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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 24, Issue 7 (November 11, 1993)

extracted text
Poetry by



Amand a E ml Iy Ray
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

November 11, 1993

Free speech on campus?
Now that I finally have your attention
I will tell you what I have gone through to get it
For you to sit there, listening
Quiet, no interruptions
I mean none
I have sat through countless lectures and meetings
Have listened to many other's words and experiences
I have read millions of passages
None of which got your attention
I spoke to you
In a voice that was calm and careful
I spoke the truth
Yet, I was patient and diplomatic
I did not want to scare you away
You did not listen to me
You did not care, it didn't concern you
I cried a million tears for myself and my sisters
Calling attention to the hurt
Did you acknowledge the pain
I became more vocal
I expressed my views
I made myself vulnerable
Just so you would listen
So you would hear me
I was practically pleading with you
but you still decided that this wasn't your issue
I became louder and you called me abrasive
You told me to do it your way
I refused because that is not my world
You said you wouldn't listen because
I did not speak without emotion
Once again I tried to speak calmly, with diplomacy
You were too focused on my breasts and my butt
To even hear what I said
You didn't even look at my eyes
How could you possibly hear me
I skipped over you
I went through the "system"
Just to let you know
It failed me
So I resumed speaking my truth

/@

You appear in my dreams at night
You turn into my nightmares
Because you spit in my face and leave me feeling like
I can never be alone again
I know you will try to hurt me
My angry words don't always protect me
All of my work and the only thing you seem
to hear is
The challenge
But you call it "an attack"
If only you had acknowledged what I said earlier
When I spoke in a polite tone
I did this for many years
I spent time carefully explaining
Just so you wouldn't run away
I was trying to get through to you
Only you weren't around
It didn't affect you
My politeness did not grab your attention
It didn't send you reeling inside
Examining who the hell you are
My points were to abstract in your world
You couldn't relate, or so you thought

by Sara Steffens
LastThursday morning, "Bible" Jim
Webber drew a crowd of about 60 students,
mostly hecklers, with his evangelist
preaching.
Webber is from Oregon and preaches
to colleges and univ.ersi ties located along
Interstate 5.
Webber says he chose to visi t
Evergreen last week because hi s conscience
finally got the best of him . An acquaintance
of hi s, Preacher Ray, used to preach at
Evergreen IS years ago and told him how
badly the students here need to be saved.
Here are some of Webber's
comments:
·011 the sexual habil.\· of Greeners:
" You're all a bunch of floozies ... May I see
the hands of the virgins standing here?"
·On maslllrbation: ··Whether you're
. sucking the noodle or whipping the noodle, .
it 's all wrong."
·011 life: "We're all a bunch of
sickies. We're all sick and hurting and we
need to be saved."
·On being kissed by swdenr Pat
CaSlaldo: " I have been a sex symbol all my
life .. I'm a real man, a real Christian man ."

Eventually you experienced pain
And I heard it, I was there for you
Even though you had never been there for me
I listened to you
And what response did I get from you?
It was not support
It was a slap in the face
You turned around and said my words of prevention
Had caused your misfortune
You didn't even focus on who had delivered your pain
It wasn't me
But you focused on me
I still listened to you
I felt for you
Even though I have gone through a lifetime
Trying to explain and
Meeting only your silence
Do you still wonder why I am angry?

....~

by Jeff Axel
loading docks, where the gas eventually
On Friday, Oct. 29, fire trucks and escaped to the outside aunosphere.
Even in small concentrations, chlorine
ambulances responded to a chlorine gas leak
. - emergency-on campus. They congregated gas- is deadly, warranting the con~em of the
outside of the loading dock beneath the CRC individual who shut the system down.
and CAB. Sever.il fire fighters with gas However, chlorine gas is a material with good
masks entered the loading dock while warning properties.
security and the ambulance technicians
The maximum safe limit of chlorine
waited.
gas chlorine gas exposure is .5 ppm, for a 40The leak was reported when an hour five-day week. On average, the chlorine
unnamed individual walked into thecblorine we smell around a pool is up to 500 times less
regulator room and smelled what seemed an than the maximum safe limit
excessive amount of
When chlorine
chlorine gas. The
gas levels rise too
individual proceeded
high, the smell is
to shut down pan of
overpowering,
and it
Chlorine gas
the system and notify
is
immediately
campus security.
obvious thataproblem
-can cause tearing, choking,
Chlorine gas
exists.
coughing, chest pain, vomiting,
is used to chlorinate
Buildings mainanxiety and, in rare cases, death.
the pool in the CRC
tenance
worker
The chlorine is
Adolph Ehresmann
adlninistered by a regulator plUnp that keeps 'estimates that when he finished shutting the
the chlorine level constant.
system down, the concentration of chlorine
The regulator failed because of a tiny was around three .to four ppm, and the gas
I
leak in its diaphragm. The leak was caused itself dispersed after 15 minutes.
Chlorine
gas · in
dangerous
bychlorine build~p on the diaphragm, which .
didn't let the diaphragm close completely.
concentrations, such as five or more ppm, will
The chlorine gas seeped through the result in the burning of the eyes, nasal passage,
opening, bled to the atmosphere and sunk throat and lungs. Overexposure will cause
into an air drain. The drain leads to the tearing in the eyes, running of the nose,



Chemicals and You .

The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505

seepage
C-Page 12 Cooper Point Journal November 4,1993

photos by Seth "Skippy" Long

by Matt Reeves
-1~--<>..
AtlOp.m.on Wednesday,
Nov.3, a woman reported that a
man had exposed himself to her
on the path between the CAB and
the dorms.
She told Public Safety she
first noticed the man near the
Clocktower as she was leaving
the computer center. He ran
ahead, and when she reached the
path, dropped his shorts and
grabbed his penis.
She describes the man as
caucasian, in his early to mid20s, with brown hair, wearing
loose dark shorts, a white T-shirt
and a black waist-length coal.
Sexual
exposure
@ areas where 1993 exposures occurred
incidents have had a long history
at The Evergreen State College, according to catch the suspect, we'll take him through the
Public Safety sergeant Larry Savage. court prosecution process."
Perpetrators are rarely caught and there appear
So far, only two exposers have been
caught and prosecuted. Neither were
to be no easy solutions to the problem.
According to Savage, the biggest Evergreen students.
.
Savage also indicated that awareness
problem security faces in catching offenders ·
is the fact that a 15-20 minute time-lapse of the exposure problem is probably the best
often follows an exposure incident before a defense against sexual harassers, but that
victim can contact security, especially on the activities like Evergreen's Sexual Assault
Evergreen beach trails. By the time an officer Awareness Week may have little effect on
is dispatched to the reported scene of the deterring harassers from outside the
crime, the offender has fled.
Evergreen community. "You can have all the
Apparently, exposure incidents have workshops you want and you're not going to
becn cropping up since Evergreen' sinception stop a pervert from doing what he does," said
in 1969. Usually they follow a warm-weather Savage.
pattern, said Savage. "As soon as you hit that
Deanna Brown and Carrie O'Neill,
first 70 degree day, you'd start getting co-coordinators of the Women's Center, both
exposers ouL" This year, however, has been agree with Savage that awareness is the best
different. The summer months were relatively defense against sexual harassers. Brown
quiet, but two exposures this year have thinks that "mandatory workshops on issues
occurred during cold weather. "Someone is of power and sexual assault" could help raise
trying to throw the pattern off," said Savage. the level of awareness of these problems on
Although Evergreen has no direct campus. "There [are] a lot of colleges who
means of preventing the problem with sexual have mandatory workshops," said Brown.
harassers on the organic farm and beach
She added that she thinks sexual
trails, Savage advocates no change in current exposure is a difficult issue to tackle. "I think
security policy. This includes investigating it would help a lot if the message was out that
reports and sporadically patrolling the trails if you got caught you'd get very seriously
on foot and on bicycle. "We'll continue to do punished," she said.
Matt Reeves is a CPJ staff writer.
the same thing we've done in the past. If we

Chlorine gas leaks into loading dock benea.th CAB, CRC

Author's hate: I have used a general"you" because I want
people to be able to interpret this poem as it is for themselves, in their own lives.

......,.,.........'.-- ...."'"

Campus exposures continue

Address Correction Requested

coughing and choking.
Recently, several faculty began
researching alternative methods of keeping
the pool clean .
They are looking at two systems in
particular, oxygenating and ozonization.
But, because these systems only Icill bacteria,
and do not render some wastes inen,chorine

would still have to be used to treat the
500,000 gallons of water in the pool and
dive well.
Another possibility is purchasing a
chlorine "sniffer" which would alert
maintenance of any problems.
Jeff Axel is a new CPl contributor.

Lowry asks lESe to plan two percent cut
by Sara Steffens
Evergreen administrators will
decide today how they would cut two
percent from the money Evergreen has to
spend this and next year, should the
governor require this cut.
In a memo Wednesday morning,
Gov. Lowry required that almost every
state agency, including TESC, submit by
Monday a plan to cut two percent from its
overall budget. Lowry also asked state
agencies to identify three of their
programs which could be eliminated.
During the second year of each
biennjum-, the governor submiis a
soppletnental budget request to the
legislature. Usually, the governor asks for
more money; this year, he'll be asking for
cuts.
To Evergreen, the two percent
equals almost $750,000, according to

college budget officer Steve Trotter.
Although a comprehensive plan
will not be completed, Evergreen
administrators will know more about the
effects of a two percent cut by Monday,
including whether this cut would mean
eliminating jobs or some academic
activities.
After the Nov . 2 election, President
lane Jervis sai.d she expected some sort of
response from Lowry to 1-601, probably in
the form of overall slate budget cuts.
After Lowry submits the
supplemental budget request Dec . IS ,
legislators will debate his · plan. They
probably will not make final decisions
about cuts to the '93- '95 budget until late
Febru~ .

Sara Steffens is the editor-in-chief
of the CPJ.

Bulk-Rate
U.S. Postage Paid
Olympia, WA 98505
Permit No. 65

News feature

News Briefs

edited by: Evenstar Deane

Week on drug and
alcohol awareness

IT service
on holidays

E VERGR"'EEN-The substance abuse
prevention program is presenting their
annual drug and alcohol awareness week,
from Friday,Nov. 12 ·to Thursday, Nov.
18.
SODA pop will start the week on
Th~sday with a drug and alcohol free
dance in the Edge, on the second floor of
A-dorm. Admission and refreshments will
be provided with no charge.
On Saturday, from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m.,
there will be a film festival featuring four
films in the racquetball courts, with
popcorn provided .
The Addictions Prevention and
Wellness Center will host an open house
on Monday, Nov. IS, from noon to 5 p.m .,
in room 208 of the CRC.
On Tuesday, community volunteers
will share infonnation about addictions
and health issues in the CAB lobby, from
10 a.m. to 3 p .m .
SODA POP will have a booth in the
CAB on Thursday, Nov. 18, to encourage
smokers to take part in the Great
American Smoke-out.

OL YMPIA-Intercity Trensit (IT) will
continue to operate all regular services on
Veteran .' s DaY,Thursday, Nov. 11.
They will,however, provide limited
service on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday,
Nov. 25. Only . th~ custom buses will be
operatirig. The custom bus operates
throughout the Olympia, Lacey and
Tumwater area by reservation. It will pick
up riders at their homes or elsewhere, and
take them to their destination.
To make a reservation for the
cus tom
bus,
call
943-7777
on
Thanksgiving day between 7:30 a .m. and
6 p.m. For more information, contact the
Intercity Transit Customer Service at 7861881.

Safety committee
needs volunteers
8VERGREEN-The Evergreen State
College Safety Committee is looking for
volunteer student members to serve for
one year. Responsibilities of this position
include reviewing accident reports and
training procedures and policies and
making recommendations to correct unsafe
conditions, giving advice and assistance to
the environmental health and safety
officer, and monitoring the process of
correcting unsafe conditions. Past and
present issues addressed by the safety
committee include the safe storage of
chemicals, campus lighting, fumes, safety
training and dogs running loose on
campus.
Interested students should contact
Jude Van Buren at 866-6000 x6612.

WashPIRG to hold
hunger events
EVERGREEN- WashPIRG
will
be
holding a series of events during hunger
and homelessness week, Nov. 15 to 19.
On Nov. IS, a hunger forum will be held
at 7 p.m . in LH 2. A fast will be held in
the CAB on Nov. 16. Also, there will be
a sleep-out on Red Square on Nov. 17,
starting at 7 p.m . For more information,
contact WashPIRG at 866-6000 x6058.

You can have all the workshops you want
but you're not going to stop a pervert from
doing what he does.

-

Public Safety Sergeant Larry Savage

Recycle plastiCS
on December 7
EVERGREEN-WashPIRG and Greg
Wright of the Evergreen Recycling Project
are sponsoring a plastics recycling day on
Dec. 7, in the A-dorm courtyard. Four
different kinds of plastics will be picked
then .
Type 1 plastic has the initials PET
on it, and will usually be found on
beverage containers and soda bottles.
Type 2 plastic is H.D.P.E. Examples
of type 2 are milk jugs, dairy containers,
laundry soap containers and shampoo
bottles.
Type 4, LOPE, includes grocery
store bags , food film wraps and some
garbage bags.
Type 6, P.S ., will be found on foam
coffee cups, plates, bowls and in foam and
clear deli meat trays, and transparent deli
or bakery trays.

Campus groups
want students
EVERGREEN-The following groups on
campus need student representatives to
participate in Evergreen governance
decisions.
The Student Conduct Code DTF
(Disappearing Task Force) is reviewing
the current student conduct code and may
make recommendations for changes in the
current code.
The Student Conduct Code Hearing
Board hears appeals of the grievance
officers findings. It is composed of three
students, one faculty and staff member.
The Presidents Advisory Board,
comprised of students, faculty and staff,
advises President Jervis on many issues.
The Parking Infraction Review

IlsECURITY t BLOTTER II
Monday, November 1
0900: A housing poster was defaced.
1211: Broken glass was found in the
fourth floor of the Library.
1856: An individual turned in a plastic
bag containing a small amount of
marijuana to the security office.
Tuesday, November 2
1133: A stolen vehicle was recovered at
Fireweed and Overhulse Place.
1-221: A man was reported injured after a
fall on the stairs between the Library and
the CAB.
1608: Graffiti was found in the Library
third Ooor men's bathroom.
Wednesday, No\'ember 3
0135: A vehic le was towed from the dorm
loop.
1430: An unleashed dog was reported near
the seminar building.
1541: Theft fFOm a vehicle in C-Iol.
2211: An exposure incident was reported
between the dorms and the CRe.
Thursday, November 4
1705: A man was involved in an explicit
sex ual s ituation with a mannequin dressed
in women's underwear and at least one
sex device on the grassy hill in Red
Square.
1729: A two vehicle accident was reported

on Cooper Point Road, minor injuries
occurred.
2030: Fire alarm in A-dorm.
Friday, November 5
1030: Graffiti found on the second floor
of the Library.
1440: A man fcll from his bicycle,
possible head injuries, on Mud Bay Road.
2106: Fire alarm in U-dorm caused by
burnt food.
Saturday, November 6
0239: A person was reported having a
handgun in the housing area, security
responded and nothing was found.
0645: A broken wheelchair was found
o utside the first floor of the Library.
1318: An .unleashed dog w.as was reported
at the Library.
2129: Two males (,13 and 14 years old)
ran from F-IOl when approached by
security .
2331: Library board room and kitchen
were found to be insecure.
Sunday, November 7
A relatively quiet day at the public safety
officc.
Public Safety completed 36 public
service cal/s, inciUliing (but not limited 10)
unlocks, jumpstarts and escorts.
-compiled by Rebecca Randall

Page 2 Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993

Committee has a paid position open to
review appeals of parking violations.
The
Enrollment Coordinating
Committee deals with issues regarding
recruitment and retention at Evergreen.
There are also proposed groups that
may need student representation at some
future time. For more infonnation about
any of these groups, contact Julie Slone in
the Student Affairs Office at 866-6000
x6296.

Health center
postpones film
EVERGREEN-The Health Center has
again had to postpone the showing of And
the Band Played On, a film which
discusses mv, because of copyright
difficulties.
The Health Center can provide
interested persons with information about
HIV. Thcy also offer HIV testing and
counseling on Wednesday evenings from
5 to 8 p.m. All appointments are
anonymous. There is, however, a $25
charge for the test, due to lab costs.

Open house to
discuss plan
OL YMPIA-A comprehensive plan for
Olympia's future has been updated and the
first draft is available for review and
comment by interested persons.
On Monday, Nov. 15, there will be
an open house to discuss this plan. It will
be held from 6 to 9 p .m., in the General
Administration Building, on the Capital
Campus, Auditorium # 1.
At this open house, persons can
review proposed changes in the plan, and
comment on specific elements, or on the
overall direction of the plan. You can also
meet with city staff and planning
commission members to discuss these
proposed changes and the direction they
set.

Bookstore pulls
fall books
EVERGREEN-The
Bookstore
has
announced that they will be pulling all text
books for fall quarter this week. They will
ship the books out next week, so all
students are advised to buy their remaining
class books this week.

Libraries to close
on Veterans Day
THURSTON
COUNTY - Thc
local
Timberland Regional Libraries will be
closed on Thursday, Nov. II, to observe
Veterans Day. The libraries will reopen on
the days they are usually scheduled.
They would also like to remind
patrons that fragile items such as videos,
talking books, cassettes and compact discs
need to be returned at the circulation desk,
inside the library . If they are put in the
book drop, other heavy material may be
dropped on them, resulting in damage or
destruction.

~\O-\O-~-Y~
A story in the Oct. 28CPJ incorrectly
stated that a Bad Religion concert
occurred at the Capitol Theater.lnfact,
it occurred at the Moore Theater in
Sealtle. This was the "ustalee of the CPJ,
and was not the fault of Jane Laughlin.,
the author.
Ben Burland's story i'l the Oct. 7
CPJ incorrectly stated that the reason
youcanrwt get AIDSfrom a tattoo because
of the heat. You cannot get AIDS by
getting a tattoo if there is no transfer of
blood or other fluids from customer to
customer.
The CPJ regrets these errors,

Enjoy Fresh Organic Produce,
Flowers, Plants,
Crafts, Art, International
Foods, Seafoods and Meat,
Baked Goods, and More!
Christmas Market
Begins Nov. 1st.
401 N. CAPITOL WAY
OPEN SAT.-SUN 10-3
352-g0g6

EETING

of the MINDS

Find your caJJ.ing at a
CPJ story meeting.
Always Monday;
promptly at 4 p.m., CAB 316

Columbia River Indians
and Evergreen
supporters are trying to
stop development on
traditional fishing sites at
Nanainmi Waki 'Uulktt
by Seth "Skippy" Long
On a wind-whipped parcel of land
jutting out a few hundred feet into the oncemighty Coiumbia river sit a half dozen tipi s
filled with memories of ancestors long si nce
past. fi ve hundred years of broken promises
and Margaret Palmer's hopes that her family
will continue to ga ther salmon from
Nanainmi Waki ' Uulkll (Lyle Point).
Since Sept. 27, members of the Native
Student Alliance and other Greeners, Palmer,
her family and their friends have occupied
Lyle Point;just a short wa lk from their house
in Lyle. They intend to prevent further
development of the land by the Columbi a
Gorge Investors limited partnership and to
defend the right to freely practice her religion
as guaranteed by treaty.
" If we leave here. we'll abandon the
site and they' ll say they have the right to take
il. ·' said Klickitat Chief Johnny Johnson.
The occupation is being supported by
the Yakima Nation and other local tribes .
Yakima Tribal Counci lman and Chair of the
Cultural Commission Clifford Moses said,
"We' ll have to stand strong on this issue."
As of Wednesday evening, Margaret
Palmer was sti ll meeting with the Yakima
Tribal Council to discuss legal step s for
blocking the development, Klickitat
Landing. indefinitely.
. For centuries, Indians along the river
have ta ken salmon from the Columbia's
waters as a religious practice. The Creator
blessed these river people with the salmon
as the "tirst food ," with the unuerstanding
that the Indians were to go down to the river
to collect the salmon. Indian s believe that the
salmon gives itself up to them as a gift.
Ceasing to collect the salmon would result
in the destruction of th eir people.

Columbia River gorge. photo by Seth "Skippy" Long

This is precisely what Palmer is trying
to prevent. The su bdivi sion of houses that
Columbia Gorge Investors, as represent ed by
Henry Spencer. want to build will destroy
the land from which Palmer's family is
accustomed to fishing. Additionally, the new
homes would prevent Palmer from using the
river in the manner she is used to.
In late September, fishing scaffolds
belonging to local Native Americans were
torn down by unknown persons. Occupation
of the point began shortly after this, to protect
newly constructed scaffolds and to protest
the desecration of Native American religious
values and beliefs.
Spe nce r plans to build 33 homes on
ihe point with a price tag of a half million
dollars each. as well as constructin g new
private roads to service the homes. All of this
wi ll block the Palmers
from collecting the
. sa lm on in their usual
and
accu slO med
manner.
This is where the
old tFea tie~ come into
play. Palmer says that
an
1855
treat y
guarantees h er Ih e
righ t to collect salmon,
uninhibit ed,
from
traditional spots along
the ri ver for as long as
her people are around.
The U.s. Supreme
Court has previou,ly
Tipis set up on Lyle Point are symbols of Native
supp orted this ri g ht
American soveriegnty struggles. photo by Seth "Skippy"
(United States v.
Long
Winans).

JE % 1F' JE IRS.

]I 1E ~ COJE

KUNDALINI
o

Kund-Unl D. In yogio tra.d1tlons,

spirItual energy that lies dorma.nt
a.t the base of the spine WltU it Is
a.ctlva.ted a.nd oha.nneled upwa.rd. to
the bra.1n to produoe enlightenment.

,

. 4th Ave 5.
Adame In
front 01
Olympic
Outflner.

KUND4LiNi
E$PRE$$O
SHOW YOUR STUDENT 10 HERE AND
RECEIVE' .26 OFF ON YOUR DRINK
THROUGH OCTOBER 31ST.

The occupation of Ly le Point is
unquestionably illegal. According to
Klickitat County. the legal owner of the point
is Spencer. Everyone at the camp is aware
that authorities could have them removed at
any moment.
This threat only adds to the unity and
the intensity of the group's convictions. They
do not intend to budge until their treaty rights
are upheld.
During my brief visit at the camp,
volunteers from Portland arrived to announce
th at a truck load of 300 loaves of bread would
soon arrive to help the protesters get through
the coming winter.
Lyle Point holds two layers of Native
American burial grounds. This land is
considered sacred by river tr ibes. The
Klickitat County Commission. however,
granted Spencer a de s ignati on of "nonsignificance" for this project, allowing him
to forego an environmental impact statement.
Religiou s rights are not the only issues
surrounding th e occupation. Lyl e Point is an
important foraging ·,ite for bald eag les. a
sac red Nutive American symbol and a
protec ted species. The Columbia Gorge
Audobon Society believes that construction
of Kli ckitat Landing will "severely harm·· the
guaranteed rights of the birds. In fact. the
Washington State Department of Wildlife has
recommended protection of 600 to 800 feet
of rive rfront to protect the eagle.
The Palmers and their supporters are
asking the Klickitat County Commission to
hold otT on final approval of the development
until their concerns are adequately handled.
The Palmers request that the ir treaty ri ghts
and their right to freedom of religion be

Supporter and Margaret Palmer hug
during the Treaty Rights Spiritual and
Cultural Gathering this past weekend
on Lyle Point. photo by Mark Adams
acco unt ed for. They also want to ,ee
protection of archaeological site, . c ultural
va lues and local wildlife.
Margaret Palmer de sc ri bed the
Klickitat Landing development dea l ,". ··jll~t
another :Jet of genocide again,t my people .··
Selll ··Skippy·· LOllg is Ih e II/{I//{/gillg
eililOr of 'he Cooper Point Jo urnal.

••.......•......•......................•.......•.........................................

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352-0123

Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993 Page 3

Features

News

At the Corner, staff are ready to weather a,n ot-h er year ,
by Paul Marcontell
The walk-in refrigerator, ironically,
came about because of a shortage of fund s
at Housing , The refrigerator I'm talking
about is the one that 's becn built in the
communit y center for the Corner's use ,
To understand what I'm talking about,
yo u' ll necd to know a lillie bit about thc
Corner.
.
The Corner, aside from being yet
ano the r community scrvice organization
with an eso te ric name (as in " the Edge",
,·the Branch", " the Agency" , TESC. .. ), is
a lso re portedly th e only s tudent-run ,
coll ec ti vel y operated res taurant-like thing
the countr y. Of course, Housing still
owns it; but mostl y they leave it alone.
It wasn't always that way , though.
Legend has it tha t the Corner sprang up
ages ago whe n a ca sh-starv ed student
began se lling cook ies out of a closet in Ado rm. Fro m those humble be ginnings,
it's s ince grown to a lot of cash-starved
students se lling complete meals out of,
essentially, a very large closet in the
Community Center.
The Corner, under its current
co ntract with Housing , is requil":'.:! :~
submit a yearly budget and uphold it. If
the y fall to far below thatligure at the end
of the year, they risk being closed down.
Apparently, this was the state of
affa irs two years ago when the Corner
approached that "point of no return." Yet
the y didn ' t cross it, and the following year
was successful.
Then during last spring quarter, it
was Housing that had a financial favor to
as k of th e Corner. Housing, in a
budgetary crunch of its own, arranged for

the Corner to temporarily pay the salary
of the Housing/Corner liaison; Chuck
McKinney. In return, Housing would use
its capital reserve to add a refrigerator to
the Comer.
.
Ba sically, it was a way for
Hou sing to transfer funds from a surplus
to a defi cit status, while benefiting the
Corner as well.
Aside from having serious
e lectrical problems with the two-week-old
refrigeralOr (what is it with contractors
and electri city?) , the Comer is also faced
with having to cam ten thousand dollars
this year above and be yond th eir us ual
operating ex pcnses.
Thi s is du e to the reduced
a vailabilit y of work- s tudy applicants
whic h the Corner depends on as pan of
their staff (there were five work-study
applications compared to ninety nonwork-study applications).
According to Jennifer Bator, Julie
Havener and James Norwalk, members of
the collective, there's a strong sense of
solidarity among the newly hired
employees and a sense of responsibility.
All are full-time students who work near
minimum wage, and are often unpaid for
overtime. "We can't afford to pay
ourselves more," said Bator.
The Comer has also been trying to
work out a model system with the
Organic Farm, to have the farm provide
most of the Corner's needs. In the
meantime the Corner is very selective
about where they get their food. They
estimate that 60 percent of their food is
organic. The collective also decides
whether to boycott certain products or not;

111

,

Analysis

Students line up to buy food from the student run and funded Comer Cafe. A new
cooler keeps the hot side hot and the cold side cold. photo by Paul Marcontell
right now, they're boycotting Colorado
products (because of the anti-gay laws
there) and corporate farms in third-world
countries.
The Comer only charges as much
[or food as it costs them to make it.
However, with impending cuts in federal
and state funds, they forese'e the
possibility of raising prices in the future.
An additional cost the Comer has
to keep meeting is the replacement of
dishes. They started out with 100 at the
beginning of the year and are now down to
40. They encourage people to donate any

extra plates, knives, forks, spoons or
other dish ware. They also encourage
students to wash dishes for food credits,
between 3 and 3:30 p.m. every day.
Despite the ongQing trials of
running the Corner, longtime members
Havener and Bator asserted that the
collective is intent Qn staying and serving
the Evergreen community. They
mentioned open-mike activities Sundays
at 7 pm as well as urged people to bring
artwork to adorn the Community Center.
Paul Marcontell- watch him pull
a rabbit out of his hat.

National rap-e statistics useful but they don't tell all
by Stacey Shaw
Rape and sexual violation are
topics that are addressed in a myriad of
ways locally and nationally. Most often,
they arc spoken of in strictly statistical
term s. Statistics are good for certain
things ; prese nting an overview, giving
one that "Gee, it could actually happen to
me feeling." The anonymity of statistics
allows one to discuss topics that may
otherwise be uncomfortable. The edge is
taken off the reality of violent crime when
the name of a loved one is unattached.
First, the point must be clear that
crim es of thi s nature most often go
unreported . As quoted from the National
Crim e Victimization Survey , "At the
present time, the best measure is
con side red to be statistics of offenses
known to the police. It has always been
known that there is a great deal of
unreponed crime, however."
The NCVS states that- nearly
two-thirds of all c rimes are never reported
to the police. Estimates based on sample
cases s how that 18 percent of those
s urv e yed I isted their reason for not
reporting the c rime to as a personal or
pri vate ma tter. Thirteen percent thought
the police to be ineffective or biased and
13 pe rce nt did not report the crime
because the offender was unsuccessful.
The NCVS also states that
roughly 56 percent of the female
vic timizations are reported lo the police,

ted Ra

6
compared with 45 percent of the male
victimizations.
These have all been national
percentages, and are too general for the
purpose of talking about Thurston
County. The following are actual numbers
for this county which come to us only
through victims who report crimes to the
local authorities.
The Olympia Police Department
includes date rape , forcible stranger rape,
and acquaintance rape of men, women and
children in the single number given for
each year. These numbers also reflect
those that were reported and convicted_
On record, the Olympia Police Deparunent
found 19 rapes in 1989, 23 in 1990, 29 in
1991, and 28 in 1992.
As of 1991-92, the Olympia
Police Department had jurisdiction over a

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Page 4 Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993

(2061 357-7004

When faculty sexually harass students at Evergreen

community with a population of 35,689
persons,
The Lacey Police Department,
having jurisdiction over a population of
21,290 persons in 1991-92, gave a block
number of 26 adult females and one adult
male as victims of rape between Jan_ 1,
1989 and OcL 22, 1993.
The Tumwater Police Department
had the ' most thorough breakdown of
reported sexual violations. One hundred
and forty-nine cases were reported from
Jan. 1, 1989 through Sept. 30, 1993. Of
those, four cases were unfounded, for a
total of 145 actual crimes. As of 1991-92
the population of the Tumwater
jurisdiction was 10,950.
All numbers except those
specified represent men and women over
the age of 18. Forty-eight forcible rapes
occurred, along with three attempted rapes,

three rapes of children, six incidents of
statutory rape, four cases of incest, 26
people reported being subjected to
indecent liberties (exposure, public
masturbation etc.), and 55 reported other
sex crimes (sex liberties without contact
i.e. solicitation for sexual favors).
Thurston County Sheriffs Office
records do not reflect the same numbers
reported to the individual PQlice
Departments in uie county. When a case
victim is referred to the sheriff's office,
their information goes as well, assuring
numbers are not repeated.
The Safeplace Rape Relief
Women's Shelter was unable to provide
'up-to-date statistics of rapes reported to
them.
Stacey Shaw has no middle
name.

by Lara Shepard,Blue
Sometimes, we get lulled into
believing that academic sexual harassment
isn't a real problem at Evergreen, or that
it's "being dealt with" somehow, by
someone.
Reading the following two cases
may shatter those ideas. Both cases
resulted in "adequate cause" findings by
the Affirmative Action Officers at the time
(Mendoza-de-Sugiyama, in the first case,
and Escobedo, in the second). Both of
the faculty members charged in the
complaints are still teaching at Evergreen.
I can't reveal their names here, but anyone
who wants more complete information can
file a public records request form in
L3103. It's a quick and easy process, and
a good way to exercise "Your Right to
Know." Let's face the reality of what
happens at Evergreen, and decide for
ourselves if it is, in fact, "being dealt
with" in a way that we can live with.
oIn 1989, an Evergreen student
filed a complaint with the Affirmative
Action Officer, claiming that she had been
sexually harassed by a male faculty
member.
She stat.e d that during a meeting
with her faculty, he showed her his new
camera and asked if she would model for
him. She agreed, thinking that they
would stay on the main campus. Instead,
he led her to his car, drove her to a site
near the Organic Farm, and led her t10wn a
path through the woods. The student
began to feel suspicious. When the
faculty said, "You don't feel funny about
laking your clothes off, do you?" she
burst out laughing. "I thought he was
joking," the student reports . "I looked at

his face and saw it was serious; he was
not joking. It was the turning point that
made me realize the validity of my fears."
Although the student returned to
campus physically unharmed, she reported
feeling that her trust had been violated,
and that the faculty's words and actions
had created a hostile environment for her.
oA student's 1991 complaint
against a male faculty member at
Evergreen describes a pattern of sexual
advances and sexual comments.
According to the Affirmative
Action Officer's investigation, "She
describes the sexual advances as:
repeatedly kissing her hands, hugging her,
kissing her face, scheduling meetings at
his house to work on her play and using
that time to discuss his sexual interest in
her, plus attempts to develop a romantic
relationship. "
In the course of the investigation,
other female students came forward and
said that they had experienced similar
behavior by the same faculty member_
Two female students reported dropping
out of the faculty-'S program earlier in the
year because his sexual attention toward
them had made their learning environment
uncomfortable_
Although the students in both
cases stated they believed that the faculty
members should be fired, no strong
sanctions were applied in either case.
In the fIrst case, a letter written to
the faculty by his dean stated, "At the
hearing, you agreed that you would
continue a course of psychological
counseling that you are currently involved
in, that you would be attending a training
session on sexual harassment prevention,
and that this leller and report would be a
part of your portfolio."
In the second case, although the

Affirmative Action Officer recommended
firing the faculty member, the faculty
inquiry committee that heard the appeal
was not "convinced" and decided that no
sanctions should be applied. They gave
almost no specifIc evidence to support
their decision. The student took her case
to the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) of
the Board of Higher Educlltion. Two
years after the sexual harassment allegedly
took place, the case in OCR is still
unresolved.
The bottom line on sexual

by Lael Hall
The Latin American Student
Organization (LASO) has survived its
first trial year and is on the verge of
receiving S&A funding.
According to LASO co-coordinator
Jaime Mendez, the group was created "in
response to a need from the Latin
American community and from those
interested in Latin culture, language, and
politics."
This group is not limited to
members Qf the Latin American
community and part of its purpose is to
"offer the opportunity to all other
cultures, without exception, to expand
knowledge of Latin American culture and
to interact with other people who are
involved or interested," says Mendez.
,
LASO is different from the student
activities group MEChA (Movimiento
Estudantil Chicano de Aztlan) in that
MEChA is a national group geared
specifically toward Mexican Americans_
LASO, on the other hand, is a local, allinclusive group interested in exploring all
of Latin American culture.

The S&A BOard is the student board
that allocates student activities fees (which
are collected with tuition) to the different
student groups each year. The student
aClivities fees already distributed among
the student groups for 1993-94 amount 10
about $893,000.
The members will be trained during
fall and winter quarters SO that they will
be able f.Q decide bow much money each
student group will receive for 1994-95
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , academic year.
For questions or concerns Darice
Johnson, S&A Board coordinator, is
a vailable in CAB 320 or at x6221.
d
Burnie Gipso,! is a CPJ staff
Ra iance of~ers a unique
\.;\ f~ member.

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LASO member Julian Laserna
says the group will be exploring the Latin
American culture in many different ways:
music, art, movies, language, political
discussion, food, dance, folklore, and
history.
Another purpose of the group is to
"drive away stereotypes and fears of Latin
Americans caused by misinformation. We
want to open up new ways of seeing
Lalinos instead of old stereotypes," says
Mendez.
LA SO was founded last year by
Ramin Alabi and Veronica Barrera.
Barrera is now the groups faculty advisor.
Although LASO had no S&A budget, a
few events were organized with "big
success," says Laserna.
Volunteer student activities groups
must complete a trial year with no
funding in order to apply for S&A money.
Meetings will be held every
Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in CAB 320. For
more information call x6464.
Lael Hall is an Evergreen
journalism student.

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New S&A boarct:members,chosen
by Burnie Gipson
On Nov. 8 the six 1993-94 Services
& Activities (S&A) Board members and
three alternates were chosen.
The new full-time members are
Francisca Lopez, Shirley Bailey, Mike
Steenhout, Tiokasin
Veaux,
Dante
Salvatierra and Megan Stapleton; with
Aurthur Dennis, Cassidy Arkin and Jachin
Thomas as alternates.

see harass, page 10

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harassment at Evergreen is this: policies
and grievance procedures, while important,
are just not enough. How can faculty and
administrators justify requiring sexual
harassment prevention trainings only after
a faculty has sexually harassed someone?
The college should be doing everything in
its power to stop sexual harassment from
happening in the flIst place. Yet, when
mandatory training sessions for faculty are
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Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993 Page 5

Columns
Taylor

at~empts

to u·n ravel the 'many mysteri.es of 1-601

ThShellb~~°tet Litle wda~tsimpbele: I ~

't d·· ·
.
it do~s so, ~nd tries to adhere to the Constitution, which states ' that bills
a s... expen lures
Iml e
spendmg hmlts im osed b 601 .
.
by inflation rates and population growth
p
y
, It may
become law after a Simple (50 percent
have to cut other areas of state spendi
I
). .
f
.
'\Od taxes exceeding the limit be subject to
h
' .
ng
p us one rnaJonty vote 0 the LeglSlamre.
' r d 'J
p'
t at are not constitutionally protected,
The provision requiring voter
rc eren Iurn .
. I
h h
l' l I e
such as higher education and social
approval of tax increases also would
t was simp e ·Wenouhg. t at a III e
services, in order to pay for the mandated ' conflict with the provisions of the
ov e r 50 percent 0 f
as mgton voters
costs.
C
"
.
.
.
.
voted for it on Nov . 2. The effects aren't
onsUtutton regardmg ferenda, w~lch
So what you're saying is that
state that
h h"
h
we ll understood " however. Jennifer Jaech
Robert Taylor
E vergreen will get more budget culs.
measures
stat
d'ts
bl' w . IC . support
.
,,(.t e
Jane Jervis's ass istant, described to me a
e an I pu IC mSlJtutions
I.e.
dispute some officers from various state
account which funds construction for
Essentially, that's correct. In
budget and revenue measures), are not
niversities and college s are havI'ng over
addition, the revenue forecast for this
supposed to be referred by the Legislamre
U
for voter ap
aI
elementary and secondary schools, as 'well
biennium is expected to be reduced later
whether this initiative applies to certain
as college construction.
h'
I
prov..
. .
' tl'on I·ncreases.
I
t IS year. or ear y next rear, and legislators
It would reqUire a const.uu
. tlOn.al
types of tUI
t so unds to me like six to eight
are talking about trymg t
'd
I't'
s
neces
sary
to
explal
'
n
0 provi e tax
amendmen.t
to.
place
th.
e
s.e.pr.ovlslons
In
'
nk
I thl
percent in creases in spending would be
relief for small businesses as well.
h C
d
some of what it does, why some of it may
plenty of money. Why would that cause
Th'
t e onstltutlon, a~ 1~IUatlves cannot
be unconstitutional , and what its effects
problems?
IS means budget cuts, possibly
amend the ConstitutIOn. The State
will be on the Eve rgreen communl· Ly .
as soon as December. Based on past
Supreme ' Court may have to decide
The problem is that there are areas
experience, this will mean an immediate
h th th
Does 60 1 lower taxes like it said
of state spending that are increasing faster
h"
weer ese statutory provisions of 601
'n the CPJ last week .?
'
Iflng freeze and a halt in purchasing or
conflict with the Constitution. If it does
I
than s ix to eight percent per biennium
replac'ng eq .
t fi II ed b
ised
No. That would have happened if
that are required to be funded by the state.
I
ulpmen, 0 ow
y a rev
so, those provisions w~ul~ be void, ~ut
Initiative 602 had passed. What 601 does
For instance, health care costs have
budget for the next academic year which
there would sull be a hmlt on. spendmg
is that it limits increases in state spending
might mean less teachers, staff and
that. would hav. e to be dealt With by the
services for students.
L
la
d
been increasing at a rate of 14 percent per
to the combined population growth rate
biennium. Increases I'n grade and hl'gh
Wh at ' s th'IS th at I heard you say
egiS Sture unng keach budget.h"
and inflation. This would be about six to
school population and pension payments
aboUi constitulional issues?
h
0 nobone nows yet w at s gOing
eig ht perce nt pe r biennium (Two-year
also must be provided for as well.
S
f th
to appen, ut we'd better expect the
budget period).
ome 0
e provisions of 601
worst, and mo, re budg.et cuts.
The state of Washington is
may not be consu'tuu'onal
Th
.
at s tTL
about right.
In addition , any tax or fee increase . mandated by its constitution to provide for
The provision making future tax
Robe
d h 1993
between now and July I , 1995, such as an
K- 12 education for all its citizens, and
increases (after 1995) subJ'ect to a two,.
r
ayor covere t e .
increase in state sales tax or a tuition
k
'
legislature and TESC budget deliberatiOns
increase, would need to be approved by
must. eep Its contractual obligations
thirds majority vote of the- Legislature
for the CPJ.
(pensIOn payments, bond obligations). If would seem to contradict the State
vote rs in a general election.
After July I, 1995 , increases in
state taxes and fees must be approved by a
I' I{ 1 :\ C I I' 1 I." "/ S ( ) l :\ I) R I' 1 1 I{ I. \ \ I. \. I I \ . \ 1 " I I \, (,
two-third s vote of each house of the
leg islature, and if it e xceeds the limit
imposed by 601, must also be approved
by the voters in a general election.
Revenues ex.c eeding the limit are
deposited in an emergency fund or an

,

T he

S moe
k
'11 d
Roo m

ro e

we e k I Y
compiled by Sara Steffens
·Jennifer Harbury, activist and
author of Bridge of Courage, will speak at
TESC on Friday, Nov. 12 at 3:30 p.m. She
will talk about her solidarity work with the
struggles of the people in Guatemala. For
more information about this free event,
call the Evergreen Political Information
Center (EPIC) at x5144 .
·The Scisterhood invites all women
interested in or studying science at
Evergreen to attend their weekly meetings,
Wednesdays, I to 2 p.m. in CAB 315.
·Slightly West and SPAZ (StudentProduced Art Zone) are holding an
organizational meeting for the Spring Arts
Festival, Friday, Nov . 12 at 4 p.m. in CAB
320. They are searching for volunteer
coordinators and participants to help
organize this week-long festival of the arts
a t Evergreen. If you ha ve questions, call
x6879 or x641 2.
_ ·SODA POP (Students On Drug
Awareness and Prevention Of Pain) is
holding a dance to beg in " What Turns
You On?," a drug and alcohol awareness
week sponsored by the Counseling Center,
the CRC and Housing. The dance is on
Friday, Nov. 12 at 9 p.m. in 0-108. Bring
music and your dancing shoes.
·T EMPO (The Evergreen Music
Prod~ction Organization) is looking for a
few good men and wome n. TEMPO meets
'T uesda ys at 4 p.rn. in the student activities
a rea of the CAB third floor.
·Umoja is sponsoring a fall food and
cloth ing drive. Donate food , clothes,
blankets and - if you want - money. You
need to tum in all items to the Umoja
office by Nov. 19. For more information ,
call x6781 .
'Memorize the acronyms for all
these student groups. You will be tested
on them next week. Speaking of which,
you can reach the CPJ at x62 13 or in
CAB 316 to submit your Third Floor item.
Sara Steffens is a kick-ass. She rocks
our world.

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993

The many humorous places and ways to p __ blicly vomit
POP
If I could vomit at will I would •••

• Force my roommate to change the
channel when the World Wrestling
Federation took on the American
Bodybuilding Association on The New
Family Feud. (He's seen this episode
twice now.)
.
• Go to Washington and make a
strong political statement all over Bob
Dole's Lie.
• Not need to learn self-defense.
.. Star in The Exorcist IV: Thai
Pesky 0[' Salan Returns.
• Get a job as a McDonald's food
taster.
• Break up the tedium of really
long lectures in class.
• Call in sick to work every other
day.
• Take my date out to an elegant,
e xpensive , high-class resteraunt for a
romantic candlelit dinner. Then when the
bill came I would . .. get the mill for free.
• Avoid talking to annoying
people I run into in the street. (Annoying
person: "Hi there Scot!" Me: "Hi there .. .
BLEEEEEARGHI ")
• Rent myself out to Ozzy
Ozboume tours.
• Clear out the Greenery, so 1 can
have a table to myself.
Attend live tapings of
infomercials. (Annoying TV Show Host:

CUlTURE
WUURE
Scot P. Livingston
"Doesn't that taste just like real
watermelon? And it only took 10 minutes
in the microwave." Me : "Oh yes, it's
really yummy and ... BLEEEEERGH!")
• Put on a colorful costume, hide
my secret identity, and become "Vomit
Man" dealing out my own unique brand
of justice. One day I could adopt a preadolescent male and turn him into "Barf
Boy." Then, after I get sick of punishing
criminals, I could sell my tt:ademark to
Marvel Comics and retire.
• Teach a lesson to those annoying
bus drivers who always demand correct
change.
• Become a voice-over actor for
The Ren & Stimpy Show.
• Re-visit all myoid high school
math teachers.
• Become the darling of the
underground peformance art world.
• Scare away all the door-to-door

Last week I flipped out. I'm trying
not to be too alarmed about it. After all,
that kind of thing happens to college
students, doesn't it? And anything weird
that happens to college students should
happen twice as often at Evergreen, right?
But little is quite as disheartening
as completely wigging Qut over apparently
nothing of consequence. I admit it, I was
conniving, thoughtless, rude, insensitive,
nonlinear, and overall , no fun to' be
around. I went crazy. I felt trapped. I
wanted, as Melville put it, to' step into the
street and begin systematically knocking

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1910 mansion
Sound

9'~
....

~

E. Benjamin CQrnett
the hats from the heads of passersby.
Women have a menstrual cycle.
People (mostly men) tend to use this
biological difference to explain the
occasional emotional outburst seen in
women, We know this was a communist
plot, but it was an effective one.
Alternatively, males have no such
catch-all excuse for temporary insanity.
This is a definite downer for the men.
There's got to be a good excuse for this
bla tant inequality, and I intend to find it.

ESPRESS-O YOURSELF
TInS IS WHERE
PEOPLE ARE PU'ITING .
TOO MANY RETIREMENT DOLLARS.

E

ve ry yea r, a lot of peopl e ma ke a
huge mi sta ke o n th eir taxes. They
d o n't ta ke a d vantage o f tax d efe rra l and
w ind up se nd ing U ncle Sa m money th ey
cou ld be sav ing fo r ret ireme nt .
Fort un a't e ly, th at 's a mista ke yo u can
easi ly avoid w ith T IAA-CR EF S R As.
S RAs not only ease your c urre nt taxb ite, th ey offe r a re ma rkably easy ,way
to build reti re me nt income-es p ecially
for t he "extras" t hat your reg ular pe ns io n
a nd Social Secur ity b e nefits may not
cove r. Because y our contributions a re .
m ad e in before- tax dollars. y ou p ay less
taxes now. A nd si nce all earnings on
your S RA a re tax- deferred as well , th e

IEEDIBID
FOR 'YOUR EVENT?

iOufliSl

~~w Cf)t=t=~~

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CAI3 I3UI L[)I~«7

ALL STYLES OF ORlGIlfAL

IVI'USIC!
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283-3&97

8;

I

war was just a set-up in the game of world
chess. The American male is but a pawn.
We are influenced by a communist
Hollywood into thinking we always have
to be tough. John Wayne, Steve McQueen,
Sylvester Stallone. (Sure, these guys
IlIpped out occasionally, but when they
flipped out they killed people. I don ' t
want to kill people.)
We men are products of our
environment. We are taught to be
sensitive, caring individuals while at the
same time never letting down our
masculine exterior and ruggedness. It's
only natural that we flip out. It's the
emotional equivalent of having Murphy
Brown for a mom and Dan Quayle for a
dad. Why do we treat sexes so differently?
The communists knew all of this.
They planned to strike in about 1995,
when America was in a state of utter
social confusion. That Lenin was a tricky
guy. Vietnam was a trick. We say the U.S.
was working toward a confmement policy,
but really the communists tricked us. They
didn't like us or the Vietnamese.
If the American fighting man
hadn't been so darn confused about his
emotions, perhaps he wouldn't have gone.
We were too busy telling ourselves not to'
act like pansies.
But now communism is a dying
ideology (thanks to George Bush, I'd like
to shake his hand) and males are again
trying to understand themselves. Perhaps
my insanity is good for something. It tells
me that I'm not quite balanced on the scale
of life. Someone ought to tatoo TILT in
big letters across my forehead. No , that
wouldn't cause me any mental problems .. .
E.Ben is having the time of his life
at Evergreen .

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• Do anything I damD..Ylell please.
• Not mind encountering street
mimes . (Annoying Street Mime:
"[nothing]" Me: "BLEEEEEARGH!")
• Have fun, fun, fun, 'til daddy
takes the T-bird away.
• Always let my conscience be my
guide.
• See every new David Lynch film
the day it comes out. Of course I will still
do that even though I can't vomit at
will ... yet.
• Use it when meeting celebrities I
really dislike. (Steven Spielberg: "Hey,
aren't you the guy who can vomit at
will? " Me: "Why, yes I am.
BLEEEEEARGHI")
• Probably have to shave off my
beard. It could get stick and messy.
• Make life-long connections to the
world of organized crime.
• Write a sensitive and in-depth
article about it for the Cooper Point
Journal frequently featuring the word
BLEEEEEARGHI
• Personally thank my younger
brother, Colin Livingston, who inspired
this week's column. I won't say how.
Oh, that wacky Scot Livingston.

~

.:. . .

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Hence the search begins for the answer to
the great Men-Shouldn't-Act-Like-Pansies
Conspiracy.
Like I said, it began with the
communists. Though it is little recorded
in human history, men have habitually
been really big pansies. . Look at Moses,
for example. He didn't like talking in
front of people so he got his brother to do
it for him. Macbeth was an enormous
wimp! ·He was only spurred on by that
she-devil of a wife that pulled him along
by his pink skirt. And speaking of
wearing dresses, what about those Greek
fellows? Socrates, Plato, Aristotle: all a
bunch of over-emotionals trying to
develop a philosophy to stave off their
insecurities< Don Quixote was another
famous screwball. (Sure, he never existed,
but people looked up to him!)
The list goes on and on. These
were men who weren't afraid to shed that
knowing tear. Where did they go? It was
the communists.
You see, brinkmanship, the iron
c urtain, Soviet bloc: these were all part of
the big communist picture. Even the cold

i
. >-

mo ney yo u do n't send to Was hingto n
works even ha rde r for y ou. Dow n t he
road, tha t can ma ke a dram a ti c di ffe re nce
in yo ur qua lity of life.
• Wha t else ma kes SRAs so sp ecial?
A ra nge of a llocat ion choices-from t he
g uaranteed sec urity of T1 AA to th e
di versifi ed in vestme nt accounts o f
C REF's varia bl e a nnuity-al l b ac ked
by th e na tion's numbe r p ne retire ment
syste m.
Why w rite off t he c hance fo r a more
rewarding retire me nt? Call today a nd
learn more a bout how TIAA-C R E F
S RAs can h elp you e njoy ma ny
ha ppy returns.

'-'

Ben reveals the men-should __ Wt-act-like-pansies conspiracy

Visiting parents or family?
We're the perfect place to stay

UNFORTUNATE~

Jehovah's Witness . missi'onaries : -;;
(Annoying Jehovah's Witnesses: "Hi! Do
you belive that Jesus Christ is your
saviour?"
Me:
"Yes
I
do.
BLBEBBEARGH!")
• Make fantastic, surreal,. biodegradable, modem art sculptures.
• Have my own film-rating TV
show, sort of like Siskel & Ebert. (I give
the new Sylvester Stallone comedy a big
BLBEEEEARGH!)
• Follow Rush Limbaugh around
all day and vomit on him every time he
said something stupid, i.e. every time he
opened his mouth. (It's not censorship,
it's just sick.)
• Appear on an Oprah Winfrey
special, "Men who can vomit at will and
the women who've never met them ." Then
I could vomit on Oprah periodically.
• Truly add the aura of an Ancient
Roman Feast to our next family
Thanksgiving supper.
• Shut up those annoying people
who talk through the entire movie and
always end up sitting in front of me.
• Wear easy-to-clean clothing.
• Annoy Hari Krishnas in the
airport. (Annoying Hari Krishna: "Ram
Na Yo Ho Kyo Rah." Me: "Ha-ha! I can
vomit at will. BLEEEEEARGHI")
• Do extremely graphic door-todoor vacuum clearier demonstrations.

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Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993 Page 7

Congress shall make no law respecting an estab lishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press;
or the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
and to petition the government for a redress of grievances

Review of Jesus
Lizard off the mark
CPJ / Rob Davis,
.As for your rev iew of The Jesus Lizard
at the Capito l Theater, you just didn't get it.
did you')
What makes you think that lead singer
David Yow was telling you to jack off? I
think maybe he was talking to people who
al:lUally know and appreciate the music of
The Je sus Lizard. not some fool who thinks
that the song "Boilermaker" is what they're
all about.
Your opinions of Pigstick (who did
play ;] poor show but sound nothing like
Melyins) and Cop Shoot Cop (who are about
as far from original, and as close to
epitomizing the word pretentious as a band
could get). are clear indications that you
know absolutely nothing about the musir.:
yo u claim to love .
Furthermore, if you think the crowd
was out of hand - "lame!" - at the show.
maybe you should stick to the Mods and the
pleasantly non-threatening company of the
Grateful Dead fans therein.
I'm sorry if you weren't capable of
enjoying wh<lt was actually an excellent show
(perhaps you noticed that everyone else there
was having a good time). Maybe you should
have stayed home and listened to something
more your own speed (read: Ph ish. Allman
Brothers. Kenny G. etc.) instead of trying to
make the scene which you obviously haven ' t
the first clue about.
As for the CPJ.I wish I could say that
I W<lS surprised by the incredibly pooreditorial
decision-making that allowed this review to
run. Unfortunately 1 w<lsn't, especially after
reading about the mystical journey of Jane
Laughlin backstage at the Moore during a
Bad Religion show, which took up aJuli page
ina recent seepage and said absol utel y noth ing
about the show itself. As a result of Rob
Davis's article running, I have decided that
he, Andrew Lyons. and Sara Steffens (if not
the entire CPJ staff) all owe me at least one
dollar each to make up for the time I wasted
reading this article, and to pay for the food I
wa$ forced to throw up as a result.
Painfully yours,
Daniel F, Ewing

Writer's dreams
thwarted by the CPJ
Rob Davis.
I'm sorry David Yow's between-song
banter bothered you. If you didn't know he
was a filthy little pervert , you haven't see n
the Lizard before, or read their lyric sheets.
(the best sample of Yow's writing you could
come up with is "Make me a nother
boilermaker?'" Do yo u even know what a
boilermaker is?)
If anything, Yow has toned his act
down. Lucky for your square ass they didn't
play ''Tight -n-Shiny."
I'm sorry you didn't like Pigstick
either. I can't wait to hear your ultra-originalsounding band, considering the fact that it
escaped your keen observation that CopShoot-Cop is lIot an original sounding band.
but in fact a Foetus poseur band. who makes
a lot of cash. Probably because of guys like
yo u. Maybe yo u should try masturbating.
CPJ. Thanks for not printing my
interview with the Jesus Lizard. Now no one
knows anything new abo ut them except that
Rob was disappointed. If the person
re sponsible for headlines had read my articl e.
they would have known that there is a "the"
before the'ir name.
Shame on you.
Matt Rudy
Editor's liOTe: Melli Rudy's piece was lIot
printed because il came in after deadline .
The CP J /'Outiirely omits Ih e H'ord " Ih e" ill
headlines as a space sal'er. - Andy Lyons.
A&E ediror

Reader awed by CPJ
Forum/Response
It·s not very often that I read the CPJ.
but I found a copy on my living room table

this week and was amazed by the Response
and Forum pages. It was like reading chalk in
Red Square (without 1/3). There is'a general
message: "The world isn't perfect damn it,
but we're trying." Good luck, 1 say.
I wou ld like to offer something to
think about. Pay illlention to your goals.
Jennifer Fiore wants to "fight all oppression."
Does this inc lude forming alliances with
non-violent white supremacists who feel
oppressed by perceived benefits given to
people of color? Oppression is a state of mind.
Also. what exact ly is paranoid? Some
people posted flyers asking, "Are we speaking
our minds or are we speaking PC?" Oliver
Moffat doesn ' t care for this "paranoid
rhetoric."
I wonder how much thought Oliver
put into it. Maybe this "paranoid rhetoric" is
a way of "subverting our assumptions about
the world."
It is possible that someone read that
flyer and realized their PC ethics were an
inadequate way offitling into a world where
they feel uncomfortable and that the PC
mindset actually went against their true
beliefs. Some people might think that political
correctness is a paranoid expression invented
by people who are easily offended by nearly
everything. I suppose everybody is paranoid.
Some more than others.
I'm sorry that Deanna Brown and
Carrie O'Neill had a low turnout rate at their
Awareness week events. By the way, who
are you "furious" at? Are you angry that
people are getting sick of hearing the same
thing over and over again. Does it bother you
that your unyielding efforts may be
desensitizing people?
We try to change everything
nowadays. However. our problem is change.
It's good in small doses but we have too
much of it.
Oppression fighters may have good
intentions, yet they are tryi ng to change val ues
that have held strong for thousands of years.
You're mistaken if you think you can get
much accomplished in a few generations.
Maybe your great -great -greeat-great -greatgrandchildren will have a better life, but I
suspect it will be the result of people who see
your folly. Why don't you change yourtactics
now and save a couple generations?
I see too many people who want to be
happy. They can't accept what my mother
told me when I complained about my brother
sitting in the front seat of the car two times in
a row. She said, "Life isn't always fair. " I'm
glad I was taught that at a young age.
I think that people used to understand
that life sucks - that's why they invented
heaven. Heaven is fading now that god is on
his last leg. People don't need him (or her)
anymore because we can now achieve
perfection here on earth. Someday people
won't .get sick or hurt and we can all live
happily ever after.
Please kill me if I live to this day
because life will be too boring to bear.
Mark Wright, a prolld middle-class while
male

Ladybug infestation
welcome, 10 some
Fezdak, and anyone else interested in
(or at leas t amused by) the ladybugs in the
clock tower, may be interested in (or at least
amused by) the ladybug si tuation in housing.
Now. we'reall familiarwith hou sing' s
strict policies where pets are concerned. but
I would g uess that there are now more pets in
housing than at any other time last year, by
several orders of magnitude. I have rougly 26
myself. I recently harbored 43 or more, but
many of them moved on during a brief period
of nice weather.
Ladybugs make nice pets; they don't
appear to need to eat or excrete much of
anything, they make very little noi se, and
they don't get into fights outside of the
community center. The only drawbacks I see
are the extreme patience required to attach a
collar, and the amount of training they require
before they will come when called.
What will Housing's response be
when they read this letter? Will I (and
count less others) be evicted for the flagrant

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993

Forum

Response
violation of the long-standing pet policy?
Will everyone harboring a ladybug ·dozen or
three be charged with fumigation?
Or, is jt true that Housing actually
bought severaJ thousand of these nice little
companions in hopes of soothing the growing
resentment of their large ly ignored pet
policies?
Nate Waddoups
P. S. I'm sure, Jessica Merrifield
Schemm, that you intended to speak of
"linguistic lawlessness," and not the
grammatically ill-formed "language
law lessness," in your postscript to the
grammarians last week.
P.P.S Reward: 17 Lost bugs. Small
(pea-sized), red with black spots, white nose,
six legs . They all answer to "Spot." Please
return to building E, apartment 208. No
questions asked.

Women's center
bleeds for Zipeto
Re: Malhew Zipeto 's response leiter
You are so oppressed. We women of
The Evergreen State College feel so bad for
you. What a terrible thing to have to face: one
image that made you feel anxious, attacked,
dare we say even unsafe? How horrible .
This sexist act of vigilante
"revolutionary" feminist terrorism is
deplorable. We feel extreme pity notonly for
your sake, but for the sake of every man on
this campus who might have fleeting images
of this grotesque assault flash through their
heads late at night while walking home alone
and before sleep in empty houses . We are so
upset thinking about your safety in the future.
and how this might cause reccurring
nightmares for you.
We have decided to abandon the
women's center and donate the space to the
men on this campus. After this senseless act
of what you oh. so appropriately termed
"sexual assault" by yet another radical
woman. it has become undeniably apparent
that you obviously face a larger threat of
violence then us se lfish womenfolk.
You were right in ignoring the first
picture (of a Ken doll raping Barbie) because
it really is insignifica nt to the real problemthat women are attacking and oppressing
men. It's time we recognized that being
attacked, raped, murdered, exploited,
objectified. and otherwise terrorized in no
way compares to the hideous experience that
traumatized you and all other men on campus
last week.
In other words, we're real sorry you
had to face such a traumatizing image and
hope that you feel listened to. We hope that
you believe we will now donate all our spare
time to ridding the world of such vile, horrible
acts.
We commend you for making a
statement at this darn politically correct school
where a man can't open his mouth, speak his
mind, beat his wife, and take his rightful
place in society - at the head.
We suggest that you join forces with
Nicolas Coley to create a more effective
attack on feminism, and those darn radical
feminists.
Our hearts bleed for you,
Kris Babb
Lake Lloyd
Deanna Brown

PC-bashing went
.out with Hypercolor
To the people who are putting up the anti-PC
flyers,
Thanks for being redundant. PC
bashiflg went out in 1991 along with Hypercolor. Your capacity ' for original thought
amazes me. Maybe you're just being retro
and \' m too geeky to tell. Your concept of PC
fascism is so unique I doubt anyone would of
thought of it in a million years. Your bright
new ideas of oppression are so interesting it
has filled my seminar with topics of discussion
for the next eight quarters.
In fact I heard they were making a
new Masters program called, "Masters in
PC-Jokes." A dozen of my closest white-

malt: friends are trying to find out who you
really are so they can worship you. 1 should
tell them they canfind you in the CPJ arch ives
looking at all the issues from 1990 trying to
find new ideas to inundate the campus, again.
Seriously now. Get with the cutting
edge. Geekism is where it's at. A complete
destruction of cool. A melding of ideas of
power obliteration and cheez whiz. It's
kerokerokeroppi on a stick. It's rubber
slippers, the shoe of the oppressed nations.
It's not flyers. it's street theater. It's the
celebration of vulnerability, insecurity and
cowardice with the purpose of furthering
issues of social justice. It's putting "kick me"
signs on bad people 1ike the perverted flasher
when we find him. It's terrorism and thievery
at kegers. And it's the abhorrence of sexism.
racism, classism and homophobia with the
love of things funny, sassy , silly and cute.
Your friend,
Dante" Lakefair King" Salvatierra
P.S. To the person who didn ' t like the
"Dead Men Don't Rape" art piece in the
CAB display case because it made you scared:
That whole thing was so May 1993. Don't be
surprised to find a big "Kick Me I Don't
Understand the Planet" s Human Power
Structures" sign on your back, hee hee.

Photographer
responds to critic
Dead men don't rape. Why are so
many men so threatened by a statement
against rape? Why do men seek sanction for
the institution of rape? Why must so much
time be spent fighting feminism instead of
fighting rape?
In keeping with traditions of sexist
patriarchy, Matthew Zipeto (in his re sponse
letter, CPJ Nov. 4) avoids dealing with the
issue of womyn being raped. He has taken
not only my images, but the entire Sexual
Assault Awareness Week, out of context and
used them as a forum for male paranoia.
"It is a poisonous exposition which
destroys the vitals of the text."
Matthew Zipeto describes my photo
of "a man lying bound and gagged on his
stomach by two vigilante women" as
"aggravated assault" and "sexual
harassment." He states that my photo is an
attack against every man on this campus.
Matthew fails to mention the
preceding photo which shows said ma n
(actually a Ken doll) raping a womyn (a
Barbie doll) who is gagged and bound while
Ken holds a knife to her throat. This photo
establishes that Ken is a rapist and the
following photo represents Barbie and her
girlfriend killing the attacker. The photos are
a very clear attack on rape. They are an attack
against rapists. •
Matthew, is every man on.thi s campus
a rapist? Do you feel threatened by images
because of your own fears about yoursel f and
your attitudes toward womyn?
Matthew Zipeto is deeply offended
by images of womyn that are empowered to
fight back against female oppression, but an
image of a womyn being raped and violently
assaulted fails to elicit any response from
him. Butthen again, her skirt was pretty short
so she probably asked for it, huh, Matthew?
These photos are my reaction to my
experience, which Matthew has attempted to
undermine in his response. If you feel
threatened by these images, then they are
aimed at you.
Andrea Stoops

Women .pro),ide pig
L~tin for Zipeto
Fuck all these stupid reactionary men
on this campus (see Matthew D. Zipeto CPJ
Nov. 4). We think Evergreen should be an
all-women sc hooL To get ridofmen seems to
be the only way for us to have an intelligent,
open discussion of feminist politics.
EADDAY ENMAY ONTDAY APERAY,

Matthew.
If you feel terrorized by strong women,
maybe you should go home and hide .
Camilla Eckersley
Kristin Long

Constitution of the State of Washington
Article I § 5 FREEDOM OF SPEECH.
Every person may freely speak, write and publish on all
subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that nght

A letter to the Evergreen Community from lESC administration
In the past few days, a number of
hateful messages have been written on signs,
on bathroom mirrors, on walls and on
doorways across campus. Individuals as well
as groups, including men, women, and
African Americans, have been targeted.
Among the most pernicious acts have been
the posting of a racist message on an
individual's door, the defacement of a sign
associated with the sexual assault survivors'
tree and death threats directed to particular
groups. These actions are not acceptable.
They threaten and attempt to si lence members
of our community. In addition, staff who
clean graffiti can be exposed to potentially
dangerous chemicals, as can individuals who
come in contact with recently cleaned areas.
Fundamental to Evergreen is our belief
that all of us should develop our own voices,
• own our beliefs and act courageously on our

We should develop our
own voices, own our
beliefs and act on our
tconvlc Ions.

A call to action by Jeremiah Bennett
Are you frustrated by housing band or
, pet policies? Or dismayed that rents are
skyrocketing more every year?
.
Do you feel like we need to figure out
how to guarantee our safety on our campus,
and have a strong say in how our campus
security force op~rates. Do you wonder if we

it's time to begin

can have a say in what classes we can choose
from, or in tough budgetary decisions?

WE CAN!
We, the students of Evergreen .
currently have no government to represent
Decisions are made for us by
us.
administrators and trustees who may not
even have any way of knowing what is really

Violators need to be understood
by Luke Turner
I want to thank you, Ray Goforth, for
your public letter to the Evergreen community
(on a wall in A-dorm).
I truly admire the openness, insight,
and deep concern for humanity expressed in
your letter. Though I suspect I-might bicker
with you over some details about socialism,
[ found the piece as a whole a very refreshing
change from the usual anger-venting, "touch
me and die" stance prevalent around here.
I regard your letter as a very definite
step in the right direction, a badly needed
addition to our social climate, and wholly
commend you for it. (Arid. please consider
su bmitting that letter to either the CPJ or the
E\'ergreen Free Press. )
. To Evergreen as a whole, I want tosay
that I also support the anger-venting, "touch
me and die" stance. Boundaries must be set.
I merely think we should add Ray's attitude
to the social climate.
So yes, be angry with those who violate

us. but now let's also begin to listen to them
with compassion. Our violators are people
too, who are likely being violated themselves
in ways neitherwenor they yet understand or
appreciate, When dissolving the "us against
them" stance, always begin by respecting the
ways in which "they" might feel violated.
Only then will they feel safe enough to reach
out and respect our feelings of violation.
This strategy especially applies in
cases where those who violate us do sO
because they are unknowingly venting the
stress of having been violated themselves.
The burden is on those who do know
how they were violated to sympathetically
educate them, to lovingly make them see
their own pain and how they vent it on us .
This may be hard to do when we are also
angry at them, but the alternative is only
escalated tensions and their continued
violations,
Luke Turner is a member oj the
Evergreen community.

Cooper Point Journal
VOLUNTEER
Comics Page Editor: Emi J. Kilburg
seepage Editor: Chris Wolfe ·man
News Briefs : Evenstar Deane
Security Btotter: Rebecca Randall
Graphic Arts Director: Chris "Timber" Wolfe
Layout Gurus:Stacey Shaw, Paut Marcontell
Storyteller: Daniel r. Ewing
Catendar Compiler: Molly Zuckerman
Cat Burglar: Pal Castaldo

EDITOltIAL-866-6000 x6213
Editor·in-Chief: Sara Steffens
Managing Editor: Seth "Skippy" Long
Layout Editor: Naomi lshisaka
Arts&Entertainment Editor: Rev . Andrew F. Lyons
Pholo Editor: Ned Whiteaker
Copy Editorrrypist: Lauret Rosen

BtlSINESS-866-6000 x60S4
Business Manager: Julie Crossland
Assistant Business Manager: Graham White
Ad,Sales: Ryan Hollander
A'd Layout: Bill Sweeney. Guido Blat
Ad Proofer: Rebecca Randall
Circutation Manager: Melanie Strong
Distribution: Emi J. Kilburg
.

ADVISOR
. Dianne Conrad
The User's Guide
The Cooper Point JOl/mal exists tofacilitale
communication of events, ideas, movement s, and
incidents aff.:cting The Evergreen State College and
surrounding communities. To portray accurately
our community, the paper strives to publish material
from anyone willing to work with us, The graphics
and articles pubtished in the Cooper Point JOl/mal
are the opinion of the author or artist and do not
necessarily reflect the opinions of our stnff.
Submissions deadline is Monday noon,
We will try to publish material submilled Ihe
following Thursday . However, space and editing
constraints may detay publication . Submission

the exchange of opinions and voicing of
deeply felt concerns. We welcome the
creation of more opportunities for exchange
and urge acti ve partici pation in such acti vities.
.Individuals who may have
information or knowledge about the recent
acts of vandalism should contact Public Safety
at x6140. Hateful graffiti has no place at
Evergreen. We encourage other members of
our commun ity to speak out against these
destructi ve acts.
Sincerely,
Art Costantino, Vice President for Student
Affairs
Jane Jervis, President
Russ Lidman, Provost
Les Puree, Executive Vice President

convictions. Anonymous acts in the form of
The Evergreen Social Contract states,
threatening statements are particularly HAsan institution Evergreenhastheobligation
troubli ng to us. Anonymity of this type to provide an open forum for the members of
separates people from their convictions and its community to present and to debate publ ic
sows distrust and fear in the community,
issues, to considerthe problems of the college
On Nov. 3, a ---------------------------------- and to serve as a
display in the CAB
mechanism
of
invited reactions to
wid e s pre a d
the defacement of a
involvementinthelife
of
the
larger
sign which was part
of the survivors' tree,
community."Racism,
Many
of
the
sexism,
and
individuals
who
homophobia
are
critical topics for
wrote
[.eactions
signed messages . Signed responses to the consideration. The strong feelings associated
defacements are a powerful statement of with people who have been oppressed are
community opposition to these anonymous especially understandable and should be given
and threatening acts. We applaud the courage expression. The recently comp leted
and conviction of those who are willing to community awareness week and display in
the CAB provided constructive forums for
own their beliefs.

deadline for Comics and Catendar item s is Friday at
noon.
All submissions arc subject to editing. Editing
witl attempt to clarify material. not change its
meaning . If possible we will consult. the writer about
substantive changers. Editing will also modify
submissions to fit within the paramelers of the
Cooper PoilU JUlIrnol style guide. The styte guide is
availabte at th e CPJ office.
We strongty encourage writers to be brief.
Submissions over one page si ngle-spaced may be
edited in order to equally distribute room to all
authors. Forum pieces should be limited to 600
words; response pieces should be limited to 45 0
words.
Written submissions should be produced in
WordPerfect and may be brought to th e CPJ on IBM
or Macintosh-formatted disks. Disk s should include
a printout. the submi ssion fite name. the author's
name, phone number and address. We have disks
availab le for those w~o need them . Disks can be
picked up aftcr publication.
Everyone is invited 10 allend CPJ weekty .
meetings; meetings arc held Mondays and Thursdays
at 4 p.m. in CAB 31G.

If yo u have any questions, please drop by
CAB 3 t 6 or call 866-6000 x6213 .
The CPJ publishes weekly throughout the
academic year. Subscriplionsare S17 (third class)
and S30 (first dass). Subscriptions are valid for
one calendar year, Send payment with mailing
address to the CPJ, Attn: Julie Crossland,
Advertisjne
For information, rates OriO place display and
classified advenisements. contact 866·6000 x6054 .
Deadlines arc 3 p.m. Fridays to reserve disp tay
space for the coming issue and 5 p.m. Mondays to
submit a classified ad.

© Cooper Point Journal t 993

stud~nt

governance

important to us.
Now, more than ever, a strong, activist
government is needed to enable us empower
ourselves.
This government can give us a
communal voice in our own affairs. We can,
together, monitor the decisions other people
try to make forus, and together we can decide ·
if these decisions are in our best interest. We
can have a unified voice that provides a
network amongst campus groups, and among
us as individuals.
Right now 100 percent of the money
that pays for housing, we pay, as part of our
tuition to support our campus groups. But
we together have no avenue for making our
decisions collectively. THIS CAN CHANGE!

1 am working on forming a
democratically elected, acti vist Student
Government. This government will seek the
input of every student. Through "town
meetings," forumsandelections, we can take
control of oureducation, our campus housing,
our safety and all issues that effect us.
You can work with me to bring this
about by attending government planning
meetings Wednesdays at 5:30 p.m. on the
third floor of the CAB, or by getting involved
in any way you can. There will be signs and
notes as we become more organized, and all
are invited to take part inth.i sexciting process I
leremiah Bennell is a concemed
El'ergreen student.

Greeners urged to set down the pack
during the Great American Smokeout
by Nate Waddoups
The Great American Smokeout, an
event started by the American Cancer Society,
will be held on Nov. 18, coinciding with the
last day of drug and alcohol awareness week.
The student organization SODA POP
(Students On Drug Awareness and Prevention
Of Pain), will be coordinating related activities
here at Evergreen,
According to SODA POP coordinator
Krista Eickmann, the goal of the smokeout is
to·get smokers to quit smoking for 24 hours.
thus encouraging them to quit for another 24
hours, and so on.
SODA POP is ready with pamphlets
titled "How to stay quit over the holidays,"
aimed directly at smokers that take part in the
smokeout and wish to hold back from their
habit over the coming days .

SODA POP will have a space in the
CAB to draw attention totheevent. Pamphlets
will be distributed, a smokeout "contract"
will be available for participants to formalize
their partiCipation in the event,
SODA POP will refer smokers to counseling
or other services if they wish. and a health
professional will be avai lable to answer
questions.
Some facts on smoking:
• The U.S. Department of Health, Education
and Wei fare reported smoki ng as "The largest
cause of preventable death in America
• The 1982 Surgeon General's Report states
that "Cigarette smoking is the major single
cause of cancer mortality in the U.S."
Nate would like 10 add "and people
Ihal smoke usually reek, " but that lVouldll 'I
be appropriate.

A letter from the editors of the CPJ
Why does the CPJ publish things that
are hurtful and offensive?
We believe that the mission of this
newspaper is to serve as a mirror for the
Evergreen community. To this end, we have
set aside certai n sections of the paper to serve
as open forums: Forum, Response, A&E and
'the Comics page.
In these sections, we print submissions
regardless of whether we agree with them.
The CPJ does not endorse contributor's
opinions or ideas.
We intend these section s to become a
place for the community to debate ideas, and
subsequently accept or reject them.
If Evergreen is to become a
community, we cannot expect one or two
people to shield us from offense. Rather, as a
community, we must teach one another and
learn to respect one another.
There is no resolution without struggle.
By debating unpopular or offensive
viewpoillts, we learn to set slandards together.
We also believe that each of us must
own her or his words. The Cooper Point
JOLlrnal will not print anonymous
submissions, or submissions attributed to a
pseudonym.
We hope that you will use our Forum

pages to present your ideas and opinions and
our Response section to respond to the ideas
you see in this paper and around campus.
Forum articles must be less than 600
words; response letters must be less than 450
words. Please bring your article to the CP1
office (CAB 316) on disk, in WordPerfect
for IB M or Mac intosh. The deadl ine for these
articles is Monday noon.
To submit an A&E article. you must
also bring your disk to the office by Monday
noon. You may wish to call Andy Lyons, the
A&E editor, before submitting an article.
To submit io the Comics page. stop by
the CPJ office for submission s guidelines.
Columnists are chosen at the
beginning of each quarter. Applications are
available at the CPJ office. Once a columnist
is chosen, herlhiscolumn becomt!s a personal
forum ,
To submit art . photos or poetry to the
See-Page, stop by the CPJ office. The SeePage editor reserves the right to not print
anything he deems gratuitously hurtful.
If you have questions, concerns or
comments about the CPJ, please call us at
x6213 or come to our office.
Sara Steffens, editor-in-chief
Seth Long, managing editor

Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993 Page 9

f

Response
'Offensive' photos
'not re'a l problem
In the Nov, 4CPJ ,Matthew D, Zipeto
claims that a photograph displayed during
sexual assault awareness week was terroristic,
deeply offensive and "assaulted", every man
on this campus" because the photograph
depicts "the murderof a man lying bound and
gagged", by", vigilante women, "
I would like to point out that the
photograph by Andrea Stoops was of Barbie
and Ken doll s (and people say "PC fascists"
haven't got a sense of humor), I resent be ing
spoken for. Mr. Zipeto, I was not assa ulted
by the work although I thought the d isp lay
was challenging and confrontational; sometimes art is n' t easy and pretty,
Zipeto also suggests that the display
may be illegal because it was a "hate crime"
and inci tes vigilante violence. The ri ght wing
uses this half-assed legal argument to justify
ce nsorship and I fee l more threatened by its
impli cations than any work of art I' ve ever
see n.
Z ip eto a lso warn s against the
bu rgeo n ing revolutionary Feminist
movement and call s on the admi ni stration
and students to"" ,beware of those using this
fight as camouOage for their ow n agendas ,
T hey are dangerous and not to be trusted,"
This is another example of that annoying,
paranoid-style rhetoric so popular on this
campus and aro und the nation,
I would like to re mind men that our
civi l liberties are not in jeopardy and that we
can onl y benefit fro m the work of feminists.
Oliver MotTat

Controversy needed
to end apathy
I'd like to respond to Matthew Zipeto' s
response piece (Response, Nov. 4) with a bi g
"thank you." Thank you for unknow in gly
being the first male on campus this year to
bring the latent mi sogyny so prevalent on
this campus to the surface,
I mean, you are obviously a little
confused if you think that o ne woman " has
assaulted, .. every man on this campus" with
her art work. Remember when Do the Right
Thing came out and the news and movie guys
said it wo uld cause the inner cities to erupt
into riots ~ Sound fa miliar? It kinda reminds
us how threatening the power of suggest ion
really is .. ,
I am a male on thi s campus and despite
what you clai m abo ut "every man," I don't
feel offended or "assaulted" by Andrea 's
show. I see it as a tool for empowerment, an
attempt toward phys ical and e mot io na l
healing in a soc iety th at teaches, practices,
and condones violence against women as a
matter of course.
Let's face it. Matthew, it 's real easy
for you to build up a vieious straw-woman,
put yo urselfin the role of the vic tim , and then
get mad when nobody' s doing anyt hing to
sa\({! you,
But look at reality: Men probably
don't have to carry mace and a whistle as a
normal precaution in your everyday life .
Men usually don't have to thin k about who's
go ing to accompany you when you walk
outside at night. Men rarely have to swa ll ow
the frustration and anger when no one will
listen to or believe them. And most men
never ·hear the storie s of women all aro und
them who are touched, grabbed, fo llowed,
chased, hit , stared at , stalked. exposed to.
verball y harassed, etc, (ad nauseam) every
day,
Then agai.n. most men don ' t want to
hear from people who tet! those stories,
.
To t.hem. like you, Matthew, they're
just I I hunch of whiny , uppity females who
want to push ','their own agendas." right ')
Well, -wben so many of my woman
friends ate constantly su bjec ted to and
affected by the types of harassment that J've
listed above, then ending violence against
women becomes a priority forme, You can't
tell me that a few photos in the CAB
permanently affect you or any other man.
Matthew, I hope you work to make
this soc iety safer for women and support
thei r efforts to express the complex issues we
all face . But if you won't , at lea st make space
for the stories and rage to come forth .

Otherwise, you only hinderthe efforts
that groups like the Women's Center and the
Rape Response Coalition are working so
hard on, as well as perpetuate the stereotype
that men don ' t care about issues of sexual'
assault. When the silence is broken, the tears
of rage can flow fre ely.
Jason Wallach

Words threaten to
silence survivors
To: Nicolas Coley. Mathew D, Zipeto. and
whoever vandalized the victim/survivor tree
sign.
You are three of the reaso ns why I feel
un safe as a woman. as a survivor. and as an
activi st again st rape.
Nicolas Coley - I don't know why
yo u (in your poe m) attack women who speak
out agai nst rape. It was not a woman who
att acked yo u, but a man. And the problem is
not your hat. but the fact th at rape ex ists on
thi s campu s.
It seems to me in this situ ati on you
would choose to work against rape - the
roo t of this problem you have been affected
by. You asked members ofthe Rape Respon se
Coalition to help and support you - they
did. You then las hed out at them , blaming
them for your situ ation and calling them and
all anti-rape activists yo ur oppressors. You
say yo u have seen no privilege as a white
man. that you sleep under a tree. I say sleeping
alone under a tree is a privilege that I wouldn't
dare.
Mathew D. Zipeto: you saw a series
of images in Andrea Stoops's piece. The first
was of a man raping a woman, The second
was of a woman fighting back.
You c hose to igno re the first, showing
that the prob le m of rape is not important to
yo u. You said that the second image was a
"terroristic threat. " Yo u also accused the
"revo luti o nary feminist movement of
attack ing a 'spec iflc populati on' ,"
The specific population that Andrea
has targeted is rapists. If you choose this
group to align yourse lf with, Mr. Zipeto, then
I hope we are threatening yo u.
Both Mr. Coley's and Mr. Zipeto's
words threaten to silence me . The same effect
as those 0 f the person or persons w ho defaced
the victim/survivor tree sign. I tied a ribbon
on th at tree, g lad that [ am finally through
running away fro m the men who raped me.
glad that I can now talk about what has been
done to me, that the nightmares have stopped
and that I have regained my confide nce in
speak ing out agai nst rape.
The defacing of that sig n was a hard
blowto me. I was upset but I was not surprised.
It seems as though there's always someone
there to knock yo u down just as you ' ve
pulled yourself back up.
These attitudes are present for every
day that I face on thi s campus.
T hese attitudes make thi s campus safer
for men who harass, men who expose
themselves, and men who rape - all of
wh ich are real problems women face on this
ca mpu s. There have already been three
expos ures (at last co unt ) reported si nce sc hool
started this year. Eleven exposures have been
reported to Pub lic Safety in '93. Harassment
is an everyday occ urrence. One in three
wome'n is raped - even on this campus,
It is hard to speak ou t against rape and
you make it harder.
Katie Taft

Attack on Stoop's
artwork absurd

Harassment, from page 5

" faculty can't be required to do anything."
Aside from the college 's legal
responsibility
to make sure that faculty are
Matthew Zipeto, in his response letter
(11/4 CPJ) , launches an absurd and adequately educated about sexual harassment,
unjustified attack on Andrea Stoops's don ' t our faculty members ' have some
photographs, which were ,displayed on the responsibility to us? Prevention training
first Ooor of the CAB during Community constitutes the bare minimum of what we
Awareness Week.
should expect our faculty members to do, in
I think that Matthew needs to take
protecting our right to an equal educationanother look at Andrea's "Dead Men Don ' t
and our safety. In a national context where,
Rape" photographs, and a hard look at his
according to a common estimate, 30 percent
own politics and loyalties as well.
In the first photo , Ken is raping of all women students are sexually harassed
Barbie. Did Matthew miss that one? He by faculty members, how can we allow our
hands to be tied by their concern for their
doesn't bother to comment on it.
In the next photo (the only one which academic freedom? Even for those students
Matthew mentions), Barbie and her girlfriend who have not been sexually harassed, the
are pointing guns at Ken who is, as Matthew faculty's unwillingness to institute mandatory
says, laying bound and gagged on the floor.
sex ual haras sment prevention training
RIGHT ON, BARBIE! It 's about time that Barbie
represents an attack on our academic freedom .
- a sy mbol of women's oppression - was
These cases also raise issues about
transformed into an image of powe rful
what is called "faculty self-adjudication."
resista nce.
If the Affirmative Action officer
My question for Matthew is thi s: Why
is it the second image, and not the first, that determines that a student has committed
offends you? Why , in your respon se letter, sexual harassment, that student can appeal
do you focus all of your attention on the the case to a heari ng board that consi sts of all
victimization of Ken? (i.e" the rapist ).
college constituents-students, sta ff and
The implicit message in your letter is faculty. But when a faculty member is
that rape of women is acceptable - natural;
determined to have committed sex ual
not worthy of comment. But when we defend
o urse lve s, you call this "terrorism," harassment, the case is appealed to a faculty
"agg rav a te d assault" and "sex ual inquiry committee, where students ha ve no
harassment" I Your letter, Matthew , rings of input.
Whether the accused is a stud ent or a
intense parano ia. citing the supposed "illegal"
nature of the photos and ending with , "They' fac ulty member. the definitions of sexual
are dangerous and not to be trusted." I harassment are the 'same. Why, then, do we
encourage everyone who responded simi larly allow this double standard?
to the events of Community Awareness Week
On thi s campus, faculty are he ld
to ask themselves why they see our intolerance
accountable only to themselves. Even the
. of rapi sts as a personal a ffront.
, T he backlash' against campus anti - conduct code at Evergreen applies only to
rape movements is not unique to Evergreen. student s. Perhaps it makes sense for fac ulty
In the book ivory Power: Sexual Harassment to self-adjudicate in some cases, but sex ual
harassment is an illegal act, and one th at
0 11 Campus, a student at Princ eton University
tells about a Take Back the Night marc h that directly affec ts our experience here as
ended in violence. Students along the route st udent s. We should demand to hav e a vo ice
of the march verbally and ph ys ically abused in deciding the o utcome of cases that involve
the marchers, throwing beer ca ns, expos ing
sexual harassment by fac ulty members .
themse lve s, and shouting "The night belongs
Lara Shepard-Blue is a fourth-year
to Michelob." Afterward, a group of male
Evergreel/
student. This is the third in a
stude nts went through campus yelling, "We
series
of
her
articles about sexual harassment.
ca n rape anybody we want."
At Evergree n, we're more refined and
"PC," aren't we') Last spring, the campus
was pl as tered with Oyers saying, "Dead
Women Don't Resist." On the nig ht of our
Take Back the Night marc h last week,
so meone defaced the poster in front of the
victim/survivor tree with messages like',
"SHUT UP BITCH" a nd "DEAD MEN RAPE IN
HEAVEN" (see 1114 CP1). We obviously have
a long way to go .
Stro ng ant i- rap e messages a re
inherently political. They are a lways go ing
to be opposed by those wi th a stake in male
supremacy. The answer is' not to' apo logize.
but to co ntinue fighting 'sex ua l violence.
I call upon all of our allies - women
and men - to show their support for sexual
justice not J USl in words. but in actio n.
Lara Shepard-Blue

(4(l f l O~I( tlLL 4
PlfflSln~

The Greatest Dress.es
The Best Accessories
Little Treasure Gifts

357 -7462

Page 10 Cooper Point Journal November II, 1993

.-..

ARTS &

ENTERTAINMENT

Fund 'set up by college for new piano
by Jeff Cleaves
The Evergreen State College has
established a fund to purchase a nine-foot
Steinway concert grand piano. !twas
established after an anonymous donor gave
$10,000 towards the purchase of a new
piano ,
Charlotte Tiencken Woolridge,
Evergreen Expressive Arts Executive
Director, said the donor attended a dual
piano concert at Evergreen last year, at
which the school's seven-foot Steinway
and the nine-foot Steinway were used, and
the difference in sound between the two
pianos moved the donor to give the
money . The donation must be used in two
years or it will be withdrawn. "The donor
really wants to see this happen," Tienckin
Woolridge said.
A new nine-foot Steinway piano
costs $50,000; Evergreen can get one used
for $30;000, which the piano fund is for.
There is another $300 to $400 per year in
expenses to keep each piano tuned and
well maintained. There are currently 20 to
25 pianos at the college, eight to ten of
which are Yamaha uprights for
instruction. Another 10. to I5 pianos are
in practice rooms available to students.
Some of those pianos are Kawai baby
grands, five to six feet ·in length, and
others are standard size pianos ranging
from six to nine feet in length. There are
two concert grands: a seven-foot. Steinway
bought in the 1970s, and a nine-foot
Steinway that was donated to the school.
Woolridge said when she got here
three years ago, the school's pianos were
in bad shape, so she went to the Academic
Deans to get money to repair them.
Evergreen Expressions kicked off
its drive to raise the $30,000 needed for

Lookinl for convenient

MAILBOX
SERVICE

the fund recently with a concert featuring
Evergreen Faculty performing original
works. The concert raised about $500, but
Woolridge said it's unlikely they will do
more benefits like that. "It's too much
work, and not enough money is raised,
but .it does let people know about the
fund."
Andrew Buchman hopes to get the
new piano in a year or two. That would
enable Evergreen to do more dual piano
concerts, and free up the seven-foot
Stein way to be used more by students and
.
for jazz concerts.
Jeff Cleaves is an Evergreen
student in that "Happy Talk" class . •

by Matt Reeves
"I try not to let my wonderful
ghost eat me," said poet Tess Gallagher of
the memory of her late husband, writer
and poet Raymond Carver. Gallagher has
spent the last couple months promoting
Robert Altman's new film Shor;t Cuts,
which is loosely 'based on several short
stories and one poom by Carver, as well
as promoting her latest two books of
poetry, Moon Crossing Bridge and
Portable Kisses.
1 spoke with her over the phone the
day before she came to Olympia for a
reading and book-signing and to introduce
Short Cuts at the Olympia Film Festival.
Although Gallagher's role in the
production of the film was to make
suggestions during the script writing, in
the end the "aesthetic choices have to be
totally surrendered to the [film]maker,"
she said. "I just did the same thing with
[Altman] that 1 did with Ray, you know. 1
would make a suggestion and if he
thought it worked and took it, fine, and if
he didn't, fin e. I don't have any hooks in
it."
Something Gallagher found
interesting about the film was the
outcome of the combination. of Carver's
and Altman's styles: "It's very interesting
for me to see how newly [Altman]
approaches this material...
[In Carver's "A Small, Good
Thing"] there's a very transcendent kind of

lift at the end. You see, this is the
difference between Altman and Carver.
Altman eschews epiphany."
To illustrate her point she described
Altman's treatment of "A SmaH-, Good
Thing" in Short Cuts, in which a baker
(played by Lyle Lovett) is confronted by
the parents of a dead child. The day before
the child is fatally struck by a car, the
mother (Andie McDowell) orders a cake
for his birthday from the baker. When the
cake is not picked up the baker makes
harassing phone calls to the couple's
house. When the baker learns of the
child's death he apologizes and tries to
comfort the couple. The wife then asks to
see the cake, but the baker refuses.
"There's a kind of cooling away
from the emotion there with [the baker]
saying, "You can'l. 1 threw it out,"
Gallagher told me. "That's not in the
Carver, either. That 's a pure Altman
move, to kind of move away from that
tender moment. He doesn't seem to want
to stay in there too long. He makes a
getaway pretty quickly and kind of gets
back to that hard-core 'well, you know,
things are ' disposable, people are
disposable' rift he's got going there."
Gallagher is currently working on
her second book of short-stories called Dig
Two Graves: Stories of Revenge, as well '
as a new book of poems.
Sara said that Matt Reeves missed
a staff meeting. J

Short Cuts offers stylistiC version of Raymond Carver bOOk

Review
by Cindy Laughlin
Two hours before the curtains were
to rise, I picked up my press pass and tried
(with only a small amount of success) to
alter my consciousness by dumping beer
into my system , 1 had planned to get to
the show 45 minutes before it started, but
when 1 finally arrived at the Capitol
Theater the line was clear to Fourth Ave.
Slyly taking a cue from the title of the
popular film we were all so anxiously
waiting to see, Short Cuts, 1 found some
friends in front and stumbled onto the
sidewalk to join them, Shamelessly
bragging about my obtainment of a free
pass, I had to hide my head in shame
when someone asked if 1 had interviewed
the widow of the late Raymond Carver,
Tess Gallager, before the show. Some
kind of journalist 1 am.
,
However, 1 didn't feel so bad when
the thirty-something new-age yuppie
couple ahead of me asked "what this film
was all about. Who's Raymond , Carver?"
(Probably the same couple who sat behind
me in the pop-soaked nose-bleed section
whispering to one another "I don't get it"

just loud enough that in the midst of the
action on screen, the annoying buzzing of
those common houseflies were amplified
into my inner ear.)
Robert Altman's Short Cuts, is
based on the short stories of Northwest
author Raymond Carver. With a starstudded cast that included such talents as
Tom Waits, Lily Tomlin, Tim Robbins,
Lyle Lovett, and Jack Lemmon, there is
no way this film could go wrong.
With a name like Short Cuts, 1
expected the three-hour-long film to
contain shorts, just like Carver's writings.
What I didn't expect was the ingenious
soap opera-like meshing of characters and
events. The book contains nine separate
and unique short stories and one poem.
Altmalt did a superb job of finding and
presenting coherently the common themes
and obsessions within these stories.
Kudos also to the casting director
for hiring such a fine group of perfonners.
Each actor and actress seemed as though
they were written for their respective
parts. (how could you go wrong casting
Tom Waits as a misbehaving drunken
husband and Jennifer Jason Leigh as a
phone sex UV<_UUUJ

Lyle Lovett courtesy of FineLine
Features.
to see this masterpiece of modern film last
Saturday , you missed OUl. Although

Short Cuts is currently running at selected
theaters in Seattle and Portland, it
probably won't come to Olympia again.

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Cooper Point Journal

Gallagh'e r discusses Altman film

Browser's
107N. Capitol






Luxuriate

I

}EAD WITH CAUTION· THERE MIGHT SE A REVIEW THAT YOU DON'T A3REE WITH.

"Give thanks unto the Lord. "
-Psalm 105:1

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(across from Toys R Us)
Olympia, WA 98502
705-2636
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Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993 Page 11

ARTS

Be ENTERTAINMENT

ARTS

'He-generation' activist Tabitha Soren talks journalism in Tacoma
quite well with the fac~ that, between class
and that news paper thing, I had been
going non-stop for the past three days on
less than three' and a half hours of sleep.
Me: So . is this part of some big
lecture tour?
Tab: No, if it were part of a tour I
would have canceled.
The sound of a sluffy nose inhaling
some coughing dOL the interview. Before
conlinuing our interview she disposes of
several large manila envelopes scoffing at
Ihe "u RG ENT! REA D Now"markings
scrawled on Ihem.
Tab: I did a bunch of speeches last
year to try to get people to register to
vote, and so as a result I still get requests
once in a while.
Me: Now that all these people are
registered to vote, what's the new
message?
Tab: The new news, political
activism. Obviously a lot of people voted
Tuesday, but to think of it [activism] not
just every four years, and not just
elections. It could be a homeless shelter,
it could be working at the Greenpeace
booth at LoUapalooza.
Me: The new news, how do you
define that?
Tab: Basically, the traditional
news format; who, when, what, where and
why, the same sort of ethical boundaries,
the same aim for objectivity. But at the
same time what people want from the
news is changing. Instead of doing a piece
on say, health care, from a perspective of
what sub-committees are thinking about
voting for it and which ones aren't, the
emphasis in new news would be how it's
going to affect the individual person; what
age group, whether they were better off
before or after.
As far as MTV or The Today Show
is concerned, our pieces stand out because
of the way they are edited and put
together. It seems so simple and so

TA8ffllA SONEN
PIEIiCE COlUGE, TII(}()MA
NO~EM8EIl

4,

1993

. by R~v. Andrew 1<'. Lyons
I was the picture of perfect health
before that trip to Tacoma. Before I knew
what was happening I was thrust into a
closet size room to do an interview that I
was originally told wouldn't take place.
All I know is that since meeting
with Tabitha Soren, my voice has
vanished into a slight whisper and I'm
drinking lots of fluids.
For those nO! TV literate, Soren,
25 , is a newscaster for MTV News and
has recently acquired a spot on The Today
Show where she reports on issues relating
to the nations twentysomethings, or rather
the "re-generation." She was a major
instigator behind the "Choose or Lose"
campaign , which provided President
Clinton with a vehicle for reaching the
younger crowd and made Bush look
cOll1pletely out of touch for refusing
interviews until it was basically tOO late.
In fact, for better or worse, Clinton
Gave Soren and MTV a great deal of credit
for "his huge plurality in the youth vote."
It appears that over 2 million young
voters registered and voted in 1992, the
...
majority of them voting for Clinton.
Soren had apparently arrived in
Tacoma with a temperature df 102, and
according to a guy who walked very fast
and appeared to be in charge of several
important things, she would not arrive
until she was re~dy to give her talk .
A short while later, a flash of red
hair whisked by, and before my
photographer (Seth "Skippy "Long) could
check to see if it was his own, we were
whisked into a small room by the very
fast walking man, who granted us the
boon of interviewing Soren.
She was admittedly under the
influence of a large quantity of codeine due
to her ailment, which seemed to fit in

obvious that it's a stylistic thing. If
. .
people have short attention spans, then .
you have to do something to keep their
attention, music is a very powerful force
and that can help, so can interesting
graphics. If you treat television as you
would film and see it from that point of
view, you could take a bland news piece
and make it visually stimulating as well
as give people information,
Apparenlly, before arriving in
Tacomiz she had been editing a piece for
The Today Show from midnighl to 8 a.m.
and then went 10 work at MTV two hours
laler for another full day.
Tab: The reason I'm sick is
because I've had to work overnight for
several days on The Today show and the
only editor I could get to cut this thing,
and be open to my ideas, worked from
midnight till 8 in the morning. So in
addition to the MTV stuff, I had to go
there at midnight and work until 8 in the
morning and then go back to MTV at
10, so I'm a lillie run down.
It's amazing how fortified the
networks are with old people. The first
Tab speaks truth. photo by Seth D. Long
two editors I worked with were good
editors, but they started editing on film
Me: Is that the one with Ron
Reagan? (Don't worry folks, it's only
for god's sake. That means they've got a
junior. Well, worry a little.)
lot of experience, but it doesn't
necessarily mean they're open to fresh
Tab: Yeah, nobody watches it
because it's on Saturday night at 8 o'clock
ideas.
Me: Do you see that changing
or some awful time slot, but it's beller
very rapidly? Do you see a lot new people
produced than any of the other magazine
coming in?
shows. They have people on it who give
Tab: I think that there is a lot of
there opinion, you don't see that on
new types of television that is calling
network television in an overt way. It's
itself new news.
the Edward R. Murrow school that you
Me: current affair...
have to keep those kind of thoughts to
Ta b: yeah, I don't think tabloid
yourself, but they get sort of slid in there
news falls into it, or Clinton playing his
anyway, it's more subversive. I prefer that
sax on Arsenio Hall. I think of it more
if a reporter has a point of view that he
along the lines of MTV and that fox
wants to get across, do it.
show, Fronl Page _ It does a lot of cool
Rev. Andrew F. Lyons still wakes
stuff; it's very highly produced, it has
up in a cold sweal screaming "Where's my
· /" ..,
- "'\'.\
little opinion vignettes .. :
Codeme.
\

Sky Cries Mary pulls off Thekla
Interview
SKY ()IlIE9 MMY
THEKLA
NO~FM8EIl 6,

/193

by Rev. Andrew F. Lyons
Sky Cries Mary ended their nation
wide tour of clubs last Saturday at Thekla.
Despite lhat no official sound check took
place the band still managed lo put on a
show in their trademark theatrical vein.
The sound guy was pissed. All he
wanted was a sound check. Roderick was
creeping around the stage Wilh a video
camera taking ShOlS of the rest of the band
who decided to due an impromptu jam
session.
"Roderick, can't you just sing
something so we can check the mike," the
sound man pleaded. Someone from the
band replied "he's doing a thing." The
sound guy put on his coat and left.
/ But like I said, the show came off
fine even without thatlitLie ritual and Sky
Cries Mary is once again safely tucked
away in Seattle. But even in the comforts
of home they manage to keep active.
Me: So, what's up with this
warehouse thing, some kind of rave- style
show?
Roderick: We've done stuff like
that, when we're doing our own shows
like in Seattle or the Northwest. We've
been trying to get outside of the club
scene and do more of our own thing.
Me: What's the difference'between
lhe two BaSically'!
Roderick: All ages, greater
control over the space and what's going
on. Instead of the same old rock and roll
scene we're trying to explore other places.
When we're doing tours it's really
difficult. It just depends on whatever the
booking agent gets in each town.
Me: How was La Luna (in
Portland)?
.
Roderick: La Luna was great,
That's the ideal spot, that and a: theater

because they have a balcony for the
projectionist.
.
Me: It's also got two levels; one
for all ages and one with a bar .
Roderick: That's the way it
should be. It's ridiculous that you have to
be over 21 to come see these shows. The
Moore [Theatre] show last night was just
so awesome, so many young people just
freaking out.
At this point DJ Fallout joins the
table and sits there quietly. Bass player
Joe Howard comes by and yells "fuck"
into the microphone. The sound guy still
hasn'l returned.
Andy Lyons is an Evergreen
studenl under the Wilness PrOlection
Program. Oops! I wasn'l supposed 10 say
thai. Q.

& ENTERTAINMENT

even ·wilhoulsound· check

Anisa Romero and Roderick belt out the lyrics at Thekla. photo by Andy Lyons

Offer tips for bartenders who provide happy beers
COmmerl t ary
by Pete Bodenheimer
Okay, can some fine individual out
there in the Evergreen bubble help me out
here? I just can't seem to grasp what the
fuck these bartenders around Olympia are
thinking .
Having tasted the wares of these
local taverns, I have come to the
conclusion that something is very wrong
here. I must admit to being a bit baffled
when a dollar tip is expected for one rather
expensive bevemge.Exsqueeze mel I was
always under the impression, correct me if
I am wrong, that a tip is for good service,
nol even great service, just good solid
service. So where do some of these folks
gel off giving me service so bad that by
the time I 'get my beverage all the alcohol
has evaporated, and then give me the
"huh, big tipper" when I fail to leave
them the appropriate 30 percent tip.
This vicious cycle of "payor we'll
sink to even further depths" prompted me
to do a liLLie research into these so-caiJed

bar-keeps and I have since come to a few
conclusions. First off, there are two kinds
of bartenders at these fine downtown
. establishments. The first type is the
buddy, a bart~n.der who seems to
understand ~hat It IS they are supposed to
be dOIng. ThiS type of bartender seems to
understand how one goes about gettIng
tipped. The buddy will actually give you
service! They are friendly and in fact make
an effort to serve a person within say, ten
minutes. Stu.nning, ain't it? Then, .of
co~se, ~ere IS the type of bartender WI~
w.hlch I v~ ~ot a problem, the power
tTlpper. ThiS IS the person who got thiS
job because of the Butt-headesque
assertion that "it's cool." In other words,
the bouncer type. What a pain in the ass!
For some reason they .assume that they
can serve you at therr leisure and you wIiI,
of course, crawl humbly on your knees
from the bar after emptying your pockets
into their outstretched arms. I just don't
think so.
Unfortunately, we young lushes are
lrapped, for these bars are quite the
popular ' hangouts even with this
hindrance, maybe it has something to do
with competition.

Olympia for all its wonder isn ' t
exactly
packed
with drinking
establishments that would be considered
"Greener" friendly, and unless we plan on
opening our own bars, we had best do
something. I have found myself
occasionally wondering about all the high
school kids hanging out on State St., and
wondered why it is they hang out there.
It's simple; they ain't got any other place
to go. This seems to be our problem too.
We only have a few places where we as
good ole freaky people can go. This
basically sucks and leaves us in pretty
awkward position.
What I propose we do is to stand
up for our rights under the Constitution
to "preserve life, liberty, and the pursuit
of mind numbing intoxication" by giving
our gratuities to those who give us service
with a smile and to expel noxious gases
in the direction of our alcoholic
oppressors.
Pele Bodenheimer is mad as hell
and he's just not going to take il any
more! 12

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Washington (enter
for the Performing Arts
in downtown Olympia.
Tickets 520/17
.(518/15 students and seniors)
on sale at the
Washington (enter
80x Office 753-8586.
Ticketmaster outlets
at Disc Jockey,
The Wherehouse, or
by calling Ticketmaster
at 628-0888.

F"NTASTIC
SEtECTION
REc OF
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Open 10 - 8 Everyday 943 - 1114

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our regular low price on
any NEW ALBUM, CASSETTE
or CD in stock
($6.98 Ust or Higher)
Expires November 24, 1993

-------- 357-4755

III

Page 12 Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993

123 Wils/ling/on 51 Nf Olymp!a. WA 98501

I
I
I
I

WESTSIDE CENTER
DIVISION & HARRISON

Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993

Page 13

COM I C S
Dove

11

HURSDAY

14-

CPJ-Hey kids, it's the CPJ
Calen.~~ Page! ] oin in the mad-cap fun
and hl]lOks by turning in your submission
by noon . •

UNDAY

TESC- Howard Zinn has come La
open your mind. Choose one of two
limes for your viewing convenience:
Noon in the Library Lobby , or 7:30 p.m.
in Lecture Hall I.

OL YMPIA- National Peace
Leader Doug Hostetler will speak on "War
as the Last Idol" at 2 p.m. in the East
Meeting Room of the Olympia
Timberland Library on 9th and Adams.

TESC- "New Music for Cello
and Piano": Works by Composer Sheila
Silver will be performed Thursday,
November II at 7:30 p.m. in the Recital
Hall.

OL YMPIA- Grass Lake needs
you! Attend a Wetland Preservation and
Enhancement discussion at 2 p.m. in the
Capital Place Retirement Home, 700
Black Lake Blvd. Call Mary Ann Swain at
352-0486 for more info.

WERlJE~! IJ£MtR.U(iSENBf~G.
yo UTELL Mt EXACTLY WHERE
A"E AND
Yol/'RE f)oING

TESC- Sing, laugh and talk in a
warm friendly atmosphere with Evergreen
Students for Christ, at 7 PM. Ext. 663
for details.

THIS INSTAN1/•

5oRRY., MOM., BUT

TESC- OXFAM Fast for a World
Harvest. Donate spare change in the
CAB .

I CANT PoSSIBLY
ANSWeR BcrrH of
T~o5£ QUtSTIOAlS

15

TESC- Jennifer Harbury, activist
and author of the recently released, Bridge
of Courage , wil l speak in CAB 108 at
3:30 p.m.

13

OL YMPIA- The Midnight Fringe
Event is "Spoken Word as Performance
Art ," Olympia Film Festival at the
Capitol Theater on 5th Ave. It's gonna
cost you $3 but it's worth it.

f\TURDAY

ONDAY

TESC- Homeless Forum will be
held at 7 p.m. in Lecture Hall 2.
TESC- Act up, Act out, Interact:
The Independent Theater on Campus,
(!TOC) will have its first meeting of the
year at5 p.m. in CAB-320. For more info
call x6604.

.
TESS:-Come to the Racquet
CInema Flim Fest. in the CRC's
racquetball court from 10 p.m. to 1 a.m,

12

TESC- The ' New Addiction
Prevention and Wellness Resource Center
is having an Open House from noon to 5
PM in the CRC, room 208. Info: ext.
6800.

RIDAY
TESC- Boogie Sober! Drug and
Alcohol Free Dance in The Edge from 9
p.m. to 1 a,m. ca ll x6555 for more info.
CI.ASSRD.RArES:
30 wad;; ex Ie!:!;: ~
gf,tDenf: Rate: ~
~

IG!te t;6JX)

~AY~~

CIa!;!;:ified Decdne:


~

~




~\

~

5 pm ~

ELM A-

Field Trip to Northern

CP}- Story submissions are due
by noon today! That includes band
interviews! ©

Willapa and Southern Grays Harbor at 7

UESDAY

'--_...;;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _---1

TESC- Men's Abuse Survivor
Support Group, 6 to 8 p.m. in Library
4004.

COMMU
..:. . . •~AI.
,; ;,
................ .........

:,'

',

........... ........:

'~.aZrZID~,

II'LP WAtfftD

TO PlA~ N-J AD:
Catac:!:: .!Me CroWrd
PI·n~ 966-6000 x6054

CPJ
CAB ~. a.YMPIA. WA 9B505.
(l(~TCPBYM

~'sn'~

Responsible housesitters wented; Jen .- mid June
'94; furnished; 3 bedroom 2 beth; 11 miles
from cempus on Steemboet lSi end Roed; No pets,
no sm oking ; $400 .00/mo & utilities . 866-9574

PHONE BILLS TOO HIGH?Celluptoone
hour to enywhere in U.S. for es lowes
$2 .00 per cell end meke short cells es low
es 17¢ per minute . 459-9156.

ALASKA SUMMER EMPLOYMENT - fisheries .
Meny eorn $2,000+/mo . in cenneries or $3,000$6,000+/mb. on fishing vessels. Get the
necessery heed stert on next summer. ,For
info . co1l: 1- 206-545-4155 ex . A609 1

The CPJ now hes e clessified ed rete
of $2 for students of TESC. If you
went more informetion, pleese contect
Ju11e in CAB 316 .

FO~ ~ALE.
1983 Suzukf GS 850G . Great town or tour
bike . Include s luggege reck & feiring $675 .00. Cell 943-1792 .

SADIQ AND DAVID PERFORM IN "EXCIT ING CONFRONTATIONS" ON DECEMBER 3rd . HELP
WANTED TO SET UP AND TAKE DOWN . ENTICEMENT: FREE ADMISSION, FRATERNIZING WITH
SADIQ AND DAVID, CALL SODA-POP AT 8666000 EX . 6555 .

PE.UOtfAL
FENDER SQU IRE STRATOCASTER (excellent
condition), PEAVEY AUDITION PLUS (with
oyerdriye), BOSS DISTORTION PEADAl. ALL
YOURS FOR $375 .00 . CALL 943-1792 .

17

EDNESDAY

The Boy with No Middle Name by Sal Occhino
THIS ~gE~ rtAS BEEN
MWJ
.--------~
ARPlJND

F~ Cf,.Tufl£S.

r Bov411T

~

r----------.

~

IT fRDM

-""'---'\...
/"'--

-

Life in the 90's by David Wehunt

.-J..~

..-- - ."..-. . . '-:r--' -' .

r:;::=:::;:::::::=:::::::-;:::::::::::::::::i

w~

TESC- Pedro Almodovar' s "Dark
Habits" in Lecture Hall 4 at 8 PM. A big
Lhcmk-you to Mindscreen.

---------

/---.-~~
-- -=-------'-~-.
.

.. - .

-RlN TIN TIN IN

BY

THE PHIl'PPI NES
Strip by Wendy Hall

To all the people who write in chalk ell
oyer the cempus : I 'M SO SICK OF YOU!!


~

~



~\

~

Rationalize by Evenstar Deane & Joe Watt
TESC-Faculty panel discussion
on sexual harassment will' take place in
the second Floor Library Lobby from 1 to
3 p.m. Join Evergreen faculty members
in a spirited debate about issues that affect
us all. Sponsored by the Womens Center.

....I~rgreen
.
pression
Music
for Cello & Piano
Thursday November 11
Recital Hall, 7:30p.m.
General: $7.50
Students: $5

The Corner should
not serve meat
because:

We need to set a good
example for the
vegetarian
dogs.

It's hard to get food
poisoning from
vegetables.

Meat is
bad.

Really bad.

Hell Is ... by Brad Katzer

. .PEARLS P\ fV\
1'1\ &E {,fEIN'
i\A.EM

- .. I
For mort Information

callthl

.

EvergrHn expressions
Box OffIce.

(~~
,

Page 14 Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993

---'

16

a.m. Call Michael for more info at 9432051.
SEATTLE- Don't miss Sandra
Bernhard at the University of WA, 8 p.m.
at the Hub Ballroom, tickets are a pricey
$18.50, for more info, call Girl Talk at
(206) 547-8557

TESC-The Evergreen. Music
Production Org. has weekly meetings at
noon in CAB 320. Stop by and suggest
bands you would like to see play on
campus,

-11-11

OLYMPIA- STOP SKINHEAD
II ATE CRIMES! Rally and March beginning
at 6 PM in Sylvester Park.

OL YMPIA- Bring out your inner
rhYlhm s with World Beat Drumming
Classes from 6 to 7:30 p.m . on Nov. II,
18 and Dec. 2, 9. Price is 535, call Geoff
at 943-5804 for location.

AccuRATeLY.

rESC-Volunte'e rs will be
sleeping outside to raise money for local,
national and international for an antipoverty organization. Make a pledge if
you can. Sleep-out beginning at 7 p .m.
on Red Square. Ext. 6058 for more info.

TESC- Oh my God , it's ]ambay,
Life of Reilly and Jim in the 4th floor of
the Library, $3 10 $5 s uggested price.

You

.

Cooper Point Journal November 11, 1993 Page 15