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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 21 (April 19, 1990)
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April 19. 1990 Vol. 20 No. 21
STU DENT
UNION
SHAKE-UP
Worldwifte celebration has
roots in anti-war movemen
by Mark Lupton
Earth Day was born out of the
energy and people involved ,in the antiwar movement.
The studerits were
talking about not only stopping a war,
but completely changing their lifestyle.
by Tim Gibson
In their minds, this meant changing
In a decisive and traumatic meeting government spending priorities from
yesterday, the present Student Union defense to feeding the hungary, urban
government was abolished in favor of a housing, cleaning up the air and rivers,
new 14-member representative "cultural and preserving our natural resources.
caucus."
In 1970, Senator Gaylord Nelson of
The new Student Union is a Wisconsin proclaimed April 22 to be
representative system. . In it, the student Earth Day. It was conceived as a
body is lxuken down into seven seperate nationwide teach~in to dramatize and
"cultural constituencies" or caucuses. focus on the environmental plight facing
These
include
African-American, the United States. The environmental
Asian/Pacific Islander, Chicano/Latino, ' problems faced twenty years ago were
European-American,
Jewish-American, such issues as air pollution, pestiotdes
Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual,
and
Native (particularly DO,!), the population
American. The constituencies of these explosion, and the killing of rivers and
cultural groups will meet to elect two lakes through pollution. Earth Day 1970
representatives to the Student Union, one was a major consciousness raising day,
male and one female from each group, with over 20 million people participating
who will attend the 14 member Student nationwide.
Union meetings.
Congress adjourned for the day and
While the public is encouraged to over SOO of its members participated in
attend these monthly meetings, only the teach-ins across the country. In New
fourteen members \ from the seven York City, Fifth Avenue was closed to
caucuses will have voting power.
automobUes and ovez 100,000 people
S&A Coordinator MaIk Sullivan, who atteIJded • .ecology fair iil Central Park.
was the primary sponsor of the new The ' Il~ Auto Workers led a parade
government plan, saw , the effort to through do~town ' ~t. Louis featuring a only grown worse.
J'he world's for a indigenous peoples consultation on
replace old Student Union as a way to smog-free car.
In Omaha. Nebraska population continues to. grow far beyond biodiversity, a Green Forum Congress,
address the desire of the community to studtnts obSQrved the day by wallPng
a, reasonable cimyiJlg ' capacity and the and a river parade by ftsherfolk.
make advances toward a more culturally through the st;reets with gas masks. effects of air pollution COIlUDue to spread.
An environmental ethic is emerging,
diverse and fair student governmeQt.
Throughout .lhe .country, over 10,000
:fu
addition, n~~ ·probt~s " ~JlW!!e to but it remains to be seen whether or not
"I don't believe thai Europe&t- schools,-' 29(1O con~ and ~v,erBi~es,
it cart be translated into soclal change.
· .:~oiJSe ~. oiQI)e, holes, the
Americans who ha'ge 92% of Ihe SChool ~8ndvirtuan ..
j n .. ~ g6Jle~ "ofr ~ormQus ~ts .pI Wbal is' n6edeci. is coope(ation and
population should have 92% of the say," nation- '
:'Speeches, , g8J'bige aDd fiazardous waste, expanding understanding. Technology may not be
said Sullivan.
educational projects, demonslratidqs, and ' deserts, the loss of biodiversity, the loss the solution, but it can certainly be
In addition, Sullivan and his community clean up projects.
of wetlands, arid·the destruction of forests helpful in developing new processes that
supporters said they sought to eliminate
Earth Day 1970 was ~e beginning of &cross the globe. .MeaSured in many produce substantially less waste, less
a system they found inefficient and a new awareness that ,the planet was
ways, the environment is in worse shape harmful waste, or more recyclable waste.
widely ignored by Ihe student body.
threatened and that politiCal action was
are
presented
with
an
We
than 20 years ago.
However, othez people actively needed to protect it
Few who
unpecedented oppOrtunity to translate
But
there
is
a
great
deal
of
hope.
involved in the Student Union had sharp participated in events that day could have
Whereas Earth Day 1970 was the catalyst public concern about the environment into
criticism for Sullivan and his supporters.
foreseen the s~gth of the environmental
for the creation of the modem concerted action, to set aside narrow selfDianna Caley, an Evergreen student movement that fonowed.
The EPA, environmental movement in the United interest and to focus on global
who has been heavily involved in the NOAA and the PresidtqHf s Council on
environmental issues that threaten all life
Student Union since its ' formation, Environmental Quality ~ ~ere created States, Earth Day 1990 is designed to ' on this planet. That leadership must
catalyze the creation of a truly global
objected to the methods used by Sullivan after dutt day.
Legislation passed
environmental movement.
People are come from us. Before we can expect
• and the proponents of the new
included the Clean Air Act, the Clean finally realizing that many of the governments to move past the rhetorical
government to push the caucus system
Water Act, the Nation8l Environmental
problems faced in iudividual countries are stages and begin to address the wide
through.
Policy Act and the Resource Conservation
inlfZtwined with those of other countries. array of urgent problems facing the
"Outreach was only done to those
and Re:covezy Act.
Political
boundaries need to be broached planet, we must make olD' lives congruent
who would favor the proposal," she said.
Althoup the original Earth Day was if any progress is to be made.
with the values we uphold. Fundamental
Caley, who has attended every SU
positive, it pofarized many' of the very
changes away from our current wasteful
It is expected that over 100 million practices and toward a more sustainable
meeting, noted with sadness that she
people who need to be working together
people
in more than 128 countries will be future will only come about because of a
"probably wouldn't be able to participate
in order to build a long-lasting
participating
in Earth Day 1990.
In commitment at the individual level to
now"
under
the
new
limited
environmental ethic in our society.
representational,. government.
Industrialists were all viewed as evil Zimbabwe, the Development Innovations "practice what we preach." Primarily, a
"Two-thirds of the student body voted exploiters and technology began to be and Networks is coordinating actions in commitment towards long term planning
the Student Union in, while only 40 denigrated. This antagonism remains as easlfZD Africa to plant trees and grass rathez than shut term gains is needed.
people at the meeting today voted it out," an undercurrent in this country and in the and discuss land management for
We must be wining to sacrifice
she said.
Wly .1980's threatened the EPA with agriCUltural co-ops. In Spain, a conference something today for future generations.
Both Sullivan and meeting facilitator virtual extinction.
on a nuclear free future will present
Turn to the bact
for a schedule
Mary Lou O'Niel frankly admitted to
Many of the problems that fueled results of radiation monitoring of the of Earth Day events. Mark Langston is
using tactics such as stacking the SU the original Earth Day have been three nuclear plants on the Ebro River.
the co-coordinator of the Environmental
meeting with supporters and concealing effectively addressed while others have And in the Philippines, there are plans Resource Center.
the purpose of the meeting from potential
opponents.
,
IN£STOO< (.B)
"We used the process to our
advantage," Sullivan said, "it was
completely coercive."
Luckily, Sullivan said, "We have a
lot of friends."
Sullivan went on to liken his and
his supporters secrecy regarding outreach
To supply 10% of the
to a political party's natural urge to keep
United States energy
projected
its intentions secret from its competitors.
demand
through
fuel fanns, it will
Ironically, it was this very ability for
anyone with an agenda to take over an
require 25% of the nation's land
SU meeting by stacking it with
area, exceeding the area currently
supporters that prompted O'Niel, Sullivan
covered
by forest land, a large
and other to seek a radical change.
ch~
of
pie.
Tim Gibson is a CPJ staff wrlt~r and
See
Energy
Topics story. page 6.
a student at Evergreen.
14-seat Board replaces
one person--one vote
p~c~
·w·
j
:,
JIll,'
Current
major
United States, land
use: Total land area
3,537,500 square miles
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested
Nonprofit Organization
U.S. Postage Paid
Olympia, WA 98505
Permit No. 65
,
"
•
Masters In Teaching approved
NEWS BRIEFS
Quote of the Week
"We used the process to our
advantage .. .it was completely
coercive. "
S&A Board Coordinator Mark Sullivan commenting on the method
used to amend the Student Union document. See cover story.
Resolute joins
the Evergreen
fleet
SenaLOr Dan Evans, along with a
Navy captain who trained midshipmen
and the man who restored the Resolute,
highlight the Recommissioning Ceremony
commemorating this 44-foot yawl's
transition into Evergreen's service.
The hour-long ceremony that begins
at noon, Friday, April 20 at Olympia's
Percival Landing, marks the beginning of
a new era for a boat built in 1939 by the
Bill Luders Boat yard to teach Navy
midshipmen to sail at Annapolis. This
craft's next mission is grounded in liberal
arts and sciences education.
Taken from service in the 50s with
the advent of fiberglass boats, the
Resolute was purchased from Navy
surplus in 1978 by Evergreen. Now, after
thousands of hours of volunteer
restoration work, the yawl is ready to
sail. The Resolute will help faculty teach
students learning oceanography, the
history of Anglo-Saxon discovery of the
Puget Sound, navigation, math, sailing
and more, as part of Evergreen's
academic programs.
For the college and the Resolute, the
Recommissioning Ceremony program
reads like a segment of "This is Your
Life."
Ted Brewer is a wooden boat builder
who apprenticed with Luders, where the
Resolute was originally built He'll talk
about Luders' boat yard and the place
that yawls like the Resolute hold in the
history of ship design. Larry Gudbranson
is a retired captain of the U.S. Navy who
will talk about his experience training
Annapolis Naval Academy midshipmen LO
sail on a fleet of more than 10 yawls like
the Resolute. Don Fassett is a retired
mechanical engineer who invested
thousands of hours refurbishing the
Resolute for Evergreen.
Charles McCann, Evergreen's frrst
president, Evans, who served Evergreen
more than seven years, and Joseph
Olander, current president, will speak and
take part in the ceremony. Also,
Evergreen faculty members whose
academic programs will use the Resolute
will share their plans, and their
excitement, for the new addition LO
Evergreen's fleet of two academic boats.
LRC ,offers skill
training, tutors
The Learning Resource Center is
available to any TESC student who wants
individual help with math, writing and
other related skills. Student tutors are
here for those who want to work on all
Security Blotter
Monday, April 9
1015: A light pole was knocked down by
a frre truck backing up behind the CRC.
Replacement of the pole cost $500.
1043: Threatening messages had been left
on an answering machine in the CRC.
1550: The biack: Security car needed
some body work for the collision it had
with a library column.
Tuesday, April 10
0853: Garbage was dumped in the F-Iot
dumpster by a non-resident
1015: There was a report of loose dogs
in the CAB building.
1800: Burnt toast was said to be the
cause of a fire alarm in E-Dorm.
1821: There was graffiti on the first floor
Men's room in the CAB.
1680: A trespasser was reported to be at
Joe Olander's office distributing literature.
Wednesday, April 11
0043: A woman fell from her bike and
hit her head pretty hard.
1716: Graffiti was found on the stairwell
of the second floor Library.
1900: A bike was stolen from a B-dorm
bike rack.
1901: Graffiti was found in the first floor
men's room in the Library.
2301: There was graffiti found in the
third floor men's room in the Library.
Tbursday, April 12
1210: A drunken vagrant damaged a
licence plate on a VW Bug in
F-Iat.
Friday, April 13
0157: A pan of burning lighter fluid was
discovered in A-Dorm loop. An officer
at the scene used a fire extinguisher from
A-Dorm because he didn't have one in
his car.
1048: There was a bike accident near ADorm. A unit was dispatched.
Saturday, April 14
0204: A fire alarm went of in the CRC
main lobby.
1357: A car was broken into in F-Iot.
Stereo speakers were missing.
2156: Graffiti was discovered in the east
stairwell of the CAB.
Sunday, April 15
0407: A fire alarm went off on the
fourth floor of A-Dorm.
2338: There was a case of malicious
mischief--graffiti was found on the pump
station.
Eighty-two public services were
performed and a verbal warning was
issued for failure LO SLOp in F-lot
James Egan compiles the Security
Blouer for the CPJ and is a student at
Evergreen.
types of writing, grwnmar, spelling,
reading, English conversation, and
essential study slci1ls.
Math tutors can help you with basic
math up through college level calculus,
and more. Some help is also available
with physics. chemistry and computer
applications.
Would you like to:
-get feedback on writing assignments;
-join a writing response group;
-work through your math anxieties;
-figure out your calculus assignment;
-improve your reading efficiency;
-fmally figure out how to spell;
-brust. up on your algebra.
Come on in. You can work one-onone with a tuLOr or a in a group. The
LRC can be used on a walk-in basis at
any time during the quarter, for regular
weekly appointments, or for crewt. The
LRC is open Monday through Friday,
with some evening hours. We are located
in Library 3407, x6420.
nominated by sponsoring student groups:
The Asian Pacific Isle Coalition, the
Evergreen Indian Center, Innerplace, The
Lesbian,.Uay Bi-sexual Peoples' Resource
Center, Umoja, and the Women of Color
Coalition.
Aflel" the forum, Gene Burnett and
Victor Cummings will perform lighthearted original music. The duo's
acoustic blend of folk rock, jazz', blues,
and contemporary music has entertained
audiences at the Seattle Folldife Festival
and across the Northwest.
Admission is free and refreshments
will be served. For more information,
contact WashPIRG at 866-6000, x6058.
Advanced First
Aid through
Rec Center
Emergency
Medical
Training
Associates and The Evergreen State
College are presenting a 3D-hour outdoor
oriented Advanced First Aid class, April
25, 26-27, 6 to 10 pm, and April 28·29,
9 am to 5 pm.
The program will be taught by
Mountaineers Mike Green and Jan Harris
of Evergreen's Wilderness Center along
with EMT medical professionals. The
course is designed to give you the
practical skills and competencies needed
to face the most common outdoor
emergencies, and it meets both state and
federal advanced ·frrst aid requirements.
For more information or to register,
contact the Recreation Center at 8666000 x6530, or register in person at the
Recreation Center, room 310. The first
class meeting is April 25, at 6 pm in
CAB 110. The course is limited to 25
people, and the cost is $50.
Bookstore,
Co-Op sell
recycled paper
Recycled filler paper, typing paper,
and 8"xll" spiral-bound notebooks are
fmally available at the TESC Bookstore!
Prices are $6.85 for a ream (500 sheets)
of typing paper, $1.85 for 100 sheets of
filler paper, and $2.l5 for the notebooks.
The prices for virgin
paper are,
respectively, $5.50, $1.29, and $1.39.
The Bookstore does not yet carry
Minimum Impact recycled paper which is
100% recycled, unbleached, and packaged
in paper instead of plastic. Regular
recycled paper can have up to 60% virgin
paper and is usually bleached. These
products can be found at comparable
prices at the Olympia Food Co-op.
The Co-op also sells recycled toilet
paper, paper towels, wrapping paper,
legal pads, and envelopes.
f
t
t
.
Multicultural
perspectives on
environment
,
~
Honoring the human
spirit & its creativity
Partners in healing
the earth
Audience participation is encouraged
at an open forum discussing multicultural
perspectives on environmental issues at
7 pm Thursday, April 19, in the
Evergreen Library Lobby. A variety of
issues and concerns will be explored by
the audience and a panel of speakers
including moderaLOr, Margarita Mendoza
de Sugiyama, special assistant to the
president for Affirmative Action. The
forum is organized to encourage diversity
and a spontaneous atmosphere LO support
an on-going dialogue between the panel
and the audience.
The panel consists of representatives
Resolute
(Reprinted from GreenerScene)
When Don Fassett first met the
Resolute, it was a stripped down empty
shell, a vague reminder of the sleek 44foot yawl that once sailed out of
Annapolis to train Navy midshipmen.
Rotting, battered, and empty, she was
purchased out of Navy surplus in 1978
by Evergreen.
First thing Fassett, a retired
mechanical engineer, did was help fix her
frame.
" Animals have ribs--boats have
4o m ,,: Same thing," he says.
lben we found out all the screws'
were loose, so we pulled out some 3,000
screws and put new ones in.
H
The refurbishing effort was launched
at a feverish pace beginning, according to
Fassett's log, in September of 1982. An
averaae of five crew were paid to work
five-day weeks to get the Resolute into
shipshape. But after about 18 months the
money dried up.
"Being retired, I don't have to work.
I lOOk a look at her and said, 'She's a
good lookin' boat and I want to sail on
her,'" says Fassett.
So be volunteered. Averaging two
six-hour days a week, he's done most of
the refurbishing since. Finally, the
*ECOLOGY~TERnUS
* EARTH VIDEOS AND TAPES
* ESSENCES
NATURAL AROMA & GEM
F..turlng
TESLER WATCHES
prollCt Jour body from
for supporting Evergreen thmllgh this
year's budget process. The budget raises
Evergreen's enrollment lid by 50 fulltime equivalent students. The growth will
be absorbed in the Teacher Education
program and provides resources to fund
the MIT program.
Groundwork for the Master in
Teaching (MIT) Program was laid in the
mid-1980s, with the national release of
the Carnegie and Holmes reports that said
beginning teachers should hold master's
degrees
before
they
stan
their
professional careers.
John Parker, director of Teacher
Education at Evergreen, is recruiting
students for the first MIT class that
begins in September.
In 1987, Washington's Legislature
required the State Board of Education
(SBE) to work cooperatively with the
Higher Education Coordinating Board
(HECB) to implement rules for moving
toward master's level teacher preparation
programs at the state's four-year
institutions. Previously, no MIT programs
existed in Washington. Three private
colleges in Washington will also begin
offering MIT programs in September.
"Developing this program has been a
major achievement We are convinced
that the demands of public school
teaching call for the same kind of
graduate intensity of preparation as do
our sister professions of law, medicine
and clergy; says Parker. "Our Master in
Teaching program provides a very
intensive experience, and we are proud
of the fact that we are the fIrSt public
institution in Washington 10 offer it."
The program is designed to appeal
not only to those with a new bachelor's
degree, but also to those who are looking
to change careers and follow a calling to
teach. The median age of students
enrolled in Evergreen's program is
expected to be in the early to mid 30s.
•
IS
Evergreen is the fIrSt public
institution that has designed a program
in response to the rules and guidelines
the SBE and HECB developed. The
HECB approved Evergreen's program by
unanimous vote in November, 1989. In
February, 1989, an independent reviewer
from the National Council on the
Accreditation of Teacher Education
praised Evergreen's graduate program
design as exemplary. In November 1989,
a visiting accreditation team from the
ready to sail
Resolute is ready for launching. Then
she'll receive mast, sail and rigging.
Walter Niemiec, Arts and Sciences
manager, has managed the Evergreen
academic boats off and on over the years.
"I would love to call this boat the
Fassett, but it would violate seafaring
tIadition to change the name of a boat.
He's given so much time and energy 10
the Resolute, and to students in
Evergreen's marine programs," he says.
The Resolute will be the dorm ship
for the college's 38-foot SeawulfJ, a
sturdy, workho!se vessel complete with
a small labonitory. The boats will take
Core Programs into the Poget Sound
every few years, and serve marine
biology and oceanography students at
other times.
Fassett's contribution to Evergreen
goes way back:. Many students have
sailed on his personal boat for academic
missions alongside the SeawuljJ. After the
Reso(ute is in service, Fassett and his
boat will still pitch in. He's become part
of Evergreen's seafaring tradition.
"I retired from work in 1975 and
came over 10 Evergreen where Pete
Sinclair was working on the Seawulff and
he said, 'what would you like to do?' I
said I'd like to give him about an hour a
week," Fassett chuckles.
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Northwest Association of Schools and
Colleges strongly recommended the
graduate progr.un be put into place.
Prerequisites to enroll in Evergreen's
MIT Program include a bachelor of arts
or science with strong liberal arts breadth
and depth as a prerequisite. In common
with all programs at Evergreen, the MIT
program
will
combine
academic
disciplines into one program that is taught
by a team of three or four faculty.
Studies will include heavy emphases on
philosophy,
history,
multicultural
education, research and field experience.
"Because people entering this
program will have a high level of
academic and working experience, there
will be a greater intensity within the
learning community that students will be
a part of for the two years they're
enrolled in the program," says Parker.
Applications for the 45 openings in
Evergreen's MIT program are now being
accepted. Classes begin in September.
Undergraduate teacher education will
continue on Evergreen's campus for two
more years, under the joint program with
Western Washington University. However,
Fall Quarter of 1990 will be the last year
new students will be accepted into the
undergraduate program.
When the Seawulff was launched,
Fassett jumped ship to work on the
Resolute. All told, he figures he's put
over 5,000 hours into the Resolute alone.
There's a new rudder, complete with
a hole to acccmmodate a propeller for
the previously engine-less boat. Fassett
built the framework to support the
engine, 100. He fabricated new gas and
water tanks. For the interior, he installed
all new bulkheads (walls), a head
(bathroom) and even a galley (kitchen),
according to the design of Ted Brewer,
who worked for Luders, the company that
originally built the hoot. The new
woodwork is perfectly smooth and rich.
One brass porthole was missing .
"Someone walked away with it, so
we casted a new one in the Lab Annex
using the original as a paUern," he says.
The boat's been recaulked, has a
new deck and even a new cabin roof.
"Yeah. We even had LO make special
brass nuts to hold on the cleats. We had
to make lots of fancy hardware," says
Fassett.
So, how will it feel to fmally see
the Resolute afloat?
"I don't know," he says. "It's going
to be strange. I'll get used to it"
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ALL WA YS TRA VEL SERVICE, INC.
News Release
In response to state and national calls
for reform in elementary and secondary
teacher preparation, The Evergreen State
College will offer a new Master in
Teaching
Program
beginning
this
September.
Funds to implement the new
graduate-level, two-year program are
included in the Supplemental Operating
Budget The Governor has strongly
supported Evergreen's Master's in
Teaching (Ml1) program, and has
indicated the funding for its creation will
remain the the Supplemental Budget
when he signs the legislation.
"Governor Gardner has been a
catalyst not only for the development of
guidelines for having teachers enter the
field with a master's degree through
programs like Evergreen's, but be's
supported the development of Evergreen's
new program," says Joseph Olander,
president of The Evergreen State College.
Olander says Washington is among
about a dozen states that are taking a
leadership role in developing master's
level teaching programs. He credits Dan
McDonald, chair of the Senate Ways and
Means Committee, and Gary Locke, chair
of the House Appropriations Committee,
I
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any NEW ALBUM,
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CASSEtTE
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EXPIRES MAY 3, 1990 1
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Ride Free April 19·22! .
WhO says you can't change the wodd? During the Earth Day 1990 celebrations YOlt can make a difference,
You ran heIr reduce air pollution, reliev~ traffic congestion and conserve gasoline and oil. How? Instead of taking
your car, start on the road to a better envIronment by using public transportation. Take a free ride on Intercity
TranSIt buses, Custom Bus,. and Dlal~A-Lift from April 19 through April 22. We'll take you to work, to Earth Day
events ... to all your destinatIOns. Call Intercity Transit today for information on routes and schedules, at 786-1BB I.
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HARRISON Be DIVISION
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON 98502
Page 2 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
1 N. Rogers open 9-8 daily
Olympia 754-7660
mnterc;1y r r 3
A
17 S
iI
VIIIIIIIIIIIIII//III//!
Celebrating Earth Day. April 22
Weaglde Center
Dl9iaton • Barrlaon
Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Page 3
Pressing Weyerhauser development
threatens Nisqually Wildlife Refuge
forest/deciduous woodland--good nesting
by Barrett Wilke
area for perching birds, great blue herons,
It is spring at Nisqually National
woodpeckers, red-tailed hawks and owls.
Wildlife Refuge. The marsh wrens chauer
at each other from the underbrush, one Nisqually River and McAllister Creek
appears now and then with a beakful of also provide fresh water for fish
spawning.
cauail fuzz to repair his nest. A great
Reasons such as these give us a
blue heron lunges from her nest on the
glimpse as 10 why the surrounding
neighboring ridge, swoops low to her
favorite marsh, which she depends on for
community of merely 700-800, the
the small but bountiful garden of fish. A
Nisqually Delta Association, and the
National Audubon Society became
cinnamon teal stands out boldly in a
enraged when Weyerhauser Corporation
small flock of mallards, as the tumultuous
ruckus from the red-winged blackbird
unveiled their plans to surround the area
marsh is silenced when a huge white
with two housing projects to support
21,000 people.
swan drifts overhead ...
"Where are they going to live?"
Nisqually Refuge is more than a
Weyerhauser's Real Estate Company
inspiring and beautiful place to visit It is
vice-president Robert Shedd asserted in
the only unspoiled estuary left in South
the Seatlle Times (April I, 1990). This
Puget Sound, and is the only untouched
wildlife refuge between the Columbia and
was in reference to the estimated 300,000
the Skagit rivers. It is home to hundreds
people moving to the Puget Sound area
of species of nesting birds and mammals
over the next five years. Weyerhauser
and a vital resting ground for dozens of claims that tight housing developments
migratory birds as well. It is situated on are far better than "urban sprawL" It
the Nisqually Delta, between the estuaries would be far better to build localized
of McAllister Creek and Nisqually River.
condominiums in Nisqually, rather than
Its lush location creates a unique allow the fertile delta area to be draped
habitat for wildlife featuring four distinct
with sparse settlements over an extended
ecosystems: (1) open field--excellent for period of time.
supporting large populations of mice and
But according to Pamela Miller of
Audubon
Society's
Nisqually
voles which are hunted by hawks and , the
eagles, (2) salt marsh and mudflats-filled Outreach Nature Center, the main issue is
the proximity of the development to the
with invertebrates, prime habitat for
shorebirds, which are hunted by the Wildlife Refuge. "We are trying to get
endangered
peregrine
falcon,
(3) them to hear this message... the refuge is
freshwater marsh--rich with small fish for really too valuable to threaten with that
great blue herons and ducks, and (4) kind of development."
Miller said that despite her efforts
and the pressure by many other groups 10
reduce the density of the community,
Weyerhauser has yet 10 consider the
needs of the residents. In response 10 the
community's outcry, the corporation held
a community forum on March 29 in what
appeared to be an auempt to open the
doors of communication.
Sharon Davis, also with the Nature
Center, was pleased tbat the company at
least came out to listen 10 the issues.
However, she said spokespeople had no
intention of scaling down the project, or
changing any plans whatsoever. "They
asked us, 'How do you feel: and 30 or
more questions were raised. Then they
told us the plan, and only mentioned a
few of questions raised. They didn't even
mention the more important issues.
Nothing's going to changed, their position
has been finalized."
Bill Hesselbart with the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service at Nisqually
suggested
to
the
Weyerhauser
spokespeople that they purchase some
land and donate it to the refuge. This
strip of land, the 50-acre private property
owned by John Meek, falls between the
future housing project and the refuge.
Even though the property has been
logged recently, the property would be
valuable to the refuge because no one
else would be able to continue the
development down the ridge. Hesselbart
said that Weyerhauser could be talked
into this if there was enough public
The
official
"ground-making"
ceremony marking the opening of
"DIR1WORKS" (Olympia's composting
demonstration garden) will take place
April 21, starting at 11 am at Yauger
Part.
A
program
followed
by
demonstrations, tours, and refreshments
will take place at the dedication. The
garden plays a significant role in the
city' s goal toward improving our
environment.
The
opening
of
"DIR1WORKS" is one of the many
programs the city is offering to enhance
community's
awareness
and
the
commemorate the twentieth anniversary
of Earth Day.
"DIR1WORKS" is located in the
northwest section of Yauger Park off Alta
Road. The garden will be the site for free
workshops
on
home
composting
techniques taught by Thurston County
Master Gardeners who helped to deveJoP
the garden. The workshops' are now open
for registration. Contact the Olympia
Parks Department at 753-8380 for more
information on the workshops and how to
register.
The garden was also developed in
cooperation with the Olympia Parks
Department and the Department of
Ecology.
concern.
·Resource Base:
SPEECH will be located in
downtown Olympia at 218 West 4th, a
street-level
store
front
next
to
Childhood's End Gallery. It will be easily
Mickelson, in a recent interview, said,
"I think the main point I'd like to get
across to you is that we are dedicated to
the environmental nature of the area."
Lone Star will be conducting an
Environmental Impact Statement over the
next 8 to 10 months, and then will
undergo several public hearings to obtain
l
I
the
,solid
earth
b:.cfett \Vi Ik
from earth, page 4
their permits. Mickelson said that he
expects Lone Star to get the go-ahead by
late 1991.
But Pamela Miller thinks that
shipping the gravel from the Dupont dock
would be a "travesty" for the tranquility,
water quality, and the wildlife populations
of the refuge. "The worst thing about it
is that they would be bearing gravel
accessible by mass transit and close to
such noteworthy public gathering places
as Percival Landing, The Farmers Market
and the Smithfield Cafe. It will serve as
a nucleus for environmental education
and public outreach for South Puget
Sound. Available resources will include:
grant writing services; bulk mailing
permit;
meeting
space;
telephone,
copying, and computer use; public survey
development,
implementation
and
analysis; internship opponunities; a
publication layout center (light table, etc.)
and library area. An electronic bulletin
board system will be developed to
provide necessary linkages to other
environmental groups.
.Meeting Space:
There are a number of environmental
groups in the region that are currently
being organized in isolation, using
individual homes for base operations.
SPEECH will serve as a common ground
that will provide natural group interaction,
improve effectiveness and eliminate
duplication of efforts. Available space
and resources will be managed by
schedule on a first come first serve basis.
Criteria for additional or urgent need
situations will be developed.
·Reference Material:
SPEECH will provide space for a
library of reference materials and a quiet,
comfortable study/seminar space. The
electronic bulletin board system will
provide access to environmental and local
government data base system.
·Infonnation Updates:
SPEECH will be the home of a biweekly environmental flyer that will be
made available to regional citizens. This
flyer will feature all pertinent meeting
and hearing dates, the latest in the
environmental agenda for South Puget
Sound, and other important environmental
information.
·Operations:
SPEECH is being organized and will
initially be staffed by Sue Patnude and
Gita Moulton. Criteria for management
will be developed by the staff with
assistance from an Advisory Board
consisting of members of the Budd Inlet
Advisory Committee and other interested
citizens.
.Funding:
SPEECH operational budget will
come from grants, donations and pledges.
Funds for start-up costs are being
solicited from the Community 'Sustaining
Fund of Thurston County. Sue Patnude
and Gita Moulton will suppon fust month
operations.
Application is being made to the
Department of Ecology for a PIE (Public
Involvement Education) contract and
Public Participation Grant. The PIE grant
will focus on local public education of
cleaning South Puget Sound. The Public
Participation grant will focus on Budd
Inlet Citizen's Advisory Committee
efforts to promote participation in the
investigation and mediation of the release
or threatened release of hazardous
substances in Budd Inlet
SPEECH will file for nonprofit
status as a 501(c)(3).
Contact Sue Patnude or Gita
Moulton
at
786-6349
for
more
infonnation.
down the river 24 hours a day ...There are
no lights now, but soon the place will be
bustling with activity at night"
Miller also pointed out that
Sequallitchew Creek and the salt marsh
created by the estuary are traditional
fishing spots for the Nisqually tribe, who
depend on the area for commercial
fishing. Most of their land was already
destroyed by Burlington/Northern when
the company put in their railroads by the
associated with urbanization we are
starting to see out there."
Both Hesselbart and Miller expressed
great concern over the fact that
motorboats and rafts are legal in the
Nisqually River.
"The wildlife just won't tolerate that high
level of use," said Hesselbart. "The
wildlife refuge is nrst, recreation is
second."
Hesselbart called Lone Star's claims
of being environmentally sensiUve
"propaganda." Lone Star has said they
have not found any rare plants or animals
in their leased property, but Hesselbart
claims to have seen bald eagle nests
where they are planning on developing.
"Someone must consider carrying
capacity for humans, and for the wildlife
as well. If we are going to err, we
should err in favor of the wildlife,"
Hesselbart remarked.
For more infonnation contact the
Nisqually Reach Nature Center (National
Audubon S'JCiety), or the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Headquarters at Nisqually
National Wildlife Refuge
Barrett Wilke is an Evergreen student
and the winner of "The Best Researched
Article Award" this week. This is the last
"Solid Earth" column he will write
leading up 10 Earth Day. Thanks Barrett.
creek.
Bill Hesselbart spoke of the
"cumulative impacts" of the two housing
projects and the gravel mine. "It is
logical that people will want to recreate
at the beach and drive their motorboats
around...Jetskis, rafting--the spinoff things
EARTH DAY BENEFIT
TO LIFE
TO ANOTHER YEAR
Earth day bike ride
. .
.Saturday, April 21 1:30 pm--The
Energy Outreach Center is organizing an
Earth Day Bicycle Ride to celebrate
Earth Day '90 and kick off their Third
Annual Bicycle Commuting Contest.
Bicyclists will meet at the Earth Fair at
the Evergreen Stille College Campus for
the fun ride. Bicyclists of all levels are
encouraged to participate. The ride will
be a marked, swept, loop through the
PRO-I_ACT
n'PIllQ SBRVICBS
STUDBllTS AHD BUSINESSBS
Re.umes, lettera, report~
Free pickup and delivery
Kathy - 456-4175
MAY.IT BE A
HEALTHY ONE FOR ALL
APPLY BY MAY 15th
west side of Olympia with the option of
visiting the Earth Expo events occurring
downtown at the Olympia Center. Both
routes return to the TESC campus where
complimentary refreshments will be
available for participants. To participate
bring your bike, your friends, your family
and meet us at the TESC library loop at
1:15 pm. Bring your water boule and
don't forget your helmet!
COUNSELING & THERAPY
BARBARA
J.
MONDA M.s-. M.A.
Abuse
• DepreaIoa • Pareetlnl
~A • RdIodolUllal.,. • Medlatloll
~
866·1378
EARTH DAY
1970-1990
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: DEEANNA BOURGAULT
''We are connected to th e
world and to others by more
than molecules ; we are
bound together by mind and
.
"
COnSClOUSneSS.
,,\l of e~~
~~a
.
-~
,
\
Q~mpi"
.(~
l(;
.,.:~ .
ftUDAY
SATURDAY
Out of a growing concern for the
state of the Earth and increasing
environmental threats to our local
ecosystem; out of an awareness of the
need to better inform the community and
each other of specific action needed for
change; out of a longing to band more
closely together and share our sometimes
overwhelming commitment and energy
and our too often underwhelming material
resources; the South Puget Environmental
Education . Clearing House has been
formed.
SPEECH. Speaking out, educating,
networking, petitioning-- communication.
1bat's what we're all about We are a
public participation and education center
providing a resource base, reference
material, meeting space and information
up-dates on issues of local environmental
industrial port
TO THE EARTH
HOST A TAIWANESE
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT EAGER
~___"",-TO EXPERIENCE AMERICAN CULTURE
754-6162
1023 Capitol Way
Newli Release
pressure.
In addition to the two housing
operations under way, Lone Star Gravel
Company has leased a 370-acre plot of
land from Weyerhauser near Dupont,
about two miles northeast of the refuge.
The plan is to move their 35 to 40
workers and equipment from their present
mining facility in Steilacoom to the new
location near the refuge.
The new mine,
the Pioneer
Aggregates Project, is scheduled to start
in 18 to 24 weeks. According to Phil
Mickelson, President of Lone Star, they
will mine the Dupont location for 20 to
25 years, and then will return the area to
Weyerhauser.
Sequallilchew Creek, an important
salmon spawning location, will be utilized
to transpon the gravel out to Puget
SouncL The Dupont dock, currently leased
only for timber distribution, will have a
conveyer system built on top of it for
transporting the gravel. Mickelson said
that three to four million tons a year will
be transported from the Dupont dock.
None will be transported out by rail or
truck, so Dupont will become an
News Release
EXPERIENCE THE CHINESE
_;.-: CULTURE IN YOUR OWN HOME
House Special I nf)itd;,tJ.i,fiY,~·
The first table each' *4~faay
receiVes complimep.tary·ililss '('Of w~ne<
Organize for the environment
see earth page 5
Dirtworks opens
News Release
SPEECH:
#-
~_
, ~~
JON SIRKIS
ENVIRONMENTAL SONGWRITER & ECO COMEDIAN!
C Sj.
l-J1~~.
·THE GREEN LFESTYLE
OPENING THE EVENING
CHRIS HYDE
TESC STUDENT PLAYING INSTRUMENTAL GUITAR MUSIC
HANDBOOK, 1001 WAYS
YOU CAN HEAL THE EARTH
by Jeremy Rillcin
FOI your convenienCe, you may use
The.Amertcan Express· Card.
---.- ~
, ..r~ .
~ ~ ~State. Moo,,,,Th",,.., 8,30 · 6~0/ l '
College _
Bookstore
Friday 8:30 - 5:00. . ~I"
Saturday 1 0:00 - 2 :~/
.
5ATlJRDA Y, APRIL 21 5T at 8P. M.
in the RECITAL HALL, COMMUNICATION BLDG
$ 5.00 STUDENTS
$7 GENERAL
TO BENEFf! THE EfNIRONMENTAL RESOURCE CENTER
\,
AND THE EARTH DA Y CELEBRA nON
SPONSOREO BY THE ENVTRONMENTAL IlESOUIlCE CENTlIl FOil MOllE INFO CALL:
866-6IXJO X67U
yo
{J
c.. A\ "/r GeT IT
tJ I"F
Y'vlf.
MiN
0
lOtally natura l SMARTFOOo® A ir·popped popcorn smothered In w h rte cheddar c heese.
Page 4 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Cooper Point Journal Apri119, 1990
Page 5
_"_, Censored Energy TOEics
The original title of Enflrgy SyslJ9ms' SMIIS
WII WII/'S Infanned by the sditors of fhe CPJ
scandalous title.
of IJlIicIes was to be "Sex. U86. and Energy
fhat fheir joumalistic Integrity would by
We feel most /'Sliders . are InteUigent
Topics- (WII lied about the sex pan). HoWfM.'"'' _ ~ ~~~_ EY letting us use such fI_ ~_enouah 10 grasp the humorous Imk be_~n two
_
.~
Student CODlDlunications
Center Ne'Ws
6J
_~_.
fhings people love 10 ciscuss but tend 10 do
nofhing about: sex and energy. The CPJ fHitors
dIctI~'t-!s~hlllfl~~ou~r-,,~~lews~. _ _ _ _ __
Least cost power planning provides energy at least cost
by Steve Bates
Least cost powee planning is still a
fairly new idea among people in the
powee industry today. Almost all
consumers of electticity have no idea
what this Least Cost Powee Planning
actually is, does, or represents. It is
actually a consumee oriented process of
setting electrical rates. The goal is to
create electrical rates at the least cost to
the consumer by keeping the rates at a
level that is fair. In the past, higher rates
were sometimes the result of costs that
were not the consumers responsibility.
One example of this was the mothballing
of several nuclear powee plants by the
Washington Public Powee Supply System,
or better known as WPPSS(whoops).
After the plants were mothballed and
it came time to sel1le debts incurred from
these plants, the general idea was to flip
the bill to the consumer and hope they
would not be any wiser of it It did not
work and consumers were outraged by it.
Years latec attempts were made at
powee planning. After the mishandling of
the WPPSS projects consumers became
more aware of how unfairly they could
be billed. Least-cost power planning is a
process that is being used to charge
consumers for electricity and added costs
that are only brought on by those
consumers and thus help eliminate any
unfair practices which could bill you for
costs that your usage has not incurred.
Least-cost power planning also aids in
decision making processes about ways in
which you might obtain power through
other means; ie, hydro, coal, geothermal,
solar power or other sources. To simply
state this, whichever is cheaper is the one
that would be best served through leastcost power planning.
However, in
past planning, this method did not take
into account environmental degradation
from power production. Coal plants have
always been known as a fairly cheap way
of obtaining power, but they do a great
deal of environmental damage in the
process.
Recently, new planning techniques
have began to include environmental
damage into the cost of power from those
plants that do environmental damage.
This method will raise the cost of power
from those types of plants, but it will
better reflect the actual cost and make
least-cost powee planning more accurate.
Student Survey Results
One other example could be
conservation. Conservation of electricity
can be looked at as an added source of
electricity and not necessarily as a
savings. If the cost of the savings is low,
and the energy savings of power high, it
may very well be a good form of power
for least-cost power planning.
From the previous examples it is clear
that least-cost power planning is simply
a way of providing the consumer
electricity at the lowest possible cost
" Item
1) Elimination of Racism/Sexism on Campus
2) Increase Diversity of Stud~nt Body
3) Lobby for Increased Student Financial Aid
4) Creation of Multi-Cultural Studies Specialty Area
) Gain Student Control of S6A Fees
6) Expand Permanent Campu-Wide Art
7) Increase Student Involvement ir Planning Curriculum
B) Create St&tewide Network of Student Organizations
9) Fostering "Public Citizen" Ethic (Democratic Ideals)
IO)Simplify Format for Academic Contracts
Il)Provide Skills Training Workshops (Communications, etc.)
12)lmprove Orientation for Ne~ Students
Steve Bates is an Evergreen student
enrolled in Energy Systems.
Tidal power is cheap, efficient, and under-utilized
by Karlito
Bonnevie and
Rob
Cockerham
Tidal power is produced by
harnessing gravitational forces exected by
the sun and the moon on the earth's
oceans. These forces cause a vertical rise
and fall of ocean watec, known as a tidal
range which in tum causes a horizontal
flow. In the United States this flow could
be harnessed to produce 1500 mega-watts
(MW), which would save 23 million
barrels of oil each year.
Every 24 hours and 50 minutes the
moon's gravitational effect creates two
high tides and two low tides. Thus a tidal
plant can have a maximum of four
energy production periods within this
time interval. The amount of energy for
a given tidal site is proportional to the
square of the tidal range. Since the tidal
range is the dominant factor, it would be
preferable to choose a three-meter tidal
range site because it will generate nine
times as much powee as one-meter range.
The main problem with tidal power
is that most coastal areas have relatively
small tidal ranges (below three meters¥
There are currently nine potential sites in
the world suitable for the development of
tidal power, four of which are located in
North America: Cook Inlet, Alaska; Puget
Sound, Washington; Passamaquoddy,
Maine; and the Bay of Fundy, Canada.
Of the three opecating tidal plants in the
world, only one is in North America. It
is located at Annapolis Royal on the
Canadian side of the Bay of Fundy and
produces 18 MW of power. The othec
two working plants are at La Rance,
France which produces 160 MW and
Kislogrub, U.S.S.R. which produces 1.8
MW.
Some disadvantages of tidal power
are the disruption of intertidal ecosystems
and fish migrations, and a decrease in
salinity which affects water temperature.
Transmission of electricity can also be a
problem due to the distance between the
Fuel farms are an environmentally
•
by Joe Yarkin
Fuel farming is one of the simplest
thods f l l '
d
f I
me
a co ecbon an storage a so ar
energy. However, vast areas of land are
required to collect and consolidate the
sun's already diffuse eneegy, risking
expansive environmental damage.
The basic bio-mechanics of a fuel
farm is the photosynthetic collection of
sun light in plants. In photosynthesis
chlorophyll in living plant tissue uses
sunlight to strip the oxygen from carbon
dioxide molecules and reforms the carbon
to make sugars and starches that are
stored in the plant tissue. In this process
between .5 and 7 percent of the sun's
energy is captured and stored. All that is
then needed to reclaim this stored
chemical potential energy is to collect the
plant tissue and recombine it with
oxygen.
Once the dry plant matter (containing
7,500 btu/lb) is collected there is a
variety of processes that can furthec
refme or "package" this energy for our
-Copiers which take more than I nickle at a time
-College us e of recycled (minimum impact) paper
-Student co-op foodservic e , bookstor e
-Make Board of Trustees ac coun tab le t o student s
-Nude sl.d\!lIl!in£ in pool (agair. )
-More ecologically sound ground mainenance
-Put human back in Evergreen "humar.ities"
-H ave S&A fe e s allocated thr ou~ h a re fe renduffi
-More film!video class opportunitie s
-Re ~ist rdti on in fo rmation center
-Expa nd t h~ Li bra rv
-Eli~ina te assaul t s an d ha rassmen t on campus
- l~!'1!"~"""\, O:---
destructiv~ s~lution
.
i.e'"
i
t
in campuE enVir OnID2ntc] iSSu es
-.,w........ . . . . . -"
Page 6 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
11.7%
B.24
7.5~
5.71.
I I. 77%
S.O~
emu<:
JQylth,:ulLural
st udt,s p,verdlu
3.Sl'
2.8~
2.7l:
l. 5i,
-Fr eecoJr. o~
ReCr€8t:i0!1
-
t c,ler a ilcf e-f "n:in c-e xpan d i n~ dru t::~ "
-lr.terc ollegiate competitiv~ spor:~
-Hir e m o r~ inspired fa c ult y
-Mok~ fac u lt y less subservient t o administration
-Wo rk against Homophobi a
-Have rec yc led papEr a\'aila ~le in bookstore
-Student Au tonornv
-Ho<l E'sty
-!'..a s ter s Degre e ava il able in En~l ish (Journalism)
-~ c redit history programs
- ~ l r:l c<, k th ", damr: buildi n rs
-Xa ke t h E' S t uoen t Ur': i orl Ie =0 ~ S :: :j~:: C
cooperaIl(i~
Faculty pass EI
Salvador resolution
_ Faculty . passed a five
point resolution on EI
Salvador, identical to the
student referendum printed
in the March 8 CP/, at the
April 18 faculty meeting. The
vote was 34-to-l in favor of
the
language
of
the
resolution, which students
GREAT
SELECTION
GREAT
PRICES
~~
rc<5VERl
IaI:Im
11.9%
-Stud~~t fFacultv
-Priva cv for people of c c l ~ ~
-Cr eate a Men ' s Center
-Less mi litant housi n g p clic je ~
-F ix da rkr ooIT venti l ation
MOUNTAINS • OCWS • IIVEH STRUMS
ISLANDS • PALM TREES Ff ~RDS
II.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I
itO 5:.!'1I> E llmlnalc
AelY]) gild
IB.6%
-Ne ",' Student Art Galler\'
-More equipment/Faculty for
me dia / arts programs
-Stud ent control of admissions
criteria (no SATs or GPAs)
ELEPHANTS • PANDAS • AUNGLES • FORESTS
convenient
use.
Although
direct
States.
This additional
~andonusetheWould.
put
combustion is generally
the most efficient
an
unmanageable
stram
nations
conversion to heat, other processes such
as
fermentation, pyrolysis, and
gasification can provide products such as
alcohol, oils and natural gas.
There are many kinds of fuel farms.
Some grow high biomass crops like sugar
cane which produce 30 metric tons/acre
year, and require large amounts of
fertilizer. Some fuel farms manage large
tracts of fast growing trees and bushes
that are harvested periodically to produce
2 to 10 mettic tons/acre year.
Other farms and forestry programs are
using the "waste products" of their main
harvests, such as com stalks from COO\
fields and ·waste wood" from lumber and
pulpwood land. These bi-products are
being used to extract their raw energy
...",..'1 & SAru~"
value instead of being recycled back into
the soil. Rapid soil degradation makes
~¢~\' '20 APRI('-'A1 L
this practice non-sustainable in many
~","''''
.;>"r
regions.
By far the largest toU on the
environment from fuel fanns is the vast
~
amOlmts of cultivated land necessary to
collect substantial amounts of Ibis
210 E. 4th • 786-1444
"renewable energy." To demonstrate Ibis, . . . . .
~- ~
20.4%
Write-in Items
tidal plant and existing population centers.
The advantages, however, are quite
impressive. There are absolutely no
opecational fuel costs and no emissions
of gases which contribute to the
greenhouse effect. With no fuel costs,
energy produced from this resource will
not increase but decrease as the initial
capital investment is repaid. Since the
price of nonrenewable fuels will
inevitably rise, tidal power should have
exceptional potential.
Karlito Bonnevie and Rob
Cockerham are Evergreen students
enrolled in the Energy Syslems program.
1 ulati
th
agricultural and forest land jeopardizing
. This example Illustrates some of the
ere ~ an exampl~ ca c
ng
e
il
d
' I ds
d limits and dangers of an all out fuel farm
prodUCtion of electnclty from, an energy
bO~tI·lOPdi~' ~ty unAndwaatter'thwet an 'tun~
program 10 supply fuel for a nation with
farm'
"
10 C
Versl.
e same
e
d 'ded
• 1
supplying us with only 10% of our such a monstrous appetite for energy.
. t S lmagme w~ ecl
to supp y
ro'ected ener
needs ten ears from
Joe Yarkin is an Evergreen student
the City of Sea~t1e With 1,24? megawatts
P ~
gy
Y
currently enrolled in Energy Systems.
(MW) of electncal power With a thermal .n..,;o;.,w;.,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.....
elec~c biom~ powered plant ~ith a
suffiCient on Site fuel farm. Assummg the
forest. land wo~ld be cultiv~ on a 5
year. lOterval With an average ~eld of 6
metnc. tons/acre y~. We. will figure
col~ec~~n and drym~ efflclenc.y at an
f
opbmlsbc 80% and ,Its conversion from
heat to electric energy at 35% efficiency
t
(standard for modem steam generators).
. After doing the calculations we flOd
this power plant would need 2084 square
miles of cultivated tree ~ to generate
~ fuel needed. If. we decide to supply
Just 10% of the projeCted energy needs of
this country in the year 2000 using our
Seattle fuel farm as a model, we would
fmd that we would require ~ land area of
~2.4 Will~\a.v Way E. Bainbridge Island, WA 98110
almost 900,000 square miles or ~ut
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approved overwhelmingly in
a recent referendum.
Faculty also discussed
concrete measures in support
of the University of El
Salvador, such as sending
telexes
and
letters
in
response to human rights
violations.
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Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Page 7
Nicaraguan filntntaker Moises Rodrequez
talks about revolution and film
by Sean J. Starke and Scot Wheat
Moises Rodrequez, a Nicaraguan mm
director, spoke at the Evergreen campus
on Tuesday, March 27. We were given
the oppornmity 10 interview him on his
. work, his experiences in Nicaragua, and
on some of the current issues facing the
Nicaraguan people. His translator was
Ruth Warner, an edilOr for the
International edition of Barricada-the
official newspaper of the Sandanista
party.
The following are excerpts from the
interview:
Q: Could you explain t~ role film
played in portraying the revolution to the
international community?
Rodrequez: As part of the strategy
to strengthen the struggle of the FSLN
(Sandanista party) and its information
aspect. the FSLN created a publicity arm
including film-making. This is in light
of the distortion of the struggle in
Nicaragua by the transnational media So
the FSLN created a small film structure
within its ranks. The group of film
makers included Bolivians, Colombians,
Puerto Ricans, Peruvians, Argentineans,
Mexicans and two Nicaraguans: because
the needs were so quick and the situation
was happening so quickly with the war
that there wasn't time 10 train totally new
people in film-making, and because it
was so strange 10 see a Nicaraguan
filming when most of the Nicaraguans
were taking up weapons instead.
We were living along with the
soldiers and in the same conditions, with
the disadvantage that we couldn't shoot
back. The goal we had was to supply
footage from inside Nicaragua during the
struggle to Latin American television
stations, so that we would have some
influence on the kind of material that was
So, we
coming out of Nicaragua.
provided the kind of footage that we
were interested in being publicized.
There were certain limitations to other
journalists in those war areas, so they
had to use the materials we gave them.
Q: SO, were you able to get much
footage out of Nicaragua during tM war?
Rodrequez: Yes, mostly to Mexico
and some to U.S. television stations and
to solidarity committees.
Solidarity
committees were one of our main
channels of distribution.
Q: Could you explain the role film
played within post revolutionary
Nicaragua?
Rodrequez: Immediately after the
triumph, we did a lot with distribution
inside the country, 10 places where films
have never been seen. By that time we
were able 10 complete four or five pieces.
The first was a collage of the year 1979
after the triumph of the revolution. Then
we did another on the nationalization of
the mines. Another film we did was
based on the formation of the new army.
We created what we call mobile
cinemas. People would take the projectors
in a car, on a bike or in a canoe-however they could get around. They
Interview
would set up the screen in a community
and show a 16mm film. In this way we
went into communities where people had
never seen films before. We would show
a lot of classical films, like Chaplin-comedies and stuff--as well as films with
more of a social content; films about the
revolution in Cuba, the Soviet Union,
about what happened in Chile, about U.S.
Indians, about the struggle of the miners
in the United States and about the civil
rights movement in the United States.
During that same period, the [U.S.]
war against Nicaragua was just beginning.
The leadership had an idea of what was
coming, so they tried to prepare people
psychologically for the war that was
ahead. The productions we did changed
as the demands changed. The initial
romantic view of what films should be
within a revolutionary process didn't get
totally left behind, but it got changed and
transformed into other creative processes.
That is when we began to focus on short
documentaries and fiction fIlms.
The point came to where the
government could no longer sustain the
subsidies for the sector of artists and of
cultural workers, so a lot of those
subsidies were cut back.
In the
beginning it w~ a very beautiful project
that we had, not only film but the whole
cultural work of the revolution. The
creation of the ministry of culture was
very unique in Latin America. The result
was a very broad artistic movement with
very free expression. It was reduced to
a certain extent as subsidies had to be
cut--because of the war situation. But
we defmitely learned a lot from the
experience.
People continued to work, even
without government resources. A lot of
us were suddenly in the street, we were
unemployed.
All of us wanted to
continue working for the revolution. We
did not want to feel that we had been
totally destroyed because we did not have
as much government suppon.
In away, people's artistic creativity
was strengthened during that period.
When resources are scarce, people look
for better quality. As a result, in the
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there has been less film
production nationally, but I think the
quality has improved. I think we are
beginning to see the seeds of what could
become mature film production in
Nicaragua.
I think the capaCity to create flIms is
very large, even · though our national
subsidies may be in question [due to the
UNO electoral victory]. Because films do
not have to be high budget at all. You
need some technical resources, and a lot
of creativity and things can be done.
Q: What, if any, possibilities do U.S.
film maUrs have in working with
Nicaraguan film makers?
Rodrequez: I think we have always
been open to working with other people
to enrich our own experiences and
collaborating on different projects-as
long as those projects are not used as
part of the aggression against our
country. I think that has been a very
important factor in our activities as fIlm
makers. We are a community of people
who are basically working to support the
revolution.
It seems like people in
past few years,
ihe government has
been lost but the baSis
and the foundation of
the revolution has not
been altered."
Nicaragua would be open to some type
of an exchange.
Q: What do you see as the future role
of the
in Nicaragua? Can the U.S.
play some positive role?
Rodrequez: I think that, in the past
ten years, the U.S. has had ample
opportunity to play a more positive role
in Nicaragua--and they haven't done so.
Nicaragua has wanted to have good
relations with the United States, .but the
U.S. has continued to carry out its war
against Nicaragua.
In fact. Nicaragua was put in the
position of having to go to the World
Court to sue the United States for
damages caused by the U.S. instigated
war. It was the first time the United
States was accused like that, and they
lost the case. According to the ruling,
the U.S. should indemnify Nicaragua for
u.s.
over 12 billion dollars. But right now
they are only offering 300 million, so it
doesn't look like that twelve billion is
forthcoming.
In the past ten years U.S. policy has
been totally negative towards the
Nicaraguan people and has been IOtally
damaging. It has been open interference
which has even gone to the point of
covering up contra assassinations of U.S.
citizens. The U.S. has been destroying
the economy and all the social structures
of the country. What we foresee in Lite
future is more interference on the part of
the U.S ..
I think it is important that the FSLN
remain united and strong to somehow
hold back the negative impact that
interference might have. That implies
defending from below--as Daniel Ortega
says--all of the basic premises of the
revolution. The revolution is now intact.
The government has been lost but the
basis ami the foundation of the revolution
have not been altered. And we are not
going to allow the erosion of these
foundations. I think even people who
voted for UNO are aware of that.
lt will be interesting to see what
happens in the next few years, so keep
an eye out for what UNO does. They
will probably try to divide public opinion
and portray the Sandanistas as corrupt or
that they mismanaged the country. With
the support of the U.S. they will try to
do as much as they can to degrade the
Sandanistas.
Q: What advice would you give to
solidarity groups in the United States in
regards to supporting the Nicaraguan
people?
Rodrequez: I think there is a lot of
work to be done by the solidarity
movement. We think solidarity work
should continue as it has. Even though
the FSLN is no longer controlling the
executive branch, there are still a lot of
good activities that will continue, and we
will need a lot of support from abroad.
Its going to mean that there will be more
difficulties in getting aid through. Yet,
through creativity, a lot of things can be
done.
Note: For up 10 date, comprehensive
information about Nicaragua, refer to the
international edition of Ba"icada--which
can be found in the TESC library.
Sean J. Starke and Scot W~at are
Evergreen
students interested in
Nicaragua.
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Roofponds: two feet of water on the roof?
by David Keleher
Water on buildings is a great way to
utilize the sun's energy for heating and
cooling. In addition to its abundance,
water absorbs and slOres heat well, better
even than asphalL 'Also, because the roof
of a building is normally the largest area
exposed to the sun, roof ponds make
perfect sense. They can be designed so
that the water, commonly enclosed in
plastic bags like water beds, absorbs or .
dissipates heat, depending on whether
heating or cooling is desired.
For· winter heating, the ponds are
exposed to collect sunlight during the day
and then covered with insulation panels
to retain the heat and radiate it into the
home during the night. For swnmer
cooling, the water is shielded from the
sun and heat, and the panels are removed
at night to allow heat to radiate to the
cool night sky.
By admitting light and trapping
infrared rays, clear plastic traps heat in
the water much like a greenhouse.
Positioned above the water, clear inflated better summer cooling by merely
bags, called air cells, act as a second deflating the air . cells.
Since single
"glazing," as in double pane windows, glazed ponds are twice as effective as
and are an economical way 10 enhance double-glazed ponds roc cooling, the
the performance. This greenhouse effect flexibility to alternate between single and
of the air bags is then easily reduced for double glazing is very valuable.
roof pond could theoretically collect more
heat, but to contain water at a slant
would be ridiculously expensive. And so,
it makes sense to simply use panels
(which can double as the insulative
covers) to reflect additional energy into
the system.
Because the sun is low in the winter,
a reflector can help to increase the
absorption of the sun's rays, improving
its usefulness in northern climates. Just
as ordinary solar collectors are commonly
sloped to improve solar gain, sloping a
Although pouring water onlO houses
isn't }.!t popular, roof ponds have proven
10 be very efficient and effective. They
work especially well in dry climates
where night temperatures tend 10 fall far
below the day range.
In the most
famous example is a prototype home in
Atascadero, California. There, a roof
pond operated with a 63% efficiency
rating, which amply supplied 100% of the
home's heating and cooling requirements.
Furthermore, because it primarily heats
the building through radiative transfer, it
warms objects and people rather than the
air, and so, much like the sun, is a more
sensible heat source.
For further details on roof ponds,
see Edward Mazria's The Passive Solar
Energy Book in the TESC Library.
David Kele~r and Ken Akopianity
researched roof ponds in tM Energy
Systems program at Evergreen this
quarter.
Buy Recycled and protect resources
by Amanda McCloskey
Recendy, I received a recycled paper
catalog, and started thinking about how
much paper I use as a student Earthcare
opens its catalog by saying: "We promote
recycling because it reduces waste, saves
energy, and protects resources." Just how
much energy does using recycled paper
save?
Some information can be found in
Earthcare's pamphlet, "Facts About
Recycled Paper." ''The energy required
to produce a ton of paper from virgin
wood pulp is 16,320 KWH compared to
5,919 KWH for producing a ton of paper
from waste paper." 1bis is an energy
savings of 64%1 As America is the
largest consumer of paper in the world
-67 million tons a year--if even half of
our national use was recycled paper, 335
trillioo KWH could be saved. 1bis is
equivalent to 30 Trojan nuclear power
planlsl
How do we cOnsume this much
papet1 A large part is packaging. A
pamp.Iet by the Environmental Protection
Agetv;y states: "Nearly half the paper we
now use is in the fonn of packaging."
And most of this paper is thrown away.
For example, 38% of the average
household garbage is paper.
Some m<re facts from Earthcare,
about paper and garbage:
1) "Paper makes up nearly 113 of
municipal solid waste by weight and well
ovez III by volwne.·
2) "Disposal of solid waste is the
nation's
third
largest
domestic
expenditure. "
3) !Americans spend $6 billion
annually to collect and dispose of our
trash."
.
Thus, using recycled paper would
not only save energy, but also solid waste
costs, and could also make money
through a new recycled paper industry.
A
few
further
considerations:
AccoIding to Worldwatch, paper pmducts
use about 1/3 of the world's annual wood
harvest. "Paper made from wastepaper
instead of virgin wood requires 61 % less
water, and results in 70% fewer air
pollutants. . .and 35% less water pollution."
Using recycled paper also saves trees.
Some IIOIImlS said it takes 17 trees to
make one ton of paper, and over 500,000
trees each Sunday for the Sunday
newspaper' across America. In addition,
the making of recycled paper, especially
minimum impact paper, which skips the
bleaching steps of paper making,
produces less dioxins than virgin paper.
So why aren't we all using recycled
papeI1 The U.S. leads the world in
exporting wastepaper to countries such as
South Korea and Canada, yet it's hard 10
buy recycled notebook paper here. Why?
The EPA
Lack of local demand.
recommends that individual and bulk
users use recycled paper, that students
"ask for recycled writing paper, paper
towels, construction paper, and typing
paper." (Add computer paper and lOilet
paper.) Earthcare explains that "the
greatest challenge for recycling centers
today is fmding a market for collected
waste. By purchasing products made of
recycled paper, you are helping support
and expand the market for waste paper."
Amanda McCloskey is an Energy
Systems student working to get more
recycled paper used on campus.
Are you
Ing or
biodegradable, ecologically
safe products?
Rad:ance is committed to he!pi'lg the Olympia
community become active in recyciing and using
sate products. We now carry:
-biodegradable laundry soap
-biodegradable all purpose cleaners
. recycled paper products
at special introductory prices-thru April 30
RESOURCES
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10am - Spm
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Page 8 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Censored Energy Topics
Directed by
Hirsh Diamant
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Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Page 9
Opinion
Letters
Hall educates TESC
by Darrell W. Riley
White people can't understand what
it is to be black. They don't understand
the subtleties of the daily existence of a
black person, the racism, the discussions
that black people engage in, etc.
by Jon Epstein
In 1962 my father purchased a home
in Great Neck, New York. I was only
five years old but I still remember our
move to Long Island. The house had a
full basement with three large rooms. On
the main floor we had a large kitchen
with a pantry, a large dining room with
a liquor cabinet, a large living room, a
large study, my parents bedroom, which
was kind of small, and a good sized
~m.ThemrunfloorweMdanoth~
bathroom and three bedrooms for us kids.
My bedroom was small but my brother
and sister lived like kings! The house
was located on 3/4 acre of land and we
had an old two car garage with a second
floor that was unfinished.
What would you expect to pay for a
piece of property like this today? I
estimate that the home, where I grew up
in New York, would sell for no less than
$150,000. In 1962 my father took out a
mortgage on the house for $25,000. In
1962 my father was a self-employed
comedian and he made about $18,000 a
year. My mother stayed at home to take
care of the three .children. Were we rich?
Was this the income of the rich Jews that
owned all the banks and were taking over
the world? I have never felt rich. I have
always considered myself a member of
that amorphous "middle class." This is
the class that exists to protect the ruling
class from the poor.
In 1990 I, like my fath~, am selfemployed. Some people think I am also
a comedian. I make less than $12,000 a
year. Unlike my father, I do not have
three children and a wife. However, I
often wonder how much money I would
have to make to live like my father in
1962. Most of my friends who have
developed "careers" over the years are
making between 30 to 4S thousand
dollars a year. If I was making
$45,000.00 a year would I have the same
standard of living that my father had in
the sixties? Hardly!
I think the salary would have to be
closer to $100,000_00 for me to
experience the wealth my parents had in
1962. What I am trying to point out is
that putting inflation aside, we are living
in a time of economic decline.
A statistician could find data to
support my hypotheses
that the
opportunity for white males to make
$18,000 in 1962 was much higher that
the opportunity for white males to make
$ 100,000 in 1990. Our standard of living
is on the decline. I have lots of friends
who raise families today on $30,000
salaries. But things are different. In most
families both parents have jobs. The
homes people live in are smaller on
smaller lots. These days a college
education is no guarantee of a
meaningful, high-paying career. This is
an American myth.
Keep this in mind as you move
through this land of freedom and
opportuni ty.
Eppo is an Evergreen fossil. srudent.
and hosts a radio show on KAOS-FM
called "Mouthing Off·... yeah I know
Ihat'S an old lag but Eppo likes it.
However, some aspects of black life
and culture are obvious to anyone who
cares to look. When I turn on black radio
and hear Army and Alcohol ads it
doesn't take the subtlety of living the
black experience to understand that there
are issues of advertising in the black
community. The issue is particularly
intense because of the high mortality rate
of black men, caused by excesses the
advertisers encourage.
These are issues of national concern.
They are also issues of local concern to
black neighborhoods. They should
concern Americans .across the nation, on
every level, of every race.
Here in Olympia we are isolated
from much that happens, particularly in
the black community. Issues that are
dWly events to people of Tacoma and
Seattle are ignored in Olympia for lack
of information.
While I was editor of the CPJ it was
my great fortune to learn of one resource
of information about issues affecting the
black community, Carol Hall's columns.
She covered black issues without payor
any other form of recompense.
Because of Ms_ Hall's columns white
Evergreener's sometimes knew more of
what is happening in the national black
communities than many blacks in Seattle.
Because of her columns, other points of
view on many issues were explored on a
campus notorious for its one-sided view
of issues.
I've been accused of being racist
because I didn't know Ms. Hall was
white when I accepted her articles. Nor
did I bother to inform the new editors of
her race. Now I know. I don't care. She
addresses issues that need to be
addressed, not only for the education of
black people but for the education of
everyone. It's absurd to think because she
is white she doesn't have anything
important to say about black issues. She
may not understand the subtleties of
black life, but she gets !he main points
right.
Most "black" issues aren't black at
all. "Black" issues effect everyone, of
whatever race. Blacks are usually the
forerunners of problems which strike
American society.
UMOJA seems to me a bunch of
black people sitting around bitching about
EVERGREEN ARE VERY
FA.c1 THA.T WE
ENCL05E OVIl. 5EcvQ.r r y pr;lls'M.I~ (...
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Are they, for instance, writing about
it for the paper, one of two campuswide,
community-wide
media
at
Evergreen? Not one time during my
tenure did we get an article from
UMOJA about the issues of racism at
Evergreen, or in a broader context.
Are they changing perceptions and
opinions? I went to a meeting with
UMOJA members where they argued that
no white people should be allowed in
their meetings because whites would mess
up the discussion. Does that mean that
whites might learn about blacks? Or that
blacks would be jolted out of their
comfortable complacency on this campus
to educate people about the issues of
racism at Evergreen, like the lack of
sports?
Is UMOJA a student group, or a
black social club? If it's solely a black
social club, they should stop accepting
student money and move off the school
campus.
State
law
prohibits
discrimination, and exclusion by race is
discrimination.
There is a lot of hypocrisy in the
attitudes of people of color on this
campus. I hate to even mention the
number of people of color at Evergreen
who Mve mixed children, white parents,
or are otherwise directly emotionally
involved with white people. For instance,
there is one student of color who goes
around proclaiming her identity as an
QPpressed minority. Her fathe~ is G~an .
Was she cloned from her mother? Does
her father play any part in her makeup?
Is he oppressing her? If hc is, is it as her
father or as a racist member of the white
society?
The effect of these hysterical racial
attitudes is shown in the article written
by Tedd Kelleher where he says he's a
racist because he feels threatened by
blacks. If Tedd is such a racist, why did
he continue to work with me? Or is he a
closet mcist, one who gets guilty pleasure
out of thinking that as a white person,
inherently racist, he can't change his
attitudes? This is the favorite attitude of
many Evergreeners.
UMOJA is closing doors. Carol Hall
opens them. Anyone and everyone can be
racist. What's needed is not to explrun to
people how they are wrong, but to show
them how to be right.
The first goal, by both blacks and
whites, is EDUCATION. It's hard for
people to move forward until they
understands where they are, where they
have come from, and where they want to
go.
Once people learn about each other
racial attitudes change. My uncle tells a
story of one of his friends who took off
his clothes before making love to an
English woman. As he did she examined
him carefully from every angle before
she let him into the bed. Days la~ he
understood she had been looking for his
tail, she had heard that all black men had
tails.
When does racism stop, and society
get be~ When people of all colors
respect each oth~'s opinions and ideas.
They respect each other when they learn
enough about other cultures to see the
beauty they have.
Carol Hall has shown herself capable
of respecting all peoples. She has
established an educational framework for
people to operate under. If she is wrpng,
it's time for blacks to point out how not
by challenging her because of her skin or
race, but by showing her the subtleties of
being a black person. UMOJA members,
pony up. You can talk the talk, it's time
to walk the walk.
Write articles. Hold seminars. Discuss
the issues of being a person of color with
white people at your meetings. Create
goals Evergreeners can strive for, not
namby-pamby feel-good "elimination of
racism on campus" but concrete steps to
bring change.
Get faculty together to discuss issues
badly handled in seminars. I know there
are a lot of poorly handled issues of race,
I've talked with faculty about it myself.
Talk to people who have been here.
The student groups are losing Evergreen's
best resource, dean Stone Thomas. He's
been a powerful force, both on the
campus
and
in
the
educational
community. Find out what he's done
that's worked, and what hasn't.
And don't discourage people who
make the effort to understand racism and
other cultures, for whatever reason. Carol
Hall should be appreciated for the
treasure she is, a valuable resource in the
midst of a cultural desert.
Darrell Riley is a graduate of
Evergreen and former Cooper Point
Journal editor.
Corrections
DF 7J./~
(Jvur:rPI10oF GLASS
THuS
how messed up Evergreen is. Yes,
Evergreen is a haven of racists. Many of
my friends at Evergreen dislike my skin
color. Some dislike my attitude. There
were reports that the people involved in
the student protest, now running student
government, tried to officially ban people
of color from their protest What is
UMOJA doing about it?
PREvEIVTING
H412ASSrNC
Page 10 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
THE
T~f'"
8()DT 1-I 5/
"110"1
:; TUDfiNTS.".
·In S. Martin's cover story last week
(Vol. 20 Issue 20), "Five non-students
apprehended. .. " there were four males and
one female apprehended and the suspects
were not turned over to Thurston County
Authorities, instead Thurston County
officers assisted security in bringing the
suspects to the Security office where after
admitting their involvement they were
turned over to their parents.
·In last week's story on auto
efficiency, Duane Drummond brought in
the following correction: Sir Isaac
NewlOn did not establish the First and
Second Laws of Thermodynamics. Rather,
he developed the Laws of Motion. Lots
of people wOIked on the laws of thermal
dynamics.
Defend Salvadoran right to revolutionary struggle
I am writing this in response to
Brendan Williams' ignorant attempt at an
article on the FMLN. It is unfortunate
that after all the "critical reasoning skills"
that are taught at this institution, Mr.
Williams still is a dupe for U.S.
propaganda.
,
Mr. Williams' assertion that the
conflict in El Salvador is merely an
extension of easl/west hostilities, shows a
definite lack of understanding of the
historical oppression, resistance, and U.S.
exploitation in the region. El Salvador's
economy is based on growing crops, like
coffee, for export.
The land, and
consequently the wealth of the nation, is
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controlled by fourteen families, who live
in gross extravagance and send their
children to the United States for an
education, while the vast majority of
Salvadorans are forced to live in
conditions of brutal poverty and face
barbarous working conditions.
It is conditions such as vast
malnutrition, infant mortality , hung~, lack
of clean water, disease, lack of housing,
unemployment, no chance for education,
and gross inequalities of land distribution
and wealth which gave rise to the
Farabundo Marti National Liberation
Front (FMLN). Since 1932, the people
of El Salvador have been organizing
(without "outside" influence) to improve
their living conditions_ Since 1932, the
government has been responding with
deaf ears and genocidal force. Farabundo
Marti was the brave spirit who led the
1932 rebellion.
He and 30,000
Salvadorans were executed by the army
for their revolt.
The late 1970's brought increased
repression to El Salvador.
In 1977,
hundreds of people were killed when the
Salvadoran army opened fire on a
peaceful demonstration of 50,000.
Liberation theology churches, labor
unions, peasant organizations, and student
groups grew throughout the late 1970·s.
The government responded to these
popular organizations by setting up death
squads aimed at terrorizing the population
to subvert all organizing attempts.
In 1980, 500,000 people, (10% of the
Salvadoran population) took to the streets
of San Salvador. Again, the National
Guard opened fire. Every attempt to
organize peacefully and within the bounds
of Salvadoran law has been met with
brutal repression, including torture,
Politically
correct
..
OpmlOnS
I can't tell you how many times I've
been in seminar, or in class, or in the
CAB just hanging out and I hear
somebody
talking
about
being
"politically" correct. Maybe this seems
like an outdated issue because this has
been a common term at Evergreen for a
while now, but I'd like to know why it
has persisted.
I know there are some radicals who
aspire to what they believe is political
purity, but I think they make the mistake
of assuming that all other political views
and attitudes are inferior to theirs. To
say "politically correct" implies the
conservative belief that there is a "right
way" to think.
Maybe I'm just letting off stearn,
because I hear a lot of ignorant rhetoric
on this campus. Of course, this may be
just my interpretation of what people say,
but I'm tired of hearing that the United
States is a capitalist fascist country that
just wants to oppress and exploit the
majority. This country's government is
not made up of evil and selfish zombies,
it's made up of people, hard-working
men and women, who have worked hard
to get where they are. While it seems
that congressmen keep giving themselves
pay raises, the education that it takes to
become a congressman or woman could
bring them three times the salary than it
does in Congress. And a $200,000 salary
is very small for a man who has to guide
a country through four years of
leadership and malce decisions involving
billions of dollars.
Again, this is just my opinion. But
then, on the other hand, maybe there's
some truth in what I'm saying. All I'm
asking is that if you fit into any of the
above-mentioned categories, take a second
look at yourself. See if you aren't
infringing on others' rights to hold their
own opinions. see if you aren't making
accusations against this country without
having full proof, and see if you can
bring your general conclusions on
humanity down to the individuals you're
murder, and imprisonment by the
Salvadoran military and government.
It is this lack of respect by the
government for human life that caused
the Salvadoran people to form the
FMLN. The FMLN was fonned to
defend the Salvadoran people's attempts
to organize for humane living and
working condition.
The move to an
armed struggle is not a decision people
make hastily. Rather, armed struggle is
the last resort people take when there is
no more space for peaceful organizing.
The assassination of Archbishop
Oscar Romero is a prime example of the
unmerciful repression inflicted on the
Salvadoran people by the U.S. backed
government. How can a white upper
middle class student like Mr. Williams be
so callous and inherently racist to assert
from his · "omniscient height of his
background" that the Salvadoran people
should use the Ghandian tactics of civil
disobedience? If the people of El
Salvador were to sit down in a
government office, they would just make
themselves easy targets for government
assassination. Campesinos who staged a
sit down strike in Guatemala (a nation
with a government that like EI Salvador's
has a complete lack of respect for human
life) decide to do it on international
territory (the Spanish embassy) where "
theoretically they were assured safety.
The Guatemalan army entered the
Spanish embassy and massacred the
protesting campesinos.
Any rich white North American who
denies the Salvadoran people their right
to self defense through armed struggle,
just rubber stamps the genocide that is
perpetrated
by
the
Salvadoran
government. Gandhi himself stated that
his tactics worked in India because of its
unique history, and would not work in
other nations (such as South Africa).
In conclusion Mr. Williams, I
encourage you to step out of your own
sheltered life and read the accounts of the
Salvadoran people or hear their stories.
Two weeks ago, Evergreen CISPES and
EPIC brought Gloria Galan, a Salvadoran
active in the COMADRES--the committee
of the disappeared. Gloria told her story
of being kidnapped, imprisoned and
tortured three times for inquiring into the
whereabouts of her disappeared brother.
She told her story of being forced to
watch her small siblings be tortured. This
is the repression that United States
money buys in El Salvador and this is
the reason that the Salvadoran people are
forced to defend themselves through
armed struggle.
Stop your hypocritical, inhumane, and
racist assertions that the Salvadoran
people must respond to repression
through passive consent, Mr. Williams! In
the words of a Salvadoran campesino, "I
worked on the hacienda over there, and
I would have to feed the dogs bowls of
meat.. .and I could never put those on the
table for my own children. When my
children were ill, they died with a nod
of sympathy from the landlord. But when
those dogs were ill, I took them to the
veterinarian ... you will never understand
violence or non-violence until you
understand the violence to the spirit that
happens by watching your children die of
malnutrition. "
CISPES meets every Friday night at
5:30 pm in CAB 110.
Leanne Roberts
talking about--if you say that America is
driven by greed, ask ycurself, who do I
know that is actually driven by greed?
Not some politician you don't know and
suspect of selfIShness, but perhaps your
next door neighbor or some teacher.
We're not all self-centered, money
and power-hungry capitalists that want to
exploit and discriminate against minorities
and Mexicans. Some of us are just
friendly people.
James Egan
the process them I am pleased. It is
about time someone lit a fIre und~ the
faculty and forced them to fight for what
they believe is right for Evergreen. I
don't believe I am the only student who
has had trouble with the Evergreen
faculty and their dictatorial running of the
college. As for the "negative publicity,"
there is no such thing as bad controversy
unless it involves moral issues such as
drugs. If anything this will just make
Evergreen more popular.
I am not
always happy when I hear about
Evergreen changing, but if Evergreen is
to survive it must change.
Eric Ruhlen
Silently picket
l\1 arri ott
I have heard it said that people
would not cross a picket line in order to
patronize Marriott. I am a full time
student and consequently do not have
time to organize and carry out an actual,
traditional picket protest of the Marriott
Corporation. I am however, boycotting
Marriott and I want to encourage others
to join me in this "silent" protest.
My own personal reasons for my
boycott are:
-Astronomically high prices
-Lousy customer service (only certain
employees)
-Marriott's recent (ongoing?) labor
problems
Please, join me and don' t cross my
"picket" line. Bring food from home or,
better yet, help support fellow Greeners
who sell food outside.
Rich Tocher
Tired of TESC abuse
As a 1986 graduate of The Evergreen
Slate College I for one am tired of the
continual abuse both the staff and the
curriculum receive. The issue of a few
Evergreen faculty being upset over
alleged discrepancies in Joseph Olander's
resume should be left for the college to
deal with.
In 1985 "Joe" brought a
breath of fresh air to a college that had
struggled for 100 long trying to get the
minimal amount of funding it received.
If Mr. Olander has tread on a few toes in
Should I worship or
wax?
I promise I will never wax the floors
again. I would like to carry a side arm
however in case someone catches me
clt'$ing up. A bazooka or a couple of
White Phosphorus grenades would be
nice.
Geof Seland, custodian
-
Williams' article
shocking
I am writing in shocked response to
Brendan Williams article, "Mixing
FMLN, Romero 'perverse'."
I found
Williams' article to be riddled with
misinformation and arrogant assumptions,
yet I also found it, in likeness to the
corporate media portrayal of EI Salvador,
a distressingly familiar article. Mr.
Williams seems to suffer from the
common malady of liberals in the United
Stales of assuming that any Third World
person who takes up arms is just like any
other person who takes up arms, and that
the same is true of any group involved in
anned resistance. Thus he is able to
stale that, "The FMLN is basically a
group of bandits, like the Contras--except
lefL" Perhaps a basic Central American
see history page 12
Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Page 11
from history page 11
history lesson is in order here.
The ConlraS were a group of
Nicaraguan ex-National Guardsmen who,
in the early 1980's, were organized by
the Central Intelligence Agency to launch
a covert war against the newly instituted
government of Nicaragua. These were the
men who had instituted decades of
brutality under the Somoza regime, and
had fled the country when the Somozas
were driven out of power by the
Nicaraguan revolutionary front, the FSLN.
The ConlraS enjoy minimal popular
support in Nicaragua, as their methods of
attacks are against the general population
(such as running over-the-border raids
against collective farms, hospitals, and
schoolhouses, then fleeing back to their
bases in Honduras). The ConlraS fight is
against the people of Nicaragua--it is a
war of barbarous terror and murder.
Only one ignorant of the facts of the
situation or with the forementioned
malady could even think to compare the
Contras and the FMLN. The FMLN (the
Farabundo Marti National Liberation
Front) is a group formed in 1980 to
battle the rampant repression and
inequality in EI Salvador. The FMLN
forged together five guerilla groups,
which had formerly fought in separate
parts of the country into an unified
coalition. An alliance was then made
between the FMLN and the FDR
(Democratic Revolutionary Front), an
unity of popular organizations, labor
federations, students, peasant associations,
women's groups, professionals, and
formt'J' government officials committed to
creating a new EI Salvador.
This was a very important step in the
empowerment of the people of EI
Salvador. In El Salvador inequality and
repression are an unbearable burden for
the people. Less than two percent of the
people in the country control 60% of the
land and 90% of the wealth. Meanwhile,
80% of the population is unemployed or
underemployed and over 60% live in
destitute poverty. Any attempts at
peaceful change or reform have been met
repeatedly with violence on the part of
the government and the armed forces.
Union leaders, health care and human
rights workers, peasants, students,
priests ... these are all the avowed enemies
of the Salvadoran government Since
1979, over 80,000 Salvadorans have been
killed by government security forces and
army-controlled death squads. The
overwhelming majority are civilians.
It is these realities which have
forced the people of EI Salvador-farm workers, slumdwellers, and trade
unionists--to form an armed guerilla
resistance, Mr. Williams .. .not (as you
imply) coercive Soviet influence. The
majority of weapons carried by FMLN
combatants are gotten in raids upon
military outposts, with nearly all the rest
having been bought on the Central
American black market. Thus the
alltomatic weapon most used by the
FMLN is a U .S. made M-16, not the
Soviet made AK-47. The FMLN is a
group of Salvadorans, fighting in EI
Salvador,
for
the
liberation
of
Salvadorans. The fact that they both tend
to carry M-I6s is the only similarity
between they and the ConlraS.
I would like to conclude by saying
that I am saddened, more than anything
else, from reading your article. Your
brandishing of red-menace and empty
terrorist rhetoric made your piece read
more like a State Department position
paper than the writing of a selfproclaimed "progressive." A week before
his death, Archbishop Romero declared
that when a government has complete
disregard for its people, when any
attempts at reform are met with
repression, and when entreaties for justice
and peace are met only with violence, the
people have a legitimate right to take up
arms to defend themselves, and this the
Church regards as a just war. No, Mr.
Williams, unfurling an FMLN banner at
a rally commemorating Oscar Romero I
not perverse; using his name in order l"
propagate the very misinformation which
has underscored U.S. policy there for the
last ten years, however, is very perverse.
T im Pellow
'Relevant facts' indicate ROlllero
and FMLN quite cOlDpatil;>le .
.
As activists concerned with conditions
both in the United States and El
Salvador we were both shocked and
dismayed with Brendan William's letter
entitled
"Mixing
FMLN,
Romero
'pervt'J'SC'."
Shocked because an
advocate of "critical reasoning" could
overlook relevant facts when discussing
the life of a prominent figure such as
Archbishop Romero. Dismayed because
a self proclaimed "progressive"
distorted the reality of the conflict in EI
Salvador. We agree with Williams that
there is a lack of critical reasoning
among students regarding foreign policy.
Ironically, his letter exemplifies this
affliction in several ways.
Williams says "I don't want some
earnest pseudo-radical to preach to me
about the virtues of the FMLN, usually
from the omniscient height of her or his
white middle class status." In response,
we do not support the FMLN because of
some type of knee-jerk, reactionary antiAmericanism (as Williams goes on to
imply). Our sympathies for the FMLN
come from an understanding of the facts
and realities of El Salvador. We do not
rely solely on the State Department, the
New York Times, or The Guardian.
Rather, we feel that Salvadorans like
Oscar Romero can offer the clearest
understanding of the conflict. It is these
people who can best inform ~ about EI
Salvador; whether we are whIte, brown,
Page 12 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
black, male, female, over, middle, or
undercJass.
Williams states "Oscar Romt'J'O was
a brave eloquent man who stood for
peace." True. However, by conlraSting
Romt'J'O with the FMLN, Williams
assumes that Oscar Romt'J'O was a
staunch pacifist. By doing so, Williams
implies that the aims of the FMLN are
antithetical to those of Romero. Such a
conlraSt is in blatant disregard of the
remarks made by Romero himself.
In his letter, Williams tries to equate
Romero, "a man who stood for peace,"
with a universal appeal to the tenants of
of
specific
nonviolence--regardless
historic, social, economic and political
contexL
He
also reveals
his
misunderstanding of the conflict by
falsely labeling the situation in EI
Salvador as strictly a super-power
confrontation.
Regarding the actual situation in El
Salvador, Romero stated the church could
not "..simplistically say it condemns any
type of violence." Repression, according
to Romero, was directed at anyone who
challenged the local oligarchy and the
existing economic and political structures
of El Salvador's exploitative agro-export
economy. In this context, the poor and
anyone who "...organized themselves to
defend their rights and promote legitimate
struc~ c~g~ ... " ~er; labeled as
"subversIves or terronsts and a threat
to nauonal secunty. Romero pomted out
that those who dare think they may have
rights were II ... arrested, tortured, made to
disappear, or murdered with no judicial
institution to protect them or to give
them a chance to defend themselves and
prove their innocence."
Romero
concluded that in this context the people
had a right to insWTection and legitimate
defense.
From
Williams'
own
"omniscient height of.. middle class white
affluence,"
universal
principled
nonviolence and archaic cold war notions
may be easy to preach.
However,
oppressed Salvadorans can not afford to
live with such delusions.
In
1978
Romero stated; "the conflict is not
between church and government, it is
between government and people. The
church is with the people and the people
are with the church, thank God." In his
fourth pastoral letter of 1979, Romero
was eltplicit about the relationship
between armed resistance, the people, and
the church. When a reporter inquired
about his impressions of the Salvadoran
"left" he replied, "I don't call them forces
of the left but forces of the people, and
their anger may be a prod.uct of social
injustice."
The "forces" Romero was referring
to were popular organizations and
guerrillas which united shortly after his
see Romero page 13
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To apply for the AJ'G[Cord, call us at
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Now, if only it were that easy to improve
your grade point average.
H •••
The right choice.
History runs counter to 'disinformation'
Opening the seepage i see yet another
example of disinformation in the form of
8 letter by brendan williams. I think that
before i point out the lies in brendan's
text a historical perspective is necessary,
albeit brief condensed and incomplete.
In 1524 the Spanish imperialists
invaded
Central America.
The
indigenous people of El Salvador, · the
Pipil, had a communal agricultural way
of life until the Spaniards attacked.
Inside of 50 years, violence and disease
wiped out approximately 425,000
indigenous people: only 75,000 people
were left Three centuries of Spanish
rule created an economy dependent on
export crops.
A series . of uprisings led to
independence from Spain in 1821. For
the campesinos (people who work the
land), this "independence" didn't change
a whole helluva lot; they were still
toiling on land they didn't own for the
profit of the landowners. Crops such as
cocoa and indigo (blue dye) were ·
exported to great Britain, the <-main
trading "partner."
In 1833 a major
uprising led by anastasio aquino (no
relation to cory "friendly fascist" aquino
who's . presently in power in the
Philippines) was crushed by the new
rulers of El Salvador who proved to be
as ruthless as their former Spanish
masters. When a synthetic for indigo
was invented, the Salvadoran economy
went for a nose dive until the new cash
crop, coffee, was introduced. By the late
19th century it accounted for 95% of
exports---and u.s. "interests" surpassed
those of the British.
In the 1920s campesinos and city
dwellers were organizing to change things
through electoral politics and peaceful
demonstrations.
In 1922, a womens'
march through the capital of San
Salvador was fired upon by the military
and dozens of women were massacred.
In 1931 the coffee export price drastically
fell. You can bet that the 1% of the
population that owned roughly 90% of
the nation's wealth didn't miss a meal.
The oligarchs passed their losses on to
the workt'J'S and some compas found their
wages slashed overnight from 75 to 25
centavos.
Strikes and mass marches
increased. In december 1931 there was
a military coup which seated general
martinez in power.
In 1932 there was a mass uprising
led by a man named farabundo marti, a
long time revolutionary and organizer of
the poor. The response was swift and
brutal and in less than two weeks some
30,000 people were slaughtered.
In
operations that rivaled the tactics the u.s.
used in the invasion of vietnam, the
military went into villages, burned the
peoples'
homes, lined the entire
populations of villages up against the
church wall (often the only stone
building) and shot everyone, men, women
and children alike. Often the military
would put corpses on stakes or in tree
fom-lmd hang signs from the bodies
warning that this is the fate that awaited
all communists.
"The peasants were
hunted down not only in the region of
the revolt, but on the basis simply of
their dress or 'caste 0 features'. It is
from 1932 that the ending of an
indigenous style of dressing, language
and traditions most clearly dates and it
became a crime to be a native
Salvadoran." (hopkinson, 15) Bitterly
ironic is that maximum estimates of
deaths caused by the rebels is no more
than 30, six of which were civilians.
In the years since the Mantanza
(massacre) of 1932, the conditions under
which people live have worsened, Today
cotton and coffee are the main export
crops.
U.s.
corporations
from
proctor&garnble to levi-strauss to pepsico
& cocola profit from the foreign market
and cheap labour. Exploited campesipos
labour 12 hours a day for $1.50, which
hardly feeds themselves no less their
families. Women and children are paid
25% less than men. Both in the country
and the cities women and children make
up such a huge part of the work force,
they provide a labour pool that keeps the
wages low for the entire working class.
Presently, 60% of the arable land is
owned by 2% of the population. (At the
heart of the FMLNs platform is land
reform.)
Massive use of chemical
insecticides is among the main causes of
severe soil erosion which affects over
83% of the country. Regular bombing,
including the use of napalm and white
phosphorus, is a major cause of
deforestation and soil damage. Crop
dusters spray the fields while the
campesinos. are working in them. Due
to the soil damage, water percolation has
been cut and now only one in ten
Salvadorans now has access to safe
Letter
drinking water. 25% of all children are
malnourished and one in every five
children will die of disease or
malnutrition before the age of 5 years.
"96% of El Salvador's families make less
than what is needed to meet basic needs."
(EPOCA)
Rebellion has been historically
consistent with the oppressive poverty in
El Salvador. This is the cause of the
revolution, it is not imported and has
nothing to do with an east/west conflict
as brendan would have us believe. It is
not surprising that a wealthy white male
such as brendan is "intolerant" of a
"powt'J' struggle between the world's
bullies," and yet has patience for the
brutal reality which the Salvadoran people
face every day_
In 1980, five revolutionary parties
with military wings joined under the
bannt'J' of Farabundo Marti National
Liberation Front (FMLN).
A mass
popular movement made up of hundreds
of groups including unions, peasant
groups (including even 8 street people's
organization), womens' groups, church
groups and political parties formed the
Democratic Revolutionary Front (FDR)
to present a political alternative to the
military junta. The junta " asn't too fond
of the idea and subsequently rounded up
the leaders of the FOR, tortured them
and executed them.
Eventually, the
FMLN and the FDR merged (now
FMLN/FDR). A week before he was
assassinated in march of 1980, arcbbishop
oscar romero said that if all other means
non-violent failed, than armed self
defence was justified. It seems ironic to
me that such a strong advocate for
furnishing "security" (who give me the
creeps, but that's another issue altogether,
or is it'?) with fIre arms as brendan
williams, is suddenly babbling about
pacifism. This perhaps stems from sheer
stupidity, a severe lapse in critical
reasoning which he claims others lack, or
it's the standard Qrwellian double speak
that the u.s. government and the
corporate media unceasingly spew out at
US, or a combination of all. It's okay for
the pigs (Salvadoran or North American)
to use violence to protect their power and
property but to defend one's self andlor
people, whether you are danny spencer,
who was clubbed to death last summer
by seven olympia pigs and one civilian
Pork chop after he fllSt tried to escape,
then futilely try to fend off seven
nightsticks and many fists with his bare
arms (the verdict at the inquest was
"excusable homicide") or if you are a
member of the FMLN, defending your
people against a repression that has killed
75,000 people in the last decade. The
FMLN, contrary to what brendan says
carry few ak-47s. The gun of the FMLN
is the m-16. They procure their weapons
from capturing them from the Salvadoran
military, from buying them from the
notoriously corrupt Salvadoran military
and purchasing them over the black
market from the contras. This arms trade
is the only connection between the
FMLN and the contras, which are largely
comprised of former somoza national
guardsmen who are as much mass
mW'derers as the salvadoran military and
the u.s. armed forces.
With the steady 1.5 million dollars
a day the u.s. sends down to the
Salvadoran government, presently the
ARENA (national republican alliance) i
fmd it unlikely that there is any real hope
for a negotiated solution until all aid is
cut.
Though brendan opposes the
"patriarchal" aspect of u.s. intervention
he comes off as rather patronizing,
especially when he states thaL.. "it's
encouraging that the latest news has the
FMLN sitting down ... " forming coalition
parties to "... face ARENA at the polls
next year." How nice, those children are
putting down their guns and facing off,
fare and square like those of us "who
have a true respect for humanity." It's
unfortunate that brendan didn't take the
time to look critically, if at all, at last
year's elections. About six weeks before
the elections took place, the FMLN/FDR
proposed that they would lay down their
arms if they could participate in the
elections on the condition that their safety
was ensured and that they be given a few
months to prepare a campaign. The
government refused. The FMLN/FDR
has consistently
tried to initiate
negotiations with the that same response.
At present, though the government has
agreed to negotiate, the u. s., which is the
real enemy, will take no active part.
Throughout all "elections" in El Salvador,
including the last, any candidate opposing
the regime have been assassinated. I
think "true respect for private property"
would be a more accurate phrase.
The
la~t negotiations between the FMLN/FDR
and ARENA ended abruptly when the
government expressed the sincerity of its
efforts by bombing the offices of
FENAS1RES (union) during a busy lunch
hour, killing ten people and injuring
another thirty and the COMADRES
(committee of motht'J'S of political
prisoners,
the
disappeared
and
assassinated in El Salvador) office.
Shortly thereafter, on november II,
1989, the FMLN launcbed a general
offensive. The military responded with
u.s. assisted bombing and strafing of the
countryside as well as the poorer areas
of the cities including the capital, causing
3,000 to 5,000 death, most of which were
non-combatants (a month later the u.s.
invaded Panama massacring 4,000 to
7,000 people, mostly from massive aerial
bombings of cities).
Most disturbing about brendan's
drivel is that his is exactly the
perspective one might get if one's source
of information is the u.s. mass media.
As for brendan, he takes the typical
liberal stance of trying to appear in the
middle but in EI Salvador, there is no
middle: there's the oligarchy and military
on one side and the people and the
FMLN/FDR on the other.
Centerist
ideology is a failure to take a stance and
thus serves to perpetuate the status quo.
In the case of El Salvador, this lack of
stance is merely a cover of sympathy for
the fascist regime.
howard
SOURCES
-A Dream Compels Us; Voices of a
Salvadoran Woman. New American Press.
-Introduction to: They Won't Take Me
Alive. (8 biography of Eugearia, who was
in the FMLN) Introduction by Amanda
Hopkinson.
-EPOCA, Enviromental Project On
Central America
-Miguel Mamwl: a testimony taken and
writte1l by RogUl! Dalton
from Romero page 12
assassination to form the FMLN/FDR.
CWTently, the FMLN/FDR is the military
and political arm of the various popular
organizations in El Salvador. The fact
that the FMLN/FDR is recognized by the
United Nations as the negotiating body of
the Salvadoran opposition would suggest
that it has substantial popular support and
is no mere fringe group (or "group of
bandits," as Williams would like us to
believe).
We do not uncritically support the
FMLN, and do not expect that from
those we work with and seek to inform.
However, it is slanderous to reduce
our support of the FMLN to a crude
caricature of violence-loving leftists, a
label which Williams' would like to
apply
to
anyone
who
supports
revolutionary struggle.
Obviously,
peaceful and negotiated reconciliation is
the most desirable means to resolve any
conflict However, this road has been
tried innumt'J'able times in El Salvador
and has consistently been meet with
ruthless state violence and repression.
What we are asking is for people to
gain an accurate understanding of the
conflict The views of Oscar Romt'J'O
can provide such insight. We feel he is
credible and spoke from the perspective
of someone directly involved. Williams'
letter, on the other hand, assumes much
and tells us little about Oscar Romero,
the FMLN and the overall situation in El
Salvador.
To us, Williams' treatment of El
Salvador reflects a dangerous current in
the United States: a disregard for facts
and a lack of historical perspective. This
attitude fosters a political apathy based on
white middle class guilt (i.e.--"who are
[we] to pick sides in someone else's
war?"). This denial of responsibility and
unwillingness to make political choices
undermines potential solidarity between
North Americans and people struggling
against oppression funded with our taxes.
One would expect these currents to be
instigated by the CIA and the State
departrnent--certainly
not from
an
advocate of "critical reasoning."
•• We invite Brendan Williams and
anyone else intereslt'.d in social justice
and foreign policy to read the sources for
this article; Phillip Berryman, The
Religious Roots of Rebellion, and the
Septembt'J' issue of North American
Congress on Latin America (NACLA)
"The FMLN--New Thinking."
William Kramer and Scot Wbeat
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EXPIRES ' ·:U· 90
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Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Page 13
ArtiS I Entortloinment
Arts Be Entertainment
Driving Miss Daisy:
In a onetime (maybe) seepage feature, Andy hits pay dirt
Hamlin re-discovers the Reagan era
THE CWTHES HAVE NO EMPEROR:
A CHRONICLE OF THE AMERICAN
genial smoke-screens add up day-by-day,
showing a man drifting dangerously far
above reality, and a press more Ihan
willing 10 let him ride the airstreams. On
80s, BY PAUL SLANSKY.
Nuw You: FIRBSIIE BooJU, 1989
by Andrew Hamlin
Paul Slansky is, by his own
admission, an obsessive. "Armed with
scissas, file folders, yellow highlight
pens and a bank of VCRs, I embarked on
December 12, 1983, Reagan addresses the
an eight year quest .. [I read] four, then Congressional Medal of Honor Society;
he talked about a World War U bomber
six, \hen eight papers a day (and five,
then 10, then 20 magazines a week) .. ,"
crewman who gave up his life 10 comfort
And his main thesis? "An aclOr is playing
a wounded, immobile young tail gunner
the president!"
as the plane crashed-"Congressional
The actor, of course, was Ronald
Medal of Honor posthumously awarded."
Reagan, the main focus of this book-Four days later columnist Lars-Erik
which, despite its claim to be "a Nelson, who examined all 434 Medal of
Honor citations during World War II and
chronicle of the 80s," begins in
November 1980 with Reagan's victory
found none that matched that story,
over Carter (NBC declared him the
writes. "The President. ..went before an
winner after only 5% of the vote had audience of 300 real Congressional Medal
been counted), and ends with Ron and of Honor winners and told them about a
Nancy leaving the White House for good make-believe Medal of Honor winner....
on January 20, 1989 ("As the Reagans Presidential spokesman Larry Speakes
depart, the backwash of their helicopter responds with this deathless line: "If you
blows \he little blue sailor's hat right off tell the same story five times, it's true."
Marilyn Quayle's head."). But little Nelson later discovers the story, sans
matter. Reagan presided over four-flfths
Medal of Honor references. in an wartime
of the 1980's; he was the fltSt President
issue of Reader's Digest--"a magazine
since Nixon to win a second term, the known to be a life-long Reagan favorite."
fltSt since Eisenhower to serve through
A President lost in the ozone, a
two terms, and celebrated by 68% of the press 100 fixated on his "bedside manner"
American people by January 1989, to report the condition of the patient, a
according to the N~ York Times.
population fixated on greed and keeping
He was also "Probably the least
up appearances. a culture awash in bad
knowledgeable of any President I've ever
taste--this is the portrait Slansky paints.
met, on any subject," according to House
"7/6/81: Nancy Reagan, 60, celebrates her
S-",lrer
Tip O'Neill. "How humilia'on' g 10
58th binhday... 7'''/82 Nancy R eagan, 61 ,
~
think of this unlettered. self-assured celebrates her 59th birthday...4/16/85: As
bumpkin being our president," opined
the contra aid vote approaches, President
Nicholas von Hoffman in Harper's Reagan claims he 'just had a verbal
magazine. Nancy suffers even worse
message delivered to me from Pope John
and Paul, urging us to continue our efforts in
treatment:
" ...glassy-eyed
overdressed, [she] always looks as if she Central America.' The Vatican quickly
has J'ust been struck by lightening in a ·ISSUes a d'al
em ...
limousine," wrote The New Republic's
5/22/85: Says [Sylvester Stallone] of
Mark Crispin Miller. And those are just the increasing monosyllabism of his
a few of the quotes this book throws out characters, 'I try to eliminate as much
as it stumbles through the decade month dialogue as possible, and I guess Rambo
by month, day by day, event by event
is my really best experiment To me, the
You could argue that passing time most perfect screenplay ever written will
has rendered Reagan-bashing passe, but be one word ... '"
Slansky isn't simply bitching on his lunch
Emperor has an index, and that's
hour. The Great Communicator's down- helpful if you're a browser --this book
home homilies, impromptu boners, and makes great bathroom reading--and fmd
B00 k R·
eVleW
,u :
a name you want to track further. Barney
Clark, recipient of the first artificial heart,
is not in the index (neither is Michael
Jackson's best-selling album Thriller) but
Diane Sawyer, who referred to Clark on
the air as "Barney Miller," gets several
references. Former Nixon lawyer Roy
Cohn denies having AIDS on page 165,
dies of AIDS on page 168. George Bush
"drives big things" on page 230, and
"eschews broccoli" on page 161--that
happened in April of 1986, almost four
years to Ute month before the papers
began trumpeting it
I remember a lot of those name.'!, but
the book makes me remember more--and
shudder, as I read, at how much time has
passed so quickly. I grew up in the
eighties, insofar as "growing up" is
defined as acquiring pubic hair, sexual
desire, and angst When Reagan took
office, I was twelve years old and
halfway through sixth grade. I heard
about John Lennon's death from my
father the morning of January 9th, 1980,
but thought it was a prank until I read
the headline at the bus stop. One April
day in seventh grade, Mr. Fiebig
announced that President Reagan had
been shot; we watched reruns on a
television somebody wheeled in. John
Belushi died in March 1982. towards the
end of seventh grade, and so did Ayn
Rand, who received considerably less
publicity. E.T. came out \hat summer
(although I didn't see it until 1988).
1984, my sophomore year in high school,
saw
f the rise of Jesse Jackson and the fall
0 Mary Decker. Just after Winter Break
senior year, the space shuttle blew up;
we watched a videotape on a television
somebody wheeled in. On June 16, 1986,
I ~ eigh}een and graduated from
high school. . The New York Pos,' s
headline that morning
read "MADMAN
MOAMMAR
0
N W A DRUGGIE DRAG
QUEEN."
Slansky is at his weakest when he
lapses from showing into telling, as when
he calls Falco's "Rock Me Amadeus"
".. .as hideous a cacophony as ever topped
the chart," instead of discussing the
song's lyrics or (gawd) the video. But he
has a malignant wit, a fine eye for detail.
and the unflagging enthusiasm of the
fanatic.
' Especially interesting are small items
God commands--
Thou shalt worship new TAD EP
TAD
SALT LICK EP
LosER 45
SUB PoP RECORDS
by Dan Snomn
Tad Doyle is God.
As a loyal follower, I worship as it
is written in the Book of Tad:
"And on the seventh day, thou shalt
partake of the holy spirits and listen to
the Word of Tad."
My favorite holy spirit happens to be
a White Russian, and on Sunday evenings
you can find me partaking and listening
to the glorious word of Tad
Before, I had only God's Balls, Tad's
fltSt release. But now Sub Pop, the
gracious pope of Tad, has recently
propelled my religious experiences to a
higher level of consciousness with the
release of a new 45 and EP.
Oh Tad, Salt Uck is an elevating
spiritual experience. Somewhat c:eaner
are thy holy sounds due to the production
of prophet Steve Albini, and yet the
rough, grungy quality of thy rockin' tunes
is not lost!
Of course, as on other holy releases
the lyrics on Salt Lick are mostly
unintelligible. This is certainly because
the true meaning of the Word of Tad
cannot be revealed until a time when
humankind reaches a mental level at
which he may understand what true
revelations the Word holds. Many hours
of contemplation can reveal parts, but
only to true believers.
Truly blessed is the Word. "Axe 10
Grind" grinds thy brain to the consistency
of vomited oatmeal. "High on the Hog"
hogs and tweaks thy very hearing with
the Word. "Wood Goblins" gobbles thy
blood and spits it out on thy wall. Oh
Tad, thy dislOrted guitars, how they
soothe the drunken soul!
Heavy is thy bashin' beat in
"Hibernation." "Glue Machine" sits in
thy stomach like undigested gum. And
"Potlatch" bears the alcoholic breath of
Tad upon the presence of the worthy.
These brain dislOrting, hair shaking tunes
are blessed gifts upon the great Tad's
drunken followers, and 10 possess them is
to know the true happiness of the wasted.
The 45 holds the same spiritual
qualities as the EP. "Loser" has been
interpreted by higher priests such as
myself as a song condemning those lower
fools who do not realize the true
significance of the Word. "Cooking with
Gas" pounds upon thy head like a
sledgehammer upon old cauliflower.
Page 14 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
In addition, this singly contains
unmeasurable wisdom engraved upon the
sacred vinyl disk:
"The show ain't over until the fat
man rocks."
Truly a spectacular revelation!
The followers of Tad call to you:
Believel Large amounts of alcohol alone
cannot save you; you must hear the Word
of Tad as expressed in Salt Lick and the
Loser 45. Only then will you realize the
true drunken glory of Tad and his Word.
Believe, for Tad Doyle is God.
Dan 'Toasterhead' Snuffin is an
Evergreen student and a holy CPJ staff
member.
The
TIRED OF TYPING?
confused about formats?
Let the
PROij do
it for you
-LSATIs
RESUMES
When?
TERM PAPERS
MASTER THESES
Our Specialtleal
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Ask about student di800unt
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or stop by
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(STUDY CENTER IN TACOMA,)
II
I
1
I
1
by Darrel
RUey
Drivi
Mis Dai
. t
ngAWards
sy Jllus wO~ti.calan
Academy
, as we as en
acclaim
This heart-wanning p'cture
portray~ a old white woman's ~tic
relationship with her hired Black driver
in Georgia over a '40 year period, as she
gradually warms .to his character and
personality. By the end of the film they
have a warm, loving relationship.
Driving Miss Daisy portrays a Black
man's gradual subjegation in his
relationship with his white employers It
shows a man who destroys every ele~ent
of his personality, including !lis manhood,
to keep a job which provides his children
a chance to escape the suffering h
endures.
e
Which of the preceding paragraphs
portray's the truth of Driving Miss Daisy?
Both. TIle film gives one message on
the surface, and quite another underneath.
Who is \he character Hoke that
Morgan Freeman plays? What do we
end up knowing about him? Basicall
nothing. Why?
y
Black people
mask
All
people mask their ;=gh~ and f~lings,
but Black people in the South do it
constantly, especially around Whites
~ th
th
Bla k
.
Th e tendency ,or
e sou em
c man
to mask his feelings and personality is
ingrained behind the stereotype and
th
hites
"th'
sou ~rn w
accept tl. WI out even
knowmg what they are seemg. When the
1
J
April 20 & 21
•
\\TInS
Fri - Sat
SUSAN K. SLATE
CUHICAL HYPNOTHERAPY COUNSELOR
HLP PRACTmONER
Study cI fum AtuHrytPhobla-Memoty R.,.,.,tIon
HClr ~ • st.." Di~ • R....MIn
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April 23
Mon. Detroit's Hazz Jazz
with Syd Potter & Steve Munger Quintet
CRYSTALS • BOOKS • MINERAL SPECIMENS •
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The Ultimate Jazz Experience!!!
8 PM
$3 or $2 if you are Jazz Societyite.
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ladies Nite
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8 PM
ladies FREE
$3 for others
Thurs.
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Matt Weinhold
9 PM $5
Get Here Early
April 27 & 28
Detroit's Produces a
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Ticket Outlets
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April 24 Tues.
Oscar
mask slips . I '
the
d
tead
' VIO ence reigns.
soun track.
Ins
a fIlm that those roles lately, but no one pays them
In Driving Miss Daisy Hoke lets the
showed white people in Africa won much attention. Witness, is an example
mask li three .
Eachtune
'
Mi
ds
of Black men who are good and bad.
s p
tames.
ss
awar.
Daisy feels ~ed and punishes him.
~en I sa~ Driving Miss Daisy I Bagdad Cafe gave us the 'character of a
By .moVIe s end, sh~ tells H~ke she knew It w0lll:d ~n awards for the ~g strong Black woman.
Why aren't these fllms given the
loves him. She doesn t love h~, she reason~. This IS a double-edged mOVIe,
loves the mask he uses ,to protect himself one WI~ messages about race, class, and attention . they deserve on race issues?
from her. Sh~ doesn t know the man percepnon. Unfortunately the messages They have been commercially successful
that got passed w~re surface messages, with strong Black men and women. Are
because she W1~ not allow the man. 10
emerge. She mIght as well feel affecti~n
the story ~at was unportant was the one they not Black fllms? Does one have to
produce a "Black" film before anyone
for a C8I'tOO? character, .because that IS
that wasn t told.
.
Just once, once, I would like to see pays attention to the roles of Black
what Hoke IS, the mearung of the man
stripped. away .and only the mask l~ft
a fi~ th~ talk~ about Black family and people? Frankly, I'm tired of complaints
.Seemg thts r~ I was remmded rela~onshlps wm awards. ~ot Glory, about the lack of Blacks in film. When
agam. of the. differences between that s more of the same whIte people Blacks are in films which don't make a
perceptions. For mstance, I was appalled over black people Hollywood crap. Not big deal out of their race, no one pays
at the juxtaposition of two scenes in the Do the RighJ Thing, that's Spike Lee's attention. When Blacks are in fllms and
film. In one scene Miss Daisy attends a
stereotypical angry Black man trip which the films concentrate on their race one
speech by Martin Luther King Jr., in the
some white people enjoyed because it gets films like Driving Miss Daisy and
next scen~ ~e begin~ .losing her san.ity.
made them feel guilty for their skin Do the Right Thing, films in which the
message is less important then the sub~o me thIS ~s the traditional stereotypl~ color.
text and hidden meanings and which
VIe,!, Of. W~lte southerne!S, the flrst Sl.go
.
Holly~ood has made some progress
of ~~ IS ~hen a white person be&1~S m race. Lethal Weapon IS one of my alienate races against each other.
Everyone should see Driving Miss
emp~thizmg WIth Blacks, the next step m ~avorite fLIms because there is .a strong,
the Insane asylum. .
Important Black male character m it with Daisy if only 10 see the way in which
Am I over-reacting? Prob~bly. It a good family life and an equally strong Hollywood has relegated the role of a
surely wasn't the filmm~ers's I~tent 10 relationship with his white partner. Of Black man to "yes, sir" and "yes,
portray that stereot~, It was Just the course, it's not a Black film. but to me ma'am." Once \hat was called "Uncle
w~y ~e film was edi~. However, I the fact that race wasn't an issue to be Tomming." Now it's called a great film.
WIsh It had been done differently so the exploited by the film made it a giant step
Darrel Riley is a cn graduate who
.
uld ' ha
quesulon wo • n t tedve co1m
I e up.
fo.rw~d. . Danny. G1<;>ver wasn't jiving, believes there is 100 much profanity in
.
. haven t tru~
J:Io ywood 10 be shckmg, hip. or punpmg. He was Just a lhis paper.
fau, I.e. non-raCIst, smce The Color good cop. There have been a lot of
Purple got 11 nominations and failed 10
win one award. Not one. Not even for !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Important Upcoming Movies... These guests will then tell their
remembrances of the cultural figures
'Thursday, April 26, 1990 at Evergreen, featured in the film.
\he South Sound premiere of the film For more info contact (206) 866-6000
Growing Up in America will be x6144.
presented. The film will run for two
showings: 6 pm and 8 pm in the Recital ·A one week run of Roger and Me,
Michael
Moore's
controversial
Hall. Admission is $3.
Growing Up in America is a sequel documentary about aulO workers in Flint,
to noted Toronto film maker Morley Michigan, opens Friday, April 27 at the
Markson's Brea/dng Together: Revolution Capital Mall Cinemas. The shows start at
of the Electric Family, a chronicle of the 5:15 and 9:30 pm each night, and all
normal discounts apply.
counterculture of the 1960's. Growing Up
Chuck Sullivan, theater manager,
in America
explores
where
the
countercultural
figures
are
now. went through some caporate hassles of
Complementing the film will be poet his own to secure a print of Roger and
Tony Seldin and guitarist Brent Jackson. Me for Olympia and encourages all
Tony, the Vagabond Poet, will give a interested parties to attend. For more info
reading accompanied by Brent Jackson. call 754-P:177.
Jim Mesi Blues Band
One of the finest blues bands
in the Pacific Northwest
April 26
II
II
w.
that acquire significance with hindsight.
"6/5/81: TIle Centel' for Disease Control
in Atlanta issues a report about
unexplained outbreaks of a kind of
pneumonia that usually affects only
cancer patients. All five cases are
homosexual men in their 20s or
308... 10/11/81: Opening for the Rolling
Stones at the Los Angeles Coliseum, a
short, skinny black musician named
Prince is forced to leave the stage when
the overwhelmingly white audience begins
throwing garbage at him...6I24/86: The
Senate fails by one vote to defeat
[appeals court nominee] Daniel Manion
aftez an arm-waving, red-faced Dan
Quayl" pressures Kansas Republican
Nancy Kassebaum into withdrawing her
vote against him. 'You know,' Quayle
tells Ted Koppel, 'I'm not so sure that
we want all those \hat graduated number
one or number two in their class to be
on ... our federal judiciary. This is a
diversified society.'" There are none so
blind as those who will not see?
The Clothes Have No Emperor,
although packaged as a humor book, goes
somewhat deeper Ihan that It does not
speculate on how Americans became so
willing to believe the illusions set before
them, but it does chronicle that
willingness. so ably personified by the
Chief Executive. I reflect, with some
trepidation. that I remember Nixon as the
man who once preempted Speed Buggy.
Ford as an inconsequential wisp. and
Carter as a purveyor of" peanuts. tree
houses, inflation. high gas prices, and the
energy crisis. Reagan, for better or for
worse, is my idea of what a President is
and does. On the one hand, that makes
me a splendid candidate for lifelong
political cynicism. On the other, it poses
uneasy questions about the voters who
put him in power and kept him there.
Perhaps we are all cousins of soap opera
actor · Jon-Erik Hexum, who died
"seriously underestimating the damage
potential of a blank cartridge"--thinking
that nothing make-believe could hurt him,
he put a prop gun to his head and pulled
the trigger.
Andrew Hamlin was awakened this
morning by a large happy rrwn dressed as
a security guard. He shouted, "Sleep
Police! You've been apprehendedf"
stereotypes, still
FOIIO\\TS
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,
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LIKE THISI
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;po
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Condoma & Spermlc:lda. • 10-<10% Below Regular Retail
Send $4.50 lor • prepaid large tube of yow c h o i c e '
and/or $5.00 for • variety pack of 12 condo.,...
\
--,.....-.,.and_
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or ftaIe1 _10:
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1 ______ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ .
Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990 Page 15
by Chris Bader
It is based in Federal Way,
WashingtOn and has branches in PortIand,
Miami, Pasadena, Santa Monica, Salt
Lake City and at least 25 other cities.
What is it? A bank? A grocery store?
None of the above; it's the UFO Contact
Center Inlemational.
Aileen Edwards, a Federal Way
resident, heads the UFO Contact Center
Inlemational, or UFOCCI as it is
commonly called.
UFOCCI holds
monthly open meetings at which all
manner of UFO related subjects are
UFO abductees share
•
.traumatic experIences
discussed.
Most inleresting, however, are the
weekly closed meetings for UFO
"abductees."
A UFO abductee is a person who
claims that they have been abducted by
aliens, submitted to physical examinations
by those aliens, and released. Usually the
victim has no memory of the event, and
recalls it under hypnosis.
Abduclees come from all walks of
life. Although people such as Whitley
Strieber have writlen best-sellers, most
abductees are very reluctant to talk about
their experiences and are very traumatized
by them.
UFOCCI, therefore, provides a
valuable service for "UFO abduclees" as
it allows them to "discuss their
experience with others of like mind and
circumstance." Only people who have
experienced an abduction are allowed into
the weekly, closed meetings.
Apparently there is a genuine need
for such support groups, as chapters have
developed in many cities around the
country.
I, as usual, reserve judgement on the
Calendar
j
19
FAIRS
THURSDAY
UFO abduction phenomenon. It seems too
fantastic to be true, but at the same time
I am very impressed with the genuine
sincerity conveyed by abductees.
ENVIRONMENT
If you have had a genuine abduction
experience, you can wrile to Aileen
Edwards, c/o UFOCCI, 3001 S. 288th SL,
Space 304, Federal Way W A 98003.
MUL TI·CULTURAL PERSPEC'OVES:
Environmental issues forum; 7 PM; LIB
lobby. Followed by music from Vic
Cummings and Gene Burnett.
Quotes are from the UFO Directory.
If you would like to report a strange
experience, write Chris Bader care of the
CPJ. Names will remain confidential.
AUDUBON SOCIETY: 7 PM; Capitol
Museum Coach House. Tom Juelson will
discuss South Seas Wildlife.
PUYALLUP SPRING FAIR: 10 AM 10 PM; $4 generall$2 children/under 6
free; information: 845-1711.
FILMS
Transportation Dept. saves wetlands
News Release
"The failure of the 1990 Legislature
to enact wetlands protection measures
will not affect the Washington Stale
Department of Transportation's (WSDOT)
continuing efforts to preserve wetlands,"
said Duane Berentson, Transportation
Secretary.
"We've always tried to be good
neighbors," Berentson said. "As manager
of over 100,000 acres of land in the state
trBI!sportation sySlem, the department
recognizes its responsibility to protect and
preserve wetlands in and adjacent to
those lands. For the past several years
we have planned and tried to conduct our
activities to lessen the destruction, loss,
or degradation of wetlands. We're now
increasing those efforts, with the inlention
of leaving wetlands betler than we found
them."
Elements of the department's plan
include an inventory of wetlands on
transportation rights of way and capitol
facilities, research on wetland inventory
and mitigation methods, use of wetland
banking (large man-made wetlands to
compensale for future impacts) to achieve
a net increase in wetlands, cooperative
agreements with resource agencies, and
training and public awareness programs.
When it is not possible to avoid
wetlands, WSOOT will take action to
minimize the impacts to the wetland and
to adequalely mitigale the impacts that
cannot be avoided.
Berentson said, ''The agency will
support the goals of the Governor's
Executive
Order,
'Protection
of
Wetlands,' signed on December 12,
1989." Those goals are to achieve no
overall net loss in acreage and function
EMO
community viewed from the larger
European-American community, within
this conlext it is more understandable
why people not fitting into the larger
group are then identified as distinct from
this group.
However, that language is certainly
not appropriale when speaking of South
Africa and its communities. Obviously
the majority group in Africa are Africans
and so it is redundant to write "black
South Africans," do you recognize that in
order to even appear educated one must
use language within the conlext of what
you are speaking? Perhaps because you
are coming from a privileged position
this is a new idea to you but I've learned
your language; make the atlempt to learn
mine.
And yes, language is very
important, it is by our use of language
structure and meaning that oppressors are
so successful.
I hope you enjoy your Coke and God
forbid you find yourself in my peoples
position oppressed by "educated" peoples
like yourself.
RADICAL WOMEN: Abortion Righls:
From Obituary Page to Front Page;
1:30 PM; JI:lew Freeway Hall, 50018
Rainier Avenue S., Seattle; information:
122-(IJ57 or 122-2453.
Dinner SClVed at 6:30 PM for $5.
MEETINGS
WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT WEEK:
7:30 PM; Lm 2219; information: call
Lisa or Vikki at 866-6000 X6200.
MUSIC
KRONOS QUARTET:
UW; 8 PM.
COMEDIAN
WORDS FROM UMOJA
by Amandla Ngawethu and Jabulile
Dayton
In response to Paul Henry and his
self righleous and patronizing article
"Coke Sweelened Apartheid?" I feel very
secure in lelling you that South Africans
are more concerned about their freedom
from severe and debilitating oppression
that their "freedom" to drink Coke (don't
take my word for it, do your homework).
I am so pleased to read about your
ovrxwhelming concern for my people and
yes, I did my homework.
Though my
education comes from a factual basis-my people are lilerally from South Africa
and still suffering under its while
minority ruled government, there are
resources in abundance to educale people
like you who question the experience of
30 million people.
How dare you call a movement to
free people "hyslerical!" How dare you
call my cousins and family struggling for
their civil rights "knee-jerk reactionaries!"
How I wish I could take you with me \0
South Africa with me so you could see
for your satisfied "coke-drinking self."
Lastly to bring to question your language
in the article (though it was riddled with
questionable language), specifically the
term "black South Africans." In the
United States of America people who are
African or of African descent are a small
of Washington's remaining wetland base,
and to increase the quantity and quality
of that wetland resource base.
"There
are
occasions
when
transportation projects can affect the
natural environment," Berentson said.
"But with careful planning, manage'.Il ent,
and coordination with resource agencies,
these projects can meet transportation
goals and enhance the value of
WashingtOn's wetlands."
PHILIPS
MUSIC
Meany
Hall,
VIC
CUMMINGS
&
GENE
BURNE1T: See EnvimonmenL
CRC
MEN'S DISCUSSION GROUP: Noon;
LIB 3500; information: 866-6000 X6040
or X6467. Men taking action on sexism
issues.
21
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
ENVIRONMENT
EARTH DAY FESTIVAL: See box.
EARTH EXPO 1990: 9:30 AM - 7 PM;
Olympia Cenler; information: 357-1185.
The environmental awareness fair will
include displays on environmental issues
and speakers on a variety of topics.
MUSIC
DVORAK & DURUFLE: Maslerworks
Choral Ensemble; 8 PM; United
Churches, 110 E. lIth.
Tickets available through all TicketMaster outlets and at
the UPS Information Center.
For more infonnation call 756-3366
D~Y
CLASSES
WORKSHOPS
HERBS: Urinary syslem; 5 - 8 PM;
Radiance Herbs & Massage; $20; to
regiSIer; 351·9470.
RELA TIONSHIPS: Safeplace workshop
on relationships; 1 - 9 PM; A Dorm.
FILMS
TELEVISION
WOMEN'S EMERGENCY BRIGADE:
With Babies and Banners: The Story of
the Women's Emergency Brigade;
12 - 1 PM; Lecture Hall 3.
Covered by Evergreen/Hartford Insurance
Questions - Consultations - AppOIntments
Iladlanc. 113 E. Sit! Olympia 357 -9470
THE
LAST TEMPT ATION
OF
CHRIST: 1 PM; Lecture Hall 3; free.
INFORMAL CHESS: 1 PM; TESC
Community Center.
~
CHESS
MEETINGS
TOURNAMENT: Masterpiece Chess
Theatre; 6:40 PM; CAB 108; entry fee
$2; information: 866-2483.
CAMPUS FOOD SERVICES: 5 PM;
LIB 3222. A continuation of last week's
meeting which discussed allematives to
a Marriott monopoly on campus.
and
Are Pleased t() Sponsor ;m
bmh [}..{y )Q90 Cut -ATIl, lTl
SPECTRUM DANCE THEATER:
8 PM; Intiman Playhouse at the Seattle
Center; information: 325-4161.
ON STAGE
TIL THE FAT LADY SINGS: 8 PM;
Washington
Center;
tickets:
$1;
information: 153·8586.
28 SATURDAY
SPECTRUM DANCE THEATER:
8 PM; Intiman Playhouse at the Seattle
Center; information: 325-4161.
• 207 W. 71 b, t )\vmpi:l
• April 22, ]l)l)0
• 10:00 a.m .. 2:00 p.m.
:Hours:
A II proceeds wi II /..,1()
National Glohal ReLe,l( hmd
t()
FormulMed with Pure Essences to Restore Health,
Reauty ;md Vit;:tlity to Your Scalp and Hair
124 4tli 7Ivt. 'L
$ t(l MINIM UM OONATI()N
754·8187
lntr'n~tionol
Spc>""O' of
E.rt" Ihv 1'19<' .,,,1
Nafional Parlnrr nr Gluh:.1 R,.l ...... f
Page 16 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
DANCE
DANCE
.lbI 'Lspruso 1UUi'Dust" C4ft
()lympUl, 'W7I 98501
Dance
SPECTRUM DANCE THEATER:
8 PM; Intiman Playhouse at the Seattle
Center; information: 325-416l.
CHESS
-
ENVIRONMENT
FESTIVAL: See box.
FILMS
Sat. 9:00am· 11:00pm
JOB FAIR: 1 - 4 PM; LID 2000;
information: 866-6000.
RAG·WOLF: Rainforest Action Group,
Watchers Over Last Forests; 7 PM;
ERC/CAB piL Everyone welcome.
MEETINGS
AVEDA·
AVEDA·
TIlE ART AND SCIEN("f
OF PURE FI( JWER ANO PLA N·I ES~ENCE$
tickets:
$7;
FOOL MOON RISING: Clowning &
juggling; 11 AM; Lecture Hall 1; tickets:
$2.50 adults/$1.50 children; information:
154-0920.
WORKSHOPS
STATUS OF WOMEN: 10 AM - 4 PM;
Olympia Cenler; information: see
753-8380. See Announcements.
LAWRENCE WESCHLER: 8 PM; The
Asterisk. Weschler will read from and
sign his new book, A Miracle a Universe,
about settling accoWlts with torturers.
CLASSES
OLYMPIA JOBS: The Olympia Hidden
Job Market; 12 - 1 PM; LIB 1406A.
TCTV
Washington
Cenler;
information: 153-8586.
READINGS
ORIENTATION SESSION: 3 - 4 PM;
LIB 1406A.
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
KALAHUNA
HEALING:
Channel 31; 10:30 AM.
TIL THE FAT LADY SINGS: 8 PM;
CAREER DEVELOPMENT
OREGON CONCERT: See box.
Sunday, April 22, 1990 at 8 pm
in the UPS Fieldhouse.
ON STAGE
SUNDAY
PUYALLUP SPRING FAIR: 10 AM - 10
PM; $4 generall$2 children/under 6 free;
information: 845·1111.
WEIGHT ROOM ORIENTATION:
Noon • 1 PM; CRC weight room;
information: 866-6000 X6530.
KEVIN BURKE: 8 PM; TESC Recital
Hall; $10/$7.50 students; information:
866-6000 X6397.
Kevin Burke plays fiddle, Mark Graham
brings his harmonica, and Sandy Silva
contribules stepdancing.
SYMPHONY SOIREE: Pops Concen;
8 PM; Frederick and Nelson's Conn at
Capital Mall; tickets: $12 advance/$15 at
the
door/$25
reserved
seating;
information: 153-0014.
29 ft~{ttt/ttItttI~~I~~mff[~~m
COOPERATIVE EDUCATION
. EARTH
PETER G, WHITE, C.A.
Mon. . !Tn. 7:00am· 11:0Opm
YOUNG DEMOCRATS: 7 pm; Dorm U
301; information: Steve Bell at 866-2022
or Sue Reams at 186-7882.
ENVIRONMENT
ACUPUNCTURE
---
MEETINGS
FAIRS
BIG PICTURE: 6:30 and 9:30 PM;
Capitol
Theatre;
tickets:
$4/$2.50
members; information: 154-6610.
A satire about making movies in
Hollywood.
~
LAWYERS ASSISTANT PROGRAM:
University of San Fransisco; 1 - 3:30
PM; LID 1406A; information 866-6000
X6193.
VIETNAMESE MUSIC:
Music for
freedom; 2 PM; Washington Cenler;
tickets:
$12
reservedl$20
patron;
information:
154-8586.
DEAN INTERVIEW: 12 - 1 PM; LIB
3236. Meet Ron Taplin, a candidale for
the Dean of Student and Academic
Support Services position.
'Dancing (joats 'Espresso Co.
SEMINARS
EARTH DAY FESTIVAL:
The 20th anniversary of the original
Earth Day will be celebrated April 21
and 22 . at TESC. The gala will
feature musicians, wortshops, tree
planting, kid's games, arts and crafts,
and food. Authors Stephanie Mills
and Robert Ryle and Greenpeace cofounder Paul Watson will speak on
the 22nd.
OREGON CONCERT:
8
PM;
Washington
Center;
$12.50/$10 students;
infonnation:
754-8586.
Oregon combines jazz, classical, and
"world" music. Tribal Elder David
Whitener and Paul Watson will speak
before the concert.
HERBS: Digestive System; 5 - 8 PM;
RAdiance Herbs & Massage; $20;
information: 351-9410.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
LESBIAN GAY FILM FESTIVAL:
May 4 - 6; TESC campus; information:
866-6000 X 6542. The third annual
weekend of outstanding and awardwinning ftlms from around the world, all
featuring Lesbian and Gay themes or
characters.
The second annual CONSCIOUSNESS
RAISING WORKSHOP ON THE
STATUS OF WOMEN will be presented
Saturday, April 28, from 10 AM to 4 PM
at the Olympia Center. Topics to be
covered include the development of self,
the
power
of
communication,
strengthening families, how to break the
cycle of domestic violence, women and
self esteem and how your appearance
communicates your message. Free. Call
753-8380 for more information.
FREE RHODODENDRON TOUR:
Everyone interested in rhododendrons and
azaleas are invited to Peggy and Art
Zabel's Rhododendron & Azalea Park,
2432 N. Bethel, Olympia, WA 98506,
any day from May 4 through June 3.
Open from 10 AM to 8 PM. Over three
acres of nature trails with hundreds of
rhododendrons and azaleas planted among
a variety of trees. Directions: From E.
4th or E. State go north on Puget 7 miles
to San Fransisco SL, turn right, go two
blocks to Bethel, turn left go another 1
miles, watch for Rhody Tour sign on
right.
BICYCLE TOURS: For people aged
18 • 30. 1990 Summer tours range from
12 - 47 days and cost from $635 $2365. Tours go to various locations in
Europe. Information: 1-800-136-2453.
Earth Day Info: 1-800-447-3330.
Call the toll-free number and find out
how Earth Day 1990 will be
celebrated in Washington state.
PUYALLUP INDIAN TRIBE: April 21;
$I
student,$5 adult, $10 family;
information: 212-5204. A celebration
featuring music, speakers, potluck dinner,
walk for peace, & midnight powwow.
Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
Page 17
W~leO~@_
ATrEN11ON: HIRINGI CRUISE SHIP, CASINO.
HOTEL JOBSI FREE TRAVEL BENEFITSI
Detail., (1) 602-838-8885 EXT. Y·14471.
CLASSIFIED RATES
·30 word. or ,"1-$3.00
·10 ClllII for IIch additional word
ATrEN110N: E..V work, excellent p.yl
Assemblo products at homo. Detail.,
(1) 602-838-8885 EXT. W·14471.
·PRE.pAYIENT REQUIRED
·CIu,,"1CI dllllln..2 p.m. Monday
FOR SALE
TO PLACE AD:
·PHONE 866-6000 X6054
·STOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A
HOUSING
SERVICES
ATIENTION - GOVERNMENT HOMES from
$1
(U-Repair) . Delinquent tax property .
Repossessions. CllII 1-602-838-8885 EXT.
GH14471.
ACUPUNCTU'RE & BODY WORK CHRIS
SYNODIS, certified acupuncturist. licensed
massage therapist. masters in counseling.
Practice 01 acupuncture integrated with
acupressure, and chinese herbs. Covered by
student insurance. 1722 W. Harrison
call 788-11t5 lor appl or consultetlon.
Spring quarter housing contract for sale. One
room in a spacious four bedroom apartment.
With neal. intelligent. non-smoking women .
Contact Catherine at 866-2478.
·SEND INFO TO: CPJ, TESC, CAB 305A
01..YMPIA, WA 98505
ATrENT10N
GOVERNMENT
SE~ED
VEHICLES from $100.00. Fords. Mercedes,
Corvettes, Chevys. Surplus Buyers Guide.
1~2-838-8885 EXT. A14471.
HELP WANTED
8 STRING GUITAR wi heart shell case, $150.
1 person studio on the 7th floor of A dorm.
Quiel, private, light. great view. $1851month, all
utilities induded. Call Peter or Helene at
866-7196 or 866~OO X6213.
Fiddle $200. BARCUS BERRY liddle pick-up
$30.00. Call 788-9213 or 788-1n5.
OPPORTUNITY
.•.....•.••••.....•......•....................
ATrEN11ON· HIRING I Government jobs -your
area. Many immediate openings without waiting
list or I9sl. $17,840 - $69,485. Cllil
1.eG2-838-8885 EXT. R 14471.
NANNIES required for east coast families.
Great working conditions . Evenings & weekends
off. 1-year contracts. Airfare paid. No fee. Min.
$1501week. More for experience.
CLASSIC NANNIES: 1·800-863-8128.
Camp Counselors for NW Girl Scoul Camp.
Must enjoy working with children in outdoor
selling. SALARY/MEALS/LODGING!
TRAINING provided. (206) 633-5600 for
application. EOE.
ATrEN11ON: EARN MONEY TYPING AT
HOMEI $32,OOOlyr. income potential . Detail.,
(1) 1102-838-8885 EXT. T14,471.
ATrENTlON: POSTAL JOBSI Start $11 .41/hr.1
For application info call (1) 1102-838-8885 EXT.
M·14471, II AM • 10 PM, 7 day••
ATrENTlON: EARN MONEY WATCHING TVI
$32,OOO/year income potential. Details
(1) 602-838-8885 EXT. TV14471 .
NANNY OPPORTUNITIESII Need money for
sdlool or just want a break from study? Call
me, il you really love children and can make a
1-year commitment to a great family. U.S.
locations of your choice - airfare paid. TRISH
1-(206) 75~843 EASTERN SUMMER JOBS
ALSO AVAILABLE.
STEREO SYSTEM . SONI Tuner, power
amplifierlSTR: V45 cost $200. SONI CD
PLAYERlCDP-302,
$100.
SONI
TAPE
PLAYERlTC-RX400, $400. KLiP SCH-HERSAYH-BK speakers $450. All good condition. Call
868-8393.
WIN A HAWAIIAN VACATION OR BIG
SCREEN TV PLUS RAISE UP TO $1,400 IN
JUST 10 DAYSI
Objective: Fundraiser
Commitment: Minimal
Money: Raise $1 ,400
Cost: Zero Inveslment
WANTED
ORIGINAL POETRY, SHORT FICTION, &
CARTOONS for
publication in the CPJ.
Please bring work with name & phone number
to CAB 30M.
WANTEDI 25 People to GAIN WEIGHT. Herbal
~~~~E..OO/o natural. Call mike 456-3226 . __
VocalisVPerformance
Artisl
desires
nonfunctioning
kitchen
appliances . Toasters,
blenders, whatever. Don't throw them away,
give them to Dan in 0114 or cail 866-9926.
LOST/FOUNDIFREE
THE CPJ WANTS TO HELP. NO CHARGE
FOR
LOST/FOUND/STOLEN/FREE
CLASSIFIEDS.
Ring found at Ranch Romance concert (LIB
lobby). Describe to claim. Call Chris X6054.
LOSTI Rugby shirt. Lg. dark blue, long sleeved.
Missing from community laundry room. Reward
offered. Call RON 866-1764.
--------
RING FOUND at Feb. 10th Raindance, LIB
4300. Describe to claim. Contact Chris X60S4.
INTERNSHIPS: Summer quarter 1990. We will
sponsor internships in social services and
contracts in the humanities and social services
in the Portland. Oregon - Southwest
Washington area. For more information contact
faculty member Frank Motley or Virginia .
O.rney X8163.
1780.
Ring Iostl Great sentimental value (16th birthday
present). Gold w/dark blue hear-shaped stones.
Please call 866-8949.
FOUNDI Glasses in Mod parking lot Call
Donna 866-2997.
God Is a Rabbit by Ron Austin
tv\o. f'l1.
--------------
PERSONAL
TROUBLE
IN
PARADISE I THE
LAST
TROPICAL LOWLAND FOREST IN THE
UNITED STATES IS BEING DESTROYED, for
geothermal development. Wells known to
release toxic fumes. Wao Keleo Puna needs
YOU NOWI Write your concerns to: MAYOR
BERNARD AKANA, 25 APUNI ST., HILO,
HAWAII 95813.
A FREE GIFT JUST FOR CALUNG, PLUS
RAISE UP TO $1,700 IN ONLY 10 DAYS.
Student groups needed for marketing project on
campus. For details plus your FREE GIFT,
GROUP COORDINATORS CALL
£d. H,
.
"To this end Amnesty International·
TESC has both short and long range
goals...to serve the students, faculty, and
staff ~ an educational resource: providing
~~--------~--~~=
e.1'> '
DV"
,
,
'T
.
Torkr'<.
IL
AJI participants are required to donate
$100 in the fonn of pledges. Money
collected for this event will be used to
provide support for Amnesty International
and the Amnesty International Wilderness
Recreation Center at Evergreen. KADS,
the campus radio station, will provide
live coverage of this event
'l~
MISSING
' .
A
" '
)
_ ..
YANIGASAWA ALTO SAX
r
.
·.
I
'l..
1• .-
\
,/
ARTLEY FLUTE
Instuments Urgently Needed By
Music Major To Complete Recording
In Progress & For Financial Support.
i""~CJ\"". "" IV f :
Lp( I f 1 - - '
PLEASE HAVE A HEART
RETURN THESE
TREASURED ITEMS
NO QUESTIONS ASKED!
DEATH
I
~...u "~RHf~ · I (. :' .
GOOD FOR ONE FREE CUP OF COFFEE
II ~
... :..
I (
I
A...
_
CHECK OUT OUR GREAT LINE OF
I
ORGANICALLY GROWN WASHINGTON
WINES
CHAMPAIGNS
I
I
a
U8KARY
WiN f,![)e{D
I
I
_____ --_.J
11m" one per person
L~:.~~~S~~_~~~:._:.xs:~:!rl:.::..'::
Page 18 Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990
.
t=AT rll "''''_~ ! OUR.
PL.- Alo of I H~':
I
I
II
'lor
I ~I
_ I l!tCH~
I
~f HE~L.III"
EN'J\&lNMENIAL E1t11c.. ·.
-
r------------------~---------HAVE A CUP ON US!
I
Sllf- R,GH1E OUS
~S( owl
(SILVER IN BROWN ARTLEY CASE)
-
infonnation on human rights issues; speak
before academic programs on what
Amnesty is, what it does, who it effects,
and why it is effective," claimed Kenneth
R. Bassett, co-coordinator of the
organization.
Amnesty Inte;national-TESC will
present a world-celebrated lecturer each
quarter for the benefit of both Evergreen
and the surrounding community. The
organization's goal is 10 attain a
i ...~·
'\
(GOLD TNT IN BROWN LEATI£R
LOOKtID CASE)
organizer of Amnesty International-TESC, gets
support for the new student group. photo by Peter Bunch
of human rights violations who neither
advocate nor participate in violence.
"Amnesty International·TESC student
group supports the work of Amnesty
International through the (following)
mandate: to aid in the release of
prisoners of conscience [and] in the
procurement of sane and humane
treatment of prisoners of conscience and
to seek prompt and fair trials on their
behalf, (and) to eradicate torture and
executions in all cases.
I ..J
e.
Paula Lang is an Evergreen student
and a staff writer for the CPJ.
~:
..
11rWl.D
~ J ""' ~ \ ,
I h e. V\ H, /:::1
tA.. C "- I"
I
rtr(jit of on Eve rgreen to~!A:
Q
hvl"l, h .... ""
"''' d b,,-I~ e d
membership of 250 on the Evergreen
campus. Meetings can be attended by
those interested at 5:30 pm on the first
Thursday of every month at the Peace
and Conflict Resolution Center.
Amnesty is sponsoring the Amnesty
International
Wilderness
Recreation
Center Climb for Peace 1990. The climb
will be led by Jan Harris and Kenneth R.
Bassen and will utilize two routes on Mt.
Rainier. Harris is a veteran ML Everest
climber and B~sen is co-coordinator of
Amllesty International-TESC. The climb
is scheduled for May 3D-June 2.
Mllf
Bullets are Cheap by Edward Martin III
J
;]~'j*i~~:
Would your organization like to make $500 for
a one-week campus mari<.eting project? CALL:
CORINE OR MYRA .t 1-800·592-2121.
1'1 :::.... It
0(
1"<1 ""5
1-800-765-8472 X50.
AI finds supporters at TESC
Amnesty
International
is
an
organization known throughout the world
~ an impartial support group for victims
Fistful of Droolers by Kenta Hadley
Scotty by Jeremy T. Owen
LOST GOLD CHARM (Feb. 8th) FAMILY
HEIRLOOM. great sentimental value. Charm is
size of quarter with thistle design, and
irreplaceable . Reward offered. Call Heather 866-
Campus organizations. clubs cail OCMC at 1
(800) 932-052811 (800)950-8472 ext. 10
=I!r= --
by Paula Lang
CARTOONS
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IMPORTANT ,
DIF~ERENT
INFORMATION PROGRAMS
Cooper Point Journal April 19, 1990 Page 19