 p.m.

and on extractor.
$85.00
TEA( (osselle deck $50.00
External Dolby Unit $25 .
SeaI1 cannister VOQJum cleaner ~~.,.uu ..,
Hoover upright yo<uum dean.r
2 Radio Shock loudspeak'l1 ( $29.95 )
or both for $35.00
6 volt automobile bollery - newl $30.
coil Tom Foote ext. 6118
Buck A Page - Typing ...
$5.00 minimum.
pickup and delivery induded.
10-5 weelcdays/ mil 491 -8590
Have Broom, W.'
Housedeoning, pointing, gardening,
talpet cleaning, windows I walls.
Business and privote rates .. '
Disc. to Seniol1. Experienced. Ref.
WE ARE GREAT! call Jon or Shoron
or 357 . 8816
$16,040· $59,230 fyear. Now hiring.
Coli 805 - 687 - 6000 Exl. R-5804
for current federal hst.
rl I
Savings over Florist.
Flowel1 . . . Professionol Design
Now taking your ardell for Spring
ond Summer weddings. (011 us:
lilly Pod Greenhouse 866 - 0291

Vol. No. 14

Rotting rodent possible cause of Geoduck
House water contamina~ion; septic leak doubted

Friday, February 14
Resume writing workshop will be held from noon to 1 p.m. in LIB 1213. For further information, contact Career Development, X6193.
Valentine Party for Kids between the ages of 6 and 10 will be sponsored by the Olympia Parks and Recreation Department. Kids will be involved in games, stories
a nd so ngs, while they a lso make a Valentine Surprise for someone special. Participation is limited to 15, so sign up soon. Bring a treat to share, a valentine, bits of
la ce, st ickers, sequi ns and other frilly things. There will be a fee of $1.50 and a donation to the food bank. The party is from 3:30 to 5:30 at the Community Center.
For more information call the Olympia Parks and Recreation Department at 753-8380.
'~,
Jan Stentz and Barney McClure will perform in the dining room of Ben Moore's Cafe, 112 W. 4th in Olympia, at 6:30 p.m. For reservations call 357-7527.
Comedian Colin Campbell will perform at The Village Inn , 4500 Lacey Boulevard in Lacey, at 10 p.m. There's a $3 cover charge. Reservations for dinner are required;
reservations for the show are recommended. Call 491-7878
The Christian Science College Organization meets every Friday at 3 p.m. in the Inn erplace office, LIB 3225.
Gourmet Tasting Party will be held at the Women's Club, 10002 So. Washington in Olympia, from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Cost is $7.50 per person; $15 per couple.
Uncle Bonsai and KW Todd will give a valentine's concert at the YWCA, SoAth & Broadwav in Tacoma, at 8 p.m. Admission is $6. For more information call 863-6617.
Ernestine Anderson will perform in LIB 4300. Tickets are $6 for students alumni and seniors. $8 general and $10 at the door. Tickets may be purchased fro:n the
TESC Bookstore.

February 20, 1986

photo by James Bar'shire

again. That time the reading was
worse," he said. Wilkinson then
notified the caretaker at the community school.
"When we became involved, we
just decided to start taking over the
testing of samples ourselves,"
Brinker said, because the county has
better lab facilities than Evergreen.
On January 20, the day after the
heavy rain storm, Brinker said he inspected the well. The top casing had
not flooded , but Brinker said he did
discover that the seals were not properly placed. This led him to believe
that a small rodent might possibly
have gone down the casing and
decomposed,
causing
water
contamination.
"I would have to agree with
Brinker," said Wilkinson, "That is
the leading possibility at this time."
During winter months, said
Brinker, small rodents are looking
for entrances to warm places. The
seal should be water tight, but in this
case it was loose; the goose net vent ,
which serves as a protector, was not
screened over as it should have been,
he said .
Sue Feldman, Olympia Community School teacher, said she
believed that the Geoduck House
sen t out notifications of water contamination, and they also informed
the parents at a general meeting held
a month ago.
photo by James Barhhirc
The house was given bottled water
The
Geoduck
House.
sire
oj
recent
water
contamination
is
the
home
oj
the
Olympia
Communiry School.
from Evergreen, said Wilkinson , at
a cost of $50 a week . The cost of the
bottled water is nOl a major impact,
he said, but it has taken time away
disinfecting does it, and if not
body intestines . "There wasn't any
the water co ntamination, but they
from the college and is basically an
would suspect it was something
fecal coliform. There was, though,
were unable to prove it because the
expense of maintenance time. As of
other than something falling down
an awful lot of bacteria," he said.
County misplaced her first test
January 30, Wilkinson had repaired
the casing," Brinker said .
"It's not really OK with the State
samples, and her more recent testing
the well, said Brinker.
Wilkinson said septic contaminaor County to not have water." said
results have been inconclusive.
Wilkinson said he also disinfected
tion could be a possibility. "An
Feldman. The "original inconve"We'll continue to test the water
it with chlorine repeatedly. He said
overflow, poor pump or possible
nience, the first day remembering
until the problem is cleared up," said
he also raised the vent a few feet
crack in the tank could cause septic
that they couldn't turn on the
Brinker. "because we are still o nl y
above the casing to decrease the
water to enter the ground," he said,
water," was the most difficult part
speculating as to the actual case of
possibility of contamination through
.. and if that reached a cracked well
for the children.
the contamination ."
flooding.
casing, the actual steel pipe that goes
"We've had one illness that
The water is safe now; however ,
"Generally three or four times of
into the ground, contamination
possibly could be associated," said
Brinker says further testing is
could occur."
Brinker. Darleen Osborn, Olympia
underway.
"We still have a lot of unknowns
Community School art teacher, said
"We want to make certain we
there," said Brinker, "although the
she became sick with a viral illness
have two consecutive good samples
septic tank is not being ruled out, it
that entered through the mouth. She
before giving a final OK on the
• doesn '( appear to be the cause."
said
it
happened
the
day
after
the
water,"
said Brinker. Another samfer substantial cash prizes for entries
Brinker said sewage contamination
County called and reported t he conple was taken, he sa id, and the
submitted by March 31, write to The
would have shown fecal colifor, a
tamination . Osborn said her doctor
results should be available by the end
Mont Pelerin Society, PO Box 7031 ,
group of bacteria that inhabit warm
suspected
the illness was a result of of the week.
Alexandria, VA 22307. Contestants
may be students or faculty not over
35 years old .
For details on the travel grants
awarded to contestants not over 45,
under the Price Essay Competition,
write to Dr. Steve Pejovich, director, Center for Free ' Enterprise,
Texas A&M University, College Staby Cheryl Culver
point so urce pollution. The program
said. '" hope the symposiulll will
tion, TX 77843-4231. Deadline for
of
the
will
also
include
a
viewing
give
student s and members of the
the Price entries is April 15 .
Water quality issues spec ific to the videotape, "In Our Waters," inforcommu nity a forum for asking quesLater in the year the Freedom
Puget Sound area will be discussed
mational displays, and a panel
tions, sharing information. and
Essay Contest will be announced by
at
an
environmental
science
symof educational, atti tudiscussion
seeki ng solut ions."
the Foundation for Economic
posium sponsored by Fort
dianl, and government solutions to
Education (FE) for high school and
Steilacoom
Community Co llege in
water quality concerns. Questions
The sc heduled speakers arc: lJerek
co llege students. Write to Howard
Tacoma. The program will be held
will be welcomed throughout the
I. Sandison, superv isor of water
Baetjer, FEE, Irvington-on-Hudson ,
from 10 a.m. to 3 p .m . o n Tuesday,
program, says sympos ium coorreso urces , Tac oma -Pierce Cou nt y
NY 10533, to get on the mailing list
February
25
in
the
Fireside
Lounge.
dinator
Joanne Shelley, instructor of
Health Department; Karen Harding.
for the announcement.
For more information, ca ll
ea rth sciences at FSCC.
in structor of chemistry and en The Mount Hood Society in its
964-6594.
"We've all become increasingly
vironmental studies, Fort Steilacoom
regional effort calls these national
Speakers will address the proaware that our wilter quality is in
Community College; and Sherri
and international opportunities to
of
pollution
in
Commencmcmt
blems
jeopardy.
It's probably the single
Tonn, assoc iate professor o f
the attention of studen ts and faculBay, contamination of ground water
biggest problem facing the residents
c hemistry, Pacific Lutheran
ty concerned for the cause of
supplies, and the hazards o f non - of the Puget Sound area," Shelley
Universit y.
freedom.

Essay winners to travel
Two essay contests have spring
deadlines for students and faculty to
submit essays on "The Economics
and Philosophy of Liberty." Both
provide travel grants for attendance
at the meeting during August 31 to
September 6 in Italy of the international Mont Pelerin Society . There,
attendees will meet leadi~tellec­
tuals in the cause of freedom. I ntellectuals such as Nobel laureates
Friederich Hayek, Milton Friedman,
and George Stigler.
.
For details on the Olive W.
Ga rvey Fellowships, which also of-

Resume help
To get help in writing a resume
for full or part-time employment, or an internship, attend
the Resume Writing workshop
from 7:30-8:30 p.m. on Monday, February 24, in the ADorm Corner. Call Career
Development for more details,
x6193.

THE EVERGREEN
ST A TE COLLEGE
Olympia. WA 98505

Puget Sound water quality to be
discussed at Tacoma symposium

NONP ROFIT OR(; ,
U.S.POS rAGE
PAID
OL YMI'IA . WA
PERMIT NO 6'

February 20, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 2

Smoking
DTF
DTF establised to examine
identifies
its
goals
violations of smoking law
by Sherry Hill
Smoking has been a hot issue
smoldering from within the campus
communi ty since the passage of the
Washington Clean Indoor Air Act in
April, 1985 by the Washington State
Legislature. A Smoking Policy DTF
was recently assigned t he task of
defining the law for the campus by
Sue Washburn, Vice President for
Development and Administrative
Services after Employee Relations
Director Rita Cooper presented the
issue to the three vice presidents.
(See CPl, 2113 / 86)

us together."
Cooper notes that many smokers
have expressed to her that they don't
feel that their smoking is offensive
to others. One smoker, drawing
from studies of smoking bans in the
workplace, told Cooper that efficiency goes down in the workplace
and tension goes up when people
must leave to take a smoke break.
Washburn said that students have
complained about faculty smoking,
both in their offices and in class.
Cooper says that non-smoking faculty have complained about their coworkers smoking in open offices,

"I feel that smokers have an insensitivity to those around them. "
-Michael Strauss
"This is the most discussed issue
that I have ever dealt with -- that includes
unions,
contracts . ..
anything." Cooper says. She
estimates that the Employee Relations Office received 50 to 60 calls
on the subject from faculty, staff
and students, and from smokers and
non-smokers.
After the law was enacted, Cooper
took on the task of writing the college policy on the issue. As she began
her work on the smoking policy, the
campus community began to respond. Cooper said she soon realized that she had too controversial an
issue to take on single-handedly.
Cooper says non -smokers' concerns varied between smokers breaking the law to people becoming ill
from cigarette smoke. Smokers have
expressed concern that their opinions
might not be considered in the policy
development, she says.
"Personal relationships are strained," says Cooper, because of the
smoking issue. Washburn stated
recently that the smoking issue "can
either splinter the campus or bring

"The smoke drifts out in the
hallways. Non-smokers must then
shut their doors to keep the smoke
out," she says.
Some faculty mentioned to
Cooper that they had the right to be
assigned to smoke-free offices. Nonsmokers moving into offices that
smelled of smoke was offensive, they
told Cooper. The non-smoking
faculty members "were finding that
the smoke odor permeated their
clothing and belongings after settling into their offices," Cooper said.
A student complained to Cooper
that the motor pool :vehicles smelled too smoky. The student told
Cooper that they wanted certain cars
set aside at the motor pool for nonsmokers.
Many smokers expressed willingness to work with the community. Carolyn Bentler, a staff member
of the DTF announced at the first
DTF meeting that she had decided
to quit smoking. Though she will be
changing her habits, Bentler noted
that "we need to do something that's
fair for everybody." John Dion, a

staff member that works in the
Registrar's Office, says, "[t boils
down to courtesy and respecting the
rights of other people. When you
start in fringing on non-smokers'
rights you have to question your own
values . "
One smoker, who asked not to be
identified said, "I will respect the
no-smoking areas. Usually when [
smoke, [ leave my desk so I wo'n't
offend others."
Conversely , Mike Hall, staff
member on the DTF noted that
when he approached a violator in the
CAB cafeteria no-smoking section,
the individual seemed offended to
even have the matter brought to their
attention.
Michael Strauss, student member
of the DTF says, "I feel that
smokers have an insensitivity to
those around them." He also said
that he resented faculty members
smoking around students, but
couldn't do anything about it.
Thelma Stamey, a smoking
member of the staff, noted that during registration, the Enrollment Services area was "just thick with
smoke." Many registrants, standing
in line, were smoking while waiting.
Meg Hunt, a faculty member on the
DTF and also a non-smoker, observed that while students aren't smoking in class, they smoke in the
hallways during breaks. That causes
problems, she said, because nonsmokers are using the hallways and
are forced to walk through the thick
smoke .
A walk through the campus finds
ashtrays distributed to lounge areas
and hallways; people are smoking in
several areas on the campus which
are addressed in the law as nosmoking areas.
The Smoking Policy DTF will be
discussing these concerns from 3 :30
to 5 p.m. in LIB 3121 any Tuesday
over the next few weeks to draft a
proposal for campus review, according to DTF chairperson Larry
Stenberg.

by Margaret Livingston
The Board of Trustees met
February 12 and gave Housing at
Evergreen permission to negotiate a
contract with Bryant and Associates
of Bellevue, Washington, to prepare
a conceptual plan for new dormitories . This does not mean working drawings, but is an aid for
Evergreen to narrow down cost
estimates. The plan is necessary
before applying for a DOE subsidy.
Jeannie Chandler, head of the

Olander hosts pianists
Joe Olander, TESC president, will
host what has to qualify as an area
record for fund raising. For a mere
$100 a select few (i .e. those who have
$IOO!) may attend Joe's place on
Budd Inlet for cocktails, live entertainment and a "grand dinner with
wine! "

The object of this high brow hijinx? The Pacific International
Piano Competition, the annual version of "piano wars" put on by local

.'

",

impressarios Kerri and Forrest
Wilcox.
The event has generated excitement on the national keyboard
scene, and the $100 includes
lucrative tax deductions, free passes
and what promises to be a highlight
of the early '86 social scene, so, send
in that c-note soon!

Reprinted by permission of the
Olympia NEWS 52.

on this issue . Specifically, the
DTF members are requesting
that the Evergreen community
respond to the following two
questions:

1) Is there anything you want
the DTF to consider in determining whether or not there wif{
be any designated smoking
areas on Evergreen's campus?
2) If [here are going to be
designated smoking areas,
where do you think they should
be? Please consider possible
locations in af{ the main campus
buildings: CAB, Library, Communications,
Recreation
Center, Seminar, Lecture Haf{s,
and LABS I & lI.
The deadline for submitting
responses is March 3, 1986.
Please leave written responses at
the CAB Information Center or
mail it to CAB 305. Anyone
wishing to attend any Smoking
DTF meetings are invited to
LIB 3121 from 3:30 to 5 p.m .
any Tuesday for the remainder
of wiQter quaner. Thanks for
your help on this important
issue.
From
DTF members:
Carolyn Bentler, Nina Davis,
Michael Hall, Michael Holden,
Meg Hunt, Mary Nelson, Karen
Rawnsley, Michael Strauss,
Bronwyn Thomas-Lincoln, Ron
Wilkinson, and Chairperson
Larry Stenberg.

.

Opinion:

Smoking issue considered
by Robert S, Balch

page 3

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Singer Thorn Workman exercises oral tradition
by Bret Lunsford
"When black people came to this
country as slaves, they relied on the
oral tradition because they couldn't
really be free with their speech or
open with their ideas. They would
tell stories, and within the stories
would be little hints and meanings
for other black people to pick up
on," says student Thom Workman.
These stories within stories still play
an imponant role in the transmission
of information, he says. He says he
uses the oral tradition to connect
African storytellers, or griots, with
black civil rights activists and
rastafarians.
'''Griot's Song' is basically a show
that has elements of theater, but is
also based on historical characters
. from black history,"
says
Workman, who has been an
Evergreen student for two years. "In
Africa, the traditional griot (prounounced gree' -oh) was the tribe
historian, who would relay the
history orally."
Workman will play the role of the
griot in his one-man performance of
"Griot's Song" at 7 p.m. on Friday,

February 28 in the Recital Hall here.
He will portray four different griots
from different eras in black hi story.
"More or less, each character is a
collage of other people," he says.
Each portrayal blends together the
music and social-political situation
of each era. Each traces the role of
the oral tradition in biack history, he
says.
Even a fter slavery days, he says,
people still relied on the oral tradition for information, both because
not everybody was literate and as a
way of keeping "dangerous"
political
ideas
somewhat
underground . Much of the griot
tradition remained alive in the churches, says Workman. "Even today,
with civil rights, the base has been
the church. The people blend
spiritual and oral and they get it all
together and that's where Martin
Luther King's testing ground was,"
he says.
The final character portrayed in
"Griot's Song" is a rastafarian
street poet, "Jah Nee B. Khool,"
who is willing to speak on the things
in society that he doesn't like .

Workman says that people listening
to Khool's story "will find that it's
about coming together and being
strong and loving one another and
building a new world. That was
Martin Luther King's dream and
that was Bob Marley's dream."
Workman began his theatrical
career in Washington, D.C. where
he studied voice, dance, acting and
mime techniques at the Theater
School, the Kennedy Center and
American University. In addition to
performing for the general public, he
has also worked with street theater,
performed in prisons, and taught acting to disadvantaged youths. Most
recently he 's been touring with
Children's Theater Northwest and
working on "Griot' s Song."
"A lot of people who were based
in the oral tradition had things to say
that are very enlightening," says
Workman, "but you have to take
time to listen. If people come out to
see the show, it's not me talking, it's
other black ancestors and souls. The
stories are true, people just have to
pass it on, and the only way is by
talking and singing."

Levin presents slideshow
by Margaret Livingston
In the United States, we decry the
violence which is daily TV fare for
many children. The drawings now
on display in the library's Gallery
2 y, (across from Media Loan) depict
violence. Not images derived from
TV. Violence that is a part of the
lives of these children of Guatemala.
Janet Sp~itzler Levin, creator of
"Guatemalan Guenica, Children of
War," presented a lecture and slide

show February 14, in LH I. She
came to tell more about the project
and her reason for colkcting the
drawings. The original intent was to
do a book of children's drawings. "I
knew children, I knew drawings, I
knew Guatemala, and thought this
was the way I could help," Levin
said. "After [ had the drawings, I
felt there should be a way to reach.
more people than just publishing a
book," she added.
She visited Mexico at the invita-

public places benefits only the
smoker as an individual. It is a proven fact that there is a considerably
larger group of non-smokers than
smokers. Allowing cigarette smoking in public places benefits a
minority of people, this does not imply to "!e that it serves as an overwhelming benefit to society.

If cigarette smokers are allowed to
smoke in public places, this will
allow clouds of noxious and harmful smoke to distribute throughout
the entire area. Non-smokers who
wish to enjoy, or do business in an
area filled with cigarette smoke will
be compelled (most likely against
their wishes) to inhale this smoke in
the process of consuming Oxygen.
Research has proven that
breathing cigarette smoke, even in
the case of not being a smoker, has
hazardous effects upon the life and
breath of the involved subject. Thus,
non-smokers may be forced to risk
ments now in use. There will be a .
their health against their will.
choice of 4-bedroom or 6-bedroom
It is a matter of personal freedom,
units. In addition to single
and civil rights, that people should
bedrooms, each apartment will have
A simple conclusion can be
be able to go about their daily
living room, bath, and kitchen.
drawn : Since cigarette smoking is
business without risking their lives.
The Board of Trustees also apharmfulLO the health of all exposed
It is only reasonable to assume that
proved the requested nine percent
persons (not only the smoker) - and
it is only worthwhile to risk your life
rent increase for present housing efthe minority of people are smokers,
and breath if the cause is sufficient
fective Fall 1986, but this increase
then to benefit the majority of the
LO provide an overwhelming benefit
will not be used to underwrite any
people, cigarette smoking should not
for society as a whole.
part of the new construction .
be allowed in public places.
Allowing cigarette smoking in
"Housing is a self-supporting,
revenue generating operation of The
Evergreen State College and receives
no operating or capital appropriations from the college. We have to
pay our way," Chandler stated.
and encourage them to attend, she
by Kim Craven
Increased costs -- eleeo-icity, up 13
said .
percent; utility and sewer, up 15 perActivities planned include tours
This Saturday, February 22, the '
cent; insurance, up 300 percent -- Third World Coalition and the Adwith Third World Evergreen
mandate a rate increase. "We ran at
students, workshops to answer quesmissions Office will co-sponsor a
a deficit last year and will do so day long event in an effort to attract
tions, and a lunch with speakers.
again this year," she said. "To keep
President Joe Olander will welcome
minority students to Evergreen and
costs down we will make substantial
the 60 expected visitors, some who
strengthen the committment made to
cuts in salaries, won't fill some posiwill be accompanied by their parents
a strong multicultural learning entions, and will be hiring fewer
and families . Yvonne Peterson, a
vironment at TESC.
students .
faculty member of the Native
According to Diane Kahaumia ,
"There will also have to be cuts
American Studies program, will give
Coordinator or Minority Recruitin the level of capital projects, such
a keynote address during lunch.
ment, minority students often don't
as replacing carpeting, painting,
Additional volunteers are needed
get the information they need
things of that nature, that we or- through traditional ways. The
to help with the event. For addidinarily do in the summer," she
tional information, or to volunteer,
Preview Day was designed to
added.
contact Diane Kahaumia at x6170.
familiarize students with the college,

Housing plans new dorms,
ups rent, cuts services
Housing office, cautioned that there
are still many steps to be covered
before construction actually starts :
research for a subsidy so that construction money can be obtained at
3 percent instead of the current
market rate, bids have to be
prepared, etc. Present plans are to
have the new building ready for
students by fall 1987.
According to Chandler, the new
housing will not be the traditional
dormitory, but will be apartment
style, similar to the 5-person apart -

Have you heard about the
Washington Clean Indoor Air
Act? The first paragraph of that
nearly I-year-old state law
states: "The Legislature
recogni zes the increasing
evidence that tobacco smoke in
closely confined places may
create a danger to the health of
some citizens of this state . In
order to protect the health and
welfare of those citizens, it is
necessary to prohibit smoking in
public places except in areas
designated as smoking areas."
The law also states that "a
facility or area may be
designated in its entirety as a
nonsmoking area by the owner
or other person in charge."
An article in last week's CPJ
describes an Evergreen Disappearing Task Force (DTF)
formed by Vice President Sue
Washburn to determine a fair
and reas.onable way LO bring the
college into compliance with the
Washington Clean Indoor Air
Act. The DTF is charged to: I)
Determine speci fic public areas
(if any) within campus facilities
where smoking is to be allowed,
and 2) If there are to be any,
develop a campus-wide campaign to generate awareness and
support for any new policies.
Members of the Smoking
DTF are very interested in hearing the opinions of all concerned campus community members

February 20, 1986

Cigarette smoking should not
be allowed in
public places.

photo by James Barkshire

Janet Levin

tion of Bishop Samual Ruiz whose
diocese includes a refugee camp. She
tells of this visit: "Over a series of
days in March, 1985, 150
Guatemalen children age 7 to 14 of
San Caralampio Refugee Camp,
located in Mexico, drew pictures that
tell a story which shouldn't be
known to them, yet is theirs. The
memories of fear and night speak as
only children can, with power born
of innocence.
"The drawings are a stark
testimony. Of several hundred, only 20 are not violent. Few omit the
bombing helicopters, the . soldiers
shooting. "
An announcer for KI RO-TV,
which had featured the drawings in
a four-minute video, stated: "The
drawings are simple and honest; the
tales they tell are nightmares."
"The response to the drawings has
been incredible," Levin said,
"Everyone who has seen them has
offered suggestions of people to see
or has wanted to do somet hing with
them." Besides being displayed in
Seattle and here at Evergreen,
Mother Jones and Harper's
magazines have published some of
the drawings and she has sent slides
to the United Nations Pavillion at
Expo '86 . The exhibit is being
prepared to be Sent to other cities in
the United States, espeeiall y those interested in Sanctuary.
"I am very irreverant and a
cynic," she said, "but I find I'm
having to change my mind about
people in general. There are an awful
lot of people who will act on what
their beliefs are."

Thorn Workman

New editor sought
If you're looking for something to keep you off the streets,
but still in trouble, then you could be the next editor of the
CPl. The current editor is moving on to bigger and better things
(if there is anything bigger) and that.leaves the position open.
If you'd like to apply, please write a letter of application
to Evergreen's Communications Board, specifying your
qualifications, your previous academic work, and your ideas
on what this position means to you and to Evergreen .
Duties and Responsibilities
The editor has full responsiblity for the CPl's content, format, quality and direction.
The editor must facilitate staff meetings and monitor staff
compliance to professional standards, codes, the directives and
intent of the Communications Board, and the appropriate provisions of the EAC, and the Washington Administrative Code.
The editor is responsible for recruiting, training, supervising,
and terminating of the managing editor, production manager,
graphic and photo editors, and writers.
The editor must make story and photo assignments, and
. organize the weekly production proccess.
The editor must make an effort to continually improve the
CPl, and to provide leadership to the entire organization .

Qualifications
Good writing skills are essential. Must be be able to edit copy,
type, proofread, and do lay-out. Experience on' a newspaper
or magazine is extremely desirable . Leadership skills are
important.
'
If you're interested, the application deadline is 5 p .m . on
Monday, March 3. Please send letters of application to L2300,
attentiafl of Alley Hinkle. Interviews will be held at the March
14 meeting of the Communications Board in the Board Room
of the the Library.

Advisory Board seeks students

Recruiting minorites

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(

February 20, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 5

February 20, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 4

Drawings for Issac Shamsud-Din's 'Bilalian
Odyssey' on display in Evergreen's Gallery· 4

Working drawing for "Bilalian Odyssey" by Issac Shamsud-Din.

phOlo b y Jennifer Lewis

by Catherine Commerford

is painted with oil and enamel on an
8 by 16 foot piece of plywood.

Gallery 4 is showing compositional studies which are working
drawings for a mural painted by
Issac Shamsud-Din. The mural, titled "Bilalian Odyssey" (or AfroAmerican Journey), hangs in the
Justice Center in Portland, Oregon,

The gallery is showing some of the
preliminary drawings of the composition and its elements. They work
as research and give viewers some
idea of what goes into a mural.
These studies work as a narrative
with or without words.

and culminates years of historical
research by the artist.
In the words of Shamsud-Din, the
subject of "Bilalian Odyssey" is
"the struggle and accomplishments
of Afro-Americans determined to
share in the challenges of the
discovery, opening up, and settle-

In several of the studies, there is
a repetition of faceless figures. There
is a loss of individual identity, but
a presence of spiritual unity. Others
are narrative work-in-progress
diagrams, while still others tell their
own stories through gestures and
color.

ment of the Western frontier." The
mural itself presents important but
little known figures as York,
translator for the Lewis and Clark
expedition; Bill Pickett, star of international wild west shows; and
Beatrice Camrady, the first Black
woman to practice law in Oregon. It

Shamsud-Din will show slides and
discuss the historical research and
working methods used in developing
the mural project in a lecture at 7:30
p.m. on Friday, February 21 in LIB
4300. The lecture will be followed by
a reception for the artist sponsored
by UJAMAA.

Periodicals to be reviewed
March I, 1986 is the deadline
set for faculty, staff and student
requests and comments to
Library Periodicals for the
review now underway . All
responses will be organized for
presentation to the Library
Resource Selection Comm ittee
for study during the spring
quarter. The aim of the Committee is to assure that funds

Olander accepts governance DTF's proposal
by Joseph G. Follansbee

President Olander last week accepted the Governance Disappearing
Task Force's final proposal for the
creation of an Advisory Board to the
president of the college.
"The recommendations are well
with in the bounds of a workable
solut ion to the problem of ensuring
greater involvement of the campus
community in its decision-making
process on this campus," he says.
Once organized, the board will
make recommendations to the president about policy matters concerning the campus community as a
whole, reads the final report. The

Advisory Board will also recommend action when a policy causes,
or may cause, a conflict between
ca mpus constituencies, who are
defined by the report as students,
staff, ' and faculty. The board will
not make policy or issue rulings.
All three constituencies will each
be represented by three persons,
reads the report. An add itional student, staff member, and faculty
member will sit on the board as atlarge members. The president will
serve on the board ex officio.
Each member of the Advisory
Board, except the president, will
hold a seat for a one year, three
times renewable term, the term of

tin, Vice President for Student Affairs. Faculty should contact Don
Finkle, faculty chair, and interested
staff should call Sue Washburn,
Vice-President for Development!
Administrative Services.
[n a memo to the members of the
DTF, President Olander noted that
the recommendations were not met
with unanimous endorsement wihtin
the DTF. He said he hopes that
when the Advisory Board begins its
work, problems can be worked out.

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study that problem formally and
office beginning on the first day of
make recommendations for action to
spring quarter each year, according
the president.
to the report. The president's term
will coincide with his tenure as chief
Board members will meet regularexecutive of the college.
According to the report, all deci- . ly with their respective constituencies
through their constituency's goversions will be made by consensus; in
the event of no consensus, minority
nance body. The report also requests
reports will be circulated.
funds be allocated for a professional
The' Advisory Board will have
clerical position for the Advisory
Board. The report further reads that
three basic options in dealing with
the board will design a process for
inter-constituency policy conflicts,
regular evaluation of its record with
reads the report. First, the conflict
the first evaluation to take place at
may be resolved "in house," that is,
the end of spring quarter this year .
within.a particular constituency. SeAccording to the president's ofcond, the Board may mediate between the connicting constituencies.
fice, students interested in serving on
And third, the Advisory Board may the board should contact Gail Mar-

spent for the periodicals collection best se rve the needs of the
academic community at
Evergreen.
Lists of periodicals in specific
subject areas arc available at the
reference desk and in the
periodicals section for patron
review. Questions about the
review may be directed to
Louise Co th ary at x6255 .

272-~817

"

SOUTH
PUGET
SOUND
COMMUNITY

COHeGC



URCLI

BORSAI
a vocallrio

page 6

February 20, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

February 20, 1986

letters
The Cooper Point . Journal
welcomes letters from our
readers. All letters to the editor
must be typed, double-spaced,
limited to 250 words, signed,
and must include a daytime
phone number where the author
can be reached for consultation
on editing for libel and obscenity. The editor reserves the right
to reject any material, and edit
any contributions for length,
content, or style. Letters must
be received no later than noon
on Monday for that week's
publication.

Si'ncerely,
Brian Hank Seidman

Education
gives choice

Trustee
Board rep
enthusiastic
To all Evergren students,
It is with great delight and optimism that I begin my term as your
representative to the Board of
Trustees. It is my intention to serve
your needs, through advising the
board, to the best of my abil ity .
As you may already by aware, the
Board of Trustees is Evergreen's
governing body in the most literal
sense. The board, whose members
are appointed by the governor, is
responsible for insuring that
Evergreen operates' effectively; seeing that the needs of the community are met. Having sat at my first
Board meeting on February 12, [
became quite impressed by what [
felt to be a deep running concern of
the Board members to service student needs. They seem to be very
open and receptive to student input.
The nature of my position and the
impact that it has to determine
change and progress is kept alive and
served well only to the extent that [
receive input from you, the student.
Without input [ would continue to
serve as your representative, but only
with the opinions of myself. I
seriously doubt that my opinions
could consistently represent those
opinions of the entire student body.
For this reason I am stressing your
involvement in the decision making
process by letting your voice be
heard. So [ ask that you consider this
letter an open invitation to contact
me when you have a concern and/or
opinion that you wish to be
represented.
As I receive the agenda for upcoming Board sessions, (held on the
second Wednesday of each month),
[ will be submitting letters to the
CPJ to inform you of upcoming
issues and their ramifications.
Thank you,
Sincerely,
Sam Segall,
Student Represemative ( 0 the
Board of Trustees
Dorm D I 04, 866-6000 x5165

Academic
suggestions
are needed
Dear Evergreen:
Spring quarter will bring the faculty's yearly retreat. At that retreat
they will plan the 1987-88 curriculum . [t is a good idea to plan the
curriculum in advance, but students
should have a chance to give input
10 the faculty and deans before t!"le
retreat. This way, the faculty will
k now what the students want to
~t udy.

J

page 7

,>

What is needed is a set of three
open meetings: The first with the
deans, the second with the conveners
of each specialty area, and the third
an open meeting with the faculty.
This would do the job of getting studem input.
,
So when students go to. the
academic fair next spring to shop for
programs, at least the st udents will
know that someone asked them:what
they wanted to study.

Letters policy

mE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Dear Evergreen:
Carol Sasaki, founder and executiv e director of SA VE-HOME, is
tru ly an inspiration, a source of
courage, and an example of the
fruits of persistence and hard work
for those in our society who see few
opportunities to escape the poverty
of their existence -- poverty of spirit
as well as body and social
circumstances.
Carol, through her own experience of coming to know others
on welfare, recognized that she was
not "the exception," there were
others as intelligent, creative, and
resourceful as she. Her efforts to
convince others of their own elusive
potential have been amply rewarded with the entrance into college and
successful performance of students
who have dared to challenge the
stereotypes associated with poverty
and welfare.
Poverty is not so often a choice
made by an individual but is a niche
shaped by the circumstances and
events of one's personal, familial,
ethnic, and social history. People
who are poor or on welfare are there
because, as individuals, they are
unaware of alternatives, do not
know certain opportunities exist, feel
incapable of achieving goals that are
perceived as reserved for persons of
greater ability and a certain level of
financial income. The programs
which have evolved in this society,
no matter how well intentioned, tend
to reinforce the stigma of poverty
and to restrict the avenues of individual growth and development.
Carol Sasaki will be at Evergreen
on Friday, check the CPJ notebook.
Glenn Terrell,
President
Emeritus
Washington State University

Submit
poets,
submit!
To the Editor:
This is an open letter to ALL
EVERGREEN POETS.
In last week's edition of the CPJ
(13 February 1986), poetry editor
Paul Pope complained of the lack of
quality submissions to the weekly
poetry page. He attributed this lack
of input to the "common notion that
a bad reputation has haunted it for
years. "
My feeling is that the quality (and
therefore reputation) of a publica ton
rests on the quality of its submissions
and the earnestness of its contributors. To withold our good
words from the school that nurtures
them, and reserve them for more
glamorous publications, encourages
an elitism [ find very contrary to
Evergreen's stated ideals.
In other words, the CPJ's poetry
page is exactly what we make it: it's
an opportunity to share our unique
visions wifh the people around us,
and communicate our ideas in a
special way.
Suddenly, "a sense of wonder" is
just a horrible slogan, stamped in
red ink on Evergreen mailers. Please
restore the true, original sense of
wonder to our community; submit
to the poetry page, or attend the advisory forum .
Sincerely,
Steve Blakeslee

Smoking
coverage
was unfair

Dear Editor CPJ:
So the smoking issue blazes into
reality at Evergreen. We get a nice
little article in the CPJ. Four
smokers pictures to one non-smoker.
Strange, [ thought non-smokers
were in the majority . I'd be interested to know if the author of the
article smokes.
David Sawyer says bigger issues
deserve all of our attention. [f
smokers can't respect the rights of
people to good health on a local
level, it seems that larger issues on a
of . global level would get the same
respect.

The Cooper Point Journal, is published weekly for the students,
staff and faculty of the Evergreen State College. Views expressed
are not necessarily those of the college or the Journal's staff. Advertising material contained herein does not imply endorsement by
the Journal. The office is located at The Evergreen State College,
Campus Activities Building, Room 306. The phone number is
866-6000, X6213. Al l announcements must be double-spaced, listed
by category, and submitted no later than noon on Monday for that
week's publication. All letters to the editor must be typed, doublespaced, limited to 250 words, signed, and must include a daytime
phone number where the author can be rea~hed. The ed!tor .reserved
the right to reject any material, and edIt any contnbuuons for
length, contenL, or style. Letters and display advertising must be
received no later than 5 p.m. on Monday for that week's
publication.
Editor: Dave Peterson
Managing Editor: Michael Tobin
Photo Editor: Jennifer Lewis
Production Manager: Polly Trout
Production Assistant: Jennifer Seymore
Poetry Editor: Paul Pope
Magazine Coordinator: Duane Anderson
Advisor: Virginia Painter
Writers: Todd D. Anderson, Bob Baumgartner, Janet Behrenhoff,
[rene Mark Buitenkant, Kathi Durkin, Joseph G. Follansbee, Arvid Gust Dennis Held , Lee Howard, John Kaiser, Margaret Livingston, 'Sharon Lee Nicholson, Lee Pembleton, Martha.Pierce,
Paul Pope, Anita Purdy, Susan Reams, Bob Reed, CynthIa Sherwood, R. Paul Tyler
Business Manager: Karen Peterson
Ad Manager: David George
Distribution: Michael Flynn
Typist: Jennifer Matlick

Pete Staddler doesn't want a law
restricting smoking, but a thousand
times a day, smokers at Evergreen
show they have no intention of
voluntarily respecting others' rights
to clean air. Smokers do have a right
to their dependencies, but not at
other's expense.
I appreciate: Faye Vaughn's view,
but Faye and Michele Griffin share
an attitude problem. They see nonsmokers as being annoyed and irritated. We are considering a serious
health hazard here, not simple annoyances and irritations.
And now we get to our lonely majority rep, Christopher Koller. At
least non-smokers get a token word
in. I suppose it is signi fieant that he
was first.
I guess I just don't understand
why a few suicidal types get to determine the air quality of the majority. Maybe we should change our
school name to Eversmoke. After
all, there isn't even one building on
this campus where you can go and
breathe really fresh air. Any smoke
in any building eventually permeates
the air throughout, in spite of air
conditioning.
Sincerely,
AI Barney
I want to breathe clean air .

New forums
join the
block
To CPJ,
There's a new, improved, genuine
forum on the bloc. It's the COMMUN[TY FORUM. II happens
Tuesdays at noon, CAB lobby .
Music, informed speakers, open
discussion.
Then there's the STUDENT
MEETING. Wednesdays, 9 a.m. to
II a.m., second floor LIB 2220. Integrated with the Community
Forum. Oriented toward planning
cooperative efforts, like the NETWORK. What network? Come and
find out.
And Thursdays at noon, bring
your lunch to Information for Action's office. That's for the
STRATEGIC PLANNING PROCESS MEETING. Consultation and
troubleshooting to ensure that
students are heard.
For the agendas each week, contact IFA at x6008.

. • } . ' If > '.

Tyler
responds to
criticism
Editor,
Gary Wessels' suggestion that
am disrespectful of native
Americans is wide of the mark . He
says that Thomas Banyaca deserves
better praise than [ give him in my
poem "The Prophecies of Thomas
Banyaca, Hopi Elder" and questions
if I was even listening to Mr .
Banyaca. Yes, Gary, I was and if
you think I did poorly then I suggest
you do better and use your energy
for something more constructive
than bitching.
[ don't claim to be a great poet,
but I do claim the capability of being sincere . I also claim as part of
my human heritage, a sense of
humor and it is on this point that I
think [ stepped on a sensitive toe.
Gary found a particular passage
in a satire I wrote some time ago to
be offensive to Indians due to
use of a "blatant stereotype." [f
Gary would re-read the passage he
would probably find an admissible
argument that it is primarily a
stereotype of Greeners, not Indians.
The satire also takes pot-shots at
business, the CPJ, the free press, the
S&A Board, the college president,
the indigent, the geoduck, and the
authors themselves.
[ believe that a sense of humor is
one of humankind's saving graces
and that by focusing on one aspect
of a piece, out of context, Gary is
possibly being disrespectful to the
Muse of Comedy.
You can criticize my poetry or my
judgement if you will, Gary, but I
suggest you get to know me better
before you make loose accusations
about my sincerity in matters sacred
or mundane .

.'.

-------...c::;
((" r~~ \j~
'.
~

r

1

I

,--.

~~"

1I swear Harvey,

\

I

let go of my ankle or I'll hit you with

my pick!!

./

o

a

o

I

o

Fit for a King

Paul Tyler

Tour of
Rituals

"

Dear Evergreen:
The Ritual Rama is a walk
through, hands-on experience, much
like a museum tour. It is designed to
give you a sense of what a ritual can
be like. There are five rooms in the
tour. Each one illustrates a different
aspect of ritual, these include: Transition, Purification, Meditation, Af-

James Mershon

THOM
WORKMAN
February
Twenty-Eighth

Griot's Song
7:00 p.m.
Tickets:
AT THE DOOR
$2.00 Stadents
$3.00 Gen.
AdJI,

T.E.S.C.

WANNA CHANGE THE CHANNEL?

firmation and Sacrement.
Ritual Rama is meant to affect
people on at least three different
levels. Educationally, so people who
are curious about bringing ritual into their lives but have no idea how,
can get some ideas. On the level of
healing; Ritual Rama will provide
the structure necessary for connecting you with your dreams and the
means to begin manifesting them.
The third level is one of irony. Ritual
Rama is a tongue-in-cheek commentary on life in the late 20th century.
A life that threatens to become so
automated that even our spirituality has been reduced to preordained
formulas.
[n order to have a more complete
experience (but by no means
necessary) [ ask that you bring the
following: Food from the land, to
offer in the Sacremental Room of
the ritual (fruit or nuts would be
perfect). A rock, crystal, feather or
other small, speCial object that can
act as a witness to your experience
and help you reconnect with the feelings you touch upon in the Ritual
Rama at a later time. Any donations
I recei\:: will be sent to the people
at Big Mountain .
Thank-you.
The Ritual Rama: 00-11- Yourself
Ritual Center will be open from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. on Thursday,
February 27, in the attic of the Lecture Hall Rotunda. Allow approximately 30 minutes for the tour.
N. Llyn Peabody

Dangerous
cult at
Evergreen
Dear Readers of the CP J,
I am writing you in order to voice
my opinion on a certain fanatical
religious cult on campus known as
N.S.A. or Nichiren Shoshu of
America .
I believe that everyone should be
made aware of the recruitment
techniques employed by this group,
as they put the evangelical movement in this country to shame.
The basic philosophical tenet of
N.S.A. is that through performing
their three ways of practice -- chanting, studying, ' and door to door
salesmanship -- one can become an
enlightened person.
Now, all this seems very
reasonable at the onset, as every orthodox religion contains these
elements to some degree. However,
there is a peculiar vortex thinking in
the N.S.A. dogma which subtly
undermines one's ability to trust
one's own decision-making process.
The emphasis is not in getting in
touch with the self, but in staying
continually distracted from the self,
through an exhausting routine of
many hours devoted to chanting,
group meetings, national conventions, and international pilgrimages.
As you might have guessed by
now, there are N.S.A. activities

every day of the week, plus weekend
commitments. The end result of all
this involvement is that the N.S.A .
people become one's only support
system and social context.
This isolation from former friends
and close relationships creates the
ideal environment for the sense of
fanaticism which this group must
cultivate in order to sustain its
membership.
[t is my opinion that this road to
Nirvana is a dangerous detour which
should be recognized and avoided.
Thank you.
Catherine Slagle

And that's

the way it IS
Dear Folks;
Well, [ guess [ could sit back
awhile longer and let this stuff pile
up even deeper. Knee deep ain't too
bad, but it's rising fast and I don't
want to end up swimming in it. Let
me try and shovel some out the
door.
Nancy Koppelman's February 6
letter was way off the mark. [ never
said what she let on [ said. And she
never said anything about what [
really said. Enough said.
Amanda Goldberg's February 13
article wasn't so bad. Three little
problems, though.

First, about not hearing protests
earlier -- Amanda, was it my fault
you weren't listening?
Second, why copy Koppelman?
Don't misrepresent my position on
representation. [ know how Congress works -- I 'don't want any part
of it.
Third, you assume your fatalistic
view of governance is reality. You
say "we are grappling for roles in a
preconceived system." Maybe you
are. We aren't. We're working
together to reconceive the system
(Who's we? We're the ones who
know there's blue sky coming after
the rain.) .
Well, that's enough shoveling for
now. Cut it down by at least a foot,
I guess. Threw it out into the garden.
Thanks for all the fertilizer.
James Mershon

New dorms
are not
doomsday
To the Editor:
I respect Kristin Jagelski's right to
her opinion on the proposed new
dorms; Still. .. Yes, I agree Mod living is great. But walking past new
dorms will hardly ruin my Ii fe . The
path to Modland is pastoral, but it's
no Walden. And if she doesn't want
mandatory food service, she doesn't
have to live there.

Also, the housing rent increase
would happen with or without new
dorms. The fire alarm system,
recently installed for our safety, was
expensive. And like any selfsufficient organization, housing
should have solvency as its goal -why should not "even a cent of our
Mod rent ... pay to help housing
become solvent"
Incredibly, Kristin says "Do we
want these buildings, and the type of
people who would want to inhabit
them ... infringing
on
our
spaciousness?" I say -- YES! Just
what kind of mutants does she think
these dorms would attract -- lepers?
Co mmunists? This kine!' of
thoughtless hate-bating is distressing
to see at Evergreen. With rents in
Olympia skyrocketing, low-rent
housing is being replaced by condos,
boutiques, and gourmet cookie
shops all over town. [f Kristin wants
a housing issue to get involved in,
how about this one -- the decreasing
availability of affordable offcampus housing is the main reason
new on-campus housing is even
needed!
Finally, what with wild parties,
destruction of property, and obnoxious neighbors screaming, setting off
fire-crackers, and squealing motorcycles on the sidewalks almost every
night, Modland is hardly the
Shangri-La she portrays it to be.
The issue boils down to available,
affordable housing, not offended
middle-class aesthetics.
Randy J. Earwood

...

February 20, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 8

February 20, 1986

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

page 9

§.p-orts
Greenerspeak:

Photos by Jennifer Lewis

What would be the ideal program at Evergreen for yOU?

Competition .for dry sports space heats up as
Pavillion faces athletic overcrowding problems
by Jacob Weisman
Competition for space for athletic
activities during winter at Evergreen
has led to conflicts which some
students say has brought about
dangerous conditions. Sports move
indoors, into the pavilion or the
steam plant.
Four foot high wooden walls now
enclose the perimeter of the pavilion

for its use as an indoor soccer field.
"The walls take about a half an hour
to move," says tennis player Ben
Chotzen. "It was too much of a hassle to take them out and then put
then back later. You sort of get used to them, though. But it stilI makes
it hard to practice with the walls being so close to the baseline," he says.
The overcrowding of the pavilion
appears to have hit basketball

players the hardest of all. "1 feel that
we definitely need another space to
play in" says Myron Partman. "The
basketball players get shoved out.
We're the last priority. And in some
ways that 's fair because we don't
have a team. We were playing ball
almost every night before tennis
moved inside and indoor soccer
started," he says.
None of the indoor soccer teams

Nation's best to swim here
by Bob Reed
ScOlI Saunders: A class that would
explore what TESC is all about.
People need an introduction to
Evergreen that would help bridge the
gap between our competitive society and the experimental interdisciplinary nature of Evergn:en .
Also, I think some type of program
that would help relieve some of the
anxiety felt when graduating and reentering the society "out there."

Bruce Donohue: I am studying in the
field of biology and there is already
the perfect program called Ornithology that is offered every other
spring. It's an incredibly intense program focused on field study of birds .
It is great.

Lucy Jackson: It would integrate
what I want to learn about myself
with what I want to learn about the
world so that I can figure out where
we and the world are going and if we
are going together.

Mark Lewin: My ideal program
would put a lot of emphasis on people learning how to work together.
They would learn to cooperate when
developing ideas and how to communicate these ideas effectively and
how to really make them happen. I
think this can and should be incorporated into every program at
Evergreen.

Andris Wollam: Probably the ideal
program for me would be a coordinated study of 40 people or so that
worked together producing the CPJ
or another publication. The publication would be inherently more
organized and supported by both
students and faculty and it would
meet my educational desires and
needs as well.

Performers burst forth with song at Evergreen

A host of the country's best NAJA
(National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) swimmers will
converge at The Evergreen State
College this Thursday thru Saturday, February 20-22, for the District
1 championships.
Last year's national high point
winner Stan Vela will be leading the
strong Central Washington University men's team. Central was second
at nationals last year and is a favorite
to win the title this year. Teammate
and national record holder John
Bryant will be the person to watch
in the 100 and 200 yard breast stroke
events.
The women's side of the meet promises to be a real thriller. Teams
competing include last year's national champion Simon Fraser,
runner-up Central and fourth place

Pacific Lutheran University (PLU).
Simon Fraser's Barbara Graham is
the national record holder in the 500
yard freestyle (5:04.63) and PLU's
Kerri Butcher has the record in the
100 yard butterfly (57.42).
Evergreen will host its own contingent of strong swimmers. The
men's team, coming off a season's
best meet record of 6-2, is hoping to
qualify the 400 yard freestyle relay
team of Robert Bruns, Casey Pratt,
Burke Anderson and Pieter Drummond for the national meet. The
relay team is four seconds over the
qualifying standard .
Returning team captain Max
Gilpin will be swimming two breast
stroke events and the 400 individual
medley. Divfr J .R. Baldwin will be
competing in the one and three meter
events, although he has already
qualified for the national meet,

which will be at Whitworth College,
in Spokane, March 6-8.
The Geoduck women will be led
by diver Erica Pickell, who has also
qualified for the national meet.
Evergreen is hoping to get strong
performances from Martha Grazier,
Tawny Young, Ann Remsberg and
Shawn Blaisdell in the 200 yard
freestyle relay.
As a result of a gift from
McDonald's Corporation of
Western Washington, the meet is going to be filmed by a group of
Evergreen students as part of an
academic experience.
On all three days, preliminaries
will run from 10 a.m.- I :30 p.m. and
finals from 6-9 p.m. Diving will go
from I :30-3 p.m. on Thursday and
Friday. The public is invited to
come. Admission will be free for the
morning and afternoon sessions and
$1 for the evening finals.

that play in the pavilion contain on ly Evergreen players. The other participants come from the Southwest
Washington Soccer Association and
the outlying Olympia area. The
recreational center sponsors four
leagues in the pavilion. Recreation
officials es timate that about 60
Evergreen students participate in
three of those leagues .
.. Evergreen has tried to promote
the school and the athletic department and they've done a very good
job of it, mainly through the soccer
programs ," says soccer player Rob
Becker. "Since there is now a
substant ial number of athletes requiring space, the department needs
to start providing the adequate
facilities for some of the other
sports . The problem, otherwise, is
only going to get worse," he says.
The soccer leagues were expanded
this year, Recreation Co-ordinator
Corey Meador says. "It was done,
regrettably, without much consideration for student use. The student access is definitely getting curtailed," Meador says.
•'The pavilion is not the worst
facility," says Chotzen. "The tennis
teams we play only have regular
wooden gyms to play in if it rains.
The balls don't grab the court and
there's very little · traction . We
definitely have a problem at
Evergreen, but it's not as bad as
some other schools," he says.
Volleyball is by far the most
neglected sport, 'says student David
Zook . "We had to play in the steam
plant," he says. "The noor was

made of hard linoleum tile that
sloped toward the water drains in the
middle of the court. It was much too
small. Three walls served as our OUIof-bounds lines . Two of the wall s
were covered by chain link fences,
the other one was concrete . It was

""We've already
grown beyond
the number of
students we can
practically
serve. "
-Corey
Meador
difficult to try hard because of the
fear of getting hurt. One day, we
popped a ball on the fence," he said .
More than 7 percent of
Evergreen 's students participate in
intercollegiate programs, while an
additional 17 percent are invol\(ed
with recreational SPOTtS, according
to Recreation Center figures.
"We've already grown ," Meador
says, "beyond the number of
students we can practically serve.
And until we can acquire more
recreational space on campus some
people are going to be disappointed.

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Erne$tine Anderson sang at a Valentine's Day Dancert
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SEE some of the NATIONS BEST SWIMMERS!
February 20-22, Thursday thru Saturday, Evergreen is hosting the District 1 Regional Championships. Three of the top four Women's teams
in the nation last year (Simon Fraser, Central
and PLU) will be ample competition for the
mighty Geoducks!! National record holders Barb
Graham (Simon Fraser) and Kerri Butcher (PLU)
will be leading the pack. Our Geoducks are
all hoping to rise to the occasion with strong
performances. The action will run from 70 a.m.3 p.m . and 6 p.m.- 9 p.m. Thurday and Friday
and 10 a.m.- 1:30 p.m . and 6 p.m. - 9 p.m .
Saturday. Everyone's Invited!!!!
A FENCING CLUB is being organized. If you
are interested: a sign-up sheet ;s going to be
posted ;n the Rec Bldg. by the sign-up sheet.
STUDENTS ARE NEEDED as members of the
Recreation and Athletics Advisory Board. If you
have opinions about these areas at Evergreen,
PLEASE call x6530 . The next meeting is Feb. 26
at noon in the Library board room.
26 miles of RUNNING . .. Geoduck stalwarts
Sean Meehan, Sue Clynch and several others
will be participating ;n the Seaside Marathon
Feb . 22nd. If you see them, tell them they're
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page 10

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

February 20, 1986

February 20, 1986

:Qoem.s

eXQre'ssive arts network
The Expressive Arts Network is a Student Organization designed for the purpose of bringing Evergreen artists together, having arts information available ' to the Evergreen Community,
and organizing Arts projects . If you have artistic interests, attend the Expressive Arts Network meetings at 5 p .m. Tues., in the Rotunda. Help to organize artists, for we are a large
population on this campus and need to coordinate our efforts . Maildrops are located in COM 302, LAB II (2nd floor), or CAB 305. Office hours are Mon. 10-12 & 12:30-2, Tues.
1-5, & Fri. 2-3 in LIB 3232, ext. 6412.


A thought from Lab I
MONDAY ·MORNING (No Umbrella)

Opinion:

The men's room partition

Dinner theater studies '
a few societal problems

is the slate

by Tracey Renee .Stefan
On Fe bruary 13, th e Power of
Theatre program presented "While
Someone Else is Eating" a d inner
theater including feminist , chicano,
and erotic performances by class
members.
The show was a truly imaginative,
vital ser ies of original and classical
performances which utilized audio
and vidw as well as costume and
props. The se riousness of the issues
in the array of presentations was
blanketed with much humor.
The dinner theater experience was,
to say the least, a very sensual one.
The sight of my fellow clas'smates
and this collosal project they had
taken upon themselves was exciting.
Turkey carnage everywhere, drippings of grease and gravy on the
counters, Hefty bags filled with diced vegies and a few stray cans of pop
made me wonder whose idea this
was to begin with.
The meal was beautifully executed
and reaffirmed the oft-thought idea
that true works of art are a product
of chaos.
Out of the kitchen, onto the stage.
The performers didn't friller their
time eating. While the audience was
eat ing, they clamored quickly to the
narrow hallway lillered with props
and paper bags to prepare their
pieces .
The show began with improvisation by part of the class who would

act out suggestions from the audience as to a person, place or' food.
The performers hilariously emulated
a banana smoothie. a sausage factory and popcorn popping .
The first rehearsed piece,
"Satisfaction," showed stereotypical
physical types of modern women,
e.g., the myth of the perfect 10, and
how women today feel pressured by
our culture's media to be "Suzie
Pencil Stick" and the frustrations
thereof. The piece was simple, funny and meaningful.
Intermittently between performances, Sarah Rose sang three
songs, alone, on a bare stage without
musical accompaniment of any kind.
Tory Babbit and Libby Wood
gave an electric performance of an
original piece that they wrote and
choreographed called "For the Love
of Norm." It was an absurdist piece
that dazzled the senses with dance,
improvisation , dialogue, and
musical scores such as the James
Bond Theme, and Laurie Anderson.
"City Planner", dealt with the
commercial ideal of the perfect city
as actor Ty Bass narrated video
footage of scenes of people and
buildings in Olympia. Some audience members were amused to see
themselves on video in their daily activities in downtown Olympia.
The next piece, "The Applicant,"
concerned the degree of conformity
we often find ourselves cOl,lfronted
with when we go for a job interview .

The clouds above my head .
Are bleeding
The soil is soaked
The trees are breathing.
My shoes, they sink into the water
. Desperation draining fart her
A time of tension
Appre hension
Too tired to mention
The good ti mes seem too good.

of equality:

a splattered portrait
of freshman and

program was mixed with a slideshow
of places she has seen, drawings,
paintings, and some cartoon
reading.
Her drawing style is wired , as if
there's an electric current going
through it. She makes people laugh
with her talk about doughnuts,
polyester, Cheelos, dating, greeting
cards, dogs, zits, and assorted other
stuff related to American life. No
idea is too small. This was mentioned along with working with an idea
in series, and the importance of
knowing when to quit and move on
to something else.
Working in series on anything that
is of interest to an artist is one of the
things she stressed while showing
slides from "Naked Ladies." This
color book was started by an interest
in playing cards and a curiosity
about women's body types . They're

Peter writing
in his journal,
like a bearded
woolen Poe;

Steve Blakeslee

Performing a "banana smoothie. "
We have to try to "look the part"
which can be humiliating. This sense
of alienation and subjection was
conveyed humorously by Barbara
Hinchcliffe and Christopher Tolfree.
"Black Mass," as the name
precludes, was of a more serious
lOne, though its dialogue and
characters were comic. This classic
piece portrayed a scene in a church
in South Africa. The characters were
perverse in their comedy as they
"humorously "
showed
the

today
we create
something ecstatic
from the bare bones of existence
and the compromises of the world
we live for awhile
like angels before a fall

photo by Jennifer Lewis

obliviousness of a sensibility that
condones racism and massacre,
equating war to a mere physical
game, such as football. The work
showed the idol worship of the
church and the hollow pretense of its
rituals. It left one with a bitter,
nauseated feeling .
The final piece, "Interruptions,"
concerned the roles of women and
the repression of homosexuality.
This piece corrolated Hitler's indictment of the Jews with the refusal by

certain key officials on Capitol Hill
to pass the Gay Bill of Rights . The
piece reminded us of the implications of the refusal of the GBR for
the third year in a row, and that
toleration of this degree of social
control effects all people because its
extreme is genocide.
The show in its entirety left me
with a lot to think about, as well as
a good time and a full belly. I hope
that if you did not catch this show,
you will try to catch the next one
Spring quarter!

not romaptic, but graphic depictions
intended to be color filled. This
series is bold, has hard edges, and
a few surprises.
As a student at Evergreen, Barry
said she concentrated on being a
politically correct Bohemian living in
downtown Olympia with very little
money. She would read mystical
meanings into things that really turned out to be no big deal; things can
turn out all right anyway, she said.
Now she talks about being free to
do whatever she wants. Some of the
latest slides depict paintings mixed
with research related to anatomy and
humor. There are some portraits, sequins , ground glass on shellac, latex
over ground glass over Elmer's glue
oils, more latex, cutouts .
Lynda Barry shows and tells that
she can use what 's around, and
make something from it.

but the only
Raven watching
is a taxidermied
crow
St eve Blakeslee

Steven Helbert

!

Peter Murney

SEMINAR

I

We sit on our plush couches,
Smoking cigarettes, drinking politically correct coffee,
Whi le we argue about nature and natural surroundings.

I

\

Polyester slacks, change jingling in his pockets says,
Man is nature,
All of man 's actions are natural.
The wool pants natural blonde waves her fi st at the sky in anger,
And raves against man' s destruction of the trees,
As she snuffs out a Marlboro Light in the aluminum ash tray .
The dyed hair of the punker falls under the weight of his hairspray,
While he sleeps on his tatooed arm and drools.
We read in the carpeted library and watch the clock .
Wool pants hops in her V .W . with the blue jean seat covers,
And heads hom e to light the wood stove.

Lynda Barry

Dr. Patsy Hancock, Medical Director and
Naturopathic Physican
Pamela Cordell, Colon Hygienist
Deborah Lee, HeJlerwork Practitioner
Dawn Avalon, Rebirther and Reike Practitioner
Diane Biscay, Iridologist
Leonard Fritz, Hypnotherapist
Kay Ridgeway, Rebirther
A NETWORK OF WHOLISTIC PRACTITIONERS
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The tim es before are dimly focused
Looking back they swarm like locusts
And every step I take
I sink into t he water
... Desperation draining farther.
Shake the trees
Till their branches look like pi tchfo rks
Piercing objects
Squinting eyes
Epitomize
The swollen skies
The bad times seem too bad.

time enough for that

Pol yester slacks walks to his dorm room and t urns up the heat.
They don't understand each other,
As t hey both lie down at ten for bed,
And pull cove rs around cold shou lders.

photo by Nancy Harter

NORTHWEST
WHOLISTIC HEALTH
CENTER
438-2882

'-

Friday, late

doctorate pi ss

Cartoonist Lynda Barry frees self from guilt
by Catberine Commerford
Cartoonist Lynda Barry was here
to show and tell students in the program "Hard Country" that books
"Boys and Girls" and "Big Ideas"
have led to "Everything in the
World" (soon to be published by
Harper and Row).
She's an artist who makes money
by making funny comics. She gives
people the stories they want to hear .
Over 25 newspapers syndicate her
work. And she's got a contract with
"Esquire," so people ask if she's
selling out.
At 30, Barry may be selling out,
but she appears to be getting things
her way while making people smile,
so it can't be all that bad.
Barry graduated from Evergreen
in 1978 and says she's having fun.
The Wednesday, February 12
discussion for the "Hard Country"

page II

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL

' Joe Earleywine

Bonnie Greenberg

THE ASTERISK

for a real good t/me!

At eight-thirty, the trust fund hippies gather for coffee and wheat toast,
Birkenstock counter girl smi les a nuturing grin,
Joni Mitchell cries, beaten, in the background,
Smoking on porch only sign hangs above the stoned wheat crackers,
All natural chocolate, seven-fifty a pound,
Croissants, herb tea, and patchoul y oil aroma,
Flows past my tobacco and beer reeking sweater .

Friday, Feb 21st :

TINY GIANTS
Sat., Feb 22nd

Heliotroupe

Cover

~x;,..""-;<

Please bring your drawings, photographs, and
writing to the poetry envelope outside the CP1
CAB 306. Please type written work and include
your name and phone number on all submissions. An open advisory forum is held on
Tuesdays ay noon in the pit area outside the
CPl. When attending forum, please refrain
from comment during review of own work. Attribution is removed prior to forum and
withheld until publication, '

Joe Earleywine

786- 1444

Paul Pope, Poetry Editor

210 E 4th Avenue

LaceYr Washington

-
Media
cpj0381.pdf