cpj0481.pdf

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Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 20, Issue 3 (October 19, 1989)

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October 19, 1989

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Volume 20 Issue 3

Convocation:

Be-coWIe...

Olander emphasizes cultural
diversity and an opposition to guns

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Momentary Freedom
Wuthering breeze
Tip toeing softly in my soul
Dancing trepidJy on my insecurities
Forcing itself to be a part of me

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Poof! The moment is gone

Feeling pretty lucky, punk?

by Edward Martin m
When it's three in the morning and
Another Friday the 13th is here. How you are surrounded by 2,000 pounds of
lucky do you feel? Take a few seconds Ford steel coasting out of gear at 1M
as you barrel down this Hell-bound miles per hour down the Evergreen
Realities swirling in my space
expressway called Life and ask yourself Parkway with Sammy Hagar screaming
Icy fears become calculated vacuums
that question a few times.
"Takin' a Ride" from the tape deck and
Sucking themselves away
three other human ~ings in the back,
Emotions expertly bind me
suddenly • remarkably • aware of their
Swept into momentary oblivion
I stagger, fall, curl
.
,
own mortality, wishing they were
Wailing.
hoping,
groping
anywhere else, do you feel particularly
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Guilt, hiding in every crease
For
another
Wuthering
breeze
lucky?
Fighting obstintaciously; defending territory
When you and a few of your friends
Cool reason infects its steely chamber
are wasted on rotten tequila smuggled up
Michael
Sell
Pleading gently for its' impeachment
from Tijuana and you dial numbers at
random until you find a woman and
Slowly, cautiously, guilt recedes
spend all night calling the number
Descending into internal stealth
repeatedly, saying whatever your a1coholdrowned
brains tell you to say, until you
giving up an instant of existence
'I wif£ 6e fuartf! I wif£ 6e sun/',
wake up in the morning on the living
Remembering, tediously, this well worn enoounter
fris screaming sft.rufliing af[ tfu sfjes,
room floor, reeking of bad juice, with
'0
gfory, 9t£uses· mauvers tfure,
sunlight slicing you open and the receiver
Imperative denial divides for protection
beeping in your hands, do you feel pretty
I've tantrums to immortal'iut'
It smells the wisps of self acceptance
lucky?
Pounding furiously within its cavern
When you read or know about
Lik$ rageetf rrumories of a foe
Eluding, expertly, its vile adversary
someone who was hun; by a lOuch, by
tid on 6fastd 6ont.S of prUU,
a word, by something they have seen; is
Intently seeping, denial is surrounded
a poet s cursing fingers Cong.
it luck that kept you woven out of that
Tender cotton hands stroke its ego
same pain and confusion? How lucky
Its fris to tal7UJ') 'We rusft. insUlt.
does it make you feel 10 not be struck; to
Lulling it, passionately, into hazy sleep
not be slandered; to not be offended or
Dreaming, feNently, of its awal<ening
'We af[ assume he s screaming stiff
hurt; 10 not. for once, be a target? It can
forcing readings, praising grief;
make
you feel pretty lucky.
Emptiness, at last, engulfs every available corridor
Our Cont.Sorru poet, tfu never kJwwn:
Friday the 13th isn't always an
Riding the crescent of warm, soothing water
unlucky day for everyone. Sometimes,
'Banshee, 6e9Bar, 6ung(er, thief
Leaving emotion behind
Wednesday the 18th is. Sometimes,
Drowning aI/ intruding inquiries
Sunday the 24th is. For many people,
today will be their unlucky day. For a
Nothingness scampers with childlike fervor
few, today will be the unluckiest day of
Revelling in its bliss filled ff8edom
their lives.
Always you will know people who
Touching, feeling, the kindness of its kindred
are having an unlucky day. Always, "you
Breathing easy, thankful for the opportunity
will feel lucky when you have a good
day. Maybe' you can share this luck wicb
There is no capturing here
someone you know who needs it. Luck is
Only essence, pure, exquisite
not arbitrary, it is relative. You can make
Dangling fairyta/es disappear, never appear
it.
To seek here is to be blind
...If you're lucky.

Fear sweeps into being
Guilt groggily remembers
Self denial now surrounds
Nothingness has become something

r

Page 12 Cooper Point Journal October 12, 1989

:'
President Jo, 'Olander $P8Ok at the Convocation address In the new gym last Monday, 7h1s Is the first
time the event was held at a time that both students and staff members were able to affend,

by Suzette Williams .

assessing state colleges.
skywalks between the College Activities
Evergreen President loe Olander drew
He said Evergreen is ahead of other
Building (CAB) and the Library building.
scattered applause during Monday's colleges in the state in fmding creative
Martin's
staff
ended
their
convocation speech by stating his
ways of assessing student progress. "It
presentation by perfonning a "wave."
opposition to anning the campus security will determine the character of the
. President Olander concluded the
force.
college over time," he said of assessment
convocation by urging the community 10
He also emphasized cultural diversity,
Student Union representative Mary
strive for the unprecedented step of
development of the College's financial
Lou O'Neil emphasiZed similar themes
resources and building a community at in her address.
Evergreen.
O'Neil spoke of a need for a unified
Olander, the vice presidents and a
student voice and said the Student Union,
representative' of the Student Union spoke despite its flaws could serve as this
at the event, biUed as a "state-of-thevoice.
union". type address.
She urged students to attend the .
by Inrormation Services starr
Convocation is held yearly, but is
weekly governance meetings.
Two
Evergreen State College officials
generally only attended by staff and
O'Neil also addressed the issue of
manned
a
national education hotline in
faculty. Because of the completion of the
security, urging that administrative policy
Washington, D.C. for . eight hours,
new gymnasium, students were invited 10 not be dictated by outside forces.
answering parents' questions about higher
attend this year's convocation.
"Reconciliation rather than reaction
education.
About 100 people attended the event,
must prevail" in security iSSUes. she said
Money and college preparation were
most of whom were staff members.
Also
in
the _ two-hour-Iong
convocation the vice presidents and the bottom line of most questions raised
In his speech, Olander said . security
during the USA Today Educational
will be a prominent issue in Evergreen's
deparunent heads introducing new faculty
future. In addition 10 opposing guns for , and staff members. Vice President and Hotline, based in WashinglOn D.C.,
security guardS, Olander emphasized the
Provost Patrick: Hill said 47 new people sponsored by the Gannett Foundation as
part of National Higher Education Week.
had been hired since September 1988.
need for "basic, raw, personal security."
"Most of my questions were about
Vice President for Student Affairs
He spoke of the newly-fonned safety
Gail Martin could not attend convocation , college preparation and what parents
disappearing task force (DTF), which he
because of a cOOference in Spokane, but could do to ·be sure children got a proper
said will explore how to make the
education; says Diane Kahaumia,
prepared a videotape before leav.ing
campus more secure.
Admissions counselor for The Evergreen
Olympia.
The President also said cbe college's
In the tape, which her staff members
State College.
commitment-to public serviCe, including
"It was non-stop. I would put cbe
pretended was a .live satellite broadcast,
serving the state legislature, will
Martin said the Student Affairs division . phone down and it would ring again;
~itssllCUSSinthefuture.~b~
said Financial Aid Counselor lohn
service is included in I;vergreen-'s mission . should speed up'"aI1 of its processes.
Mclain. "Most people were concerned
Her tongue-in-cheek suggestions
statement, adopted last Spring.
about whether they'd be eligible for
included handing the·financial aid office's
Olander also drew cbeezs when
financial aid,"
.
responsibilities to . the , Services and
taDdng ' about the Higher EdUcation
More
than
100
college
financial aid
Activities
Board,
installing
conveyer
belts
CoordiJlating (HEC) Board's abandonment
and admissions staff members from
for the registration process, and bl1ilding
of standardized testing as a way , of

founding a truly multicultural and diverse
campus.
"For me diversity is not only simply
diversity of skin, language and culture,
but diversity of speech, politics and
aesthetics," Olander said

Education hotline
rings off 'the hook

The Evergreen State College
Olympia.: WA 98505

Address Correction Requested

colleges across the country answered calls
from OclOber 9 .
12. - Colleges
. represented included George Washington
University, Johns Hopkins University,
Purdue and Wake Forest Park.
Kahaumia and Mclain were flown 10
Washington D.C. by Gannett 10 spend a
'eight hour shift on the phones.
"It·s real apparent that people
perceive the quality of education is based
on how much you spend on it, and if
you spend more you'll get a better
education," Kahaumia said 'Tm not sure
that's a good measure of what an
education is,"
Kahaumia came away from the
experience a little surprised. During last
year's hotline, she detected a lack of
preparedness for college on the part of
callers. This year, it was quite different.
"It's
frightening
that
they're
beginning 10 be so competitive," she said. "Parents of 8th and 9th graders were
already trying to choose their children's
collep;es."

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

The joy of Nicaraguan agriculture
Cam! ; Gun Week begins OcL 23
and continues through the 28th. The week
will attempt to address the measwes and
alternatives to the growing fear for
personal security at The Evergreen State
College. The two main features of Gun
Week will be a student vote on arming
security (with voting booths open
Monday through Wednesday 8 am to 5
pm in the CAB), and a community forum
on Security/Safety issues Tuesday OcL 24
from 4-6 pm in Lecture Hall #II. The
event is supported by the Student Union.

------------------The Animal Legal Defense Fund, a
non-profit organization, has launched a
national campaign to advise students and
professors about alternatives to dissecting
frogs, rabbits, cats, fetal pigs and other
animals in the classroom.
a
dissection
The
group has
information hotline, 1-SOO-FROO (3764)
that provides callers with information on
educational alternatives to dissection.
They also offer a free student
handbook which tells students how to say
no to dissection.
The Animal Legal Defense Fund says
dissection has a desensitizing effect and
teaches students that animal life is
unimportanL

Meals are now being provided at The'
Evergreen Child Care Center through the
USDA Child Care Food Program, which
makes meals available to children
according to income.
Meals are available to enrolled
children without regard to race, color,
handicap, age, sex or national origin.
Anyone who feels s/he has been
disaiminated against regarding this
program should write to Secretary of
Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250.
For income guidelines, call the Child
Care Center at eXL 6060.
The S & A Reorganization Team
seeks letters of intent from students
interested in joining The Team. Five
letters of intent have been received from
students who wish to join those
investigating options for student control
of S & A funds. At least three more
letters of intent are expected by the time
of the first meeting, but more
paruclpation
is
necessary.
The
Reorganization Team requires a nine
member minimum before an affirmative
action report can be issued and money
for the Team's functioning can be
allocated. Those interested may get lJ\ore .
information at the S & A Reorganization

Security Blotter
Tuesday, 10 October
2238: A female riding her bike on
Driftwood Rd was followed and verbally
harassed by 4 males in a vehicle.
Wednesday, 11 October
2137: Vending machines on the second
floor of the library building were being
abused.
2224: A male in the CAB was posing as
a custodian. He was gone by the time
Security responded.
Thursday, 12 October
1611: An IT bus and a second vehicle
were involved in a minor accident on
McCann Plaza.
1648: Someone jammed the locks on the
Day Care center gates.
Friday, 13 October
0122: Various paper flyers in the CAB
commented on Joe Olander and Larry
Savage. At the same time Security found
TM statements in the stairwell to the
women's locker rooms at the CRC.
1309: A pair of Clarion speakers were
stolen from a YW parked in F 10L
During the crime a window was shattered
and the radio was damaged.
Saturday, 14 October
1159: Witnessing of a male spraying

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paint on the Hwy 101 overpass was
reported.
Sunday, 15 October
0010: A single car accident occurred on
Driftwood Rd between the Parkway and
Facilities. The driver was not found at
the scene.
There were 4 traffic stops made and
122 public services performed. Many of
the public services recorded were escorts
done by Crimewatch.
Fire alarms
occurred
in
P
dorm
and
the
Communications
Center
(equipment
malfunctions), and the dorms (more burnt
food this week).

~5r ~~
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College

Bookstore
OPEN
FOR YOU

Monday-Thursday 8:30 - 6:00
Friday 8:30 - 5:00
Saturday 10:00 - 2:00

r------------------,
00
William F.
0
Buckley, Jr.

o

OCTOBER

O

8:00P.M.

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26,1989

,~\~

WAS HINGTON CENTER

FOR THE PERFORMING Am

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The event is sponsored by the
Sensible Growth Coalition, comprised of
more than 100 community groups who
believe growth decisions should be driven
by concern for the public's quality of
life.
, Derdowski is co-chair of the regionwide Sensible Growth Alliance. He
speaks at 7 pm. For more information
call 352-9351 or 491-8898.

., KriIda Rowe
Kristin Rowe visited Nicaragua this
summer as a member of a construction
brigade. The fol/owing is the second in a
series of articles about her experiences.
The roosters screamed in my ears at
ali unearthly hour and I woke up
scratching my bites from alien bedmonsters.
It was a beautiful morning; the
clouds Wele creeping over the patchwork
green mountains framed by my window.
The American Environmental Brigadewith the exception of those down with
dysentery- trekked up the "always taller
and steeper" mountain at a fast clip.
The nineteen of us promptly began
worle after a short water break.
We planted fifty-two trees, dug flftythree holes, and people went marauding
about using machetes to clear weeded
sites for new trees. We had a deliciously
long break/meeting for a feast of bread
and avocado.
We returned to work, and then, after
being baked alive in the sun, promenaded
back down the mountain covered from
head to toe with dirL
Mler about an hour of free time we
left for a charla (a small meeting and
discussion)
with
an
EPOCA
,representative.

The AIDS Antibody test is now
available at the Evergreen Health Center.
It is administered by Steve Williams,
R.N., a Community Health Nurse from
the Thurston County Health DeparunenL
There is a two week waiting period
. The Learning Resource Center is
for the test results and The Health Center
ayailable to any TESC student who wants
requests a donation. Please do not bring
individual help with math, writing and
checks for reasons of confidentiality.
other related skills. Student tutors are
The tests will be conducted between
hele .for those who want to work on all
6 and 9 pm on Wednesday nights in the
types of writing, grammar, spelling,
Health Center, l0C2ted in the Seminar
reading, English conversation, and
building across from Security (866-6000
X6200). The Health Center also offers . essential study skills.
Math tutors can help you with basic
information about Safer Sex and
math up through college level calculus,
Condoms.
and· more. Some help is also available
For
more
information
about
with physics, chemistry and computer
mY/AIDS Infection, call the Washington
applications.
AIDS Hotline at 1-800-ARC-AIDS.
Would you like to:
-get feedback on writing
A choir performance is being held
assignments;
Saturday to benefit people living with
-join a writing response group;
AIDS in Pierce County. The Tacoma
-work through your math
Women's Choir and the trio Women,
anxieties;
Women & Song will perform at 7:30 pm
-figure out your calc
at the Antique Sandwich Company, 51st
assignment;
and North Pearl. Tickets are $5 in
-improve your readipg
advance, $7 at the door.
efficiency;
.
The Pierce County AIDS Foundation,
-finally figure out how to
which sponsors the event, assists persons
spell;
living with AIDS with food, housing,
-brush up on your algebra.
health care and personal sUPPOrL For
Come on in. You can work onemore information about this organization
on-one with a tutor or a in a group. The
or the benefit concert, call 383-2565.
LRC can be used on a walk-in basis at
allY time during the quarter, for regular
weekly appointments, or for credit. The
LRC is open Monday through Friday,
coalition-building and community control
with some evening hours. We're located
of growth Saturday at the First Christian
in Library 3407, X6420.
Church, on the comer of Franklin and
Seventh Streets.

by Tim Gibson
"Anyone .who works with the S&A
money should be hired by, supervised by,
and answerable to the student body" was
the initial mission statement issued by the
S&A Reaganization as it held its
preliminary meeting · Mon. Oct 9 to get
ready f<X' its first official meeting Mon.
Oct 16.
. '.

~~;~co~~~fti;=-

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SOUTH
P UGET
SOUND
COMMUNITY
COLtEC£

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T ickets:
$ 17, 15. 13
$ 15, 13, 11 (Studen ts/Sen iors)
Ticke ts avai la ble at:

The Wa.h int-tun Ccnll~r for th e Perfnrm ing Aru &It
Offic e , \Vlu hi nfl,l o n Ge n ic,', regu l. r oU ll eu, (or c h arge
h ... pho n t u 1SJ -8S8h) li nd Tic kC: l m."c: r . 1 The Bon
and To...-cl R c(:o rds o r by callin g fl Z8...oa88.

S""n,o"

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Fo,~ mfnrmllinn.celln 4- nl l . c l l. J()6

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After breezing through matters such
as planning a self-evaluation on the
summer's AffIrmative Action activities,
the panel tried to develop concrete
suggestions as to how the reorganization
team will meet its goal of placing the
students' money in the students' hands
under student supervision.
An important part of the meeting

Evergreen expressions
challenges audiences

We have what you
need to pass the liardest
college test of all.

"Evergreen Expressions," the 1000gest
running multicultura1 performance arts
series in Southwestern Washington, opens
its tenth season October 20 and 21 with
two presentations of "This Cordate

The test has only one question:
,
How in the dickens are you
going to pay for it?
Colle~
is expensive. And for many the best answer to that
question
is a Guaranteed Student Loan from Washington
Mutual
Savings Bank: Up to $2,625 a year for freshmen
and sophomores, $4,000 for juniors and seniors, and $7,500 for
graduate students.
So let us help. ff you are trying' to get through college
or graduate school without a nch , uncle, the next best thing
can be the friend of the family.
Get an application from your school's financial aid office. Or call
us at (206) 461·3842. Collect, if it's a toll call.
ff you don't come in and pick some up, the money is just going to
keep piling up around here.

rush of .the day.
I had the presence of bIain/mouth
coordination to spit it out and semisuppress my laughter as I watched its

seek assistance, helps build schools,
organize workshops, and dispenses health
information.
The main goal of UNAG is to help
cooperatives solicit and obtain the things
that they need on their own and to train
naturaI leaders. Sixty-percent of the
fanners in Nicaragua are members of
UNAG. .
We also heard from a Swedish
woman about her government's quest to
introduce forestry in Nicaragua as a fonn
of production: a particularly interesting
topic to all of us tree planters. Then we
Wele served a dinner of avocados,
tortillas, beans and rice and I noted how
increasingly food-centered my life was
becoming I
The lunar eclipse was occurring
outside, and, after a brief diS\,;ussion with
the clouds covering the sky, they parted,
and another brigade member pointed out
the lunar eclipse.
This marked the end of my day, for
after my cosmological experience I
scurried home (while darting away from
speeding army trucks) and leapt into my
bed only to awaken to the sound of
screaming roosters in a new day.

legs wiggle in the ashtray in front of me.
The next stop in our busy day was
a run through the streets of Matagalpa in
the rain to the Casa de Amnistad de El
Salvador where we joined . a British
Brigade for a charla about UNAG
(National Union of Farmers and
Ranchers.)
UNAG was founded in 1981 out of
a need for farmers to have a voice and is
a private. independent, organization which
represents mainly small and medium
farms and collectives. UNAG helps
farmers run meetings, tells them where to

QUP\Nashington Mutual

The friend of t ... bmify ·

~

I.

./

"Expressions provides audiences with
a different perspective on visual and
performing arts, often featuring shows
that are multicultural or focus on
women's issues," said series Director Ed
TrujillO.
"However, we offer a range of
Pfif'ormance, from· more .. trad;itional
musical performance, to really modem
dance/multimedia productions," he said.
Expressions is supported by The
Evergreen State College students and
faculty, along with contributions from
organizations such as POSSCA (Patrons
of South Sound Cultura1 Activities) and
The Washington Arts Commission.
"We highlight performers who are
accessible to the audience, who allow
particip,ation, and who are on the cutting
edge of performance," says Trujillo. "We
look at perfonnances that are challenging
to viewers - that are not quite like
anything the consumer of mainstream
performing arts productions usually sees."
Expressions
performances
have

focused on giving the student body the
impression that the Reorganization Team
would worle for all students, not the more
exclusive Student Union or the various
special interest groups.
To do this, the meeting's participants
concluded, they must have more diversity.
. "Our purpose over the .summer ~
basically
been
affmnatJve
actton
outreach: said Eric Engstrom. "Our
group was so loose knit, but we dill have
people of color on the boanl and wOOlen
intermittently."
While recruitment of people of color
and women remains a high priority, the
Team welcomes any student who has an
.

interest in participattng. To join the team,
submit a letter of intent, stating goals,
ideas, and commitment to the Team's
future.
Other agenda items included the
hiring of a consultant to reorganize S &
A staff, writing the agenda in timeline
form . to diffuse c~nflict 1)f ~ sort
expenenced last spnng, and placmg the
collection of S & A fees under the direct
responsibility of the Student Union.
Referring to the 40 percent of the S
& A budget spent on the construction of ·
the new College Recreation building,
Ham Niles, coordinator of the summer's
Reorganization Team, summed up the
tone of the meeting.
"We'd be willing to give the
administration what they need for their
agenda as long as we (the students)
control the rest," he said.

Prepare· for the

GMAT

Carcass."

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Artist
a nd
Lecture
Series

EPOCA, the Environmental Project
On Cenlral America, is a United Statesbased envirorunental group that provides
assistance with environmental education,
research, and political action.
The irony of the "circle of poison"the process by which the US sells
pesticides that are banned within our
country (like DDn to Cenlral American
countries and then importS fruit, meat,
and other edible goods, from those same
countries while only testing 1% of
impcrtS - was discussed.
In addition, we learned that the two
most
environmentally
destructive
industries in Central . America are the
cotton and cattle industries.
Part of the reason cotton is so
hannful is that large amounts of
pesticides are used during its growth.
Although Nicaragua has officially banned
many toxic pesticides they are still widely
used because they are the cheapesL
We also discussed the implications of
6% of the world using 35% of the
resources: "The question is," an American
friend of mine said, "how can we alter
our life styles to not be so hypocritical
and decadent?"
While I was concentrating on the
talk and sipping my gaseosa (soda), I
inadvertently drank a fly- the adrenalin

S&A reorganization needs .members

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1989
1990



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office (1.3227) or attend the fll'St meeting,
which will be held at 3 pm on Monday,
October 23 in the Student Groups
Lounge.

CLASSBS STARTING SOON

~~IftNI

!

ACUPUNCTURE I
PETER G. WHITE, C.A.

I
I

I

Educational Services

RE -WRITE BLUES?

1107 N.B. 45th, Seattle
included internationally known Northwest
Opera Baritone Leon Lishner, Hitomi-za
Japanese theater for the deaf, a historical
musical about a Black woman hero of
the Underground Railroad. and local jazz
all-star bands.
"Our primary focus is to feature
Northwest artists, then regional and
international performers," says Trujillo.
For more information about the
Expre8$ions Performing Arts Series, call
866-6833, and ask to be on the quarterly
brochure mailing lisL

I

Cov9fed by Evergreen/Hartford Insurance
Quest10ns - ConsultatiOns - Appointments
Radiance 113 E. 5th OlympIa 357·9470

THE ROVING EDITOR

-0634

786-8321

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OCT. 20

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OCT. 21

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Yage 2 Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989
Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989

Page 3

Governance
Student Union rejects proposal
'I

ardcore
o-op

by Scott A. Richardson
Student Union members debaled.
then rejected Wednesday a proposal to
change the pesent student governance
structure to a representative system.
Student Darrel Riley had brougbt
the proposal to, the first SbJdent Unioo
meeting of the school year. It would
have instibJted a system comprised of
representatives from program seminars
and student groups.
The JXOposal had been discussed,
then tabled. for three out of the past
four governance meetings.
After voting to extend debate three
times Wednesday, SbJdent Union
members voted down the proposal.
Students expressed opposition to a
representative system, fearing it would
exclude the "minority voice" on
campus.
The Student Union will remain the
governance
functioning
student
structure.
There· were no objections to
accepting the proposed goals and
objectives for next week's Campt~:

Gun (Safety) Week (see NewsBriefs.)
Student James Dannen will chair
a committee which will create 8
proposal addressing the building Jockup to occur next Monday.
The proposal will be up for a vote
at the next SU meeting, two days after
the buildings lock-up will have begun.
There is some indication the lockup is taking place to reduce the
college's liability risks.
The SU passed a motion to select,
at its next meeting, a student liaison to
the Board of Trustees, who would
attend open and work sessions of the

Board.
The responsibilities of the liaison
have not yet been discussed, but the
student would have no voting capacity
due to restrictions within Washington
state law.
Tim Russell has been appointed to
set up a volunteer schedule for the
Student Communications Center (SCC,
CAB 2OS) until sec staff have been
hired.
The sec should be open for

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Other items discussed included the

en advisor poSition (the newspaper
has had only interim advisors for the
last year), some minor changes to the

SU document, and an 8DDOWICement
that the SU Board interview process is
to begin on November 1.
As
in
previous
meetings,
attendance peaked at about 25 students.

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October 25, 1989 3 pm
Library room 4004
Items for the agenda
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Monday.

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Page 4 Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989

Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989

Page 5

''I

Opinion

Editorial

Nicaragua: Ortega must go!

Accountability key· to organization

Notes from

Joe
by Joe Olander
As we begin the new year and
welcome
new
members
to
our
community, it is a good opportunity to
reaffirm the commitment of the College
to move toward our shared vision of
transforming
the College into a
multicultural community that values
diversity.
'
Clearly, we note that intellectual
differences between and among faculty
members constitute the most important
element of an education. The College
wiU be the beneficiary of other kinds of
diversity as well.
Where is the model, one might ask,
for what we strive to achieve? Since we
are in the process of creating something
new, we must, quite simply, have faith-faith in our capacity to embrace the
unknown, fully confident that the results
wiU enrich us individually and as a
community.
In some ways, Evergreen can be
envisioned as a Starship Enterprise-the
best and the brightest of intellegent
beings, intentionally brought together
from distant places, possessing the variety
of skills and gifts that complement and
strengthen each other.
As
with
Starship
Enterprise
adventures, it is the strength of
differences among the crew that makes
it possible to draw upon a wealth of
resources, such as empathic powers,
technical expertise, technical skills, and
ingenuity to meet the challenges before
them.

In
some
ways,
Evergreen
can
be
envisioned
as
a
Starship Enterprise-The Evergreen adventure similarly
requires the diversity of its community
to accomplish successfully the many
goals related to , being an outstanding
college.
There are many examples of
successes in our journey toward a
community that embraces the differences
of ethnicity. of culture, physical
challenges, of sexual orientation, and of
socio-economic experiences.
An increasing number of people of
color in all of our constituencies
demonstrates our success in reflecting a
The
changing ethnic population.
multicultural emphasis of our curriculum
and solicited expertise in our faculty
clearly show the serious commitment
toward diversity.
When asked how we respond to
people with challenges, we can describe
the successful Window of Opportunity
Conference recently held on our campus
that brought people with a variety of
challenges, private and public employers,
and educators together to develop
different networks for dialogue.
The two annual International Gay
and Lesbian Film Festivals held at
Evergreen, along with programming done
by the student Gay and Lesbian Resource
Center, contributes greatly to enhancing
understanding and hospitality in our
community.
The full range of socio-economic
experiences reflected in our population
increases our resolve to continue and
expand programs that enhance the
empowerment of each community
member to achieve both personal and
institutional success.
' Unlike the powers of telepathy,
astto-projection. and time travel available
to the Starship Enterprise group, we must
rely on our abilities to come together in
order to discuss the meaning of
community and to participate in cerc:mooy
that strengthens the spirit that guides us.
"Notes from Joe" is a weekly column
wrilten for the CPl by Evergreen's
Presitknt Joe OIQl\der.

by Dario Depiante
Now is a crucial time in the
development of Nicaragua. The United
States has the opportunity to see the
communist regime of Daniel Ortega
reduced to nothing more than a blighted
memory when Nicaragua holds its
elections next February.
The United States can best facilitate
in the democratization of this region by
keeping out where we're not welcome...
just this once.
A coalition of 18 separate political
parties, ranging from moderate to ulttaliberal, have united behind the moderate
Violeta de Chamorro, publisher of the
Democratic opposition press "La Prensa."
Charnorro, a former Sandinista herself,
has declared herself at odds with Ortega.
This is as a result of his continUed,
unwarranted military build up and
continued
universal
armed
forces
conscription (this even after the
Tegucigalpa accord was signed.) His
complete intransigence has alarmed
Charnorro and other members of the
UNO Party; as the oppostion is called.
These people who are at odds on
many, many issues are in accord on one:
Daniel Ortega must go. His leanings
toward a totalitarian state closely mirror
that of another "People's Hero"-turnedleftist-dictator, Fidel Castro.
Left leaners and other bleeding hearts
will whine that we propagated many of
Ortega's wrongs by funding the Contras.
Could we, as a responsible Democracy,
just allow communism to flourish in our
hemisphere? I think not However,
funding the Contras proved to be
somewhat of a blunder in the long run.
It is clear from experience that the
United States should never send others
against an evil that we are afraid or
unwilling to combat ourselves. The Bay
of Pigs invasion is a marvelous example
of this.

Had we invaded with a complement
of American servicemen, Cuba would
probably be a democracy today, enjQying
the benefits and prosperity of free trade
with the United States.
Instead, thousands clamor everyday to
be released from Fidel's workers
paradise. Dumping the political prisoners
on us was not enough for Castro
however, he decided to release all his
prisoners and mental patients as well. For
the U.S. to allow another dictatorship of
this kind to take hold hundreds of miles
from our very border would mean
disaster.

But since we've tainted our name by
supporting the unpopular, un-successful
Contras, our wisest move is to do
nothing but watch.
We should send
down a bipartisan election observation
group that is amply staffed to cover three
fifths or more of polling places.
We know from many broken
promises that Ortega can't be trusted.
Given the choice, and properly educated,
the Nicaraguan people will doubtless
choose a democracy over tyranny.
Middle of the Road is a political
column that appears weekly in the CPJ.

by Suzette Williams
Evergreen students are continually
debating the issue of accountability on
campus. The CPl staff stands by a policy
of accountability for material published in
the paper. This lesson should be heeded
by other gJOups on campus sucb as the
Student Union and the S & A
Reorganization
The Student Union is analogous to a
student~funded
newspaper
run by
anonymous editors publishing material by
anonymous writers. Where does a student
take complaints?

Team.

The CPl's policies are an example
of
making
community
members
accountable. Being accountable for one's
actions is a necessary byproduct of
holding power.
For this reason, the CPl does not
print unsigned letters or articles written
under pseudonyms. It's easy to write a
scathing letter or editorial under a false
name. It's much harder for a writer to be
accountable for hWber statements.
All letters and articles submitted to
the CPJ also must include a current
phooe number and address. Again, this

{

Welfare plan

area.
They are attracted to the state
because of its better schools, cleaner air,
cheaper housing and perhaps better job
opportunities. But Gov. Thompson says
they are coming to Wisconsin mainly for
the generous welfare benefits.
Wisconsin offers the nation's 9th
highest monthly Aid to Families with
Dependent Children (AFDC) payments:
S517 to a mother with three children,
compared with $342 in Illinois.
Nat\ooally, each state sets its own level
of food stamp and AFOC benefits paid to
poor single parents and their children.
Since 1986, 21,000 welfare families
have migrated to Wisconsin: about onothird of them from Dlinois, and most are
"minorities," according to Newswedt

magazine.
Many white Wisconsin natives are
grwnbling about the rising dark tide of

Page 6 Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989

are

accountability in this system.
The Services and Activities Boanl
traditionally has been undez fire by
students for not being "representative.·
Whatever the flaws of the Services
I\Ild Activities Board, it is a Board whicla
forces its members to be accountable for
decisions.
After serving 00 the Board for one
year, this fact was driven home last
Spring when I and five other Board
members were forced to answer questions
about our tentative allocations from a
room full of angry students.
It was painful, but we weze held
accountable. That room full of students
knew exactly where to bring their
grievances, and exactly wh'l to bring
them to. Similarly, students upset with
the Cooper Poinl Journal know where to
bring their grievances.
This year I hope the S & A
Reorganization Team heeds the mistakes
of the Student Unioo and incorporates the
successes of the CPJ and the Services
and Activities Board in this area.
Without accepting this responsibility
that comes with holding power, student
governance forever will remain a select
group of students bickering about how to
make decisions for the rest of us.

Locking the buildings
accomplishes nothing

'

by Carol B. HaU
The state of Wisconsin is almost lilywhite - with "minorities" making up only
6 percent of the population - and
Governor Tommy Thompson aims to
keep it that way.
The Republican governor is backing
a plan that will roll out the "unwelcome"
mat to anyone black and poor who would
dare to move to Wisconsin seeking a
better life.
Cities and towns in southern
Wisconsin are rapidly becoming the new
homes of low-income, mostly black and
Hispanic immigrants from the Chicago

is for reasoos of accountability.
Decision-making
without
accountabili~y, even under a system of
"participatory democracy· such as the
Student Union, is unacceptable.
Constantly students lament that they
lack a "voice" -- a way of expressing the
will of the student body. Yet SbJdents
will never achieve such a voice until they
are willing to become accountable.
The present system of student
governance means decisions
made by
whoever shows up, whether that be two
people or 200. Sketchy records, at best,
are kept of who attends, and those
attending vary from meeting to meeting.
Without such consistency, there is no
accountability. Who is the Student Union?
Governance groupies are annoyed by this
question, and generally answer it with
"The Student Union is everyone."
Therefore, if I am dissatisfied with a
Student Union decision, who do I talk to
Governance
about my
complaint?
groupies answer this one ' with, "Take it
to the Student Union."
Thus, I take my complaint to the
Student Union, a group of who-knowshow-many people, not all students, who
only represent their own opinions and lire
most likely not the same students who
made the initial decision. There is no

poor folks, and are quick to blame the
state's climbing crime rate on "gangs and

drugs" brought in by the newcomers.
So conservative Gov. Thompson,
alarmed by the influx of "poor people"
(ie. blacks), has come up with a plan
designed to help discourage them from
flocking to Wisconsin.
Thompson's plan would adjust
newcomer's welfare benefits to their
home-state levels for six months, so that
a mother of three children who moved
into Wisconsin from Dlinois would
receive monthly payments of only $342
instead of $517 for her ftrSt six months
in Wisconsin.

The
state
of
Wisconsin Is almost lIIywhlte- with -minorities·
making . up only six
percent
of ' the
population ...
"We should not offer financial
incentive for poor people to move here,"
said a Wisconsin state senator who
helped draft the plan. "If they're coming
for other reasoDS, fine, but at least we
won't be asking taxpayers to artificially
Slimulate that miplion."
But the real motivation for this
plan is clear: since the majority of the

racist
low-income newcomers are African
American and Hispanic American, the
specter of racism looms large. And this is
blatant racism, not the subtle stuff, as
long-time black residents of Wisconsin
will tell you.
Many who faced only subtle
racism until recently, now discover all
blacIss are welfare recipients in the eyes
of some white locals.
"When I go to a store here, I'm
looked upon as a welfare recipient until
they find out I'm assistant principal of
the high school," said a Kenosha resident.
Thompson's Wisconsin welfare
plan is c~ly racist, impractical, bigoted
against the poor, and reflects a repulsive,
"Not in my neighborhood," attitude. But
it may also be illegal.
In 1969, the U.S. Surreme Court
ruled that residency requirements for
welfare benefits deny citizens equal
protectioo under the law.
This doesn't scare Thompson,
who thinks he could win against a more
conservative Supreme Court. if the plan
passes the state JegisIalure.
This is one to watch closely, for
if Wisconsin ~ in impleJnenting
this bigoted schMIe, 0Ihu state may
follow suit in finding ways to reduce
welfare benefits to' the poor"CSt of the
poor - most of whom are cJilldren.
Ms. Hall, an Olympia resident,

wrlJes a column called Up FrOM for an
Indiana magazine. Her column appears
weekly in tM CPl.

STAFF BOX
Co-Editors: Suzette Williams and Kevin
Boyer
Business Manager: Edward Martin III
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
Production Manager: Tedd Kelleher
Ad Layout: Tina Cook
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Calendar: Anne Autio
Typist: Catherine Darley
Arts and Entertainment: Andrew Hamlin
Editorial Policy:
The Cooper Point Joumal (CPJ)
editors and staff may amend or clarify
these policies.
'
Objective:
The CPJ editor and staff are
determined to make the CPJ a student
forum for communication which is both
entertaining and Informative.
DNcIllnea:
calendar-Frlday, noon
Articles-Frlday, noon
Letters-Monday, noon
Ada-Monday, 5 pm
Ru... for aubmlulona:
Submissions are accepted from CPJ
staff members as well as students and
community members. Subml88lons must
be original, Before undertaking tim.
consuming Of , lengthy projects, ho~r,
It's' • goOd ,. Id.. to contact the editors
ahead of, deadline.
Submlaalona should be brought to the
CPJ offices on an IBM formatted dllkette.
Any word proc:e8llng file compalble with
WordPerfect 5.0 is acceptable. DIaka
should Include • double-apaced printout,
with the author'1 "ame, daytime phone
number and
0IakI win be
returned _ .oon as l)088ib1e.

add,.....

Poetry Editor: Katrina Barr
Sporta Editor: Tom Pereira
Cartoonist: Ron Austin
Resident Artist: Heather Candelaria
Staff Writers: Dan Snuffin, Honna
Metzger, Scott A. Richardson, Barrett
Wilke, Tom Pereira, Chris Bader, Carol
B. Hall, Joe Olander
Contributors: Ann Ziegler, Chang YoungGil, Nora Randall, Jamie Finn, Erich
Shuler, Tim Gibson, Kristin Rowe, Daria
Depiante, Josef Oguiza
Interim Advisor: Stephen Bray

H you are unable to comply with the
submission requirements for any reason,
contact the editors for assistance.

by Kevin Boyer
At a time when Evergreen
President Joe Olander has the majority
of the Evergreen community 00 his
side on an issue (gun on campus), he
has decided to lock doors on campus
without soliciting community -inpUl
In so doing, he not only has made
concessions in the face of increasing
pressures from the media. security, and
state legislature but, in the name of
safety, has made our campus even
more unsafe.
Where is someone to go if
attacked? All the lighted buildings will
be locked, and more importantfy, all
the inter-campus phones wiU be out of
reach. The campus phones are located
just inside the locked CAB, and in the
locked wing of the Library building.
Administrators' answer to this
concern is that a student can always

go to the security office, or use the
outside phones, (all pay phones). But
if a person is being attacked or even
followed, it is a long windsprint to the
security office. The pay phones outside
of the Library require both a quanec
and time to dial the campus opemtor.
(Dialing 911 won't bring help in time.)
Are locked doors really the best
alternative to arming Campus Security?
Or is Olander using the safety/gun
issue as a "spotted owl" to lock the
doors and lessen the school's chance at
a liability lawsuit?
If Olander is willing to make
concessions in the interest of safety, he
should seek. ideas from within the
community instead of responding to
outside pressures. We are the most
familiar with the issue and the most at
risk.

Letters
Evergreen radicals?

Lett....:
Letters will be accepted on ail
subjects. They must include the author's
real name, phone number and acldre88.
Although the address and phone number
will not be published, the CPJ will not
publish letters submitted without this
Information.
Letters will be edited for libel,
grammar, spelling and space. Letters
should be 300 words or 1888. Every
attempt is made to publish 88 many letters
88 posable however, space limitaliona and
tlmelinea may Influence publication.
Letters do not represent the opinions
of the CPJ staff or editors.
Aclvertlalng:
The CPJ is responsible for restitution
to our advertising customers for mistakes
in their advertisements In their first printing
only. Any subsequent printings of th.
m.take are the soie responsibility of the
advertising customer.

Staff ......nga:
Open meetings are held weekly in the
CPJ office Fridays aI noon.

Evergreen students are frequently

accused of being radicals who try to
shake up the system. What a relief,
therefore, it must be to the establishment
to see how successfully Evergreen
students are emulating conservatives in
becoming reactionaries.
Tbere's more than a semantic
difference. Take the omnip-esent gun
issue, for example. A true radical would
respond to the notion lhatsecurity should
be armed by saying that they shouldn't
be and by presenting viable al~ves.
A reactionary, however, would
present an empty facade of hostility to
the idea of an anned security while
offering no real allCmlltives. Bveagaeen
students, in
their
transitioa to
reactionaries, have been content to just
sit back and bitch - rebuffing any
initiatives to resolve the situatioo.
From a 9OCiological perspective the
change is noteworthy. Dialogue has been

Cooper P,?in.t

replaced by dogma, reason transfonned
into reaction. We're less like liberals and
more like the Republican party in the
19505.
Why not settle for locked doors 00
campus? It would take security out of
buildings where they might be ambushed
and out into the open, where they'd be
better able to observe crimes being
committed.
Maybe they'd be willing to drop their
request for guns with such a threat to
their safety removed. Which shall it be,
locked doors or guns? The time fur
deciding is now.
Unfortunately, though, I'm sure &be
response to the locked doors policy will
be additional unproductive reaction. To
think that a conservative state senator,
,Brad Owen, ooce tried to have us shut
down for being a hotbed of radicalism.
He must savor the irony.
BrendaD Williams

J<?~l

October 19, 1989

Page 7

by Cbris Bader
Linda Evans, the glamorous and
beautiful star of Dynasty fame, has left
the trappings of Hollywood foc life in
Tacoma. Don't wocry fans, Evans is not
"roughing it" by any means, but has
purchased a large, historic mansion in the
shadow of Mount Rainier.
Evans
reportedly
moved
10
Washington 10 be near her spiritual
menlOr, J2. Knight of Yelm.
J.z., born Judy HamplOn to a strict
fundamentalist mother in New Mexico,
now resides in a $2 million dollar

Ramtha and J.Z·. Knight:
A scam for the millions

mansion, complete with the 1argest stable
of Arabian horses in the United StaleS.
She ClIme into such wealth as a result
of her spiritual teachings, which involve
"channeling,"
or allowing another
intelligence 10 enter one's body fIX' a
short period of time.
During her channeling sessions, 12.
is supposedly "taken over" by a 35,000
year old entity from Atlantis named
Ramtha.
12. travels the country, appearing 00
such programs as the Merv Griffin show,
during which she goes into trances.

Upon entering such a trance, 12.
slowly closes her eyes and rolls her head
back. W!len 1.z. opens her eyes again
she speaks in a deeper, sing-song voice,
makes funny faces and claims 10 be
Ramtha.
Ramtha's messages themselves are
not 100 impressive, consisting of your
basic, "you're an old soul" type of new
age mumbo-jumbo.
Ramtha or J2:s motives become
rather suspect when one Iearns that she
charges between $200 and $500 for a
single session with the Atlantean stud.

Such Hollywood stars as Jermaine
Jackson, Mike Farrell, and the everspacey Shirley Maclaine have junlped on
the Ramtha band-wagon f<r short periods
of time.
Meanwhile, poor Linda Evans, at
least acc<Xding to the admittedly
questionable TV program, "A Current
Affair," is holed up in her Tacoma
mansion, stock-piling food and awaiting
a Ramtha-predicted apocalypse.
Ah well .. oits a living.

Sante Fe Station: An average alternative
by Tim Gibson
As I descended upon the Santa Fe
Station, Olympia's newest Mexican
restamant located across from Fabricland
on Cooper Point Road, I was first
impressed by the sign that read: "Now
Appearing: Live Music from Klaus
Lendzian."
The rest of the night lived up 10 this
shining example of Hispanic aUthenticity.
On the way to the table, I noticed
that the plastic "Little Shop of Horrors"
plants, the ceiling fans, the wicker chairs,
and the cooks in their traditional
"cinnamon toast crunch" hats gave the
restamant
a
comfortably
familiar

appearance.

The clientele consisted of mostly
older couples and families, reinforcing
the comfortable, if a little dull,
atmosphere set by decor.
Soon after being seated, a waiter
breathlessly scooted to our table and
handed my girlfriend Iris and I our
menus, which, to my surprise, contained
very reasonable prices.
The entree~ were priced below eight
dollars and the more traditional plates,
such as tacos, burritos, and enchiladas,
were even less.
Our waiter, aptly named Gary,
exuded enthusiasm and served us
wonderfully. In fact, everyone we came
into contact with at the restaurant seemed

genuinely friendly and willing 10 go out
of their way to make our meal pleasant
Our entrees, seafood enchiladas for
me and a beef chimichanga for Iris,
proved to be from the "let's appeal to
everyone" genre of cooking and therefore
became unexciting, and even a little drab.
However, the fare proved 10 be tasty
enough to leave us entirely stuffed, so we
pushed our plates away early to make
room for the delightful desserts that came
later.
Among the traditional desserts, the
fried ice cream stood out as particularly
delicious.
The Santa Fe Station (open from 11
am - 10 pm Mon - Thurs. 11 am - 11

pm Fri - Sat, and 12 am - 9 pm Sunday)
combines a comfortable setting with great
service and reasonable prices, but the
food itself, while not being outright
displeasing, left me a bit disappointed.
Indeed, eating at the Station in search
of authentic Mexican food would be
much like, as Iris said, "Tommy Lasorda
(the very Italian LA Dodgers manager)
eating spaghetti by Chef Boyardee."
However, if another trip to the
Urban Onion or the Spar Cafe leaves you
a bit cold, try the very reasonable Santa
Fe Station.

Sports

Baseball: How 'bout them Cubs?

by Tom Pereira
OK. a lot of Cubs fans are really
bummed now but let's face it, you spell
Cubs l.o.s.e.r. There's no doubt about it,
they choked.
Sure, they did much better than most
people expected after their dismal preseason (9-27), but they choked. Andre
"The Hawk" Dawson batted a dismal
.127 with no dingers.
The MVP from two years ago just
plain sucked, then choked, and then he
swallowed.
Mike Bielecki was red hot, then
oops, you guessed it, he choked.
He walked three batters in a row
with two out in the eighth inning, on the
rust batter he was ahead on the count 12. Then Mitch Williams gave up a two
run single to Will "the Thrill" Clark, still
with two outs. His only batter. Choke.
Studs Turkel said, "The Cubs are more
endearing to Americans when they lose."
You know, the Cubs are like life in
America in that as much as you think
that you'll come out ahead, you always
.
get the shon end of the stick.
The Cubbies have a cemetery in
Wrigley Field. They are the heart and

soul of America, we can't win.
The A's on the other hand, are ldekin'
and takin' names. When you have a team
that is as deep as the A's, well it would
seem hard to beat them.
In the fourth game of the ALeS Jose
Canseco hit a dinger that ~as the longest
loog ball in several years -- about 500
feet See Ya.
It went 10 what is affectionately
known as the sky deck in the Sky Dome,
about 3()() feet up. It wouldn't have been
out of some parks though, let's say
.YellowslOne.
And we can't overlook the performance
of Rickey Henderson. Batting over .400.
SluggiRg percentage of over .640. Onbase percentage higher than 1.000.
Don't forget two very important
home runs. Oh yeah, the major league
record of eight stolen bases, (don't f~get
that he was never put out on a steal, only
tried in three games and this series only

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went five games).
Rickey is up for free-agency ~
year. Don't let that creep in New York
get his hands on Rickey again, it would
be exceptionally bad.
.
A couple of more things; when
you're watching the series remember this
is the first time this has happened -- a
bay series -- and probably the last.
You're walChing several Hall of
Fame candidates (Hen\ierson, Will Clark,
Jose Canseco, Mark McGuire, Dave
Parker, Mike Moore, Rick Reuschel,
Dave Stewart, and others).
It is the greatest American pastime.
After over forty years, last Monday's
Giants - Cubs game was NBC's fmal
bioadcasl This series is being dedicated
to a man of arts and letters, a renaissance
man, and a man who just loved baseball;
A. Bartlett Giamatti.
So, sit back, get a cold one out of
the ice box, and enjoy the 1989 Bay
Area Series, i.e. the W~ld Series.

Men'. Soccer s.:ores
. .
Geoducks 6
Gonzaga Prep 2
Upcoming Games:
Oct. 22
1 pmGeoducks vs Simon Fraser

Oct. 14:

Women's Soccer Scores
Oct. 14:
Geoducks 5
Whitman 1
Upcoming Games:
.Oct. 22
1 pmGeoducks vs at Central
Wash.
'
Oct. 28
1 pmGeoducks vs U. of Puget
Sound

I
I

AND

De La record reVIeW
Generic nickname amoog De La Soul

b1 A..tmr IIamUD
DB LA SouL
3 Fmrr IbaR



RmNo.

TOMMY Boy RsoaRos

DE LA CREDITS. Band mem~:
Trugoy the Dove, Posdnuos, P.A.
Pasc:master Masci and Prince Paul
(menD and lasagna devotee). Band
membels whose names can be' spelled
backwards for additional confusion: 2.
Band member most food of ketchup:
Mase (shown guzzling some Heinz 00 the
rear cover. Most creative song title:
"Potholes In My Lawn." Most creative
music publishing company name on the
record: We Blows Up Music (BMI).
DE LA GLOSSARY. 3 Feet High
and Rising: Mythical game show
conducted throughout the album. Luuden:
A quaalude, ~ anything producing a
mellow attitude (encouraged). Jenifa: Any
or specifically Posdnuos'
female,
girlfriend. who likes English and running
around in naught but Saran Wrap. Buddy:
The female sex organ. Jimmy: The male
sex organ. Scrub: Old schoolyard
pejorative revived by Prince Paul (see
"Can U Keep A Secret"). De1acJatic:
Political envirorunent where the individual
is free 10 ' indulge in his/ber wildest
desires, i.e. "I can stick my arm in the
air/[ can stick my arm up my oose/f. can
hold my foot and count to three." Plug:

members-"PIug One", "Plug Two", etc.
Daisy: Symbol of peace and prosperity,
usually found near a peace sign in the
album's graphics.
DE LA SAMPLING. Samples include
Steely Dan. Hall and Oates, the first
IDeIISUre of "Stand By Me: the fust three
notes of Otis Redding's "Dock of The
Bay," James Brown, George Clinton,
SchoolHouse Rock, Liberace, and an old
Frmch instruction recoi-d.
De La leaves in the crackle and pop
from their old records, which must annoy
the living shit out of CD buyers, and
they also credit their sources in some
cases. (This is almost unheard of rap
since Grandmaster Rash and the Furious
Five credited the Tom Tom Club f~ "It's
Nasty" in '78.)
On other songs the samples are not
credited. but that just makes it fun 10
guess. Besides, a full credit list for "Cool
Breeze on the Rocks" would take longer
to recite than the song (37 seconds), and
wouldn't be nearly as fun.
. DE LA LYRICS. They lack the
fmger-in-yoUl-face delivery of an LL
Cool J, but they have more dry wit, less
ostentatiousness. "Say No Go" makes its
anti-drug point with sublime subtle
rankings--"They say shovin' is worse than
pushin' but I'd rather know a shover than

I
II

"1 Barrett Wilke
CAMPER Y1~ BBBTHOVEN

KEY l.IMB PIE
VIRGIN RECORDS

One mooth ago IOmorrow, I first
heard the long-awaited "Key Lime Pie:
by the no-longer obscure Camper Van
Beethoven.
I remember my expectations of this
record. It had 10 have the pleasantly
nonsensical lyrics of their earlier songs,
such as "Where the Hell Is Bill," "ZZ
Top Goes To Egypt," and "The Day That
Lassie Went to the Moon." But not as
sloppy and loosely arranged.
And it also had 10 be worthy of
following up their 1988 all-time~lassic­
up-there-with-Led-Zeppelin-IV
album
"Our Beloved Revolutionary Sweetheart."
. It-had to. be as well-produced (not
over-produced), and continue their new

legacy of rock-steady jamming, folksy
swooning, as well as consistently
reaching, yearning, and intuitive lyrics,
often both relevant and irrelevant at the
same time.
In short, it had to be damn near
perfecL
And it was (well, close).
It displayed much the old spuokiness
of the early albums. Their producer and
menlOr, Jackson Herring, didn't seem as
concerned with making every note perfect
- which may have been the case with
"Revolutionary Sweetheart." The band is
much more "in the raw" this time, and
satisfies the most eccentric of tastes and
at the same time .produces two
chartworthy tracks: "Sweetharts" and
"Pictures of Matchstick Men."
"Pictures" starts out with new electric
violinist Morgan Lischer setting down the

Notice

Notice

everybody thinks they're neat "If they
call themselves De La Soul, they should
play soul music. Aretha Franklip, that's

soul music. They aren'L" -Paul. H.
Henry. "Well...uh, you made it sound like
there would be more of the original lyrics
preserved."--Rollo, a good friend of mine,
who has the entire SchoolHouse Rock
multiplication table on tape.
DE LA FORMAT. Advantage of
buying the CD or C".assette version: Extra
tracks included. (My vinyl copy slOps
with "D.A.I.S.Y. Age".)
Disadvantage: The inner sleeve
comic book is reduced to itsy bitsy teeny
weeny need-a-microscope size, Yet
another reason why CDs are an insult 10
recorded music.
DE LA CONCLUSION. If you don't
like rap, you could do a lot worse than
to give these guys a chance.
They don't yell in your ear, they're
fUlUlY, they're anti -drugs and pro-respect
(even the inevitable song about getting
laid, "Buddy," comes across as more
affectionate than exploitative), and they
ob\;ously like Frank Zappa just as much,
or better, than I I Cool J.
And don't forget those De La Soul
Proof of Purchase seals, just in case
YOU have the correct answers to the
quiz. (What DOES "Toosh et lele poo"

mean?)

am waiting on the heaviest in the air to
brealr/and reveal some small irrelevant
lnIthfcause we move like we are
suspended in amber/and the light from
your eyes spills from the moon."
There are a couple of arutoying
songs lyrically, however, m~t notably a
pointless rune called "Flowers" which
sings, "Flowers growing/by the drunken
river/tlowers growing/by the burning
bridges/flowers growing/out of my
bones." But hey, 10 some this what
Camper Van Beethoven is all about
Which brings me to my final point.
Don't expect this album 10 son your life
out
If "Revolutionary Sweethart" did this
for you with such philosophically potent
tunes as "Change Your Mind," "Never
Go Back," and "Life is Grand," just be
happy with thaL
You won't get any therapy from
"Key Lime Pie" unless you need to
rescramble your mind. But hey. that's
what music is all about.

~\ottE1tR SOl1Rl>ollQ

~
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MEAT &: VEGETABlE PIES

We're having a
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HUNDREDS OF SELECTIONS
POP TO CLASSIC

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-----------------.

framework with a few simple strokes of
her bow and the band erupts inlO a
catalclysmic frenzy reminisent of their
previous college-chart busting album.
Lischer, as the liner notes point out, was
wearing either brown boots or was
barefoot.
David Lowery, CVB's forming
member and lead singer, adds the
harmonica to his usual guitar and
keyboard work. He stands out best on
"Borderline; a bluesy tune with a sica
offbeat guitar that shuffies along, taking
its time, like only a stubborn '67 VW
camper van could.
Another tune, "When I Win the
Lottery", is surely soon 10 be a standard
Evergreen party song. This song could
have fit right next to "Take the Skinheads
Bowling"
on
their
1985 debut,
"Telephone Free Landslide ViclOry."
The bizzare tripiness reaches its forte
on "The Light From a Cake" which
meanders thus: " ... We are sleeping like
angeWand living like devils again/and I

~GCO.

GET 'EM BEFORE THEY'RE GONE
. Right Anewr

a pusher cuz a pusher is a jerk. •
In "Tread Water," De La Soul hangs
with Mr. FISh, Mr. Monkey (sporting a
broken ann), and other members of the
animal Idngdom. And then there's "Can
U Keep A Secret," with Prince Paul
doing the creepiest, raspiest whispering
since Gary Kellegren 00 Frank Zappa's
"We're Only In It For The Money."
This man makes Tone Loc sound
like Sade; you can never tell if he's
gonna evaporate in sexual ecstacy or
shoot somebody.
DE LA LIES. The musu.chioed gent
on the inside sleeve comic book tells you
"There are no obscene words on this
album, but the thought is erotic!" That's
not quite true.
A few muffled four-letter words
appear at the end of side one, and in the
middle of side two Prince Paul breaks
out with one. Apan from this, however,
the album is "clean," as the KAOS
programmers say.
DE LA COMMERCIALITY. Best
radio tracks: "The Magic Number"
(SchoolHouse Rock goes hip-hop, with
plenty of weird samples), "Say No Go"
(Hall and Oates get a sobering
makeover), anI! "Me Myself And I,"
which is just 100 catchy for words. Love
that transform scratch gargling.
DE LA DIS SING. Well, not

Camper Van: Damn near perfect

!

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simultaneously
·Check messages anytime
·FRANCHISES AVAILABLE

Page 8 Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989

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Arts & Entertainment

THE EVERGREEN
HOURS
STATE COLLEGE MOnc:a~~yT~~~~8:30-6:00
BOOKSTORE
Saturday 10:00-2:00

STUDENT BOARD MEMBERS

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The 1989-90 Services and AcUvities Fee Review Board
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105 LEGION WAY
DOWNI'OWN

Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989

Page 9

Calendar

Arts a Entortclinmont

PERFORMANCES
EXHIBITS

Mangrove's first name revealed!
by Andrew Hamlin
I was walldng aroWld campus before
sitting down to write this article and I
noticed that Dr. Mangrove is at it again.
His new poster purports to set the
record straight on what his other posters
have been trying to say all along.
Apparently, what they were trying to say
is, "Joe Olindier is FAT! Boy is he
FAT! We mean really FAT! We mean
super FAT!"
Of course, our college president's
name is really Joe Olander.
But Dr.
Mangrove isn't all that concerned with
spelling. He misspelled Nietzsche's name
in his last poster, which reads, (with the
"'God is dead.-spelling corrected)
Nietzsche.' 'Nietzsche is dead.--God.'
God 1, Nietzsche 0: Joe isn't exactly
fat, either. But I don't think the Doctor
dwells much on such things as reality.
His goal is beyond. Beyond what is still
shrouded in mystery.
A confidential source gave me Dr.
Mangrove's address. He told me that the
Doctor was reclusive, and not to expect
an interview. But I'm a journalist, and
journalists are obliged to try. On a gray
day I bicycled over and knocked on the
door.
The young man who opened it had
on a white terrycloth robe, and his hair
was damp. "Are you ... Dr. Mangrove?" I
asked, looking around furtively. He said
he was. "I'm from the Cooper Point
Journal," I explained. He invited me in,
on the condition that I not reveal his real
name or where he lived. That seemed
fair.
We sat down and he offered me a
cup of coffee. I asked him how th~ Dr.
Mangrove phenomena got started. He
was vague, referring only to a "series of
events," but admitted that a big influence
on him was the Mutants, an anonymous
group of people who made guerilla poster
art. Then "The Dr. Mangrove Institute
was founded, and there was created a
top-secret panel of experts to determine
its mission." The panel is so secret that
the Doctor himself does not know who
they are or what they do. He receives
his instructions by computer.
The first Dr. Mangrove poster came
out in the late winter of 1988. It read
"Tear Down These Walls!
Build
Communities, Not Cities." Subsequent
works included "Stop Bill and Ted's
Excellent Adventure," ("all proceeds will
consist of extortion money"), a silhouette
of a shapely woman with the caption
"Are you offended in any way shape or
form by this poster7", and a letter
denouncing Dr. Mangrove as an "Avantgarde ansy fansy," which the Doctor
stuck on a poster and posted all over
campus, with a note from himself
thanking the writer for the note.

Some of the old posters had a phone
number the public could call to leave
feedback, but that number is no longer
valid, he told me over coffee. He's
cwrently working on getting his own 800
telephone number.
In addition, the
Branch now carries the Dr. Mangrove
newsletter, which began publication this
month.
The fl1"St issue is two pages long and
has contributions from Peapod Pot Pie,
Jotio Squirt, Frankie Roulette, and
Horace.
And finally, the Mangrove Institute
helps sponsor a weekly show on KAOS:
Radio Savage, hosted by Mr. Morris
Martzapaan, Tuesdays 12 midnight to

But in the midst of this
diversification, the posters keep coming.
I asked Mangrove about his pink poster
which read in part, "When I fl1"St attended
Evergreen I thought I was getting away
from all the trendy people, all the
yuppies, and the competitive capita1istic
modes of thinkinJl .. ." Some people had
scribbled things on those posters, like "go
back to Bellevue," and "you're part of
the problem."
"The poster was intended to provoke
a reaction," the Doctor said "We wanted
to be slightly radical with that poster, so
as to move the moderate elements closer
to the left. So, the more mdical we get,

The Olympia Jazz Society presents
"Bebop Revisited," a jazz quintet
dedicated to performing classic jazz, at
the Washington Center's Stage n, Oct.
20 8 pm. For further information call
357·9812.

the more the moderate has to readjust."
I gulped down my coffee and bade the
Doctor goodbye. He gave me a copy of
his "We have a right to Amorphousness!"
poster and wished me luck. Just before
I left, I asked him if Dr. Mangrove had
a fl1"St name. "Ob yes, actually. It's
Throatwobbler." Fans of the late great
Graham Chapman will understand
I pUlled my bicycle out the doorway,
leaving him in his bathrobe. Waiting for
the signal to get up, switch on the
MacIntosh, and type "Joe Olinder is
FAT! Boy is he FAT! We mean really
FAT! We mean super FAT!"

by Ericb Sbuler
Microwave was cool. He talked to
me. I walked into the Seattle Center
Coliseum at 3 pm. The sound and stage
were set up. Microwave was On the side
of the stage stringing Peter Buck's
guitars--- about nine in all.
I saw a ping pong table backstage
so I posed the question to Microwave,
"Who's the best?"
He said about 18 guys from the
band and crew play before each show.
He said Michael Stipe can beat them alL
Stipe certainly didn't look the part
of ping pong extraordinaire when he
walked onstage. He sported a new
mohawk with a braided tail that stretched
to the middle of his back. He wOre a
white suit which he abandoned during the
second half of the show for shorts and
combat boots. The band opened with
"Stand, The One I Love, So. Central
Rain and Tum You Inside Out." Stipe
dedicated various songs to the Exxon
corporation, the students in China, and to
the audience. Film clips and comments
were shown behind the band on a large
screen.
A few things became apparent
about Stipe. First, he
an odd fellow.
Second, he has much more singing talent
than he shows on the albums.
Several times Stipe either started
or sang whole songs acapello. His voice
was simply excellent. Something became
apparent about the rest of the band as

is

Pittro's Pizza
~ ,

'\ , - ' . . . ~,

I<

I I

.1

well. They play their instruments, period
They aren't showmen, they are musicians,
and damn good ones at that.
Microwave touted Peter Buck's
abilities before the show and mentioned
that he is very humble about his skills.

didn't know all their concerts were like

In fact, he said the whole band is very

grown to fit a larger audience. They are
paid a lot of money.
Wednesday's concert showed that
"America's Best Rock & Roll Band"
(according to Rolling Stone), has
maintained its musical integrity and its
appeal as the quirkiest mainstream band
around

humble about their talents.
In concert, Buck shOok his head a
couple times but that was the extent of
his letting loose. Mike Mills and Bill
Berry moved even less.
The whole band could be accused
of rwming on automatic pilot if one

this.

R.E.M. has obviously grown. All
efforts to talk to them were thwarted by
large security men or \DIwilling
production managers. Stipe's show has



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William .... Huckley Will present a
lecture at the Washington Center for the
Performing Arts Oct. 26 at 8 pm For
ticket information contact 754-7711 ext.
214.
Marty KIelB, a marriage and family
counselor, will speak on "Censorship and
the Fear of Sexuality" on Oct. 21 at the
offices of the Northwest Feminist AntiCensorship Taskforce. Call 322-2911 for
more information.

SATURDAY MARKET
10am - 3pm

DID YOU KNOW
THERE IS A GROCERY STORE
ON CAMPUS?

"II PUN, ....IENOl.Y PLACE
TO SHOP, lilT • VISIT"'

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Capital Way

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THE BRANCH BAS NEW HO
(Starting Mon., Oct. 23rd)
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Sunday·1-11pm
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·Books

1"1.

The Branch It's worth the walkl

Located In the .
Housing Community Center
next to The Corner cafe

Maarava,
Evergreen's
Jewish
cultural organization will meet Oct. 26 at
5 p.m. in Lib. 3214.
Tbe Student Union meets every
Wednesday from 3 pm - 5 pm. Check
the S & A Office' for locations.
The College's Strategic Planning
committee meets Mondays from 3 pm 5 pm in Library 2116.
Tbe Assessment Study Group
meets Wednesdays from 1 pm - 3 pm.
Contact Steve Hunter at ext.. 6567 for
location.

HEALTII
AIDS Antibody testing will be
conducted on Wednesday from 6 p.m. 9 p.m. at the Evergreen Health Center.
Contact ext. 6200 for further infonnation.
Black Hills Community Hospital
offers free blood pressure screening every
day from 7 a.m. - 7 p.m. No appointment
is necessary.
Tbe Diabetes Wellness Center at
Black Hills Community Hospital is
offering a support group meeting to help
diabetics get through the holidays on Oct.
23 at 7:30 p.m. For more information call
754-3333.

GENERAL
Local authors will be displayin'g
their work on Oct. 21 from 1 p.m.- 4
p.m. at the Four Seasons Bookstore. For
more information call 786-0952.
"The First-Ever-Kid's-Guide-ToThe-Best-In-Olympia" is available for
free from the Olympia Timberland
Library. The guide tells what the kids in
Olympia do for fun, food and everything
else.
The
new
Education/Job

-30 words ar 1ess-$3.00
-10 cents far each additional word
-Pre-payment required
oClUIIfted cleadllne-2 p.m. Tuesday

.When you want the reader 10 read what
you meant when you wrote it... Tbe
Roving Editor 786-8321.

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1-8OC).21l-XTRA.

You want

10 be financially independent?
You want 10 be your own boss? Then
networking is definitely for you. Call
Jerome at 459-4035.

Cruise Ship Jobs

OUR GUIDES. RECREATION PERSONNEl.
Excellent pay plus FREE travel. Caribbean.
Hawaii. Bahamas, South Pacilic. MeXICO.
CALL NOWI Call refundable .

KEYI



1-206-736-0775, Ext . ..11~
Would you like to offer Discover creell
card? Are you available for only a few ho
a week? IT so call 1-800-932-0528 :13. W'
pay you as much as $10.00 an hr. Only 1
positions available.

MONEV OIDERS

210S Harrilon (behind SkIppers') • 352-1596

§M,35. non-drinker. non-smoker, Dylllll,
Beatles, Dire Straits. Jazz, Three Stooges,
Woody Allen, Marx Brothers. Mariner.
Seahawk fan. Also enjoy walks. reading.
and honesty. Seeks SF w/similar Interests
for coherent conversation and 7 Call Wynn
866-6515 (eves.)
Lonely? Need a Date? Meet that special
someone todayl Call DATETIME

405

.

ama
'!\tjll'
'We have
,,,
rentals
t----available

SERVICESOOOOOO

ACUPUNCTURE & BODY WORK
CHRIS SYNODIS, certified acupuncturist,
Ucensed massage tberaplst, masters In
COIID!eIlng. Practice of acupuncwre
integrated with jin shin. jyutsu acupresaure,
crutial-sacral techniques, and chinese patent
hecba. Covered by student insurance. 1722
W. Harrison call 786-1195 for appL or
consultation.

-PHONE 866-6000 X6054
-STOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A
-SEND INFO TO: CPJ, TESe, CAB 305A
OLYMPI WA 88505

KAOS Coffee Mugs!

~

For sale by TESC student. GOOD
WORKING CHEV. VAN. 3/4 Ion. 35.0
engine, eight passenger. new paint, 1973,
$2,4~.00. Pbone: 352-9159.

HIRING Men - Women. Summerl
Year Round . PHOTOGRAPHERS.

·OLYMPIAN MAIL. BUSIN.ES$ ·SERVICE

Iolormation Center is now or n at the
Lacey Library. The center has a variety
of print, video, and computer based
resources and is free and open to the
public.
Tbe Tenth Annual Music City Song
Festival is offering over $250,000 in cash
and prizes to musicians, singers, lyricists
and composers. For complete contest and
entry information write to MCSF, P.O.
Box 17999-J, Nashville, TN 37217 or
call (615) 834-0027.
Tbe 1989 Governor's Conrerente
on Small Business will be held at the
Seattle Sheraton Hotel and Towers on
Oct. 19 and 20. For more information
call 441-6448.
Radical Women is offering a Rebel's
Halloween Masquerade on Oct. 28 at
7:30 p.m. at New Freeway Hall in
Seattle. For more infonnation call 7226057.
Tbe public is invited to attend three
panels to choose the winners of the
Washington State Arts Commission's
1989 Artist Fellowship Awards. Panels
will
consider
submissions
from
Washington artists in playwrighting,
choreography and music composition. For
more infonnation about panel meeting
times and locations contact the Arts
Commission at 753-3858.
A public bearing to consider the
establishment of a reduced speed limit on
Rich Road will be held on Oct. 25 at 6
pm at the East Olympia School Library.
All interested parties may attend.
Tbe Olympia City Council is
looking for someone to fIll vacancies on
the Olympia Parks Advisory Committee
and the Olympia Planning Commission.
The positions are open to any Olympia
resident and applications are available at ·
the Olympia City Hall. Applications must
be turned in by Nov. 3. Contact Nancy at
753-8447 for further information.

~~[8]~@@OO
CLASSIRED RATES

AND COMING SOON FOR YOUR
CAFFEINE FIX

THESE & OTHER FINE PRODUCTS AVAILABLE AT:
THE EVERGREeN STATE COLLEGE BOOKSTORE

·Drugs & sundries

MEETINGS

HELP WANTED 000000

To better serve the Evergreen Community,

~~._

Pidros Pizza

SPEAKERS AND IJECTUREs

STARTING NOV. 1st

·Underground comics & magazines

Pr . _ _ CClUClO" _ ,« . ........ -"..'O.".. ()rIr ' 1'0Cl_
r IOiIO ~~","""""" .. rl _ _ , ..... , , ... , 1 "'Ia'" • • 'oC . ,I'"

Tbe Career Development Center is
offering a workshop on Resume writing
on Oct. 20 from 12 pm - 1 pm in
Library 1406A.

THURSDAY - SUNDAY
10am - 3pm

·Dairy products - milk, eggs,
cheese, butter, ice cream

....._o'Ior~I'IM '\(I

and

FALL MARKET

·Fresh bread. & pastries from
The San Francisco St. Bakery

OFF ANY
OFF ANY
LARGE PIZZA MEDIUM PIZZA

A worksbop, JugglIBg Time: Books,
Work
Play, is being offered Oct. 25,
3 p.m.-4:30 p.m. in Lib. 1612. It includes
tips for time management and prioritizing.
A ' 'Halloween
mask-making
workshop is being offered Oct. 28 at the
Olympia Center from 10 am - noon. The
cost is $15. For more information call
753-8380.

285-5110.
" Abortion: Women. fighting ror
tbeir lives," a multi-media video
produced by two Evergreen students will
be shown Oct. 19 and 20 at 7 pm in
Lecture Hall 5.
Heidi Muller will celebrate the
release of her second album "Matters of
the Heart" in an album release concert
and party Oct. 26 8 pm at the New
Melody Tavern in Seattle. For ticket
information call 545-4167.
Tom Yody's "Abstractions," a
series of 3-D mixed media images, is on
display in the TESC Library Art Gallery
throup;h Oct. 30.



'-~~-:~ii~--~

WORKSHOPS

The Olympia Timberland Library
presents Readers Theater from 7 pm - 8
pm on Oct. 23. The reading of stories,
excerpts from plays and poetry will be
featured.
A Contemporary Tbeatre presents
Alan Ayckboum's comedy "Woman in
Mind" opening Oct. 26. For times and
ticket information conact the theater at

REM maintains it's integrity

DOES THIS MAN HAVE
"Bm~ DAVIS EYES?"
Ve., IhIa II nm
Thorp, manager 01
Golden Oldie.
Recorda & Tape•.
SInce 11170, Golden
OldIe. haa &old
hun-lr.d. 01
"84I11A1 Davll Ey..by KIm Camea. Let
Golden Oldie. ftnd
the record or tape
you've been
learchlng for.

2am.

An exhibit on Nadve Design is
being presented from Oct. 20 - Nov. 19
at . the Childhood's End Gallery in
Olympia. A variety of Native American
art and craftworks will be on display.

AND

~-6335.

LOSTIFOUND REED 0000

FOR SALE
Two studded snow t1r1!S for Large Ford
vehicle. ~ 1453.
1970 SAAB V-4 model 1-96. Original
owner. Well maintained. Solid state.
$1.1000 Olympia. Martin 754-4384 (eve.)

Medium-sized, tan, sorl of long-haired,
ultra-loveable, young she·1X)(j found at
Ash Apts. with brown collar. CAlL 866·
0804 or 866-9650 she wants .to come
homel

Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989
PaRe 10 Cooper Point Journal October 19, 1989

Page 11