cpj0477.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 19, Issue 26 (May 25, 1989)

extracted text
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Do you think drug use is prevalent at Evergreen?
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If so, do you think it is a problem?

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May 25, 1989
Volume 19 Issue 26

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Not as much as some other
places I know about. I went to
Garfielc and it seems pretty calm
here.

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Scott Hungerford

Yes, I do. But if you're not in the
scene, it's not a problem.

Celina Lilly

o

B

I think it's prevalent if you try to
find it, but it's not any more
obvious or more prevalent than
any other school campus that I've
been on. It's just a problem if
you use it in excess. I think that
drugs are good for you every
once in awhile.

Kirk Jones

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It's prevalent too but according to
other schools like Harvard and
stuff I don't think it's as strong.
We don't have as much of a
drug-use problem as they do
because people in here tend to
use it moderately.

DO

Janice Thibault

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It depends on what drug use
means. I think there's a lot of
problems on this earth and I think
that they're just gonna be
eliminated as we want them to
be eliminated.

Zoe Eisinger
Stephanie Boyden

I think it's prevalent but I don't
think it's a problem at all. Most
people that I know who do use
drugs are pretty aware of not
abusing the situation.

Yara

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Page 12 May 18, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

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

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

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~Evergreen 'community' is collection of

anarchists operating under mob rule
by Suzette Williams and Darrel W. Riley
This week we met with a member of
a college research group and five other
Evergreeners in a discussion about the
positive decision-making aspects of the
Evergreen
community.
Since
the
community meeting on the S&A Board
actions had just ended and three of the
participants had been involved, it was
difficult to fmd much positive to say.
The consensus about half-way through the
meeting was that Evergreen operated on
mob rule: whoever shows up controls the
decision-making.
However, one student said he had
come to Evergreen precisely because
there was no institutionalized method of
student control. He liked the anarchy
which resulted from Evergreen's strange
brand of decision-making.
The meeting, however, made us think
about the word community when applied
to Evergreen. Does Evergreen have a
community, and if so how does it
manifest itself? One of us declared
Evergreen students don't have an~~ing
they do together, such as sports, religton,
or politics and th~refore have no real
Ever~n, commumty. Even the students
who live In the dorms don't s~ to do
much
together.
The maJonty of
"community" interaction seems to be
within 'programs or withi~ dorm roo",ls;
very little occurs to bnng the enUre
Evergreen community together.
It was more frightening that the
group came to a consensus that
Evergreeners were willing to accept
diversity, as long as it was the proper
type of diversity. One participant told of
working at The Bon, and sneaking to her
car so no one would notice she looked
professional. She told of the antagonism
which had greeted her when she arrived
at Evergreen with matching lipstick and
nail polish.
The most disturbing consensus was
that Evergreeners weren't willing to
toleratc political diversity. Everyone in
the room laughed at the thought of
Evergreeners tolerating any political ideas

that weren't "liberal." This is especially
politically acceptable. But I would rather
terrifying in view of the recent S&A
not pay for anyone to travel than to give
the' opportunity for the KKK or Nazis to
Board and Student Governance's attempts
to allocate monies.
get any of my money, which at this point
The S&A Board has allocated money,
they seem entiUed to. It is a dangerous
not just to gather political information,
game Evergreen is playing. So far no one
but for political action such as protesting
has seriously challenged the Evergreen
at the Nevada Test Site. It justifies
ethic that the world only consists of
funding such activities because members right-thinking people. But the day is
say the board is allowed to fund political
coming and the reckoning will be hard.
action as long as it covers a broad range
When we first arrived at Evergreen
of political action. One of the we were full of hope for the things that
Governance committee funding requests could be accomplished by so many rightwas for women to go to Central America thinking people. Now, after watching the
with materials to aid the population. This bitterness and fighting that occurs within
is obviously not for the purpose of the campus population it is hard for us to
gathering information but to perform
see much positive about the decisionactions and by the nature of those
making that OCCUJ'S at Evergreen.
governments' relations with the US, the Evergreen, as one man suggested, seems
acts are political.
a place which in those inestimable words
These are causes the liberal student of Martin Luther King Jr. where people
body agrees with so no one makes a
"Talks that talk, but don't walk that
fuss. But, according to the funding logic
walk."
used by the S&A Board and by extension
It is hard to believe, but instead of
Governance, if a group of students
working together toward the common
want~ to wOrk. for Star Wars, or g~ on
goals and beliefs which we share
a tnp supportmg the South African Evergreeners attack each other for the
go~ernment, the S&A Board w~uld be
small differences we do have, making
obliged to fund them. The fundmg has unwarranted assumptions from sketchy
not been eq~al thus far.
information, like saying the CPJ needs
According
to
an
Evergreen more student input, when all who work
administrator, groups requesting funding
here are students.
have said they, do n~t. have to fmd a
What's especially. baflles us is why
, counter to theu posluon because the students get upset with each other when
counter
is
already
present
in we know Evergreen's reputation forms a
"mainstream" American society. But what screening process. We have met only a
if a group, such as a recent group that . handfull that actually acknowledge being
came to the Evergreen campus, said they conservative, the Evergreen reputation
needed funding to kill spotted owls keeps the rest out.
because they were interfering in the jobs
At the CPJ we are more sensitive to
of loggers? It could be argued that their the bitterness and disagreement than most
position is not represented in the organizations on this campus, maybe
mainstream press. Neither is the position because we deal with the widest range of
of the KKK represented in the opinions. However, as two Evergreen
mainstream press. Or the Nazi's, the students, as the editors for the school
skinheads, the Bloods and Crips, and newspaper, and as fellow humans on this
almost any radical group. Where does it planet we implore Evergreeners to work
end?
together. As we sit here there are more
Evergreen, so far, has not had to nuclear weapons being built, the forests
deal with this problem because the are disappearing at a faster and faster
actions that have been funded have been rate, the oceans are being "strip-mined"

The staff:

The Policy:

Interim Editor: Suzette Williams
Managing Editor: Darrel W; Riley
Ad ·Manager: Chris Carson
Business Manager: Whitney Ware
Ad Layout: Matt Carrithers
Calendar: Honna Metzger
Typist: Alexander Rains
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Arts and Entertainment: Honna Metzger
Poetry Editor: Yolande Lake
Production Manager: Joe Hughes
Staff Writers: Kevin Boyer, Tedd Kelleher,
Honna Metzger, Edward Martin III, Scott A.
Richardson.
Contributors: James Dannen, Carol B. Hall.
Interim Advisor: Janis Byrd

The Cooper Point Journal is published '

weekly on the campus of the
Evergreen State College, Olympia,
Washington 98505 (CAB 306A);
(206)866-6000 ext. 6213 & 6054.
Copyright 1989,

Cover photos
by Honna Metzger

Page 2 May 25, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

The Coo~r Point Journal (CPJ)
editor and staff may amend or clarify
these policies.
Objective:
The CPJ editor and staff are
determined to make the CPJ a student
forum for coinmunication which is
both entertaining and informative.
Deadlines:
Calendar-Friday, noon
Articles-Friday, 3 p.m.
Letters-Monday, noon
Rules ror submissions:
Submissions must be original.
Submitting work which is not ooginal
is a legal, ethical and moral violation
and an injury to those members of the
Evergreen Community
who do
complete original work.
Submissions should be brought to
the CPJ offices on an mM fonnatted
diskette. Any word processing file
compatible with WordPerfect 4.2 is
acceptable. Disks should include a
double-spaced printout, with the
author's name, daytime phone number
and address. Disks will be returned as
soon as possible.
If you are unable to comply with
the submission requirements for any
reason, contJICt the editor or managing
editor
for
assistance.
Before
undertaking time-consuming projects
for the CPJ, it's a good idea to call
.the CPJ office about deadlines, future
plans and suitability of materials.

The Evergreen State College has been
granted a total of $40,423 for "Exhibits"
from
the Washington State Arts
Commission. The commission, through
state increases and federal funds, has
improved its total monies from the
current $4,523,486 to $5,329,000 for the
next biennial allocation.
In view of an April national ranking
of state arts appropriations, Washington
would leave behind its current standing
of 47th and rise to a potential of 38th,
should other states remain static.
The Evergreen allotment is part of
funding . for five programs totalling
$1,704,192.
,

of their life, the lands are being polluted
and stripped for their contents, pesticides
and nuclear wastes are poisoning our
waters, and oil spills are forever ruining
our natural resources. Mankind is
destroying every part of this earth.
We at Evergreen have a special
responsibility to show others how to act.
Other people might not know the issues
involved, many here do. If we do not
work with each other to save what's left
then all else will be as ashes and dust.
We hold the future in our hands, if we
act" together. The job for Evergreen
students, . as we see it, is not just to
protest and complain but to come up with
ideas. Telling defense analysts to stop
building nuclear bombs isn't enough, we
must be able to tell them why and what
to do instead Telling the CIA to stop
covert action isn't enough, we must be
able to tell them why and what to do
instead. Telling farmers to stop using
pesticides isn't enough, we must be able
to tell them why and what to do instead.
Evergreeners have the abilities to
change the world. Now is the time to act,
to use that magnificent educational
opportunity
Evergreen
sUPllosedly
provides. Don't just criticize, come up
with better ideas. The true test of making
a difference is whether we can keep the
world in shape long enough for the next
generation to learn the same lessons.
.

~----KAOS radio 89.3 FM announces a
new
public
affairs
program.
AFfERNOON DELIGHT, each Thursday
1- 4 pm beginning June 1.
The program is hosted by Evergreen
student Tom Freeman and will explore a
variety of contemporary topics through
live interviews, listener on-the-air phone
calls, commentary, news headlines,
listener mailbag and music. There will
also be an entertainment component
consisting of daytime drama updates,
humorous tabloid headlines and the latest
news from tinsel town.
A representative of The Olympia
AIDS Task Force will be among
Freeman's guests on the fust show.
For further information, contact Tom
Freeman at KAOS 866-KAOS.

----_ ...
.

,~

'"

however,

Matt Groening Talks about
being Journal Editor

.... ---- .
"Women's
Empowerment
Day:
Speaking Out Against Violence Against
Women" will be held at The Evergreen
State College Tuesday, May 30.
The Empowerment Day will consist
of three events: a panel discussion in the
College Activities Building at noon;
workshops on campus running from 3 to
5pm; and a Women's Take Back the
Night March beginning at Sylvester Park
in downtown Olympia at 8 pm.
The Empowerment Day is being
organized in response to recurring
violence against women both on and off
campus. Recently, attacks against women
have increased on trails and areas
surrounding the Evergreen campus,
which, when added to the daily violence
women experience, is creating a
intolerable ·atmosphere.
. Representatives from The Evergreen
State College
Affirmative Action,
Women's Center, Women of Color
Coalition, Lesbian Gay Resource Center,
as well as Safeplace, and FIST (Feminists
In Self-defense Training) will by involved
throughout the day.

When I became the editor of the
Cooper Point Journal in December 1976
I had a grand scenario in my mind of a
controversial, steadily-improving, nothingis-sacred weekly publication which would
alternately astound, amuse, and infuriate
its readers. "You can tell a newspaper by
its enemies," I used to sneer in the old
days, fed up with the newspaper's
relatively sluggish, play-it-safe editorial
stance which offended no one and bored
us all.
I wanted a high-quality, vigorous,
often-satirical newspaper which would
make its reader's hearts beat a little
faster. I also felt should never take the
whole thing too seriously, to always keep
in mind the absurdity of working on a
tiny campus newspaper at an alternative
state collage in the nonhwest United

States woods.
The Jctuality of puttiPg together a
newspaper varied widely from my
journalistic visions, of course. The
original fantasies had been fairly rosy,
and I neglected to incl ude in them all
sorts of thorns which went along with the
tamest of whims and ideas. The thorns
were everywhere in real life: a limited
budget, nasty letters, daily compromises
over one thing or another, a skeleton
writing staff, the flu, bureaucratic
runarounds,
mechanical breakdowns,
physical exhaustion, legal hassles. intense
hostility, dirty looks, insults, screaming.
and general misunderstanding,
It was sometimes discouraging , but in
all except the most mundane, tiring.
experiences, I was in a state of
exhilaration.

Third week's puzzle, not
for the weak minded
. Congratulations to Monika Heise and
Ryan Finholm for finding last weeks
token and returning it to the CPJ Office
promptly. They won a hot tub visit at
Town Tubs And Massage at 115 Olympia
NE and 16 ounces of massage lotion
from Archibald Sisters at 113 W 5th
downtown, where they may select from
over 100 different scents for their lotions.
Good luck with this weeks puzzle and be
sure to return the token to Chris Carson
at the CPJ office to claim your prize.

Egad! This is the last time I
leave it up to the context clues!
You people are just too quick ana
ornery!
Get it this time only from the
reclusive, secret message, okay?
A word of wisdom though ...
Grab the token card as quick as is
realistically possible. It's really
embedded every Wednesday night, so
discovering an empty spot can only
need signify that you either didn't
understand the clue or were too late.

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

Tuesday, 16
1616: A 67 year old male nonstudent was apprehended when he
attempted to shoplift a book from the
TESC bookstore.

Because the CPJ ' is 8 college
newspaper, priority wiD be given to

are

AT-shirt promoting rape, produced
by University of Washington Fraternity
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, has UW students
enraged. The T-shirt depicts a male
symbol penetrating a female symbol with
the captions "SAE-Men VIOLATE" and
"Play to Win or F·-- it up for everyone
else." The fraternity has apologized and
forbade its members to wear the T-shirt
under pressure from UW women's
groups.
.

Earl Kenneth Shriner, 39, was
arrested in the assault of a Tacoma youth
last week. The boy was found in the
woods near his home, wandering dazed
and bleeding, apparenUy he had left for
dead.
Shriner pleaded innocent to charges
of fust-degree attempted murder, fust
degree rape, and fust degree asSSlult of
the 7 year old boy.
Shriner has a long history of
criminal behavior and has served a 10
year sentence at the Washington
Corrections Center for the assault of two
. 16 year old hitchhikers.
The arrest has created outrage
among the public inside and outside the
community where the mutilation-rape
took place.

In the CPJ Twelve Years ago Today

Evergreen State Security reports

'.

student submissions;
community members
to contribute.

NEWS BRIEFS

an

encouraged

Wednesday, 17
1710: Sex offense/exposure. Three
male students were playing frisbee on the
recreation fields while nude. They ran for
their shorts when security arrived and
were warned against public nUdity.

Letters:
Letters will be accepted on
subjects. They will be checked for
libel and may be edited for grammar,
spelling and space. Letters should b
300 words or less. Every attempt is
made to publish as many letters as
possible however, space limitations
and
timelines
may
influence
publication.
Letters do not represent the
opinions of the CPJ staff or editors.

an

Advertising:
All forms of advertising will be
considered. The subject of advertisements printed in the CPJ do not
represent the . opinions of its staff or
. editors.
The . CPJ is responsible for
restitution to our advertising customers
for mistakes in their advertisements in
their first printing only. Any
subsequent printings of this mistake
are the sole responsibility of the
advertising customer.

Friday, 19
0126:
A large amount of steam
came from leaks in the CRC. A power
surge occurred and a 3 foot arc of
electricity came from the ceiling. The
CRC was closed until repairs could be
made later in the day.
Saturday, 20
0005:
Several persons reponed
excessive steam coming from the utility
hatch cover in front of the Housing
Community Center. A rock thrown into
the open hole had broken a steam pipe.
2256:
A liquor violation was
reported. Two non-students were drinking
in the basement of the Library.
Sunday, 21
.
9348: A Datsun station wagon was

broken into while parked in B lot Taken
were a computer with two disc drives,
telephone, multi-band receiver, Walkman,
backpack, sleeping bag, and other items.
1448:
Disorderly conduct was
reported at the CRC. A male refused to
pay for services after sneaking in the
building with the help of another male.

More graffiti was found on the housing
office window, on K dorm, outside the
Greenery, on the Mud Bay overpass, and
in the Housing Community Center men's
room.

Fire alarms occurred five times.
One was a system malfunction, two were
false alarms, one was. in Lab I, and one
M da 2
. caused minor damage at mod 317B.
on y, 2 An nkn
be
f
Two thefts from dorms rooms were
wn num r ,0
reported. Money, jewelry, a backpack,
2320:
heardu . 0th
persons ~ere .
In
e new hou~mg and a purse were taken. An attempted
construcu~n Site: It was later determIned theft from a car in a lot was reported.
that electncal Wire was stolen.
Four cases of vandalism occurred.
These included a broken window at K
Summary
dorm, damage to a door at the HO'Jsing
Graffiti was reported in the Library
Community Center, damage to a partition
on the third floor (three incidents) and in
in a Library men's room, and writing in
the fust and second floor men's rooms.
fresh cement at the Library loading dock.
There was one traffic citation issued
for failure to stop at a stop sign, a
personal harassment complaint was
received, and security provided 69 public
services (jump start, vehicle ePley, escort,
lock/unlock door) during the week.

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Objectivity:
The editor does .not believe
objectivity is possible. Instead. the
editor and staff believe.in fairness. We
will make every effM to get as many
viewpoints OIl a subject as possible. If
you have an opinion about something
you've read in the paper, please write
and teU us •

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Cooper Point Journal May 25, 1989 Page 3

'Onanist' inspires new guidelines
by Scott A Richardson
Masturbation photographs assembled
in Aaron Joshua Bausch-Greene's "The
Onanist" created a stir which has kept the
Student Art Gallery (SAG) swirling since
the beginning of March. Although it is
unlikely that any additional shows will be
displayed during the remainder of this
academic year, SAG director Vince
Brown and a group of community
members have been working to create an
effective plan for next year's displayed
student art.
Dean of Student Development Stone
Thomas, who directed the removal of the
controversial artwork, wished to have in
place a more formal policy for preview
of works to be exhibited. But it soon
became apparent that addressing the
policy issue would not be sufficient for a
large number of students (particularly
those creating visual art) and staff. For
this reason, the informally developed
SAG committee investigated four major
issues:
Criteria,
Process,
Visual
Environment Group, and Space.
Criteria
Guidelines for selecting works for
exhibition have been loose, developed,
lost in the shuffle, recreated, and now
formally discussed. The SAG committee
has proposed a five point criteria list
which outlines the responsibilities of the
artist who wishes to display in the SAG.
Also included in the list is the notice
that
"submissions that could be
considered objectionable to any member
of the community must be reviewed by
committee" (expected to be the Visual
Environment Group).
The criteria list is prefaced by a note
stating that "submissions may be subject
to additional criteria established by the
current SAG staff. "
Process
All art submitted will be reviewed by
the SAG selection committee, comprised
of at least four students, which will
decide whether the work will be
displayed. When deadlock or concern
ova possi ble inappropriate material
occurs and the SAG committee requires
external advice, the Visual Environment
Group (YEG) will settle the dispute.
VEG
In December of 1973 Evergreen
Administrative Code (EAC) 174-136-610
outlined the purpose of the Visual
Environment Group, which included
'Jyerseeing art display spaces on campus.
The YEG history was sporadic, and
by 1981 it had ceased to exist except in
the EAC. The SAG committee is
encouraging the administration to revive
the YEG, which is to be made up of
students, faculty, staff, and Olympia

community members.
Space
All agree that the present student art
space is a poor excuse for a gallery. But
with Evergreen's space at a premium,
fmding additional or alternative space for
a gallery has proved difficult. Use of the
faculty/staff lounge in the first floor of
the CAB drew initial popular support,
especially among students. However, a

memo requesting feedback from staff
received a 95% negative response.
Other spaces considt7ed have been
104 (presently a smoking
CAB
lounge/eating area), the Free Box area,
the CAB "Pit," and the Arts Annex. Each
has been rejected.
A recent proposal was to construct
walls to enclose a 12' X 50' space in the
hall alongside CAB 108 and 111. Besides

. the prohibitive cost to create the gallery
(estimated at $9000), this same space
figures in the proposed flIst floor
restructuring due in 1991.
The fmal SAG temporary committee
report will be forwarded to Stone Thomas
who will, if it is satisfactory, support its
implemetation.

Firearms on campus?

Security holds community forum
by Kevin Boyer
Approximately 30 people attended an
hour-long community, forum held by
Security yesterday to discuss recent
events and Security's request to carry
fIrearms.
The flISt issue addressed was flfearm
use by the Security force. Presently, they
do not carry fuearms. Evergreen's force
is one of only two state schools (Western
Washington State is the other), not to do
so.
Students at the forum were adamantly
opposed to Security's carrying handguns
but they sympathized with Security
officers' desire to protect themselves
during altercations.
"I would just like to have protection
if I run into a situation where an
assailant has a weapon," said Security
officer Lana Brewster. "I just want to be
prepared, that's not too much to ask."
Students countered with comments
regarding the virtual non-existent history
of campus violence. Although violence
has occurred on campuses like the
University of Washington, their locations
and population sizes are incomparable to
ours, students contended. Violence
involving handguns just has not happened
here, said one student
The
issue
revolves
arou~d
"community" at Evergreen. One side
wants to increase the safety of the
officCl"S within the community by issuing
handguns, the other side feels the safety
of the community is threatened if officers
have weapons.
Not only will the officers be
threatening the safety of the community,
they will separate themselves from the
community, consequently losing its trust,
said students.

The Security force doesn't see
carrying weapons as a threat They see
weapons as protection and aid in helping
them respond to emergency situations
which might involve a weapon. If they
carried weapons they could respond
immediately to potentially dangerous
situtations instead of waiting for the
Thurston County Sherifrs office for
backup.
Security Chief Gary Russell used
Western Washington State as an example
of how a weaponless Security agency
becomes ineffective.
"The Western
people don't respond to emergency calls,
they immediately call Bellingham police ...
you have to wait for the city police who
have guns and arc in no way affiliated
with the campus," said Russell.
While students and Security agreed
that bringing in Thurston County
deputies, who have no understanding of
the
Evergreen
community,
was
undesirable, the students at the forum
feared Security would be quick to use a
weapon if threatened. This came to light
when some students made claims of
recent Security brutality, surveillance, and
intimidation. (see last edition of the
Cooper Point Journal.)
With Security's reputation already
threatened, they should work on positive
things for the community, especially in
communication to the students, before
trying to implement a gun policy, said
one student

"Guns are just an escalation of
violence, an increase in flfepower just
increases the chances of someone getting
hurt," said one student "I'd rather see an
alternative, that's what Evergreen stands
for, designing something new and
innovative."
Another issue discussed was the
increase of attacks against women on
campus.
Students asked the panel why the
first reported incident of this spring, in
which a woman was accosted along the
trail to the beach, was not publicized
until student groups began hanging
warning posters a week after the incident
occurred.
Security finally admitted there had
been a "breakdown in communication"
during the week following the incident
and they had s.ince worked to prevent
such a breakdown occurring again.
The forum discussed measures to
make the • campus safer for women
.walking alone, including the installation
of emergency phones around campus,
training a dog to use for a walking
companion, Crime Watch, and free selfdefense courses offered on a quarterly
basis.
Students suggested Security should
have a regular community forum to
furtha communication and develop trust
between Security and other community
members.

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with
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by Carol B. Hall
state.
As America's white news media
But you and I know the truth. The
continues to drone on and on about the clever Bush campaign ads would be
sordid details of a white New York City successful because they played upon
woman's rape in CenttaI Park by a group white America's biggest fears and most
of "wilding" black youths, my thoughts vicious racist stereotypes. For as long 'as
drift back to last year's presidential there have been Africans in America,
campwgn.
white men have taught their sons and
Remember Willie Horton? Willie, in daughters to fear violent attacks and
case you forgol, was the brother whose rapes by black males, who were always
face was splashed across our television portrayed as vicious savages.
screens several times a day on George
America was founded on this racist
Bush's campaign eds. Willie allegedly fear and hatred of the African male, and
used his Massachusetts prison furlough to these beliefs and fears were coddled and
take a hip to Maryland, where he was cherished like precious antiques passed
accused of raping a white woman then down from generation to generation of
murdering her and her husband.
European
Americans.
Upon
this
And, if you recall, Bush denied the foundation of racist beliefs, white
ads were racist and insisted that the ads Americans have added their horror of
were designed to show that his today's urban street crime, to build a
Democratic opponent, Massachusetts festering fear and hatred from which no
Dukakis,
was African American ' nate is immune.
Governor
Michael
dangerously "soft on crime" for having
The Michael Dukakis presidential
such a prison furlough pro)~gram::;:!...!i!!.n.,:hi!!,·s:...~~~~stood~~in!.!aw:e~Of~the:.!~!~I~:!:~;..,

..

fJfu .:;fsterisK. ana Cliuse LiDrary prautffy suppurts
tIie O(ym.piaSustaining ~ruuil
One percent if. our 6ur ami wine safes goes to
social cftange ant! cOtTU11Jl.nity-6uiUfing wurK.
in 'lIiursUin County.
_
)
~n you enjoy a coU 6eer ur gfass of wine,
you're supporting a focaUy-O'UITJ.etf business
ani! contriDuting to your prolfT'essive
community Jountfation,

power of the Willie Horton ads and did
nothing '..J counter them. This was one of
the major blunders that cost Dukakis the
election. But if the Dukakis bunch
recognized the influence of the Willie
Horton ads, why didn't they move
immediately to aggressively counter
them?
The answer emerged in the flurry of
ongoing media attention to the CenttaI
Park "wilding" rape. The Dukakis
campaign was managed by a white
woman who was raped by a black man
years ago. She recently admitted in press
reports that she has never been able to
overcome her resulting fear and hatred of
black men.
"There is no more powerful
metaphor for racial hatred in this country
than a black man who rapes a white
woman. None," wrote Susan Eshich, the
Harvanl law professor who ran the
Dukakis campaign. In press reports,
Eshich referred to the Central Park case,
the Willie Horton case, and her own
rape.
. "A lot of women who are raped
have trouble dealing with men afterward.
They are afraid of men," she continued.
"Not me. Not all men, at least. Just blacJc

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men ...For months, I wanted to cross the
stT'eet or run inside and lock my door
every time a strange plack men looked at
me 'funny' or at all ...The point is how
easy it is to confuse racism and crime."
One white woman's fear 2l1d
paranoia toward African American men
infested the Dukakis campaign from
beginning to end. It probably also
influenced the way Dukakis snubbed
candidate Jesse Jackson when choosing a
running mate.
One white woman's paranoia was a
great negative force working against the
campaign she was supposedly managing,
holding her candidate back and costing
him the election. And thus changing
history.
Rape is a terrible crime, no matter
what color the victim or perpetrator, and
conhibutes to the oppression of women
the world over. But it's time for
Americans to recognize the historical link
in white minds between crime and the
black male, and recognize the power of
the link over white society and the white
media.
That power was evident during the
1988 presidential campaign, and is
dreadfully evident in the media coverage
of the Central Park "wilding" rape. It's
evident every time a white woman
crosses an urban street 10 avoid walking
past a black man, whether that black man
is dressed in rags or a $1000 three piece
suit

COUNSELING & THERAPY
J. MONDA M.s., M.A.

BARBARA
Abu.. •

DepnaJon

~A • RelalJoDsldp9

~



Med18Uoa
• PareoUaI

866-1378

MAY 30 - JUNE 3
vergreen·s first STUDENT GOVERNANCE is evolving. The direction that
it will take is up to you. The following are the pros and cons of the two
GOVERNANCE proposals up for final ratification. Full, unedited versions
of both proposals are avenable 24 hours a day in the CAB m811 lobby outside
the Student Communications Center. Decide for yourself; Geo-voice or the
Student Union, then act.

E
Mon.-Thurs.

Bam-4pm
Fri.-Sat.
Bam-9pm

en For Dinner!

TAKE

JOBS

Race paranoia infests United States

VOTE

Live Music

ACTION FOR
SOCIAL CHANGE

Opinion

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HAIR STYLES

GET READY FOR THE SUMMER
LOOKIN' GOOD GRAD TIME
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Women 00000000 $13.00
Children 00000000 $10.00

Our hours are 9 to 6 Monday through Friday and 9 to 4
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Evenings are by appointment.

112 Jefferson Street • Downtown Olympia • 786-1565

Ask us about out Outer Limits Perm!

Vote Slldent Union

VOle Gro-Voioo

h is rrit f1raugh IIrl effecM union 1hat we, as students, can meet our needs and
conduct 011' aIIairs wit10ut ouUIe domilalion. HisDic:alIy, sUIenIs at Evergl88ll have been lured
wi1h the canut of IDIIIn stucIen1 ~I IIrld baalan with hi stick of reaity. Real student
em~ raqUIw a I1I1II student panment
WIflIhe SIudinI Union. we CIIrl mow past I1e wo!Id of illusions and bu~, in10
c:onaete soIutians III real proijems. We have hi rVlt III contol OU' own 8M fees. III hire and
firu the stall we PI¥ with cu $&A IIIOIIBY, III set our own poIicie& and inplemont
ideas; We
need III push a IisIincItt sllldanl agendIlllrld, III do so, we m..t orgBnlZ8 cuseNes In a lair and

Mo!e f1an quick and painless at,ficiencY, a ~ s1lUc1Ure ~y ~ must first
strive lor faWr_. The mcl6t violent opposItIOn 10 I1e Geo-Voice has been lIS ineffeaency. But
while mcNing sIawer than mcl6t membels of the "let's gel ~ done yeslBrday" majority QllaJre might
want. it slid III its IUI1IIIn1on that each and fNery student must be empawered III determine the
coun;e of student aftais.
Yes. him are problems wi1h the Gro-Voice, But none 1ha1 can' be solved and no
mOl9 than i!IIf syslBm might run into. A system &UCh as the Gro-Voioo. which is so diffemnt from
tho&u we are used III, is going III Iaks tine.
The AeliCIIS ~ Geo-Voice and i1e SbJdent Union boil down ., one essential
question: Which is more imporla'll, efficiency or faimess? If a syslBm can be efficiunt and fair.
~ can 00* be eIIicient first and then fair. Fairness must be the foundation of any governance
system at Evorgreen.

au:

aII8ctive lIIan:Swent Uian firmly 86tabIi&hes i1e relalionship batwaen student govemanc:e and
iIs suppon CIIgIIIiz:aiDn& putq hi Union first. In doing so, it escape& the inighting inhenlntly
caused ~ a IIIIdauI ~ ~ IlUdenIS III pusue .,rflwhile goaIs_ Lars stop argu~
about wIIIII a panment should do,' we aInJady know the _ _ III 1hat question, and Iaks
control of hi daciIiora flat Il106l cIinIdIy aIf8ct our live&.
RebutlalIII hi Geo-Voice

The most WJIent opposition 10 . . Geo-Yoioe ha been iIs ~ il8llitiullc,. IIrl
illlflic:iulicy thai has mooI8d q c:Ia*nI flat ... Geo-Vaill iii '1Iir.- FM III wham? Has iI been
fair III IhoI8 wIlD ha¥8 . . lie tine ., em. .., ...... anIy III " - .... iii. WIi*Ig b' the
bIIh lllllimpl ~ . . GenIIII , . . . " III .... ~ CanIniIIH ii1iIii1bn? HIs it been fair
III iID&II ..... who ' aDIndId gMll.1CII 1IMIIIings, hopirG III accomplish
someiI~ IJDIid for their 1aIow IIIJdera, III ' - • ~Ie WdanI IIDp ..., In tie nane 01
COIIIIOOniVl III ineIIic:ieo tIir?
The Geo-VO: ..... be 1edgling.1U. iii . . iqIouiIlIe III dIqa. Fa fle las! tour
W8iIks, the GanerIII --..; . . aIIiimpIIId III dIIIgI fle Geo-Voite. For hllastlu weeb,
~ has Iaied. A paiIIMlt" C8IIOt dwVI iIIeIf. nat1llllr IIIgndIiI but ~ pnMI6
unIIW III II IhoI8 aIIaid ~ It
WIllI fie Geo-Voite iii ......... nor lair, aIIciInI:y _ IIimesa .. not
IIIIIIUatj 81du1iv8; inAIId !her .. i . . .
DIciIin, no matIIir how ~ made, have
III be inplemenlad in anIar III _
fIr1IIirv. lhI ...... iIn, IIiIIIINIan tIIic:iaiq.and !amass;
~'s beIweI!rl a gcMIIIlnad flat . . ~ neithar and ... flat wi biI bofI incUNe and
elic:ient

1fIIU'-'

II!

Reblllallo the Sildart Union

The Gro-Voice is in compIBII hBmIIny will hi StJdent UJiDn's deGire to see a
student gcMIl.nent run ~ ~ 1aIdents, wihIut outside dominalion. The Geo-Voice differs
oriI in its sound contantion hit aI IllidenlHimbodiad in the General AssembIy-m..t make
these clec:isions c::oIadMiIr ~ hi _
pi\lCaIS daIaiIed in the cIocII'nenl A two-tliids
pIuraIi\' wi indeed ~ up ... adci!lIion of the S&A budget or the implemeilialioll of vir1uaIIy
any poIic:J. but at what CIDIt?
of . , Ingging ridiII we might like III .-w, i1e
Eveigraen CllllllllUi1~ iii Iadr..... A ITIIjariIy of 1IUdanIs, easily IN« two-fiids, are
Cauc:asiIIrl and tum micIdIHIIIa bDpInda. Ale .. opinions of tho&u IiIIIders CDIIing from
diIIanint aAIInJ badlgniunds _ hM1I diI'IIienI paIpICMs Ie6s vaid because flay are glO&Sly
0UIiU1Ibenid wt.1 lie fWd ..., IIIb II _ _ fails?
The Geo-Voioa says No. Fair!wM IIII.BI come before 1lIIiciurq.

In...

_i1.

VOTING BOOTHS LOCATED IN THE CAB LOBBY EVE1nDAY PROII KAY 3ChJmiE 3 BB'IWEEN llAll-8PII

Page 4 May 25 , 1989 Cooper Point Journal
Cooper Point Journal May 25, 1989 Page 5

Folklorist brings new perspective to TESC
by Suzeue Williams
Combining folklore and media this
year led to more than talking about
needlepoint fro m the old country for
students in Mass Media and Popular
Culture.
Evergreen began an experiment this
year with the program Mass Media and
Popular Culture, integrating the study of
media and folklore. According to program
coordinator Tom Foote, "It worked very
well."
Students in the three quarter program
studied mass media, folklore and popular
culture through oral history interviews,
ethnogmphies and media analysis of the
presidential election.
Folklorist and first-year faculty Sam
Schraeger taught with Foote this year.
Schmeger says 11 IS unusual for a
folklorist to teach in the wmmunications
area of a college, particularly integrated
with mass media.
"There's a natural connection between
popular culture and folklore," Foote
explains. He and Schraeger agree the two
subjects share an "oral tradition." The
oral tradition separates folklore from
history.
Schraeger
says
folklore
is
understanding the meaning stories have
for the people who tell them, rather than
looking at a larger story and its effects
on a country. Where history is the study
of
broad-ranging
events,
folklore
emphasizes the experience of the
everyday person.
"With folklore the expressive form is
the center," Schmeger explains, "What I
discovered was that the stories are all
connected. It isn't just each person telling
a~~t a life that's ~parate, people talk in
sImIlar ways. Therr expenences are all
connected. Their lives follow similar
patterns that are shared. That, to me, is
folklore."
Foote describes Scbmeger as a
"highly theoretical folklorist" who uses
analytical models to examine the
messages in images and behaviors. Foote
lists the authors whose work the program

has drawn on, such as Goffman, Geertz
and Barthes, emphasizing that the study
of folklore has a theoretical framework.
"People tend to think all folklorists do is
run around and collect stories or take
pictures of people doing needle work
from the old country," he explains.
The program began in the fall by
attending the Shelton OysterFest. Foote
says this was used to teach students how
to describe something -- you don't just
shuck an oyster, he says, there are
specific movements and steps to the
process.
"Students were reintroduced to their
environments." He claims, "they were
taught how to look at stuff."
Other major program activities
students conducted were interviewing
older women about their experiences in
the first half of the 20th century and
doing quarter-long ethnographic studies.
Some ethnography topics included the
legend of Bigfoot, a study of a used
bookstore, and an examination of the
intemctions in an Evergreen office.
Foote says the feedback from
students about this experimental program
has been positive. "Students are saying
things like 'I'll never be able to look at
a media image the same way again,'" he
says. "Sam and I take this as the highest
form of praise."
Foote insists that after fighting for
getting folklore into the Evergreen
curriculum for years, the program has
proven media and folklore are integral to
the Evergreen curriculum. He wants to
see folklore become a main emphasis in
the school's offerings.
Students from the program recently
attracted regional attention by sending
seven students to the regional conference
of the Northern Pacific Popular Culture
Association in Spokane.
After receiving written descriptions
of the students' work, conference
organizers asked students and faculty to
participate in a panel discussion about
folklore at Evergreen.
"It was well received," Foote says,

Folklorist Sam Schraeger
"We're so used to marrying curriculum
that we forget these people [md it mindboggling."
One student in the program, Chris
Bader, was elected by the other students
at the conference to be the regional
representative for undergmduates to the
Pacific
Popular
Culture
Northern
Association. He was also the frrst student
to serve on the board of the Association.
Foote and Schraeger were recently
nominated for the Burlington Northern
Distinguished Teaching Award for
innovative curriculum.
Mass Media and Popular Culture
will be offered again next year, with
Foote and Scbmeger as faculty. Although
formal plans have not been made for
changes to the curriculum, Foote says a
weakness of this year's program was not
enough emphasis on media.
"Because it was a new experience for
me I was very willing to allow the
program to take a strong direction in
folklore because I was intellectually
curious," he explains. He credits

Schraeger
with
bringing
a
new
perspective of examining media messages
and propaganda.
Schraeger came to the Northwest
from Troy, New York in the late '60s to
study at Reed College in Portland. He
says he became interested in folklore
after college while working for the forest
service in Idaho.
In Idaho, he says, he began listening
to the "old timers" tell stories and then
spent four years documenting pioneer
experiences in the Moscow, Idaho area.
He then decided to attend graduate
school and study folklore.
Schraeger worked for the Smithsonian
for several years and conducted a study
on trial lawyers as performers. He
emphasized the common experience that
the best trial lawyers play on in a case,
and sees this as part of the folklore
tradition.
"They reach down into some level of
people's feelings of how the world
should be," he explains. "What I found is
how much they rely on cultural identity
to persuade jurors. The real topnotch
lawyers often use ethnicity or gender or
regional background -- jurors really
connect with that stuff."
After conducting the study Schraeger
arranged a Festival of American Folklore
for the Smithsonian and included an
event where top trial lawyers were asked
to "perform" in a tent He is presently
writing a monograph on the project and
says it will ultimately culminate in a
book. Before Scbmeger came to
Evergreen 'he taught at the University of
Oregon for one year. '
Foote joined the Evergreen faculty in
1972
and
has
taught
Mass
Communications and Social Reality for
four years. The program has emphasized
media and journalism skills rather than
folklore and ethnographic study. Although
Mass Communications was replaced by
Mass Media and Popular Culture, a four
credit media module is beginning next
year for students interested in focusing
sPecifically on journalism skills.

r '- - - - .- - - .- - - I
:

on the West Coast, while steamy guitar
and drum solos alternate with Todd
Duncan's expressive and powerful lead
vocals.
The 8's dish out lyrics as powerful
as their music. Original songs such as
"Law and Order," "First Strike," and
"Rubber Bullets" giving an edge of social
awareness to their sweat-stained dance
tunes, while balancing the unadultered,
but frenzied, fun of their more party
oriented
material,
such
as
their
notoriously twisted version of Deep
Purple's "Smoke on the Water."
With four critically acclaitrled albums
behind them, plus a fIXture on college
radio stations from coast to coast, the 8' s
are probably the most popular band in
America without a major label contract.
When you dare to cross the boundaries
between genres, when you dare to cross
the line between mces, when you dare to
cross the barrier between mind and body-

between funky grooves and incisive
lyrics- you find yourself among the
independents and shunned by the big
labels.
, "They say 'Jeez, there's white guys
and black guys and horns and no drum
machines,'" says manager Marc Baker,
shaking his head at major labels' inability
to come to terms with anything unique.
Baker, with lead singer Todd Duncan,
charts the band's perilous course through
the uncharted seas of independent
recording, touring and marketing. Perhaps
the Big Break into the major leagues
would come if the band moved to L.A.,
but as Baker points out, "I've seen bands

go down to L.A. and just get put through
the grinder, spit out, then [they're]
historv.
.
The dance, on Saturday June 3 at
9:00 p.m. in the TESC Libmry Lobby, is
a fundraiser for the TESC Alumni
Association, which supports a variety of
activities to benefit alums and the
Evergreen community. Tickets are $6 in
advance, or $7 at the door. Advance
tickets are available at Rainy Day
Records on the West side, Positively 4th
Street (downtown). and at the Evergreen
campus bookstore. Tickets will also be
available the day of the show at the
Alumni Association Chicken Booth during
Super Saturday.

Hidden
Away in
the Old
Olympian
Hotel

WINDT

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reakfast ... Lunch...Dinne
Dessert
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Monday-Thursday 7am-11pm
Friday & Saturday 7an-Midnight

Page 6 May 25, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

by Honna Metzger
What went wrong in the Capitol
Theatre '24 production of Charley's
Aunt? It premiered in 1882 in Victorian
England and has enjoyed popularity ever
since, so the fault can hardly be found in

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The three talented actresses race disturbing racts: Heather Mueller, Barbara Zelano (middle), and Stephanie
character, and therefore appeared insecure
in a few of her roles. Sometimes the
actress was too visible in Humpal, when
the character should have shone through.
She had some very challenging roles.
Barbara Zelano could be a terrifying
freak one scene, and meekly dull in the
next. She carried a lot of the play with

the play itself.
U's supposed to be a farce, but
farces are supposed to be funny.
The plot goes like this: Charley and
Jack are students at Oxford in love with
two women. They want to tell Amy and
Kitty of their love, but must find a good
excuse to invite them over for lunch,
because of their ovreprotective guardian.
Charley and Jack decide to use the visit
of Charley's wealthy, long-lost aunt as
pretense to bait the women. When
Charley's aunt decides not to come after
all, Jack convinces a friend to
impersonate her. A male friend of course.
Identity-confusion, sexual innuendoes,
men coming onto the fake aunt, the fake
aunt taking advantage of the two women
Charley and Jack have invited: it's alI
annoying , and reminiscent of a bad
episode of Bosom Bodies.
Sitting through three acts of
.
meaningless, unfunny franticness was not
worth the amazing $12 charged for
tickets.
All the same, a few of the
performers dit. very well, namely Tracy
Nance of Evergreen as Charley , who
seemed to understand the idea of farce,
and never faltered from his excitable,
childlike character.

I~

her confidence and ability to lead Mueller
and Humpal, especially during mQments
of comedy. Her sense of the absurd, and
of overdoing something to hilarity, but
not past, is finely-tuned. With her great
command of her voice, body, and timing,
Zelano has great potential for comedy
and drama both.

IZ
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by theater veteran Jeff Kingsbury. He is
the classic actor-- he knows his lines
knows the play, feels the rhythm of th~
performance, and can carry it when costars fail. Sadly, his attempts at comedy
fell flat, probabl y due ,to the cast failing
to reach his energy level and skill. Nance
- - - - - - - - - - - - - , and Geffken work great with Kingsbury,
I but the others do not know their lines
I and characters well enough to make his
rL. C"J
I role work.
I
The rest of the casto-which includes
I
Ruth
Richard, Heather Irene Davis,
·SCA Wolff Taming
I
Jennifer
Bradly, Claude Bowman, Philip
·Pecfecl
Toning
I
R.
Roth,
and Lisa West-- faltered by
oEUfOPM/1 IIocIy Wr.p
I being either too non-liescript and plastic
I or by forgetting their lines altogether. But
MAY SPECIALS:
I their costumes-- lovelyl
I
Charley's Aunt will provide uUerly
Month UnllntId TonIng.ft.....".....$29.50 II mindless entertainment, but for $10 or
1 Body WI'ap.-_.."ft,,_.___._.$2II.50
$12, why not see every bad ftIm at the
Te. TANS. .... __ ••••
OO II State and have money left over for
popcorn and Skittles. Either that, or see
a play at Evergreen-- even when they're

TAN

orR'I:"ECT'"

1m.,

OUTDOOR FABRICS

Ie.

sadly... ,flounders

Photo by Hanna Metzger

Works
_lhlnsulate

The intense, suspenseful script and
the energetic, shameless actresses make
Calm Down Mother a glorious success:
Women and men alike will savor the
performance and wish for more--the play
lasts only 40 minutes. It will be
performed May 27 and 28 at 8 pm in the
Recital Hall. Free!

Carlton Bradley "Corey" Geffken
p~ytYl Jack, the aristocratic, charming
fnend of Charley. He handled his snobby
role perfectly, mocking his character, yet
refraining from gross overacting.
The aunt impersonator was played

a

.Packcloth

a~d

Humpal.~

,

Canvas

IC)

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COOKIN'

"U

Charley's Aunt cast tries hard

:0

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

~~

~U'e4
~ ·GI~~~SORIES

by Honna Metzger
Calm Down Mother begins serenely
enough--with three women sleeping on
the stage. But once those women wake
up, serenity is replaced with suspense, a
disquieting tension lasting until the
curtain closes.
Megan Terry wrote the play in 1965.
It consists of five vignettes, or selfcontained scenes, from women's lives.
The main concern of the play seems to
be the mother/daughter relationship. But
basic human experience is no less
explored.
The actresses, Stephanie Humpal,
Barbara Zelano,and Heather Mueller, had
their work cut out for them, transforming
themselves from women in a nursing
home, into prostitutes, then into Catholic
prudes. They worked together well,
gliding
though
the
dance-like
choreogmphy and frequent synchronized
chanting, which created a chaotic, insane
effect.
Heather Mueller played a repressed
Catholic mother in one vignette, and a
Jodie Foster-esque streetwise woman in
another. She was excellent as every
character, especially in her command of
accents and gesture. Mueller also made
herself heard without resoning to that
frankly-contrived theatrical voice. While
she did not blatantly command the
aUention of the audience, her presence
was riveting, her characters seeming
complex and mysterious. Her excellent
acting ultimately made her the star.
Stephanie Humpal was cast as the
scapegoat or outcast for a large portion
of the play. For this reason, perhaps,
many of her characters were unlikable.
Another reason could be that she had
difficulty switching from character to

r----------,

Craz;y 8's play here Super Saturday Night
After all the eating and playing and
entertaining and beer gardening at Super
Saturday, it's going to be time to get
serious ... Serious Fun, that is! After Super
Saturday, we swing straight into Super
Saturday Nite Live!
The TESC Alumni Association is
sponsoring its annual Super Saturday
Dance, and it's the biggest and funnest
ever. This year's featured performers will
be the Crazy 8's, Portland's houest
rock/dance band. This will be an all-ages
dance, with a separate lounging space for
the legally mature. The dance has also
been moved from the traditional Library
4th floor space into the larger and more
aumctive Library Lobby. Dancing will
begin at 9:00 sharp, more or less.
The Crazy 8's are a seven man group
noted for their energetic fasion of ska,
reggae, funky rock and rhythm and blues.
In-the-groove percussionists rock steady
behind one of the hottest hom sections

Mother, scapegoat, freak: play faces . facts

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CJr:)t:JcJCYQC.lCJCJ

Cooper Point Journal May 25, 1989 Page 7

Governance

Letters

Critics 'p ander to patriarchal benevolence

Security chief shares insight on drugs
I read with interest the articles in the
May 11 cn about drugs and alcohol on
campus. Having been off campus for that
week, I was not asked my perspective, so
I would like to share some insight by
way of this letter.
Evergreen does have an alcohol and
drug problem, so do most colleges and
universities, and so does society in
general. Having close informational ties
with the public safety (police/security)
departments of all the private and public
college and universities across the state,
I can say that Evergreen seems to have
no worse, and in some cases less, alcohol
and drug problems than other campuses.
Drugs are available on the campus if
you seek them out as they are on the city
streets. I genuinely sympathize with the
parent of a student whose life is
negatively impacted by drug use as was

mentioned in the article, but I can't agree
that the anger should be directed at the
college or university the student attends.
The student has usually brought the drug
or alcohol problem with them.
We have dealt with some very
frustrated and irate parents under these
conditions, but 'thankfully, we have far
more often had dealings with supportive
and concerned parents who understand
the supply and demand proposition as it
relates to drug availabili ty. Their energies
are directed toward problem resolution
and not indictment.
Certain comments were attributed to
one of my staff in the article that suggest
an administrative posture of non-support
or laissez-faire relating to drug and
alcohol problems and enforcement
activities, specifically the involvement of
the Thurston County Drug Unit. This was

nOJ represented accurately.
The current administration has never
made a decision to support or reject
assistance from the Drug Unit because
they have never been asked. If substantial
drug involvement is discovered on
campus in the future, and the situation
could best be resolved by employing the
Drug Unit in its investigatory role, I feel
confident the administration would agree
to their assistance.
There is an ethical and legal
responsibility that rests with the
administration to assure the wellbeing of
this community. When Security is aware
of the use or sale of drugs on campus an
investigation is started. When elements of
a crime can be substantiated, charges are
fIled with the Prosecutor.
Security does not turn its back on

by James Dannen, Governance Stearn
The list of editorial opinions rendered
by the Cooper Point Journal, as
exemplified by Suzette Williams' and
Darrel Riley's most recent work
denigrating even the notion of student
government, can only cause the thinking
student to cringe. The pain caused by
their naive commentary is sharpened by
their claims that students are already
receiving the , services that a student
government will, after finally taking form,
offer.
While the Gee-Voice has been less
than impressive in its eight weeks of
existence, one can only view this as a
sign of its relative youth and the failure
of consensus as a decision making tool.
Both of these can be corrected, the first
by time and the second by a change in

violations of the law ood certainly not the
controlled substance laws. However, on
some occasions when it has been
possible, the drug user has allowed
Security 10 be the catalyst in bringing in
medical assistance and counseling.
There are personal and legal
consequences associated with alcohol and
drug abuse and the related behavior
problems they often cause. We have
much vandalism, assaults, sexual and
otherwise, that are the result of drug and
alcohol abuse.
It's not just a law enforcement
problem or a housing problem or the
administration's problem but one that all
of us as community members should be
concerned about. '
Gary Russell, Security Chief

by shoddy journalism
I am dismayed by the unprofessional
and shoddy piece of journalism
demonstrated in the front page story of
May 18 entitled "HEC Board stirs
controversy." Not only does it contain
inaccuracies that are meant to misinform
the Evergreen community, but it is
written by two of the leaders of the antiassessment group, who should not pretend
to be giving an unbiased report on the
issue.
There are two gross inaccuracies just
in the short paragraph that mention my
name. I was not "hired by Evergreen to
try the test for internal assessment" but
rather to teach clinical psychology; I
joined the assessment study in March of
this year. Also 1 did not say that "1 am
shocked that Steve (Hunter) was using
the test in that way". Rather I said that I
would be surprised if all the statements
that the two reporters (w~o, by the way,
never identified themselves as being
associated with the CPJ) attributed 10
Steve had really been expressed by him.
Quite a difference, wouldn't you say?
The quotation criticizing the MyersBriggs instrument purportedly came from
a "professor of psychology Dr. Daniel
Kelleher". Who is he? Could he, by any
chance, be related to Tedd Kelleher, the
co-author of this article? Why didn't the
authors get the opinion of even one of
the thousands of educators and
psychologists who use the MBTI happily
and productively in their work?
As a first-year faculty member at
Evergreen, I find it hard 10 believe that a
college of our national stature allows
such low-quality journalism 10 represent
the views of our community. It becomes
gradually clearer to me why so many
students and faculty members do not

bother to read the CPJ and instead turn
to the alternative media on campus.
Ryo Imamura, faculty member
Yes, Daniel Kelleher is my father.
Alex Kostelnik did not identify himself as
a CPJ reporter because: 1) He did not
illlend to write a story from the
conversation he had with Ryo Imamura
and 2) he is not a regular en reporter
and instead only collaborated 011 this olle
article.
I am sorry for making the
mistake cOllcerning the reason Evergreen
hired Imamura. However, I stand behind
the contellt of the rest of my story.
Tedd Kelleher

Assault ·is
assault
On May 10th in the CAB, I noticed
that on one of the "Women Unite: End
Violence Now" posters someone had
written in ball-point pen, "He only
touched her breasts." I think that this
comment reflects common attitudes many
people have about sexual assault
I would like 10 make an analogy:
Picture a black moo walking down a road
somewhere. A car with four white men
pulls along side him and SlOps. Those
men get out of the car and surround the
black man threateningly. One of them
pulls out a length of rope and loops it
around the man's neck. Just then a
patrolperson drives up and stops 10
question what is going on. One of the
white men says, "Hell, officer, we didn't
lynch him, we just laid the rope around
his neck."
An assault is an assault
Ann Ziegler

General Assembly, S&A Board clash over funding

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The Board also established a $1,326
training
budget.
The budget is
administered by S&A Administration and
will be used for training students in
consensus, racial justice, etc.
Another change to the current level
budget was a $4,762 cut from the
Governance request. The Geo· Voice
requested $18,115 and was allocated
$13,353. Most of the cut carne from the
discretionary budget.
The final budget was approved
yesterday by the General Assembly. It
now goes through an administrative
review with Vice President for Student
Affairs Gail Martin, Dean of Student
Development Stone Thomas, ood Bill
Zaugg, administrative assistant for budget
10 the vice president for student affairs.
The budget is then forwarded 10 the
Board of Trustees for approval.
Members of the administrative
review team will determine if any needs
are not being served by the budget and
can then formulate an alternative proposal
for presentation 10 the Board of Trustees.
If the Board of Trustees does not
approve the budget it is returned to the
S&A Board for revision. The Trustees
have ultimate authority in approving the
use of student funds.
The S&A Board makes decisions on
a modified consensus basis. Board
members are chosen by an open selection
process which all members of the
community are invited to participate in.
The Board operates under a set of
funding guidelines approved by its
members.

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Page 8 May 25, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

..

o

@

Assembly was designated as the policy
making body and the Services and
Activities Board as the allocation body.
The S&A Board is designated by
Washington State law as the responsible
party for distributing student activity fees,
and was recognized in the Geo-Voice
document as the authority for allocation
of student fees.
Board
members
and
General
Assembly
participants agreed the
mismanagement was no fault of the
Governance Stearn or the General
Assembly, but resulted from a lack of
communication between S&A and
governance about the discretionary fund's
purpose.
New in this year's budget is funding
for an S&A Productions Assistant. The
student in this position will work with
the S&A administration and student
groups to produce campus events. The
Board felt this would allow students 10
have better quality events and alleviate
some of the student group coordinalOrs'
responsibilities.

~OV/ES ,I:;

~

AWAY.

funds from their discretionary fund.
Monday the Assembly decided to fund a
Women's Center sponsored trip for
students to go to Nicaragua. Wednesday
they approved funds for the Free Press,
and for a student to conduct 00
agricultural study in Midwest
After an almost five-hour meeting,
the S&A Board recaptured the
governance discretionary fund. The fund
was recaptured since the Board felt the
funds had been mismanaged. It is now
under S&A control and the only binding
decisions are those to fund the
governance ratification process 8I)d send
students 10 the Washington Student
Lobby conference.
Board members agreed the intent of
the discretionary fund was to support and
enhance the governance structure, not to
function as an allocation pool for student
activities.
The Board felt that by allocating
funds the General Assembly was
duplicating the Board's function. Among
the students in the discussion the General

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by Suzette Williams, S&A Board
Member
The Services and Activities (S&A)
Fee Review Board completed its fmal
Spring allocations yesterday.
The Board encountered opposition
from student groups after last week's
tentative allocations eliminated the Peace
and Conflict Resolution Center and
combined student group honorariums into
"honorarium pools."
After Monday's community forum
about the allocations, the proposed
budgets for both concerns were restored
and passed essentially unchanged from
current level allocations.
Also discussed at yesterday's meeting
was w!Jether it was appropriate for the
General Assembly to allocate S&A fees.
The General Assembly had allocated

-HEUUM-NEON LAsER POINT-

PhYSician & Surgeon In China & A Certified
Acupuncturlsl In Washington SIal8 with
more than 20 years of eKpenence

:;..o3ft

Those so-called community leaders ought
to bUll out of community affairs and
mind their own business.
Mr. Riley, you are to be recognized
for your sensitivity to the issues ood your
ability to articulate a vision of a future
where men need not fear reprisal for their
actions. I sincerely hope that your fellow
students will give you the response you
so richly deserve.
Anna Schlecht
[Editors note: I'm sorry you did not
read the same editorial I wrote. I did not
defend the men. their alleged victims. or
their alleged actions. I merely poillled out
that the actioflS are alleged, not proven.
Olympiall's reporting
was
The
irrespollSible because il allows people to
draw conclusioTiS, as you did, which are
UIIprovell and aTe no IOllger even being
alleged.]

CHINESE ACUPUNCTURE CENTER

Dr. K.K. Lau

·Congratulations
Seniors'

oatriarchal benevolence but worships the
idol of nostalgia.
This person is only to be outdone by
one who states that we have a
"community" at Evergreen, presupposing
that we'·ve achieved an end for which we
haven't even begun to struggle.
Community means little to those who are
consistently ignored in its name.
Thoreau sums it up best when he
says, "How can one be satisfied to
entertain an opinion merely, and enjoy it?
Is there any enjoyment in it, if one's
opinion is that one is aggrieved? ... Action
from principle, the perception and
performance of right, changes things and
relations; it is essentially revolutionary,
and does not consist wholly with
anything which was."

Services and Activities Board:

CPJ Editor shows sexual bias
Faculty member dismayed in coverage. of Rabie/Rish
Darrel Riley is to be honored for his
efforts to vindicate two alleged rapists.
Were there not such valiant defenders of
the loyal order of men, we might actually
see a change in our judicial system. Or
worse yet, society as a whole may stoop
so low as to take victims of sexual
assault seriously, and perhaps escalate
this nonsense of protecting the rights of
women and children to a point where
convicted ra!)ists would get longer
sentences than people who forge checks
or steal cars.
Darrel Riley is truly a moo not 10 be
deceived by the facts or statistics of
sexual assault Nor does he yield 10 the
base temptation of sympathy or
understanding of those who are brutalized
as would many people of inferior
integrity.
The fact that these two MEN were
charged is clearly the crime of this issue.
Thank God, Mr. Riley wasted not a'
More
single word on the victims.
importantly, Mr. Riley was not mislead
by the prosecution dropping the charges
because the victims were too traumatized
by these fine men 10 testify.
Lastly, I must say I fully share Mr.
Riley's opinion of The Olympian's
coverage. They have absolutely no right
to cover a p,ublic proceeding such as a
trial, especially when a moo's reputation
is at stake. Clearly, there is no honor
among journalists who would go even
further and seek other community leader's
opinions about these charges. Rap~ is
not an issue in this community and never
should be. The fact that two of the three
men charged were once considered
"pillars of the community" is irrelevant.

represents and, hence, its members
the decision making process.
The upcoming ratification vote will smugly deny that it claims to be. .
In the light of this, the principled
give students the opportunity to move
from consensus to a more workable individual -- one who believes in the
forum, one that recognizeS that the desire principle of student power .- must look
to destroy student governance is not to a new way of organizing in order to
compatible with the desire to empower achieve this end.
Student government, because it is in
students.
At a deeper level, it is troubling, in its formative stage, can be structured at
the light of the historic .failure at its very roots to work for student power.
Evergreen of students to attain power as However, this can only be achieved if the
students, to hear claims that DTF's or principled individual chooses to enter the
any other campus boards have served the process. Otherwise, student government in
needs of students. There has not been a its final form will take on the identity of
other
worthless
campus
single DTF charged with finding a every
method for students to control their own "governance" board.
One who mouths the too often heard
funds; structurally, it is impossible.
The S & A Board, enlisted to assist phrase "we've operated seventeen years
in the allocation of student fees, isn '[ witho~t a student govemmcnt and we've
even accountable to the students it done just fme," not only panders to

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Cooper Point Journal May 25, 1989 Page 9

Calendar

Sex and Darkness set tone for Dances
by Honna Metzger
Evergreen dancers and choreographers
put on an excellent show last weekend.
New Dances was filled with spell-binding
dramatic pieces.
In "Darkness 3" by Karen Kirsch, for
example, dancer~ Kirsch, Suzarme Quinn
and Carol SchouOOc danced in a triangle
formation, with synchronized movements,
yet each acted as if alone in unnamed
torment. The effect was eerie and
fascinating. Suzanne Quirm shone through
as an extremely entertaining, skilled
aClress and dancer, as she did throughout
the program.
The most bizarre work had to be
Jez'ebel, choreographed by Anne Murphy,
and danced by Murphy and Holly Eckert.
Murphy explored the paradoxes, conflicts,
and inescapable desires inherent in
sexuality. Outfitted in lranslucent lace
tops, thin lace skirts, and modest white
underwear, the dancers took turns pulling
each other's heads back aggressively by
the hair, and symbolically raping or
degrading each other. Much of the dance
focused on Murphy's character, seemingly
a young girl or disturbed adult, and her
struggle with her sexual desires: MUJ :;!J"

Suzanne Quinn takes dancing seriously, with a talent ror perrorming.
writhed and rolled about on the stage
floor with a child's doll between her
knees, showing both flexibility and
creativity.
Through out New Dances, Anne
Murphy danced beauufully, confidently,

and with enr:rossing dramatic energy.
Annie McMannnis and Sandy Silva
choreographed and performed two duets
entitled "Evidence" and "That Funk
Thang." Less dramatic and moody than
other pieces in the show, their

Thursday

entertaining dancing showed amazing skill
at synchronization and rhythm.
Holly Eckert choreographed "A
Liberation Theology" dedicated to the
FMLN of EI Salvador, which was danced
Eckert, Stephanie Goodsmanson, Nicole
Elizabeth Grote, James Ingersoll, Anne
Murphy,
Megan
Pickerel,
Malke
Rosenfeld and Suzanne Quinn. Eckert's
choreography was original and riveting,
its only glitch being several things
occuring simultaneously on stage.
Keeping track of all the dancers proved
difficult. Eckert's solo concerning
liberation was effectively dark and
mysterious, and ended with Eckert
stepping out her black gown to walk
from the stage naked.
The most
disappointing portion of the show was
Meg
Hunt's
self-danced
and
choreographed "Seven Dance Episodes."
Hunt displayed excellent technique and
physical ability, but dance itself seemed
to have little entertainment or intellectual
value for a general audience. It lacked a
well-expressed character or "story-line."
Andrew Buchman did an exceptional job,
on the piano accompaniment, composed
by John Marvin.

The Luminaries /i======================
looks at nuclee
The eye, voracious, is constantly eating light.
Cold has driven the winter birds
The light is innocent,
low in the trees
bombs and evil I But
having no idea what it itself is.
they have become more IIluggish
once inside is pounced upon,
by a half·second,

'I

by Horma Metzger
What would happen if the creators of
the atom bomb were confronted by a
representative of the devil minutes before
their bomb's fust detonation?
Thea Myhre decided to answer this
questions by writing and directing a play:
"The Luminaries."
Performed by classmates from his
program The Human Condition, the play
uses scenes and poems from Lewis
Carroll's Through the Looking Glass to
address the questions of guilt, innocence,
responsibility, and evil connected with
creating an atomic bomb.
The three scientists in the bunker are
Rocklynn Culp as the amoral Edward
Teller, Margaret Shaklee as the guiltridden Leo Szilard, and Virginia Frost as
the fame-hungry father of the bomb,
Robert Oppenheimer.
"Mephisto," a timeless being of evil,
turns life into a bad dream for the
scientists. Brad Fowlkes was excellent on
stage. His face pai ntt'.d in to a gri m
Joker's, he struts about suavely, a creepy,
malevolent genius.
See "The Lwninaries" if only to be
entertained.
Contemplating
global
destruction, good, evil, God, and the
futility of trying to appear good, when
really you're evil .. .is optional. The
performance will be in the Recital Hall
tonight at 8 pm, no admission charged.

made to go crazy,
become what light itself cannot imagine.
Something between the eye and the brain
makes a hook and sends it trolling
discreetly through the matrix
until a name, or memory catches the bait.
And the named light
is examined casually and tosll8d back
to linger near the surface for a while
or to sink into the deepest pool again_
But sometimes we are surprized.
Something huge rises that draws us down too.
And if we cut the line we are foolish;
it will visit in our dreams.
Neely Denwar



The old thing
that has weathered centuries of warm houses
unfolds in him,
answers the snow yes, night yes,
He is the purposeful darkness creeper,
terror to small rodents.
He llipi into the house at morning.
His fur holds coldne88,
he i. happy from a kill.
I remember again:
I have brought a wild animal into my life.
Neely Denwar

Mercury in Retrograde

MERCURY IN RETROGRADE


and wait there·fluffed plums for his deft picking.

mercury in retrograde

Awe
It's 2:30 in the mornin,
When most people who commit suicide do so.
The moon il swollen with the .unlig"ht it fed on all day before.
Black clouds, miles 10Rl and silent, boil over it_
I remember the Bock of Revelations

and I wonder it someone
somewhere down the line
got thin,. mixed up.

Edward Martin

5-1Opm

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"VV

'I'uaday

May 30

Thursday

June 1

A rally against the US War In EI Salvador
will happen In the TESC Red Square at noon.
These activists will speak: Larry Jefferson,
Austin Kelly, Marti McCarthy, Bob Seiber, Pete
Bohmer, and Madeleine Khass. Local sponsors
are EPIC, Students Against Apartheid,
UMOJA, B Salvador Action Network, and
CAAC.

June

·30 words or 1ess-$3.00
,10 cents for each addilional word
·Pre-payment required
,Classified deadllne--2 p.m. Tuesday

TO PLACE AD:
,PHONE 866-6000 X6054
·STOP BY THE CPJ, CAB 306A
·SEND INFO TO: CPJ, TESe, CAB 305A
OLYMPIA, WA 98505
WANTE D .11 1111 IIttItt lilt III III 1III 111111111111111111111
Original poetry requested for publicalion In the
CPJ. Please bring your typed poems with
name and phone number to CAB 306A. For
more info, call 866-6000 X6213 ask for
Honna.
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seeking Sunday School teacher toe elementary
age students. Twice monthly $25-$35 per
session D.O.Q. (position starts in tall) Call
Rona Rlben 866-3829.
:L :L 3

joumey of an aging doctor, and his
transformallon, via two hitchhikers, from a selfdeprecating man into a kinder, gentier, selfaccepling one. Showtimes are 6:30 pm and 9
pm, admission $4 non-members, $2.50
members.

Women'. Empowerment Day: Speaking out
against violence against women. In the 2nd A Few Words, a film by David L. Mello and
The Thul1ton County Agriculture Advisory floor of the CAB Building, a public forum will Keimalia, will be shown at 6 pm in Lecture
Committee Is scheduled lor 7 pm, at the feature a panel of representatives from FIST, Hall #3. Free.
Thurston County Courthouse, room 280. The Safeplace, Women of Color Coalition,
Friday
Lesbian/Gay Resource Center, and Affirmative
2
public Is welcome.
Action. From 3-5 pm workshops will take place
"The Lwnlnarles" Is a play about what in Lab II, following a rape continuum Art's Alive features are as follows: 1-7 pm in
happens "when the Manhatten Project meets presentation. Men and women will have a !he Arts Annex, art exhibits, computer art, live
the devil.' TESC students wrote and will discussion group together concerning the acoustic music, Slightly West and other
perform this play about moral decisions. Come portrayal of women in the ·media, and rape, readings, dance performances. 1-7 pm in Red
and see it FREE tonight In the Recital Hall at and separate into men's and women's groups. Square, 4 dance bands. In the Ubrary Lobby,
Women will learn !he legal process of how to 1st and 2nd floors, sculpture installations. In
8 pm.
prosecute harrassers or sexual assaulters the Lab I Lobby, the 'Image & Idea' exhibit. In
on/off campus. At 8 pm in Sylvester Park on !he Lecture Hall Rotunda, 'Art & the Eye'
Capitol Blvd downtown, women will stage a exhibit. In the library Basement. 'Democracy
May 26
'Take Back the Night' march. Men and women & Tyranny' wall mural. In Lecture Hall #3,
The NW Folkllfe festival at the Seattle are encouraged to bring poetry, songs, stories, Rotunda, videos & film by students, including
Center begins loday, lasting through May 29. experiences, etc to share. For the sake of the .!he 'Visual Humor" program. In the library 4th
It features crafts, mllsic, dance, international symbolic empowerment of women walking Hoar gallery, art by faculty and staff. From 5safely alone or with one another, the march 7 pm in the Arts Annex, 'Spoken Word and
cuisine, and more. Admission is FREE.
will be women only, although men are asked What Nol' will be performed.
"Random Generallon" is the opening event of to give support by standing on !he sidelines.
The Govemor's Chamber Music Festival
'Ms Alive', offering live accoustic and The post-march rally is also women-only.
presents its· first concert at 8 pm in the
electronic music, dance and video, composed,
Washington Center for the Performing Arts.
performed, and produced by TESC students.
It begins at 8 pm in the Experimenlal Theatre. A vocal concert will be given by Joan Tickets are available at the Box Office,
FREE, but be advised to call 866-6833 to Winden's Advanced Voice Class. The program Yenney's, Rainy Day Records, The Bookmark,
wi! include English ballads, classical pieces, and The Great Music Co in Centralia. They
reserve a seat.
light opera, and songs of the 201h cenlury, . cost $12 general, $10 students and seniors.
plus solos by Mary Eiland, Cheri Lutterwaser,
and alumni Robert Rensel. Faculty Andrew "Art saves Lives" is an art auction to benefit
May 27
Saturday
Buchman will accompany on piano.
people wilh AIDS. Preview 6-8 pm, and bid at
8 pm. Westwater Inn in Olympia. Admission is
Calm Down Mother, a play by Megan Terry,
free, everyone welcome. The '87 Art for AIDS
explores women's lives and relationships to
auction raised $7000.
one another. It stars students Heather Mueller, Wednesday May 31
Stephanie Humpal, and Barbara Zelano, and
will be performed tonight and May 28 at 8 pm "Undresstng National Security: A Look a'
the Emperor's New Clothes" is a publil Announcements
in the Recital Hall. Admission is free.
lecture that discusses the definition of national
A Travel Seminar to EI Salvador and
security. Keynote speaker is Mike LoWry.
Nicaragua, sponsored by Central America
Presented by Washington PhYSicians for Social
Sunday
May 28
Peace campaign. is recruiting students. Dates
Responsibility. Subtops are Tomorrow's Social
of trip are July 17-29. Cost will run $1,865 all
Calm Down Mother has its second Agenda, by the president of the WA state
performance at 8 pm in the Recital Hall. Rainbow Coalition; and Saving Our Planet, by expenses paid from Seattle. Call Wendy
a Professor of Geography. Lectures begin at Pickering, (206) 547-39n, for an application,
Please see May 27 listing for description.
which are due June 1.
7:30 pm in Kane Hall, University of
Washington, Room 130. FREE.
.May 29
Monday
Confidential HIV tests and counseling are
available at Thurston County Heallh
The Olympia Film Society presents the 1957 A Few Words, a film by David L. Mello and
Department. To schedule an appointment, call
classic 'Smlitronstallet (Wild Strawberries), a Keimalia. will show at noon and 6 pm today in
786-5581, or stop by 529 SW 41h Ave.
film by Ingmar Bergman. The story follows the Lecture Hall #3. Free.

SUmmer Jobs on Cruise Ships Paying $300$900 per week. Airline poshions available also.
Call (817) 626-6136 Ixt C-13.

0
0

0
0
0
000000000000000

KEYS

Charley', Aunt will be performed at the
Capitol Playhouse '24 tonight, June 2 and 3rd
at 8 pm. Matinee on May 28 is at 2 pm. Call
the box office at 754-5378 for reservations.

CLASSIRED RATES
7:30-1D1m

m

KayalcJng the Puorcatlmbo River is a
mystical film about US Kayakers attempting to
kayak the Peorcatambo River In Peru gave It
two thumbs up. Free at 7:30 pm in CAB 108.

~~[E~~~ £!\[OO
BREAKFAST .
DlNN",
MON..fRI
MON-THURSI-SUN

-and the sun became black as sackcloth of hair
and the moon became as blood-

May 25

California Recruiters can help you find a
teaching posldon In SUNNY
CALIFORNIA. Current lists of job offers ir.
your speciahy. Call now at 1-8QO.Job in CA or
write us at: California Recru~ers. PO Box 220,
Rio Dell. CA 95562·0220.
Counselors for summer programs with Boys
and Girls clubs of South Snohomish County.
Full time days. June 19 thru Sept 1. $200$25O/wk. Qualifications: education, leadership
and/or artistic background. Call Karen at
l-n4-3022.

CUSTODIAN for The Evergreen State College.
We are accepting applications for temporary
custodial work for the month of June.
Requires: physical ability to do work required.
Salary: $S.n hourly. Deadline May 25, 1989.
Call 866-6000 X6361 lor Informadon and
appllcallon.
LOST/FOUND 1IIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllll
•The CPJ wants to help. All ads in this section
are tree.
STOLEN: Mountain Bike. Metallic turquoise.
Owner Heartbroken. REWARD. NO
QUESTIONS ASKED. Call X6374, Mary C215.
-OJ
Lolt necklllce in soccer fields. Silver chain
w/spider pendant & purple amethyst stone
inset. If found, cal Julie, 866-9113.
LOST: WMe iealher NIKE cross-trainer
a1hlstic shoes. Lost in the men's locker room
at the REC center on Sat the 13. Call Daniel
(collect) 1-426-5189.

FOUND: PORTABLE TYPEWRITER IN THE
CAB BLDG. DESCRIBE TO CLAIM. )(6213.
FOUND: Tent. Contact S9CUr~y lost & found
at X6140. Describe to claim.
HELPIII I've lost a very important book called
The Courage to Heal. U's large, in a white
paperback cover. Call Vikki 86EHl114.
FOR SALE 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
Orley Wood stove $350. Call 456-1458 after '
Spm.
PETS 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt
Unconditional lovel Great family dog urgently
needs new home (due to crowded conditions).
Call 357-5074 for the friend that you've always
wanted.

HEALTH 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIt1111111111 til t11111111111
FREE BRTH CONTROl.
The Black Hills Research Team is conducting
a study of commonly used birth control pills &
their effects on weight, PMS, and other
symptoms. Participants, ages 18-35, wiD
receive FREE BIRTH CONTROL PILLS, PAP
SMEAR, PHYSICAL EXAM, AND BLOOD
TESTS. The program Is being supervised by
an Olympia physician. Interested persons
should call 754-9n1 or 357-99n.
HOUSING tllllttlllllllttlltllltllltlllllll'-IIII
FREE ROOM I. BOARD. Live-in person
needed tor a 4-person group home for
developmentally disabled adults. Private room
& bath. Ught staff duties. Excellent staff and
I agency support. 352-3573.

Summer Dance Inslitute-SeatUe is a four
week training program for intermediate to
advanced dancers, held on !he U of W
campus, July 10- Aug 5. Write UW Extension,
5001 25th Ave NE, GH- 21, Seat1le WA
98195.
Adult Children of AlCOholics meets every
Wednesday at 5:30 in library 4004. Please
call the Counseling Center, x6800, to inquire.
The Crazy 8's will play at the Super Saturday
Nite Uve, at 9 pm in the TESC Ubrary Lobby.
Tickets are available in advance for $6 at
Rainy Day Records, Positively 4th Street, the
Evergreen Bookstore, and the Alumni Chicken
Booth at Super Saturday. TIckets will cost $7
at the door. Volunteer positions may still be
available for people who want to work 2 hours
then get in free. Call the sponsor, the Alumni
Association, x6192, to inquire.
Wolf Haven announces summer hours:
come and learn the truth behind the myths
about wolves. Visit Wolf Haven America, a
nationally recognized wolf refuge located on 60
acres, 20 minutes south of Olympia. To see
and meet 37 wolves, go on a guided tour,
available 10 am to 5 pm daily. The cost is $3
for adults, $2 for children 6-15 y.o., under 6
y.o. are free. Friday and. Saturday nights, you
can join in the fun of a Howl-tn, which start at
7 pm with a tour, followed by stories, music,
and a marshmallow roast all around a giant
campfire. Then, participants howl with !he
wolves. Howl-ins cost $4 adults, $2.50 children
6·15 years old, under 6 y.o. free

MOVING OVERSEAS
TO STUDY?
RETURNING HOME?
SENDING GIFTS TO
FRIENDS?
lei Alrpon Brokers lave yOu on the
tnInIpOrtIlon COlt. W. offer alr and

on ov....... 1hJpments.
. . . . you IIIIp CII .. fur • _,

octII1 ralel

AIRPORT BROKERS CORPORAnON

246-6580
FOR RENT: 6 BEDROOM HOUSE. 2 baths.
2 kitchens, 2 fireplaces, laundry room. On 15
acres, near water. $250 plus % of utillies.
Prefer gay males or females. 943-2656.
Matur. Student Neede House, studio or flal
by mid-August, with yard space, close to
Evergreen State College. Have old. well
behaved family dog & cats to care for. Can do
maintenance & yardwork if needed. Excellent
professional references. For financial and
housing qualifications, (call reimbursed)
783-5410 (Seattle), Linda.
SERVICES 1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllili
Chris Synodis, Certified Acupuncturist,
Licenced Massage Therapist, Masters in
Counseling. Practice of acupuncture integrated
with acupressure, Chinese herbs, and cranialsacral techniques. Aduhs $2O-$35/I1r; children
$5-$15I1reatment. 754-0624.
House s~ting services offered by TEACHER,
long term Olympia Resident. Extended or
Short term arrangements. Prolessional. Leave
msg. for D. Moore 753-8975.
Invlll U8 Inl
'N VISION PHOTOGRAPHY
Will ,hoot lit the locallon of your choice.
PortraKs, parties, weddings, home insurance
Inventories, team photos, or 7. An photo
requests considered. Call lor prices
436-2114.
Expertenced mature House·altter seeks 6
mo. to 1 year housesitting arrangement.
Ref.rence, 754-9651 or 753-4948.

5th

Cooper Point Journal May 25, 1989 Page 11
Page 10 May 25, 1989 Cooper Point Journal