cpj0507.pdf

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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 21, Issue 2 (October 4, 1990)

extracted text
SG next week,

Vote

October 4, 1990 Volume 21 Issue 2

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This is the latest tentative plan for the $1.57 million CAB renovation.

To meet budget constraints. the two conference rooms have been
elimJnated. the bathroom will have less toilets. the balcony has been

- - 1 - -- - -

THIRD FLOOR PLAN
SCALE I / S " -

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-

.taken out of the plans. KAOS lost a control room. and less
renovation Is planned for the area that will become KAOS's office.
The renovation is scheduled for completion by September 1991.

Presidential hopefuls speak
by Tedd Kelleher and Sam Loewenberg
Four candidates fa interim president
sat before students, staff, and faculty for
four hours yesterday in a meeting called
by the Faculty Agenda Committee.
The candidates were: Les Puree,
acting
president;
Carolyn
Dobbs,
academic dean; Rudy Martin, founding
faculty member; and Ken Winkley. who
retired last August from bisposition as
vice-president
for
finance . and
administration.
These candidates indicated willingness
to serve as interim president, and were
taken from a list of 20 nominees given to
the board of trustees. Charles McCann,
faculty member who was Evergreen's
first president, is a candidate for interim
president but did not wish to appear at
the forum, says John Cushing, chainnan
of the faculty agenda committee.
Another possible candidate, Dan
Evans, former Evergreen president as
well as former Washington state governor
and senator, is in Finland and it is not
known if he is willing to serve as interim
president, says Cushing.
The interim presidential appointment
is "extremely important" since slhe might
end up serving ~ president through three
years and two budget cycles, says Gail
Martin, vice-president for student affairs.

a

The board may hire an interim
president as early as October 10 when
they will hold a meeting where students,
staff, and faculty will have the chance to
express their feelings
about the
candidates.
Les Puree opened his remarks by
saying, "I'm the least known," and went
on to describe his background. Puree
graduated from Idaho ' State University
with a bachelor's in psycolology. He
went on to earn a master's in student
personnel work.
Puree then worked as a counselor and
chief adviser to the black student union
at Washington State University. He then
earned a graduate degree in counseling
education at Idaho State University.
While earning his graduate degree
Puree was elected to the local city
council and eventually became mayor of
Pocatello. As mayor he established the
first comprehensive · environmental team
to deal with pollution. He also was a
founding member of a state-wide iniative
,to start a low-income housing agency.
Puree was apPointed at the age of 27
as an administrator in the Idaho
Department of Administration where he
worked for five years.
Puree then worked for five years as
hC?8d of the Idaho Health and Welfare

The Evergreen' State College
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested

Department after it had been gutted by we practice, and feel that they are the
Reagan budget cuts. Puree says he was most effective and valuable ones I have
able to work with the staff, community, . yet encountered in this country."
and legislature to enable the agency to
Martin dien told the audience that he
function again.
taught the first ethnic studies program at
From these two experiences Puree Evergreen and worked on the precursor
says he learned that he did not want to of the First People's Coalition in 1971.
be a bureaucrat
"Academically, and in relation to
Hoping to get back into higher college goverance and college affairs, I
education by learning business skills, have tried to be central," said Martin.
Puree started worlring for , a booming
"I was the first full term academic
business in Sun Valley, Idaho. Although dean. the first faculty chair, I chaired the
he enjoyed the experience, he found presidential search, and I worked on the
himself "intellectually starved."
Strategic Plan. The point I'm trying to
Puree said he came to Evergreen 18 make is my life in this college has been
months ago because •. "I wanted to get a mixture of serviilg as a leader and
back to what I saw as an institution that helping to follow other peoples' leads. I
am convinced the best leaders are the
shared my values."
Puree hoped that his job as vice- folks who are the best followers," said
president for college advancement would Martin.
Carolyn Dobbs came to teach at
allow him "assist in developing and
acquiring resources that would help the Evergreen in 1971. She sees Evergreen as
a female-type institution. "Evergreen is a
academic mission of this institution."
Rudy Martin said coming to nurturing place based on inclusiveness,"
said Dobbs. She believes that as interim
Evergreen in 1970 to be a member of the
planning faculty was "Gail's [Martin, his president she can re-strengthen that
femaleness and bring a woman's
wife] fault" Martin added, "Living with
perspective to the job.
the results of the planning has been
Dobbs believes that because she has
exciting to me."
When speaking about Evergreen, worked as a "social change agent" in the
Martin stated, "I am committed to the
approaches to learning and teaching that see candidates, page 3

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Olympia, WA 98505
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Screwing the
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Quote of the Week

Congressman Traficant's sarcastic
side surfaced during a recent minute in
the House of Representatives. He had this
to otTer his coUeagues: "Mr. Speaker, this
week's Nice Guy Award has got to go to
the ms. The ms has announced that
they will not audit the taxes of American
hostages held captive in Iraq or Kuwait.
Now, that is reatly nice of them. I think
they deserve the Nice Guy Award."
Mr. Traficant also conferred upon the
U.S . Olympic Committee the "Screw the
American Taxpayer Award" for having its
bullons, for sale in the United States,
manufactured in Taiwan.

Conference for
disabled workforce
News Release
Over 300 participants from business,
government,
and
the
handicapped
community will address workforce issues
impac ting the disabled during the second
of
Opportunity
annual
Window
conference at Evergreen on October 10.
Resource Center for the Handicapped
Pres ident Ri ch Walsh said the Center is
presenting the conference in cooperation
with
the
Employment
Security
Deparunenl and the Division of
Vocational Rehabilitation to encourage
greater
awareness
of
workforce
contributions that can be made by
persons of disability.
"Through the continuous support of
friends like Isiah Turner of Employment
Security and many others, we have been
able to make this conference a national

'That's a collector's item. For someone to
hang onto a mint copy with the little bag
and the bIick ... that Is key,"
Free Press man David George commenting on
the CPJ Orientation issue.
model for helping the disabled access the
job market," says Walsh. "This year's
program will feature the latest technology
to empower the disabled, motivational
speakers and infonnation on the true
impact of the
American's
With
Disabilities Act."
Conference speakers will be 1990
Disabled American of the Year David
Schwartzkopf, special education projects
manager at IBM; Dr. Thomas Furness,
director of Human Interface Technology
Lab at the University of Washington;
Thao Tiedt, an attorney with Ryan,
Swanson & Cleveland; and Ernest
LaPalm, deputy commisioner at the
Emploment Security Department.
Concurrent workshops also wiII be
offered on various topics includinl!
prosthetic advances for the disabled,
entrepreneurial development, computer
technology to empower the disabled, and
lifestyles of persons with disabilities.
The conference will be held in the
Library from 9 to 4, and will feature at
noon a trade show of public and private
sector service organizations. The deadline

Security Blotter
Tuesday, September 25
1026: A student in U-donn reported his
wallet stolen from an unlocked room.
1639: A burnt pot of beans caused a nre
alarm in Q-dorm.
2117: A burning bagel caused a fITe
alarm in R-donn.
2319: Burning incense caused a fITe
alarm in I-dorm.
Wednesday, September 26
0343: A fITe started in E-donn when a
student fell asleep leaving burning
candles in an altar made of cardboard
and a linen sheet.
1304: Previously reported stolen kayaks
belonging to the CRC were recovered
near Cooper's Glen apartments.
2100: Officers responded to a report of
three intoxicated non-students in the
Mods. Subjects who had been trying to
crash a party had left before Security's
arrival.
2151: Vandalism was reported to a light
fixture in a CAB men's room.
2317: A suspicious person was reported
near T-dorm. It was established as a case
of mistaken identity.

Thursday, September 27
0900: A wallet was stolen from an
unattended purse in Lab I.
1200: The president's office reported a
threatening call left on the voice mail
system.
Friday, September 28
0950: As the result of a complaint
concerning a dog in the CAB , a black
lab was caught and placed in the kennels.
2310: Officers observed a disturbance and
minor assault near A-donn. Security
facilitated a resolution between the parties
involved.
Saturday, September 29
1219: Burning toast caused a fire alarm
in S-donn.
2301: A disturbance involving an
intoxicated person was reported in the
Housing Community Center. Officers
escorted the non-student off campus.
Sunday, September 30
0840: Custodians reponed graffiti in the
men's restrcc.n.
In addition to this activity, 40 public
services were perfonned by the Security
staff during this period of time.

BLOW YOURSELF UP!
Immortality is Yours!

BlaCk & White
Only $9.95

to register is October 9. Registration fee

is $15.
For more infonnation or to register,
contact the Resource Center at 545-6550.

12.5% cut in budget
planning exercise
The following news brief was
adapted from a memo to the campus
community, from Russ Lid man, Gail
Martin, Les Puree, and Jamil Qureshi
The governor's OffIce of Financial
Management has asked all state agencies,
including Evergreen, to undertake a
budget planning exercise to gauge the
impact of a 12.5 percent budget cut in
the next biennium which begins July 1,
1991.
The OFM memo to agency directors,
October
3,
stated
that
received
"unanticipated growth in K-12 and other
entitlement budgets, coupled with a
weaker economic outlook in the aftermath
of the Kuwait invasion, has created a
very difficult budget situation for the next
biennium. Based on OFM calculations,
the present revenue forecast for 19911993 falls more than three-quarters of a
billion dollars short of supporting a
current level budget (which provides pay
increases for state employees, university
faculty, and teachers),"
We know very little at this point
about this budget planning exercise. Jamil
Qureshi, vice-president for finance and
administration, along with other vice
presidents for business from the state's
higher
education
institutions,
met
Wednesday with OFM to gain further
infonnation about this process. The
results of Evergreen's budget planning
exercise must be given to OFM by
October 22 ....
How state budgets will be affected

Joe Olander contract buyout: $193,000

USA Today seeks
smart students

Computer workshops
Computer Services is offering
Microcomputer
workshops
covenng
WordPerfect, Lotus 1-2-3, MS-DOS, and
the Macintosh. You can register for the
workshops in person at the Student
Consultant desk in the Computer Center,
Library 2408, or by telephone x6231.

Correction:
The Evergreen Indian Center was
inadvertantly referred to as the Northwest
Indian Center in the S&A overview in
the Orientation issue. The student
organization has been known as the EIC
since 1986.

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Introduction to the SG by Raquel
Salinas and Larry Jefferson
The fonowing student government
document was created with the intention
of unifying and providing a voice for the
student body. The main factor of this
unity is the cultural caucus system and
the eight at-large members.
When the idea of the cultural eaucus
was fust created last spring, the impetus
was to destroy the numbers game and
give an equal voice to those groups
which have been historically ignored.
This system is also set up to include any
other "cultural" group which chooses to
be included. The "East Indian" group, for
example.
When this idea came up last spring it
was criticized by some students as being
too limiting. Some students believed that
was unfair to let the Euro-American
students have the same vote as, for
example, the Latino/Chicano students.
They reasoned since Euro-American
students were the majority at this school
they should have congruent number of
votes. Other students believed that it was
unfair to "categorize" people.
Conversely some students agreed with
the new system and believed it would be
reflective of the diversity of this campus,
by eliminating the all too common
"majority rules, minority doesn't" cliche.
Also many students like this structure
because it provides a forum for many
different perspectives to come together on
any issue.
Finally, amidst all this controversy,
the Student Communications coordinator
selected 3 or 4 students from each
perspective. These students came together
and hammered out a compromise, which
is the document we present now. The at·
large positions are intended to serve

candidates, from cover
community since 1964 she would be
good at helping Evergreen in this period
of change.
Dobbs says her personality is suited
to the job because she is thick·skinned,
straightforward, tactful, candid. and
assumes that people are doing the best
they can give in their circumstances.
Ken Winkley described coming to
Evergreen in 1968 as the controller.
Before coming to Evergreen Winkley said

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he worked as the assistant controller at
Washington State University.
At Evergreen Winkley says he
developed a "good strong fmancial staff."
He cites as his qualifications for interim
president his administrative backgroWld
and his strong ties with the staff.
Winkley closed by saying, "I'm here to
serve."
When the panel was asked about
their
management
style,
Winkley
responded by stating that administrators
should be
held responsible and
accountable, but that room should be left
for error. He added that delegation allows
growth and brings out the best in people.
Puree responded by explaining that
his management style involves getting as

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Preamble
Student Governance (SG) is different
from
previous
Evergreen
student
government structures for several reasons.
First, it has been structured as a vehicle
for the empowerment of all students,
where past structures effectively have
given personal power only to those
students who could devote great amoWlts
of time to governance. Second, through
maintaining a pennanent board, the SG
becomes more coherent, accessible, and

RECORDS

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Clty _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
State _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ __
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Phone _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __

Coope r Point Journal October 4, 1990

_ _ _ Num be r of Prints
_ _ _ Cost per Print
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students who do not want to be part of
the cultural caucuses for whatever reason.
All positions are accountable to the whole
student body and will be able to be
reached through a central student
government office.
Many students have tried to start a
governance system here and these
systems have repeatedly failed. In the
past, these systems have not inspired the
students to come together in any cohesive
way. It only took a few students who
were greedy or power-hungry to ruin a
sincere governance system. Hence a new
system has been created where everyone
is equal, accessible, accoWltable and
where diverse perspectives may come
together to discuss and bring unity to all
student issues.
So read the document, talk it up
with your friends, and come out to vote
whether you disagree or agree. The Big
Vote will be October 9 through the 11.
Take care... Raquel and Larry, your
interim coordinators.
This is the Student Governance
document as prepared by a team of
negotiators at the end of the 1989-1990
academic year. Minor editorial changes
have been made in the document to bring
it into confonnation with ePJ guidelines.

USTEN, WE STILL SELL

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division of the college," although a
subsequent article in the fall 1990
Greenerscene
indicates
that
one
individual,
Olander's
household
coordinator,
has
been
laid
off.
"Recaptured salaries" from two currently
vacant positions--a half-time secretary
post unfilled since midsummer and an
affmnative action omcer position vacant
since August--also contribute to the
$164,000 figure above. Exaetly how the
,

vice presidents intend to contribute their
$28,600 remains unclear.
The letter concludes: "Further, to
assist fonner President Olander in his
transition, the Board agreed that he may
remain at the college residence until the
end of December. He will pay $750 per
month rent, and reimburse the college for
the cost of all utilities."

'

Shel1a Hammond sports one of 5,000 envtro-tote bags being given
away by the Bookstore as she talks to Shartn Hovitz. photo by
Leslyn Logan
accountable, thus ensuring a working
government -is always available to act on
student- originated proposals. Third, the
SG embodies the Evergreen community's
values of proportional representation,
individualism, and equality. And, most
importantly, the SG also embodies the
community's values of cultural diversity,
affirmative action, progressive social
change, and gender and etimicity equality.
Rights and Responsibilities
1) Students have the right to have an
accessible, effective and accountable
student government This government haS
a proposal process by which any student
may originate and submit a proposal for

timely consideration.
2) Every student has the right to
participate
in
Student Governance
meetings, and to have accessible
infonnation needs to exercise this right
All students are encouraged to become
voting representatives on the SG Board
through one of the two electoral
processes.
3) Every student has the right to be
involved
in
choosing
at-large
representatives, and has the right to be
involved in an electoral caucus if they
choose.

see SG, page 4

Interim. presidential candidates speak

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directly from the president's budget via
salary savings, reduction in president's
residence suppon, reduced travel and
purchases for the board of trustees, the
president, and staff, elimination of
planned computer upgrades, etc. The vice
presidents have agreed to fund the
remaining $28,600 through their own
office budgets."
The letter also states that "there will
be no layoffs or salary reductions in any

SG document up for vote

USA Today, "The Nation's Newspaper,"
is looking for 60 of the nation's smartest
college students to join their prestigious
1991 All-USA Academic Team. If your
a lucky winner you' ll be featured in a
special section of USA Today. If your
really lucky (and smart), you'll also
receive a $2,500 award from the Gannett
Corporation. Any full-time undergraduate
is eligible. To get the required paperwork
to take advantage of this opportunity, see
Gail Martin in Library 3236.

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by Andrew Hamlin
Former college President . Joseph
Olander will receive, or has already
received, a total of $193,000 from
Evergreen as settlement for the remainder
of his contract, according to a letter sent
to "The Evergreen Community" from
acting president Les Puree, dated
September 13, 1990.
Puree indicates in his letter that
"$164,000 (85%) of the funds will come

won't be known before April of 1991
when the legislative session is scheduled
to end. The OFM memo says,
"Ultimately, it may not be necessary to
make these program reductions on the
scale requested. However Governor
Gardner needs the ability to weigh these
options will! all others at his disposal
when his final budget recommendations
are made later this fall."

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much infonnation as possible and
realizing that everyone has a different
kind of wisdom.
Martin says he shies away from the
word "management" and therefore does
not have a management style. Martin
does believe that he should not make
decisions that others should make, and
believes things work best when everyone
has responsibilities. "I lead by walking
along the side and enabling others to do
their job,"
Carolyn Dobbs does not like to
"manage" but instead believes in
governing. Dobbs believes that her strong
individualism makes her a good team
player. Dobbs says she errs on the side
of consulting too much.

GOING=-

~

When the panel was asked by a
faculty member about racism on campus
martin responded by saying, "I haven't
seen anything at Evergreen that I haven't
seen anywhere else in the country." He
added that he feels Evergreen has made
more of an effon to end racism than any
other college. Martin said that we have to
get rid of monoliths like the term "people
of color."
Winkley responded by saying that
racism is not a new issue, and that it is
not going to be solved overnight He
added that racism is the primary focus of
the Strategic Plan.
Puree responded by saying, "At
every step, even though it's difficult, we
have to prevent elevating it to the
personal level. We have to have a
dialogue."
Tedd Kelleher is the editor of the
CPJ and Sam Loewenberg is a second
year student concerned about the future of
the college.

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QuestlO/lI - ConsUtations - AppoIntments

RadIance 113 E. 5th Olympia 367-947(1

Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990

Page 3

Student Government

Student Government
the SG is composed of no more than 26
SG, from page 3
students. Although these representatives
are selected through a dual electoral
4) Students have the right to full
accounting of all Services and Activities . process, they each have an equal voice
within the SG. Each is responsible to the
fees at all levels.
entire student body and will work to
5) Every student should take affinnative
action to ensure participation of students represent the best interests of all students.
from diverse backgrounds and cultures. Board members are responsible for:
-Auending all SG meetings
Additionally, all must ensure that no
-Serving on at least one standing
member of the student community is
holding In:
excluded from participation on the basis committee of the SG, or
of sex, ethnicity, creed, color, national position on a governance related body.
-Being accessible to all students for
origin, physical challenge, age, sexual
orientation, or political and religious communication.
-Recruiting and training all incoming
belief.
6) Students will suffer no impairment of SG Board members.
Coordinator: The SG coordinator
frcedom of speech concerning the conduct
of the SG. Active discussion of student serves as the SG staff. The SG
affairs shall te encouraged, facilitated, coordinator is accountable for providing
information and services to the SG.
and protected within the SG.
The coordinator is responsible for:
7) The Social Contract (WAC 174-120-Providing for
facilitation
of
020) is considered to have binding
authority. No student at any time will meetings.
-Preparing meetings' agendas.
infringe upon another student's rights as
-Retaining a minutes taker.
set forth in this document
-Auending multicultural training.
Student Governance Duties
-Providing multicultural training for
The SG will be responsible for:
-Holding well-advertised meetings at the board.
-Disseminating information.
least bi-weekly during fall, winter, and
-Preparing and managing the SG
spring quarters.
operating budget.
-Representing student interests.
-Organizing and training the SG
-Cooperating with the institution's
other governance bodies in formulating board members.
-Communicating with other offices
institutional policies.
-Appointing student representatives and committees.
(S/he may delegate any of these tasks,
to campus-wide governance committees.
of but remains responsible for their
-Exercising
responsibility
confinning the appointment of and completion.)
recalling, if necessary, S&A Board Student Governance Process
Meetings: The SG meets at least
members.
twice
monthly during fall, winter, and
-Confirming the hire of the S&A
spring quarters. At least one meeting a
Board coordinator.
month will give priority to hearing and
-Approval of the S&A budget
acting upon proposals from the student
-Retaining a SG coordinator.
-Acting on proposals originating
see governance, page 5
from the student body
Student Governance composition
Board: The decision-making body of

governance, from page 4
body. Meetings of the SG are open to the
public except in rare executive sessions
for personnel issues as set forth by
Washington State Law. Agendas will be
posted prior to meetings, and minutes
will be easily accessible.
Proposals: Proposals for SG action
can originate from the student body, SG
standing committees, or SG board
members. During at least one meeting per
month proposals originating from the
student body have priority on the agenda.
Decisions: The SG uses an agreement
seeking decision process, two auempts at
consensus followed by 2/3 majority vote.
Matters to be considered by the SG must
be submitted to the SG coordinator. A
quorum of one half of sitting board
members must be present to conduct
business.
Grievance and appeals: The SG will
design and implement a grievance and
appeals process during the frrst quarter of
operation.
Standing
committees:
Each
representative to the SG is obligated to

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member, regardless of her/his culture or their respective caucus meetings for the
expressed purpose of selecting the year's
background.
Caucuses: Students with Challenges, board members.
Older Students, Native Americans, 2) Board members will be selected in
Asian/pacific
Islanders,
Euro- accordance with each caucus' decisionAmerican/White,
Jewish, making rules at a well-advertised
Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual, African descent, meeting.
and Latino/Chicano. The caucus may 3) The selection process will be overseen
choose their own decision-making by the SG staff to ensure adherence to
process. The process must guarantee each caucus' process.
equal access to participation by all . 4) Each caucus is strongly encouraged to
choose one male and one female board
members of the caucuses' constituencies.
member. If two people of opposite gender
Due to the narrow purpose of the
cannot be found, it is requested that only
electoral caucuses, and the small time
one representative be selected.
commitment involved, they will likely
draw a different group of participation
5) If a seat becomes vacant at any time
than do student organizations. Although
during the term, it may be filled for the
student organizations are called upon to
remainder of the term through a process
provide assistance to caucuses, all efforts
satisfying points I - 4 above.
should be made to maintain the
RecaU process: Each board member
independence of the caucuses; for this
can be recalled by the constituency which
reason, student group coordinators are not
selected her/him. A caucus can hold a
meeting and recall a board member
eligible to be SG Board members.
through its regular decision-malring
Board member selection: In the frrst
month of fall quarter, board members will
process provided that the booed member
is given two weeks notice to respond to
be chosen. The selection process is as
complaints, and her/his rights are not
follows:
abridged. Any caucus constituent may
1) The existing representatives will call
call a caucus meeting, provided it is well
advertised. A member of the student body
can recall an at-large board member by
collecting over 400 signatures on a
petition which stated the reason for the
recall drive.
SG Coordinator Selection Process:
During May, the standing SG will
Greg Gollent
conduct a hiring process for the SG
Coniume. Economi .. and Houling
Coordinator
position for the following
Cornell Univenity
year. The selection will follow all student
personnel
hiring
procedures
and
Affmnative Action guidelines.
Term: The SG Coonlinator's term
of employment will normally begin in
July and end in June. No person will
serve as SG Coordinator for more than
one term of employment If necessary,
the SG may terminate the employment of
the SG Coordinator prior to the end of
the term of employment In the even that
"The first time I saw a Macintosh, I was
disciplinary action or termination should
occur, the SG will follow all relevant
immediately hooked. It's a work of art. I saw the
institutional policies and procedures.

sit on at least one standing committee or
hold one position on a related governance
body. The four standing committees are:
-Academics Committee
-Campus Services Committee
-Strategic Plaruting Committee
-Services and Activities Board
Liaison Committee
The Academics, Campus Services,
and Planning Committees are responsible
for: Selecting a chairperson from among
their membership, making appointments
receiving the most votes will be selected.
4) Candidates' letters of intent will be
available as the only voting guide. The
selection process will last no more than
one week and independent campaigning is
not permitted.
Caucus Process: In order to help
create a board composed of diverse
perspectives, nine caucuses will meet in
the fall to select SG Board members.
These caucuses are not interest groups,
they are electoral bodies. The board
members chosen represent the entire
student body, but are accountable to the
caucuses that selected them. The caucuses
are free to choose any student as board

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by Scott A. Richardson
The student governance
system during the 19881989 academic year was
the Student Union. It was
built upon a one person,
one
vote
system
of
representation.
During April a coalition
of students dissatisfied by
the system coalesced · to
vote in a new "cultural
caucus"
governance
structure. The new system
was meant to provide
greater
accessibility
to
tradi tionally
underrepresented groups.
A month later the new
SU
was
deemed
unconstitutional
by
Evergreen's legal counsel
Mike Grant. During the
final days of the academic
year a negotiating team,
comprised of both cntlcs
and supporters of the SU,
hammered out a revised
document, labeled "Student
Governance." This SO is
the document reproduced
on these pages.

Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990
Page 4 Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990

Page 5

Late night with David George
by Scott A. Richardson
Wednesday night is layout night at
the CPJ. Sometimes Wednesday night
moves into Thursday morning as layout
continues. We get red-eyes and silly. We
begin to wander campus.
This Wednesday-Thursday was layout
night for the Evergreen Free Press as
well. I caught up 'with part of the Free
Press "staff' in their CAB Pit temporary
layout area at about 1:30 am. Partially
completed pages formed a grid across
one side of the Pit while hunched figures
wielding Exactos and non-repro-blue pens
placed text and graphics. David George,
a Free Press cornerstone, rushed from
point to poin t, coordinating the stal wart
staff in its mission. That mission: get the
flats prepared for printing later in the
day. I interrupted: "What military action
are you considering to respond to the
CPJ take-over of the old Free Press
layout space?"
"Only time will tell."
"Are the CPJ and the Free Press
quarreling?"
"I don't believe so....32 pages, if
that's the next question."
Thirty-two pages is twice the size of

a typical issue of either paper. To create
such a tome the Free Press needed solid
backing. David said that over 30 people
have spent time getting ' this special
orientation issue together. Logistically, a
return to a smaller format will probably
be in the works for the next issue
(maybe a month away).
David indicates that the Free Press
would like to find a staff or facul ty
member willing to serve as an adviser, so
the paper can gain access to some of the
space on the CAB third floor. The
presently empty and unused spaces
created by expansion upheaval would
provide the Free Press with safe storage
space and, perhaps, a more efficient
working environment.

But as one production assistant
remarked, "I kinda like this vagabond
arrangement, moving from place to place.
It suits my lifestyle."
In fact, the makeshift quarters have
created some odd inspiration for the
workers. With the closed openness of the
Pit area, UFO conference posters nearby,
and a gusting wind howling past, the
staff has experiences a "strange interlude
with alien forces" during the production
of the first issue of volume 4.
With an eye-catching cover by noted
local artist Mark Dudock, copies of the
long-awaited publication should be
snatched up soon after their arrival on the
scene. That should be rewarding for the
"incredible number of people who gave

their time and energy" to put the paper

oul
Although this week's CPJ and Free
Press are expected to hit the stands just
hours apart, David points out that the
purpose of the independent publication "is
not to make waves, but to provide an
informational
resource"
for
the
community.
The Free Press presently has no
office and no phone, but will advertise
meeting times and has provided an
address: EFP, Suite 2-314, 2103 Harrison
NW, Olympia, Washington, 98502.
Scott Richardson is usually asleep at
3 am.

._----------------------------------------------------------------------------_.. _-----------------------------------------------._,

WE HAVE
JUST WHAT YOU
NEED FORA
BRIGHT FUTURE.

Did Army c·o ver up UFO crash?
by Cbris Bader
In all of my years of reading about
and researching UFOs, the situation has
never been stranger than it is now. UFO
"experts" are claiming that the United
States government is participating in a
massive "cover-up" of its intimate
knowledge of the existence of UFOs.
These UFO experts say they have
official government documenlS to back
them up.
.
You have probably heard something
of these rumors, either through the
tabloids, TV shows like "A Current
Affair" and "Unsolved Mysteries," or
even a series of articles in last year's
Evergreen Free Press.
Over the next few weeks I will give
you a primer of these UFO stories, the

people involved, and even infonnation on
the alien races purportedly visiting us.
Please remember that I am only
reporting the stories as I hear them.
Hopefully my telling the story will not
lend to its veracity.
So, with reservations in mind, here
it goes ...
Roswell, New Mexico. 1947--00 the
evening of July 2, 1947, a disk-shaped
object was seen flying over RosweU,
New Mexico.
The next day a local ranch manager
named William Brazel found strange
wreckage scattered over the countryside
near his home.
Brazel eventually contacted the
authorities after which Major Jesse
Marcel, an intelligence officer at a nearby

Late Wednesday night
CPJ editor loses mind
and thanks staff
I'd
like to thank
everyone who has gone
out of their way to see to
it that you, the readers of
the CPJ, get your CPJ in
a timely manner. First, I'd
like to thank Ron Austin
for staying up for 48
hours at a time to design
ads and distribute the
CPJ. Next I'd like to
thank Heather Candelaria
for volunteering (that
means no money) to stay
up late into the night
laying out ads for our ad
department which is in
total chaos.
Sam
Loewenberg
deserves
some
recognition for showing

undying enthusiasm for
the
CPJ and
the
possibilities it represents.
Dan Snuffin we thank for
bringing music to listen to
and sticking with the
. production of the paper.
I'd also like to thank my
good
friend
Dylan
Canfield for coming in at
just the right moment to
type in material we could
not do without.
Scott
Ri ch ardson
deserves recognition for
devoting
massive
quantities of time to the
paper while trying to
attend classes like a
normal student. I'd like to
thank Edward Martin for

UFO Conference
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Army Air Forces base, was sent to
retrieve the wreckage.
Among the objects he recovered were
"small beams about three-eights or a half
inch square with some sort of
hieroglyphics on them that nobody could
decipher."
The Army next made a press release,
announcing that the remains of a "flying
disk" had been recovered. Newspapers
allover the country printed the story as
front page news.
Unfortunately the Army party poops
quickly issued a second press statement
saying, in effect, "Whoops! The wreckage
is really only a weather balloon."
Since that day UFO buffs have
claimed that the government issued the
second press statement to cover-up its

4> Under the

ever.g reens
by Scott A. Richardson
October weather moves faster than
August's. Has the rainy season started
early or wiU we be treated to another
spell of warm and sunny days?
Big-leaf maple leaves have begun to
respond to cooler temperatures and
shorter days by starting their annual shift
from green to orange and yeUow. Hawk
migration is beginning, with red-tailed
hawks soaring overhead and other raptors
moving through. A merlin passed over
the recreation fields and a turkey vulture
was spotted over Mud Bay. Passerine
flocks of kinglets and chickadees are
getting larger, while bushtit "swarms"
have also grown. Northern flickers have

also become more visible--fledglings
learning their way around the snag route?
Now is a good time to begin feeding
if you want to add crowds of finches,
siskins, or juncos to your window view.
In the Bald Hills area Pacific· tree
frogs bounded away in every direction as
two Greeners bounded after them. Their
appearance in such large numbers seems
to be another response to the October
conditions.
Thank.r Eben, NikJd, and Ian. Bird
sighlings and all olher natural hislory
observations are welcomed at lhe CPJ
office, L251O. A compiler for lhis column
is needed, 100.

saving my sanity by
taking responsibility for
half of the paper's
operations. Finally, my
girlfriend
Deirdre
deserves some credit for
putting up with my
absence .for three days
each week.
In
case
your
wondering, this list of
names is not in any
particular
order
of
Significance because my
synapses are falling apart
under the strain of this
late
hour
and
the
Dimetapp I took for the

cold I'm suffering from.
The people I really
wish I could be thanking
are hoards of writers that
(will?) be submitting to
the Seepage. Remember,
the CPJ is what you
make it. Come by our
office Library 251 0 and
talk to us about what you
are going to write.
You know, the really
sick thing about it all is
that most of us love the
torture we put ourselves
through every week to
put out the paper.
. Tedd Kelleher, editor

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

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990

October 6, 1990
Evergreen
State College
Lecture Hall #1
1:00 P.M.
$5.00 Students!
Senior Citizens
$10.00 General Admission

retrieval of a crashed UFO. They point
to facts such as Major Jesse Marcel's
statemenl that he was "absolutely
convinced that the wreckage could not
be from a weather balloon", and that
radio stations around Roswell were
warned by the government not to transmit
infOl mation about the "crash."
Did the Army recover a crashed
UFO?
The "RosweU Incident" was nearly
forgotten for decades. That is, until a
journalist named Jamie Shandera received
the "MJ-12" documents ...
Next issue- Secret government
documents, alien bodies, and other
goodies.

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Cooper

Point Journal October 4, 1990

Page 7

Forum
Puree for Prez? Eppo says no
the administrative realm as well. Finally,
he has a sense of history that I feel is
critical during this transition period of
Evergreen.
My second choice is Gail Martin for
many of the same reasons. Byron is first
on my short list because I feel that Gail
is already filling a critical role as vicepresident of student affairs. If Gail left
this position it would leave a void similar
to the one Les has created during the
past few weeks. Finally, I put Dan Evans
on the list because he enjoys a lot of
credibility within the legislature and he is
not likely to try and micro-manage the

anything. No one knows anything about
by Jon Epstein
Today I will tum my attention to the him and he has not published any articles
subjcct of an interim president for on his views.
Similarly, we know very little about
Evergreen. Currently, Les Puree, vicepresident of college advancement is Les Purce. I have nothing bad to say
flI1ing this role. While many people about him, at the same time, I have
support Les Purce as a candidate for nothing good to say about him. He has
interim president, I do not. From the not been here long enough for most
historical viewpoint it is important to note people to gain an opinion. He has no
that whomever becomes interim president history here at Evergreen and knows very
will likely serve in the position for little about the principles and ideals that
approximately two years. That is how were developed by Evergreen's founding
long it took the board of trustees to fIOd faculty.
Joe Olander.
This creates another void in which
As a member of the Alumni the burden is upon Les to "prove
Association Board of Directors I have himself' to the Evergreen community_
had several opportunities to work with Time and energy spent convincing
Les in his role as vice-president. I have everyone that he is a team player is time
had no personal experiences with him that could be better used to convince the
that leads me to believe he should not legislature to provide funding for the
serve as interim president. However, there college.
are a number of good reasons why he
My third reservation about Les Puree
should not become interim president.
has to do with the position he has
First of all, he is Joe's man. This vacated. The college needs a vicemay be an unfair description but, as we president of college advancement. Who
have seen, perceptions do make a will fill this role? The likely candidates
difference in political positions. In order that I have seen are unacceptable. One of
for Les to work effectively with the those candidates admits to having very
Evergreen community he must establish little interest or skill is raising money.
himself on his own terms.
Raising money is one of the primary
Unfortunately, this is an uphill battle. Joe duties of this position. Les was hired to
Olander hired him in his present position fill this position and that is where he
and the perception, right or wrong, that belongs.
he represents our past presidents agenda,
My top picks for interim president
include Byron Youtz, Gail Martin, and
follows him wherever he goes.
Second, placing Les Purce in the former president Dan Evans. Byron is my
crucial position of interim president is first choice because he is a long-time
similar to placing Judge Souter in the member of the faculty and has credibility
Souter will get the among his colleagues. Byron is also a
Supreme Court
nomination because he hasn't done o former provost and enjoys credibility in

college as Joe attempted to do.
Finally, I am working on a new
song called "Ode to Joe." The melody is
based on Hank Williams classic tune
"Jambalaya" The song begins, "Goodbye Joe, you gotta go, right-a-away-<>." If
you have any verses for this soon to be
classic, Greener hit please drop them in
campus mail room, at KAOS-FM, or the
CPJ.
Jon 'Eppo' Epstein is an Evergreen
graduate student involved in so many
activities it's a wonder he ever gets any
sleep.

,-.~-~--'-:"-------=-------------------r

"'~m1/(i '

TIlE SUtrml1.Y (IF };./lo ~ o IM5
Prm."'J/J~D T/l1;f \'Of! cA" (lli, fr-mE

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creators of the 1982 bill, Fernand St.
Germain and Jake Gam, received a total
amount of over $210,000. Although the
actual numbers of those who received
money from the bank lobby is far too
long to be mentioned here, I'll just name
a few that you might recognize. Between
1981
an~l
1990,
the
following
representives and senators each received
the amount listed according to the July
10. 1990 Village Voice: Pete Wilson (RCalif.)-$243,334; Lloyd Bentsen (DTexas)-$154,207; Alan Cranston (DCalif.)-$143,700; Alfonse D'Amato (RNY)-$88,235; Phil Gramm (R-Texas)$86,098; Robert Dole (R-Kansas)$72,450: William Lowery (R-Calif.)$85,088; David Drier (R-Calif.)-$75,150;
Mel Levine (D-Calif.)-$69)50; Frank
Annunzio (D-lli.)-$51,620. Please keep in
mind that the actual list of those who
were slipped the bills is at least twice as
long as the one you see here.
Pete Zuckerman, editor of the
Washington-based newsletter PACs and
Lobbies, said that the amount of
'persuasion money' is quite astounding.
According to Zuckerman, members
received $3.5 million in 1985-86, and
$5.8 million during the election cycle just
prior to the passage of the S&L bailout
bill last year. The only one who seems to
be somewhat honest is Henry Gonzalez
(D-Texas). While Chairman of the House
Banking Committee over the last six
years, he has only received $1,750. Quite
a contrast from his predecessor, St.
Germain, who received a minimum of
$149,000.
Oh, but this ripoff doesn't end there.
One of the primary reasons for the big
loss in the Savings and Loan industry
was that investments were made in the
oil market There' s that leey word
again ...OIL! An interesting result of the
Iraq invasion is that those investments are
going to increase in value, allowing some
o of the S&L investors to reap some big
benefits, while still receiving money from
the bailout bill. They will be getting the
goods from both sides.
George Bush, who has an infinite
interest in oil, has the majority of his

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990

by Sylvia Darko
A bumper sticleer--"No fat chicks." A
TV ad--"Even if you lose weight, you
still °may not like what you see." Personal
ads--"Sensitive. and understanding. Want
to meet slim, attractive person for
meaningful relationship." A TV groom to
his valueless, shallow bride--"Just don't
chunk up." Stars view "before" pictures
in astonishment--"This was mel"
We have cried buckets, taken speed,
sprinkled powders, run miles, popped
pills, paid fortunes, counted calories,
opened packets, induced vomiting,
watched videos, kept charts, attended
meetings, endured fasting, read booles,
and planned menus. We've gone under
the knife, into therapy, back to childhood,
and out of our minds. We've died. We're
people with eating disorders. Most of us
are women. As scarred veterans of battles
with food and ourselves, we want
understanding, not pity.

Understand that not everyone with an
eating disorder is overweight. Bulimia,
anorexia and compUlsive overeating can
be part of anyone's life, not matter how
much or how little they weigh.
Understand that we make assumptions
· g disorders and peop1e who
a bo ut eaun
have them. Most of these concern
overweight people, but others get their
unfair share of ignorance. As an
overweight woman, I can speak to only
one area: fat bigotry.
Understand that many people are "at
"
bigots, both innocent and intentional. As
usual, they rely on myths. Not as usual,
it's acceptable to apply the myths to
reality. We · have all made these
assumptions, fat people included They
were taught to us in many ways.
Fat people are ugly. Fat vs. thin has
been a changing fashion trend since selfconsciousness was invented. Aside from
specialty pUblications, how many images

of glamorous overweight women are
there? TV-land has three: Delta Burke,
Oprah Winfrey, and a pantyhose ad. Four
if you count "Roseanne," a show about a
non-glamorous working woman. Many
cultures feel an attractive woman is
at....
ctive at any weight. Media-conscious
ua
cultures feel you can never be too thin,
especially if you're female.
Fat people are not smart. How
many fat and dumb fictional characters
can you count? Limit yourself to network
entertal·nment TV, where most fat and
dumb people seem to live. What do you
see?
Fat people are lazy. Thin people
tend to be hired before equally or better
qualified fat people. What is the
em p loy e r
t h ink i n g ,
per hap s
subconsciously? That fat people are lazy
and will not work as hard. A popular
legal drama addressed the issue once.
One show. One episode.

All rat people want to be tbin
people. Not quite. Fat people want to
feel better about themselves. (Don't we
all?) Some think becoming thin will solve
all their problems.
Fat
people
are:
unhealthy,
humorous, metally unstable, ashamed,
good cooks, lonely, better nuTturers,
emotionally crippled, old, more popular
with children, shorter-lived, badly dressed,
and sexually perverse.
Fat people are not: intellectual,
spiritual, athletic, physically passionate,
d ISClP
· . 11 ed
.
.
0,
am b·IUOUS,
prod uctlve,
romantic or artistic.
As a veteran, I'm only one of many.
I invite anorexics and bulimics to write
about prejudice
they
may
have
encountered.
Sylvia Darko is a senior studying
film theory and criticism on an
independent contract and one of two
tWors witll the Reflections on Nature
program.
0

0

Free speech attacked on campus
6f51Pf YIIV oEa/J£5 JMT H£'5
COTTA HAVE A ClWETTE

.. , ~v'f

Many shady things lie behind S&L
by Paul Slusher
On September 28, the nation heard
talk of war. George Bush said that he
vowed to reclaim Kuwait and replace the
ousted monarch, hinting that military
force may be "necessary."
National
Security Adviser Brent Sowcroft followed
up with a message to the world that the
United States would only wait a short
period of time before exploring "other"
options. Finally, a democrat on the
Armed Services Committee, Les Aspin
from Wisconsin, said, "The administration
is looking more and more favorably on
the war option."
Hmmmmm, what is going on here?
Well, believe it or not, a lot is going on
in the wings. Despite all the hype that
surrounds this "Crisis in the Gulf," many
issues have suffered from almost total
blackout That, as I will attempt to
illustrate, is very possibly part of a much
larger thing (aka conspiracy).
Among these issues are the David
Souter nomination (which could affect
everything from abortion to civil rights),
the proposed military cuts, our lagging
economy, increased offshore drilling, and
other oil exploration, U.S. support of
death squads in such countries as
Guatemala and El Salvador, and the nowinfamous Savings and Loan scandal. It
is the latter issue that I would like to
examine this week. The Savings and
Loan issue is the most covered up issue
since the Iran-Contra scandal. And like
its predecessor, the trail of slime leads.
right into the back door of the White
House.
In 1982 the most dangerous idiot of
the decade, Ronald Reagan, signed the
"Gam-St. Germain" deregulation act. At
the time the "great communicator" told
the nation that it was the "most important
legislation for fmancial institutions in the
last fr.fty years." Like most other issues in
the Reagan years, we bought the farm,
not knowing that the land was poisoned.
In the process of persuading both the
House and Senate Banking Committees
into deregulation, lots of money seemed
to flow between the banking lobby and
the committee members. The actual

Fat higotryplagues society

fmancial holdings in the oil industry. Neil
Bush, his son, who was the head of a
failed S&L, was quoted as saying in a
recent congressional hearing, "I know this
sounds kind of fishy, but I can explain."
Fishy is putting it lightly, Neil.
The issue of the failed Slid. is one
of several under examination. Although
information pertaining to connections to
the CIA, the Contras, and insider
fraudulent loaning, the media and the
congressional
investigative
hearings
continue to avoid the real issues. This
has a lot to do with all the diversion
created from the Iraq invasion of Kuwait.
Neil Bush, who is involved in the oil
business as well, has been fIOgered as
giving insider loans to an asSOCiate at his
Silverado S&L. Neil reportedly approved
$96 million in loans to Bill Walters.
Following the loans, Neil and Bill entered
the JNB oil exploration company
together, and the result left Neil With an
87.5% of the company's stock. The
Silverado S&L had purported assets of
$2.3 billion, and the bailout of just that
one S&L will cost the u .S. taxpayers
more than $1 billion. Neil and Bill,
however, will pay nothing, In fact, Neil
will most likely retain his financial
holdings. His only punishment will be
that he can't run an S&L anymore. Oh
boo-hoo!

0

When it became known to the S&L
regulatory commission that Bush's
Silverado thrift was in debt, the order
came from certain Washington officials to
hold off on shutting down the S&L.
Why? It was two months before election
day in 1988. The regulator who divulged
this infonnation, Kennit Mowbray,
refused to name the 'official' who gave
the order.
It has also been reported that certain
ties with the CIA were in place.
Although nearly impossible to confirm,
the story is that the CIA set up fake
investments
(insurance
companies),
liquified the funds and sent the money to
certain political figures, informants, as
well as the Contras in Nicaragua. It has
also been exposed, through certain ex-





crISIS

CIA operatives, that the CIA has been
involved in drug trafficking for political
pwposes. What should be asked is
whether the S&L issue has any
connections to the CIA drug movements,
support of death squads, or even the
mafia.
The mafia connection has also been
slightly exposed as of late through
several publicized transactions between
the CIA and known organized crime
businesses. One example, according to
Houston Post reporter Pete Brewton, is
the transaction between St. Joe Paper Co.
and a consortium of investors that
included several oraganized crime leaders
and the CIA. Out of the transaction an
estimated $7 million made its way to a
company tied to CIA-friendly narcotics
smuggling lllld drug money laundering
located on the island of Jersey.
As you can see, there is a lot to be
learned from the S&L crisis. However,
that is the last thing Bush wants to see
happen. As we observe our corporate
media tell us half-truths and propaganda,
and our bought-out legislators talk
rhetoric and make men's club threats at
Iraq, nothing substantial will be done
about the biggest scandal in U.S.
economic history.
0

Joe Wells, an Austin-based ex-FBI
agent who is now the Chainnan of the
National Association of Certified Fraud
Examiners, has said. "This S&L stuff is
probably the biggest criminal conspiracy
that I've ever seen ...perhaps the biggest
that's ever existed."
No, instead of the truth, Bush would
rather send our 18-22 year olds to go and
die in the desert. This not only allows
the important issues to be covered up,
but it very well might get him re-elected
in 1992. Every 'good American' loves a
'good war: Bush knows that reality all
too well.

Paul Slusher continues to explore the
inter-relatedness of diverse topics in u.S.
foreign policy in next week's CPJ.

by John Karl
Free speech is under attack on
college
campuses,
and even
its
traditionally staunchest defenders have
joined in the assault
Student journalists and free speech
advocates are concerned about a
proliferation of college speech codes so
widespread that, according to Time
magazine, "Nowhere is the First
Amendment more imperiled than on
college campuses." As is often the case
with censorship, these codes have been
adopted with the best intentions: Campus
racism is on the rise and something has
to be done about it. So token measures
are taken which exacerbate racial tensions
and ignore the First Amendment.
Speech codes drafted in response to
this important issue are dividing the
American Civil Liberties Union, wl.ich
has always tended toward an "absolute"
posistion on free speech. While the
Wisconsin and Michigan ACLU afflliates
have
sued their respective state
universities over the codes, the northern
and southern California affiliates adopted
a resolution in July favoring narrowly
drawn policies which prohibit harassing
speech.
John Powell, national legal director of
the ACLU, asserts: "My concern is less
with the strength of the First Amendment
than with the wave of racial harassment
that has swept the country. The campus
is not under the threat of being silenced."
Defending their resolution, the
California affiliates cite the legal need to
balance the First Amendment against
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The Cooper Point Journal exists to
facilitate communication of events, ideas,
movements, and incidents affecting The
Everp'CIl State College and surrounding
communities. To ponray accurately our
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material from anyone willing to work with

"conduct that interferes with the
Fourteenth Amendment right of students
to an equal education." They argue that
the resolution only advocates a ban on
speech which is clearly harassing and that
"hostile, even offensive speech in
classroom debates and public discourse is
something students must endure or
challenge with speech of their own."
Free speech proponents such as writer
Nat Hentoff are not buying. Pointing out
that cases brought under the codes will
be heard by untrained college judicial
panels, not civil libertarians or ACLU
attorneys, Mr. Hentoff decries the
inevitably vague nature of speech codes.
"Most colleges whose 'due process'
hearing I've covered are unshakably fond
of the British Star Chamber model of the
17th century," he remarks sarcastically.
"Just the places to deal with these broad
and vague restrictions on speech."
Rules which limit speech are only as
good as those who enforce them. Eleanor
Hobnes Norton, President Carter's chair
of the federal Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission, explained this
bitter reality: "It is technically impossible
to write an anti-speech code that carmot
be twisted against speech nobody means
to bar. It has been tried and tried and
tried.
Indeed, speech codes have been
defended by voices far less moderate that
those of the ACLU's California affiliates.
At Stanford University, law professors
provided the philosophical rationale for a
new student conduct policy that one
student sponsor candidly admitted "is not
0

0

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Submission deadllne Is Monday nOOD.
We will try to publish material submitted the
following Thursday. However, space and
editing constraints may delay publication.
Responses to the content of the CPJ
which are longer than 300 words and Forum
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entirely in
line with
the First
Amendment"
ABA Journal.
the
publication of the American Bar
Association,
quotes
Stanford
Law
professor Mari Matsuda, who argues that
traditional views of free speech act -as a
self-serving
cover
for
continued
domination by majority elites.
In Orwellian fashion, advocates of
the code argue that speech limitations
would actually increase free speech and
"vigorous debate." Discriminatory speech,
they reason, is meant to silence the
victim.
Such arguments are not only clearly
opposed to First Amendment principles,
they also threaten to undercut the
achevement of equal rights. Civil rights
activists have always relied on speech as
their principle weapon. In the long run,
any compromise of principles of free
speech works to the detriment of
minorities.
In addition to infringing on free·
speech, these codes may actually fuel
racism. As the recent incident with the
music group 2 Live Crew dramatically
demonstrates, attempts to censor offensive
views makes martyrs out of the censored_
Did the censoring of the album "As
Nasty as They Wanna Be" silence the
misogynist lyrics of 2 Live Crew?
Definitely not. It showered the band in
publicity, thereby propelling them to the
top of the charts.
Alan Keyes, a former assistant

secretary of state, points out that the
codes themselves arise out of a racist and
cQndescending reasoning. In a debate
with the professor who wrote the code
adopted by Stanford University this
spring, Mr. Keyes argued against the
"patronizing paternalistic assumptions"
upon which the code is founded. He
expressed surprise that "someone would
actually think that I will actually sit in a
chair and be told that white folks have
the moral character to shrug off insults
and I do not."
Racism is a problem which must be
addresed with more than misguided
measures like limiting offensive speech.
Not only are such measures open to
abuse, they also drive racism underground
where it thrives.
An
academic
enviroment
characterized by an unfettered pursuit of
truth and knowledge should be the ideal
forum to expose and defeat the ignorance
that fuels racism .
The ACLU's John Powell forcefully
argues, "The primary problem is that we
haven't begun to seriously discuss racial
issues." He is absolutely right But the
speech-restricting policies he seems to
advocate will only have a chilling effect
on the needed discussion.
Jolin Karl is a researcll analyst for
Freedom House, a nonprofit public policy
organization. nus column was nationally
distributed by tile Collegiate Network.

Ban the 'Book of Lies'
by Dan Snuffin
Religious extremists like to ban
things. They like to ban movies and
records that contain things that don't fit
into their rigid moral beliefs. Most of all,
they like to ban books. Books like
Huckleberry Finn and Catcher in the Rye.
The list of barmed books is long, but
it omits one very dangerous title.
The book that is missing from their
list has been used to justify banishment,
prosecution, murder, and war.
This book was used in pre-civil war
America and again in South Africa to
justify the enslavement of blacks.
This
book
has
condemned
homosexual behavior as immoral and
evil.
This book has been used to justify
the idea that women should be passive
and servile to men, that a woman's place
is in the home.
The book I am talldng about is the
Bible, one of the most evil and
dangerous books of all.
Decades of 'interpretation' of the
Bible by extremists to fit their concepts
of religion have warped the ideas within

so much thal the book is almost
completely meaningless.
It is an ancient book that no longer
pertains to these modem times, yet some
still strive to apply its antiquated dogma
to the world of today.
If any book should be banned, it
should be the Bible, the Book of Lies.
For when it is fmally destroyed, there
will be no need to ban anything else.
Dan Snuffin is a godless communist
wllo believes in realiry, not religion.

Response

'Black swath'
I couldn' t help but notice, and I hope
my
fellow
students
also
were
apprehensive in their flfSt days back to
school, the tremendous black swath struck
through the very center of Red Square.
This slapdash revision confounds the
point of paying well-dressed architects.
I' m well aware of the need for a
smoothly wheeled ride to and from the
CAB but gee whiz.
J. Renaud

Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990

Page 9

Arts & Entertainment

Arts & Entertainment

Paul asks: What's in a name?

'Goodfellas' explodes spaghetti
by Gordon
Peterson takes to exploring
When Hollywood
certain segments of society with artistic
vigor and guaranteed box office rewards
one can safely assume the subject U;
question has a widely accepted and
probable romantic impression upon the
populace.
The early years of cinema produced
what, at the time, were bold vehicles-stiff by today's standards--into the world
of organized crime with fIlms like "Liule
Caesar" and "The Public Enemy." Naive
and aware of the present value system
the bad guys always lost, falling victirr:
to their own ambition and unbridled
greed; Good and Evil starkly separated
by an impregnable moral wall.
The sophistication of the Godfather
films brought to reality the world of the
Mafia (the word is rarely used) and its

"The dirty talk
is hurled with no
shame, the main
characters plug
their own
antagonists, and
the spaghetti
sauce isn't
prepared by a
lower soldter."
encroachment into "respectable" society;
men of dignity wearing solemn suits
ordering executions, and attending famil;
christenings.
What director Martin Scorsese

("R
.
Bull"
. ag~~
, "T,~. . Driver") has do~e
.The narra~r's early in~on is
With. Goodfellas
IS. to
take this ~aull (paul SOM.no) a ~e, silent ~evolutIonary p~ocess a bit further.
like .man whom Impassively watches his
The parnclpants he~ are. lowered a e~pIre.run itself, sitting quietly and grim
step from the autOCIC!ucal hie~hy of With hiS pc,,:er behind him. Soruino's
D?n Corleone. The ~ talk IS hurled ~onnance IS reserved .and restrained
WI~ no shame, th~ mam characters plug glVlng a sense of unquestioned authority
their own antagoms~, and the spaghetti in every scene. "Here's some money," he
sauce and. sa~age Isn't ,p~ep~ed by a tells betrayer Henry. "I must now tum
l~wer soldier. Goopfellas IS just that: a my back on you." And he means it This
trIO of men ~ho enJoy what they do with
after years of friendship.
a sense of pnde and. accomplishment ~at
. J~ Pesci plays. a trigger-happy,
labor ~lnlOns pay big bucks to publicly easIly mSulted fiery little man with a
proclaim.
.
..,
high voice and short legs. He represents
Based on NIcholas Pileggi s book the good old days when gangsters spoke
~eggi co-wrote the with the~ heaters and kil1~. copper:' for
"Wiseguy"
scree~play With Scorses.e) the . fIlm fun. A Violence syruped With funny Jokes
chromc.1e~ three d~des m the life of and p~es and hugs for his old mother.
Henry. Hill, poor kid fr0!'l B~ooklyn and Pesci IS perfect for ~e role, the kind of
dreammg of the good life VIa the mob raucous and audaciOUS enterprise the
men he sees everyday from his large Academy loves to consider and always
family, small space apartment
overlooks.
He starts with the small time. Parking
And Robert DeNim.
cadil~acs,
delivering. mes:-ages, and
Veteran of the Mafia movies (" The
blowmg up an occasional nval parking Godfather" I and II, "Once Upon a Time
lot are but a f~w of his tasks. The in America") DeNim's part as Jimmy
school,. however, mfonns Henry's parents "The Gent" Conway is a cross-section of
of thelI' son's truancy and the local his earlier efforts. Jimmy is a blue collar,
goodf~lIas persuade the local postman not
white collar criminal holding up the
to deh~er ~y more. letters ~om school; targets himself then dressing appropriately
they sock hiS head mto a pizza oven as with the spoils. He feels the world o" ·es
an additional inducement
him a living and he takes when it does.: '!.
Henry's experiences as he rises and pay up.
Jimmy is Henry's darker side,
prospers are told in a narrative style,
~most documentary, which pulls in and standing in the shadows and in small
mvolves the audience. Henry is the increments pulling Henry deeper in.
layman's bri~ge into the underworld, a
Holding this merry band together is
world few ~aIthful subscribers to the IRS Scorsese. His shots are short and snappy
darting around in a frenzied pac~
ever came Into co~tact with.
Karen (Lorrame Br:acco) meets, is matching the movement of his characters.
stood up .by, and .~es He~. She As the years fly by the music changes
becomes Involved m his dealings and (from Bobby Vinton to the Rolling
doings, ~cepting her new life-style (the Stones' "Monkey Man"), the clothing
money IS good) and having her limits changes, the cars become less distinct and
tested (Henry's mistress, set \.lP in a the cops require a bit more to keep up
with inflation.
fancy, gaudy apartment is not so good).

.
~ne~ts

The
of Henry's connections
are detaIled In a ~pectacular shot of
Henry and Karen domg the Copacabana,
bypassing the long lines outside and
en~g through the extensive kitchens,
being .personally attended to at every turn
and given a front row seat
The Eighties are another matter. As
Henry begins ~etting high on his own
supply the hectic schedules, heavy traffic,
and helicopter surveillances bring Henry
to . a peak and. topple him down. ~e
Witness Protection Program becomes his
only option ~d trusts ~ d~s~y~.
To call GoodfeUas a hIt IS pure
self-indulgence. But the frlm does make

"Parking
Cadillacs,
delivering
messages, and
blowing up an
occasional rival
parking lot are
but a few of his
many tasks.
II

its point with humor and earthy
nonchalance that, at times, rivals "The
. Freshman." One cannot judge 'its factual
contents without admitting something; but
when the swarthy man in the third row
(expensive shoes, checking his peripherals
constantly) has a smirk of pleasant
recognition, one suspects the fIlm's
premise has touched a few chords of
truth at least

Fork over the loot
by Andrew Hamlin
-- -Aspiring-radio pirates might need
actual piracy to get themselves on the
air. According to Michael Huntsberger,
station manager for Evergreen's
KAOS-FM,
the
Federal
Communications Commission's new
operator fee rule, effective since last
May 25, requires all new radio
licensees to shell out $35 before the
license can be handed over.
Huntsberger stated that the FCC
normally waives fees of any kind for
noncommercial radio stations, but this
new ruling "slipped through the cracks"
because it applies to individual
The
programmers,
not
stations.
Intercollegiate Broadcasting System and
several affiliated organizations led a
campaign to quash the new requirement
when they learned of its passing, but
their proposal stalled at the desk of
FCC chairman R Sikes. Told that the
new fee would hit college students
particularly hard, Mr. Sikes allegedly
remarked, "Thirty-five bucks? That's
beer money."

~

"This is your government's attempt
to rip you off, blind," said Huntsberger.
"You own the airwaves, but now you
have to pay to use the airwaves you
already own." He indicated that if the
fee
requirement
dissuades
new
programmers from joining KAOS, the
station will soon be shorthanded as the
old programmers graduate or leave the
area "Here we are trying to provide
opportunities, but the feds won't allow
it"
To request action on this issue,
Huntsberger suggests writing to State
Representative Jolene Unsoeld at 1508
Longworth
House
Bldg.,
U.S.
Congress, Washington D.C. 20515.
Andrew Hamlin is flat broke and
starving, but he did buy the Rappin'
Duke. For fifty cents.

Your practical insult of the month, in 5 Languages:
English: May I have another plate for the maggots?
German: Bringen Sie mir doch noch bille einen Teller fur die Maden.
French: Donnez-moi done une cuvelte pour y mcltre Ics vcrsl
Italian: Mi lIarehbe un piatlo a parle per i vcrmi?
Spanish: Tiene 0([0 plato para dejar los gusanos?

We now brlng~you the conclUSion of the
CPJ interview with Alice in Chains, another
Seattle band moving into the nalionallimelighl.
Part 1 of this interview was printed in the
September 27 CPJ.

by Paul Slusher
Next my attention turned towards the
~me itself..Alice In Chains. I asked Jerry
if he thnught the name was in any way
sexist or had any sexist connotations. I
never finished asking the question when ...
Jerry: . I think that anybody who takes
any piece of · printed word or
anybody's...anything that's just a blank
thing. It could be 'cat on the floor' or
whatever. Anybody that takes anything
out of it like 'Oh this is evil, this is
satanic, this is against women' ... that's
BULLSHITI I think that you are pretty
lame and pretty bored to fuckin' don't
have the heart or the time to figure out
what the fuck is going on. If you've got
a problem with it, then fmd out what it's
about, maybe talk to someone about it,
instead of making preconceived notions
about it. That's totally bullshit. I hate
when that happens.
In answer to that, that name doesn't
mean anything. It doesn't mean a damn
thin.g. It doesn't glorify women being
chained up or anything. It's just a theme.
It's just words. If you want to look at it
in a much less volatile way, we can use
Alice as being a person's name, as
something more pure, more whole, more
swee.t or. wha~ver. Chains: something
that IS a httle bit more harsh. So it's like
a positive and a negative, together. You
could look at it that way. That's how I
do, you know. That is what life's about.
You can't have the good without the bad.
That's how I look at it ... the name doesn't
!llean anything.
Not long after we had covered that
topic, the rest of the band began to stroll
in.
CPJ: So if Alice makes it to the ~tra
level of a teenage-worship band, MTV
style ... are you guys going to stay true,
will you stay in Seattle?
Mike: Yeah!
Jerry: Yeah sure...! always will.
CPJ: Do you see that happening though?
I mean one day you go to tum on the
TV and there's Alice kickin' it allover
the place.
Jerry: I can see that happening.
Mike: Yeah, I fuckin' hope so.
Jerry: I hope that it does 'cause that's
what we are all working for.

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OFF ANY
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Oct.5
S&A Office

CRC 306
866-6000 x6220

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Oct. 6

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$3.00 I

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202 We« 4th

city of
, i~
now headed for the big time. They like it,
they crave, maybe they even need it. Yet,
even in the days of the big sell-outs and
the wanna-be rock scene, these guys seem
to at least be true to themselves. That is
something, I guess, thal shnuld be
admired. When I asked Layne if he was
psyched for the last shnw in Seattle for a
while ... he reponded "r m gonna jizz all
over the crowd tonight. Then I'm gOMa
talee a fine chamois and bump and wax
it." I think thal could be trafLSlated as a
"Yes, I am."

a massive lut within

LARGE INVENTORY
BIG SAVINGS
I OPEN MON-SAT I

NEW and USED

P!iRSCN AUZED

Sean: That could never happen.
Jerry: I was never involved in any shit
like that!
Sean: You couldn't prove it anyway!
Mike: Where did you hear that man?
CPJ: · I just heard it.
Sean: Well, you can't prove it.
To say the least, Alice is made up of
some very colorful characters. It always
seems thal the ones whnm could very be
doing sOme time, or doing some action to
warrant such, end up playing rock and
roll.
Alice In Chains, a band thal has been

®,RPET BROKaw
222 N. CAPITOL WAY

OLYMPIA'S ONLY

100"" COITON

CPJ: How about these young girls and
that whole worship trip? At Bumbershoot
I saw, when you guys were signing
autographs ...
Jerry: That was totally bizarre!
Mike: That was a flI'st time on that one
man.
Jerry: Yeah, that was the flI'st time we
had done anything like that
Mike: I .mean every once in a while
you'd get one or two people saying.. .'hey
man can I get your autograph, sign my
shirt!' or something, I mean that's great.
But Bumbershoot was like a whole
fuckin' crowd, never ending.
CPJ: I renlember seeing these young
girls standing on a platform looking down
at you guys signing autographs. And they
were talking amongst each other about
who was the cutest. (groups laughs) And
they are going 'Oh my god, I'd love to
get my hands on them', and I couldn't
help but think that you are going to have
to make some serious adjustments in
relation to this stuff.
Jerry: Well ... yeah.
Mike: But that won't happen again for
quite a while.
CPJ: It has got to be quite a rush
though?
Jerry: Oh Yeah!
The band's video, which was
scheduled to air sometime around the end
of September, was a major step in the
eyes of Alice. There was lalk for a while
that Alice In Chains would soon be
hosting Headbangers Ball on M7V. ThaI
was still in limbo at the time of lhe
interview. Jerry discussed the video.
Jerry: We did this video in front of this
really nice house in Glendale that totally
got burned down to the ground. A really
c~l house on a hill. And they painted
this red and there's all kinds of shit
around, and it's totally fucked up, but yet
n:ally beautiful. Tht; blue sky and all, and
we're playing in front of this totally
fucked up house. There's also a lot of
shit that has to do with water in this.
CPJ: For what song?
Jerry: "We Die Young."
CPJ: Now, I've got to ask you guys
this.. .1 have heard this rumor that came
from' a relatively reliable source that you
guys had this house together, and for a
week or so you had some girl, willingly,
handcuffed to like a beam or something.
The word was that this was a very sexual
- experience. Now is there any truth to
this?

10em • 6 pm

FRBB PARtING

OLYMPIA
DOWNTOWN CENTER
222 N. CAPITAL WAY

The Northwest Family Pizza Restauranl

EXPIRES OCT. 31,1910

I



~------~----------,
754-3711

CAPITAL MALL. OLYMPIA

Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990

Page 11

Arts & Entertainment

Mould screams from the junkpile
by Mark Winford
Life is not easy for Bob Mould. On
"Black Sheets of Rain" the guitarist
contemplates suicide, chronicles six
destructive relationships, and fmally offers
himself as a sacrifice to solve his own
and the world's problems. It is to
Mould's credit that he injects enough
passion into each song through his guitar
playing and voice that he doesn't
succumb to self-parody.
Husker Du's breakup liberated
Mould's guitar playing: he rips into his
songs on "Black Sheets of Rain." The
title track is over seven minutes of
sludgy distortion; in his second solo
Mould builds a junk pile of sidewinding,
strangled notes. Then somewhere in the

chaos, he fmds the song's melody and
for a few seconds rises above the cloud
cover that blankets the album before
letting out a belch of electricity via the
whammy bar and dives back into his

verse.
The loners anthem "Hanging Tree" is
the album's magnum opus. After a
desolately strummed acoustic intra Mould
launches into a raging, swampy riff that
could clear cut a redwood foresl Mould
catalogs a series of events that have led
him to be an angry drifter and at the end
sings "these things happen all the timet
should I throw myself from the hanging
ttee?/is there a place for those of us who
don't belong?/l haven't found it yet," and
hits a power chord for punctuation that

crashes out of the speakers like a
tsunami.
In the eye of the electric hurricane is
the acoustic "Last Night" in which Mould
sings the most sensitive and gentle vocal
of his career and captures the shrug-ofthe-shoulders-hopelessness at the end of
a relationship beautifully.
"Black Sheets of Rain" also contains
the thrash pop gems that will be found
on any Bob Mould album. "Hear Me
Calling" with its bouncy acoustic twelvestring melody and surges of distortion
crashing in and out builds up, because
Mould gradually increases his vocal
intensity,
until
(with
overdubbed
background vocals harmonizing) his voice
roars like a melodic freight train. "It's

Too Late" is the catchiest track on the
album and, with its release as a single,
could be the hit that Mould deserves.
"Black Sheets of Rain" is a ftftyfour minute primal scream releasing
loneliness, anger, frustration, dissolving
relationships, and most of all, electricity-the sculpted textures of Mould's previous
album
"Workbook"
make
few
appearances. Catharsis has never been
this powerful in popular music, "Black
Sheets of Rain" makes John Lennon's
"Plastic Ono Band" sound like Muzak,
but if you can make it through with Bob
to the end of the album you'll be glad
you did.

All no
by Dan Snuffin
ALL

session. General admission is $10.00.
students and senior citizens $5.00.

BERKELEY FILM: "Berkeley in
the Sixties," a documentary covering the
radical movement on and around the UC
Berkeley Campus, begins its three-day
run at the Neptune Theater, comer of
15th and Brooklyh in Seattle. The New
York Times calls it "a lively and
comprehensive chronicle ...a potent blast
from the past."
AWESOME SCULPTURE: Artist
David Govedare will fmish installing the
fust six horses in his sculpture
"Grandfather Cuts Loose the Ponies," a
steel sculpture that will depict, when
fmished, 18 life-size horses spilling out
of a giant woven basket. The sculpture
sits on a bluff over looking the Columbia
River midway between Seattle and
Spokane. Govedare and his partner
Joseph Bascetta, chairman of the
Thundering Hooves Sculpture Committee,
will be on-site an available for interviews
For more
from 9 am to 11 am.
information contact Bascetta at the
Thundering Hooves Committee, (509)
459-0388.
.
INFINITE DOCTOR: A video tape
of Dr. Barry Commoner delivering a
1974 lecture on the energy and the
gasoline shortage airs over and over and
over again until Master Control gets the
order to shut it off. It's probably on right
now. Go look. Campus TV, Channel 3,

• ALLRoy SAVES' (LP)
CRUZ RECORDS

The cover of AlL-uy Saves just
about says it all. The band's mascot,
Allroy, has been crucified on a fence,
and empty can of food, a broken piggy
bank, and a garbage can lying at his
feel After witnessing so many great
albums, this one probably drove him
to suicide. Poor guy.
Somewhere between this album
and their last release, "Allroy's
Revenge,"
something
happened.
Something died, and this almost sounds
like a funeral march.
All seems to have lost that upbeat,
positive spirit in their music that
always picked you up off the pavement
when you listened to it. It don't know
what happened.
It just isn't there
anymore.
I'm not trying to see that this is
not a good album. It is good, but
that's really all you can say about it.
It just doesn't have the power that I've
come to expect from this band. The
magic of All is fading.
It's no wonder why Allroy
crucifted himself. Poor guy. Maybe
if we're really lucky, he'll rise from
the dead on the next album. You'll
have to excuse me now, for this record
review is depressing me. I think I'll
go put on "Allroy Sez" ...
Dan Snuffin needs a CD copy of
the album "All" by the Descendents so
he can play the title track on infinite
replay.

4

OBSTETRICAL
MYSTERY
TOUR: The Black Hills Community
Hospital hosts an Open House of its new
obstetrical unit from 1 pm until 4 pm.
3900 Capital Mall Drive, Olympia. Dial
754-5858 eXl lOOt

from when you turn it on to the year
2000 maybe or worse.
N'WEST ART:
A collection of
drawings, wood block paintings and
paintings by Northwest artist Guy
Anderson opens tonight in Evergreen's
Gallery IV, and runs throu " November
1st. The Gallery is on the Jurth floor of
the campus library build .Ig; exhibition
hours are 12-6 pm on weekdays, 1-5
weekends. Call Evergreen Galleries at
866-6000 eXl 6488.

5

FRIDAY

CROONIN' COUNT: The Chinook
Theater at Fort Lewis presents "Dracula:
The Musical?" "This musical farce is a
spoof of the classic horror tale," featuring

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Campus Paperback Bestsellers
_Innoc:on~

by Sala TLIOW. (Warner, $4.95,)
A sI>ocIOng tale 01 be<rayal and mun:Ier.
2. c _ _ _
by Tom Clancy.

1.

t~.

18eo1dey. $5.95.) CJA'.!>de againsl CoIomOian ClN!l caneIs.
3. TIle Joy Lucie Club. by ""'" Tan.IIvy, $5.95.) DesIinIes 01
Chonese irnln4granI women Mel ..... Ch~American dau!jlIers.
4, AIIIFIMIIy_ to KnowllMmed In _gor1on, byAobert
FuigI'<JIn 11vy. $5,95.) UIlC01VTlOf1I1lougt11s on common Ihirgs.
5. W_ _ Another _ . by Bill Watterson.

I~ a McMeeI, $7.95,) More CaMn & Hobbes canoons.~
6. TIle PtIWI 01 tile e.rtII. by Ken FoIIet. INAU~ $5.95.)
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~ events SUITtlOOCIII1o building 01 a caJledraI.
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7. Tho _ _ • by.tom Ie Caml.IBartam. $5.95.)
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The dalgerous wOOd 01 spies and cwnIerspios. •

HARRISON & DIVISION
OLY·M PIA. WASHINGTON 98502

C. Jay lseli as Count Dracula and Karen
Christiansen as Mina. Tonight is opening
night; subsequent performances are
October 6, 11, 12, 13, 18, 19,20, 25, 26,
27, 28, 31, and November I, 2, and 3.
All shows start at 8 pm except for the
performance on the 28th, which starts at
2 pm. Halloween night is dress-up night,
featuring door prizes.
For ticket
reservations call 967-6169 between 10 am
and 5:30 pm weekdays.
ART CLASSES: The State Capitol
Museum's Fall Pacific Rim Program gets
under way.
Courses include Intro to
Visual Arts, Cartooning, Figure Drawing,
and Mask Making. Youth and adult
courses. Dial 943-2375 for further info
and registration.
.

6

SATURDAY

UFOS: The UFO Contact Center
Intf'rnational presents a UFO Conference
ilt Evergreen, Lecture Hall 1 from 1 to 6
pm.
Your host is Aileen Bringle,
founder of UFO Contact Center
International. Guest speakers include a
Boeing engineer discussing life on other
planets, and several contactees, or people
who claim to have met with alien beings,
with their own stories. Also UFO books,
magazines, posters, and at least one Q&A

8. A IIrioI HIolOrt ",-n.... by SIophen W Hawlcing.
1 _ , $9.95.) Theory on the origins 011110 cosmos.
9. I Wont to Cdlogo ond n _
Oby. by Jim
I"'" Press. $5.95.) CoiIedicn 01 popUlar C8fT1lUS

COITlC snip,

10. 50 Simple TIlIngo you con do to She tile - . by !he EaIIh·

•• _.~ Group. IE8I1hwOII<s Press. $4,95.) Saving 1110 ."..""mont
~

...... c..-.. .. _ _ _ _ _ _ ....... _ _ " _ _ '\ '_

New G Recommended

-

BUSSING TO BAYVIEW -

SHUCK YOUR THING: The West
Coast Oyster Shucking Championship and
Washington State Seafood Festival goes
on today,ll am to 6 pm at the Masor.
County Fairgrounds. Sponsored by the
Skookum Rotary Club in Shelton.

8

MONDAY

MASSAGE:
Radiance offers
therapeutic massage, by appointment,
Monday through Saturday, 9 am through
8 pm. Rates are $18 for a half hour, $30
for one hour, $40 for an hour and half.
10% discount for seniors (65 and over).
Gift certificates available. Radiance is
located at 113 E. 5th, Olympia, 3579470.

1OWEDNESDA Y
PIRG DO:
WashPIRG holds its
annual Campaign Kickoff/Potluck at the
Organic Farm tonight at 6 pm. Lyle
Tribwell of the Energy Outreach Center
will speak on "Energy Alternatives for
the 1990's." WashPIRG's three projects
this quarter will be help for the hungry
and homeless, a toy safety project, and
Evergreen's fust-ever environmental audit.

11

THURSDAY

IT'S LIVE: Olympia Live Music
Society presents Dianna Kallerges and
Tom Falk at the Asterisk Cafe, Olympia,
6 to 8 pm. Free. For info call Dianna at
3524425.

s..- 8. Anthony. by KaIhIeen Batry, IBaIIanbne. $12.95.)
The I.. and limes 011110 woman wf'o became the mcoI inIIuenIiaI
_
01 the 191h-cen1uly women's movemenl •. __ . _ _ __ _

...... ond ~ta, by Chirua _
. IAnchor. $9.95.)
Selected essays from _
's wriIing and ledu<es revealing !he
impodiments .... still *'<I in the _ 01 open ciaIogue _ _

bladcsand_
Tho End 01 Natur., by Bill McKilban IAnchor, $9.95.)
/VI eloquent ~b the necess.Iy oIalInIameoIaI ptiIc>sopI>caI
sI1iItinthe_we_ .........

USSING TO BAYVIEW IS A GREA TWA Y TO COMBINE GROCERY)
SHOPPING WITH ENJOYMENT OF THE SCENIC OLYMPIA
ATERFRONT FEATURING THE PERCIVAL LANDING BOARDWALK

C

BEER-MAKING
SUPPLIES
IMPORTED WINE. BEER
GOURMET COFFEE. ESPRESSO
GREATDEU
Capital Village

400 Cooper Pt Rd

352-8988

IAwardwi~DiDg DeB I
I Bulk. Foods ~
of Specialty
Foeclltau
I'
~
I!D-store Baked GOo4j
TbouMDd8

To

sed 10'"

IOpen 24 Bra. 7

Daysl

DOWNTOWN OLYMPIA BY THE 4TH ST . BRIDGE

Page 12 Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990
Cooper Point Journal October 4, 1990

Page 13

Comics

KAOS listening .g uide
SUNDAY

6
am
7

8

The Classic Hick
with Bill Wake
Classical and nw
acoustic music to
make every Sunday
morning a pleasure.

MONDAY

TUESDAY

WEDNESDAY

Peanut Butter Soup
with Scott Brown
World beat, ethnic,
and light rock music
start the week off
right-Earth on the Air
at 8:30

Black Coffee In Bed
with Josh Kilvington
A unique morning of
world folk, rap, and
Plus
beat.
world
Josh's version of the
kitchen sink

Wlmmln 00 Thl • . TheU. Show
Every Day
with T.J. Foster
with Cara Nelson, Bluegrass, jazz, and
Dana
Schuerholtz, folk music plus rolf
and Sarah Wright
"lives on in the corner
A welcome mix of and KD. in the at 9
R&B, world beat, and am.
other music created
women,
plus
by
and
issues
Commentary

Queer Talk

New Voices

This Way Out

Crossroads

Groovy Tuesday
with Dan Heinzkill
Reggae, rap, and
R&B.
Crunchy-frog
treats now available
on Thursday

'Wheels of the
World
with Erin Schrader
..
mUSICian
A local
brings you the widest
Celtic
of
variety
music--a real treat for
the ears

Canto Llbre
with Charles Howell
Music from the Latin
American new song
movement

9
10
11

12
pm
1

2
3

4
5

6
7

of
KlIleldoscope
Sister Sound
with Esther, Val, and Sound
Ro!;emary
with
Valerie
W e s t e r n Spvha:~ky
Washington's oldef.i Acoustic and other
program by and for music from around
women . Music and I the world. A new
feature each weekI
lots of information.

Skankln' Salmon
Hands on the DIal
Juli Kelen's on-the- : with Simon Martin
air training show. Ska, reggae, and dub
New
each " dub dub dub dub dub
folks
. music.
week.

Gospel Music
with E.O.C.
Share the spirit

New Voices to 3:45

10

Rllmo Y Mae
with Marcella Abadi
Salsa, samba, and
' sout~ of the boarder
Bass In the House
musIc
with Terry Thompson
and
dance
R&B
music-very holl
Radio Babel
with Tom Hinds
Monday night world
beat

The Beat
wit h
Brendan
McFarland
and
Kristar Milburn
World beat, afro-pop,
and reggae music to
lift your spirits.

11

12

Second Opinion

to Public

Indlgenou. People.
Network
Formerly
Indian
World.
Now
two
hours of music and

Affairs

to

3:45

To be announced

s...

Swing
lon
with Earl Stark
Big Bands of the
30's, 40's, and 50's.

Mouthing Off
with Eppo
Olympia's answer to
talk radio, move over
Downey-Morton
Eppo never shuts up
" unless you call.

Afternoon Delight
with Tom Freeman
A music and public
program
affairs
focusing on local
issues.
Tom knows his stuff

Jazz 303
with Doug the Baker
Third level curricu lum
in this ongoing lesson
on American musical
culture

TeuB Gumbo
with Seth Watklns
All kinds of music
from Texas

American
Anecdote.
Tom Foote and Earl
Stark
Old time bluegrass

Comma C'...
Blurre

Tap Skram Comedy
Hour

Garth and Paul'.
World of Sin
Son of Toy Train
Crash Backside Bone
Beefcake.
Rock music.

Boy Meet. Gill
with Calvin Johnson
Rock music

The Fourth
Dlmentla
with Trey McGuire
Local and other indie
rock

Good, Bad, Smug
with Scott Brown

Cheez Death
with Jerry Ziegler
The
metal
that
makes America

Lawrence 01
Olympia
Lawrence
with
Prohaska
Rock and reggae

Specializing
Northwest rock

,HE"

Light Brlakfaat
with Garth Johnson
New acoustic and
muslc--a
electronic
nice way to start the
weekend

To be announced

Round Table
with Elena Freeland
Story telling

Ch i Id hood

When You Wish
Upon a Star
with Jim Peck
Broadwaylfilm music

fWlefhOries

'711is 'Week; ''Doctor's Oraers'

EI Menss)e Del Alre
Broadcast in Spanish
with Jose Pineda,
Felix Torres, Jose
Valadez, & friends
Music, news, and
community affairs

Crossroads

This Way Out

Hello Olympia
Original comedy

cu~ure

LAT E"R..--

MINU"TE"5

Second Opinion

Jump Night Jazz
with Ted Kuoppamaki
Straight ahead jazz
with no kicks or
that
Not
twists.
imitation mayonnaise

Johnny Stac.tto .
T. V. and film music
and trivia with a
Hollywood great

Good Morning
Olympia
with Timothy Hull
What a way to start
your weekend.
Folk
Celtic
and
music,
plus
the
amazing
Joseph
Spence

TlIJO

in

Ghoul's World by Chris Wells

God Is a Rabbit by Ron Austin

."

To be announced

Bring the Nol..
with C.C. Claire
Rap and hlp-hop-the one and onlyl

Synergistic Root.
with Cara Nelson and
Jeff Clearwater
Africantworld outernational roots music.

exotica Zone
with Victor Braitberg
Victor mixes music
from Europe, Africa,
and the Mideast

Hldeaw:l
Dan
with
eird
Spearman
Four full hours of
solid blues. Dan finds
really obscure stuff-not the stuff on those
big - statioi'ls. This is
blues as only KAOS
can give it to you

!..

The Future of Evergreen by Paul Henry

T~[ f[t}r[(ffi~[ ~f [W[~@mE[~
.

PH£

SS PHllRfCA51J' By,.I-I .

,

I<

To be announced

am

2

To be announced

3:45

8
9

The Umo)a Show
African-Am e rican
music and culture

.

The Fascist Chemists by Morgan Evans

SATURDAY

FRIDAY

THURSDAY

To be announced
To be announced

Borscht
Circuit
Radio
with Byram Abbot
Experimental radio

Way Too Late Show
with Jon Snyder

Cream of Broccoli
with Jeff Englund and
John Lin: Metal

Afterhour.
Underground
with Ed Brownell

Off the air
Off the air

Off the air

Off the air

3
CLASSIFIED RATES
30 word. or Ie.. - $3.00
10 cent. for each additional word
PRE-PAYMENT

REQUIRED

cl... III.d d.adllne-2p.m.

THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP. NO CHARIGR
FOR lOST/FOUNDfSTOLEN/FREE
ClASSIFIEDS

Monda y

TO PLACE AD:
PHONE S66-6000 X6054
STOP BY THE CPJ, LIB 2510
SEND INFO TO CPJ, TESC, LIB 2510
OLYMPIA, WI. e8505

LOST FEMAL£ ORANGE AND WHITE
TABBY 5 MTH. OLD KITTEN
WITH DARK BIRTHMARK ALONG
EDGE OF ONE EAR; MEDIUM LONG
HAIR; GREATLY MISSED BY FAMILY.
ANY INFO PLEASE CALL 754-8212

SEND LETIERS CALUNG FOR AN
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PRES. GEORGE BUSH 1600 PENNSYLVANIA
AVE N.W. WASHINGTON D.C.
20500. FOR MORE INFOR CONTACT PAWS:

HELP WANTED

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j

I
Cooper Point Journal October 41 1990

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