cpj0498.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 20 (April 12, 1990)

extracted text


security, from page 9
the bill was never to ann campus
security, an unwelcome and admittedly
scary prospect in its present incarnation.
This was the simplistic and inflammatory
version promulgated by the student
referendum, CPJ, and the poorly
administered Campus Safety Survey. By
the way, did anybody get one of those?
I haven't talked to a student who has.
However, I digress, the bill's idea was to
create a new entity, a campus police
force. I had no more objections to this
than I have to well·trained and equipped
law enforcement anywhere.
The campus police requirement,
however, failed in the Legislature this
year ironically not as the result of the
lobbying of any individual or group, but
simply because the powerful chair of
House Appropriations, Rep. Gary Locke
(D.-Seattle) thought it was basically a
poo-poo idea.
Thus we have been afforded new
opponunities. To heal the wounds
inflicted during the melee over this issue.
And to come up with a viable alternative
to an armed police force. I'm willing to
believe it can be done. It has to be done.
The posturing of our present Campus
Safety DTF is by no means a guarantee
of results. We've had such DTFs in the
past. They are good at one thing;
disappearing. Meanwhile, the problem

remains.
We have an unconscionable rate of
sexual harassment, and assault, incidents
on this campus. One a year is too many.
One a week, an average we have
achieved in the past, is as intolerable as
it is frightening. If the harassment had
~n directed at men, instead of women,
you can bet we would have done
something long ago.
Getting back to Larry. It was a
tough enough task reconciling our campus
to the notion of having its own police
force. Particularly in the manner in which
it was presented, as though each security
officer would be handed a six-shooter.
Larry didn't help things. He could have

taken a diplomatic course, respectful
disagreement instead of what he did. ije
took, in effect, the Shennan's March
approach - trampling over the legitimate
concerns of students, staff, and faculty. A
bull in a china shop, he called women
"girls," accused the school of being lost
in the 1960's, and ridiculed efforts at
reconciliation. These reasons alone are
probable cause for dismissal, for he must
function within our community. I cannot
judge the validity of the · allegations
against him, the process will address
those.
It is a time for healing. There
should be no false dichotomy engendered
separating security from the Evergreen
community's values. Petty reaction will
ill·serve us, it is a time for activism. You
can bet that if we fail to clean our own
house this year the Legislature will be
back next session with the same broom
and one more month to sweep with it.
Brendon Williams

THE 1990-91
COOPER POINT
JOURNAL
E·DITOR-IN-CHIEF
You can be all this and more:
-conceptualizing figurehead
·recelver of copious quantities of mail
'popular
'eK-officio member of the Communications Board
'administrative mouthpiece
·own a desk with a view
'rich (pays $4.5blhr up to 2,304 hours for the year.)

r---------------,
Due to spring break and our
resultant publishing downtime,
we have received a backlog of
submissions and were unable
to print al/ the letters for this
issue. We tried to print aI/
timely material and will print
the remainder next week. Next
weeks' topics include the
recent Christian performing
artist Steve Camp's
performance at Evergreen and
a question of whether Coke
really does sweeten apartheid.
Kevin Boyer, editor

Candidates must submit letters of reference. an essay on content and editing
philosophy and a resume. For datalls, see CPJ advisor, CAB 30SA. Candidates must:
1) Fulfill requirements of the job. (Description of editor's responsibilities and
requirements of the position PLUS copies of the CPJ's mission statement and Its goals
and objectives are available from CPJ advisor, CAB 30BA.)
2) Be a student at TESC In 1990·91 .
3) Have previous newspaper experience.

Closing date: 2 P.M.
Friday, April 13
Interview (to be individually arranged) before Communications Board, current CPJ staff,
current editor and advisor from 12:30 pm Friday April 20 , selection by April 27.

The Cooper Point Joumal, seepage

the community

Backhoe blues

Maybe some may think we are packrats,
Save it for a rainy day.
.

I've been digging holes
for a long time,
especially this one.

You may need it sometime, you think outloud,
I'll save it for a rainy day.

J /,--

-©"/ ,'\.

What do we do when there are no more days to rain,
no more time to blame our saving on.
Which excuse will we use then,
or will we give up,
Saving for a rainy day?
Michelle Minstrell

POETRY

Hometown
I stuck the comic book
in my coat pocket
and waded through the toxic waste
ftUed gutters of my own

Iwmetown
Land. of paper heros
worn clothes
seedy bars and.
one thousand auto part stores

Eric Knudsen
Page 16 Cooper Point Journal April 5, 1990

,

fOf

April 12, 1990

Volume 20 Issue 20

It wasn't easy
burying the car.

.

Five non-students
apprehended by
Security in connectio
with auto break-ins
by S. Martin

Save it for a Rainy day

Find something you think has worth or value,
Save it for a rainy day.

Cooper Poi.n t Journal

Apply Now

Five
male
teenagers
were
apprehended by campus Security officers
on Thursday, April 5 in connection with
the theft of car stereos in C·lot. The
suspects, none of whom attend Evergreen,
have confessed to previous vandalism and
theft from automobiles parted at the
College.
According to Sgt. Darwin Eddy of
campus Security. the suspects were
spoued at 12:05 am on Thursday by an
off duty security officer who was driving
through McCann Plaza. As the officer
reached the Evergreen Parkway, he heard
glass breaking in C-lot and saw one
suspect shaner the window of an
automobile. The officer radioed to
security headquarters and returned to the
parking lot to investigate.
When the suspects attempted to
escape, the officer followed their vehicle.
The youths sped down the Parkway and
entered Highway 101, heading west
towards Shelton. The pursuing officer

took their license plate number
returned to ·the campus.
The leens later returned to the college
and were pulled over by security officers
near McLane Fire Station. They were
taken to campus Security headquarters,
questioned, and turned over to the
Thurston County authorities.
The suspects, who are from Olympia
and Shelton, were charged with
vandalism, theft. and malicious mischief.
They face sentencing in Thurston County
Juvenile Court, and will be forced to pay
restibltion to the owners of the vehicles.
According to Eddy, the suspects were
not newCQRIers to the Evergreen campus.
"The teens confessed to involvement
in numerous break·ins in our parking
lots over the last several months; said
Eddy, an 8 year veteran ·of Evergreen's
security force. "Hopefully, we'll see an
end to the problem of car stereo theft .
and vandalism at the college."
S. Martin is an Evergreen student and

a CPJ staff writer.

This chart was compiled by sending a questionnaire to
the student groups asking them to describe their accomplishmeJ)ts this year. About two-thirds of the student groups responded. The budgets listed are for the
1989-1990 academic year,

Evergreen students support
striking Greyhound drivers
Fotty-two Evergreen students
stood on the picket line with
striking Greyhound bus drivers last
Friday, April 6. The strike, now
in its fifth week, has been plagued
by violence from both the
company and striking drivers.
No drivers have crossed the
picket lines in Washington State,
forcing Greyhound to bring in
replacement driveis from other
states to maintain the limited

Ron OIealham
lC6530
eRC

$124,891

For some reason
the dog ran away.
But I buried the goldfish
in an underground stream:
They ·seemed
very happy.
I didn't bury the books I
planted the books: I
understand they provide' their own
fertilizer.

S

&

A

Administration

1he Dlvlslon of Recreation and Athletics strives to serve the fitness and
leisure time needs of the student. of The Evergreen State College by
providing programs which range from fonna! Instnlction to c:aaual use,
and offer opportunities for phyllica1 exercise, enjoyment, the learning of
lelaun!-orienled aIdlI. and respite from work for the Mre-creatlor( of mental. phyllica1 and spiritual qualities.
In the spirit of mmmunity, the fIUIle aervIces and programs afforded to
IIludents are made available to whatever degree possible and desirable to
faculty, ltaff, and local reaidents. The openness of the programs serve
not OIIly to promote reerealion within Evergreen, but a!" to create a
joyful link with the cammunity .t 1arge.
Out of the funding through S&A, the CRC uses eeventy-five percent of
the lI\OI\y to eIl\ploy 7S student slaH. The remainlng twenty-five pem!IIt
so- towards opentiol\a1 CXlIIIs.

The million of the Student Activities Administration is to promote
SJUter ltudent Involvement In S&A AdmInistration Office and provide
addltlmal support for student orpnlzatiOl\&

kathy Ybara
x6220
CAB 3m

$87,069

Group Accomplishments

Did not respond to query.

The Student Activities Administration assists students In developing s1dlls
to enable them to accomplish their co· curricular goals. Students are
provided opportunities, guidance, and encourag<!DIent to leam sIdlls necessary to coordinate the services and activities provided by the S &. A
funded orpnizatiClllL
Student Activities II committed to student empowerment and the
development 01 ImpoJtant ·8Oda1 activist and community organizing sldlls.
The Student Activities. Office' also co-produces and underwrites events as
well a. staffing Its own production team comprised of students. Even ts
Include; Wallace Terry, The Defenders, This Cordate Carcass, New Student Orientation, and Our Mothers Stories.

I don't imagine I'll be
coming back.
The key is behind
a loose brick.
Let me know if anything
comes up
next spring.

rVlew

requests for the 1990-1991
acade·m ic year exceed available S&A resources by
$89,000. To eliminate this discrepancy, student group
budgets will be cut and/or student groups will need to
be .consolidated.
Tedd Kelleher

Group Mission Statement

But the furniture
took longer:
It's under the
crabapple tree
like a furnished
basement.

inter-city bus service they now
provide.
The strikers charge Greyhound
with endangering passengers lives
by using poorly trained drivers
and illegally overcrowding busses.
Greyhound. has ass~. the
replacement drivers that thelT Jobs
are pennanent, leaving many
striking drivers without a job
shoul~ the strike be settled.
photo by Mitch Gray

Evergreen
Chlldcare Center
peggy BuclcUhymir
x6060
PIreweed 201

The million of the Evergreen OtUd eare Center is to provide quality
chlld care programs that .will benefit the chlld, parent, staff, and the
community. The environment, needa to be consistent, positive, safe, healthy, and In CXlIlIpllance with all state and cIty regulations and licensing
requin!menl8. Its purpoee is also to provide this quality care 011 I slld·
Ing fee IIc:a1e to ensure students are able to alford service.

We have served 48 chUdren

80

tar this year. We are achieving nation-

al accreditation for the center this year and we have remodeled the

toddler room and Increased play yard space.

$71,412

see budgets. pages 5. 6, 7
Michael McNeilley

The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested

Nonprofit Organization
U,S. Postage Paid
Olympia, WA 98505
Permit No. 65

NEWS BRIEFS
by Ron Jacobs ror EPIC
On April 26, 1990 some of the
defendants in the most recent flag-burning
cases will be speaking at TESC. Also
appearing will be Joey Johnson, the
original defendl!nt in last July's Supreme
Court trial. As you know, the last ten
years have been marked by increasing
restrictions on our rights to freedom of
expression as guaranteed under the Bill
of Rights.
The flag law and amendment are
prime examples of one group of United

States citizens attempting to enforce their
opinions on the rest of the country. Not
since the Third Reich has there been such
a blatant attempt to enforce patriotism. '
We hope you can help support the
Evergreen Political Information Center
financially in their effort to pesent this
important issue to the Evergreen and
For
further
Olympia
community.
information, please contact Ron Jacobs or
Leanne Roberts at 866-6000 x6144 as
soon as possible.

.Security
Monday, April 2
0025:
A suspicious person
was
questioned in F-lot He turned out to be
an ex-Greener seeking shelter at
Evergreen for the night
1622: There was a Minolta 35mm camera
missing from the second floor of the
Library.
1855: Blue and black paint was detected
on the south side of the gym.
2342: An ill female in C-Dorm was
transferred to the hospital.
Tuesday, April 3
1244: Security's Citation car got a brake
job.
1605: The bikini briefs exposure suspect
was sighted in the lower meadow near
the beach trail.
1700: Graffiti against Security was found
in the third floor Library , Men's room.
Wednesday, April 4
1951: Security's Citation car had a
headlight replaced.
2020: A nude white female, about , 5'10"
and weighing 170 pounds, jumped out of
the woods near C-Dorm and started
yelling at a male. The victim fled for
lack of anything else to do.
2231: 'The same woman was spotted
again waving her arms and yelling
unintelligible noises at another male. The
victim ran to A-Dorm to avoid a
confrontation. Both complainants were so
startled they don't have a good
description of her face.
2355: Five suspects, four of them under
eighteen years old, were apprehended
breaking car windows in F, B, and C lots
by sergeant Savage while he was off
duty. They were brought into the Security
office, admitted to several other breakins, and as they are juveniles their
parents will pay restitution for damages.
(see story on cover.)

ACUPUNCTURE
PETER G. WHITE, C.A.

Covered by Evergreen/Hartford InSlJrance
Questions - Consuttatlons - Appointments
Radiance 113 E. Slh OlympIa 357 -9470

Blott~r
Tbursday, April 5
0706: Equipment was stolen from two
Cars in F and C-lot.
0936: A student's dog was bothering
patrons and employees at the deli and
Animal Control was contacted. The dog
was apprehended.
1619: In the lower meadow a nude male
was sighted. Leopard skin bikini briefs
were at the scene.
1930: A car was being driven recklessly
on the campus path near the soccer field.
The driver got out near the HCC and
urinated on the ground.
Friday, April 6
1610: A nude female, thought to be 5'5"
with long blond hair, was sighted on the
beach trail.
2015: A stereo was stolen from a car in
F-lol.
Saturday, April 7
2346: Graffiti was discovered in the third
floor Library Men's room.
Sunday, April 8
1707: Someone reported that their gas
cap had been stolen from F-Iot.
1955: A car was caught speeding in Red
Square. Security advises that unauthorized
cars should not drive at any speed on
campus grounds.
2329: There was an incident of graffiti in
the CAB first floor Men's room.
There were about 75 public services
done last week and there were no fire
alarms pulled. Security believes that the
nude female may be testing them to see
if they discriminate exposures based on
gender.
The Security Blotter is written by
James Egan, /irst-year student at TESC.

Institute for
Social Ecology

Memo of' the week...
we

j~st

didn't have a good enough quote.

",pril 4, 1990 .

TO:

Student ' Group Coordinators

FROM:

Denise Robertson

RE:

Bake Sales

The Thurston county Health Department requires that all bake sale
operators have an Operating Permit and a Ternp?rary Food Handlers
an! ,
This regulation has always been requ1red by the Health
department and the Evergreen State College, but due to the increase
in hepatiti5 attacks in the Olympia area we are now required to
enforce it.
In order to schedule a bake sale, you will need to see Denise in
the Student Act iv ities off i ce to get
a Health department
app lication, The application for th~ Operating permit needs to ~e
filled out two weeks in advance and 1S good for 14 days. There IS
a $6.00 tiling tee . The fee can be reimbursed to you through your
budget.
You may either mail your applicati~n or go to th~ hea!th
department in person. Filling out the applIcatIon and maI lI n g It
requires n~ more than five minutes of your time,
Only one person at the bake sale table needs to have a food
handlers card. You may either apply for one or have someone you
knc" who wo r ks ir. a restaurant or any place serving food ass ':'st
yo u at the table.
This person must be present at all times while
bake goods are being sold.
As a re", i ncl er , bake sales are only pentitted for Student Groups
and Acaderric programs.
No individual can sell food for personal
prof it:. BatE goods include cates , cook ies, ~ies, ,not needing
refria eration, candies and breads.
No cream ples, plzzas, cream
cheese, butter spreads or quiches are permitted,
Bake sales (insi de or outs i de the CAB) will not be sc~eduled until
penni ts are obtained, Please check in advance of your sale to make
sure that you have the required permits .

,

OLYMPIA PUBLIC RADIO FM 89.3
THE RJI!AL ALTERNATIVE
INVITES YOU TO

FEED YOUR BRAIN!
EVERY WEEKDAY TUNE IN
9:30 am
IMPORTANT , DIFFERENT

INFORMATION PROGRAMS

Lotto winner shares $4M with Greener son
by Tim Gibson
.
When Clark Gardner, Sr. of Port
Orchard took home his half of an $8
million dollar lotto jackpot, he wasn't the
only Clark Gardner winner.
His son, Clark Gardner, Jr., a second
year Evergreen student, also won big . in
last week's lotro drawing.
The elder Gardner put it like this:
"I'm 73. ' [Clark, Jr] is 20. Now
who's going ro get the most out of it?:
said the new septuagenarian millionaire.
The younger Gardner, who said he
was "skeptical" of the lottery bebe his
dad won, described his reaction to his
father's new fortune.
"I didn't believe him at fU'Sl," he said
when his father told him that be bad the
numbP.zs.

by Andrew Hamlin
Vern Flesner, Lutheran Pastor and
Evergreen's chaplain in residence, offered
me some monkey bread from a pile of
snacks on his desk. "I bad a birthday
recently, and I decided to celebrate: he
rold me. The offiCe smelled of Sail, his
favorite pipe tobacco. Flesner came to
Evergreen in September of 1989, but very
few people seem to know who he is. "I
don't shove myself down people's
throats," he says. On a campus that
mostly ignores or refutes formal religion,
that policy makes sense, but it does make
him more obscure than he might be in
another setting.
Vern was born in Beatrice, Nebraska;
he gives thanks to the local church's
leadership training school for "showing
me I could be something else than a
farmer." He got a bachelor's degree in
social , services from Dana College in
1957, then attended Wartburg Seminary
in Dubuque, Iowa. The Seminary
included one year of field work; Vern
ended up in 'Walla Walla.
That was his first trip to Washington,
and he preferred ., t\1e weather, to"

by Tbomas Fletcher
A few days before election day, a
collective farm outside of Matagalpa.
Nicaragua received ominous news. Some
visiuxs claiming to be with the UNO
party (Union of National Opposition)
dropped by with a message for the
campasinos: they must vote for UNO or
lose their land. These campasinos bad
provided the Sandanistas with armies to
win the revolution.
Ten years later, on February 25, they

do a little travelling as a result of the
windfall.
"I'm going to Japan this summer,"
he said.
In addition to travel, the younger
Gardner's life will change in other ways.
"I'll probably quit my job until after
school," he said, "but I won't change my
schooling plans." He said he still in~ds
ro attend' Evergreen with a focus on
Political Science and Latin American
Studies.
About his future, however, the

Nebraska's: "It was dry, and it didn't get
100 cold, and it didn't seem 100 hot, and
the wind didn't blow; he laughs.
After graduation he did three years at
a Nebraska parish, three more at a
children's hospital in Houston, and then
a sixteen-year stand at St. Luke's general
hospital in Milwaukee. At St. Luke's he
ran a training program for nurses and
other pasrors. "'The nurses understood
Kubler-Ross' five stages of death [denial,
anger, bargaining, depression, and
acceptance], but what they didn't
understand was that people go back and
forth between stages." I asked him what
he learned as a children's hospital
chaplain. "Children get sick quicker, but
they also get well quicker.
There's two schools of thought in
children's hospitals, one where the
parents come live in the hoSPital, and one
. where they don't--our hospital was one
were the parents lived in. That's
important, because it is the whole family
that becomes sick. ln a lot of cases,
where the kids have died, it ends in
divorce."
ln, 1983, Flesner vansferred to the

Washington Corrections Center at
Shelton, replacing a former student of
his. He continued the Clinical Pastoral
Education program, preparing new pastors
for chaplainship. Five years later he led
a fight to get lawyers for 36 Hispanic
inmates, all scheduled for deportation
hearings in one day--theoretically-between 9 am and 3 pm, with no legal
representation. 'The judge denied Flesner
and his associates permission to counsel
the inmates, so they appealed to various
lawyer's guilds. The inmates got their
lawyers, and a translator, but the prison
superintendent suspended Vern from his
post on June 12, 1989.
A local pastor tipped him off to the
opening at Evergreen--Thurston County
Ministries in Higher Education wanted to
put a full-time chaplain on campus.
Flesner had sent resumes all across the
country, but a local position meant he
and his wife wouldn't have to move from
Shelton. He applied over the summer and
took the job at the beginning of fall
qll;&rler.
The new chaplain's schedule is
loose. He littend!: S&A meetings and

<=t'I--= =It

served in militia. They would be ready
if the new government attempted new
_
land re-distribution.
-If:
~
I,
til _ c=::pIo==>
Throughout Managua rumors seep
voted against the Sandanistas.
through every fact. Exaggerations infuse
every anecdote rold by journalists. The
Only days after the UNO victory,
truth is harder to find than indifference.
representatives arrived announcing the
The local newspapers don't even attempt
farm would soon be given ' back to the
"real" owners currently residing in
to recreate the myth of objectivity. People
Miami. The farmers went to the military pick their political afftliation by which
asking for forgiveness and guns. In
paper they read. No story is ' clear CUL
Nicaragua, most of the farmers have
The one rold above bas, many variations
'"

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Page 2 Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

c

M and

DANIEL CHOOORKOFF
CIItAH HEI.u!R
YNIJ.STRA KING

1:5 ....

--7

VCR - AUDIO INC.

MURRAY BooKCHIN

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WITH: MARG<Jf ADLER

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COMMUNITIES

~pril

are

c;:?"

DESIGN FOR SUSTAlNABUl

Friday the 13th
Saturday
to th :

and spread rapidly throughout cafes and
press conferences. M~st.likely some of it
IS true-and some of It IS nOL
There is but one clear truth about
Nicaragua: the people now live on
standby.
With the recent UNO victory, the
future is foggier than usual. Students
started school this March knowing
President-elect Violetta Chamarro intends
to close schools for a year to rewrite
curriculum. All assets in dollars
frozen, but people still need to go to the
markeL And black inarketeets still sell
the national currency, the cordoba, for

1--..

and

APl'ROPRIA'Ill TEcHNOLOGY AND

Then rock on down

receives students for conversation or
counseling. His Thanksgiving plan to feed
stranded students at local resident's
houses fell through--"We couldn't fmd
enough families, and most students felt
they'd be interfering with somebody
else's holiday." Vern showed Romero on
campus last quarter and got 125 people,
so he's set up a few more movies this
quarter, notably God, Gays, and the
Gospel. and The Last Temptation of
Christ.
He's also trying to get a
meditation group together, and a "Men
and Feminism" group affiliated with the
Women's Center.
"My style of ministry is not to try
to push anything on anybody because it
doesn't work," he says. "Unfortunately,
college students seem to be at the far end
of their spiritual journeys." You can fmd
out what he means by that, and a lot of
other th,ings, by visiting Vern at the
Campus Ministries/Innerplace office,
Library 3225, or call 866-6000 ext. 6145.
Andrew Hamlin is the most prolific
CPJ writer this week, an Evergreen
student, and the Arts and Entertainment
editor.

see Chamorro, page 13

EAS TER--::

Eco-FEMINlSM

EcoLOGY AND SPI1UIUAllTY

GBO Storm."
The younger .Gardner also plans ro

younger Gardner remained unmoved
amidst his new fortune.
"I'll probably go to grad school," he
said, "maybe to become a business
lawyer."
Soon after they took home their
enormous lottery winnings, lhe younger
Gardner said, the phone began to ring.
The younger Gardner said that while
at fllSt they were beseeched on the phone
by reporters who wanted their story and
by financial investors who wanted their
business, others were more direct with
their requests.
"Some guy from Gig Harbor called,"
he said, "just asking for money!"
Tim Gibson is an Evergreen studenl
and CPJ staff writer.

UNO's Chamorro faces
many
challenges
=

snmy; Eco-PmLosoPHY
CoMMUNITIES

COMMUNITY REALm
BIOREGIONAJ.,. AGRICULTURE
ARCHlTECI1JJtE AND SOCIETY

his father in their Pan On:hard home,
indicated that since the check arrived his
commute became a lot easier.
"I bought a new car: he said, "a

Evergreen has a campus pastor

1990 Summer Semester

RECONSTRUcrtVE ANmRopoLOGY

"I war.c;hed the drawing on T.V.," the
eldez Gardner added, "He was the one
who got excited, I didn'L"
Aftef a couple of papers were signed
at the lotto office, the younger Gardner
said. they look ~me !heir 'first
installment--a whopping $200,000 check.
However, the younger GlUdner noted
that the IRS was quick to take their
$40,000 share out of that initial 200
' grand.
In spite of all this, the eldez Gardner
tried to downplay the effect this new
fortune will have on his life.
"I don't tlUnk it'll change very
much," he quipped. "I'll still go fishing."
However, the new wealth bas already
begun ro change his son's life.
The younger Gardner, who lives with

......

---

Custom Orders

\'

\..41

Special baskets

,- ~~
'-

Panarama Eggs

boppin8 huon ....
Easocr boJIoons

lnlIa1abk_
bunny~

$2.00 OFF
/

~=~~~~~~~~~~a~,,~, plllduue B.95 or more). ' :

gJow-

11 \ \1:~..,t )( h Aw 1)vn nltm " otH11Ill.l \1 .• 11./

L-

Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Page 3

!ervices ane Ac 'ivi 'iesOverview

Garbage: America's Renewable Resource
by Devin Bennett
Ninety percent of all household
garbage in America, according to
government statistics, isn't garbage at all.
Yard and food waste, for example,
far from being "waste," is the precious
organic material that gives soil its
fertility. [f this commodity were properly
returned to the soil, it could enrich our
fast-disappearing supply of topsoil that
ensures the continued production of food
for the world. By burying it in landfJlls,
however, we cut off the oxygen that
supports useful biological breakdown and
transform organic matter into "waste," in
fact as well as by name.
Paper, which can be reprocessed as
many as four times before being returned
to the soil as compost, is too often buried
in landfJlIs as well. Aluminum, steel, tin,
and other metals, which could be
reprocessed at a fraction of the cost of
production for virgin metal, are allowed
to rust and poison the already diseased
soil of the world's dumping grounds.
Glass and plastic, which cost twice as
much to produce from raw materials as
from recycled, are thrown away.

In short, most of the so-called
garbage in the garbage cans of America
is not garbage--nol, at least, until we
make it so.
What can we do as individuals to
stop the draining away of resources into
landfills?
The fIrSt and greatest step is to stop
buying useless items. There is no reason
to drag home pounds of packaging if
food is available in unpackaged "bulk"
form. Buying disposable items, such as
paper and plates, makes no sense either
environmentally or economically.
Second, we must stop throwing
tbings away that have not outlived their
usefulness. Glass jars and plastic bags are
perfect examples; the convenience of
keeping these in supply justifies reusing
as well.
Finally, we must begin sorting our
garbage. Rather than throwing everything
into one enormous bin, we can use
several smaller buckets, one each for
organic material, aluminum, tin, steel,
glass, plastic, paper, and nonrecyclables.
The fraction of garbage that will go into
the last bucket--induding rubber, textiles,
and multilayer packaging--is astonishingly

Group name, coordinator'.
name(s), phone number. 1ocII1lon,
and S&A budget

KAOS Radio
Station

100%

Michael HWltsberger
x6397

CAB 304

$53,984

Cooper Point
Journal
Kevin Boyer
x6213
CAB 30M
AlUMINUM

COPPER

PlASTIC

STEa.

GLASS

PAPER

$25,276

A graphic demonstrating the amount of energy saved by recycling
various products. For example, it takes 95% less energy to recycle
aluminum 8S opposed to manufacturing. a new can.
small.
Recycling, therefore, consists of
three simple steps: if possible, don't buy
garbage; if possible, reuse wbat we buy;
if possible. recycle wbat cannot be
reused. Only after an item has passed

these three tests can it be called
"garbage."
Devin
Bennett compiled this
information from resear.ch conducted by
James Johnson. The work was done as
part of the Energy Systems program.

r

S&A Reorganization
x6555
CAB 13237

$12,000

Higher efficiency for cars and drivers
by Duan.e Drummond and Susan
Searles
One third of the carbon dioxide
produced in the United States comes
from automobiles. maJcing them a major
contributor to global warming. About
two percent of the total surface area of
the U.S., including ten percent of all
arable land. has been paved over to
accommodate cars. Each passenger car
requires an average of 4000 square feet
of asphalt just for parking spaces in a
daily routine: home. work. and shopping.
Worldwide, nearly a quarter million
people per year die in traffic accidents.
Yet, the mode of choice for getting
around in this country is still the
automobile.
Efficiency of automobiles can be
assessed in a variety of ways. The facts
above indicate some of the environmental
costs of cars. Anyone who keeps track
of gas prices. insurance rates. or highway
funding. has ideas about the economic
efficiency of cars. One of the most ·
revealing perspectives is from the
standpoint of energy.
In 1988. the average fuel efficiency
of cars driven in the U.S. was nearly 20
miles per gallon.
This is an
improvement of better than 40% above
the average efficiency of 20% years ago.
Although this sounds like fme headway.
rumors
of
phenomenal
mileage
performance and suspicions of corporate
foot-dragging
leave . many
people
dissatisfied with the difference between
what cars might do and what cars
actually do. These rumors and suspicions
are quite well-founded.
AU of the major manufacturers have
developed passenger car prototypes with
extremely high fuel efficiencies at normal
driving speeds. Both General Motors and
Volkswagen have designed cars which
attain about 70 miles per gallon. Volvo
and Peugeot can get 80 mpg. Ford has
reached more than 90 mpg, and Toyota
and Renault close to 110 mpg. The 1988
Renault "Vesta" achieved an amazing 138
miles per gallon, cruising at a steady 56
miles per hour. Despite impressions of
fuel efficient vehicles as million-dollar
erector-set contraptions, mass-produced
cars can be efficient without being
expensive or rickety.
Technology to
increase fuel efficiency evidentially exists.
but certain social and economic obstacles
must be overcome.
Americans' attraction for more
powerful (less fuel-efficient) cars is wellknown, and growing. In 1980, 30% of
Americans listed fuel econom y as the
most important factor in choosing their
next car.
By 1987, this figure had
plummeted to a minuscule 3%. Without
strong consumer demand for fuel-efficient

cars, manufacturers feel little incentive to
increase the fuel efficiency of their
automobile fleet
One way to boost fuel efficiency of
automobiles is with governmental actionof
fuel
economy
-implementation
standards, gas taxes, or consumer
incentives. Another way is governmental
inaction, allowing purely market reactions
to fuel price or perceived availability to
guide auto makers toward improvements.
Enjoying this second slance, American
manufacturers argue that too much
regulation would give foreign competitors
unfair advantages, since many imports
already meet suggested fuel efficiency
standards.
However, without policy changes,
the average fuel consumption of
passenger vehicles will not be made
better within the decade. No matter what
motivates
improvements
in
fuel
efficiencies, this tension between industry
and government (or, this collaboration)
leaves the rest of us guzzling gas.
So, just how many miles per gallon
can you get from a car'] More exactly,
how much work can you get from the
heat of burning gasoline? Without ever
knowing the joys of speeding across an
open stretch of freeway, Isaac Newton
could have correctly answered this
question more than two hundred years
ago based on his first and second Laws
of Thermodynamics: the energy used to
move the car is just a fraction of the
energy supplied by gasoline. In fact,
only 8% of the energy contained in the
gasoline pumped into your tank is
actually used to move the vehicle. The
rest of the energy for work done in the
average car goes to braking, and
auxiliaries such as the alternator and air
conditioning. Overall, a third of the total
initial energy is used for work, a third
goes to cooling the engine, and a third is
coughed out the exhaust pipe.
The
opportunities
for
fuel
efficiency
improvements are in this distribution of
energy.
Since such large proportions of
energy are spent cooling a conventional
engine, <r wasted as exhaust, research is
emphasized have been in these areas.
Several innovations have been gaining
ground recently to minimize or recover
the energy lost during the internal
combustion process. For example, metal
engines overlteat with the . friction of
operation, thereby requi$g much of the
supplied energy to w<Xk at preventing the
heat stress. Ceramic parts with a greak'Z
capacity for heat are now being perfected.
Nissan and Izusu have already
demonsttaled that ceramic engines can
meet standard performance demands. (It
is interesting to note manufacturers in

Page 4 Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Japan have been more successful than in
the U.S. because there, ceramic engines
were developed piece by piece while
here, funded by the DOE, a wholeengine-or-bust mentality has prevailed.)
Another important innovation is the
continuously variable transmission (CV1),
which adjusts the engine to the cars
requirement for work. This means that a
car going uphill will be automatically set
by the CYT to do more work than the
saine car when it comes time to go
downhill, level, or idle.
This makes
available two-thirds of the energy
conventionally spent on the transmission
process.
Toyota and Mitsubishi now
have models using the CYT.
The main body design options for

improving fuel efficiency of cars are
power train optimization, reducJion of
weight,
rolling
resistance,
and
aerodynamic drag. Fleet fuel efficiency
can also be increased by shifting to
smaller cars, "dO\>1lSizing" to twopassenger vehicles. Many people have
misconceptions about the safety of
smaller cars, but careful design can
compensate . for size in protecting its
occupants.
For automobile fuel efficiency at the
individual level, all it takes is a little
common sense.
Susan Searles and Duane Drummond
investigated automobile fuel efficiency as
part of their work in Energy Systems.

1) BUY FUEL EFFICIENT CARS. Consider
small, two-passenger cars. and those without
fuel-oonsuming
luxuries.
such
as air
conditioners.
.
2)
USE RADIAUROLlING RESISTANCE
TIRES. especially if you do a lot of highway
driving.
3) CHECK TIRE PRESSURE EVERY TWO
WEEKS.
Keep lires at the lire maker's
maximum 'recommended pressure.
4) MAINTAIN proper wheel adjustmenlS and
keep bearings lulled and aqusted.
·
5) TUNE THE ENGINE every year (or every
10,000 miles). Pay special attention to the
carburetor. filters, anti-pollution equipment, and
ignition system-spark plugs and distributor.
Avoid engine knock.
,
6) USE LOW-FRICTION MOTOR OIL.
7) BUY HIGH-DETERGENT FUELS.
8)
BEGIN DRIVING AS SOON AS OIL
PRESSURE IS ESTABUSHED.
9) DON'T DRIVE OVER 55 M.P.H. Peak fuel
efficiency occurs between 35 and 55 m.p.h.
10) AVOID ERRATIC DRIVING. staying as
smooth and staady as traffic and road
conditions allow.

11) MINIMIZE STOPS. Anticipate traffic flow,
travel at o~-peak tim.e s. and use ~outes with as
few stop signs and lights as poSSible. (Try not
to imagine what would happen if everybody
followed this point)
12) DECELERATE with foot of the gas pedal,.
and car in gear.
13) ACCELERATE WITH MODERATION-no
jack rabbit get-aways or snail-like starts.
14) AVOID "FLOORING' THE ACCELERATOR
when climbing hills and I~g gra~, and use
the brake to hold the car In plaoe If you must

S&A Board
Operations
Mark Sullivan

x6221
CAB 305

$9,796
Intercollegiate
Athletics
JC6g3()

CRC302

$7,779

.-----------------------------,I

t

I
I

I

L

stop.
.
15) DON'T IDLE If you expect to be parked

more than 30 seconds.
1~) LlMI.T ACCESSORIES USE, such as the
air condillOner.
.
17)
MINIMIZE AIR RESISTANCE.
AVOid
pennanent roof racks, and at speeds over 45
m.p.n. keep windows closed.
18) COMBINE SHORT TRIPS, and if possible
use a warmecklp car II you have a choioe.
Don't start the car just to move it
19)
USE MASS TRANSIT. CAR POOLS,
BICYCLES, OR WALKI
• ...

------------------------------

~

Umoja
Larry Jefferson,
Rosemary TanJc:sley

x6781
L 32f11

f

I

$7,597
Evergreen Indian
Center
Oyde BID, Rio Bellon

x6105
L 3221

$6,536

Group Mission Statement

KAOS Is a listener-supported public radio station controlled by a
governing board broadly representative of the llstening audience It serves;.~
KAOS broadcasts educational, cultural and entertainment programs, with
a particular emphasis on Information about local activities, issues and
events. KA05 serves listeners who are unserved or Wlderserved by other
broadcast medla. KAOS makes opportunities In broadcasting avaUable to
aJI individuals, without regard to education, income, ethnldty, political or
sexual orientation, age, sex, disability, or experience in broadcasting.
KAOS la a radio etatlon of real people, sharing their hopes, dreams,
roncems and opinions through dynamic, responsive broadcasting.

Helen DeSmith,
Kelly Wrlg}lt

x6162
L 3216

$6,186

Asian/Pacific Island
Coalition
Will Depusoy,

Jean Yang,Na XIong,
and Cat! Y_Rosa
x6033
Ubrary 3209

$6,052

KAOS has recently added several new public affairs programs to the
Including Crossroads, the multi-cu1tural neWli1I\agazine from National Public Radio and Consider the Alternatives, the magaZine of
peace issues from the SANE Education Foundation. KAOS has worked
to include more ethnic and World Beat music throughout the format,
and has added the children's program East of the Sun, West of the.
Moon. KA05 has submltted an 585,000 Federal grant to purchase new
broadcast equipment, including a satellite downlink. Upcoming KAOS
concerts Include Bolivian New Song artists Suka y, and local artists
Sandy Silva and Kevin Burke. About 100 local residents, both students
and c:onununity members, I'eI:leive radio training from KAOS each year.

,,,~edule,

The Cooper Point Journal .erve. the Evergreen community and the
greater Thurston/Mason counties area by producing a newspaper that
alms to re6ect the interests of the Evergreen rommunity.
The CoopeI' Point Journal serves the students of Evergreen by offering a
laboratory where students can learn about newspaper modus operandi,
lingua, culture, aeed and perspective; polish communication sldlls; experiment with ways to effectively communicate in print; supervise staff and
operations, and manage the financial affairs of a publication.
The Cooper Point Journal editors, staff and advisor encourage and support the dissemination of information and opinion/viewpoint, particularly
information and opinion/viewpoint which Increase muiticultural understanding and confront injuStice and c:tisa1mination.

The Coop" Poi,,' Journlll has
developed a newspaper editing and
design style that makes the paper more accessible and responsive to
the community. We have expanded the format and size of the
newspaper to a ronstant of 16 pages a week. ThIs has aJlowed more
and varied student input including weekly columns and a full page of
cartoons. The busineas department has raised the ren:m rate on billings
to over 85'l!. a8 well as organizing the Archives and interpreting and
correcting many past billing errors. Overall the new organizational
framework will allow the paper to be viable even after the present
staff departs.

A central theme of the student rights movement has been to gain control 01 S&tA fees. At Evergreen, although student money pays for S&rA
professional staff positions, students have" no formal authority to determine
who fills those positions, nor do students have a formal route to
evaluating those staff members. By assuming appointment authority for
the DIrector of Student Activities, students will be In a position to make
final decisions about the scope and direction of the S&tA program as a
whole.
The S&rA Board has been chosen to hold this authority because of its
historical stability and for lis accountability to the new Student Union. In
addition, greater responsibility placed with students within this context Is
consistent with the goals and intent of the S&tA program.

S&tA Reorganization plans to present their reorganization proposal to the
Board of Trustees in May.

The S&tA Board In compliance with the Evergreen Administrative Code
allocates S&:A fees in a manner which:
-enhances student life
-promotes the autonomy of the student body constituency
-considers direction outllned In the Slrategic Pum of T£SC
-is adaptive to the changing needs of the Evergreen Community
-recognlzes and promotes diversity of expression
Since the strategiC planning council final report which recommended a
shift in emphasis from programming intercollegiate athletics to programming wellness, the division of Recreation and Athletics has done just
thai, while continuing to provide a hig}ler level of athletic participation
for some students who desire to play soccer or to swim Intercollegiately.
In additi"n to providing uniforms and other supplies for soccer and
swimming S &: A funding provides for the Athletic Training service
which has been available to all students, and which has been supervised
by Arno Zaske, who Is also a rertified athletic trainer.
Umoja's mission is to provide resources and services related to African
American culture for Evergreen's AfriczIl American students and the college community at large. Umoja provides a culturaUy supportive atmosphere and recognizes events Significant to African American history.
Umoja st~lves to open lines of communication with other African
American organizations, especially Black student organizations throughout
the Padftc Northwest.

Did not respond to query.

Did not respond to query.

Umoja has sponsored several successful
dances and films presentations this year,
as well being a resource for African
American students at Evergreen.

The Evergreen indian Center (EIC) was created primarily to serve the
needs of American indian and Alaskan Native students at The Evergreen
State College which were not being met through the existing channels.
EIC seeks to promote sovereignty and self-determination among all in- '
dlgenous people. The EIC provides limited support services and advocates
(within staff and budgetary limitations) on behalf of Indian students, as
we.ll as social and cultural opportunities. The EIe maintains support of
the Long House project.

Each year we . host indian speakers like Thomas Banyacya, Hopi spiritual
leader, Russell Jim, Yakima spiritual leader and environmentalist, to come
speak to the Evergreen community on a variety of issues that are important to us all. Recently we brought Truman Lowe, an Ojibwe artist
from the Great Lakes area, to ~ampus and he shared his words and
artistic vision with several art programs.
Now we are planning for the second annual Siahal Night. Siahal is a
traditional gambling game that is played for fun and also settles disputes. Our purpose is to join together with the campus at large in the
splrtt of fun and to raise money for the Long House Project and an
indian Student Scho1arshlp fund.
We are also bringing the Spider Women Theater, films, documentaries,
and drum groups. as well as being involved with numerous committees
involved In Issues Important to Indian students and our people.

The Women's Center Is a student organization dedicated to the needs,
safety, ' rights and recognition of women students, staff and faculty at
The Evergreen State College. Its goals are:
1) To fight against the oppression of racism, sexism, classism, ageism,
homophobia, and other prejudices which threa ten to separate us as
women and human beings.
.
2) To protect and advocate women's equal rights at The Evergreen State
College and in the community.
3)To provide peer support for constituents through groups and drop In
appointments, as well as a liaison between women students, the Institutioo, faculty, other student groups and the community.
4) To maintain a l'e9Ource file, library, and referral network In coordination with women and women's groups in the community at large.
5) To celebrate the dlveISlty and strengths of all women, while making
In effort to incorporate and work with women from different ethnic,
IIOCiO-«:OnOmlc, and cultural backgrounds and lifestyles.

The Women's Center has worked hard this year to bring women on
campus together by sponsoring a . Women's writing group, a Women
over 40 support group, women's safety meetings and workshop, and a
group of active Political Wlmmin. Fall quarter brought the national ProChoice march, musician Alice Oi Micele, and a vigil for the slain
women of Montreal In Red Square. In March, with the Women of
Color Coalition, the L/GRC and many other student groups, we sponsored International Women's Week. It featured music, dance, poetry, discussions of reproductive rights, theater, and films.

The Asian/Pac;tflc laJe Coalition (A.P.I.c.) was created primarily to serve
the needs of Aslin/Pacific students at The Evergreen State College.
A.P.LC. Is committed to providing support services to meet these needs
throU3h involvement with the greater rommunity.

-"HlroIIhlma" Concert in Tacoma; progressive Aslan American jazz band
-"Cold Tofu" Comedy-Improv Show; Northwest Asian American theatre,
alao had luncheon with students from other roUeges.
-"Shared Dreams" photo exhibit and presentation; showed "Home from an
Raatem Sbore", Ran Clew, (Commission on A-A Affairs), spoke.
-"A1alkeroa" exhibit on PU-Am cannery workers
-"Talldng History', "'Utu and A Queen's Destiny" films at indigenous
Peopk!s' AIm Festival
We hope to h08t the first, regional Asian/Pacific Student Union retreat
amnetIrne in May. Presently, we are hiring new coordinators and establishing new advisor ship.

t
Women's Center

Group Accomplishments

N

N

Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Page 5

!ervices an~ AC' 'ivi' 'iss 'l5verview

GIOup nam.. ooordinIIar'I
name(I). IhIne number. 1ocalIon.
and S&A budget.

Lesianl
Gay/Bisexual
Peoples
Resource Center
0viI Barefoot.
Micha De Lana
x6544
Ubrary 3223

$5,779
MeChA
Rique! s.una8,
liza Sbptason

x6143
Ubrary

32~

$5,721
Women of Color
Maria 8J'IIganza
x6006
Ubrary 3211

$5,252

Evergreen
Political
Information Center
Lesnne Roberts

Group Mission

Stat~ent

Group - . CIIOIdIIIIIII'a
rwne(1), phone IIImber. Ioc:aIIon.
Ind 8&A budgtt

The L/GRC aim, to athieve freedom from InstltutlONl barriers and sodal Intolerance that exist to oontrol, discrImlnate aplnst, and denigrate
the integrity of lesbian and Gay people. The L/GRC also worke at
mOving beyond the level of demanding sexual tolerance to work for
freedom to affirm ourselves a8 a creative force. It works In support of
demande for soda! tolerance In the work place, c1aasroom, and the sodal Ufe of the Wider community. It works to achieve the poaslbillty
and right to chooee one's own sexuality, free oi lnslitutional and pubBc
penalty. The L/GRC also provides the opportunity for Lesbian and Gay
people to enoounter and pursue the creative affirmation of their Identity
through their sexual, ethicaJ. and political choices.
-

Student
Communication
Center
ICnoll Lowney, 0uiI

Did not respond to query.

wen..

and MIdwIIe Shephard
JI6785
CAB 206

InnerpIace it the center for ipIrltual explOJ'lltlon at Evergreen. We seek
to support each individual', quest for wholene!18 and to recognize the
IDIIfytns Jestures In the diverse pathways toward inner growth. As well,
we ue here to help with the expression of the fruits oi this eearch.
Forms this may take Include IIOdal service, spiritual feIlowahip and artt.
tic creation. Ultimately, our goal II to oonnect people, groups, and •
IAM!II In mder to foster global community. It wishes to fadlltate healing
and growth IlId to foster an awareness of the diversity of ep1rltulll
pstbi, and oi their unifying fea ture!I. innerplace alma to link spirituality
to acts oi 80dal CXJIIsdence and to support those arts which are evocative oi the spiritual.

Innerplace
Sc:oIt MUle

Did not respond to query.

The Women of Color Coalition is working With the Women's Center
and other student groups on International Women's Week. We hold
regular meetings and look forward to bringing some women of color to
the ampUl! In spring as speakers or performers, In addition to other
activities Within the Coalition. Meetings are held approximately monthly
and are announced through the mall and with flyers. One of our goals
this year II to Increase the visibility of the Women of Color Coalition,
90 all members of the campus oommunlty know that WE 00 EXIST!

JC61.s
Ubrary 322S

$2,878

Students With
Challenges
Ruth Leitz
x6092
Ubrary 3215

$2,274

EPICs mission Is to provide multi-media based information, research, and
support regarding loclll, national, and international Issues. EPIC bies to
reflect • humanistic, cultural learning approach with respect to a variety
of world views and to coordinate student-campus/community initiated
Ideas and projects.

Did not respond to query.
Graduate Student
Association

x6144
Ubrary 3222

$5,165

Miriam Lange
Eli StearHng

Governance

x64ai
Lab 3024

Meetings held in CAD 110
on Wednesday afternoons
between 3 and 5.

$2,213

$4,805
Environmental
Resource
Center
Mark Langston,
Rebecca Smith
x6784

CAB 306B

The mission of the ERC Is education and action . The ERC is the

This year In the E.R.C. Is going to be an exdtlng one- as awareness

primary campus source for environmental information. It serves as a ref-

grows and expande Ill1 over the world. people need a direction, plans
hope .for . the future. This. y~ar we .are ushering in what many
hope to be "The Decade of the Environment."
MAJOR plannlng .1I going on for the event of the decade-Earth Day
1990. Thl' Is the twentieth anniversary and promises to be a huge
community event, pulling together and empowering not only In the
South Puget Sound area, but the Earth. Earth Day Is only a week
awsy, 80 be ready. ThInk globally, act locally.!

erence for research papers, public Infopnatio.!l, and provldi!d the background materials for students to become actively Involved with
envlronmentsl I98Ues. The ERC actively works on environmental Issues,
organizes and pubBdzes campUl! events and coordinates With other student groups. The ERC Wishes to help students with research projects.
The ERC seeks to educate, outrea....h, and to act.

$4,559
Organic Farm
Steve Drutz,
ChrIstine Triplett

x6160
2712 Lewis Road

$3,630

Maarava
Elisa Cohn

x6493
Ubrary 3214

$3,344
Wilderness Center
Nadean Reinertsen
x6530
CRC 306

Murava serves the JeWish and non-JeWish community members by
providing a forum for Jewish culture and ooncerns. Emphasis II placed
on Jewish oonbibutlons to the oommunity as a whole. Paramoun t to our
miIaIon Is to support the free expression of ethnic and cultural diversity
while cultivating our indigenous resources.
The Wildern_ Center's Mission Is to program outdoor activities for students and to plan educational services relating to outdoor activities, and
Insure that partldpanta have access 10 safety equipment and to record
for others the amditlOll8 of each trip for Interest, planning. and safety.

$3,008

Slightly West
Karen HIatt
x6879
Ubrary 3210

Slightly West Is Evergreen's literary magazine. It seeks to provide a
means for studen 1 Blerary expression.

$2,963

Did not respond to query.

Did not respond to query.

Students with Challenges' mlll!llon Is to serve as a forum for students
to work cooperatively and provide leadership In addressing the rights,
responsibilities and non-academic neede of disabled students. To provide
activities that enlighten The Evergreen State College campus community
by dispelling myths, misconceptions and fear about the effects of dlsability. To provide advocacy and support of the rights and non-academic
needs oi students With challenges.

Students With a.alleng" sponsored the Window of Opportunity
ference for employees with challenges and employers of
dlvlduall last October. Students with Challenges also is
readers program that puts books on tape for students with
We are alwsY' educating The Evergreen State College campus
needs and desires of the challenged oommunity
Students with Challenges Is also taking part In passing a new bili to
form a task force that will enforce some guidelines for the proVider for
the challenged In higher education.
We also are producing a new brochure for the challenged community
of TESC. We hope to finish It by the end of this year.

The Graduate Students Assodatlon's mission Is to provide to graduate
students professional development services which are not furnished by
TESC ·communlty. It Is the responsibility of the GSA to identify
graduate atudents needs which are not being met through their academic
programs and other student organizations, and to design and coordinate
events which would meet those needs. These events should be tailored
to gnduate atudents, open to the Evergreen community and aimed at
personal, professional, and Intellectual development. It wishes to provide
opportunities for atudents to enhance their professional development. The
GSA alms to meet graduate students particular needs and concerns in
and to the Evergreen community.

There are two graduate programs at TESC: the Masters of Environmental
StudIes (MES) and the Masters of PubUc Administration (MFA). Both are
relatively new programs (6 and 10 years respectively), and have an
evenly combined constituency of over 225 active students on campus.
Cla8ge8 are scheduled In the evening and students are typically older
than undergraduates with most holding jobs In the professional environment. Originally, both groups were served by a single graduate student
coordinator, but this arrangement proved unsatisfactory In April 1989, It
was decided that the IOOpe of the graduate program as a whole would
best be served by If the MES and MPA programs each had a coordinator while maintaining a common emphasis to develop a graduate
community Within each dIsc:1pllne. The success of this new arrangement
has been immediate, resulting In over fourteen new events and services
slated for the 1989/90 academic year.

The Bike Shop operates to serve this oommunlty's alternative transportational and recreational neede. The Bilce shop Is ~cated to enoouraglng
the use oi blcydes a8 an alternative to less ecologically and economically
efficient means oi transportation. It provides a source of bicycle parts to
students who otherwise could not afford them. It provides a place
where .the oommunity and TESC students can receive low al8t mechanical help. It teaches aIdJls necessary for maintaining and repairing blcydes.
It advocates bicycles and optimizes useability.

The BIke Shop, located In the basement of the CAB building. Is open
to both students and faculty Monday to Friday from 2 to 8 p.m.
Tools, workstands, and a staff of volunteers are at your .oommand for a
tiny fee, and rep1acement parts are sold at low prices. We support the
use of bicycles not only as a recreational toy but also as a means of
efficient. basic trall9portation. ThIs year we are organizing a frame-weldIng workshop, and work dosely together with "Bikes not Bombsw , sendIng bikes and parts to Nicaragua.
If you are having trouble with your bike, do not know what to do
about It. or just need the right tool - or If you feel that your own
bike doee not give you enough trouble, oome on down and volunteer It'. all yours!

an~

Bike Shop
Tom Herring.

Julia

KlImeIc

x6399

CAB 011

$1,806
The Organic Farm provides 46 'c ommunity garden plots to TESC students, staff, faculty, and the Olympia oommunlty. It ooordinates the Harvest Fair and assists In the maintenance and operation of the Market
Gardens during summer months. It provides ongoing work projects and
gardening advice to the TESC community. It serves as an academic
fadlity by providing a laboratory for students as they work under the
direction of the farm manager, who coordinates practical learning with
the faculty of the Eoologlcal Agriculture program. It also works as an
experimental station for academic research. And finally, it works partly
as a market garden, acting as a model of a working commercial
enterprise In order to teach the realities of organic agricultural production.

students who want to be active In campus governance and/or
lID iIIua of dedIIlon-maldng at TESC. By preMrVing and orpnIzirIa IltUdmIl' effortIt. . the sec can help new generaliona of students
to realize their PerDllIce goab IlId to Increue the effectlven_ of
their ~tIoJl . In decision-making proe
Its p i II to provide III
e .. y, reliable, and thorough ace... for governance information. To
facllitste pro
foe wIectI"8 8ludent memben oi 0I'Pa, the PAD, the
Board oi 1'nII"', and Illy other dec:iIIoa-maldng body. To eupport ltudent initiated projects reilted 10 enhancing student Involvement and/or
ItUdmt a _ _ with campus governance.
To _

Informed

$2,ISOI

. M~ .Ch.A's mission Is to provide a forum for students, staff, and III
those CXJlloemed CIOIlUIIunlty members, who seek to identify resources ' and
to formulate responses to the educational neede of Chicanos. M.E.Ch.A.
seeks to fadlitate access, promote conditions conductive to educational
persistence, and oonbibute to academic and non-academlc culture of the
hoat Instltutlon(s).

The Women of Color Coalition was founded In 1975 In the pursuit of
equality, diversity, justice and freedom for all peoples and exists to:
Provide outreach and a support system for women of color on the
Evergreen State College Campus. This Includes oonsultatlon, oonversatlon
and support for and With women of color to aid In the retention of
these studen ts.
Encourage a multi-ethnic, anti-radst, non-sexist perspective both within
our constituency and within the greater campus community.
Work with the other four student groups In the First Peoples' coalition
to support and represent Issues for women of rolor.

w

Group Accomplishments

The organic farm II moving into high gear on redalmlng areas of the
farm that have beoome overgrown with perennial weeds, and establilhlng
a permanent aop-rotatlon &y8tem developed by the Eoologlca1 AgrIculture
Program. We also have a new dry-flower bouquet rack In the bookstore
this year.
We are doing a lII. .slve compost operation, and will have most of the
compost treated with Blo-dynamlc preparation by the end of spring.
New experiments with row coven and compost heap covers are ,
priority alIIo.
A twelve-credit Intensive course In organic, smlll-sca1e market gardening
II being ~ffered Spring Quarter at the farm.

Did not respond to query.
The Wildern_ Reeource Center h.. oontlnued to schedule low cost outIngs on a regular b.... each quarter In addition to oonductlng free or
low cost workshops In seuonal outdoor sldl1s. Perhaps the most significant development which should enhance the program ha. been the
.tsbllshment of two auO-groupi with-In the Wlldern_ Center'a jurisdiction; namely, an U8OCI.atillD of Alpine Instructor Guides and as U8OCIatlon oi River instn.Jctor Guids both of which will functillll. In part to
InIItruct and to guide In Wlldem_ activities. S " A funds provide for
leadenhlp and for proviIIon of safety equipment for outings.
Sllgltlly Wal, Evergreen'. literary/arts magazine, tries to serve I i •
vehicle for literary and artiItic expr_lon created by students, Itaff,
faculty, alumni, and the greeter Bvergreen Olympia/Tacoma community.
Thill year we have aIBo atrived to be "multicultural.- By this I believe
we wanted to oB. the Bversreen community a ooUection of well written/spoken from the heart wrltlngJI that reflecied a range of specific
badcpoundl, La African AmerIcan, AsIan AmerIcan, Chicana(o), <luist1an,
gay, Jewish. lesbian, Native American, punk. White, etc... Aa a staff I
think we approached Judllng oi the art by ..unIng that (In America)
these groupI have a few things In common, priIIIarIly the Bngllsh language. How we can judge what II a -good- use of this language II
an open matter of debate.

Student Art
Gallery
Angela Leonard

The Art Ga11ery's miIaIon Is to provide space for Evergreen student art
work and to document the work 'shown. The Student Art Gallery also
attempts to create an environment that Is supportive of Evergreen artists.

lI64U

Did not respond to query.

Ubrary 32U

724
KristIn Rowe,
Jobnathan Shennan
lI6O!I8
Ubrary 3224

$1,188
Parent Resource
Center
Gayle a_I ,'
x6098

Ubrary 3224

$688

The ~ce and Conflict Resolution Center provides practical support for
.tudents exploring and enacting their des!rel for a more open. peaceful
world. It wishes to fadlltate and promote peace-related research and art.
To assist atudent. In exploring nonviolent waY' of Interacting and to
CIlIIfront militarism as It relates to the college experience. The Peace and
ConflIct Resolution Center also provides support for peace-related activism.

The Parent Resource Center Is committed to the physical, emotional,
ip1ritua1, and Intellectual well-being of student-parents and their familles.
NontJ'llditional families, single-parent families, and families of oolor have
special needs a. they struggle with the prejudice and insensitivity of the
culture we Bve In. Our mIaaion II to support and assist student-~rents
and tl!eIr families In balancing these needs, and to enhance their Uves
as students, and as parents. It wishes to establish a base for referral
and resources that II free and avallable. To develop a dependable base
for dIild-care and oontlnued parental support.

Did not respond to query.
In December the Parent Resource Center hosted a holiday celebration
the children on campus, this Is an annual event. Another annual
Earth Day, is being co-sponsored with the Daycare Center. int,erestedl
pIIleJlts should oontact Gayle
x6036
A fmti1y swim time Is being offered free of charge to
and their famll1es. A sign up sheet Is located outside the P.R.C,
II limited.

There are several new student groups with little or no S&A support this
year. Next winter when the CAB expansion is completed how are all the
student groups going to fit in the ~ted office space? How are we going
to pay for all the new student groups with legitimate constituencies.
Should some groups be eliminated? All these questions will face the S&A
board in the years to come.
'

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990
Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Page 7

Opinion

Letters

Coke sweetened .A partheid?

by Jon Epstein

It's spring aDocation time for Student
Activities and a time of mass confusion
and misunderstandings.
How can we have more students every
year and yet IW more money for stlllkfll
groups? Is there a clandestine movement
on the part of the S&A Board to

undennine student organizations?
Come to our allocation discussions
next week and find ouL There are
basically two reasons student groups are
unlikely to see much increase in their
budgets over the next decade. For one
thing more students bring more needs for
that pot of money. More students mean
more student organizations want to be
funded.
More students mean more
pressure on professional staff to provide
more services.
The two things I hear student
coordinators request the most is need for
office space and the need f(X more
professional staff.
Both these things
Speaking of big
require big bucks.
bucks, the cost of building the new
addition to the CAB building is $1.5
million. S&A plans to borrow most of
the money.
This will commit many
future Greeners to paying off the loan.
The good news is that many people
around here have worked hard f(X a
number of years to come to an Bgn'JCment
about "student office space." The amount
of S&A dollars that will go towards
paying for the CAB remodel will be
much less than had the college chosen a
more "lraditional" route.
Those of you who have not been
here very long may not know that the
college "Administration" gave student
groups 10 years notice on their
occupancy of the third floor of the
Library building. That was 10 years ago.
It could be argued that past S&A Boards
have been irresponsible by aUocating 100
much money. They could have started
saving money many years ago which
would have reduced the burden that you
and I must suffer today.
It is my
perception
that
many
student
organizations on campus were created
during these "fat times" of irresponsible
fiscal managemenL
Student groups
should be aware that the increase of
students on campus, which leads to the
need for more professional staff to
provide services, combined with the costs
of remodeling translates to less dollars 10
spread around to sLudenL groups.
We all agree that Congress should
have the guts to make the cuts necessary
to bring down the deficit right up until
they start talking about cULting our
favorite programs. Politics is a thankless
task. Leftists like myself may rejoice in
the fact that the United States is on a
decline as a world military and economic
power, bUL this also means the standard
of living in America is faDing for all of
us. More on this theme next weeki
Jon "Eppo" Epstein is an Evergreen
student and a member of the much vilified
S&A board.
The allocation meetings to which

Eppo referred lOOk place on Monday and
Wednesday this week. --Editor

The sound and fury on this campus
about
the
Coca-Cola
Company's
involvement in South Africa is both
misinfonned and misleading, and seems
to me to have come about through an
unwillingness of some of the more
reactionary types to find out the facts for
themselves.
According to the book ShoppJng For
a Belter World, Coke is involved in
South Africa only to the extent that it
sens its products to independent dealm
and franchises within the country. The
company has no strategic involvements
whatsoever.
Certainly it may be assumed some
black South Africans enjoy Coca-Cola.
To force Coke to withdraw its products
from South Africa would mean depriving
aD South Africans, be they black, white,
or colored, of the right to drink iL That
is aD.
Additionally, Shopping for a Belter
World lists PepsiCo as being involved in
South Africa to' exactly the same degree
as Coke. Indeed, politicaDy conscious
Greeners would do well to boycott
PepsiCo for helping to bankroll
Concerned Women of America, an ultraright-wing women's organization that has
been at the forefront of the battle against
reproductive freedoms and equal rights
for women and homosexuals, and is
intent upon forcing the entire United

States to adhere to their narrow-minded, hysteria of a few knee-jerk reactionaries
that the facts have been overlooked. I
hate-filled brand of Christianity.
But don't take my word for it Do would advise everyone to check out the
your homework. I don't know how situation thoroughly the next time a cause
Coca-Cola came to be the scapegoat for . like . this comes around instead of
.
an angry mob whose concern for the foUowing blindly like sheep.
Me, I'm going to have myself 8
rights of black South Africans is quite
justified. but it seems, that everyone CoU.
involved has been so caught up in the Pa·u' H. Henry

MAY 11
1951, OLANDER 5I<I~PED

T~RO\v'

'., AND ON

SC~OOL

10 Go

lIM

OUT.'.'!

FIS/./1NG

AND L.IED To HI S MDTf.lER

ABOuT IT . .•
• ,<!JSOCI4rl oN OF
OVERLY TQuCHY
STu 0 ENTS

don't have a positive impact on our
I write you as one white person in a society). Racism in its entirety, including
racist society to another. Like you, I am , racist prejudice, should be the fOC\lS' of
committed to ending racism, and also like efforts to end racism. The role of antiyou, I identifY with the struggles of . racist white people is to criticize and
African-Americans and other people of educate white people, not to criticize
color. (I use the word African-American people of color, which easily plays into
as a description · of Americans--N<Xth, racism and reproduces racist relationships.
Central, and South--of African descent, People of col(X are perfecdy capable of
and out of respect f<X the right of engaging in self-criticism within their
oppessed peoples to name themselves.) communities.
Of course, the most virulent and
However, I disagree with much of your
response to the criticisms of you made by devastating forms and effects of
prejudice, along with racist economic
some membm of Umoja.
and
political
You make the dangerous mistake of exploitation
confusing "bigotry" or prejudice with disenfranchisement, are suffered by
racism. Prejudice based on skin color, people of color. I don't doubt that you
culture, or sexual preference, among other have experienced prejudice as a result of
things (but not "race," which is a social your multi-cultural baclcground and your
construct with no basis in biology), is a close relationships with people of color.
terrible thing.
But prejudice is not However, you have not experienced
racism; rather it is one aspect of racism. prejudice or racism in the way that
Racism is a system of economic, people of color do. Whether you like it
political, and social oppression of people or not, you are a beneficiary of privileges
of color in this country and around the bestowed upon white people in this
world. Prejudice is the inIerpersonal society. You say that you do not identify
manifestation of racism encouraged by yourself as white or European-American,
but our society does. Throughout your
racist ideology.
I take issue with your description of life, you have had access to social,
African-Americans who are prejudiced as political, and economic opportunities
racists. Everyone who grows up with denied to people of color. Nowhere in
racism is p-ejudiced to SOOle degree, your article do you acknowledge your
including me, and including people of privileged position as a white person.
Why don't you identify yourself as
color (a natural result of life in a racist
white? To be white is not a matter of
society). But a racist is someone who
suPJXX1S racism (the structures of choice, and neither is your access to
economic, political, and social oppression racist privileges as a result of your skin
of people of color) and so only a very color. However, white skin is not wrong,
few people of color, token benefICiaries nor is it the cause of racism. We all can
of white supremacy, could be called choose to work to end racism, and as I
racists (and they might better be referred see it. we white people as material
(though not spiritual) beneficiaries of
to as brainwashed sell-outs).
Furthennore, even without calling it . racism have a special responsiblity to do
racist, your criticism of p-ejudice on the so. (It is not necessary to marry or parent
part of people of color is misplaced. a person of color to wapt justice for all
Prejudice which is backed up by the people of color.) You should take pride
structures of racism is a completely in being part of a long tradition of white
different thing than p-ejudice · which is people who oppose racism. As a white
not The prejudice of people of color is : person, you are part of a community of
a natural result, and not 8 cause, of white people working in solidarity with
racism. In a racist society, suspicion of the African-American community, and
white people by people of col(X is a part of a larger anti-racist community.
justifiable instrument of self-preservation. But you are not and never win be a part
Many people of color would never Dl8ll')' of the African-American community.
In my opinion, your failure to
a white person for good reasons (which
is not to say that inter-racial relationships identify yourself as a white person in

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

On Saturday, March 3. Christian up; but it was his concert and his
artist and social commentator Steve Camp opinion.
pcrlormed for a throng of Olympia-area
But then the baptismal walen hit the
Christians in the BVQgreen Gym. In fan. I was instandy offended when
response to Kim McKain's article of Camp said that the most crucial thing any
praise, I feel I must also respond.
person could do was to renounCe one's
I left the camp concezt thoroughly self love and self confidence.
His
shaken and angry. There were so many message was that God shOlJ1d be so
things the man said that deeply disturbed impc:xtant in your life that without Him,
me, yet I felt no avenue was open to you are nothing. He makes or breaks .
express my outrage, because I felt that I you. I find it a terrifying thought that
was a definite minority iIi the audience there are christians running around out
that night; I remained sitting, rather than there with no idea of who they are other
standing, for the Lord.
_ than wchristians." I find it terrifying that
I SIU quietly Ihrough Camp's opening they ooly feel defined as people
anti-abortion remarks and his subtle slurs according to one sole belief, rather than
directed at astrology. Quiet I was, as I
according to the multitude of facets
felt that these issues were bound to come which make up the human heart. Mine,
anyway.
STAFF BOX
Other niggling remarks left me cold
as wen, such as his statement that it is.
Editor: Kevin Boyer
great that the Berlin Wall has been taken
Managing Editor: Tedd Kelleher
down,
because now he can go over there
Business Manager: Edward Martin III
and
do
a concm for ChrisL Somehow,
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
.
I fail to believe that this is the point of
Ad Layout/Calendar. Tina Cook
the East Germans' newfound freedom.
Asst. Ad Layout: Heather Candelaria
Production Manager: Scott A. Richardson They are not necessarily free to welcome
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Jesus; they are free to be people with
Distribution: Ron Austin
Typist: Catherine Darley
Arts and Entertainment: Andrew Hamlin
Headline Writer: Dan 'Toasthead' Snuffin
Poetry Editor: Katrina Barr
In reading the last issue of the CPI,
Cartoonists: creatively dry.
I was str:uck by the fact that a few of my
Advisor: Dianne Conrad
Staff Writers: Tina Cook. Scott A. feUow students, as evidenced by a photo,
Richardson, TIm Gibson. Paula Lan~ decided to pay homage to the late
Elisa R. Cohen, Andrew Hamlin. Chris Archbishop Romero by brandishing an
Bader, Carol HalI, Jon (Eppo) Epstein, FMLN banner.
This seems decidedly perverse. Oscar
Dan Snuffin, Stephen Martin, Scott Srown.
BaITett Wilke, SCot Wheat, News Release. Romero was a brave, eloquent man who
stood for peace. The FMLN is basically
Editorial Policy:
a group of bandits, like the Contras-The Cooper Point Journal (CPJ) editors except left. It is a fact that while the.
and staff. may amend these policie,. '
FMLN mip,t not be ·'as treacherous as
Objective:
the cpJ editor and staff are ARENA. it does its best to emulate some
determined 'to make the CPJ a student of the worst traits of its, right wing
forum for communication which is both adversary. HlDldreds of murdaed people
of mSalvador give lie to claims of
entertaining and Informative.
DeadliDer.
FMLN benevolence.
Calendar-Friday, noon
So what? you might ask. Aftez·all. it
Artlcles:-Frtday, noon
is a civil war, and the FMLN the far
~~onday, nOon
lesser of evils. This kind of value
A~~onday, 5 pm
judgtment is indicative of the IacIt of
RulH for Sub'mUIlona:
Sqbmiaslona are accepted from CPJ critical reasoning by many Gteeners about
staff members u well u students and foreign policy. You ask them why they
community members. SubmillSions must suppcn the FMLN, and it boils down to
be oriJdnal. Before undertaldng time- the assertion that the U.S. government
consuuUng or lengthy projects, hOwever, supp<Xts ARENA. Hard to refute such .a
it'a a good idea to contact the editors compellingly reactionary argument, but let
ahead of deadllne.
me try.
Submission IIhould be brought to the
I oppose U.S. intczvention in El
CPJ offices on an IBM formatted Salvador. because it is oppressive and
dlekette. Any word processing file patriarchal. We seem to be hell-bent on
compatible with WordPerfect 5.0 III
acceptable. Disks should · include a recreating our mis. with Nicaragua. I
douC,le-spaced printout, with the author'a come to the IDpic with a bit of
name. daytime phone number and knowledge. My family has been involved
address. Disks will be returned u soon all in the Sanctuary project This was
established to harbcx refugees from El
possible.
If you ~ unable to comply with the
submission requirements for any reason.
contact the editors for usistance.
(.etten:
Letters will be accepted ·on allllUbjects.
They must include the author's name,
About one month ago, I was in the
phone number and address. Although the Housing Community Center playing
address and phone number will not be bingo. There were only about 10 of us
published, the CPJ will not publish letters
so whenever someone entered the centc"
submitted without thill Information.
Letters will be edited for libel. we would urge them to play. Two
grammar, spelling and apace. Letters 'women came ·in (who happened to be
should be ~ words or less. Every Japanese) and I asked dlem to play. As
attempt is made to publish as many they walked out of hearing 'distance one
letters as poSSible; however, space of the bingo players, in a· joking manner,
limitations and timelines may influence Said "Ycab, imagine them playing, and
publication.
he continued by saying "Bingol Bingolw
Letters do not represent the opinions
in
a Japanese' (or what he thought was)
of the cpJ staff or editors.
accent
I immediately said "That really
Adverti,inF
The cPJ is responaible for restitution offends me, please don't say that." He
to our advertising customers for dlistakes defensively replied with, "I didn't mean
in their advertfaements in their first it like that, you know, you've seen
p'rinting only. Any subsequent printing of ShogwLw And it WIL'III·t even his racist
thit mlBtake are the sole responsibility of remark 1bIt.angered me. most It was
the advertising customer.
wtJen I 1<X*ed around the room for
Staff Meettnlll
suppcxt
and all I met was bIand stares,
9PeJl meetings are held weekly in the
CPJ office (CAB 306A), Fridays at noon. embarrassed silence and averted cyes.
To eublCribe to the Cooper Point These same people have sat in seminar
Journal contact u. at 866-6000 ext. 6213• • denouncing racism and have signed

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

\

basic human rights--one of which is the
right to choose a religion, if I am C<XreCt
But the icing on the holy bread that
night was Steve Camp's comments about.
AIDS. I went to see him having heard
that he was a Christian artist wwith a
cause," and I was interested. Instead,
what I heard him say was that condoms
are "not the answer to AIDS; rather,
"Jesus Christ is the answer to AlDS.w
Pardon me. Mr. Camp: did yoo mean to
infer that if one loves Jesus, one will not
contract the deadly dlsease? Do you not
agree with me that · someone living at
risk, whose love for Cluist is every bit as
valid as your own, could still come down
with AIDS? ' Those terminal patients,
though they .love Jesus, are still going to
die. In great pain. Probably with great
loss of dignity.
I completely support the dying AIDS
patient who turns to Jesus in his,lher final
hours because it puts hislher mind at ease
before death. But Camp infuriated me
by saying that the pain, the suffering, the
loneliness. the death that surely lies ahead
is inconsequential compared to the fact

that the doomed soul has turned to the
Strangely reminiscent of the
Christian pro-life sentiment, wouIdn'l you
say? That is, I feel that they do not
consider who will take care of all those
unwanted babies; rather, what's more
important is "thou shalt not kill." Well,
when Jesus Himself · is retrieving
abandoned newb<Xns left in inner-city
garbage cans, when Christians hang
around longer than the time it takes to
merely convert someone, when they stick
it out through the pain, then rrnlybe I will
give the Steve Camps of this worid a
listen. But in the meantime, Christians,
please hear me: it's the hurting that·s
important.
It's helping your fellow
hwnans that is important, it's giving of
yourself to ease the pain of others, it's
holding a dying man's hand, not rushing
out of his hospital room crying
"Hallelujah!" and scribbling down another
laDy marie.
I most sincerely hope,
though I will not pray, that I live to see
the day when your caring does not end
with the salvation of the soul.
Amy .Malik
Lord.

Mixing FMLN, Romero 'per~erse'

Manning responds to ,Hall
by Susau Mannina

Christ or condoms for AIDS?

writing about issues of racism is
unethical. There is no objective truth;
what you write is a result · of your
perspective and experiences, and the color
of your skin is the key factor shaping
your experiences of racism in our SOCietY,.
Your ·experiences and knowledge (like
mine) are fundamentaUy diffemlt from
those of people of color. (If your
marriage has affected your experiences,
then identify yourself as a white person
married to an African-American man.)
Failing to identify yourself as white
implies the arropnt and incorrect
assumption that the col(X of your skin in
our racist society does not lffect what
you write, and hence denies the reality of
racism. It also lets people asswne that
you are African-American, which is
misleading at best and dishonest at worst.
Journalistic and political integrity require
that YOlJ identify yourself as white, to
clarify the source of your eJtperiences and
the limits of your knowledge of people of
color, and also to set an example for
other white, people of a white person
taking a stand against racism.
I support your choice to address
issues of racism in print White people
have a responsibility to educate ourselves
and other white people about ,racism, and
writing articles is one way to do so. But
as a white. person. you do not have the
autb<Xity to speak for black people or to
patetnalisUcally assume a' knowledge of
African-American culture to which you
do not have access. Why write for an
African-American newspaper J'IIIber than
seeking out f<XurnS f<X addressing white
people? African-Americans do not need
white people to educate them about
racism, but white people certainly do.
I wonder how accurately or
completely you described the criticisms of
you made by Umoja members. Athough
I cannot be certain based on your article,
I suspect that I share most (X all of their
criticisnis. and I hope that you will take
their ideas and mine as construetive. I
offer my criticism with respect and in the
hope that you will use it to broaden your
analysis, reevaluate your methods, and
heighten your effectiveness as a white
person working to end racism.
Susan Manning is an Evergreen
student.

Salvador that the Reagan adJirinistration
wouldn't
admit
were
politicaUy
persecuted, because such an admission
would reveal the blood on our hands. So
the refugees, if caught, would be sent
back to m Salvador-- where the friendly
neighborhood death squad waited.
In light of this activism I define
meaningful oppOsition to U.S. f<Xeign
policy as entailing.a bit more than words.
I don't want sonY; earnest pseudo-radical
to preach to me &bout the virtues of the
FMLN, usually from the omniscient
height of her (X his white middle class
affluence. Who are they to pick sides in
someone else's war'l Are these the same
people who don't want to see the United
States ever get involved .in armed
conflict?
It's evident that die double standard
exists 'btanse too many U.S •. citizens,
regardless of professed liberalism, devalue
lives in developing nations. Let them
fight, this culturaUy racist reasoning goes,
at least it's not us.
These people also ignore the fact
that we are not the only external
influence on the situation. Do they think
the AK-47s the FMLN uses are grown by
campesinos in their fields on little
Kalishnikov trees? The people of El
Salvador . are caught up in another
inevitable power struggle between the
world's bullies. This intolerable reality
cannot persist.
Whatever happened to pacifism as

an enobling trait amongst my progressive
peers? Wby is there no longer reverence
for the non-violent methods , of social
refonn practiced by Mohandas K:. Gandhi,
Martin Luther King, and others? Could it
be that we are buying into the
conservative mentality of using violence
as a cure-aD, and meeting reaction with
reaction? I think many like 10 posture,
and pretend to be make-believe
revolutionaries. Why don't they keep
fantasizing, watch "Rambo" movies, and
leave El Salvador alone?
It's encouraging that the latest news
has the FMLN sitting down to seriously
consider forming a coalilion with
opposition parties to face ARENA at the
poIls next year. This will be a
disappointment to those who- Ict their
voyeuristic jollies from , the perpetuation
of conflict in El Salvador• . Yet it is
heartening to those of us who Ilave a true
respect for humanity, and nOt just the
side with the "better" fighten. .
The recent student referendum on El
Salvador wasn't a bad starL It is not
patronizing to work f<X peace in strifetom countries. Send a message to your
govemrnent- whether it be through civil
disobedience, marches, or letters. Just
don't pretend to have aD the answers.
After all, you attend a school that
sells "No habla espanol, shmuck" buttons
in its bookstore. Conservatives don't hold
a monopoly on intolerance.
Brendan WilUams

Eyes averted from racism
W

petitions against apartheid. But when it
comes down to actually doing something,
and 'not theorizing, all I witnessed was
toIal apathy. I was the only person of
color who heard this remarIc, and once
again the person of color, as repeatedly
happens in situations simiIar to this one,

had to make a stand.

I know I may
sound angry and might offend people, but
I am angryl Let's not talk about saving
the planet when we can't even stand up
to the subtle racism that occurs daily on
this campus.
ADIIe Clark

Clark speaks for self
Well thank you Ms. Hall for taking
the time to write me. H you remember in
the very beginning of this silly argument,
my question to you was, "Why don't you
identify yourself as someone of European
descent?w The only reason why I asked
that question was because I believe it is
very different to write about the
community of African descent when you .
yourself are not of African descenL I say
that because I think you can give people
the wrong repesentation. Apparently that
has happened several times before. I

know that it is a stt7eotype that all
people of African descent look alike as
well as think alike, however, I didn't
think that you Ms. HaIl would faD into
that trap because as you just stated you
are and have been in relationships with
people of African descenL Ms. Hall I
(Heather) was the one who addressed the
question, not "8 vocal few w or not
"UMOJA." But anyway thank you again
for taking the time to write me, not "us."
Heatber Clark

Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Page 9



f,

Are you a New White Person?

Restaurant sports
spiritual patrons
by Chris Bader
According to Dan Kass, bartender for
the Seven Gable's, a medium once visited
the restaurant The medium proclaimed
the bouse to be full of ghosts. including
one of a young lady who likes to sit at
one of the bar SIrois.
Despite the great DlDnbers of ghosts
purportedly haunting the buillting, only a
select few bave seen them. Sally, one of
the owners of the Seven Gables, is one
of those privileged few.
Sally lived and worked in the Seven
Gables buillting for seve:al years and
often beard strange, inexplicable noises

WORDS
FROM
UMOJA
"I ask you, which is worse: rednecks
who only let you paint horses, or liberal
groupies who only let you paint flower
pedals (sic)? I say both are equally
suppresive to the free spirit This is
another wall between Evergreen and
cultural diversity. People at Evergreen
don't seem to want 10 be culturally
diverse. But worse yet, it's a barrier
against intellectual and spiritual diversity.
Is Evergreen ready and willing to accept
the dloughts and ideas of a black person
from the streets of L.A.? It doesn't seem
like it"
Taken /rom recent Dr. Mangrove
wallpaper.

which kept h& awake at night She
finally moved out of the building. but
not, she says, because of the ghosts, but
because. she found it too stJessfu) living
and working in abe same place.
Sally's strangest experience occurred
on the Saturday bef(R CbrisImas, three
or four years ago. Sally and 8DCICher
worker, Tim, were alone at the bar. It
was very late at night as the two were
closing the restauranL
As Sally and Tim passed by an
archway which leads to the kitchen, they
both observed a strange form. Near the
kitchen doorway was a tall, thin, misty

News Release

Last year, in an ingenious maneuver
to seule a budgetary dispute, Rio LaraBellon, the coordinator for the Evergreen
Indian Center challenged the staff at
S&A 10 a game of SIahal, a ttaditional
Native American stick game. Game
fellows that they are, the S&A staff rose
to die challenge and an agreement was
reached whereby the loser would become
responsible for the disputed amount, and
the proceeds from the auction would be
divided in oSUch a way as to favor the
winner. The event was a great success
for everyone, one of those "win_win"
situations: although S&A won the Slahal
event, they absorbed the disputed amount
About $500 was raised by the auction of
various items donated by staff, faculty,
and students.
Well, it's Slahal time again, and this
year we expect an even greater success.
Teams have been designated and the
atmosphere of friendly competitiveness
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The

head and sbouIders of the entity were
well defined, but the legs tapered off and
were hazy; "sat of like Casper the
ghost", mentioned Sally. It was
impossible to identify the figure as its
exact features were uncle&!'.
Sally and Tim looked at me another
in amazement and when · they looted
back. the ghost bad disappeared. Sally
does not rccaIl being scared during the
Cltperieoce, merely interested.
Later the two agreed as to what the
ghost looked like, but Tim remained
uneasy talking about the experience. As

--.

of yet, nobody else has bad a similar
experience.
Strange Ihings cootinue to happen at
the Seven Gables.
occasionally
appliances appear to tum on and off by
themselves. Sally even sent a WOlter
home early one night, when "the ghosts"
frightened her with loud noises, and a
collapsing shelf.
I'll be sute to keep you updated on
any new oulbreaks of supernatural
mischief at the Seven Gables.
Chris Bader is an Evergreen student
and writes this weekJy collUM lor the

CPJ.

Slahal attracts five teams

~~yy~~~~~~~~~~NY

CLASSIFIED RATES

figure in the shape of a person.

,

I

III

will make for an exciting evening. TIle conlribute an item fur the auction
Indian Center and Native American (proceeds from which will benefit the
Studies will have its team; S&A's team Longhouse Project and the Indian Student
is IooIdng forward to another victory; the Scholarship), call either Rio or Tracy at
Teachers' Progmm is competing this 866-6000, x6105, <r Mark at x6220.
year; the Taholah Community Project has
......L
a team; and rumor has it that the
Campus
Paperback
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" AIII_,y_'. KnowI~n.cUnKlnde'lll'rten, I > y "Coyote Dollars" have been printed 10
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2. The Hun .... Rod Oc:'_,by Tom Clancy, IBerkIey, 54 50 I
The ncredlble chaSe 01 a nucleaf submarlle.
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3, ~.,,;...;;;, by Meioay _IHaz_ $8.95.)
of which there are many, including
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~~~.J~~~..':!~~~ ) .~_~the_enVllOO~
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items, in which bidders can write in dleir
6, WebQfO"';" .. b;: v . C -AncO~ ,P~-~,;
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. The biI1h_01 • ~ ~""-.
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7. SI¥, I>y DanoeIIe SOleI, llleli. $5,951 EJCpIotes It1e
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_.
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.The~
_
CaMn ....~camoc:": , _ _ __
at 6 pm, Saturday, April 14 in Library
9' ~~1=~~'=~~
4300; the auction begins at 10:30. If
10, The Sholl - . by Aooamuncte ""","" IDoII. $4.95.)
you'd like more information, if you have
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step in his personal exploration of race
What's in a name? At Evergreen we issues. TIle issue of racism as addressed
spend countless hoW'S attempting 10 by the college will wend down many
define terms. Although this is a useful lanes, but individuals within this
exercise, the results of the work are oftm institution must pursue dleir own paths of
as ambiguous as the pre-argument ideas. self-questioning.
As we move to bCcomc a more culturally
Only after beginning with an
diverse college, several tenDs are being admission ("I am a racist. ") can an
bandied about which will require
thoughtful consideration: multiculturalism,
A.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _' .Eo._ _ _ _ _ _
prejudice, racism.
There is growing interest in helping individual begin to explore what ~
people of color and whites aIiIce 10 Ieam must do to eliminate the ways that racism
ways to promote tolerance in a diverse
community. To this end, seve:al students is manifested in their daily interactions.
from Evergreen travelled to Phoenix in smni~\:~::C~~ipainfsa~: '
March to auend Ii conference on racial
justice. Upon their return to Olympia a . "be palient" qualifier may be, a minority
racial justice workshop was held for of people on this predominately white
student group coordinaIors. Enlbusiasm 111 campus are aware of the racism which
the workshop was high, and some steps occW'S-many deny its presence, many
deny their own racism, many believe the
were taken toward acdon.
Another recent example of racial issue must be attacked by the African

awareness was a CPI editorial by American community.
Umoja's (African American student
Managing Editor Tedd KeUeher, in which
....tinn) constituents are reticent to
_._
he admitted to being racist He made this nroani
claim because he reacts to people speak out on the topic which SUII'OWlds
them, in part because they are isolaled in
depending on their ethnicity.
their plight as spokespelSOllS for an entire
Tedd's confession is an applOpriate
race. This role is uncomfortable for the
relatively few African Americans on
GOINGcampus.
In fact, it is unwittingly impolite for

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Found: aaaress bOOk In Llbi8ry near

whites to ask more from blacks than they
would be expected to be asked
themselves. To request an opinion from a
person of color because of their color
often is considered rude and unthinking,
helping neither person involved to come
to a better understanlting.
The method which some Umoja
students encourage is for whites to seek:
answers from themselves, in part as a
,race, but perhaps more importantly as
individuals. This sentiment is echoed by
a slowly increasing number of whites,
including Clarence Glover, who has
written a carefully considered "guide" for
the New White Person (see accompanying
article). Glover's technique heralds the
coming of a raciaDy just society in which
all people will \)e sensitive to the
aspirations of olbers.
In American society--yes, on the
Evergreen campus--most people are
rugged individualists, which should bode
weD for the possibility that Glover's New
White population will grow. Through
self-examination we intelligently challenge
our systems of belief and create insightful
modes of living, which will allow for the
New White 10 come of age. As Glover
implies, however, dlis evolution will meet
· widl resistance from diose less
enlightened.

SHERWOOD GLEN

STORE

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notion for everyone to live by, When
self-interests clash and confIk:t emerges,
ground rules must be negotiated, or none
will survive. We mQve to the
understanding that sclf-intezest is not the
same thing as selfishness.
This does not mean that the New
White Person will be "pals" widl
everyone, but neither will we be patton
or pawn.
On the international scene, we
recognize that it will be to the realistic
self-interest of whites to learn to play an
appropriate and creative role as a
minority race among Ihe colored majority,
not in ordea- 10 ingeniously maintain
control, but 10 enjoy dignity in peace
with other peoples who are taking power
commensurate with their numbers.
(6) TIlE NEW WHITE PERSON
TAKES RISKS. If we act for change, we
must expect retaliation from those who
pppoSe us. We must be prepared to not
only say we stand against racism, but
show by our actions that we truly do.
(7) TIlE NEW WHITE PERSON IS
OPEN 10 NEW LIFE S1YLES and sees
the connection between life style and life
commitment We are not only open to a
clearer understanding of other lifestyles,
but we are able 10 incorporate parts of
the lifestyles of those different from us
into our own.
(8) TIlE NEW WHITE PERSON IS

beauty.
(3) 1lIE NEW WlDTE PBRSON
UNDERSTANDS POWER and the ways
of dealing with those in powtZ. If justice
is to prevail, changing altitudes is not
enough. PoWet8 that determine · the
present must be modified <r replaced by
powcn that will shape tommow.
In American society, real power is
held by a very few men, corporations,
and institutions. Most while people, too,
are victims, not oppressors, used by those
in powtZ to maintain a racist system that
locks everyone in. The New White
Person understands that changes in power
structmes do not simply "give" power 10
others and "take" power from whites, bu1
rather these changes help all persons
shiue in new definitions of power.
(4) THE NEW WHITE PERSON IS
A PRO-ACTOR, NOT ARE-ACTOR.
We know that change will not come
unless political initiative can be wrested
from those committed to preserving the
status quo. We will be politic81 beings
who select allies and fonn coalitions that
can effectively challenge the powers that
be. We are ready to initiate change, not
merely to respond to bad results.
(5) THE NEW WlllTE PERSON
ACCEPTS "SELF-INTEREST" as a valid

by Scott A. Ridlardson

__

TIpl preferablY with liner ana polIS.

liberal "good feeling." Paralleling the new
consciousness of others, we will value
OW'Selves as people and celc1nte our

COMMITI'ED 10 PLURALISM. We
appreciate many cultures, many groups,
many persons different from ourselves.
But we do not feel compelled to imitate
them or demand that they be like us.
Willing to live in conflict &nil able 10
endure ambiguity, as New Whitel we will
celebrate the many diverse capabilities
and tensions wilhin ourselves, aDd delight
in the rich potentials of other persons and
cultures.
(9) THE NEW WHITE PERSON
NEEDS SUPPORT GROUPS 10 provide
the security that will encourage openness
and growlh. We recognize the need for
kindred spirits to suppon our egos,
maintain our sense of security, and
stimulate
our move into new
consciousness. Suppon groups would
provide opportunities for evaluating,
strategizing, and celebrating. They would
be places for honestly and love, criticism
and forgiveness.
If a non-alienating society is 10
become a, reality, people must be in
touch with themselves, and practice at
first hand how to live with, be sensitive
to and respect the moods, wads, and
values
of
others.
From
such
learning/sharing communities, people can
draw strength and wisdom and forge a
world community in which all people can
live humanely.

Transform racists to New Whites

_.he

- -- -- -- -

by CIar~e Eo Glover, Jr., DJredor of
IDtereuitural Educ:atloo and Miaority
Student Affairs, Soathena MetbocUst
Ulliversity, DaUas.
Some of us whites are experiencing
a new undelslanding fX what it means to
' be white, and feel the urge to push this
awareness to its limiIB. We are awaking
to the truth of our minority status among
world population, we want 10 ask if our
whiteness can stand for anything positive,
and, if 10, wbat actions are ~uirccl of
us to deal humanely with the realities
that confront us. If 88 While Per80ns we
seek integrity for ourselves and justice
for everyone, what does the new scene
require of us? Here we popose some
skctclUnp of The New White Person.
(1) TIlE NEW WHITE PERSON
MOVES BEYOND aUll.T to reality-,
action aimed at justice. We must mobilize
for change, not out of guilt for the pest,
but out of commitment to the future. We
need not waste time with selfincrimination or verbal abuse from odlers;
1'IIthez, we move delibezately to discover
and deal with real causes and solutions.
(2) TIlE NEW WHITE PERSON
VALUES SELF WORTH. We cmsider
ourselves important, even before we act
Therefore, we n~ not undertake projects
10 prove our word!. We will accept
ourselves and act out of that security. We
will no longer need 10 search for that

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From die Phoenix racial justice
conference also came a list of terms with
this preface: "Self-definition - is [an]
important component of self-determination
and assertion of rights. " The self-identity
of die "New White Person" will
effectively create die equivalent of a new
race (or sub-race, if the biological tie to
"white" is difficult for die reader to
sever). Then the New White Person will
be subject 10 racism from diose who
disagree with the ~mises set ford! in
the evolving doctrine.
The new race, as it· attempts to
"wrest control" from die power elite,
almost certainly will come under attack
from more traditional or conservative
thinkers. It is unfortunate that this clash
must occur, but just as inevitable. Most
important will be the necessity for the
New White Person not to become
pompous in his or her righteousness.
Factions formed by self-pride cannot help
but fan prejudicial flames.
AccordDlgly, the transition at college,
national, and world leveis wiD be slow
enough not to cause an unpredictable
reaction. Again, minorities will be urged
10 be patient as the gradual process of
majority awakening plods along.
Reducing racism
will
require
oPJX'C8SOl'S 10 acknowledge that it exists
wilhin themselves. TIle oppressed must
quell the temptation to edify the
owessors. This may result in an
,unfortunate damping effect on the action:oriented imperative of the hopeful
community.
Scott Richardson is a racist.

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Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Page 10 Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

,

Page 11

Arts a Entertainment

Zombies, from page 12
common is not clear, but in Snuffm's
eyes all fall short of God's perfection...if
he admilS to a God in the first place).
"Pope on a Rope," "Antichrist Picnic,"
"Holy Water Reservoir" ("With holy
running water/Would we be baptized
when we shower?/Would our shit be
consecrated/Or would we just be
constipated?") ...you get the picture.
Other colorful animals populate this
cassette: Fred the cat ("Fred doesn't

Trujillo directs 'The Elephant Man'
TIIB EulmANl' MAN,

A PLAY

BY

BERNARD

POMERAN<ll

WASHlNcrroN CEImlR

fOR

TIlB

PilRFoRMINo

AIm
30-APRn. 14, 1990
by Andrew Hamlin
"The most striking feature about him
was
his
enormous
head.
Its
circumference was about that of a man's
waist From the brow there projected a
huge bony mass like a loaf, while from
the back of his head hung a bag of
spongy fungus-looking skin, the surface
of which was comparable to brown
cauliflower...The nose was merely a lump
of flesh, only recognizable as a nose
from ilS position...the back was horrible
because from the back of it hung .. .huge
sacklike masses of flesh covered by the
same loathsome cauliflower stain ... "
The young doctor Treves (Bob
Stalder) recites this litany while Timothy
Day, the actor playing John Merrick, the
Elephant Man, stands stage center.
Behind him a projected slide of the real
Merrick clicks into empty space, every
bit as hideous as the doctor describes
him, his ironically normal penis dangling
amidst thick, gnarled limbs and those
bloated sacks of flesh. The only other
normal body part, his left arm, hangs at
his side, as though awaiting a shellac of
blight and puffmess to complete this
unbelievable Halloween costume. But
Day, an Evergreen graduate, wears no
costume; he simply twists his mouth to
one side, crooks his back, holds his right
hand stomach level to portray the "fingers
like !hick tuberous roolS," and leans on a
cane (in addition to his deformed legs
and spine, Merrick was hobbled from
childhood hip disease). Clad only in a
diaper, he turns to display each blighted
area as the doctor describes it, then
shuffles off stage. But his eye:; linger in
the mind. They are like a small child's
eyes, wide and round, incredulous,
absorbent; set in the face of a human
monster, they seem most ironic of all.
The Elephant Man is the story of
John Merrick, hideously deformed,
bounced from a workhouse to virtual
slavery as a sideshow freak, rescued from
that by Dr. Frederick Treves and housed
in London Hospital until his death six
years later. Pomerance condensed the
story into twenty-one scenes and added
paradoxical elemenlS to a story already
rife with that quality; Merrick, who may
have been !he ugliest ·man to ever live,
was also an avid reader, a poetry lover,
MARCH

a Bible enthusiast, and deeply romantic.
Wi!h his good hand he constructed a
model of St. Phillip' s Church, which he
presented to his friend Mrs. Madge
Kendall, and which is now exhibited,
alongside his skeleton, at the London
Hospital Medical College.
Pomerance uses this material as a
springboard for musings on !he duality of
human nature, and appearance versus
reality. At the beginning of the play, a
slide show alternates between snapsholS
of Victorian England and sideshow
freaks. In one scene various characters
comment on how Merrick's personality
resembles their own; as Treves observes
in a later scene, "we have polished him
like a mirror, and shout hallelujah when,
he refleclS us to the inch."
The play also has a bilateral
symmetry. In scene 8, Merrick is upset
over an orderly who has been fired for
peeking at him. Treves tells him, "It is
just the way things are." In scene IS,
Merrick uses the same words to tum
away Ross, his former manager, who is
dying and needs the Elephant Man for
financial support In the third scene,
Treves presenlS Merrick to his colleagues
and delivers the litany of affiiction; in the
eighteen!h Treves suffers a nightmare in
which Merrick presents him to a
concerned audience of pinheads, using the
same clinical cadences: "The most
striking feature about him, note, is the
terrifyingly nonnal head. This allowed
him to lie down normally, and therefore
to dream in the exclusively personal
manner, without the weight of other's
dreams accumulating to · break his
neck ...From the brow projected a normal
vision of benevolent enlightenment, what
we believe to be a kind of selfmesmerized state... The right arm was of
enormous power...The left arm was
slighter and fairer, and may be seen in
typical position, hand covering the
As the Elephant Man
genitals ..."
becomes more and more what others
want him to be, the doctor becomes less
and less what he seemed to be.
Day, as Merrick, carries the show.
Every step he takes is shaky, every line
lightly punctuated with smacks of his
twisted lips. To render the mutated right
arm he bends his middle finger back so
rigidly !hat for most of !he show I
thought it had been amputated. But he
also conveys Merrick's inner self, his wit,
his hysterical joyous weeping at the
kindness of the farst woman to formally

receive him. Bob Stalder, as Treves, and
Stephanie Humphal, as Mrs. Kendall,
provide supple reinforcement. Kudos also
to Andrew Gordon, Jason Haws, Anna
Villines, and Rebekah Allison, who
portray fifteen different roles .between the
five of them. TESC's Ed Trujillo direclS;
Greeners malce up half of the cast (Day,

Villines, Haws, Humphal) and almost all
of the technical crew. Catch it before it
vanishes.
Andrew Hamlin, CPJ A&E editor,
keeps us on our toes. If you saw our
shoes you'd know what a challenge this

is.

Headline wri ter by night
Acid ZOIllbie by day
TIIB AaD ZoMBIBS
ANnClRlST PICNIC

(NO LAIIIlL)
by Andrew Hamlin
Good, kind, gentle Dan Snuffin is the
headline .writer for the Cooper Point
Journal. He is also the vocalist,llyricist
for the Acid Zombies, a rockin" trippin',
smoke-coming-out-of-the-ears,
flippin'
combo from way-out Gig Harb<x'. . I
dwmo, I always thought Gig Harbor was
a mellow place, yeah, sit around watch
the boalS come in, right.. uh, let's see, is
this like, a folk tape or...hnimm .. ."No
birth control/Shouldn't screw at alI/Even
with AIDS/That's what God says/The
Pope is a dope/Hang him on a rope.. ."
*BINGI* thanks for playing, here's a
copy of our home game.

Dan has three major lyrical subjects:
the condemnation of organized religion
and the right-wing agenda in America,
the joy of .household pelS, and the sensual
bankruptcy
of
modem
existence.
AIIlichrlst PictUc's most hilarious moment
comes on "Catholic Cat," a supposedly
true story about a lady who "sent in
bucks/and
filled
out
an
twenty
application/to the United Christian
Church/and Ministerial Association/I'hey
sent a preacher's license/and her cat was
ordained/CATIlOLIC · CAT KNOWS
WHERE IT'S AT/MEOW MEOW
MEOW PRAISE TIlE LORD/HOLY
FUCKING FELINE!" (What the Catholic
Church and the U.C.C.M.A. have in

pisslFred doesn' t shit/Fred doesn't eat/and
Fred never sleeps/Fred is made of
cardboanl/Nice kitty-kitty-kitty")
the
Psycho
Bunny
("Cute
fluffy
monster/gnaws on your bones") and the
who
regurgitates
unseen
puppy
"undigested dog food" on the tormented
singer's carpel Dan renders them all with
vivid barks, meows, squeals, and ragged ·
shoulS, each onomatopoetic sound
mocking the ragged invective of a
possessed preacher. If Dan had a mind
to, he could strap a pyramid on his head
and channel dead housepelS for anguished
housewives.
Guitarist Pete Johnston is right on
the job--his solos sound like he's being
pushed down a flight of stairs, and that's
just what Dan's lyrics need. Yes, Saxon
Smith's bass sounds like a whale burping.
Yes, Remington's dnunming could be
mistaken for the tap-dancing of Ted
Bundy's feet on the death chamber floor.

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Avenue, Gig Harbor, WA 98335.
Andrew Hamlin is mad as hell that
the first CD release of "Physical Graffiti"
omitted the last five seconds of "In My
Time of Dying."

Chamorro, from, page 3
dollars at inflated rates, even though
UNO promised to even the rate. (The
current rate is one dolla'r for 58,000
cordobas).
No one \mows whether Violetta will
have the power to implement the
sweeping changes outlined in her
campaign and victory speeches. The
Sandanistas still control over 40% of the
National Assembly, enough to block any
constitutional amendmenlS. Most of the
changes, including giving property back
to former owners, would require a drastic
change in the Nicaraguan constitution.
Chamarro runs into other problems
in her own camp. UNO is not one
political party but twelve. The coalition
officially broke on election day. With
such diverse members as two communist

HOST .
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01,.,.

parties and several right-wing parties,
Violetta will have a hard time with unity
wi!hout continued U.S funding and CIA
organizing.
Beyond the uncertainty lies an
extremely volatile scenario.
The
Sandinistas have given the guns back to
the peasants. These campasinos will not
willingly give back the land to the rich.
In the forth coming crisis, Violetta might
feel the need to rule by decree. Under
Nicaraguan constitution, the president can
ignore the National Assembly and the
Constitution during a national emergency.
One road block remains for
Chamarro: the Sandinista Army. Barring
the small and unpopular Contras, the new
government has no way to force change.
The United States marines might try
to "liberate" Nicaragua for the 31st time
in 150 years. Press wolves beware, the
Nicaragua invasion watch continues.
Thomas Fletcher is an Evergreen
student who spent time in Nicaragua
during the recent elections.

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Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Page 13

Calendar
12 ~t/j::::itl/t{t:::jml:trtt

LECIURES

BROCK EVANS: 7 PM; Lecture Hall 1;
$2 suggested donation; information:
866-6000 X6784.
National Audubon Society VP for
national issues will speak on The Battle
for Wilderness and Ancient Forests.
JANE GOODALL: 8 PM; Washington
Center; tickets: $11 - $17; information:
754-8586.
The world famous scientist will discuss
her research of wild chimps.
DEAN JONES: 7:30 PM; Four Seasons
Books, 421 S. Water St.; free;
information: 786-1356.
The owner of Four Seasons will read
from some of his favorites books.

Conservatory will audition actors in
Seattle. Scholarships and fInancial aid
available to students who want to
participate in a two-year professional
actor training program in New York City.

AUDITIONS

FAIRS

AMADEUS: Auditions for men and
women; Capitol Theatre, 7 PM;
infonnation: 754-5378.

PUYALLUP SPRING FAIR: 10 AM 10 PM; $4 general,l$2 children/under 6
free; information: 845-1771.

DANCE

CAREER DEVELOPMENT

COUNTRY DANCE: Old-time Country
Dance; 8 PM; South Bay Grange, 3918
Sleater-Kinney Rd. N.E.; $4, $2 seniors
and youth 10 - 16; information:
754-6230 or 357-5346.
No experience necessary, live music.

TESC ENTREPRENEURS: Starting
Your Own Business; Lm 1406A;
1 - 3 PM.

ELEPHANT MAN: 8 PM, Washington
Center, tickets: $8; information:
754-8586.

ON STAGE

EASTER SERVICE: 6:30 AM; Capital
Dome.
A program of liturgical dance, bands, and
bells.

HAZARDOUS WASTE: Thurston Co.
Household & Small Business Waste
Management Plan Workshop; 7 PM;
Olympia High School Cafeteria.

UNITED METHODIST CHURCH:
9 & 11 AM; Washington Center; free.

INTERNStnP ORIENTATION:
12 - 1 PM; LIB 1407; information:
866-6000 X6391.

13

FILMS

~tttttttt~rt~@f~rlmtf~t

ELEPHANT MAN: 8 PM; Washington
Center; tickets: $8; information:
754-8586.
POTLUCKS
MAARA VA SHABBAT POTLUCK:
6 PM; Cooper's Glen #65.

WORKING WOMEN: The Women of
Summer: The Bryn Mawr Summer School
for Women Workers. 1921-1938; Lecture
Hall 3; 12 - 1 PM.
.
OFS: A Man When He is a Man. Bread
and Dignity. The Centerjielder; 6:30 &
9 PM; Capitol Theatre; $4/$2.50
members; information: 754-6670.

POTLUCKS

WHY KNOCK ROCK: 9 PM; E.C.C.
Funwne, 1000 · Black Lake Blvd.;
infonnation: 352-3410.
A seminar on the lifestyles of rock stars
and their li ves.

NARAL POTLUCK: Organic Farm
House; 6 PM; everyone welcome.
CHESS
INFORMAL CHESS: 7 PM; TESC
Community Center; information:
866-2483.

RESUME WRITING WORKSHOP:
12 - 1 PM; Lm 1406A.

EARTH DAY: Poster making; ERC;
5 PM.
RAG·WOLF: 7 PM; ERC/CAB Pit
Rainforest Action Group - Watchers Over
Last Forests.

SEMINARS

SHAKESPEARE: Information: call
1-800-472-6667 to make an audition
appointment The National Shakespeare

.

oo

-

o

MUSIC

0

..,. •••••

~

~!

.....

•• ~

~~rl COrheS Pefer Cottllnf'\iI,
~orpin~ L!OWrl -the blArH1~ +rail,

PUYALLUP SPRING FAIR: 10 AM 10 PM; $4 general/$2 children/under 6
free; information: 845-1771.

~i prii~ - hOfrit~ - hir-pl+~ - ho p- if... •.
(lookr Jikt. witr's self - se rve fJ,js yea r. )

God is a Rabbit by Ron Austin

-r. 'Je.A· you.... UJIythi n~
e/Se.? SOWle W7()I'"~ 'cad?
Co..",

ENVIRONMENT

{J...V1o./l,ev-

fl/I/ow?

thCl.o\oq\C~\ i~su~s as\oa. 1
Ke,,'1 n, this \5 G¢.ometr'l' and
'I n Gllom£t r'll "G 0 0" is ti\\® 'l?

A\\

OREGON CONCERT: See box.
FAIRS

.......~.

PUYALLUP SPRING FAIR: 10 AM - 6
PM; $4 general/$2 children/under 6 free;
information: 845-1771.

the.

answe.r!

ANNOUNCEMENTS

ENVIRONMENT
MULTI-CULTURAL PERSPECTIVES:
Environmental issues forum; Lm lobby;
7 PM. Followed by music from Vic
Cummings and Gene Burnett.

RADICAL WOMEN: Abortion Rights:
From Obituary Page to Front Page;
7:30 PM; New Freeway Hall, 50018
Rainier Avenue S., Seattle; information:
722..(fJ57 or 722-2453.
Dinner served at 6:30 PM for $5.

MEN'S DISCUSSION GROUP:
LIB 3500; noon; information:
866-6000 Xr040 or X6467.
Men taking action on feminist issues.

EARTH DAY FESnvAL:
The 20th anniversary of the original
Earth Day will be celebrated April 21
and 22 at TESC. The gala will
feature musicians, woItshops, 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.

Page 14 Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Tbe second annual Consciousness
Raising Worksbop 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
infonnation.

-

Col.

5a..f1

dey-'s -

rAe ct., c ~ c::,., '3

,,"0 u)

MEETINGS
WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT WEEK:
7:30 PM; Lm 2219; information: call
Lisa or Vikki at 866-6000 X6200.

f))OF RID A Y

bV tnttrrttn1ttIr::1}:I:}n:~:I:

The Fascist Chemists by Morgan Evans

pe:art1 C1r H[ARAI..V

MUSIC & DANCE

KEVIN BURKE: 8 PM; TESC Recital
Hall; $10/$7.50 students; information:
866-6000 X6397.
Kevin Burke plays fIddle, Mark Graham
brings his hannonica, and Sandy Silva
contributes stepdancing.

OLYMPIA JOBS: The Olympia Hidden
Job Market; 12 - 1 PM; Lm 1406A.
CHESS
TOURNAMENT: Masterpiece Chess
Theatre; 6:40 PM; CAB 108; entry fee
$2; information: 866-2483.

OREGON CONCER1:

W~AT

Do

f Lf~'e" A'BO\lT rvr-,I OWN

SPIDERWOMAN
THEATRE:
Winnetou's Snake Oil Show from
Wigwam City; Seattle Group Theatre,
3940 Brooklyn Ave. N.E., Seattle; April
12 - May 11; tickets: $8 - $14.50;
information: 5434327.

I-rS A CJ.CSEt> WCR.l.DJ AND~­
ON~ \ S ALLOWED IN~t>E". ITis Qllln
W~~N
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Earth Day Info: 1-800-447-3330.

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CIULD CARE: If you need help with
child care, call the Child Care Action
Council Resource and Referral lOAM 10
2 PM at 754-0810.

Call the toll-free ..umber and find out
Center; how Earth Day 1990 will be

8
PM;
Washington
$12.501$10 students; infonnation:
754-8586.
Oregon combines jazz, classical, and
"world" music. Tribal Elder David
Whitener and Paul Watson will speak
before the concert.

Mt1r PtPE~ ~

A MA.t> MANI~ LAMe:NT:

SAFEPLACE is looking for women of
color and minorities to be volunteers and
offers a flexible schedule. Information:
Kimberly at 866-8754.
SUPER SATURDAY: The organizing
comlDlttee is asking for participants and
wild suggestions for additions to Super
Saturday Xll. Also, applications are being
accepted from people and organizations
interested in . selling food or arts and
crafts, as well as from entertainers.
Information: 866-6001.

in!}

C.OMPo....h)l

WALKING CLUB: Weekdays 4 PM;
green mound on Red Square.

CAREER DEVELOPMENT

AUDITIONS

IJ

EARTH DAY FESTIVAL: See box.

FD...MS

SEMINARS

WORKSHOPS

bNV lllNll rR

:

CAREER DEVELOPMENT

CAREERS: Perspectives from people of
color; 1 - 3 PM; Lm 3500.

ON STAGE

::::

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ENVIRONMENT

ELEPHANT MAN: 8 PM, Washington
Center, tickets: $8; information:
754-8586.

FRIDAY

,

AUDITIONS

RELIGIOUS SERVICES

16MONDAY

THE NEW UFE MASS CHOIR:
7:30 PM; Lm lobby; free.

D

VIETNAMESE MUSIC:
Music for
freedom; 2 PM; Washington Center; $12
reserved!$20 patron; information:
754-8586.
AMADEUS: Auditions for men and
women; Capitol Theatre, 7 PM;
infonnation: 754-5378.

MUSIC

MUSIC

-

FAIRS

MEETINGS
WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT WEEK:
7:30 PM; LIB 2219; information: call
Usa or Vikki at 866-6000 X6200.

21

Fistful of Droolers by Kenta Hadley

Bullets are Cheap by Edward Martin III

EARTH DAY FESTIVAL: See box.
LAW CAREERS: Information session;
Lm 1406A; 12 - 1 PM.

ON STAGE

WORKSHOPS
LOBBYING WORKSHOP:
3:30 - 5:30 PM; CAB 110; lnformation:
866-6000 X6784.
Brock Evans will present a workshop on
effective lobbying and citizen action.
(See Lectures)

CARTOONS

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celebrated in Washington state..
PUYALLUP INDIAN TRIBE: April 21;
$1 student,$5 adult, $10 family;
information: 272-5204. A celebration
featuring music, speakers, potluck dinner,
walk for peace, & midnight powwow.

Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Page 15

Huge forest tracts reserved for owls
by Barrett WOke
"We have concluded that the owl is
imperiled over signiflcant portions of its
range. Current management strategies are
inadequate to ensure its vitality." -- Jack
Ward Thomas, et al. in the conclusion·of
their report on Northern Spotted Owls
The fate of the last remaining
Northwest old-growth forests finally is
with long-tenn
being considered
repercussions in mind. Many of the
region's inhabitants are in an uproar.
A team of blue-ribbon scientists from
the U.S. Forest Service, the Bureau of
U.S. Fish and
Land Management, and
Wildlife finished their exhaustive report
on the status of the Nm1hern Spotted
Owl last week. The study is expected to
be the basis for new legislation' for the
troubled timber industty. The cammittee,
which was led by Forest Service biologist
Jack W. Thomas, carries a lot of clout
because their recommendations were
arrived at without political considerations
and were only concerned with saving the
owl from extinction.
The study recommended a shocking
total of 6.S million acres of public forests
in Washington and Oregon be set aside
for Habitat Conservation Areas (HCA's).
In Washington, 44 ttacts of forest land
totalling 3.25 million acres on both public
andpriyate lands would ~be unavailable
for logging. This incl~ 150,000 acres
of state and federal lands in the South
Sound region, especi8lly in Capital Forest
and Ft. Lewis Anny base.

The decision whether to adopt the used to provide fmancial support for
measure depends mainly on the U.S. Fish towns forced to convert from a raw-Iogexport-based economy to a wood
and Wildlife's decision to place tt.e owl
on either the "Endangered" or products based economy.
Surprisingly, Rep. Jolene Unsoeld
"Threatened" list on June 23. Few, if any,
(D-WA) has. emerged as C?nt!.;..the most
legislators doubt this will happen.
If implemented, the suggestions outspoken critics of the plan. "We have
detailed in the swdy are expected to a disaster on our hands," she was quoted
reduce. timber harvests · to roughly 2.7 as saying last Wednesday .in The
billion board feet from the .present 3.6 Olympian. "If the Olympic Peninsula slid
billion (a 25 percent drop). At least 9000 . into · the OCean, the impact on the
jobs will be lost in Washington and communities wouldn't be any greater than
Oregon, according to the U .S~. Forest this is going to be." She also demanded
Service. The National Forest Resource to know who is going to provide money
Alliance, an· industty group, claims that for the logging cOmmunities, so they can
"dig themselves out."
the total job loss of all three states
Fortunately, she also pointed out that
affected, directly and indirectly, will be
it is "outrageous" to export four out of
more than 60,000.
Many local logging-dependent towns 10 raw logs, when local mills are going
..
such as Forks and Darrington depend on under.
Unsoeld is not alone in · this view,
~ higher quality of old-growth timber.
These remote logging and mill towns especially now that the plan has been
may be doomed to extinction. The towns unveiled. Before the study was
economic decay will arrive at a nearer completed, all of ihe Oregon delegation
and a somewhat speciflc date, as opposed except Sen. Mark Hatfield were in favor
to slowly deteriorating as the last few of at least a partial ban · of raw log
harvestable old-growth forests are cut exports. Now Hatfield joins the rest . of
over the next 10 years. The plan may the Oregon lawmakers, and is even
. aclually hylp these troubled communities drafting a bill with Sen. Bob Packwood
on the long tenn because they now know to halt unprocessed log exports from
public lands.
what to prepare for.
In the past, about half of the
Although Northwest legislators have
always been split on the logging issue, Washington delegation had been opposed
they all agree that some kind of fedenU to the ban. Se. Brock Adams, who has
relief program must be created for the tried to be on both sides, is now in favor
towns hit hard by the timber cutbacks. of the ban. EVen Sen. Slade Gorton, an
The relief money will most likely be outspoken critic of the ban, is now

starting to listen. Many other Washington
legislators are leaning toward supporting
the ban.
The reason for this is obvious.
Because there is a finite amount of oldgrowth timber, legislators are realizing
that a ban on raw log exports is long
overdue.
The most troublesome obstacle to
banning exports is the WashingtOn State
Constitution, which povides schools
around the state with money collected
from the export of old-growth timber.
Assuming the plan is mobilized, the
next two years will mark a significant
decline in the amount of timber available
for the local mills. The fact is, apart
from federal relief money, the only way
to save our state economy from ruin is to
implement a ban on unprocessed log
exports from public lands. .
"Public" means ours, the people. We
have the right to keep old-growth timber
in Washington, and to have a say about
how it is "managed." So far, we have
achieved only a wishy-washy "ban" on
log exports from federal lands. The rest
of exports are coming from private
forests (two-thirds) and state forests (onethird). The time is now for an all-out ban
of all unprocessed log exports, and force
the PacifIC Rim counties to purchase
completed wood products. The time is
now to straighten out the most corrupt
practice of the modem timber industty.
Barrett Wilke is an Evergreen student
and a staff writer for the CPJ.

EARTH FAIR weekend at TESC will offer plenty of surprises
by AmI Bach",." . . BImIIt Wilke
Earth Day " The EV'tgl'Hn Stat, Colleg, Is ·so near w, can hardly
"'/I,v, lt~ulNlves, .though th, planning has d,mand,d the
,xhaustive efft1rts 01 many dedicated Indlvldusls lor th, past three
months. Even.though th,y.y th' 1990 Goodwill Games are "going ·
to be good," TESC's Earth Day may very w,1I be "'tter.
Apatt from th' food, music, ganws, fun, and uplifting amblBnce that

will '" avallabl, In hug, quantltl,s over th' week,nd of April 21 Bild
22, ther, w'l'''' many ,xcellent workshops to explore as well. We are
sure that everyone can lind useful and positive learning experiences
for th, "''''rment of th, plBnet during th, 1990 Earth Day weekend.
WATCH FOR A COMPLETE. SCHEDULE OF WORKSHOPS IN THE
NEXT ISSUE OF THE COOPER POINT JOURNAL
I

T

My Father's Son

Cherry Blossom

Cherry blossom pink arid soft,
Petals flutter-falling from aloft.
Snowy petal-down falling down,
Resting softly on her crown.
On her crown, on her crown
Fragrant petals in her down.
Hands-full of fallen petals
Sprinkle-showered on her pearls
.Curb pearl, ·lips and milky pearl
Nectar there where petals find .
Birds a-hum . with tongues athick
Savors rapture at the nectar lick.
Lick and lick leave too quick;
Tastes the flower in ·a niche
Cherry blossom full in bloom,
Ob trees, and in a shaded room.
Anther and ,stamen in intimate groom:
Fruit is fertile in her womb.
Through the air fragrants waft
of cherry blossom pink and soft.
Wolf Edigy
A

I was good
at running my legs couldn't reach
his expectations were high
on the top shelf
he hid things
because he never wanted me
to touch them
like him
I've learned to hide
from everyone
many things
have taught me
to run and I've learned
not to touch.

Poems
Page 16 Cooper Point Journal April 12, 1990

Stuart Tennis