The Cooper Point Journal Volume 29, Issue 26 (May 17, 2001)

Item

Identifier
cpj0816
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 29, Issue 26 (May 17, 2001)
Date
17 May 2001
extracted text
oGrammy Nominated Drum Group in CRC

Cooper
Point
Journal

Native Student Alliance holds annual PowWow....page 4

• Blowing Shit Up in the Name ofthe Environment
Speakers Address the Que.5tion o[Violence....page 5

o I Would Pay Fifty Cents for That Heath Bar
A Knight's Tale Told Wrong .. ..page 8

o My Necrophiliac Dog is Cooler Than Yours
Comixxx: Woofft Up .... pages 18 & 19

~~:'!:::!~iS:=====================O V 0

Iume

29 •

Iss u e 2

6•

May

1 7,

200 1

01======

Vox. POPULI

THE VOICE Of THE. PEOPLE

How would you
react if you were

'

discriminated against?

Raque1 Najera, senior
"That's a tough que~tion. Discrimination
cOmes in so many different forms that
there's going LO be many reactions to it,
from anger 10 shame; it depends if it waS
public or private. [I would react withl
anger. rfit was unintended, I'd educate the
person to what they've done, but if it was
someone I didn 't know, I'd walk away. rt
depends on the situation."

Evergreen sen ior Tim Brown gets a needle in his arm from mobile technician James Frosr ar the Puget Sound Blood '
Center blood drive in the Library last Tuesday. Brown said it was good to donare blood so he could help save a ljfe
larer on.

"

Luke Bayn~e,~;h:=
"That depends on the discrimination; If it
was a safe place, rd try to politely correct
the person; if(it wasn't a safe place] I'd just
try to grin and bear it.... The safe thing is to
walk away, but ifit was a classroom, I'd say
something."
.,r~~-----,

Mike, junior
"I would seek some sort of justice, as in, I
would confront the person who is
discriminating and ask them why they're
doing it and try to speak truth to them. rd like
to resolve it in a civil manner.... I'd try to have
a deep
for the discriminator."

I
Serah Stetson, sopllIolTlOre
"I have a tendency to surround myself with
people who wouldn't discriminate.... I would .
turn around and reave. Deep down, I'd be
hurt, but it'd be something'! dealt with on a
personal level.... It depends Ofl what kind of
di$crimination it was; there's subtle
disctiminations ~hat happen everyday, but
if it was big, I'd seek out an organization.» .
photta: and inl'rrvie.wJ by ~ LoWe

TESC
Olympia, WA 98505

. SfOT' ,

~]~tlt

Address Service Requested

Cooper Point Journal • 20· May" 10, 2001

Greenhorn Provost

Evergreen Newcomer Picked Over Old Timers
by Corey P"in

When Dr. Enrique Riveros-Schafer
was hired for Provost. he beat out two
long-time Evergreen faculty members for
the job. One, John Cushing, has been
dean and faculty since 1985. The other.
John Perkins, is the director of the
environmental studies graduate
program.
Riveros· Schafer
has
vi s ited
Evergreen three limes. He wiii puii in
$1 25,000 a year as Evergreen 's provost.
$65.000 more than starting faculty. The
job will lend him the most power or
anyone on campus except President Les
Puree .
"r first want to get to know the
institution , to hear the various voices
and become part of the organization ," he
said. "There is much I need to learn
about."
Riveros-Schafer starts this July; he's
replacing current provost , Barbara Leigh
Smith , who's retiring after twenty-three
years at TESC. Once insta lled in office,
he'll be expected to assist with
Evergreen's public relations and
fundraising. He'll be Evergreen's
representative at other colleges and to
the Washington state legislature. He will
be in charge of the enti re academic
division, controlling things like faculty

hiring and the library. And when the
Purce is gone, Riveros·Schiifer will be in
charge.
Hiring for the provos t started last
year, when a search comm ittee recruited
and screened candidates. The committee
was selected by Purce, who also had final
say on who wou ld fill the position.
The committee submi tt ed written
evaluat ions of the finalists two months
ago . and last week. he announced his
dec ision.
"There is no more important
decision I am likely to make as president
than this appointment," Puree said in an
e-mai l.
When asked why all Evergreen
newcomer was chosen over two current
faculty, committee members all deferr'ed
to Purce, saying it was his decision.
Purce wou ld only say that he
considered the opinions of the search
committee, faculty, staff, and students
before picking the provost.
Riveros-Schiifer, who hails from
Ch ile, has worked in higher ed uca tion
since he received his Ph.D. from the
Univers ity of Cal ifo rnia in 1982. He
current ly se rv es as a dean at De Anza
Co ll ege in Cupertino , California. He
plans on teaching in a program in the
fall.

Ro bert Ptl vne:

Renaissance Man
by Erica Nelson

A woman comes into the Evergreen
bookstore and asks a simple question: "Do you
have that book in?"
Because she asked Robert Payne, she
docs not get a simple answer.
He tells her it's not in yet, but he also
mentions how many copies the store will
stock, how many copies were printed, who
published it. when it came out, who wrote it
and gives a small lesson on how the publishing
business really works.
Payne has worked at the Evergreen
bookstore for 21 years. All the books not
specifically needed for Evergreen classes, he
buys. He stocks books by Mart Groening,
books about Matt Groening, student. faculty,
and alumni books. He even stocks CDs and
art made by students.
He'll
give
anything published by Greeners a chance to
be displayed and sold in the store. Usually, it's
sold on co nsignment, and if it sells, he'll keep
it on his shelves.
Payne, 54 , is the renaissance man of the
bookstore. The man with striking long grey
hair worked up from shipping and receiving
to manager, eve ntu ally becoming interim
director when someo ne quit. Now he works
part time as the store's "trade book buyer" and
describes his job as "getting books, talking
books, and talking ideas."
-':"-s-ee-MAN;-;-:~o-n-pa-g-e~1-;;6

PRSRT STD
US Postage
Paid
OlympiaWA
Permit #65

Cooper
point

-----I(BRIEFS)'-----£

Q

Joumal

We Are All Going to Hell ... But Very Slowly
b y Jen 131.1L'kr(lld

For tho;,e unaware of th e
pas sage of ti me, this week is the
seventh one of th e spring ilcademic
qUilrter, which meilns everyone
runs around frilntical ly trying to put
on events, finish fina l projects, and
in general cram a great deal of
activity into il short amount of time.
Well, except in g blotter, of
course. Here, there is virtually
nothing go ing on. Sure, bikes are
sto len, food is burnt, a nd crappy
alcohol rains down at TESC like the
weather in May, but as for other
crimes, it's a dead week.
Still, summer is coming, ilnd I
find comfo rt in the knowledge that
pretty soon, I won't have to write
it... for three months. Glory be.
On with the madness ...

Story meeting:
Monday 5 p.m.
Paper critique:
Thursday 4 p.m.
Journalism and ethics
.forum: (led by CPJ
advisor Dianne Conrad)
Friday 3 p.m.
How to contribute content
Turn in your story on a disk and printed out to
Cooper Point Journal office CAB 316, or email
your contribution to cpj@evergreen.edu.


Our deadline is Monday at noon for that week's
edit ion .


Indicilte your name and phone number on your
submission


Try to keep your story under 600 word~ . If you 'd
like to write more than that, please call the
Cooper Point Journal ilt 867-6213 so th at w e can
reserve space for you .

This speaker from rhe Sinn Fein (lefr) provided a grear source of informarion on, and more
importantly, a personal accounr of rhe "troubles" in Norrhern Ireland. She spoke a decem
amounl abour the srruggle for power on the island, and discussed Bobby Sands, the most famous
of the "men on rhe blanket"; rhar is, the hunger srrikers in rhe Long Kesh prison . She was here as
a welcome guest of rhe Evergreen Irish Resurgency Experimenr, and was a valuable resource to
the dozen or so in attendance.
- Turtle

.-- - - -- - - -

Angelic Auditions

Hey Intelligentsia!

Want to be in with the angels and not
This is a brief especially for faculty and
set foot inside a church? For those interested
academic
staff. SUBMIT and GET PAID! The
in getting involved with the performance of
Evergreen
September Symposium wants
"Angels in America II: Perestroika" in the fall
your
participation
in a seminar, workshop,
quarter, don't worry if you miss ed the
or
anything
that
shows
your research, artistic
academic fair. Auditions will be held for all
work,
teaching
strategies,
etc ... .
wou ld-be ange ls by appo intment on Friday,
Contributions are due Friday, June 1. The
May 25. Those auditioning will n eed to
Symposium is September 13 and 14 at the
present a monologue and be prepared to do
a cold reading from the script . To sched ul e Tacoma Campus. Call Nancy Taylor at
x6398, Emily Decker at x6637 or Gillies
an audi tion appointment or just to ge t more
i Malnarich at x6609. You will be paid $125 a
information, contact Matt Smith at 866-6893
I day.
or mattsmovies@cs .com .

\

May 7
12:03 a.m.
Big shocker as
someone under the ilge of 21 gets
caught drinking and driving.
1:05 p.m.
A bike is stolen.
Almost eight hours later, anot her
one is taken. And you know what?
Tomorrow another bike will go
missing at ilbout the same time as
the second one . And you know what
e lse? This hilS got to s top, people.
With all the bikes that have been
stolen, I think you have enoug h to
start your own Critical Mass. So just
qui t already.
5:35 p.m.
Wow, something
new and unusual is sto len from

Benefit Fiesta

News
Editor-in-chief. \'(ihilnLj' K''a.''ga
Managing editor: C"re)' [tin
News editor: EriC! Nel,on
l&O editor: MA Selbv
Photo editor: Adam L"uiL'
ME editor: Mik, 'f.'UlI1rl
Sports editor: 51115t.1 5111ilh
Designers: T)~LT !l.11li'l. Wend), ~ leNd
Copy Editors: .\t." lI1g tvlIlt:s, Edith ~,l'lIl

Advisor: 1)1.11111<' ClIIlI:.d

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hero ...

10

And There Was

I Much

** corrections * Writers! Convene!
The article "Assault Not Taken
Seriously" of two weeks ago contained a
few inaccuracies. Thanks to Chandra
Lindeman, Sexual Assault Prevention
Coordinator, for pointing them out. The
third paragraph claims that 85 pertent of
people assaulted report it. The figure
should have read less than 85 percent
report assaults. In paragraph four, the
statistic should have said one out of four
men have been-assaulted, not one out of
five. And, at the end of the article, people ,
are invited to visit Chandra Lindeman in
SEM 4126. That is her mail stop, not her
office. Her office is in SEM 4130.

subscnbt> , C"aU36(}&7.ffi">4

Once upon il time there was town called
Shelton. And Shelton had a Writer ' s
Confe rence at the Olympia College, located
in the town . A great man, environmental
writer Derrick Jenson, decided to speak on
the nature of honesty a nd truth. Many
people attended the conference, which was
held May 19 and 20, started at 8:15 p.m., and
cost $60. The world WilS a hilppier place. Bu t,
wait, it isn't a filiry tale l You can still attend
the amazing event! Go to their website right
now at www.oc.ctc.edu.

May 9
Nothing happ ens. No traffic
offenses, no fire alarms, no drunken
people yelling obscenities at each
other. I guess that means everyone
behaved themse lves. Or got better
at concealing crimes. Either way, it's
pretty much a cipher to me.

May 10
There was graffi ti on Red Square.
Otherwise , it's pretty much like
yesterday in the terms of interesting
things occuring or being reported to
me.
May 11
See above, only subs titute fire alarm
in D-Dorm at 7:21 p.m. for graffiti.
May 12
1 p.m.
An officer on routine
patrol sees a "low spot" on
Driftwood Road. "Because of the
earthquake, I thought someone
should look at it. I put a facilities
work out on it. This week I noticed
the roadway is cracking on both
ends of the sinking area. Because
that location has an underground
spring near, I am concerned that the
road may be being undermined."
Just another reason why going to
Evergreen can be such a joy.
11 :32 p.m.
More
underage
drinking in A-Dorm as yet another
student gets an MIP.
May 13
The week wraps up with more
graffit a nd another MIP as a student
in A-Dorm gets busted with alcohol.
Na turilll y, he is arrested, the bottle
is destroyed and life resumes its
steady course of decay and entropy.

"BUTTONS·
"CARDS
AND
POSTCARDS·

· QUEER GEAR·

LOCAL ART
YEAR ROUND

·STERLING
SILVER·

·AND

A

~a Books

Olympi;,'s Largest

Indep~nt

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10'X> Off New

Current Qtr.Texts

LOT

MOREIT!·

One would think that
this story would have ended.
But that is not the case.

a

In press release dated
May IS, it was revealed that
in fact, Stepp's/SouthSound
Driving School was still
registering students and
collecting money, despite the
lack of licensing.
You know, that's really
ironic ... a driving school not
having a ... oh, forget it. Just '
make sure that if you go to a
school, it's got accreditation.
Like you did when you
decided to go to Evergreen.
For more info, contact the
Consumer Protection Division
at (360) 753-6210, (toll-free at
800-551-4636) or e-mail
protect@atg.wa.gov.

We Buy Books Everyday!

la::oUJ:DI.

II

---'-1

"l:he Most Fun Place to Shop In Olymplal"

FINDERS KEEPERS



ANTIQUE I•
MALL
~

1728 State ~

943·6464

Mort-Sat 111-5 Sun U.4

'I'tJt!>.·TlJUQS. 10 AX·8 P.M.
rol af SAT. 10 A.M. · to PM. • .sUN. NOON · 5 P.M.

THURSDAY MAY 17
FRIDAY MAY 18

3:()(}S:OO PAIlEl ON YOUTH INCARCERAllON @ UB LOBBY

I

r

11 :IJO.4:OO OJ'S & GRAffITI ART @ ~O SQUARE
2:3()'3:30 PANEl ON WOMEN IN HIP-HOP@ UB lOBBY
3:3()'S:OO GRAfFITI MURAl. WORKSIKlP
5:()(}6:00 HOOKPIIONIC
7:0()'11 :30 URBAN EXPRESSIONS HIP HOP SItOW

CDs, Cassettes, Lps
New & Used

PROm. sm:-I. LlU.lJ.o..Nl
N1f57 DOIJI58 S1UIJIII55 IlUDIIIT 1lOO~7

a~ MIIJtISA, IKIOM W

Hemp Converse high-tops
and low-tops are in with
new seasonal colors

SATURDAY MAY 19

11 :00 UPRISING SKATE CONTEST @ OI.Y SKATE PARK (SIGH IN @ 8:00AM)
6:3()'11:30 SPOKEN WORll &B-roVjB-6lRL BRm: BATTlE
6:JO.7:30 ISAHGiWW.



SUNDAY MAY 20

9:00 GRAfFITI MURAl. WI NUKE@SYLVESTER PARk
3:()().4:30 OPEN DISCUSSION ON URBAN ARTS FEST AT TESC
9:QO.12:OO FREE PlINK SHOW @ U8 4300
(1oiNilg ifFtEa~ (fROM BElnH6))

J1(KEIS @ RAINY DAY RECORDS, lIiE BRAHOt. rES( BOOKSTORE
CAll (360) 961~412 FOR tNFOAWlOH

..........

Ph357-4755
M-Sat 10-8, Sun 12-5
intersect of Division & Harrison
@ Westside Shopping Center

Cooper Point Journal • 3· May 17, 2001

J
\

7:3Oa:30 PO£Trt SlAM
9:lJO.I 1:30BUAK twta 8.\IlI.E

-Erica Nelson

Cooper Point Journal • 2· May 17, 2001

You may recall, in the
May 10 edition, our brief on
the Stepp's Driving School in
Shelton losing its license to
give others their certificates
or teach students.

-Jen Blackford

'-GLASS ART*

Rejoicing

Jose "Chencho" Alas will speak abou t
the devastating earthquake in EI Salvador at
If Ballot MeasureE' and Regionill
an Ear thquake Benefit Fiesta, Friday, May 18 1
I
Governing
Bodies make you want to shout
from 7:30-9:30 p.m. at the United Churches
I "amen," then have I got the forum for you.
at 11th and Washington St. in Olympia
Refreshments will be served, and the I You will explore the roles, rules and
sugges ted donation is $10. Money from th e I responsibi lities affecting people's abilities to
benefit will assist h ome rebuilding in EI inform and educate the public regarding
Salvildor. Alas will speak about The ballot measures. You will be at Lacey City
Foundation for Self-Suff iciency and its Council Chambers on Wednesday, May 16
at 6 p.m. You will rejoice in your newfound
delegation to EI Salvador lilter this yeilr.
knowledge. You will be happy.

M67-62\J

Tht'C~"'l!"-'r !','l/l ! I 'lll rl "'l l l~

I

May8
Well, you know about the stolen
bike, but did you a lso know that
there was a fire alarm? No, you say?
Then you h ave n't been reading
blotter enough to know that these
alarms have been, currently are, and
will always be ringing throughout
my life (and Housing).

III Legion Way
Downtown Olympia
(360) 753-5527

M('~ -('(1 5~

EI Salvador Earthquake

Housing. Apparently a drum set is
the on ly thing taken out of a well equ ipped room. Was the perpetrator
simp ly wishing to perpetuate the
time-honored tradition of playing
them at 3 a.m. outside the window
of people trying to sleep? Well,
whatever the Cilse, the d rum set is
recovered and no more is sa id.
11:10 p.m.
Rousseau said "Ma n
is born free, but everywhere in
chains." And evidently, the state of
Washington SilYS, "You have to keep
your dog on a leash, otherwise it
will be taken to animal control."
Proving that once agilin, philosophy
of a dead French guy hold s true
even today.

* B ' EA ._ DS*
*INCENSE·
·CANDLES·
·STICKERS·

Business
Busin5S Manager: Jl11 BbciJ(l[d
Asst. Business Manager: Munica F"'I.l
Advertising Representative: I.m PadL"
Orculation and Archivist: Michatb MOn.mall
DlstJibution Manager: Will H,win
Ad DesIgners: Nicholal Sl.ml.d!1v.~ki , buren SI<m11

Newsbrief: Update

,.

------~~E~1~-----£!

SEas

EZ

NSA Annual Pow-Wow to Feature Grammy Nominees
ed u ca ti o n by a ttendi ng th e coll ege intent of our program is to
a nd by con tinuing tr a ditional showcase the be s t in Native
T h e Native S tud e nt Alliance values of o ur cu lture, like th e culture throu g h the s in g ing and
dancing that will in s till
of The Everg ree n State Co ll ege is. Pow-wow, that will
pride in the s tud e nt s
cospo n soring a large project th a t e n ab le s u ccess in both MaK19
and
the s urrounding
reflects an annua l t radi tion of wo rld s .
(::~rhc
trib es we represent.
gat hering. In o ur past, o ur tribes
The a nnu al Sp rin g
This year's h ost
co uld look forwa rd to seeing eac h Pow-wow
is
an
Grand Entry
drum for the Evergreen
other every year at the Pow-wow. excellen t oppor tunit y
ptTIQ.T '
Pow -wow is GrammyThis tradition helped u s m a intai n for the st u de nts of
A~pm
nominated " Black Lodge
heritage.
The
Native Evergreen to display
o ur
Singers." This year is the
American students at The o ur tr ad iti ona l cu lture
Everg r ee n Sta te Co ll ege a r e to th e s tud en ts, fac ulty of th e fir s t year th a t N a tiv e American
working to maintain a balance of sc ho o l a nd large r public. The singers and musicians hav e been
by Erv.lnn. Liltle Eagle

eRe

1

Life Behind Bars:
by Marco Rosaire Ro ssi

The Pr ison Action
Comnuttee (PAC), a s tudent
organ iza tion that ha s been
providing - the
TESC
com munity with information
o n prison issues, is planning
a Prison Awareness Week to
help raise people's awareness
o n incarc era ti on and its
effects. Prison Awareness
Week has been an annual
event for PAC and ma kes a
grea t opportunity
for
s tud ents and people within
the O lym pia com muni ty to
become more aware of what
it means to be incarcera ted
and the long struggle
throughout u.s. history to
reform or abolish variou~
forms of imprison ment.
This year, the week will
begin at 3 p.m . on Thursday,
May 17, in the Library Lobb y,
with the PAC's support of a
panel on yo uth incarcerati on.
The panel w ill includ e
individuals who h ave
belonged, in some way, to the
Gateway program . The
Gateway prog ram was a
project t~at has help ed

incl uded within the Grammy Awards
ceremony, and our co mmittee feels
very honored to have this drum come
to rep rese nt th e p eop Je of the
Northwest in a Pow-wow that hono rs
the continuance of our people.
The Pow-wow will be held on
May 19, 2001 , in the Ca mpu s
Recrea tion Center. You ca n exp ect to
witness Native American si ng in g,
drumming, danci ng, artwork, and
food, as well as be a participant in the
intertribal dances that are open to all
people.

Prison Awareness Week Explores
the Effects ofIncarceration

in ca rce ra ted yo uth find a
voice and b eco m e mor e
ed u ca ted . All the members of
the panel have been involved
in putting toge th er the book
Through Ihe Eyc~ of II,,, l/ldSl'd,
which is currentl y being sold
in the TESC bookstore . The
book and the panel give an
opportunity to yo uth tha t
hav e been impr iso ned to
exp re ss themselve s a nd
inform o th ers of the
conditi ons that incarcerated
people are forced
to
experience.
The week wi ll con tinue
the follow in g Monday, whe n
Ramond Afri ca will ~peak to
TESC stude nt~ in Lecture
Hall 1 at 6 p .m. Ramona
Africa has insp ired aud i ence~
throughout the United States
wit h h e r passionate and
criti ca l acco unt of th e presen t
state of law enfo rcement and
the lega l sys tem in the U.s.
Ramona Afri ca is current ly
the spo kesp erson for th e
MOV E orga n iza ti on, a
radical orga ni zatio n from
Philadelphia th a t deal with
vario us surrou ndin g racism,
eco logy and freedom for

The Native S.tudent Alliance
hosts the Annual

SPRING CONTEST

POWWOW
May 19th, 2001

political prisoner Mumi a
Abu -Jamal. She is the sole
survivor of the Philadelphia
police bombing of the MOVE
headquaters in 1985, in whi ch
un a rm ed MOVE m e mbers
and children were murdered.
On Tuesday, May 22, in
Lecture Hall 3 at 6:30 p .m .,
PAC has invited Ophelia Ealy
to spea k abou t her s ituation
confron tin g
police
in
terrorism. Ms . Ea ly's son WilS
murd ered by th e Sea ttl e
police , and her case has
provoked se r io u s issues
conce rning police vio le nce
toward com muni ties of color.
Ms . Ealy wi ll discuss recent
developments in the case,
and what the c iti zens of
Wash in gton ca n do to fin d
justice.
At 7 pm in Lecture Hall
1 on Wednesday, May 23,
Mark Cook will speak about
the rig hts of ex-prisoners who
hav e b ee n released. Ma rk
Cook is a n ex- Was hin g ton
political prisoner himself. In
th e 1970s, Mark Cook was
part of
the
militant
revo lutionary g ro up th e
George Jackson Brigade ,

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• Art.s • Food • Dancing
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EVERQREEN
For more info c&lll Erv&lnna &It 360~867~6105

For 1/1 01'1' infomwi ion on
Prison Awareness Week or the
Prison Aclio n COn/millee, call
867-2467 or come 10 a prison
discussion gro up 0 '1 Ih e third
floor of th e CAB every Monday
al 4:30 p.n/.

Thursday May -17
3 p.m., Library Lobby

Panel di sc us s ion with
members of th e Ga teway
program .

Monday

May 21

6 p.m., Lecture Hall 1
Sp ea ke r Ramon a Africa,
spokeperson of the MOVE
organization.

TuesdaYMay 22
6:30 p.m., Lecture Hall 3

Ophe lia Ealy speaks on
police terrorism in Seattle.

WednesdaYMay 23
7 p.m., Lecture Halll

Ex-Washington po litica I
prisoner Mark Cook speaks.

FridayMay 25
12 p.m., Lecture Hall 1
Pan e l di sc u ssion on
women in prison.

Did you know .....

I

91

that a certificate of confidentiality protects documents
from being subpoenaed? That's the highest level of
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Iirf

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call us for more information (360) 867-5516.

"Social Movements (Past and Present),

Property Destruction, and the Question of Yiolence"

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

Ron Jacobs,
Thursday, May 17'h
Noon, Library Lobby

Part I:

TESC a lumnus, on the history of the Weather
Underground, a leftist revolutionary
movement of the late 60's and early 70's (more
details in last week's CPJ) . Ron will also be
talking at 7 p.m. Thursday at 705 Lybarger St.
(Take 4th Ave. east from downtown, take a
right on Central and then a left on 7th. The
house is one block up the hill on the right on
the southwest corner of 7th and Lybarger.)
Helen Garvy,
Monday, May 21
Noon, Lecture Hall 4

Part II:

Helen was
the Assistant
National
Secretary for
the Students
, for
a
, Dem ocra tic
Society (SDS)
in 1964 and is
the director (I cft) Carl'y at ,he SDS ,wional
of th e new co nvc nli on. June 196).
film on SDS (Righ,) Carvy 200n .
ca lled Rebel~
1l,ilh a Ca llst', which will be s howi ng at the Capi tol
Theater/Olym pia Film Society this weekend and
early next week (conta ct OFS at 754-6670). Helen
will be presenting d his tory of SDS with some
reflections on thei r legacy and th e collapse of the
1960s movement.

SDS was arguably the mos t important
s tudent activist organization in the 1960s, with
I chapter~ on hundreds of ca mpuses and well over
a hundred thousand members. SDS authored the
famous "Port Huron Statement" in 1962, perhaps
the single most influential political text of the
I 1960s, with its harsh criticism of the passivity of
American life in the face of the Cold War, racism,
economic ineq uality, and oppression around the
world.

l

see GARVY page 16

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INTERESTED? CALL (360) 493-5782
Cooper Point Journal • 4· May 17, 2001

by Brian Frank

Over the next two weeks, four speakers will be at Evergreen as part of a series titled "Social Movements
(Past and Present), Property Destruction, and the Question of Violence," presented by the Evergreen Political
Information Center (EPIC).ln recent years there has been much heated discussion-both within the current
social movements and in the media--on the issue of politically motivated vandalism and economic sabotage.
Actions of these sorts have increased dramatically in recent years, from the torching of a multi-million dollar
ski resort threatening lynx habitat in Colorado to the smashing of Starbucks' windows in Seattle. The questions
raised by such actions are very important ones.
For example, is it ethical to burn down an SUV dealership (this happened in Eugene, OR, a few months
ago) in order to keep extremely polluting cars off the road? Should such an act be considered violent? Do
such actions actually effect the economy or the system, or are they merely a form of "propaganda by deed"?
How do stich actions affect "mainstream America's" perception of current social movements, and should
we care? Do Stich actions increase the militancy in the movement, or do they just create divisiveness? Are the
potential consequences for those that commit such actions worth it?
The purpose of this series is not to glorify, condone, or condemn property destruction, but to present
per~pectives ~n both the past and the recent history of politically motivated property destruction in the
Uruted States m order to foster open and informed discussion and debate.

Part III:

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Craig Rosebraugh,
Wednesday, May 23
Noon, Library Lobby

Craig is the publicist and ideological
s pokes mrm for the Ea rth Liberation Front (ELF),
".~.l.~_
...
perhaps the FBI's mostwanted domestic " terrorist"
~" ': - . '-,_ '//
(non) organization. Actions claimed by the elus ive
ELF have racked up millions of dollars in damage
to private and govern.ment property, to projec ts that
d c-s troy the planet. Craig hilS become somethin g
of a media antihero in tile past yea r, Witil numerous
dppec1fclnces and interviews on nat iona l news
program~ (includ ing ABC's 20/20 last month),

newspape rs and milgilzines.
In 1997, Craig Rosebra ugh (shortly after he co-founded the Portland-based
" Libe ration Collective") received a communique from the Animal Liberation
Front, an international undergro und animal libe rati on organization. The
communiquc clai med responsibility for the release of 12,000 mink from a fur
farm in Oregon. Rosebraug h held a news conferellce and released the
communjquc to the media.
Rose braugh went on to receive a few more ALF communiques. In
November 1997, Rosebraugh received a communique from tile Earth Liberation
Front, th e first official communique issued by the organization in North
America. Rosebraugh again spoke out in support, re leasing the information
to the media . Rosebraugh has since served as the main spokesperson for the
ELF in North America. [n early 2000, Rosebraugh co-formed the North
American Earth Liberation Front Press Office based in Portland, which releases
information on ELF actions and works to educate the public on ELF.
As a result of his dedication to protecting all life on the planet and stopping
injustice, Rosebraugh has been severely targeted by law enforcement. He has
bee n subpoenaed seven times to federal grand juries in Oregon investigating
see ROSEBRAUGH page 16

Olympia Community Vag£} Centet"

1009 E 4th Ave.

SEVERE PRE-MENSTRUAL
SYMPTOMS STUDY

NEWS

U p coming Se ries at Evergreen:

History of Students for Democratic Society

f"':-

A
U

Grammy nominated

who, alon g with others,
performed ex tre me acts of
property destruction and
robbery in th e n a m e o f
s uppressed p eople . Mark
Cook, unlike other membe rs
of the Brigad e, served a much
longer pri son se nten ce and
faced harsher conseq uen ces
due to the rac ism within the
Seattle lega l sys tem .
The final event that PAC
has p lann ed for Prison
Awareness Week is a panel on
women in prison, which will
appear on Friday, May 25, in
Lecture Hall 1 a t 12 p.m. This
pane l will included Crys tos
and Ida McRay Robinson,
who will describe some of
their experie n ces with
inca rceration. The event wi ll
hopefully bring people 's
attent ions to th e of tenignored iss ues of women
wi thin the legal system.

pr~L:ti~l)tJrt

.

For more information
on any of these
events, contact EPIC
at
<epicupdate@
hotmail.com> or 8676144.

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Activist and
filmmaker Tim
R ea m will be
presenting a talk
e n t i t l ed
"Eco n o mi c
Sabotage: H ow
a nd Why " on th e
e thi cs and ta c tics
property
of
destruction .
There will be
mor e information
on
Tim's
pre se nta tion in
next week's CPJ.

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Wednesday, May 30
Noon, Lib. Lobby

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For more infonnation, telephone (406) 243-6014

Cooper Point Journal • 5· May 17, 2001

Planned Parenthood"

1-800-230-PlAN
www.ppww.org

J,

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------~@~w~~------

ationa
Cattlemen 's Beef

Ih Brian F"nk , Cr.lh,lm H.lmh)"
Stephen ""rlllul, and \ ',111"»., lent""

Top Stories:
-CIA documents reveal
U.S.-Nazi Ties
- Old growth logging 1
begins in Ma tole, CA
- Scien tis ts recommend
Puget Sound whale be
listed endangered

department 's
chief
lawyer , and ,1 lobbyio.t for
Monsanto for No. 2 Jt the
Environmental Protection Agency.
A lawyt'r who repre5ented General
Electric in its fight with the EPA
over to:>-i c wa;.te site;. wa;. chose n
for c hairman of the Council on
Environmental Quality. (see
www.nytimes.com)
-Clinton's
Roadless
Area
Conservation Rule, which wou ld
halt the construction of roads in
certain areas of National Forests,
was dealt another blow last week
JS a federill judge in Idaho issued
an injunction barring the U.S
Forest Service from implementing
the new regulations. The roads the
Conservation rule blocks are used
largely for timber extraction
purposes. The Bush administration
had stated ea rli er this month that
the Roadless Area policy would be
implemented, but with a new, as
yet unspecified rule-making
process thJt cou ld substantially
a lt er the rule's implementation.
The judge's ruling takes Bush's
move a step further by prcventing
Jny change in Roadless Area policy
from taking effect. (see I
ens.lycos.com)
-Women representing groups from
across the country demonstrated at
the Dow Ch~mical Company's
shareholder meeting on Thursday,
demanding that Dow c h ange its
products and operations to prevent
dioxin contamination. Dioxin is a
carcinogen and can a lso disrupt the
immune,
hormone
and
reproductive systems, even in
sma ll amounts. Through food
alone, Americans are getting 22
times the maximum dioxin
exposure suggested by th e U.S.
EPA. (sec lens, lycos co m)

and calls for st rik es by th e
campus's janitors, dining hall
employees, and clerical workers.
(see www.boston.com)
-Morc than twenty Earth First!ers
have been arrested trying to halt
the logging of o ld growth forests
in the Ma tole River Wa tershed of
Cal i fo rn i a . Lnv en forcemen t
officers using pain inducin g holds
aga in o.t the non-violent protesters
re s ul ted in thre e e mer ge ncy
med ical evac uations , including a
rescue ilirlift. Pacific Lumber
Compa ny, a subsidiary of Ma x:>-am
Corpora tion , ha s been gran ted an
e:>-emption from the Endangered
Spec ies Act and permission to
eleeu-cut th e area ao. pMt of a dedi
signed with the U.s. Co ngress In
1998. Previous attempts to log the
JreJ were refused by the California
Water Quality Board and State Fish
and Ga me off ic ia l~, due to the
presence of numerOllS endangered
species and the area's steep and
unstab lE'
s lopes,
(see
I
ens.lycos,com
and
www.indymedia ,org)
- Due to th e race-related police
shootings of six black men in
Cincinnati, Ohio, activists are
ca llin g for a march to take place
June 1" - 3"1. They will demand
that all arrested during the April
Cincinnati riots have their charges
dropped, that all police officers
with ties to neo-Nazi organizations
be dismissed, as well as the
dismissJI of all high ranking city
officials during the shootings. (see
www.infoshop,org)

even low- level radiation is present
are exposing their unborn children
to in creased risk, the researchers
said. The new findings show that
the radiation from the stricken
Ukrainian reactor affected the
sperm of fathers , leading to
mutation in the DNA of th e
chi ldren. The researchers say that
low er doses of radiation also
produce mut ations, s ugg es tin g
that low level occupational or
medi ca l exposure to radiation
co uld double th e mutiltion rate in
offsprin g. The nucl ear industry
has repeatedly rejected clc1ims that
exposure to radiation among its
workers can affect children yet to
be
conce iv ed.
(sec
www.guardie1nLlnlimited.co.uk )

Local

-Ten scientific and environmental
groups have filed a petition to list
the Puget Sound population of
killer whales as an endangered
species . Whales in the sound are
known to be contaminated by PCBs
- polychlorinated biphenyls which
National
are byproducts of many past
-Newly declassified U.S. CIA
industrial practices. The whale's
documents
s h ow
their
favored salmon prey are also
collaboration with the Nazis
endangered. The population is
during WWII. Documents show
under intense whale watching
extensive use of Nazi spies to wage
pressure, and the Puget Sound
the U.S. campaign against the
ecosystem is collapsing around it,
Sovie t Union, and that Nazis were
the groups charge. A population
brought into U.S. CIA to avo id
model developed by scientists at
being charged with war crimes.
the Center for Biological Diversity
(see www.sfbg.com)
concluded that under current
-Advantage Schools inc., a Bostoncondi tions, the southern residents
based company at th e forefront of
face up to a 99 percent chance of
a national effort to run public
extinction within the next 300 years.
schools privately, has failed to live
Labor (see I ens.l ycos.com)
up to its promises of academic and
-The people of the Navajo Nation - Mother's Day Protest in Olympia:
financial success in charter schools
have filed suit against Attorney A dozen mothers and other
in at least seven s tates. Advantage,
General John As hcroft, accusing demonstrators gathered with picket
which serves 9,000 students in
the federal government of signs in hand Sunday afternoon at
eight states and the District of
"coordinated neglect" to deny the intersection of Harrison Aven ue
Columbia, has misled parents
justice to uranium workers, The and Division Street in west
about teacher qualifications, failed
government is supposed to Olympia, The moms were there to
to consis tently boost sco res on
provide cash paymen ts to for mer protest possible development at the
high-stakes state tests, and
urJnium miners, millers and others site and bring attention to
engaged in financial practices that
exposed to radiation from nuclear pedestrian safety, as sidewalks and
have prompted cens ure by at least
weapons testing and production, a new right-turn lane the city
two states. At Chicago'S Octavio
but the government money for this promised to in stall years ago never
Paz Charter School, 30 of the 33
plan ha s run out, The Navajo materialized. The lot, which has
teachers Advantage hired had on ly
Nation claims that the situation is laid vacant since 1997, was also the
substitute certificates, according to
Jdding insult to injury, as the site of a May Day protest action
a city official. At Jersey City's
Protests compensations were originally where a vegetable and flower
Golden Door Charter School, class
-About 30 students at Harvard crec1ted as an apology for the garden was planted . The City
sizes were a third larger than
Uni\'ersity ended il three-week sit - government concealing the ill d es troyed the garden with a
advertised, and Advantage ended
in to demand a $10.25 "l iv ing effects of Uranium exposure to th e backhoe the following day,
up with a $600,000 deficit. And at
wage" for all campus employees, Navajo workers for years. (see I arresting one gardener who refused
Albany 'S New Covenant Charter
to
leave .
(see
declaring victory despite no solid ens.lycos.com)
School, more than 90 percent of the
www.theolympian.com)
-Children
of
those
drafted
to
clea
n
promise that the administration
students failed New York State's
would boost the salaries of it;. up after the Chernobyl disaster -The Dalai Lama , Nobel Peace
reading
test.
(see
lowest-paid workers. For 21 days, suffer seven times the mutation Prize winner and exi led sp iritu al
www.boston.com)
Harvard st u dents forced the rate of offspring whose parents and political leader of Tibet, spoke
-Threats to anti-Pacifica radio
adm ini stration to deal with top were not exposed to radiation, in front of an estimated crowd of
managemen t websi tes have been
accordi n g to research published 25,000 over the weekend. Among
called off. Paci fica, the New York- lawyers from the AFL-CIO, calm this week by the Royal Society in renewed calls for world peace, he
U.S. Senators Edward M. Kennedy
based radio sta tion which airs
and
John F. Kerry, respond to Britain. The " un expectedly high" criticized U.s. foreign policy for not
Democracy Now l is facing free
hundreds of outspoken professors mutation rate means that a living up to ideals he believes the
speE'ch lawsuits. Pacifica was ready
on campus and around the cou ntr y, significant proportion of the U.s. was founded upon: " liberty,
to sue the activist websites,
world's population doing democracy, equa lity and freedom ."
and
quell
repeated
savepacifica.net and freewpfw.net,
'obs where He ca ll ed the 20th century "a
marches
Beyond the Bub e
for trademark infringements . (see
century of bloodshed , of violence,
is published each week as a service from EPIC,
www.infoshop.org)
Destructive power was
the E\'ergreen Politicillinformoltion Center, EPIC has recently begun work on this year's
immen se, Millions of
"Disorientation Manual " (an alternate, student-produced guide to her);reen).
people suffered in the
EPIC also publishes a weekly emilil update on politically related events hJPpening around
En vironrnental
name of violence, in the
our area, and provides resources for activists at Evergreen, To receive EPIC's email update, for
• Presiden t
Bush
has
name of war. But I believe
mure infom1iltion on how you can wurk on or enter submissions to the Disorientation manual, to
announced his intent to
humanity has become more
make comments on the news, or for more information on EPIC, please contact
nominate a number of corporate
mature from past experience. n
epicupdate@hotmail,com
advocates for environmenta l posts,
(see wwwtheolympian.com)

Cooper Point Journal -

• May 17,2001

------4(ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT)"""--

Disparate Measures
Five photographers from The
Evergreen State College will
s how work at the Olymp ia World
News, opening un Friday, May IR
through SilturdilY, June 9. Their
work represents a broad rilnge of
s ubject s,
in fluences ,
and
techniques, and ha s been
exhibited throughout the U nited
States and Europe. The purpose
of this exhibit is to showcase the
personal work of th e staff and
adjunct faculty who work in
Evergreen's Photo/nlld , the area
that s upp orts the campus'
photography
nccds
in
instruction, production, ilnd
publications .
Mal Pina Chan makes
collages using xerograp hi c
tran sfer techniques to mix her
own photographs with o ld
family images, maps, and icons,
reca lling faraway places and
distant memorics. She explores
the qualities of opacity and
translu ce n ce and uses them to
repre se nt layer s of meaning.
Hugh Lentz hedges his bets with
two bodie~ of work. Tilly Li ves
art' large , co lorful
prints
s hOWing in sec ts, " up close and
persona!." Lentz's love for color
continues in hi s second series,

CUlidy till" Ot/Il'/' Orligl!l~..
Martin Kane work s in rich ,
sump tu ou~ tone s afforded by
black and whi te to ilddre~s the
beiluty and solemnity of west e rn
land;.capes,
Steve Davis
present s To J-/dp Youllg Mell
ChllJlge, Using a large 8xlO view
CamL'fe1, Davi s created formal
portraits of incarcerated boys
from the G reen Hill Training
School, and presents them with
Images
documenting
the
restrictive envi ronment they
must inhab it. Dan Weisser tops
off the show with co lor prints
intermixing portraiture with
urban la nd scapes. Taken as a
whole , hi . project frames
individuals within e1 culture of
detritus and emptiness.
An opening reception is
planned for Friday, May '18, ilt
8:00 p .m ., at tht' Logos Lo un ge,
located upstairs at the Olympia
World News, l,} 6 41h Av e.,
downtown Olympic), Business
hours are Sunday through
We.dne;.dilY, 8:3lJ il,l11, - 1):30 p,m.;
and Thursday through Saturday,
8:30 il.lll. - midnight. For more
information, call (360) 867-6263.
C(lI/U II

Need ajob next school year?
*make $3,600 or more selling
ads for the CPJ
*make $60 a week driving a
TESC van to deliver the CPJ
See Jen atJhe CPJ in CAB 316
for details or call
867-6054·
17,2001

I

-----t(ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT)~Z!

ili£

S

Zi&

strallge plnee m llen
'S pookylalld .'
T ill s
1I

lII ysterio ll s

I

I had Count Chocula for
breakfast, Frankenberries for
itmch, and if I feel like d ri v ing
to Ca nada , 1' 1I have Boo
Berries for dinner. All these
spookalicious vittles hav e
made it so I go t Ghosties on
the brain. Let me brush off the
ancient grimoire I "checked
out" from the Rare Books
section of the library. Ah, now
let me read to you from this
anc ient tome.
TESC's Big Book of Spirits
and Malficient (sic) Entities .
By Dr. Hannibal King
Copyright 1978

roO Ill

"Spookyland," huh ?
M uch like the peace sign was
once a symbol of the Antichrist,
"Happyland" seems to have
less than s tellar roots.

"Perliaps tlie grentest tlirent
of nil to Evergrwl's well-beillg is
a spirit kllown as Ellif Tsoll. A
truly IIIn/evolellt creat ure who
springs UpOIl the studellts of our
fair mil/pus whfl1 their stolllndlS
IIl1d minds nre wenk. Ellif Tsoh
haul1ts twu floors (if tile CAB,
IlIrking like Iljllcmtoll ravenous
/Jeast. Bcwnre Enif T.~0!JI Pnck a
Ilin ch, ~ tlld e llt ~; oll /y hOllle
cooking mil kecl' that creat ll re nt
/JII y. "

"To begill, The Evergreen
State CoJ/ege is built IIpon the
fo undntio ns of an allcient
'Colli/uistador bllrinl groul/d .
SItch disrespect to the dead often
opens II glltewny to the nether
world .... Who can blal1le angry
spirits for rising lip alld seeking
Word s as true today as
reve nge 011 th ose who hll ve
they were back in 1978.
disturbed their hallie?"
I highly recommend that
Wow, never .k new th at everyone get a copy of Dr.
Hannibal King's book. It is as
about Evergreen, did you?
necessclrY to ~ urvi va l a t this
Dr. H ann ibal continues: school as the Disorienta bon
"Tilese gllosts lire 110t klICHI'll to Manual.
Remembe r, "id!>, thi~
hall/It areas fre'lllcllte d 11.11 till'
lilling bllt mtill'/' iso/llll'clllr('{/~ co lumn ca n re turn to it :;
H'ilerl' ollly tile /J1'Il!'c,t (~r tile (lriginal furIllcltd.~~ollna!> I gl'l
bra!'c cOllld lillger .... 01lL' area more que~tion;. from you l
wilen.: ::>Pll'lts hnpe bcell r('I'orter! Mikesez@hlltlll(li l.colll .

/

kG

$S

ze

&S¥C S

LSCL2&

n

The
Gibralter Code
Brady Hall, Calvin Reeder, Brian Wendorf



(Also Staxx will be performing musiC/media)
hy E. Rose Ndwn

1. What is the motivation or inspiration for your work?
This movie is important. It emotes the t,rue nature of the
complicated human condition and what truly motivates us all. At its
core, the film reflects back to us the sometimes disturbing origins of
good and evil. Through brilliantly delivered dialogue, stunning se t
pieces and thought provoking performa,nces, this film breaks down the
artifice of American politics and shows us a ll a glimpse of ourselves.

is

locllted ill a secret crmol
splice ill ali I' of th e
buildillXs 011 Cll lllpllS. TIll'
roolll itselfis covered with
nelllollie postl'J'S of such
vile pnifa llers ns Ozzy
Osbo ll /'lll! Illld /lIlI i J-iclldrix.
There IIrc also Satallie col/iforts
~lIch as '/JC'Il/I-bag' chnirs nnd 'lalla
lalllps.' Most likely Lava fro m J-iell
itsi'lf LalllpS. "

, as £GS

&

A Really Bad Knight's Tale
is

----f(ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT)

The m ovie A Klllght 's
Tn/e , s tarr ing th e Australian
eye ca nd y H ea th Ledger,
was a ve ry funny m ov ie.
Pro bab ly funni er th an it was
inte nd ed to be. You see, I
we nt to sec it with a large
g roup from the Socie ty for
Creative An ac h ronisms, a
m e diev a l / rena i ssa n ee
reenac tm e nt
soc iety.
Translated , people w ho do
tha t so rt of thing for fun.
"Ha rml ess histo rical nuts,"
as one of our so ngs has it.
Peop le who clearly know
more history th a n whoever
put together thi s truly
bizarre film.
In al l hon es ty, I feel
sorry for anyone who wen t
to that theatre expecting a
good movi e. We kept
lau ghing
at
fairly
inappropr iate moments, as
when Lov e Interes t Ch ick
a ppeared wearing a hat
re m i ni sce nt of Audrey
Hepburn in Sabrilla. And at
eve ry new h a ird o s he
s porte d. And at the end,
wh e n a z ipp er co uld be
clearly seen runnin g d ow n
h e r b ack. When H ea th
Ledger, a thatcher's son, got
"apprenticed" to a knight.
That las t, by the way,
destroys th e film's w ho le
premise-" You have to be of
nobk bi rt h to co mpct c"because you on ly got
I <lppre nti cc d to pl'op le
who~e C,lITers you would
e nd up in. Basic<1l ly, Ir yo u
I kllllW any th ing about
hi s tory, it 's J very runny

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I'll pay 55 ce nrs for rhar H EATH bar. __ _ _
movie.
But other than th at, the
jousting' s about the best
part. My friends who know
armour ass ure m e th at it's
fairly a cc urat e-a t least,
none of our fighters were
scoffi ng. As loud ly as the
costumers. They e ven
admitted that, eve n with
blunted lances, it was s till
pretty dangerous. Peop le
go t hurt. In fact, Mary
Queen of Scots' first fatherin-l aw was kill ed in a bout
us ing blunted lances- they
sha tter, and a fragment got
into hi s eye. Thi s film was
set a few hundred years
before Mary Queen of Scots,
but they do m e ntion the
dangers. That kind of
impre~~ed me .
Is A Kniglit 's Tale a good
movie ? O h , lord, no. Is it
histori ca ll y accu ra te? Again,
no. In fact, the thing it is
a llegedly based o n, which is
by Geoffrey Chaucer, is set
in ancient At h e n s, not
IPedievClI Engla nd and
FranCe'. Is it wo rth seei ng?

Accord in g 10 Ih e CliffNores or
Ctlll terbtl~y Tales, rhis is nor
how I pic! u red Geofrrey
C h ,lllll ccr

Well , so rt of. If YO ll know
history, li ke jOllsting and
hay!? iI lot of friends of till?
sa m e ilk to see it with.
Preferably in better, morl'
accurate costumes th an they
wed/' in the movie.

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Cooper Point Journal • 8· May 17, 2001

2. Describe the piece you are presenting.
This is a film about s truggle. The stru ggle for sanity in a world gone
topsy turvy. Three men must look past their differences and join together
to thwart the diaboli ca l plans of a criminal mas termind. With only their
.
wits
and
gumption to
keep
them
going, they must
bring themselves
to the edge of ruin
before they can
save the world from
this scourge of m an.
3. How do you fee 1
about this project
before the festival? Or
what are your artistic
plans for the future?
We feel pretty
good. We plan on making
'.
more terribly important
films such as this one. Right
now, we are in the midst of shooting a feature length film about how Jesus Christ comes
back to life and kills a bunch of people in a bowling alley. That one should be pretty damn
important.
1. What is th'e
motivation
or
inspit'ation for your
work?
1. What is the motivation or inspiration for your work?
.
Inspirations
or
The inspiration for this piece is that I often have these,
motivations? I can't say
little scenarios in my head, these sort of "if then things."
that I draw on any specific
Frllm \-.~
2. Describe the piece you are presenting.
influence or identify any
Afar
I wanted t~ shoot something with a Bolex camera that
..
consistent
source
of
"""C>
I'd just bought. This project was completely done the
inspiration. I tend to think
old fashioned way. Before I directed the feature 27
G
about movies as sequences of
e
pieces of ~me, my training had been predominately
events that exist outside any sort
r
video. AU the. work in From Afar was shot with
a
of ape meets ape, ape hits ape
.,.
~,
my hand-wound camera, ed ited (both the film
I
with stick, apes copulates with ape
and the sound track) and completely finished
d
,
kind of narrative s tructure. Pretty
on film .
I
....
much anything else is fair game.
D
3. How do you feel about this project before
()
the festival? Or what are your artistic
n
2. Describe the piece you are
plans for the future?
a
presenting_ "Guys in trees."
My next project is going to be more
h
L "
! .
0
character centered, more about working 3. How do ... ? If you mean how, watching
!
l~
with actors and less about the technical
. k es, th II1gs t h at co u Id
the co mpl eted movie, I assess the work, I see most Iy t h e mlsta
I':
aspects of filmmakin g .. . my n ex t have been done differently, or moments that could have been more effective.
Fj 1111
I • "
project wIll be much more literary
But, s teppi n g back, I have to sa y it works, in my mind, as a whole. I think it's a hoot.
I
if I get to do the project tha t I want Currently I'm finishing a movie about brain pods, and th e future is full of eggs .
I; t l
to do.
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Feminists Should Endorse Female Gun Packers

How po We Slow Down Our Society's
Rate of Consumption and Outstep the
Crafty Methods of Marketers?
The core of our society is de co mposin g
at an in creasingly rapid pace. Our sc hools are
being infiltrat ed with gunfir e and our
playgrounds with adve rtis e ments. We
demand aCFss to la ll I'S (to wa ke us up) .
herbal loti ons (to ca lm us down) , SUV's (to
ge t away). all -terrai n s neakers (for
Sa turda y afternoons), and
chemical-free cigare tt es (they're
better for you). Si ngle-se rvin g
microwave dinner s have
replaced mea ls with fam ily
and friends. Is thi s a Hea lth y
Choi ce? We would rather farm
cellulite from the comfort of
our Lazy-Boys and witness
human inter ac ti o n s on an
ele ct ri c ca nvas than turn to
each o th er and practice the
art of co nv ers ation . We may
be a society presently
comprise d of Survivors , but
at what point will our
co ll ec ti ve isolation-from
each ot her and natur e-turn
into death by consumption?
The more alienated we
become from one another,
th e more we depend on
products to patch the
emotion a l potholes that
rema in in the wake of our social
isolation. Advertisers spend their entire
ca ree rs learning ways to manipulat e us by
associating their product with desires that
we. the consumers , already have. It is th e
serpe nt chasing its tail: the more isolated we
beco me, the more we co ns um e, yet
simultaneously. it is our co nsumpti on itse lf
whi ch is fueling our isolati on.
How do we slow down our soc iety's rate of
co nsumpti on and outstep th e craft y methods
of marketer s? Quite sim ply : by acti ve ly
litt erin g.

I.ill erin g is th e fi rst step tow ard
educa tin g eac h o th er about our levels of
co nsumption. We will have no choice bu t to
be disgusted by the quantit y of prod ucts we
con~ um e wi th th e ev ide nce of o ur
co nsu meri sm 1I 0t passive ly hidden und er the
earth. but rath ~r starin g LI S down in oll r
frOllt
yard,.
crowd ill g ollr
str eets
and
parks. Litt erin g
will le t the
ste nch of our
ro ttin g ins id es
co nfront every
membe r
of
soc i e t y,
including thost'
ca n
who
presently afford
to liv e awa y
the
from
illcoll ve ni ences
of industria I
pr o du e t ion
si tes.
The

of our leve ls of consumption.
Ameri cans produce an average of 3.5
pounds of ga rb age daily. Over the span of a
year. a fami ly of three will produce 1.5 tons
of ga rbage- roughly th e weight of a large
elep hant. Th e per capita weight of house hold
refuse almost doubl ed after WWII and has
bee n rising eve r since . As America in vested
in r~ buildin g a tattered Europe und er th e
Marshall Plan fo llowing WWII, production
levels by th e recoverin g co untri es leapt into
ove rdri ve. A vit al economy translated to a
co un t ry's ca pacity to repay American loalls.
Is it merely a co in cio cll ce tha t adve rti sin g
methodologies shifted drastically durin g thi s
same time peri od?
Take, for example, beverage co ntain ers.
In 1945, four percent of all beer was so ld in
non- refill a bl e co n tain e rs. By 1955. thi s
numb er had climbed to 37% and has been
steadily risin g ever since.
Littering is our opportunity to strike back
against th ese same adv erti se rs. The very
labels which marketers have spent thou sands
of dollars designing and testin g for appea l
will now be vis ible everyw here, with the most
recog nizable and prominent labe ls
gene rating the mo st disgust.
Littering
will
force
co
mpani
es
into
be
in g
.JlP
held accountable for the

.J
~
. . ..



'~QZ)

\ll

choru s o f
""""
parading
empty soda
,.,
hottl es in Oll r I~
~
driveways wi ll
drive us into ac tion. We ca n no
longer afford to seg rega te ourselves fr om th e
im pact of ou r co nsumpti on-a nd litterin g.
as a means of ed ucatin g each other on this
top ic visuall y. is a sim ple (a nd by definition
effo rtl ess) wa y to harn ess an understandin g

~

amount of packaging
they produ ce. for litterin g
affords no sec rets.
The United State s produces
morc than 150 milli on ton s of garbage a year;
that 's equal to the amount of rocks and dirt
that was dug up to create th e Panama Cana l.
Why wa ste t he productive energy of o ur
workforce hiding our co nsumption ? The
Egy pt ia ns built pyramids, th e In cas built
Mach u Picchu-will our ~ ocieta l monument
to future civili zat ion s be landfills?
Littering prevents us from further

Offensive, Insensitive Sexist Seepage!!!
This is to everyone involved in the
making and editing of this [past) week's
CPJ .
I cannot believe the crap that was
printed on this [past} week's CPJ. I was
shocke d and hurt to see that a lesbian
threesome, which caters de spicably to
men and women who like to objectify and
deny the humanity of women, was run for
Seepage thi s week . I am almost
completely without words to tell all of you
morel !! But you have let me down. Do you
realize that restaurants and libraries
where women and children (nine-tenths
of the victims of this kind of sexist shit)
ca n now see for themselves your fumble?
HOW DARE YOU?I
Scott Cecil. 1 liked your lines .and

form. You definitely know what you like. But
a school paper is not where yo ur pie ce
should be.
Be ashamed!
As a grown survivor I am sickened and
offended . You all deserve a trip to Safeplace
and a good look at police files of women and
children's beaten and raped bodies. You are
printing in a world of terrible magnitude
and respons,jbility. I'm not sure that I will
be able to look any of you in the face again
and not feel the bitter rage , hatred and fear
that the Seepage inspired in me this week.
This is a formal "as is" submission to
the CPl, and as such, I fully expect it to be
printed. I want it printed BIG AND BOLD
in the offensive Seepage slot. The. re;lson
being, every person who \Vas hurt by your

actions des erves to know that they-are not
alone . ,
-Annjeanette Daubert
editor's note: Annjeanette and editoI-inchief Whitney Kvasager bad a
conllersation about Iyhere her rette/,
should be placed withfn tile paper. She
agreed to ha ving it published on the
Letters and Opinion pages instead of on
Seep3lJe. Annjeanette then decided to
submit a drawing that comments on last
week's Seepage for publication on this
week's Seepage. Please turn to the back
page (20) for her artistic commenta:y.

Cooper Point Journal - 10 - May 17, 2001

sa turating the earth with cavities ofOdwalla
bar wrappers and Pepto-Bismol packagin g.
Just imaginel If we all littered , trashcan s
could be replaced with sculptures, dumpsters
co nverted to garden boxes! The possibilities
are infinitel
What is important is that yo u get
involved today. Littering is easy-and it can
even be flln! Tell your co-workers; encourage
your boss to set up a littering program at
work . Be creative; try organizin g
neighborhood pizza box throwing contests or
newspaper dropping relay s.
The resources we need to slow down our
cons umption and tllrn the tables 0 11
advertisers are literally at our fingertips . By
littering , the repercussions of our
consumption will finally be both timely and
equitable. Can we really afford not to?
-Erin Kelly
To The Cooper Point Journal Editor:
Illv.e near Olympia lligh School, on
Carlyon Avenue, and when the schoo'l year
began at our new multi-million dollar gem
of a school, 1 began to see trash pile up
along the roadside leading,to and from the
school, so instead of just compl~ining
about it, I began to pick it up'as I walk my
. dog in the a.m~ and again in th~ p.m.' .;
. My first intention was to blame the kids
for this problem. but'on Barth Day, [
picked up over 50 pounds of garbage on .
tbe school campUs alone, and as 1 picked
up the trash, 1 did an assessment of all of
the garbage cans on Sight.
I was really mad when I discovered
that there was only one garbage can on the
whole Cady()n side of the school, so I
Olympia
High
School
called
Administration to complain. I wasn't too
happy when I was told that getting a
couple of garbage cans was going to be
quite a big project, and it could ~ake a long
time to accomplish such a goal.
I explained that I would wait seven days
to write this letter, but I was told that it
would take at least 14 days to accomplish
this monstrous goal. which includes at
least three garbage cans-tbat'is alI!-so
. J w~ited 14 days, and still no garbage cans.
I supported a multi-million dollar school
bond, and a couple garbage cans is a big
deaIYesterday, I dropped one day's trash
pickup, which .was a full kitchen-sjzed
garbage bag full, on the front desk with 3
note saying1 had been patient enough. Do
you think I was asking too much? I didn't
think so. I guess the wheels of
administration must turn slower than
most. Thanks for your time,

I

share my suburban strung out on drugs who's after my purse .
Seattle ZIP code with
I'm 5'4" and 130 pounds , and I still
four high-level sex leok like a teenager. I ride the bus to and
offenders . My ZI P code from work, and I cannot help wondering
(98107)
stretches how much risk I'm taking by leaving the
several blocks, and I walk house at all .
through others on my way to
According to a health analYSis survey
work. The ZI P code at my bus
took recently, my most likely cause of
stop and the grocery store are death in the next ten years is homicide. At
different too , and I wonder least I don ' t have to worry about cancer.
how many sex offenders and I've also discovered, courtesy of the
other criminals live there.
eternal optimists at the Justice
Seattle , home of Ted Department , that I fit enough of the
Bundy and the "Green River profile for violent victimization to be its
Killer," is a relatively "safe" 'poster girl. For thos e of you keeping score
city, and I live in a good at home, those factors are :
neighborhood-four of my
Age 20-24
neighbor s notwithstanding. I
Africa n-A meri ca n
didn't know about th em wh en
Divorced, separated or si ngle
I mov ed in, and mugging ,
Urba n-dwellin g
rape , burglary, carja c king ,
Non-high school grad uate s
and a numb er of other crimes
Earning le ss than $10,000
are new to me . .People tell me
that's just the way cities are .
[n 1981, the Supreme Co urt rul ed in
But I'm from a small town Warren v . Distri ct of Columbia that
with
a
volunteer
fire personal defense is an individual
department. No one back responsibility and not the purview oflocal
home ever needed to take law enforcement. [n the process of taking
personal safety classes.
responsibility for my safe ty, I've explored
I've long had Mace on my many options . Martial arts. Stun guns.
keyring to deter a drunk or a Those personal safety classes. Handguns.
mean dog, but I've never used Yes. handguns .
it. It's illegal in the city and
Stun guns don't work well, and who
will only piss off so meon e wants to get close enough to try? I'm not

about to bet that any of my Jacki e Chan
moves will do much to ward off real
danger. I need something that will deliv er
consistent, predictable result s from a
distance. I need a handgun .
This has not been an easy decision to
arrive at. I once (lovingly) called my
boyfriend a "paranoid nutcas e" 'fhen he
bought a gun and got his concealed pistol
license. I've read up on all the statistics
regarding accidental shootings (guns
killed 5,285 children in one year,
according to the Bradys' gun cont.rol
group) .
The concept of women owning a
handgun really upsets men . A few of these
hairy-knuckled Neanderthals are under
the impression that "it's just not right " for
a lady to pack heat. God forbid I impinge
on their right to protect me from their le ss
enlightened brethren in my ZIP code.
And then there 's th e w.omen's
movement. Betty Friedan called the trend
of women's gun ownership "a horrifying,
obscene perversion of feminism." Betty,
Betty , Be tty! What is horrifying and
obscene is sharing the neighborhood
Starbucks with four sexual predators .
Feminism gets confusing when it aligns
itself with the good 01' boys . So many of
the feminists I know are as opposed to the
idea of women carrying a weapon-even
with the proper training and Iicensingas men are. Feminism is about

empowering women . The feminist
movement has granted me the
right to work, the right to vote,
and the right to an abortion if I
want
one-a
procedure,
incidentally, of which I am mor e
likely to di e than a self-inflicted
gunshot. But they 're against me
making a choice to protect myself
responsibly.
I won't be "pac kin' a piece " a
la Jay-Z , Eminem, or Queen
Latifah. I will be a public defend er
ca rrying a personal defens e
enhancing tool. I won't be Wyatt
Earp; I'll be me. But I'll be safe _
As for tho se who espouse th e
phil osop hie s of nonviolenc e and
peace , love and harmon y, I hear
that ther e's an opening in my
building . We can walk to the bu s
together. It's only two ZIP codes
away.
-Jessica Mainard
Facts in thi s letter were obtained
from:
Handgun Control Web pag e at
http://www.handguncontrol.org
National Safety Council, 1993
Health, magazine, March/Apr
1994, P. 54.

Bush Makes Me Gag
Eve ry minute, 190 women face
an unplann ed or unwanted
pregnancy; 110 women experience a
pregnancy-re lated complication; 40
women have an unsafe abortion; and
one woman dies from a pregnancyrelated co mplication. Th is is every
single minute, world wide. One of
Bush's first acts in offi ce wa s
. approving a po licy that interferes
with tb e prevention of ne arly
600,000 deaths of women durin g
pregnancy and childbirth each year.
These deaths are pr eventable if
famil y planning providers are
allowed to give women the resources
they need to prevent un wanted
pregnancies and avoid an unsafe
abortio n. Disregarding th e views of
th e majorit y in order to please a
small min orit y (a nti -choice law
membe rs), Bush dec ided to ban any
fed eral aid go in g to all interllational
organizati ons that ma y perform.
promote. or support safe abortions
in any way. This unfortunate plan of
action is ca ll ed the global gag rul e.
Sin ce 1973, when Roe I '. Wade
made abortion legal in th e U.S., no
U.S. foreign aid ha s go ne towa rd the
perform.an ee or promotion uf
abortion (so then why th e global gag
rul e?). This is all un der th e Helms
amendm en t. whi ch end ed a ny
gove rnm en t flindi ng of abortions .
U.S. aid has allowed orga nizations
to provide reproductive health ca re

and family planning services and use
their non-U.S. funds to provide safe
abortions in co untri es where
abortion is legal. The global gag rule
sta te s th at any foreign non governmental organizations that
receive U.S. funds ca n no longer use
non -U.S. funds to provide abortion
se rvices, follow up procedures ,
referrals , or counseling. If they do,
their U.S. funding will be cut oIl.
Thi s
ultimatum
force s
organi zations to choose between
supporting aborti on ri ghts with the
risk of not hav in g enough funding or
ending th ei r abort ion suppor t in
order to keep the organization alive.
Ma ny organ iza ti o ns will be
in eligible for U.S. assistan ce, while
others w'ill stop performin g
abo rt ions and withhold all
in forma ti on and se rvices having to
do with th e procedure . Thi s will
result in an increase in un safe and
ill ega l abort ion s, putting million s
more wo men in da nger eve ry
minute. Bush has enacted a plan that
enda ngers women . children and
families world wid e.
78% of Ameri cans support
famil y planning ass ista nce overseas.
This assistance goes to prog rams
that allow women access to doctors
and th e ri ght to pr enatal care,
cont raceptives, and safe abortions.
Presen tl y. $425 million is allocated
by Con g~ess for international fami ly

planning through USAlD, World
Bank and about 400 other
governmental organizations that
contribute to the health of our
world's population. These programs
contribute to the health of
populations, which ultimately leads
to lower rates of poverty, smaller,
healthier families, more natural
resources, and lower mortality rates
among women and children.
Informed lawmakers and the
majority of U. S. citizens know that
family planning services provide
access to contraceptives and
reproductive health care, preventing
death and illness around the globe.
Family planning reduces the need
for abortions . When famil y
planning is not available, desperate
women resort to abortion whether
it is legal or not . An increase in
international family planning fund s
would lead to a decr ease in
abortions around the globe, whil e at
the same time, it would legalize and
thus make safer those abortions tha t
still occurred.
Because of the global gag rule.
family planning organization s are
faced with an ultimatum that is
undemocratic and is not lega l under
th e constitution of the U.S.
Everything about the global gag rul e
is an infringement offree speech: the
right to speak out and be part of a
movement. Does Bush need to be

-Patrick ,((elly

reminded that the main goal of U.S .
foreign policy is to promote
democracy around the world? Our
co untry ha s no right to tell an
organization how to spend their own
funds! The global gag rule dishonors
th e freedom that individuals have in
other countries.
In Bush's fight to limit
abortions , he ha s simultaneously
rights
to
ended
women's
reproductive health ca re and safe,
legal abortions. It seems as though
Bush's long- te rm plan is not
red ucing the amount of abortion s
but to wipe out most of the women
on th e planet and increase infant
mortality and te enage pregnan cy
rates.
Currently, t here is th e Glo bal
Democracy Promotion Ac t that is in
the process of being voted on in the
House of Repr ese ntative s. This
measure will render the Global Gag
rule und emocratic. if passed. If yo u
want to contribute to the efforts in
making sure that th e global gag rul e
doesn't exte nd beyond this year, you
ca n tell your memb er of Cong ress
that you are in favor of th e Global
De mocracy Promot ion Act or ca II
t he White Hou se co mm ent s line at
202- 45 6- 1111. Te ll Bush how you fee l
abo ut hi s mali ciousnes s towards
int ern at ional family planing fund s.
Also, for more information. go to the
ROEvB US H.co m website.
-Michaela Monahan

May 17,2001 -11-

ooper Point Journa

....

\

(SPORTS)

WOULD YOU
like to be the next

S&A BOARD · OFFICE MANAGER?!

by Shasta Smith

I recently had a chan ce to interview

Dave Weber, the new Athletic Director
here at Evergreen.
CPJ: So Dave, tell me ilbout where
you're from and how it is you became
AthletiC' Director here at Evergreen .
Dave: Well , I wa s most recenLly at
Patton College in Oakland, California,
where I've been for ilbout SIX yeilfs ilS
ath letic director and men's basketball
coach. Previous to that I had been at
the University of California as il
recrea tion supervisor and also coached
the j. v. basketball team there, and going
back to the start of my college career, I
was at Dominican University in San
Rafael, California, and was also th e
basketball coach and ath letic director
there.
CPJ: What did you want to do with
Evergreen sports when you arrived?
Dave: We ll, I'm not so sure it's what I
want to do with Evergreen sports as
much as what needs to be done with
Evergreen sports. I think you have well, we have here - tremendous
resources; I mean, this is one of the best
physical plants [or athletics that you'll
see. Right behind the CRC gym is, as
you know, pretty wonderfu l soccer
which has great fields. It's kind of an
unknown secret. We need to ge l out
and let people know what there is here:
attract more student athletes to the
campus, have better teams, involve the
community more in Evergreen and
Evergreen athletics, and I think that's
something that really needed to happen
whether I wanted it or not. I think it's
more a case of this is what the college
wanted to do, and you know, I think I
have th ~ expertise to get it done. So I
think we are both in accord, both what
those that hired me want and what I
want to do.
CP}: So what element of Evergreen
sports best portrays Evergreen to the
community?
Dave: I think the best element we have
is not anyone element; it's the overall
accessabi lity of it to the comm unity. You
have th e ability to go out into the

19 Hours per week
$6.72 per Hour
Increase your skills in:
• office organization
• graphic design
• minute taking
Work with great people
Gain great experience

community, as some of our teams have
done, and interact with some of the
youngsters at elementary schools and
so forth, and bring some people in for
some enjoyable events here in the gym
or out in th e soccer field and also
through club spor ts and s tudentgenerated sports such <IS the Kung Fu
club and the crew program where its
stude nts have <lctually come up with
things a,ld brought them to us and said
some things and then have done them
extremely well. [think that sells
Evergreen; it shows students that this
is a p lace where you can accomplish
things that maybe somebody didn't lay
out for them.
CPJ: Could you talk about Team
Evergreen Kung Fu going to the World
Championships, men's basketball
going to the playoffs, and women's
soccer going to the playoffs as well?
Dave: I think those things are signposts
tha t we're on the right track. I think that
Kung Fu - which of course you're part
of - I think that was a remarkable
perfo rmance. Men'S basketball has
been the shining light of the
intercollegiate program; people have
always looked to them to mean
something that shows what we could
be doing here. Women's soccer was a
big step up. I think they went from a
start last year that they probably wish
they didn't have, and they improved a
lot as the season went on. They got
much, much better, and they went on
to the playoffs. It shows that upward
trend that we're trying to accomplish. I
think that the more sports get better, the
more they push each other, the more
excellence they get out of each other,
so Kung Fu, basketball, and soccer
doing some good things can only
enhance men 's soccer, women's
basketball, our new sports of crosscountry and vo lleyball; all of them will
have to try to come up to the level that
those three sports accomplished this
year.
CP}: How has the winning of the
programs been for you in your first year
here at Evergreen?
Dave: Well, you know, we won a little
bit, but I think that we have amp le room

for improvement. So I think what the
winning does is it gives you that little
taste that hey, these teams did make the
playoffs, Kung Fu did go to a World
Championship, so why can't we do that
with other sports? And it gives those
Otller sports that same thought that here
we go, hey, we can do this, we can be
just like they were, or approach that,
and it also gives LIS, when we go back
and we bring in a coach, we can say
well, we're hiring you for this sport, and
maybe it hasn't been that successful but
our other teams have, and so it shows
people that things can happen here, I
think, and that they will con tinue to
happen here even at a higher level in
the future.
CPJ: What are your plans for the future
of Evergreen sports?
Dave: Well, my p lan is shaped by a lot
of things; it's not really my-plan.Again,
[ go back to it; it's what the institution
rea lly wants and needs, and I think
there's a lot of recognition here that
a lthough sports will never be the
primary reason we're in business, we're
never gonna approach what a Division
One school is like for its athletic
program, but there is a lot to be said for
a high-level, small-college program,
and we can achieve that. We can do
things we haven' t done yet, and in all
reality, Evergreen's done some things
m the past that maybe a lot of people
don' t know about. I'm always referring
to tlle 1989 soccer team that finished
seventh in the nation in the NAIA and
had a couple of all-Americans. One of
their players was drafted in Major
League Soccer's first draft with a
number 20 pick, which is, you realize
being a soccer player, he was just
basically second team all draft or
whatever you want to call him, so
Evergreen has done some things. We've
got many all-Americans in swimming.
As you mentioned, many of the teams
started to win this year, so the future is
to tie that past of excellence into what
we've started to develop with the teams
this year, and to expand outward with
that.
CPJ: All right, well, thanks Dave.
Dave: Thanks for having me.

COME WATCH

FOR MORE INFO
STOP BY CAB 320
OR CALL X6221

APPLICATION DEADLINE:
MAY 25th

THE INTERVIEWS: Dave Wieber

@

5:00 P.M.

TEAM EVERGREEN

CLASSIFIEDS
Funds
Clubs • Student Groups
Earn $1,000-$2,000 this
semester with the easy
Campusfundraiser.com three
hour fundraising event. No
sales required. Fund-raising
dates are filling quickly, so call
today! Contact
Campusfundraiser.com at(888)
923-3238, or visit
www.campusfundraiser.com

Deadile for text and payment is 3
pm fINery FrKiay. SIUdert RaIa isjust
$2.00 for 30 words. ~ Jan
Blackford for more
Phcri:i(a60)
867-6054 or stop by 1he'CFYJ;CAB

Show your Evergreen student ID when
you hop an I T. bus and ride free
It's that easy! Skip the parking hassles,
save some cash , and be earth-friendly.
I.T. is your ticket to life off campus!
For more Info on where I T. can take you,
pick up a "Places You 'll Go" brochure
and a Transit Guide at the TESC
Bookstore. Or call1.T. Customer Service
at (360) 786-1881 or visit us online at
www.intercitytransit.com.

no.

G16.

Cooper Point Journal • 14· May 17, 200 1

KUNG FU COMPETE

Dl,n_i/YTranSif
Fares paid through siudeni programs.

THE AWARDS
by Shasta Smith
This is it ... drum roll please ...
AU of the teams that competed this
year have had their awards banquets;
now it's time for Shasta's Evergreen
Sports Show to have its own as well.
This is a salute to the efforts of the
teams that have worked so hard this
year. So, without further ado, here it
is, the awards list created by the cast
and crew of Shasta's Evergreen Sports
Show for you the readers to vote all.
To vote, write your choice of player,
team, or coach and cut out the list. You
can drop off you r ballots a t the CPJ
or ema il me your decisions at
smisha13@evergreen.edu. Your votes
will be taken int o account to
determine the final awards.
Your opportunity to recognize
the efforts of all th e teams,
administration, and sports figures has
arrived. Don't pass up on your chance
to affect the outcome of the awards.
The fina l awards will appear in two
weeks in the paper and on Shasta's
Evergreen Sports Show.
1. Player of the Year

2. Rookie of the Year
3. Coach of the Year

4. Most Exciting Game

5. Top Individual Performance
6. Most Surprising Fini sh

7. Most Improved Team

8. Most Improved Player
9. Most Influential Sports Figure

10. Most Underrated Player
11 . Most Photogenic

12. Top Highlight
13. Most Va luable Player
14. Best Defender
15. Best Offense

GET INVOLVED
WITH
CROSS-COUNTRY

THE 19th!!!
by Shasta Smith

On Saturday the 19"', Team
Evergreen Kung Fu will be competing
in the 5 th Northwest Open. The
tournament will be taking place nearby
in Centralia. It starts at 10 a.m. and will
be held in the Centralia High School
gym. The directions are as follows: take
exit 82 and head east. Take a left at
. Safeway; go one block to a 4-way stop.
Take a right; the high school is at the
end of the road.
This is nearly your last chance to
see Team Evergreen Kung Fu in action
before the end of the school year. So
grab a friend and drive on down to
cheer and have some fun.
If you are interested in the Bak
Shaolin Eagle Cia"'!. Kung Fu Club,
email Captain Jesse Harter at
·vharter@earthlink.net or call 357-9137.

by Gin Harbold

If you are a runner and didn't
realize that .Evergreen is going to
have a Cross COl!ntry program next
year, or· are interested for any
reason, I strongly encourage you to
check the team o~t. Currently, the
coach,
Craig
Dickson,
is
collaborating with the swim coach
to host a swim/run biathlon. It will
be held on the 2&1' of May. The event
involves a 1000 meter swim and a 5
k run. The coach is also planning a
twilight cross-country meet for the
end of July. Both of these events
would be great ways to meet the
coach and get involved. You can get
more information by calling the
eRC at 867-6530.

Cooper Point Journal • 15· May 17, 200 1
'v

MAN

GARVY

continued from cover

continued from page 5
SDS moved from com m uni ty
organizing projects to empower and
organize poor people around local
issues in the early and mid '60s to
become the major campus-based force
agaiJ1st the war in Vietnam. SOS also
played' a major role in Free Speech
Movement demonstrations in Berkeley
-and in some of the earliest protests
against U.s. corporate investment in
South Africa's harsh pro-apartheid
government. At the same time the antiwar movement was growing, SOS's
female membership helped light the
fires for the 1960s feminist movement.
By the late '60s, SDS had grown
increasingly militant as it became clear
to many activists that the government
had no interest in ending the slaughter
of the Vietnamese people and u.S.
soldiers. The government's opposition
to SDS also became steadily more
pronounced, and the FBI's secret

CO INTELPRO program began to
target sos. Chicago police brutally beat
demonstrators at a highly televised
protest at the Democratic convention in
1968 in which SOS p layed a major role.
Police assassinated prominent activists,
such as Black Panther Fred Hampton .
SOS began to seek other ways to end
the war abroad and injustice at home.
Revolutionary rhetoric escalated, and
more and more SOS members felt they
must stop the war "by any means
necessary." SDS internal politics
became more convoluted and
confrontational as its leadership and
members become overwhelmed, and
the organization finally imploded at the
1969 SDS convention. The militant
Weatherman faction of SDS took
control and soon began a campaign of
organized street riots, bombings and
arson attacks that many feel helped to
destroy the movement.

ROSEBRAUGH
continued from page 5
the ELF and ALF. On two sepa rate
occasions, one in early 2000 and the other
on AprilS, 2001, Rosebraugh ha~ had h.is
home and office raided by federal
au thorities. HW1dreds of items have been
seized in the raids and have yet to be
returned.
In October J999, Rosebraugh had
his arm severely broken by the Portland
Police Bureau during a false arrest at a
support demonstration for Mumia AbuJamal. Rosebrau h took his case to court,

won all his criminal charges for the
incident and end ed up settling out of
cou rt with the City of Portland.
Craig will be discussing ELF, the
harassment he has experie nced from the
government and his reflections on ELF's
tactics. Craig will al~o be talking at7 p.m.
Wednesday night at O lymp ia World
News, located at 11 6 E. 4th Ave. More
information on Cmig and ELF is available
,1t \"IWW.carthliberationfront.com.

During all his years of job
shifting, Payn e has seen a lot of
change. The bookstore once stocked
over 14,000 non-textbook titles, but
with the movement toward a more
gift-oriented store, the titles are now
down to 4,000 . Payne found the
change difficult, saying, "1 saw the
market place go from the community
to big chain stores."
Payne's work is also hindered by
the small staff in the bookstore. Back
when Evergreen first started, the
school's population didn't exceed
2,000, and they had six staff members
in the bookstore. Now, there's only
seven, even though the college'S
student population has doubled.
"It's a challenging place to
work. ... 'Do more with less' is sort of
the profound rule now," he said.
The bookstore doesn't make any
money, and it is not privately owned.
Theft happens frequently and always
causes a major hurt to the store. Payne
gets frustra ted when he talks about
shoplifting, and asks the question, "If
we're so self-righteous at Evergreen

with the myth of OLlr community, then
why do we steal from each other?"
Wi th th e care Payne puts into
choosing the books for this
department, many do sell. He does
research on all the books he buys :
reading reviews, publisher's
ca talogues, seeking books that tie in
to programs, and more.
Most of all, though, he tries to
buy for student interests. Don't be
surprised if he walks up and strikes
up a conversation with you in the
bookstore; he just wants an idea of
what you like.
"Zen and the Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance" and "A People's
History of the United States" can
always be found on his shelves. Books
by Bukowski, Burroughs, and eastern
philosophers abound. They've
proved to be some of the most
popular books year after year. He tries
to cater to Evergreen students because
he admires their tastes.
"They want to challenge
themselves, they're driven . I love
that," Payne said.

...--------======================

CALENDAR
1

1

,;



Tue, May



7:30 p.m.
Olympia Center (222 N
Columbia)
The Vajralama Buddhist
center has classes . "This series
of class will help us deal with
the [s ic) everyday life problems
using meditation ... Includ es
talk and meditation ."
Call 526-9565

Fri, May 18
NOON
Value Village parking lot
The Cascadia Defense
N e t·work Action camp
ca rpool leaves here, now.
Learn forest defense skills.
Share good food a nd mus ic.
Learn climbing, medical
ski ll s and wilderness
o ri enting.
Ca ll 705-9812.

22'

7:30 p.m.
United Churches (11th and
Washington)
Have live music by "Los
Calaveras." See a s p eaker
recently return ed from
earthquake-ravaged
El
Salvador. It's a benefit fiesta
for the people.
Call Vicki, 357-5030

Fri, May 25
8 a.m.

Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge
Woody Frazen leads a bird watching
tour. "Breeding activity should be in full
swing, with singing and nest building/
tending aplenty. Take water and snacks."
Meet at the registration spot in front of
the main building. Three dolla .
Call 352-7299

1 p.m. and 7 p.m.
CRC
The Native Student Alliance hosts a spring
contest pow wow. Vendors and contests . Go to it!
Call the NSA, x6105
8 a.m. if you're cool or
11 a.m. you're jllst watching
Walking to urs of Oly!
Olympia Skate Park
by The Ci t y
Ska te co n tes t! Ska te con tes t!
Men' s and wom e n' s divisions,
11 a.m.
junior to advanced. No e ntry fee!
Swan town Inn
Pri zes !
Eastsiieeede tour.
Call Nichol, 786-8629

Sat, May 19

1 p.m.
Farmer's market
Downtown tOLlr.

9 a.m.
behind Yauger Park
Free public workshops on co mpos ting and
han g ing baskets and other gardening thin gs a t
the Dirt Works Demonstration Garden. Plants
will be for sa le .
Call 786-5445, x7908

3 p.m.
Puget and Bigelow
Bigelow highlands tour.
Call 786-5745

things ongoing
Saturdays 9 p.m.
Studio 321 (321 Jefferson)
See Fool's Play Improv, every week
at this time . Funny stuff. If you don't
believe me, read the press release. "Fool's
Play is 100% funny, 100% made up! " $6
for a ll , except s tud e nts, then it's $5.
Call 867-1229

Student Group Directory·
BodyVox wraps Season
at ~ashington Center
After 24 spectacular performances, The Washington Center's
2000-2001 One World Season wraps up with a performance by
modem dance company BodyVox.
BodyVox will take its audience on a journey through The Big
Room at The Center. It's the first - and much anticipated Olympia visit for the Portland-based company.
The Big Room, BodyVox's first full-length work, is a collection
of impressions based on a computer jargon phrase company
co-creator Jamey Hampton happened across as he perused a
WIRED magazine fealure .
"The Big Room is the rest of the world beyond the keyboard and
the mother board," Hampton explained. "We were inspired by the
statement and the irony that all of nature is a big room."
Choreographer Hampton and partner Ashley Roland, who have
both been honing the cutting edge of contemporary dance for
more than two decades, gave birth to BodyVox in 1997. Hampton
was an early member of the innovative dance companies
Pilobolus and Momix. Roland, who also danced and
choreographed for Momix, has been a featured solo performer
througho ut the world.

BOX OFFICE: 753-8586
Displaying a bold physicality infused with humor, striking imagery,
and the use of film and sculptural sets, Jamey Hampton and Ashley
Roland, former members of Pilobolus and Momix, perform The
Big Room with their company of fine-tuned dancers in Olympia for
one night only!

May 24 at 7:30 pm
Adult Tickets: $18 - $26 plus $1.50 s.c.

Buy tickets online at
www.washingtoncenter.org.

o

THE WASHINGTON CENTER

HALF-PRICE ACADEMIC GROUP DISCOUNTS!

FOR THE PERFORMING ARTS

Sponsored by Peninsula Development Services

512 Washington Street SE • Downtown Olympia

WWW. WA S H I N G TON C E N T E R. 0 R G

APISH
(Aduocntes for Jmproving
Salmon Habitat)
Discuss environmental & salmon issues.
Meeting time: Monday 4 p.m. in CAB
320. More info: CAB 320 or x6105
Amnesty International
International
human
rights
orga!1ization. Meeting time: Monday 5
p.m. in CAB 310. More info: x6724
ASIA
(Asiall Studen ts in Alliance)
Meeting time: Wednesday 1 p.m. in CAB
320. More info: Emiko Atherton, Miral
Ghimire at x6033
Bike Shop
Volunteer-operated bike shop. Meeting
times: Call or stop by; schedule is on
door. More info: Ari or Jayro at x6399
Capoeira Angola
Meeting time: Thursday 6:30 p.m. in Lib
4300. More info: c.J. Hanekamp at 8664811 or hanekamc®evergreen.edy
Common Bread
Working for justice and peace. Meeting
time: Monday 5 p.m. in CAB 110. More
info: Julie Boleyn at 943-9144

cpr
(Cooper Point 'ouma!)
We are the group that produces a weekly
paper about Evergreen. Story meeting:
Monday 5 p.m .; Paper critique:
Thursday 4 p.m.; Forum on ethics:
Friday 3 p.m.; These meetings are in
CAB 316. More info: x6213
DEAr

(Developing Ecological
Agriculture Projects)
Re~ource center for organizing farm
projects. Meeting time: get on our e-mail
Jist, send to deapgreen@hotmail com.
More info: x6493

EARN
(Evergreen Animal Rights Network)
Promoting the ethical treatement of
animals. Meeting time: first and third
Wedn~day of each month 5:30 p.m. in CAB
320. More info: Laurel and Tom at x6555
Eye~reen Dance Team
Meeting time: Wednesday 2-4p.m. in CRC
316 and Thursday 3:30 -5 p.m. in CRC 116
Eve~reen Invesbnent Dub
Meeting time: Thursday 2:30 p.m. in CAB
315. More info: Andrew Bucher, Adam
Smith-Kipnis, 786-9161
EOA
(Evergreen Queer Alliance)
General interest meeting: Tuesday 5 p.m.
in CAB 314; Film Fest p lanning 5 p.m.
Wednesday in CAB 314. More info: x6544.
evergreen queer alliance@botmail.com
Eve~reen Students tor Christ
To understand, to grow, to serve. Meeting
time: Tuesday 7 p.m. in UB 2101. More info:
ES4C@ao!.com
The Eveween Swing Club
Beginners welcome, singles okay. Meeting
time: Friday 7 p.m. on the first floor of the
library. More info: David, 866-8324;
Kristina, 867-4939
Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance
Working for equality for women. Meeting
time: Friday 1 p.m. More info: Whitney
Bindreiff at 888-2166 or x6636
GRAS
(Giant Robot Appreciation Society)
Evergreen'sAnirne club! Screenings Friday,
8 p.m. at the Edge. More info: Megan
Connolly at conrneg21@ev ergreen,edu

ICC
(Jewish Cultural Center)
The JCC celebrates Jewish culture and is
devoted to combating all forms of hate,
induding Anti-Semitism. Meeting time:
Wednesday 3 - 4 p.m. in CAB 315. More info:
Steve or Carmel at x6092
MECbA
The Chicano student movement of Aztlan.
Meeting time: Wednesday 2 p.m. More info:
x6143
Medieval Society
RecreatingmedievaJ martial arts, crafts, and
performances. Meeting time: Thursday 5:30
p.m. in CAB 320. More info: x6036
Men's Resource Center
To provide resources for people to grow in
mind, body, and spirit. Everyone welcome.
Meeting time: Wednesday 3 - 4 p.m. in Lib
2221. More info: x6092
The Middle East Resource Center
Meeting time: Wednesday 4 p.m. in CAB 320
in office 15. More info: x6033
Mindscreen
Free movies on campus! Meeting time:
Wednesday 3:30 p.m. in CAB 320. Free
movies: Wednesday 5:30 p.m. in Lecture hall
1. More info: x6412
Percussion Club
We play traditional West African music.
Beginners Welcome! Meeting time:
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in CAB 110. More info:
Lesa Cassidy or Jamie Stillman, x6781
SEED
(Students at Evergreen for Ecological Design)
We are a resource and networking center for
students interested in discussing the
different aspects of ecological designand the
connections between them. Meeting time:
Wednesday 4:30 p.m. in LAB II 2242. More
info: Jamie or Troy at x6493 or
greenseeds@bobnail.com

Slightly West Literal)' Mapzine
We publish TESC's literary magazine.
Meeting time: Monday 2 p .m. and
Thursday 9 p.m. More info: Patricia
Kinney, Jen Levinson at x6879
Umoja
An activities and support group for all
~tudents of African descent. Meeting
~me: 1 - 3 p.m. on May 16 and 30. More
\
info: x6781; Cassetta Stroud at (360) 4550470; Loretta Bradley-Allenat (360) 3529906
Uprooting Racism
White students work on ending racism.
Meeting time: Wednesday 12:30 - 1:30
p.m. in liB 2221.
WasbPIRG
We run environmental, social, and
consumer campaigns. Meeting time:
Wednesday 4 p.m. in Lecture Hall
rotunda. More info: Rebecca x6058 or
evergreen washpi~obnajl com
The Wilderness Center
We run trips outside (rafting, rock
climbing, hiking, snowshoeing) as weI!
as skill.
Women Of Color CoalitiOn
Equality, diversity, justice and freedom
for Evergreen's women of color. Meeting
time: Friday 3 p.m. at CAB 313. More
info: Melissa Wise, Jessica ·Lee at x6006
Women's Resource Center
A resource center that provides
meetings, a library, events, and a dropin center. General meeting: Monday 3
p.m.; 'Zine meeting: Monday 5 p.m.;
Evergreen Cliteracy Foundation:
Wednesday 3 p.m. More info: x6162

*Thillilt is not comprehensive. II you want your dudeftt croup n.ted, drop 0& yourlntonaation at the CP.J (CAB 3S.).

Cooper Point Journal • 16· May 17,2001

Cooper Point Journal • 17· May 17, 2001

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Cooper Point Journal • 18· May 17, 2001

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Cooper Point Journal • 19· May 17, 2001
Media
cpj0816.pdf