The Cooper Point Journal Volume 33, Issue 14 (January 27, 2005)

Item

Identifier
cpj0918
Title
The Cooper Point Journal Volume 33, Issue 14 (January 27, 2005)
Date
27 January 2005
extracted text
16

___________________________C~O~O~P~E=R~P~O=IN~T~J~O~U=RN~A~L~____________--------SEEPAGE
JANUARY

UPDATE FROM ARGENTINA, PAGE

20, 2005

6'"

I' I~j The Evergreen State COilegB
, ~ Olympia, Washington 98S0!:i
ACADEMIC ADVISING MOVES, PAGE 5 ... DAY OF ABSENCE/PRESENCE, PAGE 4

COOPER POINT JOURNAL

Pygmalion after Jean-Leon Gerome

Enrollment proposals

being considered,
opportunities for

student input

available

By Peter Ellis
Since fall quarter, the Enrollment
Growth Disappearing Task Force (DTF)
has concerned itself with creating a process by which members of the campus
community could submit proposal s for
Evergreen's growth to 5,000 Full-Time
Equivalency (FTE). That process is now
completed , and the DTF now seeks feedback from the community.
Members ofthe DTF will be holding a
student focus group on Monday, February
7. Students from ten academic programs
spanning Evergreen's curriculum will be
participating, with space available for ten
additional students. We ask that interested
students RSVP to Christine Ciancetta
by phone at 867-6331 or bye-mail to
chrisc@evergreen.edu. These slots will
fill on a first-come, first-serve basis.
The DTF also announces an open
comment period on the proposals that we
have gathered. These proposals are available on closed reserve in the Library and
in the Dean's Area for community review.
We also provide comment sheets with
these proposals for community members
to provide their feedback . The deadline
for this round of feedback is Wednesday,
February 9 at noon .
Also on February 9, the DTF is holding an open forum for all community
members from I :15 to 3 p.m. in Lab
I 1047. Students are strongly encouraged to at tend; more information will
be posted around cam pus as the Forum
approaches.
.
The DTF re quests that forum participants read proposals before at tending the
fo rum, as there w ill not be ample time to
prov ide backg round on each s ubm itted
proposal.
Peler Ellis is a super senior enrolled in
The Novel : Life and Form . He serv es
on the Enrollment Growlh DTF and the
Enrol/menl Coordinalion Commillee as a
.I'll/dent represenlali ve. He can be reached
via e-mail al ellpeI2 7@ evergreen.edu.

Evergreen survey shows

News In Brief

decline in student involvement

Tonight, the Draft

Outcome prompts introspection among Evergreen officials '
By Angie Jones
Evergreen students rated lowest ever
on the 2003-04 National Survey of Student
Engagement (NSSE). But whether this is
a true reflection of student experience is
unclear.
Evergreen freshman and senior
students have participated in the NSSE
annually since the spring of 2000.
The college s pen t $5,200 to
participate in last year's s urvey, which is
conducted by NSSE , a n independent third
party organization hou sed at the Indiana
University Center for Po stseco.ndary
Research.
" The NSSE is rooted in the concept
of "student engagement," defi ned for
this survey as the amount of time and
effort students put into their studies and
other educationally purposeful activities,
and how successful the institution is
at encouraging students to participate
in co-curricular activities that lead to
student success.

By Chris Enright
Chris Enright is a sophomore enrolled in Women's West . He is studying art and art history.

TESC
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Service Requested

• • • • •
Procession of the
Species
It's time to plan the 11th Annual
Procession of the Species Celebration.
All are invited to help in the production, which includes opportunities from
staffing the art studio and workshops to
planning events and assisting with environmental education. The organizing
meeting is Sunday, January 30 from 3-5
p.m. Stop by the Procession Community
Art Studio, 812 South Central in Olympia,
to participate. The Procession will take
place on Saturday, April 23 during Arts
Walk Weekend in downtown Olympia.
Call Earthbound Productions for more
information at (360) 705-1087.

Robo Seeks Soldiers

Photo by Eva WOllg

Th e womenfrom Raining Jan e broughlilieir laid-Dack sly le
afiernoon /hanks 10 S&A produc fiof7.\· .

a history of the Synergy Conference
In the sum mer of 1999, two Evergreen
students representing SEED (Students at
Evergreen for Ecological Design) attended
a natural building cor\ference in Oregon.
Surrounded by innovators from all over
the Northwest region, they returned to
campus with minds full of inspiration
and notebooks full of contacts. One of
the first people they contacted was Craig
Lawrence, Evergreen alumnus and the
previous year's SEED Coordinator.
When Lawrence was the SEED
Coordinator, the group hosted speakers
on a weekly basis. "It built up over time,"
Lawrence says of the first Sustainable

The survey is designed to assess
educational practices and track student
status at the b.eginning and end of
the college experience . It uses five
benchmarks (see breakout box on page
3), which closely align with the college's
core values, according to Evergreen Vice
President of Academics Don Bantz, who
oversees the project.
The 20 03-04 res ult s, representing
26 percent of freshman and 13 percent
of seniors; show a dec line in nearly eve ry
benchmark , althoug h representation and
response rates were identical to previous
years. "We're still unpacking what happened," said Laura Coghlan, who has
monitored NSSE results for the past four
years.
Most notable are senior decline rates
\ in student-faculty interaction, decreased
frequency of conversation with peers of
a different race or ethnicity and lower
involvement in co-curricular activities

As U.S. military activity continues
to increase, many are wondering, "What
about the draft?!" Come to an engaging
information session with Glen Anderson ,
Olympia's local expert on the possibility
of a draft, who will be affected, and what
legal and illegal options are available in
case ofa draft. The event is tonight, Thursday, January 27, from 7-9 p.m. in Seminar
11, B1107. It is hosted by Common Bread
and the Evergreen Political In forma tion
Center. For more inform ati on, contac t
steryaI 2@evergree n.edu .
-Brief prov ided by Rya n Steph ens

• • • • •

Seeds of sustainability:
By Adrienne Barrett

Issue
14
Volume 33
January 27

Living conference. The progression into
a conference of guest speakers and bui Iders was only natural.
Students from SEED formed DEAP
(Developing Ecologically-sound Agricultural Practices). DEAP, SEED, the
Environmental Resource Center and
Freaks of Nature each had a hand in the
construction of the second sustainability
conference. The conference grew and
became m.ore visible on campus. One
aspect of this change was establishing a
physical presence. A great amount of time
and energy went into constructing three
tripod structures of alder wood, bamboo
and plastic wings on Red Square.
"The most exciting thing to come out

10

Ihe CA B Wednesday

ofthe second year was probabl y Demeter's
Garde n," Chariti Li, conference coordinator, remembers. The old co mmunity
garden space was lying unused while the
Farm thought about what to do with it.
DEA P coordinators were passionate about
creating a student-run project there lest
the space be closed off to student access
altogether. Led by permaculture designers, conference attendees gathered at the
site and brainstormed design possibilities.
The now-fertile plot tended by Greeners is
the result of their creative solution.
I n year th ree, con ference coord inators
Chariti Li and Leon Smith went back to the
drawing board. They wanted to change the
name of the event to afford the conference
more name recognition. "Synergy" was
chosen because of its root meanings: cooperation and working together. Synergy is
also the interaction of two or more things
to produce an effect greater than the sum

Are you a soldier or do you know
one? Robo Studios, a group of students at
Evergreen, is currently look ing for soldiers
who have served in Iraq or Afghanistan to
speak on camera abo ut their experience.
This is a chance to speak openly and
candidly abou t yo ur involvement in these
critical tim es.
For more info rm ati on, please vi s it
http://www.robostlldios. com or call (360)
867-0150.

• • • • •
Teen Tutoring
The Teen Tutori ng Projcct, a nonprofit orga nization that provides free
tutoring to local high school students,
is currently rec ruiting tutors. The TTP
offers exciting and rewarding opportunities to college students looking to give
back to their community and to make a
difference in someone's life. The TTP
currently needs math (college-level math
is a prerequisite), science (college-level
science is a prerequi site), Engl ish (helping ESL students) and Spanish (collegelevel Spanish is a prerequisite) tutors. II
you apply to tutor in one of these subjects.
you will be paired up with a student or pUi
into a group setting right away. There arE
students who desperately need your help
so don't wait- apply today.
To apply to become a tutor for TTP
please contact Jerry Chiang at jcchian!
@u.washington.edu or visit TTP website
http://www.teentutoringproject.org

PRSRTSTD
US Postage
Paic
Olympia W/J
Permit #6E

COOPER POINT JOURNAL
JANUARY 27,2005

2
Sustainability must
include locality
Commentary by Sebastian DelrieuSchulze
Evergreen is not a liberal institution, nor is
it an environmentalist institution . Evergreen
is a progress ive institution ; it is a sustainable
institution .
But in m any ways it is more libera l
and environmenta list. Kerry was correctly
labe led as th e " Il]pst liberal candidate,"
Kucinich ri ghtly was called a progressive
candidate and Nader was right ly ca lled a
. thJrd-party candidate (wanti ng to be a part
of the two-sided discussion, while not necessarily fighting for all other voices) .
Kerry has an older approach to worldl y
problems, more in line with the rhetoric of
any our presidents; he has certain duti es to
uph old in the U .S .'s empire as it stands.
Env ironmenta li sm comes into pl ayas a
solution with influence of markets for products, i.e. , recycl ing vs . s ustain ab le materia ls-economi c incentive: cost of mining
vs. recyclin g- and less of an emphasis on
re-use and reducing . Env ironm ent a li sm
plays its role within the global market and
is onl y a step toward sustainable practice.
Sustainable practice in volves decentrali zation of the market- localism, local economies, local culture, etc. Of co urse trade is
necessary, but th e less trade we are forced
into, th e more fossil fuel s and human energy
that are dispensed.
Oil is just the beginn ing of a whole spectrum of lim ited resources. Everythi ng we
make comes from concrete resources, some
of which are farmed and others of which are
pulled from the earth. Reducing the amount
we pu II from the earth so as to increase the
longevity of these elements for production,

All the cool student
groups are doing it
By David Hornbeck
Hello, everybody! So, I hear through the
grapevine th at many student groups need
to get the word out abo ut the campaigns,
events, fundraisers or whatever it is th ey ' re
doing. Well I, being th e genius th at I am ,
have thought of a brilliant solution to this
horrible plight that has plagued our fine
institution of learning for far too long. You
ready for this?
Write an article for the incredible, ed ible

we must make every effort to contain much
of our production in closed, sustainable
models. Wars are fought for resources and
land, always have been, and· always will.
Imagine th~ wars for oil in 30 years. Scary
thought, eh? Well, sim ilarly, all aspects of our
modem world come from limited sources.
Current farming practi ces are making our
lan d limited; farming practices will catch
up again as in the Dust Bowl. Conflicts for
resources have occurred in many situati ons,
tied in with U.S. interests, such as mining
companies in the states impeding on Native
rights with the FBI, conflict in the Congo
for precious and useful- minera ls, and Iraq
and its hu ge oil suppli es. George Bu sh is
fi ght ing for our interests because we are not
willing to change our li festy le, th e-- interests
of the car drivers.
Sustai nabl e so lutions corne" in many
form s, but always locality is an issue.
Germany has been a shining example of
a country concern ed with sustai nability. But
there is a problem: Like in much of Europe ,
a trend in privatization is also tak in g ho ld .
The German people are upset to see handouts
given by the governm ent in order for some
indi vidual to make the money off of sustainable energy. This is a probl em because a corporate model must make a profit, whereas a
municipal approach allows us to break even,
or for extra money to go to publ ic services
while provid ing very good workers rignts,
and benefits. Also, throu gh use of a publ ic
infras tru cture, a greater unity amo ng education al and administrat ive as well as corporate entities could be born. This could occur
through governm ent research and teaching
of s usta in ab le practic e, with corporate
ass istance, in th e logic that hi gh ly trained
susta inab ili ty technicians could be born from
a state institution.

NEVVS ________________________~CO~O=P~E=R~P~O~IN~T~j~O~U=RN~AL~____________________~______

PAGE TWO

JANUARY 27, 2005

Vox Populi

David Hornbeck is a fresh man currently
enrolled in Co ntemporary Socia l Issues.

sta.ff

Hazardous while driving?

By David Hornbeck & Tim Yates

I

Legislators have discussed the use of cell
phones by drivers in vehicles as a big cause
of traffic acc idents. If you are talking on the
phone, then how are you paying attention to
the road?
In addition to ha ndling the phone, the
conversation itself is a distraction. That bei ng
said , I would .like to bring some overlooked
fac ts to li ght.
I recently spok e with Dick Doane, a
Research Ana lyst with the Washington Traffic
Safety Commi ss ion. Dick has compiled a
Research Summary after spending many hours
studyi ng results of hi s own studies as well as
stud ies conducted by Ha rvard and also by the
Univers ity of Utah. Confirming what ma ny
people believe, Doane said, "There is nearly
unanimous agreement that using cell phones
w hile driving significantly degrades motor
and/o r percept ua l-cog nitive skill s esse nti a l
to driving."
More co mmon in everyday driving rather
than in di ffic ult dr iv ing cond it ions are slower
reaction time, ty pica ll y 0.5 second , greater
variability of steeri ng w heel angle (erratic
lane positi o n) and accelerato r position (speed).
Dick ex pl ained, "These risks must be weighed
against th e safety benetits cell phones generate such as enhanced res ponse to emergencies,
reduction of unnecessary travel, and expa nded

SOS Visual Arts

" It 'd probably be in ratio with population grow th ."
Holly Melgard
Sopho more

Poetics and Power

" I hope it doesn 't ra ise tuition ."
Rikki Sa lyer
Juni or

Philosophy as a Form
Women's List

0/ Life

" How do they plan on doing that? Maybe in the
next 10 yea rs, if we're not a ll overseas fig hti ng."
Melissa Harris
Senior

Media works

" I wish it wouldn't keep expa ndin g. I li ke the size
the way it is. That's what's good abo ut the school."
Sam Lebow
Freshman

productivity during trave l time. Many peo ple
believe that a hand s -fr ee~ki t (ea rpi ece and
microphone) will solve the problem. It does
not. Cell phones are not the problem . The problem is distractions to the driver in general, be it
the stereo, eati ng or drinking, kids, or even yo ur
friend talking to you in the passenger seat."
Whatever the problem may be, we must rea lize that taking away one piece of the problem
does nothing except leave us to wonder, "Why
are accidents sti ll happening? We took away the
phones, now what?"
He re are some easy steps th at yo u could
follow to ens ure safer driving:
First and foremost , fasten your safety be lt.
It is unbe lievable how many people st ill do no t
buckle up.
Next, if you do need to use your ce ll phone,
e ither have the number dialed before you start
driving, or pull ove r to th e side of the road and
d ial the. number.
Last, slow down! Drive th e speed limit. It
is sa id that if yo u speed and drive aggressive ly,
you onl y ga in about 30 seconds in overa ll trave l
time . T I)at boils down to one thing : what is 30
seco nds worth to yo u?
If yo u are interested in a copy of Dick
Doane's Research Summary, it is available at The
Washington State Traffic Safety Commission,
1000 Cherry St., Olympia WA 98504
Travis Reed is a ji-eshman enrolled in America
in the 20 th Century.

• • • • •

Organizing/or Democracy

Internships APlenty

" I don 't love it. C lass a nd semina r will get bigger.
If t·he state gives us more teachers and money, it
would be better."
Todd Sessons
Senior

Political Economy, Social Change, and Globalization

Cooper Point Journal

Meetings

Your work in print

is written. edited and distributed by students enroLLed at

Business manager ....................................... Adrian Persaud
Ass!, business manager .............................. Jessica Tweedy
Ad proofer and archivist... ........ ................ ' Kristen Lindstrom
Circulation managerlPaper archivist .............. Jacob Stanley
Distribution manager.. ................................. David Hombeck
Ad sales representative ................................ Andrew James

The Evergreen State CoLLege , who are soLeLy responsibLe for its
production and content.
is published 28 Thursdays each academic year, when class is in
session: the 1st through the 10th Thursday of FaLL Quarter and the
2nd through the 10th Thursday of Winter and Spring Quarters .

Editor-in-chief ....... ............ .............................Renata Rollins
Managing editor .......................................... ......Corey Young
Arts & Entertainment coordinator. .....Christopher Alexander
Briefs coordinator........... ................................ Kate DeGraaff
Calendar coordinator ........ .. ........................... Katie Thunnan
Comics.coordinator. ....................................... Chelsea Baker
Copy editor........................................Mitchell Hahn-Branson
Copy editor........................................................... Sean Paull
Letters & Opinions coordinator ..................... Sam Goldsmith
News coordinator .............. .......................... ......... Joe Jatcko
Photo coordinator.......................... ........................ Eva Wong
Seepage coordinator.. ................................ .Ikuko Takayama
Sports coordinator ......................................... Meredith Lane
Vox Populi coordinator..................... ............ David Hombeck

By Travis Reed

11

" I gradu ate next year, so w hatever."
Chris Nelso n
Juni or

Business

News

FAFSA Deadline
,

Sebastian Delrieu-Schulze is a senior
enrolled in Poetics and Power.
Page Two of the Cooper Point Journal! One
of th e ma in purposes of this abso lute ly
aweso me page you' re reading is for student
groups to entice other, uninform ed st udents
to join your cause or hobby. Yes, now there 's
a specific place fo r your group to brag about
their accomplishm ents.
All you would have t<;> do is submit an
arti cle to the C PJ offi ce. Be sure to tum it
in by the deadline ( Monday at 3 p.m .) and
everything should be just dandy. C mon, you
know you want to ...

More Briefs

Cell phones

How (,10 you feel about the school's plan to enroll
over 1,000 students over the next ten years?

is distributed free at various sites on The Evergreen State College
campus. Free distribution is limited to one copy per edition per person.
Persons in need of more than one copy should contact the CPJ business
manager in CAB 316 or at 867-6054 to arrange for multiple copies. The
business manager may charge 75 cents for each copy after the first.

sells display and classified advertising space. Information
about advertising rates, terms and conditions are available in CAB
316, or by request at (360) 867 -6054.
.

How to Contribute

Our meetings are open to the Evergreen
community. Please come and discuss with us!

I

I
\

Organizational Meeting
5 p.m. Monday
Find out wha t it means to be a member of the
student group CPJ. Practice consensus-based
dec is ion making.

Content Meeting
5:30 p.m. Monday
Help discuss future content, such as story
ideas, Vox Populi questions and possible long
term reporting projects, as well as other things
needed to help the week along.

Contributions from any TESC student are welcome. Copies of submission
Paper Critique
and publication criteria for non-advertising content are available in CAB
.
4 p.m. Thursday
316, or by request at 867-6213. Contributions are accepted at CAB 316, or
Comment on that day's paper. Air comments,
by email at cpj@evergreen.edu. The CPJ editor-in-chief has final say on
concerns, questions, etc. If something in the
the acceptance or rejection of all non-advertising content.

How to Contact the CPJ

Design ......................................................Kristen Undstrom Cooper Point Journal
Brad Meyers CAB 316
Tim Yates News: (360) 867 - 6213
Email: cpj@evergreen.edu
Advisdr ........................ ....................... ........ Dianne Conrad
Business:
(360) 867 - 6054
Assi~taht to the advisor .......................... ............ MA Selby
Email: cpjbiz@evergreen.edu

CPJ bothers you, this is the meeting for you!

Friday Forum

-.

.~. --

3 p.m. Friday
Put your values to the test! Discuss ethics,
journalism law and conflict resolution .

All meetings are in CAB 316.

3

er SIXty organizatIOns partoo ,

If you would like financial ai d for the 200506 school year, the time to fill out your FAFSA is
now. In order to meet Eve rgreen 's March 15 Priority Deadline, it is important to file by mail before
February 15, or online before the end of February.
File early for less stress. While you're thinking
abo ut money, don't forget to apply for Evergreen
scholarships by February I at 5 p.m .

• • • • •
Shadia Marhaban
Shad ia Marhaba n, an Acehnese huma n rights
and pro-independe nce activi st, will be speaking
abo ut the hi story of the Acehnese people and a id
of the ts unami victims. T he talk w ill take place at
12 p.m. on Tuesday, February I in the Evergreen
Library Lobby. If yo u ca n't make it to cam pus, she
wi ll also be s peaking at Traditions Cafe Tuesday at
7 p.m. Both events are free a nd open to the public.
For more information , cont ac t Peter Bohmer at
867-643 1 or bo hmerp @evergreen.edu . This event
is sponsored by the Olymp ia Movement for Just ice
and Peace, the Provost's Office and many academic
programs at TESC.

• • • • •
Language Learning Exchange
The EF International School of Eng li sh is
offeri ng a vo lunteer opportun ity. They have foreign
stude nts who would like to practice their English
with a native speaker. This is a great opportunity if
you wou ld like to pract ice your Korean, Japanese,
Chinese or Spanish in exchange for time practicing English. The Conversation Partner Program
has no s pecia l qualifications and only requires an
hour or two per week. For more information, contact Rhonda James, the EF Evergreen Academic
Coordinator, atjamesr@evergreen.edu or pick up
a blue form from Seminar I 4152.

4

c_o_o_p_ER__
p_oI_N_T~J_O_U_RN_A_L____________--------------NEVVS
JANUARY 27, 2005

______________
o _______________

NElVS ________________________~CO~O~P~E=R~P~O~IN~T~J~O~U~R=N~AL~____________________________

.

JANUARY 27, 2005

Support
the Lakota:

Radical Women for Change:
Campus Day of Presence,
Day of Ab$ence nears
Amy Goodman and Graciela
Some race discussions require pre-registration
Monteagudo to speak at Synergy
By Renata Rollins
By Adrienne Barrett
Amy Goodman of Democracy Now'
and G rac iela Monteag ud o will speak on
Saturday, February 12 at The Evergreen
State College. Tickets for the event are $8
to students and $ I 0 to non-students, but
students can purc hase tickets in advance
for only $S from the TESC Bookstore,
Rainy Day Records and Orca Books .
These two extraordinary wo me n will
empower and inspire on the final night of
Synergy: th e Fourth Annual Sustainable
Living Conference at The Everg reen State
College.
Graciela Monteagudo writes in he r
autobiography, "I thi nk that social change
will come out of people who are working
as a community, and that a community'is
built when people can work in democrati c
ways. When we take our puppets, props,
banners and stilters to the streets, we arc
attempting to comm unicate through these
artistic, democrati c processes political
messages in ways that can not only appeal
to the general publi c, but inspire them to
engage their own everyday struggles in
new ways."
Raised in the Argentinea'l working class
of the 1960s, Monteag udo grew up in the
midst of social activism. During her childhood, social organizations and student
movements were on th e rise alongside
disappearance, oppression and torture.
In high school, she dabbled in activism.
In the Arge ntina of Monteagudo's youth,
c iti ze n5 were routinely " di sappea red,"
and over 300 concentration camps were
in operation.
Monteagudo joined the Trotskyist Party
in 1980 and was violently expe lled que to
her reaction to the dictatorial structure and
corruption of the orga ni zation . Afte rward,
she and 20 of her outcast friends took matters into their own hands. Gat hering their
anti-authoritaria n ideals, they founded a
non-hierarchical organization titled La
Mano, "The Hand ." Monteagudo began
tra ining in Co mm ed ia dell'Arte and
Puppetry in Buenos Aires. S ince th en, she
has brought politically e mpowered art to
public space on a daily basis. O ne demonstrat ion involved plastering Buenos Aires
with silhouettes of thousa nds of m issi ng
people as a .reminder to th e c ity of their
existence .
While g iving puppet shows to homeless ch ildren in Bahia, Brazil, Monteagudo
met and subsequently joined the Vermo ntbase d Bread and Puppet Theater in 1996 .
The compa ny travels internationally, per-

forming puppet shows for soc ial change.
Monteagudo learned to instruct and orchestrate the hundreds of untra ined volunteers
who made the puppet shows possible . She
has organized a nd perform ed in co untless shows tackling the issues of hum an
rights, poverty, labor, ecology, politics and
power. From wo rking with the ch ild ren of
th e disappeared to spendi ng her time in
non-profit so up kitchens, Monteag udo has
dedicated her wo rk to improving th e lives
of Argentineans; 50% of the popul ation
lives be low the poverty level.
Journa list A my Goodman seeks true
democracy in every statement she makes
and question she proposes. Goodman's
program Democracy Now! is broadcast
on NPR and a growing network of over
300 radio an d television stati o ns in th e
co untry.
Goodman began her career in the 1980's
as a community radio personality in New
York C ity. In 1990, she embarked on an
investigati ve piece about the U.S.-backed
I ndonesia n occupation of East Timor.
Whil e working in th e field, Goodm a n
witnessed the beatings of 270 Eastern
T imorese and was bea ten her,se lf by
Indo nes ian soldiers. Returning to East
Timor again in 1999 and 200 I, her work
evolved from combating the injustice of
occupation to the establishment of a new
government.
Goodman has si nce reported on controversial subj ects at the forefront of human
justice and global politics. She traveled to
Nigeria to uncover the abuse of land and
people by Chev ron Oil. Joi ning the fray
at street level, she covered the eight-day
WTO protests in Seatlle.
In a post-9I 11 world , Goodman continues to seek answers to vital questions o(
soc ia l and political justice and to expose'
the problem's w ithin o ur democracy.
'C rac iela Monteagudo and Amy
Goodman are women co mmitt e d to
change. As Grac iela says, " We have to
work together to create democracy.''' A long
wi th these acco mpl ished women and a host
of other in spiring speakers, Synergy is an
exchange of ideas working towards the
creati on of democracy, now.

Adrienne Barrett is a sophomore enrolled
in In Sea rch of Sustain abil ity. Introduction
to Eco logy and E nvir on menta l a nd
Comm un ity Journalism, She is studying
ecology (s ustainability, evolution, biodiversi fy. eco-agriculture. botany and
ecosystems).

I

I

retreat starting at 10 a.m. for a co ntinental breakfast, a workshop on internalized
oppression by Leticia Nieto, a potluck
lunc h, a speech by faculty member Ja n
Kido and a storyte lling workshop by Joyce
Stahmer from Academic Advis ing.
Pre - registr at ion for the retreat is
requ ired by calling First Peoples' Advising
Services at 867-6467 o r emai ling firstpe
op les @ evergreen .ed u by Wednesday,
Fe bruary 2 at 5 p.m .
Meanwhile, white students on campu s
have th e chance to discuss anti-racism
and anti-oppression tactics at a workshop
designed to help white st udents get pas t
feelings of gu ilt and start tak ing action
against racism . The workshop begins at 9
a.m. in Semi nar II BII 05 aljd goes until
noon.
Then from I to 3 :30 p.m. three faculty
members will lead sma ll group discussions on white privilege in the Everg reen
community.
For additional information, please
contact First Peoples' Advising Services
at 867-6467.

t

Evergree n 's annual two-day program
on race and rac ism begins this Thursday,
Fe bruary 3.
The Day of Presence on February 3 is
a day for the ca mpus community to come
together and disc uss matters of race, prejudice, and privil ege in American culture and
at Evergreen.
The day kicks off at 10 a. m. in Lecture
Hall 4 with a show ing of the film The
Angry Eye, abo ut a blue-eyes/brown-eyes
exe rci se in di scriminati on.
T he shol1 film will be followed by a
semi nar led by Housing employees Andrea
Seabert Olsen and Dionne Smith.
Next is a workshop by Leticia Nieto
focusi ng on interc ultural communication
and working across significant differences,
one or the five foci of an Evergreen ed ucati on. The workshop is from I :30 to 4 :3 0
p.m. in Library 1000. Pre-registration for
the workshop is required by calling First
Peoples' Advising Services at 867-6467 or
by emailing firstpeoples @eve rgreen.edu
by Wednesday, February 2 at 5 p.m.
Remata Rollins is a senior taking a contract
The Day ofAbsence has been observ'ed called Race and the News. She is study ing
at Everg reen since 1975 . Like years past, civic journalism and is the editor-in-chief
.
this Friday, February 4, many peopl e of of the CPJ
color on cainpus will go to an off-campus
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Greeners

f

Academic Advising moves with new quarter'

,Peltier
solid,a rity day
is Saturday,
February 5
By Liz Egan
The U.S. criminal justice system and
prison industries have gained inte rnational
notoriety for their lack of rehabilitation,
and th e ir classism, rac ism , sex is m a nd
over po pul at ion . Eve rg reen students
have bee n involved in prog rams li ke
Gateways for In carcerated Youf h and
Birth Att endants for incarcerated pregnant
women to help hum ani ze and reform th ese
systems of punishment. Saturday, Fe bruary
5 is another opportunity to sta nd in so lidarity wi th a ll politica l pri soners, spec ifically
Leonard Pelt ier.
O ne hun dred forty- siK years ago, there
was a wa r go ing on in Washington State .
During this time, N isqually Ch ief Lesch i,
who stood up for his peop le a nd their land
ri ghts, was ill ega ll y tri ed in a Washington
co urt, convicted a nd killed . There was
no ev idence agai nst Leschi, but even if
there was, murder is not prosec utab le
in wartime. Eve ntually in December of
2004, the Was hing to'n Supreme Cc. urt
held a historical trial in which Leschi was
found not guilty, an exoneration that was
long overdue. However, a similar case of
wrongful prosecution had already occurred
in the late 1970s, in the case of Leonard
Peltier.
In the 'mid-1800s treaties signed with
the U.S., the Lakota Nation retained
the rights to most of prese nt-day South
,,~, including the areas now known
as thbiBadlands, the Black Hills and Mount
Rushmore . There has never been a treaty
that legally stripped these lands from the
Lakota, but because gold was found in th e
hills, the U.S. felt empowered to pass an
unconstitutional act in 1877 that illegally
stole the title.
In th e mid- 1920s, the Lakota bega n
the decades-long proce ss of s uing the
U .S. government for the return of their
treaty-guaranteed lands. Procedural iss ues
kept the case unresolved unti I the 1970s,
when the US finall y admitted its wrongdoings: the unjustified and uncompensated
taking of Lakota lands. The gove rnment

Walk Out

Phofo by Jerico /-Ia/ch

Greener Lindsey Brown organized the counler-inauguration walkout last
Thursday. See her reactions in her article on page eleven.

Phofo by Eva Wong

With the start of winter quarter, Student Academic and Support Services (including Academic Advising. Career Support Services
and First People s Advising) packed up and moved to the second floor of the Library to L2153. They a re some of the first offices to
get a new home thanks to the Library building renovations.
offered the Lakota $ 17 million . The Lakota
refused. The government then offered $122
million . Again, th e Lakota re fus ed the
settlement: They wanted the land, not the
money, so the matter remains unresolved.
The Lakota have doc umented rights to land
that the US admits it unfairly stole, yet the
government refuses to return the title. This
scenario calls into question the status of the
whole trust relationship and governmentto-government relations.
Besides facing U.S. fin ancial offers in
the 1970s, the Lakota people also had to
unify against serious security issues. The
FBI made many raids to intimidate the
Lakota, a nd in response, the Ameri can
Indian Movement (A IM) provided protection, standing up for th e ir people and
thei r land ri ghts much like Chief Leschi
did across the mounta ins a century before.

Ecology
Design
Social Justice
CultUrD
Photo by Jerica /-Iafch

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sustainable living conference '

@

360,943 .8044
233 Division 8t NW

5

The Evergreen Slate College

Olympia. Wa

www.ev!;lrgreen.edu/synergy
Free admisson for studentsl
,

.

Local, national and international
presentations, workshops, panels,
art, trashy fashion, music and more ...

During one of these raids on Pine Ridge
Reservation, a shootout occurred between
AIM members and the FBI, in which both
parties suffered loss of life. In the court
cases that followed the incident, all the
blame was thrust upon Leonard Peltier,
despite ignored evidence and witness'
coercion. To this day, Peltier remains
behind bars, known internationally as a
political prisoner. His legal team hopes to
get essential documents declassified thi s
year that will lead to his rel ease, but in
the meantime, we can do our part on the
outside to stand up for him and for Native
sovereignty.
On Tuesday, February I at 4 :00 p.m . in
Sem II A 1105, the Native Student Alliance
w i II be presenting Incident at Oglala, a
doc um e ntary that fl es hes out the detai Is of
Peltier's case a nd the events surrounding

it Saturday, February 5 is the International
Day of Solidarity with Leonard Peltier:
In Tacoma, there will be a gathering at
Portland Avenue Park starting at noon,
a march down Puyallup Avenue and a
rally in support of Leonard and Native
sovereignty.

Liz Egan is a senior taking Grant
Writing, Intergovernment a l Relations,
Environmental
and
Community
Journalism and a contract on Tlingit art

and language.

THE MORRIS K. UDALL FOUNDATION
SCHOLARSHIP AND EXCELLENCE IN
NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY

$

$5000 SCHOLARSHIPS

$

The Udall Scholarship seeks to reward undergraduates
with the commitment and potential to make significant
contributions to the fields of the environment, tribal health,
or tribal governance. To apply, you must be nominated
by the faculty representative (Yvonne Peterson) of The
Evergreen State College. Refer to www.udall.gov to download
an application. Make 'an appointment with Yvonne on
Mondays (Tacoma campus) or Wednesdays (main campus)
by calling 867 -6485 or email petersoy@evergreen.edu for an
appointment. Complete applications ri1\lst be received by
Yvonne on February 25 t h, 2005 in order to meet the
March 3rd , 2005 due date.

6

_____________________________C~O~O~P_ER__
P~OI_N_T~j_O~UR-N-AL---------------------------NEVVS
JANUARY 27, 200S

COOPER POINT JOURNAL
JANUARY 27, 200S

NEWS

"Survey"

Update frol11 Argentina

Pholo by Ethan Schaffer

By Ethan Schaffer
Navarro, Arge ntin a, January I, 2005:
. A bumpy three-hour, stop-and-go bus rid e
out of the metropolis of Buenos Aires lies
the small agricultural town of Navarro.
Just outside town, Ga ia Ecovi ll age sits
on 20 hectares, nestled among thousands
ofhectares of estancias, large land ho ldings. Most of the estancias are for dairy
production, bilt the latest agric ultura l rave
is . transgenic soybeans. Argentina is one
of the largest exporters of soybeans in the
world.
Gaia is a tin y David among an army of
Goliaths. However, its pioneering work
to establish a sustainability movement
in Argentina is start ing to capture th e
attention of the coun try. A few months
ago Gaia was featured on national te levis ion, and last wee k they were interviewed
~ by a reporter from La Nacion, th e largest
newspaper in th e country.
Since 1996 th e ir sma ll group of e igh t to
twelve people has establ ished an important
mode l of sustainabie li ving. The goal of
the project is to live spiritually sati sfying
lives in community and in harmony w ith
the natural eco logy. The land has been
designed using the concepts of pennaculture, a methodology for developing sustainable human sett lements. One hundred
percent of their electric ity comes from
three wind turbines. All of thei r cooking
is done on parabolic so la r cookers and
an efficient wood fired, earth-and- metal
oven. The showers are so lar heated. T hey
have completed two hand-sculpted earth
ho uses that look more like works of art
than habitations. The smooth, poured earth

fl oors and thick earth walls stay cool under
the blazing sun. A huge thatched roof earth
commo n house is under co nstruction.
Gaia Ecovillage is also one of the few
places in Argentina where you can get an
almost entirely organ ic and homegrown
meal. Although they d on 't yet produce
many stapl e crops a nd their fruit trees
are still immature, thei r vegetable garden
is ab undan t. They even save their own
seed.
In addition to practicing sustai nab le
li ving, the residents at Gaia a lso teach
others to do th e same. They reg ul arly
teach courses in permac ulture, natural
building and comm unity living. Some of
the co urses are geared toward foreigners,
but most are taught completely in Spanish
for the local population.
Life certain ly is n ' t pe rfect at Ga ia.
Comm unity dynamics can be tumultuous
and economic reso urc es scarce. However,
in comparison to the poor neighborhoods
outs id e Buenqs Aires, li fe is comfortab le a nd healthy. The si mple and natura l
approac h to living practiced at Gaia has
great potential to improve the li ves of
many Argentineans.

Ph 010 by Sarila Role

For more information, workshop
sc hed ul es and internship o pportu niti es,
vis it http ://www.gaia.org.ar
For more o n th e South America trip
visi t:
hit p:1Ipo Iycu lture. b logs pOLorg

Ethan Schaffer is a senior enrolled in
Patience.

Top left: Cob earth common house at Gaia.
Top right: A wall in Argentina displaying griffiti. "Patria" is "sovereignty" and "FMI"
is "IMF:" the International MonetGlY Fund.
Above: Casa Rosada, the Argentine White HOllse. The graffiti says. "Justice to the
murdered youth. "

Cotttrol

for One Year!

for WOIItal artd lit.. at
PlaMed Pararthood
YCMI eGtIid ~ ff:
• You have modcnae intomc
(Tccru ~ on their
in~eDonc)

• WuhingtoD taid.cnt ami
US. citizen or p o card

• No other /t,fcdic.lid ~gc:
~/111...

..£1
'.

btcIudt:

I. Academic
challenge .
Challenging intellectual and creative
work is central to student learni ng and
collegiate qual ity.
2. Active and collaborative
learning. Students learn more when
they are inten sely involved in their
education a nd are asked to think about
and app ly what they are learning in
different settings.
3. Student-faculty interaction . Stude nt s .see f irst hand how
expe rts th ink about and solve practical problems by interacting with
fac ulty members inside and o utside
the classroom.
4. Enriching educational
experiences. Educat iona lly effective
colleges a nd universities offer many
different opportun ities inside and outside the classroom that comp lement
the goals of the acade mi c program .
S. Supportive campus environm e nt. Students perform better
and are more satisfied at colleges that
are committed to their success a nd
cultivate positive working and socia l
relations amo ng different groups o n
cam pus.

*Benchmarks are paraphrased from
th eir original form on th e NSSE
report
NSSE to search for simi larities or differ~
ences. "There are lots of le nses th at we
use to look at the e'xper ience of stud ents
at Eve rgreen," she said.
In orde r to make survey f indings
usefu l to Evergreen faculty, res ults are
often incorporated into facuIty planning
in st itutes each s umm er. Faculty may
then choose to take prom i nent concerns
into consideration when planning
programs. "It's a way of launching the
conve rsatio.n; it's not a way of driving it,"
said Coghlan.
According to Cogh lan, Evergreen
faculty members wi ll also participate in a
companion s urvey to the NSSE this spring.

About the survey
240 Evergreen students comp leted the NSSE 2003 -04. The respon se rate
of the random sample was 37 pe rcent.
473 coll eges and universities participated in NSSE 2003 -04.
T h is project documents effective educational practices at in stitutions with
higher-than-predicted scores on NSSE benchmark items .
The NSSE is co- s ponsored by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teach ing a nd the Pew Forum on Undergrad uate Lea rning.

A s hort summ ary o r more detailed report of Evergreen 's 2003-04
s urvey res ults may be viewed at http: //www.evergree n. ed u/institutionalresearc h/
nsse. htm

.Graduating soon and still not sure what you want
to do? Why not consider doing something with
. meaning and purpose before starting your career
or going on to graduate school? Peace Corps
offers hundreds of great overseas opportunities.
Visit us at one ofthe events below to find out more,

• F,lD~ c;lOI1tnlCepUoO
• Vueetomy at tlihallipban

Slide Show & Information Meeting

Information Table

4:00 - 5 :30 pm
Seminar 2 - Room A-3105

Correction!
In last week's "Briefs" section, we announced that the modified Evergreen Parkway designs of McCann Plaza and Overhulse
Road included a roundabout. The improvements to Overhulse
Road do not, in fact, include a roundabout. McCann Plaza is to
have a si ngl e roundabout, however.

"History"
Continll~d

from

Cov~r

of the indiv idu a l effects. The orgartizers
felt this was the direction th e co nference
and the sustai nabi I ity movement as a
whole were goi ng.
With a larger grant from the Servi ces
& Ac ti vities Board throug h the Specia l
Ini t iative process, the confere nce had
great potential. To improve turnout ,
Synergy was moved to the winter quarter. Defining the st ructure more c learly
for future confe re nces, the planners laid
down the core themes of agr icu lture,
ecology, de sign, health a nd soc ial justice.
Because embracing soc ia l justice is a vital
component of s ustainabi Iity, the events in
2004 emp hasized multi-cultural ism and
the involvement of First Peoples. Eleven
student groups participated, representing
th e diverse inte res ts in the Everg reen
com munity. The gro up s found points of
This wi ll hopefu lly enable comparison o,f
fac ulty expectat ion and perception of progra m act iviti es w ith how students exper ience the learning environment.
Despite marked decline, the NSSE
final report s ings Eve rgreen's praises. It
describes the college as a " .. .distinctive
in st it uti o n w ith a n unusually high
commitm ent to teaching and lea rning and
a vibrant intellectual spirit," and further,
as an institution that " ... has created a
str uct ure for putting hig her-orde r mental
sk i li s into pract ice."
Bantz parallels this enthusiasm, as
he is positive 'abo ut the college's overall
performance. " We're feeling affirmed on
our whole educational approach," he said.

overlapthat illustrated the interconnectedness that Synergy tried to realize. In Li's
words, "Everyone working together made
the upper level of the CAB a mljch more
fr iend ly place."
Synergy is not just a conference abo ut
sustai nabi lity and cooperat ion; 'it operates
. by those very themes. Exper iencing Synergy is bei ng a part of it. Take it from Li:
" It is g reat to be around people who are
in th eir field and are o n fire ... you wi ll be
inspi re d."
For more information as we ll as the
co mplete Sy ne rgy lineup, visit
http://www.evergreen.edu/synergy/

Adrienne Barrell is asophomore enrolled
in In Search of Sustainability. Introducti on to Ecology and Env iro nm e nta l and
Community Journalism . She is studying
ecology (sus tainabilily. evolution, biodiversity, eco-agriculture, botany and
ecosystemJ).
" We a re doing a good job on the things
that matter, but we can always improve ...
a nd what I love about Evergree n is th at
we are a culture that's accustomed to selfreflecting."
Coghlan hopes that through investigation and reflection, the college will come
to a full understanding of the s igni fi cant
decline by next year.
" What [students] share when they fill
out a s urvey-it matters," said Cogh lan.
"It does n' t go into some big dark ho le
somewhere. This stuff gets widely distributed ... people take this stuff to heart."

Angie Jones is a senior studyingjournalism through an independent contract.

rite. Think. Grow.
... drafts ... evaluations ... seminar papers ...
essays ... ESL. .. creative writing ...

Tuesday - Thursday
Drop-in Only

12-5

PM

The Tacoma-Campus of The Evergreen State College

THE

February 3,2005

10:00 am - 3:00 pm
Campus Activities Building (CAB)

l-IOO-UO~PLAN
VtWW.JIIIWW.otQ

such as internships, community servi~e
and study abroad.
Bantz and Coghlan doubt the accuracy
of some of these findings due to the high
number of transfe r students at Evergreen.
"Those scores just don't make sense," said
Bantz. " We know [students are] doing
internships and comm unity se rvice, yet
it 's not showing up on these res ults! "
Coghlan bel ieves question phrasi ng on
the survey may produce misleading results
b ecause it isolates
student experience
solely to time
spent at Everg re en.
"Part of w hat I'm
wondering is if
transfer st ud en ts
a re hav i ng those
exper iences before
Don Bantz
tr a n s~er r i ng," s he
sa id.
Freshman res ults reflect that they a re
less likely to work harder than they thoug ht
they could to meet faculty expectations
and a decreased sense of how sup portive
the campus environm e nt is, espec ia ll y
whe n it comes to thriving sociall y.
" I think we a re st rugg ling to create a
se nse of community beyond the individual
program at Everg reen," Coghlan said._
Reasons for decline are under
investigation by Evergree n institutional
research and assess ment staff and other
Evergreen officials.
" In order for assessmen t to be
s uccessful, you have to share the results
with people who have the power to change
something," Cog hlan said .
According to Bantz, seve ral campus
divisions, s uch as Academ ic Advisi ng,
Student Affairs a nd Academic Deans,
use su rvey d ata as a la un ching point
when planning.
"Because we track this we can tell
when something slips, and we respond
immediately. We get those co nversations
goi ng," Coghlan sa id. " Dia log ue is a way
that change occurs at Everg reen."
Coghlan believes it is also critical to
look at other survey results, a lumni feedback and administrative data alongside the

NSSE benchmarks of effective
,
educational practice*

. We 'If be visiting TESC on" .

• AruruaI cam Uld roLtDSding
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foam, CODcrlltlCpth-e pitCh

Plamed Parenthoocr

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WRITING

ROOM

Room 132 - In the Commons Area
Contact: (235) 680-3028; www.evergreen.edulwritingcenter

Traditions

Cafe & World Folk Art
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Support Fair Trade with low-income
artisans and farmers and you wilL ..
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-A cafe with good food
- A performanc~ space for concerts, classes, forums, and more
Website: traditionsfairtrade.com
300 5th Ave SW, Olympia 705-2819
"Just a s lash from Herita e Fountain & Ca itol Lake"

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:A
JANUARY 27, 2005

Poetics and Power sponsors
reading series
\

Synergy Conference.
Wednesday, February 16, Stacey Doris
will read from her many books of poetry.
Stacey Doris is Assistant Professor of Poetry
at San Francisco State; she is also a leading
translator from the fre;]ch. The reception for
Stacey Doris will al so take place on February
16 from 3:30-5:-30 p.m.
Wednesday, February 23, TESC Fac ulty
membe r Bill Ransom and poet Judi th Roche _
wi II read from their work.
Fin al ly, Andrew Zawacki will read from
his work on Wednesda y, Ma rch 2. Andrew
Zawack i is th e ' a uth o r of two poe tr y
boo ks, /l ilab ranch (Wes leya n Uni ve rsity
Pres s, 2004) and By Reasul7 uf Breaking l'
(U ni versi ty of Georg ia Press. 2002), as we ll
as a chapboo k, Masquerade (Vagabo nd
Pr ess, 200 1), whi ch rece ived t.h e Ali'ce
Fay Di Castagnola Award from the' Poetry
Socie ty of America. He is also coeditor of th e
international journal Ve rse. A form er fell ow
of the Sloven ian Writers' Association , he
edited th e anthology Ajierwards : Sloven ian
Writing 19-/5-1 995 (White Pine Press, 1999)
and is tran slating Al es Debelj ak's Arrow J'
Shadow. Zawacki is currently a doctoral candidate in Social Thought at the University
of Chicago and Iive s in Paris.
. TESC facult y member and poet Leonard
Schwartz wil l also read from his latest work .
The library reception will take place on the
same day, Wednesday, March 2, from 3:
30-'5:30 p.m .
These readings are all free and open to
the public.

By Angela Buck

To all friends, lovers, a nd ca s ua l
acquaintances of poetry: Th ere will be a
series of poetry and fi ction reading s thi s
quarter sponsored by Poetics and Power.
The reading seri es will include writers both
near and far-flun g and all readings will take
pl ace in Seminar II , D II 05 at 7 p. m. on
Wed nesdays .
The readi ngs wi ll be acco mpan ied by
li brary rece pti ons where th e Evergreen
commun ity will have th e opportun ity to
' chat with the visiti ng poet and other literary-mi nded studen ts and professo rs on
-cam pus. These recept ion s have been made
po ss ible by the ge neros ity of The Friends
of the Evergree n Library· and will a ll ·take
_ place in the south west corner of the li brary,
upsta irs on the th ird fl oor. Light refreshments
wiII be served.
The. date s and writ ers are as foll ows:
Wednesday, February 2, poet and novelist
Ca rmen Firan and author and translator
Bruce Benderson will read from their work.
Bruce Benderson is the author of several
"cult" books including User and Pretending
10 Say No. Carm en Firan 'is a Romanian poet
who lives in New Y8rk City. A reception will
- follow on February 3 from 3: 30 to 5 :30 p.m .
All are invited to attend .
Wednesday, February 9, Michael Palmer
will read from his work. Michael Palmer is
a poet. and the author of The Lion Bridge:
Selected Poems 19 72-1995, published by
New Directions. He lives in San Francisco.
A reception has been planned for Thursday,
February \0 from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in the Angela Buck is a senior at Evergreen. She is
southwest comer of the Iibrary, third floor. studying literature and creative wriling.
This, reading has been co-sponsored by the

:'

.....

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

I'll take Gender-bending for 100: Drag
Ball 2005
By James Avalon
The movie Party Mo nster, featuring
Macau lay Culkin in drag, said it all with the
simple phrase: "Money, success, fame, glamour, for we are living in the ag~ of the thing,"
and no w the Eve rgreen Queer Alli ance and
Society for Trans-Act ion and Reso urces is
headin g up a Drag Ball and those word s
resonate in cars.
What b~ tt er way to impl cment thi s eve nt
then with a Homo Bak e Sale? Covering the
tab le are confetti cupca kes with a chocolatc
orange zest co nfection. "' How gay we ri1ust
be, and w h ~ t fab ul ous cooki es '" me mbers
say to one ano th er, eyes shining with pro mi se
as money roll s in fro m selling baked goods,
money for the hopeful sllccess of the ba ll.
The ball will featu re a drag/burl esque troupe

out of Portland- Honey and Charley- who
wil l headline the event. Student :tClS will also
line the stage. A dance along with refreshments will follow.
Advertisements litte: boards, asking
" What if Cipderel!a was a boy'?" with the
senior prom innlrendo offlashy glam rock hair
and costume-adorned attendees. "Money, success, fame, glamour. " This Drag Ball seems
that it wi ll have it all, with a double scoop of
glamour and a das h of glitz.
The ball is on Fri day. January 28 at 8 p. m.
in Se minar II E4 11 5.
$3 for stude nts and $5 for non-students.
Vi sit htlp:l/www. honeyandcharley.com lo r
more info on the burl esque troupe.
E-m a il t he EQ"., evergreen_qu ee r_
all ian ce@evergree n. edu , with an y qu es tions.

Art4Harmony's Up and coming events
By Mylee Ring
Hi , everyone. Ar14Harm ony has some upand-coming events we would like to invite
everyone to. The first event is January 28,
2005. We have a young high school student
that is putting on an art show for her senior
project. She is looking for artists to display
their work ; she officially has ten spots for
Evergreen students. She will be down to talk
with those interested in showing, we wi ll be
meeting in the CAB third floor in the pit area
from 3-4 p.m. We hope to see you there!
Next, for those who are interested in
digital storytell ing, we have a guest speaker
from Bridges to Understanding coming down
either February 4 or February I I to tell us

about a mentorship program that allows a student to travel and tell stories through digital
means. We will keep everyone posted about
the date.
We are hoping to perform some puppet
shows for th e children at the Child Care
Center here on camp' rs. If there is anyone
interested in helping with this, please e-mail
arl4hannonv<i/!yahoo.com . Lastly, we have a
lead for students that are good with ink drawings. There is a gentleman who wants to write
a fishing book and needs some drawings for it.
If you are interested, please drop us a line.
Peace.
Mylee Ring is a second year student enrolled
in Shadow lands. She is also the coordinator
ofArt4Harmony

.. ."'; .. . . ..... ,.

THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
NEEDS AN ADVERTISING
REPRESENTATIVEI
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lo-ads 01 Fun!
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Hour 4-8!

Ad Representative: Keeps in contact with
Olympia-area businesses that advertise in the CPJ
and is responsible for getting payment and maintaining client records,
If you have any interest in this AMAZING
learning 0ppOltunity to develop your business
skills, come on up to the CPJ office (CAB 316) for
an application, or call the business side at the
number below!

ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

COOPER POINT JOURNAL
JANUARY

9

27, 2005

On the Screen
going to be ruined. But sure enough, Paul
survives orie potential catastrophe after
another by bribing, flattering, calling in
favors and bluffing within an inch of his
life. He knows how the world works, and
how to manipulate the murderou s Hutu
general who threaten s to invade the hotel
by treating him as a valued cli ent, by putti on the di
ise of the hotel manager

By Lee Kepraios

Hotel Rwanda
Terry George 's new film Hotel Rwanda
tells the harrowing story of hotel manager
Pau l Rusesabagina, who miraculously saved
more than 1,200 people during the Rwandan
genocide in 1994 using only hi s wits, his
intelli gence, hi s business
ity to barga in .
It remain s th e darkest spot on th e Clinton
ad mini strati on. and O(le .
of the dark est in hi story.
Wh at Hute! RII'anda does
to tell a story in the midst
of a chaoti c ni ghtmare is
sca le down it s locus and
tell yo u only this story, the
story of th e hotel and of
those that survived: Some
have compl ained that the
film spends too much of
.
its cnergy fo cusing on .
_ fJ hnlO courlesy oj [ll/iled ArtislS 2(}O.J
the 1,200 that survived Don Cheadle alld Sophie Okonedo star in '"/-Iotel Rwanda . ..
rather than the 500,000
and businessman, wearing a suit, putting
that were killed. That's a va li d point, but I his' staff back to work and never feeding
person ally think an actual film about the them the fear that pethaps hi s 'Tutsi wife
genocide itself wou ld best be presented Tatiana (Sophi e Okonedo) and chi ldren
in the form of a documentary. What Hotel might be next. Nick Nolte play s a U.N .
Rwanda wants to do, first and foremost, is official and longtime friend of Paul 's who
tell a gripping, riveting story about how a few find s it hard to tell Paul that there is noth people respond to such horror. And believe ing he can do to help.
The film is heavy, yes, but it's also so
me, it succeeds .
Don Cheadle stars as Rusesabagina in maddeningly suspenseful it had me biting
a performance of strength and conviction. my nails. As soon as the film was over,
Throughout the whole ordeal, he's a man I felt wrung out, as if I had just been on
who never lost his confidence or his com- a rollercoaster ride. I was moved , even
petence, always maintaining his ab ility to uplifted , but also surprisingly entertained ,
make lifesaving decisions, right until the the way one would expect from a thriller.
very end. As militant Hutu forces se ize the Hotel Rwanda is not playing anywhere
country, massacring all members of the Tutsi near Evergreen, so I highly suggest you
tribe, many begin to take refuge at the hotel, bug your friend with the car, because this
which is eventually announced on the radio is one of the best films of the year.
as a safehouse for "cockroaches," and a dark
Rating: ~ ~ ~ ~
cloud looms over the hotel.
7"- 7"- 7"- 7"Throughout the fi 1m we fee l impend ing
Finding Neverland
doom : that Paul 's delicately craft ed plans are
In order to write the time less class ic

that is Peter Pan, J.M. Barrie had to realize
the fact that basically, he was Peter Pan. He
never did grow up and spent hi s days leading
up the first stage performance of Peter Pan
putting on littl e plays and devi sing fantasy
games for the chi ldren of a widow friend
of his.
Johnny Depp co uld arguablr---::-'-"--":..:..::......:..:..:..:.
actor of hi s ge nera ti on.
He do es n' t ju st playa
cha ra c ter, he plays th e
most bizarre kind of that
character you've eve r.
see n. In FrO ll1 Hell he 's
an opi um-addi cted pol ice
inspector, in /'i,.ut ..:s o/ Ihe
Ca,.ibheon he's a pi rate
ca pt ain crossed wi th Keit h
Richards- he was the onl y
thi ng that made that mov ie
watchable- in Once UlwlI
a Tim!! in Mc:.ri c() hc's a
CIA age nt unlike any I' ve
ever seen in a mov ie, and
then he turn s up in Sec,.et
Window as an aberra nt JohnllY D!!I'P WId
noveli st who wears hi s Neve ,.land ':
bathrobe eve ryw he re
he goes.
He plays Barri e in Finding Ne l'eriand, a
look into hi s process of the creation of Peter
Pan . He can't seem to connect to his wi fe
(Radha Mitchell ), and one day in the park
he meets a lonel y looking woman named
Sylvia (Kate Winslet) and her fO llr boys, one
of whom, named Peter, doesn' t entirely trust
thi!; new man coming into hi s fami ly's life.
Barrie dotes on thi s fami ly, awed by their
innocence and purity that closes his eyes to
everything else in the world, even as Sy lvia
is found to be seriously ill.
His obsession with the boys does border
-on the creepy at times, but Depp's performance never borders on the unbelievable. He
shows Barrie as a man with stars and pixi e
dust in his head , but sane and in control of
his actions. Hi s naivete docs ny in the fa ce
of the practicality of adulthood, but he knew

A GRADUATE DEGREE

what he was doing when, for instance, on
opening night, he left 25 house seats open
and brought in a parade of young orphans to
enjoy the play right alongside the adults , who
no doubt had their eyes opened to the wonder
of the play by the laughter of children.
The film is rated PG and is clean, innocent
and a
iece of entertainment for chi 1-

Pholo bl' ('live ('oole . .llimll/ax h l lll s 2(}{J.J
I\ale Wil;slel with th e kiddies in '"Finding

dren (although they should probably shoul d
sec Peter Pan first). Julie Chri stie as Sylvi a's
disapprov ing mother and Dustin Hoffm an
as the theater 's doom ed and under-financed
producer contri bute great supporting work .
All of thi s is well and good . It's a good film ,
really.
The problem is, to be honest, I found
Finding Neverland a bit borin g. It ju st
didn't have an effect on me. I don 't believe
a film about J.M. Barrie is palatable enough.
There 's nothing really wrong with the film,
I guess, but with so many films coming out
that are worth seeing, recommending it, at
least for me, is just a task from Neverland .
Rating:

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LETTERS AND OPINIONS _ _ _ _c_OO_P_E_R_P_OI_N_T~JO_U_R_NA_L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

COOPER POINT JOURNAL

10 -------------=-==-=JAN.:..:::.:UAR:...:.....=.Y::.:2:..:..7,:!..:.2:..:0=OS:.:.::::-- ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT

Lost in
.Edmonds
By Julian Gerhart
Open cul-de-sacs
wide;
those great mocking
hips.
I'm taking a ride
in my gold Honda ship.

W In turn lanes unknown:
I'll dart and weave
over crests of stone
that crack and heave.
But when
finally I
coast
up to your
door
it 's worth

J

~

"fJ.

~ .•

Submit your comics to a new monthly paper
By Jim Jordan
\

Calling all comics!
I am writing this article to let people
know about a new newspaper that is
going to be showing up in Seattle and its
surrounding regions. Friends of mine that
are living their dream as creative artists
are designing a monthly called Seattle
Co mic Times ! It 's already got enough
strips to run and will release its first issue
February 15 of this year. But as the fellas
that are running it are friend s, I told them
how good some of our CP J comics are,

and they said I could let y'all know about
it if you wanted in. You gotta be on point,
no lined paper with chicken scratch, and
it's gotta be funny. Yes, demented humor
is appropriate, but the art -quality really
does have to shine. They personally have
a bit of a political arc to them, but they are
opening the paper t.o straight-up comedy
in .all forms. I have seen some great comic
stri ps come through here. I would love to
see some Greeners step to the next level.
Think: Your old stuff would be new to
them . You could be sitting on a pile of
material ready for publishing. Really, this

recipe by Taj Schade

is going to have great distribution, and it's
run by some great folks . The website for
it is http://www.seattlecomictimes.com.so
go ahead and check it out. And if you're
a retailer reading this, or know one that
would like to advertise, they are local independent media and they love and need all
the support they can get. So step up if you
got 'em on hand and please don't be afraid
of being denied; that's half the fun ofbeing
a satirist. Be well.
.lim Jordan is a junior/senior enrolled in

Foundations of Performing Arts.

art by Dan Thompson

"-~

ONLY

being lost
a few hours more.

.luliun Gerhart is a ji'('sIIlIlUI7 enrolleu in

Old and New World s.

Play Cupid this Valentines. ••
For a friend,
lover,
or
someone speciaL ..
Up to 30 words
for only $2!

Deadline is
Tuesday,Feb.8
@ 3:00
Come by CAB 316
or call 867 -6054



In

the

CPJ

JANUARY

27, 200S

The People Say "No!"
By Lindsey Brown
The hiphop g roups
the
raged,
speakers
screamed
the truth, the
pigs tri ed and
fai led to stop
our ma rch
and the students spoke to the world . A conservative
estimate says 1,000 students showed up
despite the rain, the workday and school
commitments. Many more were surely not
able to show their support, though their
hearts and minas were with us. Those
at Evergreen who claimed that walkouts
or rallies in Seattle on Inauguration Day
were worth nothing were wrong. How
many people realized the power of speaking up and shouting out the truth of their
realities when we gathered to voice our
ragged discontent? How many who wondered what they could do found an avenue
for outlet through any number of groups
represented that day, from anti-war coalitions to anti-Bush groups to anarchists? It
is impossible to say- the tears streaming
down the faces of those who hadn't heard
of the protest but merely happened upon
our beautiful gathering ~o uld tell yo u more
than my words could.
I went to the "No Business As Usual "
rally at the Westlake Center on Thursday
to represent Evergreen and my fellow students. As we come nea rer to grad uation,
I see a future losing most of it s once-brilliant possibi lities day by day under the
grips of a fascist-funda mentali st reg im e
bent on forcin g th eir holy tcxts into our
everyday lives regardless of our own private religions and beliefs. The result of our
current administration's agenda has been
the murder of civilians, the ripping apart of
families, the torture of inmates under the

11

Nonviolence and Palestine
By Jacob Stanley

Aft e r
reading la st
auspice that the Geneva Conventions are
week's paper,
"quaint," and the threatening of our most
th e concept
basic civil liberties here at home. Most of
of non-violent
us don't even yet rea li ze they are slipping
resistance was
away. Many don ' t react to these crimes
brought to
perpetrated by our government because it
my alteniion
hasn' t affected them yet. In response to
by som eo ne
thi s trend , I hope we rememher the words
who see m s
of the poet out of Nazi Gert11 any, Martin to enjoy repl yi ng to my ideas fr om tim e
Niem6l1er, in his sentimel1ls:
to time. I' m a pacifist by choice, but the
idea of nonvi olence is a di ffere nt concept.
Pac ifism is an opposi tion to military action
or war in general, while nonviol ence is
merely refraining from using violent action
to achieve political objectives.
"Fi rst they came for the Jews
It was suggested that Palestine should
and I did not speak out
use the tactics of Gandhi or Dr. Martin
because I was not a Jew.
Luther King to achieve their ends, but
Then they came for the Communists
the case of the Israel-Palestine conflict is
and I did not speak out
a different matter entirely. Dr. King and
because I was not a Communist.
his followers' tactics were useful because
Then they came for the trade unionists
they were U.S. citizens who had economic
and I did not speak out
power and the right to challenge civi I
because I was not a trade unionist.
rights violations in the Supreme Court.
The Palestinian people have little to no
Then they came for me
economic power over Israel and no legal
and there was no one left
recourse as they are at the mercy of the UN
to speak out for me."
and, subsequently, the U.S.
American citizens can choose to be
pacifists because our country is usually
the aggressor in the world and we don 't
have to fight, at least not yet. Basically, I
The day long events throughout the rally can be a paci li st because no one is trying
were powerful and si neerc- the anger at to kill me personally. Sure, Gandhi had
the world's degradation under our nation's the military agai nst him in India, but he
brutality was given voicc. The people of also had nearl y [Ill of India behind him to
Iraq and Afghani stan will fee l the rever- rcmove Britain's colon i[ll rule. Dr. King
berations and hear the echoes of our pleas had people trying to kill him and many of
for peace and justice, and as we carry the hi s follow ers, but he cou ld appeal to the
weight of their hopes on our shoulders, we Constitution alid gain protection from the
will co ntinue to move toward the beller go vernm ent eventuall y. The Pal est ini an
world that is possible through act ion al1lf people don't have enough strength to resist
solid arit y.
the Israe li arm y or the allies to influencc
Israeli policy. Nonviol ent resista nce mi ght
Lindsey Brown is enrolleu in Work and the garner more empathy for Palestine from
Human Condition and Biogeography: The the rest of the world, sure, but their pride
Fates of Human Societies.
isn't going to let them just be crushed by
a nearing country without a fight.
The difference in culture is a primary
reason why one cannot reasonably suggest that nonviolence is a good way to

resist Israel's aggressions. The people
in the Israel/Palestine region have been
fighting for more than 2,000 years and
certainly aren't going to stop and let the
other side win after all thi s time. The concept of honor in dying for a cause, such as
reclaim ing the Holy Land, far out weighs
the concept of nOllvio lent resistance in the
Middle East. Nonviolence may work some
of the time, but th e resulting casualt ies
wou ld be far too great and the Pal esti nian s
would be destroyed before accompli shing
soc ial change wit h Israel. If they haven ' t
any economic power ove r Israel nor any
judi cial contro l, all nonviolencc wil l get
them is a quick death or a rel oca ti on to
territories along the same Iines as Native
American reservations.
Nonviolence is a useful tool und er
the right circumstances, but eventuall y
the intellectual tactic won't always work
against illogical war tyrants with bi II ions
of dollars protecting them. I oppose war in
all its forms and tend to only support violence when it comes to revolution and radical reform in government, not when done
to achieve personal means that could be
solved in nonviolent ways. When people in
Chile overthrew their government in favor
of a more socialistic state, they couldn 't
do all of it nonviolently and that's to be
understoop, because if there's one thing
the government will never do, it is go
down without using all their wea·pon.,s.
Basically, what I'm trying to say is that
nonviolence work s, but not in eve ry
situation. Malcolm X once explained the
co ncept in a very si mpl e way that I beli eve
S UIll S up the idea well :
"We're non vio lent with peop lc who
are non viol ent with us. But we an: not
non violent with anyo nc who is viul cnt
with us."
Thc Palestinian peop le could be Iloll vioIcnt, and they arc a grea t deal of the lime.
but when Israe l is violcnt with the lll. the
onl y respoll se for such a small grou p of
people is one the Israe li s willunderst;lIld :
to fight fire with fire.
Jacob Stanley is a ji-eshman enrolled in
America in the 20 th Century. He is study ing
American history.

'A Call for Immediate Action!
By Tony Brave
All of you Evergreeners, yo u beautiful, colorful , stoned, rela xe d stude nts
of light: There is a great task that must
be accomplished on our campus. It will
require hard and fast dedication and the
utmost perseverance to accomplish, bllJ
the fruits of your labor shall be plentiful.
If we can do this almighty deed , we shall
be immortalized in the pages of history.
With this accomplishment, a solid foundation for change may be forged and
countless generations to come wi II reverently exclaim with stars in their eyes that
Greeners really kicked ass! What is this
amazing deed that I speak of'? What could
possibly put our souls to rest? It is none
other than making this campus as "Booty
Positive" as possible!
At this (Tloment, you might be asking
yourself, "What in God's name is 'Booty
Positive,' how do I do it and what the
heck does it have to do with any sort of
meaningful change?" That's a good question my loving, poetic, freakish, magically
delicious compatriots! I will explain all of
that for you soon enough, but if you already
know what it is that I am talking about, put
down the paper and get to work!
Let me start off by say ing that all of

you, each and every single one of you,
are all sexy as hell to somebody! And you
deserve to be loved, loved and loved some
more. "Booty Positive" is a very sc ientific
term originated in Lynnwood, WA by the
famous soc iologist Randolph Jackson. It
is used to describe that which facilitates
love in its manifold forms. If place A, for
example, is "Booty Positive," sweet,juicy,
hot, romantic lovin' is something that is
not impossible to attain and in fact encouraged. Place B is "Booty Negative," and
the people of that area, it is obvious, are
unhappy. They walk around like zombies
with desperate looks in their eyes, they
mope when they have to go somewhere
and they spend most of their time hiding
from human interaction. This is something
that we must avoid at all costs, and I am
. sorry to say that for all this desire for great
change on campus, we're doing a barely
par job. This is absolutely unsatisfactory!
So how do you do it? Well it's simple.
Don't let Jear control you. When a hot guy
or gal walks by and you think to yourself
"Damn, what a nice ass!" or "That person
represents all.that is holy in this God-forsaken world," you must go with it. Ask
them out, buy them a flower, write a poem
and send it to them with perfume on it.
Granted, you are going to fail most of the

time, but now you can get over that person
you've wasted so much time and energy on
and move on to someone that actually may
love you back. Success is paved by the failures of the past, or some such cliche-like
wisdom. And if you are the receiver of such
a compliment, whether it is something you
are looking for or not, why don't you congratulate these daring souls for their acts or
bravery? Say "Even though you creep me
out, thanks for saying my eyes look like
goodie goodie gumdrops fallen from the
vending machine of heaven. Keep up the
gooa work. You will find the right person
if you keep on trying . .. I think."
With love's mystique floating about
all through day and throughout the night,
much energy will be saved. Think about
all the phenomenal amount of energy that
is wasted on that person you've had your
eyes on, just thinking about them and
not being able to do anything about it.
Think about when you are doing your
homework- that is, if you aren't in the
Patience program Oust kidding)- and
you just can't get them out of your head,
and their love is an you think about. Your
concentration goes to crap because the first
rule of being a person has been neglected,
the need for love . You would have so much
more energy to use to do your studies if

you already knew that you had a date 'v ith
that person tomorrow night than if you had
never asked them out. If you are ahk to
follow this simple task, sleepl ess ni', hts
will com e to an end, hickey art wi l be
joyfully displayed and all that energy Nill
be left to spread even more love. Thll ~ the
world shall be changed and a new era of
the human race will dawn before our eyes,
lickety-split.
So if I don 't see red, red wine fal ling
from the skies, ladies and gentleman st rutting their stuff and sparks of love setting
this world aflame, I will be thoroughly
and utterly disappointed with all of you .
So get to work on AMBAP (As Much
Booty As Possible) and make the Gods
envious of our Bootyliciousness . I wa nt to
see serenading, parading, all loving bl iss
rampant upon this campus with sugar
on top. Hand-holding, beautiful smiles,
romantic gazes and stylish undulating
shall pervade incessantly and withouf end!
Graduate from fear, humiliate yourselves if
you have to, engorge and ennoble, shine,
my pretties, shine!
P.S. This article does not condon e
sexual harassment in any way, shape or
form. And don 't forget that crack kill s.
Tony Brave is a sophomore enrolled ill

Patience.

12

-------SPORTS

___________________________C~O~O~P~ER~P~OI=N~T~J~OU~R=N~A~L~______________
JANUARY

CALENDAR __________________C......:O_O_P_ER__PO_I_N_T.::...10,:.U.:. . :.R-:.,N. . :. .:A:=.L__________________________

27, 2005

JANUARY

Women's Basketball:
turning the \ Cascade
Collegiate Conference
upside down

7-9 p.m. Common Bread and The
Evergreen Political Center presert
" What about the DRAFT" in Seminar
1I B1107.

favor as they took both ga mes, hom e and
away, last year versus Southern Oregon
They may have taken a spl it last Universi ty. Friday ni ght should prove to
weekend, but with a 5- 1 record for their be a great way to start off th e weekend
last six games and a 6 -5 conference with another win for our side.
record overall, the Evergreen Women 's
Saturday will be a greater c ha ll enge .
8asketball team is settin g it self up to Oregon Tec h ha s developed a great
take the second half of the
program over the past
few year s , dominati ng
2.005 season by storill.
WOMEN
Dominating on defen se,
the Ducks both home and
Next game
Heather Hyde (se nior,
away. They are current ly
Central High School /Tacoma
the con ference leaders in
Friday
Coml11unityCollege), Kam rica
just about every category.
January 28 But with bo th team s
(fres hman ,
A ry-Turner
coming off of a loss from
Decatur High Schoo l) Je nny
5:30
the previ o us weekend -Ol son, (sophomore. Dee r Park
Hi gh School ) and Steph a ni e
Everg re en aga i nst Warner
MacDuff (senior, Lakes Hig h
Paci fi c , and Oregon
Sch ool /Tacoma CO lllmunit y Coll ege) a l:e I nst it ut e of Techno logy aga i nst Eas tern
leadin g the team tow ard success. These Oregon Unive rsity- Saturday's ga rn e wi ll
fo ur Geoduck gal s a rc consistentl y amo ng definitel y be exc iting! Be th e re at 5:30
!he lO p 15 stats ra nk ings in the conle re nct', p.m. w ith your stud ent ID to get in free ,
he lping to make Evn grecnthc co nfe rcnce a nd wa tch the gam e fr om tip o ff to th e
lea de r in steal s , sco ri ng and reho und fi na l bu zzer. Be s ure to stay for the men's
defense.
.
gam e immediately followin g l
The women play at horne thi s weeke nd
vers us the two most ex tl"cme tea ms in th e Aferudith is a senior ClI/TI! I1I/r illll!rlring in
conference. Southern O rego n will be at the /h e IVushinglol1 State Scnate" She still has
CRC at 5:30 p.m. on Frid ay, Janua ry 28, 111'0 II/ ore weeks be/I)re the doc says she
hoping to move up from th eir last-place can s/opjlls/ reporting/i'o/)/ th e sidelin cs
rankin g. Histor y is in the Geoduck s' and start participating ill sp orts aRain.

Friday, January 28
6-9 p.m. Hands On C hildren's
Museum presents a free respite night
and caregiver ed ucat ion program for
family members raising the childre n
of re latives. For more information, call
(360) 9S6-0818.
8 p.m. The Evergreen Queer Alliance
presents the Drag 8all in th e Longhouse. This event will feature a drag
and burlesque troupe out of Portland as
well as student acts. Cost is $3 for students and $4 for no n- stud e nts.

p.m.

Down by as many as 15 in th e early
goi ngs of th e second ha lf last Saturday
ni ght in La Grande, O regon , it had the
makings of a loss for the Gcod ucks. But
determination and s o li d defen s e plu s
good fortune allowed Evergree n to tak e
a victory away from th e Eastern Oregon
Moun tain eers and spl it a pair of games
over the weekend.
The even in g before, the Geoducks
found themselves in the gem state, fresh
otT a 104-71 victory over Cascade, taking
on the 14'h ranked Coyotes of Albertson
Coll ege of Idaho (AC I). AC I hadn ' t lost
a home game al l yea r and conti nued th eir
home dominance with suffocating defense
and hot early offense th ank s in la rge part
to se nior g uard EJ Coste llo who had 16
points in the first half before finishing
wi th a game hi gh 25 . The Coyotes tied
a season high by snatc hin g 17 steals, but
that's what's expec ted when 3 of their 5
starters are in the top 5 in steals in the
conference .
The Geoducks main problem in the

I

3-5 p.m. Procession of the Species
organization and planning meetin g
at Procession Community Art Studio
at Old James Madison"E leme ntary
School, 812 South Central , Downtown
Olympia.
"

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2 p.m. Umoja will be showing Eyes
on the Prize, focusing o n the hi sto ry
of the Black Panther Party. Feel free to
bring munch ies to share.

Thursday, February 3
1:30-3:30 p.m. Day of Presence A nti Oppression Training will be held in the
Library Building. Exact locati o n to be
a nno unced.

Friday, February 4
8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Day of Abse nce
off-campu s potluck will be he ld at the
Lacey Co mmunity Ce nter.

Monday, January 31
7 p.m. Betsy Damon , Evergreen's
Photo by Eva Wong

The Geoduck women j. baskeiball team hard at work at practice.

ea rl y goi ngs was foul trouble as seniors it looked like the same story. Listen to
Walter Tucker, Josh Peterson and streaking these consecutive series of possessions
junior Durriel Jones were forced to sit most for Eve rgreen. Down by 5 at the 19:26
of th e first ha lfwith two fouls ap iece. The mark of the second half, it went like thi s:
quick fouls put ACI in the bonus, which missed shot, turnover, turnover, missed
helped them on a quick 15-2 run to ope n shot, offensive rebound, missed shot,
the game up to 19-9 lead . Eve rgreen went offensive rebound, turnover, turnover. It
into th e locker room down by 15 but gave resulted in a 10-0 run over a 4·m inute span
Geoduck fans hope as they started the and Evergreen finding themselves down by
second ha lf w ith 7 unan15. But the Geoducks act uMEN "
swered point s, a ll scored by
a ll y took the game plan the
senior 8arson Collins to pull
Coyotes had used on them
Next game
within 8. Unfo rtunate ly, the
th e previous night and were
Coyotes were able to regroup
ab le to force a season hi gh 26
Friday
and fend off the s urging
turnovers off Eas tern Oregon
January
28 and
Geoducks before pulling
also co ll ect 11 steals ,
away to a 77-59 victory and
their most s ince their third
7:30
snappi ng Eve rgreen 's mini
game of the season back in
two-game winning streak.
early Novembe'j·.
Coli ins led the w.ay for the team in green
Evergreen slowly closed the gap over
as he scored 20, pulled down 12 rebounds the Mountaineers and fin ally ·tied it up at
and had 4 blocks, lead ing the team in each 56 ap iece with just over two minutes left
of those categories. The onl y other player in the co ntest on a Josh Peterson 3-pointer.
to join him in double figures was freshman The Geoducks as a whole cashed in on
GiovannI' Woods who helped out with 10 eight 3-po inters, six of them coming in the
points.
second ha lf when they made their run . The
The next night a t Eas tern Oregon, game came nown to the last possession

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as Josh Peterson attempted a 3 with three
ticks left on the clock. He misfired but Walt
Tucker collected the .rebound was able to
put it back in withjust I second remaining
giving the Geoducks a 60-S8 lead , their
first lead since the three minute mark of
the first hal f. Eastern Oregon would have
one more chance but Patrick 8risbane's
shot went off the rim as the horn sounded
ending the ga me, which drowned Ollt the
Geoducks heavy sigh of relief. Evergreen
won 60-S8 and were led in scoring by Walt
Tucker with 16 and G iovonne Woods with
15.
T~e split gives the Geoducks a 9-IS
record overall , 4-7 record in conference
play an d sole position in the 7 spot of the
conference. After three weeks on the road,
the Geoducks finally return home this
weekend to avenge losses to Southern
Oregon and Oregon Tech.

Kip Arney is ajunior enrolled in Forensics
and Mystery Writing. He is studying creative writing "

I

I

2005 Danie l J. Evans Chair, will
prese nt a talk titled " Kee pers of the
Waters: A rt, Science, and Citizen Collaboration for Water Quality." Communications Building Recital Hall.

Tuesday, February 1
Noon. Shadia Marhaban will spea k on
the hi story and political strugg les of
Aceh and aid for th e tsunami victims.
Library Lobby.
6:30-8 p.m. FREE. Power parenting. Your kids enjoy the Ch ildren's
Museum while you learn valuable parenting ski lls. The topic is depress ion
in children. For more informati o n, call
(360) 9S6-0818, exte nsi o n 102.
5 p.m. Scholarship applications du e
in the Office of Enro llm ent Services,
Library 1221.

7 p.m. Shadia Marhaban will speak on
the history and politi ca l struggl es of
Aceh and aid 'for the tsunami victims.
Traditions Cafe .

Wednesday, February 2
Noon. SESAME presents Souha Sur-

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Weekly Group Meetings
Monday

,

fUrnJ-eure WOrl<S

NewMoonO

6 p.m. SESAME presents Algeria:
Women at War. Lecture Hall I.

Sunday, January 30

Tucker's Buzzer Beater Salvages Road Trip
By Kip Arney

3 p.m. SESAME presents Ajganistan
Unve iled. Lecture Hall I.

Thursday, January 27

By Meredith Lane

• • • • •

viving Hell, a fi 1m from Lebanon.
Lecture Hall I.

Events this Week

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4 - 6 p.m. The S&A Board m eets in
CA B 31S.
5 p.m. Evergreen Kung Fu meets
in .the Longhouse .
5 p.m. The Cooper Point Journal
m eets in CAB 316. Come participate
in the o rgani zat io n and th e planning
of the newspaper.
6-8 p.m. Racquetball League in
the C RC.
7 p.m . Improvisational Theater,
Seminar II C IIO S.
7:30 a.m. Yoga Club, CRC 116 .
9:30-11 :30 p.m. Late Night at the
CRe. Co me join in late ni g ht ac tivities like 8adminton , Ping-Pong,
8a sketba ll , Volleyball, and 4Square.

Tuesday
4 p.m . Prison Action Committee
meets in CAB 320, Workstation 10.
4 p.m. STAR, Sem in a r 118 2 109.
4 p.m. Racquetball in the CRe.
4:30 p.m. The Evergreen Compost
Club m eet s in the Organic Farm
workroom. For more info, e mail
carjay@ evergreen.edu.
5 p.m. Yoga Club, CRC 117.
5 p.m. Soccer in the Pavilion .
7 p,m. Students for Christ, Sem inar II A2100.

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27, 2005

5 p.m. Gaming Guild, CAB 320.
5 p.m. Evergreen Kung Fu meets
in the Longhouse.
9:30-11:30 p.m. Late Night at
th e CRe. Co me j o in in late-night
ac tiviti es like Badminton, PingPong, Basketball, Volleyball, and
4-Squ are.

Wednesday

13

5 p.m. Evergreen Kung Fu meets
in th e Longhouse.
5 p.m. Dodgeball in the Pavilion .
Come play!
6 p.m. EARN meets to di sc uss
animal r ights in CAB 320.
6 p.m. Men's Cent~r meets in CAB
320 in Workstation 2.
7 p.m. Percussion Club, basement
of th e Library Building. All a re we lcome and drums a re provided l
7 p.m. Geodancc meets o n the f irst
floor of th e Library.
7 p.m. Juggling Club, Se min ar II
81107.
6-8 p.m. Olympia Men's Project meets every seco nd and fou rth
Thursday at UCAN. Fo r m ore info rmation, call (360) 352-2375.
9:30-11 :30 p.m. Late N igh t at
the CRC. Co me join in latc - ni g ht
activ iti es likc 8ad minton , PingPong, Basketball, Volleyball, and
4-Square.

7:30 a.m. Yoga Club, CRC 11 6.
I p.m. Evergreen Queer Alliance,
Sem in ar II C2 107.
I :30 p.m. Envi"onmental Resource
Center, Se min ar II E310S .
I :30 p.m. Radical Catholics mcet
in CAB 320.
I :30 p.m. Native Student Alliance
meets in CAB 320, Workstation 13 .
2 p.m. Evergreen Capitalists
Organization, Library 1308.
2 p.m. VOX - Communities for
Choice, CA B 320, C ubicl e 17. Office
ho urs: Wednesday, 1-2 p.m. , CAB
320, C ubi c le 17.
3 p.m. Jewish Cultural Center,
Friday
Se minar II E2 10S .
3 p.m. CPJ Friday Forum. Come
3 p.m. SEED, Se m i nar II E3 109.
put your eth ics to th e test, learn
3 p.m. Women of Color Coalition,
abo ut journalism, a nd discuss issues
CAB 206.
in journalism a nd gro up dyn a mics.
3 p.m. Writers' Guild, Se min ar II
5 p .m. Electronic Music Collective,
AII07.
Seminar II C2 107.
3:30 p.m. Environmental Alert,
7 p.m. Giant Robot Appreciation
CA 8 320 on the couc hes. Help
Society, Seminar II AlIOS.
defend A ret ic Nat io na I Wi Id Iire
5 p.m. Evergreen Kung Fu meets
Refuge.
in th e Longhouse.
4-6 p.m. The S&A Board meet s in
5 p.m. ASTESC Student Union
CAB 3 15.
meets in CAB 320 .
4 p .m. EPIC, Se min a r II A210S.
4 p.m. CPJ production night .
Sunday
Come participate in putting together
1-3 p.m. Ultimate Frisbee in the
"your student newspaper.
Pavilion.
5 p.m. Evergreen Iri s h Resurgence 3 p.m. Kickball on the field n ex t to
Element meets in CAB 320 , Workthe HCe.
sta tion 4.
5:30 p.m. Yoga C lub, Lecture Hall
5 p.m. Evergreen Kung Fu m eets
, 3.
in the Longhouse.
6:30 p.m. Common Bread , Long6-8 p.m. Racquetball League in
house Ceda r Room .
the CRC
9:30-11:30 p.m . Late Night at
th e C Re. Co me j o in in late-ni g ht
act ivities I.ike Badminton , PingHave a
special
event
Pong, 8asketball , Volleyball , and
planned?
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to
a
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Thursday
4 p.m. Ca rnival , Semina r II DI107.
4 p . m. Women's R eso urce Center,
CA8 3 15. 4 p,m. Racquetball in the C RC .
4 p.m. CPJ paper critique. Co me
voice concerns about the week's
paper.
4 p.m. ASIA meets in the CA8 third
floor conference room.
5 p.m. Yoga Club, C RC 117.

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COMICS----------------------~C~O~OP~E=R~P~O~IN~T~j~O~U~RN~AL~----------________________

COOPER POINT JOURNAL
JANUARY 27, 2005

------------------~~~~~~~---------------COMICS

JANUARY 27, 2005

15 -

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