cpj0468.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 19, Issue 17 (March 2, 1989)

extracted text
...~ ." --;;.~-~.--~ ..

in praise of O.

-

Poetry

(about
the nuclear
fog we pushed
our styrofoam
boats
taking a census
of brown
bottles and their
offspring.

,

Sitting on the Freeway

in eastside
bars we drank
cool manhauans
until we could nOl
feel our lips
against their
glasses.

beaten to death by a big bad book
he's trying to unhook himself from
the mechanized slum he lives in
can you hear the awful din?
where is the pavement deeper?
peeling eyes off of paper
knocking over blackboards with a
glance
something he'll have to live with

on the capitol
steps we drank
shots of moonlight
and ran home
and wrote poetry
that we hoped might
be published
in our college
magazine.

exploding light fixtures
his darkness turns to gray
mental institutions devolve
revels as the paint peels away
sitting on the freeway
the sky gestures as it melts
cars lie undead in the halls
and piper brings papal death on a stick
by Dan Snuffm

sunday we built
a fire and ate cream
of mushroom soup.)

Just A Dream
We walk, my friend and I.
Beside steel mesh, on cracked cement.
On the other side children laugh, where
we once played.
Gray metal sound, engines race.
Mechanical rhythm pulls close.
Blue Z - cold blue twenty two.
Charged lead plunges to my belly.
Three little scabs, I look to my painless
gut
I guess my body can take the pain.
Absorb the lead - cover it up with a
scar.

in
an empty
theatre we
watched a movie
jerk
through its spasms
twice.
in
the men s clothing
section of the yard
birds
we died

by R. Nelson

The way you draw me
smacks, each time like
fresh fish unfolded from
newspaper wrapping,
pungent and mysterious.
Warn, malted drops,
sweet vinegar for spice
or the palest ale.
These are not tears,
These are not ' tears
I am crying,
These are not tears
I am crying
for you.

-...

and were born again
in the windows
of
batdorf & bronson

The
on the
in your kitchen
sternly disapproves of me,
but I don't care.

.---

.....

-

~O

of infinity

..

~'0

candlelight
and

-

....
.....

\'..

.....

j' .

,

.;

diligence.

...

~-

By Nathanael Boxer

'

by Karl Schomburg

,
IN THE NAME OF PROGRESS (BLINDERS)
When I look into your eyes I see the fear that used to haunt you
before you got it under control.
It's hidden in the darkness and it's whispered in the comers
and it slowly leaves a marlc: upon your soul.
You think there's nothing you can do and nothing you can say
if you want to stop the sky from going black.
Just leave it to the readers with their rules and smiling faces
to save you from a last attack. .
Because you grew up in a world where they say everything has happened
and you know there is no way to change the past.
So you try to buold the future in the footsteps of the present
and you try to make your good times last
But they hid it in the ground behind a barbed wire fence it's only seen thrugh military eyes.
Afraid a time will come when it will have to crack the surface
and help you 10 remember all your lies.
So when you come to be of age, just tell the young the truth don't you think we're ready for a change?
they're another generation that could destroy the world or they could complete and rearrange.
Did you ever want to change. the things that we have done
In the name of progress?
By Mark T. Ladiness

~

I

\

~

\
I

A Love Poem

\

i


l

1

,
i

~

;
j

.
"

f

I look into your bright blue eyes
And in them myself I see
Therin I seek the reason why
It is that you love me



f
;

r

r

Deeper and deeper into you I gaze

On that quest in search of me
To frnd myself in a twisted maze
Littered with love's debris
Once in that maxe I can't escape
For the walls they are too high
Torment, IOnure my soul you've raped
And noone hears me cry
I kick and scream deep in that abyss
As one would lost at sea
This I endure; the price of one sweet kiss
For it is in you that I lose Me.

By J. Miller

Page 12 February 23, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

..

The Evergreen State Colle'ge
Olympia, WA 98505
Address Correction Requested

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

Art and ads about limits of free expression
The CPI was started as a way for
students and community members to
express themselves. It was not started to
be pan of the school journalism program.
Since it was never part of the official
school it has always been a slightly
subversive program.
Today we get the majority of our
funding from ads. We are one of the
only student groups not solely dependant
on S & A funding.
We do not account for our actions
the sarne way the student groups do. We
account to a board of community
members, Evergreen faculty, Evergreen
students, etc. called The Communications
Board. The composition of the Board
shows that the CPJ doesn't impact just
Evergreen studr-nts. The number of
distribution sites should also suggest the
CPJ has.
community impact
There is a mistaken assumption that
we exist at the pleasure of the Evergreen
student body. Actually we exist at the
pleasure of just a few students; Suzette
Williams,
Catherine
Darley,
Matt
Carrithers, Bernadette Williams, Chris
Carson, Whitney Ware, Peter Bunch, and
help from people like Maureen Eddy and
Janis Byrd. If any of those people were
to vanish this paper would cease to exist.
They are the people who make a
continuing contribution, week after
grueling week, to keep this paper alive.
They are the people who have to deal
with the problems and take the abuse
when things go wrong, or be able to
accept compliments when things go well.
They are the lifeblood for this paper. I
bow to their collective , decision. If any
one of them doesn't accept my thinking
on a subject, we discuss it until we agree
or they at least understand my arguments.
We agreed at the beginning of the
year to allow any types of advertising,
unless we were legally bound not to
accept it. Originally we had as a policy
that we would accept all forms of
advertising, but our ad manager and a
very sharp-eyed student (Hector Douglas)
thought that statement was too strong so
I changed it to say that we would
consider all forms of advertising.

me

It's ironic that the people who
complain about the CIA ad and wanted
me to censor it before it went into the
paper condemn the removal of the picture
of the man masturbating which was
displayed next to the entrance of the
Greenery. Either you accept the concept
of allowing people to make judgements
or you do not
But. of course, it's not that easy
because taste is also at issue. I have not
printed some pieces I received because I
question their value to the community. I
feel they didn't contribute to the ovemll
Evergreen community. There haven't been
many but there have been enough to
allow people who don't know better (i.e.
don't work at the paper) to accuse me of
censorship.
Let me give you an example of the
type of material we haven't printed. I
received a personal attack on an
administrator. It said very nasty things
about this administrator in reference to a
particular situation. I dido't publish it. It
would have been a good start to a story
about an overall lack of responsibility, or
an example of incompetence, but as it
was written it was between those two
people and would not have added much
of value to the Evergreen community.
Actually I've received four pieces
like that all about different administrators.
Or another example. I've received a
lot of cartoons from various people that
are composed of text without any
drawing, or very little drawing. Those
aren't cartoons to me, they are text and
would work better if they were presented
like every other piece of text in the
paper. If I use them as cartoons they take
away space from other people who have
written or typed their text which they
might think is equally important.
I once printed -something from
people who wanted to remain anonymous,
the Reptilian Underground, because I
knew who they were and could fmd them
in case of trouble. After a community
meeting I agreed to prim anonymous
works in the future only if the
circumstances were extraordinary. Since
then I have received a lot of anonymous

A picture of a masturbating man is a
works which I have not published.
One last example. I received a reasonable approach to AIDS discussion,
pornographic cartoon which I choose not the problem is when it is put in a public
to publish because the office staff found place where people have an opportunity
it too offensive for inclusion in a not to see it. If you were seriously
community paper.
offended by this picture and ate regularly
This entire discussion revolves at the Greenery you would still have to
around freedom of expression. It also see this picture every time you went in to
revolves around the definition of art. eat 1bere is no way to avoid it. That's
Evergreen is focusing more and more on . not to say that the picture shouldn't be
art, looking through the catalogue it shown, only that it be shown in a way
seems that more than 50% of next year's that gives peQple the option to avoid it if
courses are about art. However, it seems they fmd it offensive.
that there are two kinds of art. There is
I also have a personal bone to pick
public art and private art. Since I work with some of the people I've heard
with words I will give an example from recently at this campus. When I was first
coming to Evergreen I heard from a man
poetry.
.
There are poets that are called I respected very highly about an
accessible (PUblic). One is Robert Frost, extraordinary teacher at Evergreen. He
one is Maya Angelou, and there are was discussed in such glowing terms I
many more. Some poems are not meant resolved never to meet him; no one could
to be read by other people. They are be so capable and I didn't want to be
private poems, maybe to explain disappointed.
something to oneself or to just a small
I now work for that man: his name
group of people. Somehow Evergreen is "Stone" Thomas. He has in every way
students never seem to understand the lived up to his reputation and more. He
distinction between public and private, has been gmcious and helpful even when
there was no . cause to be. Last year I
they think everything should be public.
Let me take the masturbating man wrote a piece which was very upseUing
picture as an example. This discussion is to some members of .the community.
not about AIDS. AIDS is one of the Stone, who at that time did not know me
most important issues of our time and it at all, defended my right to my opinion
should be discussed. However, there are and suggested that people read the actual
other methods of expressing concern. A opinion instead of assuming from other
picture of three couples kissing; people.
Throughout this year he has offered
male/male, female/male, female/female
could have talked to the issue without gentle criticism of the paper but has let
being quite so gmphic. Therefore the us make our own decisions on everything
issue isn't how to present a picture which about the paper and our relationship to
talks about AIDS, it is how to present a the community. He has his faults, I've
heard (I've never seen any), but in every
picture of ntan masturbating.
My family has long used the situation I've seen him in he has been
expression, "my rights end where yours fair to everyone involved.
Yesterday I watched this man being
begin." If I am' impinging on your rights
then I need to carefully consider my attacked for making a decision which was
actions. In the paper we have a lot of his right to make about the remo\!al of
material that people could fmd offensive. the picture. Please read his memo
However, for the most part I don't feel published in this issue. He did not
that we impinge on their rights. If they suggest that the picture should be taken
don't like the malerial they carl; turn the down pennanently, or e",en tlun ,Ro future.
page or have other people read the paper works should go up. He only suggested
for them and mark the pages not to look that before more works go up a more
inclusive community decision-making
at, or not pick up a paper at all.

Letters
Left-wing threats are no better than the CIA
Like the majority of Evergreen
students, I am disturbed 'to see the CIA
advertising in the Cooper Point JourlliJl.
However, what disturbs me more is how
some members of the community reacted
to this.
'
As a staff member of the
when
I learned that the CIA had contracted US
to run an ad with us, I first laughed in
disbelief. ' But since then, I have been
threatened with bodily harm outside my
campus apanment by a pair of Evergreen
students. 1breats in the office are one
thing, but at home? Quite a shock-afterwards, I had myself another laugh of
disbelief.

cn,

II

The staff:
Interim Advisor: Janis Byrd
Editor: Darrel W. Riley
Managing Editor: Suzette Williams
Ad Manager: Chris Carson
Business Manager: Whitney Ware
Production Manager: Bernadette Williams
Ad Layout: Matt "Wow! Done so early!
The saga continues." Carrithers
Calendar: Catherine Darley
Typist: Alexander Rains
Poetry Editor: David Henshaw
Photo Editor: Peter Bunch
Contributors: Mark Sullivan,
Mary Lou O'Neil, James Dannen,
Maureen Eddy, Scott Richardson,
Ernest "Stone" Thomas, Perry Morse,
Betty Lochner

The Cooper Point Journal is published
weekly on the Cam pus o f the Evergreen
State College . Olym pia. Washingt on 98505
(C AB 306 A) ; (206)8 66-6000 ext . 62 13 &
60 54 . Copyright 1988,

Page 2 March 2, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

The policy:
The Cuupe'!' Point Juu rna l (CPJ)
editOl' and staff may amend 0 1' cla rify
t hese polici es.
Objecti ve:
The CPJ edi t Ol ' and staff a re deter min ed to make th e CPJ a student
fomm foJ' communication which is both
en te rta ining ano informati ve.
Deadlines:
Cale nda l'- Friday, noon
Articles- Friday ,3 p.m.
Le tter s-Monday, noon
Rules for submissions :
Submission s must be OI'igina L S ub·
mitting work whi ch is not original is a
legal , e thical a nd monll violation a nd
a n injury to those member s of the
E ve rg r een community who do comple te original work.
S ubmissions s hould be broug ht to the
CPJ offices on an IBM form atted
rliskette. Any wOI'd processing fil e co mpatibl e wit h Wor dPerfect 4.2 is acceptable. Disks should in~lude a doublespaced pl'intout, with the ' author 's
nam e , daytime phone number a nd address. Disks will be retul'l1 ed as soon
as possible.
For jilformation about other t ypes of
comp uter submissions, call the office at
866-6000 ex t. 621 3. Some he lp is also
available at t he offi ce.
Double-spaced , typed copy wit h one·

Letters :
Letter s will be accepted on all sub·
jects . They will be checked for libel and
may be edited for' grammar, spelling
and space. Letters s hould be 300 words
0 1' l e~s. Eve l'y attempt is made to
publis h as many lett er s as p ossibl e;
ho weve l' , space limit a ti on s a n'd
time liness m ay influe nce publicati on.
Letters do not r epresent the opinions
of the CPJ staff 0 1' editor.
Adverti sing:
All forms of advel'tising will be
con s ide r ed.
Objectivity:
The edit or does not believe obj ectivi·
ty is possible . Instead, the editor and
staff b elieve in fairness. We will make
ever y effort t o get as many viewpoints
on a subject as possible. If you have a n
op in ion about something you've l'ead in
t he paper , please write a nd tell us.

cn

Governance is an illusion

serves a purpose "

I would briefly like to address an your eyes, perhaps you should visit some
issue that ' has recently agitated various bodies in a morgue, dead as a result of
responses on campus. This being ' the overdose from CIA cocaine and heroin.
PeIhaps one should talk to a woman
topic of graffiti.
Gmffiti has beerl used throughout the who has been brutally raped and beaten
effective 1001 for propaganda. by her husband or "friend." The world is
world as
In Nazi Germany dissidents armed with not beautiful, the issues are not pleasing,
a bucket of paint and a brush risked their but "please let my walls remain clean. I
lives in order to express their opposition just love staring at bare brick cemen!."
to fascism. Urban guerrillas with the
College campuses are pan of the
specific task of painting city walls with
world, let us stop pretending otherwise,
anti-Somoza/National Guard propaganda isolationism is a false sense of reality.
lost their lives to save Ni~
There are other means of expression,
To say that graffiti 'is needless would . but they are hardly ever out in the open
be absurd. What should the Nicaraguans as gmffiti is. Let's not paint the doors of
have done in 1978, publish an article the CPl, it is neither appropriate nor
stating their opposition? Pedro Joaquian sensible. They were upholding a standard
Chamorro tried this; he's dead. The of no censorship, it would be far more
dissidents of the United States might not effective to drive to Seattle and paint a
be facing assassination, but what is one slogan on the walls of the CIA office or
to ' . do when the ' main powers of at ttie -Fedeml Building. .
expression are controlled by the ruling
It's time we take our heads out of
elite, the same people who benefit from
the sand, grafflti is a legitimate tool, stop
the status quo and keeping opposition wasting my tuition money to clean it off
silent
Evergreen's not so precious walls.
If graffiti is not visually beautiful to Adam L. Freeman

F'mally, I just wailt to repeat Darrel's
suggestion from his 1/23189 edilOrial, that
perhaps the CIA wished to advertise on
the
Evergreen
campus
because
"Evergreeners already know how to
march, the thinking is already rigidly
un~nding,
and
they
don't
see
alternatives. They make great soldiers."
Whitney Ware

ignored advisory capacity to the President
and the Board of Trustees; Third (and
most importantly): giving students the
illusion that they have a voice in the
administration so. that they won't make so
much noise.
The time has come for Exergreen
students to stand up and pretend that they
have a legitimate voice in running their
school!
Jay Winston

Evergreen is fmally getting a student
governance system. Hip hip hoorayl
I have had experience with student
governments in high school and in my
previous college experience and can,
therefore, barely control my enthusiasm
about
having
one
here.
These
governments
flIl
three
important
functions. First: organizing pep rallies and
deciding on the themes for homecoming
floats; Second: serving in a routinely

an

continued on page 4

inch mar gi ns will be accepte d. If you
ar e unable t o comply with the submis ·
sion r equireme nts for any reason, cont act th e editor 01' managing editor for
assistance. Before undertaking time' cons uming proj ect s for t he CPJ, it's a
good ide a to call t he CPJ office about
deadlines, future pl ans and suitability
of ma t erials.
Be ca use the CPJ is a college
newspap er , pr'i ority will be g iven to
stude nt submissions; howe ver , all community member'F; a l'e encouraged to
contribute.

Graffiti

continue without my aid. I would rather
just extend a few words to that selfimportant pair who thought that their
threats would persuade me to see things
exactly as they did. Hey, boys, grow up.
I would like to repeat to you that I am
not impressed by your threats. And I
would like to ask you both -- are you so
different from that CIA dude in the $50
shades? I don't think so.

While I disapprove of the ad in
question being run and personally would
have just said "no." I understand both
arguments for and against ·the ad having
been printed. Either the
(and those
of US who work here) has ill-advisedly
supported the CIA by allowing their ad
to be printed, or we have decided not to
perform the censorship that we are
continually accused of. As much as the
vocal left-wing of this school may hate to
admit, there are Evergreen students who
might wish to work for the CIA, and
who have given their support for the ad.
But I'm not interested in continuing
that argument; doubtlessly, it will

t
I

,

Editor's -Note needs c.hanges

I'

I was pleased to see Ian D.
Vollmer's letter in the 23 February CPJ,
in which he outlined some suggestions
for improving the paper. Although I can
not wholeheartedly agree with all ' of his
points, I hope the) editor takes his
criticism to heart. I would like to add
another idea which has spun in my mind

since September.

the love you share with your friends and
relatives, but if you seek a real-world
journal as a CPJ goal, . delete your
birthday/holiday/etc greetings and pay for
a personal classified.
Scott A Richardson

Censoring ads
Up go the signs. "lust Say No Way
to the CIA." As I stand· in the CAB, I
wonder if I were somehow miraculously
whisked away from reality to a land
where things exist in the flipside, a kind
of Bizarro Evergreen, if you will.
Contradictions swirl around me in a
ghastly cloud. Are we so eager to
condemn opposing viewpoints that we
dare , border on hypocrisy?
No, I do nol believe in the CIA but
I am a fmn believer in freedom of
thoughts. I think if we are going to
attempt to emdicate any sort of paradigm,
we should begin with the mentality of
Father knows best.
"But you don't understand, you need
pro&ection from those fascist rightwingers, everyone does. They've mined
the harbors of Nicaragua, undermined
entire
countries-oChile,
Angola,
Cambodia, South Yemen ... " My alter ego
mmbles on for a couple of minutes.

Both ad arguments are valid

The
editorial
opinion/personal
gratification section on page two must be
The flap over the CIA ad in the CPJ
overhauled to more" suitably display
concise editorial viewpoints and CPI raises some questions as far as "freedom
I agree,
news. The thoughw and ideas in the of the press" is concerned.
section are valid, but the rehashing of !dong with others who protested against
material from previous editorials and the ad, that the CIA is an organization
mmbling for tbe edltorls causes' sake dedicated to torture, murder, subvertiJ)g
would be better suited to the letters or people's rights (in our country as well as
opinions pages. The most recent editorial abroad) and overthrowing legally elected
could have been easily reduced to one- governments because they aren't "prothird its length without detmcting from US," all in the naine of "protecting US
its intent. Edit most carefully your own interests" against a perceived CommuniSt
work, and the community will have threat.
greater respect for your position as editor.
However, I also agree that the CPJ
Open the freed space, perhaps a (as well as any other newspaper) has the
quarter of page two, to such well- right to accept or reject ads as you see
enunciated views as Ian Vollmer's. The fit. The responsibility for accepting or
CPJ has improved a great deal since Fall rejecting such ads is yours and a certain
1988, but an open community discussion amount of protest is to be expected if ads
within the covers of its newspaper will are printed that offend some people.
make it better still.
But there is another aspect that hasn't
Finally: Darrel, I admire and respect been dealt with yet. There are certain
==============flpeople in our society who believe that
Letters will be accepted on all forcing other countries to do our bidding,
subjects. They will be cheCked for libel no mauer what means are used, is as
and may be edited for grammar, spelling. patriotic as the flag and as American as
and space. Letters should be 300 words apple pie. Chevrolet and baseball. These
or less. Every attempt is made to publish
as many letters as possible; however, ads should be run in order to give these
space limitations and timeliness may people the opponunity to torture and
influence publication. Letters do not murder pinko-commies in order to protect
represent the opinions of the CPl staff or American interests. To get good pay with
Editor.
Igood benefits is just icing on the cake.

And if anybody really believes that
last pamgmph, I have ocean-front
property outside of Billings, Montana for
sale cheap. Also for sale, shares in a
bridge in Brooklyn.
Wynn Wright

CPJ rag run

by inept staff
In your article "Cooper Point Journal
serves no master," you allude to the CPJ
as being a "reasonably professional
product.· Are you serious? From what I
hear (and think) the
is a rag run by
an inept staff who can not simply copy a
story verbatim, who, in fact, omits the
most important of facts. It seems you
print only what you want to print Not
what you think your readers want to
reael. And believe me, your readership is
steadily diminishing. "A roasonably
professional product"? 'fake a poll.
Mian Carvin

cn

.'IS

hypocrisy

Yeah, I know what they've done and I
agree that we need to safeguard ourselves
from them, but who's going to protect
me from the fascist left-wingers?
I am offended by the fact that others
believe they know what I should or
should not be subjected to. I can read, I
can think. and I can most certainly form
my own opinions. To each his own: no
ifs ands or buts, to say less would not
only insult my intelligence but everyone
elses.
Larry F. Chin

CIA doesn't have
individual rights
Why would the CPJ not allow ads
from the KKK advocating the violent
overthrow of the US government. yet did
allow an ad from the CIAo-which has
overthrown
governments
(Chile,
Indonesia, post World War II Greece, to
name a few), organized the torture and
murder of hundreds of thousands of
people, and subverted numerous electoral
processes? As for taking out an ad in
response to the CIA's ad, well, how can
something be free when one has to pay
for it? And, finally, regarding the rights
of the CIA: the individuals who work for
the CIA have the same rights as you or
I, but I can't be convinced that the CIA
itself shares those rights. After all, it's an
institution, not a human.
Ron Jacobs

Thanks to Food
Bank organizers
I applaud Rita Cooper and Karen
Wynkoop for organizing a more frequent
and consistent way of contributing to the
Food Bank. In between now and the end
of this academic year there will be four
different collection weeks--market barrels
will be outside of Employee Relations,
the Libmry, the Bookstore, the Branch,
and in the Facilities Administration
OffICe. More information is included in
the letter they wrote us Greeners, posted
outside the Student Communications
Center (CAB 206) and on the
Information Desk outside the Bookstore.
I'm excited about the thought of this
becoming an ongoing custom around
here.
Jennifer Mohr

Cooper Point Journal March 2, 1989 Page 3

Oil spill devastated seabird wildlife
by Scott A Richardson
Two months ago the oil barge
Nestucca was rammed by its tug while en
route to Grays Harbor. Prudhoe crude oil
spilled in a slick up to 30 miles long
from near the mouth of the harbor out to
sea. Efforts to patch !he gash were
impeded by 14-18 foot seas, and
eventually 230,000 gallons of oil soiled
the ocean.
This
second
largest
spill
in
Washington's history has been covered in
detail by the state's media, and national
attention has been focused on the
disaster.
The
spill
has
brought
international conflict as well, since
Canada's wilderness was also affected by
the slick. It will be weeks before a fmal
report can be issued, but a few facts are
available now.
By lanuary 24, a month after the first
ones were brought in, a total of 4994
dead birds had passed through the Ocean
Shores Convention Center, headquarters
for the emergency spill response. It is
very likely that hundreds more (perhaps
thousands) perished at sea and were not
washed ashore. While most of those at
the Convention Center were seabirds,
with Common Murres, White-winged and
Surf Scoters, and Western Grebes
comprising the majority, at least a dozen
other species of birds died due to the
oil's effects.
Live birds brought in numbered 3040,
and included a similar set of species. The
Convention Center was overrun by oily
birds, emergency response teams, and
volunteer bird rescue workers.
Thousands of volunteers helped in
every way imaginable to give many
affected birds a chance to live, and their
efforts made this a somewhat successful
operation as spill responses go.

Approximately 2200 of the 3040
oiled birds collected from the beaches by
search and rescue volunteers were
cleaned, fed, and otherwise cared for by
volunteers at the center. Most, probably
all of these birds have been released.
Those who participated in the massive
effort should take pride in this 72% rate.
Patience, hard work, and determination
were required in the crowded confusion
at the center or for the collection
difficulties along the beaches.
Many other bird species were also
affected by the spill but did not receive
the press that the murres and others did.
Five shorebird species (plover and
sandpiper families) were exposed to the
oil, but were nearly impossible to catch
and as hard to locate after death. Most
will probably not last long enough to
head north in April or May for the trip
to breeding grounds.
In addition gulls, crows, ravens, and

Bald Eagles fed upon the oily carcasses,
and two falcon species hunted in flocks
of shorebirds which included oiled
individuals.
Let's return to the bare facts:
Seabirds collected dead
4994
.
Seabirds died in center
842
Seabirds dead after release
1100 (50%
survival rate)
Seabirds lost at sea
1 0 0 s
(I000s?)
Shorebirds dead
2500 (optimism again)
Oil killed birds, total
9 4 3 6
minimum
Seabirds saved
1100 maximum
Volunteer hours
20,000+ (conservative estiniate)
Some unanswerable questions: Is 20
volunteer hours per bird worthwhile? Has

a significant impact been made in· bird
survival? Will the saved brrds be able to
function normally after days or weeks of
enormous stress?
When the next spill occurs (it will
happen) another save the birds campaign
will \lndoubtedly occur, and the
experience that this operation provided
will prove valuable.
Acquisition of equipment and other
logistic support is being arranged to
provide faster and more efficient care to
suffering animals. Even with a saved-tokilled ratio of less than 10 percent, such
wildlife assistance should occur. Not only
is it a chance for people to see and
handle
animals
otherwise
mostly
inaccessible, but as importantly it keeps
the disaster of an oil spill's effects at the
forefront of the public's mind. That is
where such catastrophes belong.

TESC students eligible for study atU of W
Evergreen juniors and seniors who
have earned seventy-five quarter hours at
Evergreen and can meet the necessary
prerequisites may be eligible to spend up
to a full year studying foreign languages,
areas studies, economics or international
trade and affairs as special students in the
University. of Washington's JlI.ckson
School of International Studies.
The School has been a pioneer in
offering programs in · non-Western
languages and cultural studIes. It offers
interdisciplinary curricula emphasizing
both regional and topical studies. Students
may concentrate their study on a major
world area within the context of
humanities and the social sciences, they

may specialize in topical studies, or they
may pursue a more general course of
study within the program.
Major areas normally available
lhrough this program include: Chinese
Studies; lapanese Studies;
Korean
Studies; Middle Eastern Studies; Soviet
and East-European Studies; South Asian
Studies; Comparative Religion.
Application to participate in a year at
the University of Washington should be
made through the Director of the
Language and Culture Center, Dr.
Andrew Hanfman. Because he will ont be
on campus during Spring , quarter,
applications must be made before March

15.

Too many thoughtless acts at
On Tuesday, December 13th, 1988, I,
drunken on winter sunlight, foolishly
forgot a library book on one of the
benches adjacent to Red Square. When I
returned from the CAB some five
minutes later, the book was gone. I
would like to believe that whoever picked
up this book is intending to bring it back
to the library by its due date on March
17. This leuer is written with the hope of
encouraging whoever has this book to
stick with their best intentions, or as a
plea, on bended knee, to be honorable.
The book in question is simply titled
Imogen!, and is an anthology of the
of
Imogen
photographic
works
Cunningham; caU number tJ647.cSb45. If
the book does not return, I will have to
pay $40.00. As a person who is currently
eating one meal a day in order to pay
my heat bill, this is not an expense that
I look forward to.
While I may be lucky and have this
book returned, I've been disturbed to

Governance

learn of all too· frequent incidents of
outright theft at Evergreen. Last quarter a
claSsmate of mine from the Philippines
had her book bag ripped off with all her
class books, library books, and an
important paper enclosed. Last week a
woman in the library had her entire
portfolio of art projects taken from the
table she was studying aL These thefts
represent incredible hardships for their
victims, and an incredible meanspiritedness on the part of the perpetrator.
If I lose my library book, it will mean
I'm out 40 bucks and maybe I'll go
hungry for a few days, but in some of
these other instances students stand to
lose up to an entire years worth of work
and credit.
It is difficult for me to believe that
one student could be so callous to the
needs of another. All I can imagine is
that sometimes, being the products of a
competitive, highly individualized society,
some of us forget that we all share a

.

TEse

common interest, and similar needs. I ask
that the next time any of us have an
opportunity to exploit the foolishness or
vulnerability of a fellow Evergreen
community member (or anyone) that we
think of that person's needs and concerns
as being like our own, and refrain. This
really isn't a new idea, and I'm given to
understand that it has worked here before.
So please everybody lets try to cultivate
more care and respect for one another;
and in doing ·so ourselves as well. Thank
you.
Michael MacSems

r--Notice--~--Notice----'
Pu~

to EAC 174-"2-230

STAFF & FACULTY BOARD POSITIONS
FOR

The 1989 Services and Activities Fees and
Review Board are currently being solicited

Evergreen has reciprocity agreements
with two lapanese universities, Miyazaki
and Kobe, for exchanging two students
with each institution, tuition-free, for one
calendar year, beginning in October 1989.
Interested and qualified students who
plan to apply for this exchange program
must have a sufficient proficiency in
lapanese as most of the teaching at both
universities is in lecture format in
lapanese.
Applications should be submitted in
the form of a letter of intent accompanied
by portfolios to the Director of the
Language and Culture Center no later
than Mwch 15, The applications will be
screened by a selection committee.

continued from page 1
process be created.,
I've not quite figured out why
Evergreeners take offense so easily. A
very good friend of mine works for
Evergreen and she often tells me how
dedicated the staff is . to making
Evergreen a school to be proud of. I
know of a woman who has had
continually had more work heaped on her
without any addition~ pay, someone you
would know very well if I said her name.
She isn't doing it for the money (she's
barely getting any for the work she
does), she is doing it because she is
proud to work at a place like Evergreen.
In all of my time here I have never meet
a staff member who isn't bending over
backwards to make this place special for
the students. The staff and faculty .can be
frustrating to work with, the processes for
getting things accomplished are often illconceived and difficult to figure ouL But
they try their best.

DOES THIS MAN HAVE
"SErrE DAVIS EYES?"
Ye., thJa II TIm
Thorp, I11II/I8CI8r 01
Golden
Oldies
Record, a Tapes.
Since 1870, Golden
Oldie. hal sold
hundred. 01

Art removal shows hypocrisy at lESe
by Mary Lou O'Neil, S & A Board
lames Dannen, Governance Team
February 24th, midnight, the art
exhibit in the Student Art Gallery on the
flfSt floor of the CAB was removed
under the cloak of darkness. Consistent
with the method by which this exhibit
was removed was the process by which
was
made.
Six
this . decision
administrators (Stone Thomas, Kathy
Ybarra, Margarita Mendoza de Sugiyama,
Kathleen Garcia, lennifer leach, and Ted
Hong) and one student (Vince Brown,
Coordinator of the Student Art Gallery)
gathered behind closed doors to discuss
the controversy surrounding the display.
The decision arrived at (Vince Brown
and Ted Hong abstaining) was as
follows:
1. The display would be removed.
2. A moratorium will be placed on
art displays in the gallery until a new
process is established to determine the
content of displays.
3. Stone Thomas would ta1ce full
responsibility for removing the art.
The decision was driven by
allegations that five women claimed they
had been assaulted by the photos of a
man masturbating and therefore the spirit
of Affrrmative Action was violated. In
addition, it was intimated that the
location of the display was inappropriate
and would prove embarrassing when 125
Boy Scouts arrived on campus over the
weekend.

Abuse .• Depression • MedlaUoo
;\!;...,A • ReiatlolllllJps • ParenUna

866·1378

Not
withstanding
the
flimsy
justifications for removal, this decision
cuts to the heart of our commitment to
freedom of expression. We should never
succumb to the pressures brought forth
by those lhreatened with the possibility of
a truly free and open community.
Threats, in this case wrapped by claims
of emotional distress, can't take
precedence over principles. Affrrrnative
Action should not be wielded as a
weapon for censorship. Using it as a
justification for denying rights serves only
to undermine the basic tenets that
Affrrrnative Action was founded upon.
While the use of Affirmative Action
in defense of censorship served to debase
the foundations of Affrrmative Action, the
process by which the decision was
reached relegated student autonomy to the

realm of mere rhetoric. Aside from the
presence of Vince Brown, students were
excluded from a decision that should
have been made entirely by students.
This situation becomes even more
offensive when it considered that a
meeting of the Evergreen community,
regarding the display, was held on
Tuesday, February 23rd and subsequently
ignored.
In
that
meeting
the
overwhelming feeling was one of leaving
the art in place. It is ironic that, with the
exception of Ted Hong, no IIdministrator
attended the public forum. It seems it is
only
behind
closed
doors
that
administrators felt brave enough to make
this decision.
Clearly removal of this display is an
attack on freedom of expression and, at
an institution of higher learnin~, the

CAB art removed
[This memo was sent to the Services
and Activities (S & A) Board members
from Ernest "Stone" L. Thomas, Dean of
Student Development about the removal of
art from the Student Art Gallery. Dean

Thomas kindly gave his permission for it
to be reprinted in the CPJ.]
In the. spirit of locatibility and
accountability, I wish _to adv~ you of

ultimate act of hypocrisy. This action sets
a dangerous precedent for banning other
forms of expression. If we are truly
committed to diversity we must take
responsibility for protecting the rights of
even those we disagree with. It is only
by doing so that we, ourselves, are
protected.

Vote on GeoVoice now
by SCC staff
The votes are now being taken on the
Geo-Voice student governance proposal.
Voting started Monday and will continue
through Saturday, March 4.
The voting booth will be open in the
CAB from 11 am to 8 pm everyday. If
you haven't seen a copy of the proposal,
come on over to the CAB and we'll be
happy to give you one. Then make your
view known and VOTE on student
governance.

continued on page 7

"I wastit rubbing
it in-I just wanted
Eddie to know
the score of
last nights game."
.

Treat yourself to the finestl

• Private Hot Tub Rooms
• Therapeutic Massage

GIFT
CERnFICATES
HOURS: II am-II pm Sun·Thurs
II am-I am Frr-Sa[

Go ahead and gloat. You can
rub it in all the way to Chicago
with ARleT Long Distance Service.
Besides, your best friend Eddie
was the one who said your team
alUld never win three straight.
So give him a call. It costs a
lot less than you think to let him
know who's headed for the Playoffs.
Reach out and touch sorneone~

If youtllike to know more about
ARleT products and services, like
International Calling and the A1&T
Card, call us at 1 800 222-0.30.0.

"Bella Davll Eye.by Kim Camel. let
Golden Oldies find
!he record or tape
you've been
searchJng lor.

Applications and Additional Information:·
CAB 305
The Evergreen Stat. CoUege

(206) 866-8237 X6220
• All opplications must be filed with the S & A Administrative OHice.

FULL & PART-TI ME STAFF AND FACULTY MEMBERS ARE ENCOURAGED TO
L..-_ _ _ _ APPLY REGARDLESS OF THEIR SEXUAL ORIENTATION, RACE, SEX, A G E , - - - - - - '
HANDICAP, RELIGIOUS OR POLITICAL BELIEF, OR NATIONAL ORIGIN .

Page 4 March 2, 1989 Cooper Point

RECORDS • TAPES .• .CD's
OLYMPIA

TACOMA

420 Franklin S.E.

8024 S. Tacoma Wy.

943-8228

581-7947

AlaT
The right choice.

FREe PARKING AT BOTH STORES
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

Journal

Cooper Point Journal March 2, 1989 Page 5

Plans for CAB
by Mark Sullivan
The question of student space at
Evergreen has always been a source of
heated debate. Where do students have
the ability to say yes or no to the design
and use of this community'S facilities?
Since the inception of The Evergreen
State College there has never been a
defined student space, even though
student fees have been used since the
beginning to fund maintenance, upkeep,
and even rent for College facilities. Since
1977, however, students have been
working to design, fund, and build an
area to be used solely for the purpose of
student suppon functions. This effon has
culminated in what, by the Fall of 1991,
will be a new facility used solely by and
for students.
What follows is a brief history of
student space at Evergreen along with the
issues students will have to consider in
terms of space in the next couple of
weeks.

llisroRv
In 1967 the Legislature funded the
construction of a Campus Activities
Building (CAB) at Evergreen at a cost of
$3.4 million.
The building was unique in that it
was constructed totally with state dollars
as opposed to Debt servicing (loans)
taken out by students to be paid back
with student fees. The intention was to
create a building owned by all facets of
the Evergreen community as opposed to
just students, as in a student union.
However, until 1981 seventy five
percent of the cost of maintaining and
servicing the CAB was covered by
student fees. In 1981 the legislature
decided to fund the cost of the building's
maintenance and distribute the rest of the
cost among the users based on the
percentage of space used. This funding
arrangement left students carrying only
about 12% of the burden and is still in
effect.
Omrns
According to an article written by the
then S&A Board Secretary in the August
29, 1977 issue of the CPJ "[as of April
1977) The S&A Board was told that nine
to ten student groups were already
working in 'loaned' offices on the third
floor of the Library. When enrollment
reaches 3,200 students... the groups would
Ilave to make room for faculty and
ldministrative offices."
Prompted by this, the students hired
U1 architect to work with several student
ntems in designing and beginning
:onstruction on a facility to accommodate
;tudent groups. The original design plan
levised by this group called for a large
!xpansion to the existing CAB building
:osting several million dollars.
By 1981, however, enrollment had
not increased (due to several legislative
cutbacks) and this left the space on the
third floor of the Library available for
students. Three factors now came into
play:
1) The CAB expansion was no longer
necessary without increased enrollment
2) There was now a great deal of open
space, particularly on the third floor of
the Library building since there was no
need to fill these offices with faculty and
administrators
3) The administration was in dire need of
fmancial resources to cover budgetary
cutbacks.
This culminated in a contract
between the Administration and students
for a lease until 1991 of all the student
)ffice space on the third floor.
Now ,
however ,
enrollment,
' rojections are increasing again and, as a
-esul t, the lease on student office space
",ill not be extended. In addition, student
;roups are complaining about their '
IDlation on the third floor of the Library
rom the mainstream of community
ctivity. As a result, starting last year,
~sess ments have been made concerning
udent facility needs and how they can
! met.
STUDENf

·qge 6 March 2, 1989 Cooper

expan~ion

Currently, a group of students
representing different facets of the
community and afftliated staff are
working with the campus architect (the
same person hired by students back in
1977) to design and build a place for
students. The designs encompass a variety
of student needs and some innovative
approaches to commuDity design.
The designs have reached a point
now where they are ready for feedback.
Here are some basic tenants of what the
group has been working with:
T HE DBSlON

KAOS: KAOS is presently working
to become the National Public Radio
affiliate for the South Puget Sound
Region. Chances are good that with some
creative lobbying this will happen.
However, to do so KAOS will need more
space. The logical space for KAOS to
expand into is next door where the S&A
administrative offices are currently
located. NPR Slatus could relieve S&A
Fees of a $50,000 burden.
S&A Administration and the CPJ:
These organizations have longstanding
problems of lack of communication with
student groups. Therefore, the best plans
will locate them in the same area as the
student groups.
The Student Group Village: Student
groups have long been isolated from the
hub of mainstream activity at Evergreen
as well as from each other. The optimal
environment then is one in which both
visual and audial contact is constantly
maintained. The most progressive designs
on college campuses have encompassed
the idea of open ' space design ' or a
"village concept." This concept should be
integrated into the design of the new
student space.
Funding: Starting in 1977 money has
been set aside for constructinS a student
space. Presently this amount totals near
$500,000. By the time construction begins
this could total near $620,000. Students
also have the capacity to use up to
$105,000 a year in S&A fees to payoff
debt services (loans) if they wish to
fmance a project laiger than $620,000
without decreasing funding for student
activities and organizations. Students may
choose to spend more than the $105,000
safety lid, however this would force

Point

on the board
the third floor of the CAB (please see

students to decrease funding for other
activities.
Three tentative plans 'are available to
get an idea of what students can build for
their money. The $600,000 plan would
allow COnstruCtiOll without taking out any
loans, however there wouldn't be a whole
lot there. The $1.2 million plan would
require debt servicing but would not
require cutbacks in other areas. It would
allow a moderate amount of new student
space. The $1.4 million plan would
require both debt servicing and funding
cutbacks in other areas but would meet
the greatest space needs. All designs will
be posted in the sec and Student Groups
Lounge on the third floor of the Library.
Where: The most viable place for
construction appears to be the terrace on

illUstration). This area is already located
near the mainstream of activity and it
would require the least amount of new
construction.

HAPI'IlNS NI!KT?
There will be a community forum to
get feedback on the designs Monday,
March 6 at 3 pm in CAB 108, and
another budgetary (S&A Board) Meeting
March 8 at 3 pm in CAB 108. All
students are encouraged 'to attend both
meetings. Both will be critical to the fmal
design that is sent out to bid for
construction by Fall 1991.
WHAT

I

-,--,(

I
~





_

•••

_



l



4

:

_

.

_

•••



_

• • • • • •

:.. : :; ...
: ~ :-~ :....
: : ~ -r
.

~

~-~



_

.

-

.

"



-



-



-

-

_

..

••••





:

i . . . ._ ~

: : : : : :.: : ~ ~ :-~ ~
~"~.-:- .: j
:.: .: _" :.. .- ,:.....:,..:.....:..:.--=---~i--T'_ __..::"':..-.;.·...:.·...:.·...:.·;';
-'_ _

~.

~ .- _-2. ~.: ..:

.....- •. , I

i

~

I

.------T-

__J

.,

t

I•

I

II!

t

.... -..

-. -...... .
,

-. ; ,

,

-

1

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

ROCKY MOUNTAIN NAT10NAL PARK
RETAIL SALES· FOOD SERVICES

I. MARCH 8th I,
ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS

LIS 1401

~ XIII 113

CPJ should serve students
by Perry Morse
Let me clarify what your explanation
of your decision to run a recruitment ad
for the CIA ("CPl Serves No Master",
February 23, 1989) me8lls.
Your advertising policy states thilt.
...all
forms
of
advertising
will
considered." "Considered" is the operative
word in this Sl8tement. Let's explore
'what it means.
The CPJ has an obligatiOll to serve
it's community. The CPJ has a master
and I am one of them. The CPl is
funded principally from S&A funds. S&A
funds are the sum of seventy-five dollars
per-capil8 per-anum for each full-~e
enrolled student. Given the source of its
only sl8ble funding base (the S&A Board
as trustees for student activity money),
the CPJ is compelled to serve the student
population of the Evergreen State College
primarily,
and
other
campus
constituencies only incidentally. It must
be made clear that as far as dollars are
concerned the CPJ is a student paper, not
a campus paper. The editor has a
financial and ethical obligation to the
community that pays his salary.
In paragraph eight of your editors
note you state that you "would noCallow
an ad from the KKK advocation
government overthrow." And you full
back upon the Constitution to relieve you
of your obligation to make an essentially
ethical decision. Ethically, there is no
justification for running a racist ad, nor
for running an ad for an agency which
has been, continues to be, and will be
actively involved in the violent overthrow
of other nation's governments.
Mr. Editor, you owe us an
explaq,ation of the sense in which it is
ethically acceptable to run advertisements
for an agency which is by many accounts
involved in large scale drug shipping as .
far back as the Vietnamese conflict and
as recently as Oliver North's creative
fmancing of the Contra forces of
Nicaragua.
More fundamentally, you owe us an
explanation of the grounds upon which it
is acceptable to take a~vertisements from
an agency which was, as least as' far as
the Iran-Contra scandal is concerned,
involved in the ' subversion of the
Constitution. The only defense that can
be offered 011 behalf of the CIA is that
they are protecting the right of American
Industry to access and utilize the vast
natural resources and slave-wage labor
force of Central America.
Ethically, even this argument is
unacceptable.
To
concede
the
expendability of the people of Central
America (liule brown non-English
speaking people) for the sake of the
natural' resources of that region is the
worst kind of racism.
For these reasons I have come to the
conclusiOll that you have failed to
"consider" the ramifications of you
decision to print an ad (or the CIA. I
recapitulate: the CIA subverts the

Constitution, the CIA devises and
enforces racist policies, . the CIA is
involved in the illegal drug business tor
profit, the CIA has been and is currently
involved in the violent overthrow of
foreign governments tl1Creby negating
other people's inalienable rights.
Personally, I am degraded by my
association
with
(and
unwilling
subsidation of) a paper that would print
advertisements for the CIA, just as I am
dehumanized by a ' paper that prints
"public service announcements" for the
Selective Service, and hate mail from
racist subhumans (ie. the Reptilian
Underground).
In the game of baseball this would
be considered
your third
strike.
Unfortunately,l am not the umpire. I am
your victim. Methodically, you have
invented issues that are the fissures which

MOUNTAIN PARK

P.O. SOX 2680

co.

ESTES PARI<. co 80517
303 588-11308

at first
sight.

personal visions. We are forced to make'
ethical judgments. We are compelled to
impress our visions uoon this malleable
reality, and thereby to improve it In the
absence of such vision this paper cannot
build anything. It is like a tool that has
no defmite function.
If
you
adopt
an
editorial
policy/agenda which heals the wounds
you have created and fosters cooperation
and trust this paper may become
something delightful, my shame may fade
and be forgotten. It may even be replaced
with pride. Till then, I, like so many
other students on this campus, cannot
submit my work to you, cannot have my
spirit shat upon by associating With you
paper (not mine). The best I can do is to
expedite the journey of this unclean thing
to its highest and best use through the
recycling bin.

continued from page 5
my recent action with regards to the
current CAB building exhibit and the
Student Art Gallery.
.
On Friday, February 24, 1989, after
a review of the past week's events and
historical documentation, I directed
student coordinator Vince Brown, to
remove the an work that displayed nudity
and a sexuality implied act from its
present location. The photo, which had
been located next to the cafeteria
doorway, was called into question by
many members of the Evergreen learning
community. An alternative display site
was discussed, and it had been my
understanding that "Gallery 2" (2nd floor
library) was made available as an
optional space.

I have called a moratorium on future
exhibits until written guidelines and
policies, produced by students, are
provided to me through Kathy Ybarra
and Ted Hong. This information should
include, but not be limited to, a process
that has a more inclusive decision making
mechanism, and should also take into
account the public location of the Student
Art Gallery.
It is important to note that I have not
suspended the budget allocation.

VATCH OUT

TED

~Clr ~n- ~-tore.

DANSON

SPEC1ALS

ISABEUA
ROSSELLINI

IPG .•i}

on

burpit~ for
o.",~({e.r- £rJH\~

Ii ..." • ..ooNT
~ICTVA f

. , I.:

.~.-

· . . t· .



\0%

1

!

OfF

on se.\ed:e.d
~1I'U.JlD)lBN1r

NIGHT IS

THURSDAY NIIGJHl']['!
Present your sludent 1.0. and get $2.50
admission \0 any movis except for special
.engagements.

Journal

render. us incapable of achieving any
collective goal of moment or purpose.
You print things that wound, not just
offend. This paper has the capacity to
build a community, to foster cooperative
action. And, this is your duty. Recognize
it! Recognize that this duty is more
significant than your personal thoughts
about the fIrst amendment. It is more
important than the rules of journalism, or
the proces:>, of debate, or the development
of yout portfolio.
We live in a time that demands a
higher ethical standard or each of us. We
live in a time in which the rules don't
seem to work.
Certainly the verbal
battlefields of debate and journalism don't
foster
peacefulness
or
trust
or
cooperation. In the absence of a workable
pre-manufactured morality, like this
moment, we are forced to rely upon our

Love

r ___-=~:;:=-.!.AfI~PL~ICA~TIONS & INTERVIEW SiKIG~N-~U~P~;:;;:::~_____~
T.E.S.C.
r ROCKY
CAREER PlANNING & PLACEMENT

Opinion

ikfY\S

VEGETARIAN CUISINE
HOMEMADE SOUP • CHOLESTEROL FREE FOOD • VEGAN MENU AVAILABLE

Ir---------------------------I
NEW MOON CAFE INVITES YOU TO ENJOY A I

E

I
I

I
I

I

SMOOTHIE

I

WITH PURCHASE OF MENU ITEM

I

I
II

._-------------------------_.
EXPIRES MARCH 31, 1989

Mon.-Sat.
7:3Oam-3pm

943-8692

Cooper

Point

111 Legion Way
Downtown Olympia

Journal March

2,

1989 Page

7

Career Development

Internsh.ips still available, deadlines near

Several summer job guides now available
by Maureen Eddy
valuable to many students. In 1980. four
It's the time of year when students students from Evergreen worked on such
are wondering what they should do for a project When their project was
summer jobs. Career Development · completed. they had published The
receives summer positions daily. Some of Employer Resource Directory
for
the listings are for year-round positions Thurston County. This Directory provides
as well. We have the 1989 Summer infonnation on Employers in Thurston
Employment Directory listing SO.OOO County and publicizes their personnel
Summer Job Openings at Resorts. Camps. needs and hiring practices. We realize
Amusement Parks. National Parks. there have been many new businesses in
Businesses and the Government, the
this county since 1980. but there are now
Student's Guide to The Best Summer more resources that will provide
lobs in A\aska, Special Summer Camp information such as this Directory.
National Vacancy List We have local
For example. our office has the
and out of state listings. From Tour Thurston County Chamber of Commerce
Guides for Seattle City Light to an directory listing members and their type
Apprentice for the Maine Organic of business as does the other Chambers
Farmers and Gardners Association. Career in the area. We also have a directory
Development may have just the right listing the Public Relations Employers in
summer job for you. You are welcome to the Puget Sound, and The Grea:.!r Puget
come in and peruse the information Sound Employment Opportunity Book.
displayed on the bulletin boards and on
There are countless schools in this
the table in Lib. 1401.
country who have students involved and
Many school projects often times
undertalcing projects such as the one our
results in information that can be students did. In 1985. students from the

University of Minnesota completed a
school project which resulted in a
publication entitled, Directory of Financial
Aids for International Activities. We have
this directory in our Resource Library.
This directory contains information on
455 individual award opportunities
available tQ academic staff. graduate and
undergraduate students, advanced scholars
and young professionals for study,
research, travel and teaching abroad. It
also contains a section of information on
awards for study.in a· degree program at
International Schools, centers and
universities in foreign countries. This is
just a sampling of the ambitious and
worthwhile projects students have done
and continue to do.
UPCOMING EVENTS: Monday.
March 6th. the Institute for International
Cooperation and Development are making
a return visit to campus. They will be
giving a presentation in Lib. 2218 at 7:30
p.m.
Wednesday. March 8th, the Rocky

Mountain Park Company will be on
campus recruiting for surnqler positions.
They will be in the CAB lobby from
9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Information and
brochures are located in the Career
Development's office Lib. 1401.
Friday, March 10, Resume Writing
workshop in Lib. 1406 from 12:00 to
1:00.

by Betty Lochner
The Office of Cooperative Education
(Co-op Ed.) is now busy helping sUidents
fmalize and document their spring quarter
internships. Students who have already
made arrangements with Co-op Ed. to
conduct an internship, need to schedule a
sample review appointment by March 17.
This can be done by stopping by our
office (Lib. 1407. in the Hillaire Student
Advising Center), or by calling ext 6391.
Students who are continuing an
internship from winter quarter and have
not yet notified Co-op Ed. should stop by
and pick up the necessary forms to
complete by the deadline date.
A few openings have become
available at Microsoft for interns spring
quarter. If you are interested, you need to
submit a resume, cover lener, application
and unofficial transcripts to Co-op Ed. by
Friday Mar. 3. MicrosofL internships are
full time, paid ($1387 per mOJ)th)
internships. You need to be able to make
a two quarter commitment For more
information and to pick up an application
packet. stop by Co-op Ed. .
If you are interested in a spring or
laU internship at Microsoft, the deadline
for all application materials to be turned
in to the Co-op Ed. office· is Monday
April 3.
There are still a few good internships
available for spring quarter. If you are
interested in any of the following
internships, contact Co-op Ed. during our
drop-in hours (fues. Wed. ·Thurs. 3:00 4:30) to find out more about them.
Please Dote: do to our staffmg level. we
are no longer able to make general
referrals. We will only be able to give
you information about specific internships
during our drop-in hours.
The following are internships that are

still available for spring quarter. For the
contact people and phone numbers. see
Co-op. Ed.
Woodard Bay Project
Wash. State Dept. of Wildlife, Olympia
Participate in a study focusing on an
inventory of the bird species of the water
and shoreline. including Bald Eagles;
document wildlife responses to human
activity;· 20 hours per week; $333 stipend
for the quarter.
Everett .parks and Recreation
Everett, WA
Arctic
Project Coordinator
~oordinate and o~rate an arctic nesting
unprovement project on Jetty Island.
Conduct
scientific
observations
recordings. management of recordings
decoys. Live on the island for 4 weeks to
manage project. 40 hours per week; will
provide compensation for 4 weeks of
live-in project. the rest of the quarter is
volunteer.
U.s. Bureau or Census
Seattle, WA
. Recruiting Intern - work with the
Census Awareness and Products Specialist
recruiting staff and implementing goals
and objectives. Assist with community
outreach, hiring . and placement Help
promote an accurate and representative
count of minority groups for the 1990
decennial census. 25-40 hours per week.
$5.50 per hour.
Wash. State DSHS - Div. of Healtb
Olympia
Research Coordinator - Conduct
research of HIV and · Aids material.
Implement training program. 10-40 hours
per week, volunteer (possibility for pay
for student who continues for more than
one quarter).

and

Allegro
Seattle
Theatre Technician/Stage Mgr. Assist main producer of dance/movement
theatre. 20-35 hours per week, volunteer.
South Sound Options Unlimited
Olympia
Assist in initiating a new program to
enable developmentally disabled adults to
begin living on their own. 10-40 hours
per week. volunteer.

The Office of Cooperative Education
is located in Lib. 1407 (in the HiUaire
Student Advising Center). Our drop-in
hours are Tues. Wed. Thurs. 3:00 - 4:30.
Call ext 6391 or "drop-in" for more
information.

South Puget Sound Community College
is proud to present

THE
INTIMATE
P.D.Q. BACH
An evening of

musical madness I
March 3, 1989
8:00 p.m.

Washington Center for
The Performing Arts
TIckets:
$18.$16,$14
Students/Seniors: $15.$12.$10
TIckets available at:
TIcketmaster. The Bon. Tower
Records. or by calling
628-0888, Washington Center Box
office. Washington Center Outlets,
South Puget Sound Community
College. 754-7711. ext. 306.

••

SOlITH PLX;ET SOUND
" ... ' \ l u\ / n \ " I I_./

Artist and Le<:tlire Series 1988·89

ALL WA YS TRAVEL SERVICE, INC.
EVERGREEN. EXPRESSIONS. PRESENTS

JUDITH
HARRISON Be DIVISION
OLYMPIA. WASHINGTON 98502

Evergreen team member swims to victory at Districts.

li F [ \N ZERO -G

,---------------------l
1

I.
I
I
1

It's Magic!

I





It's Luck! •
It's Our 13th Anniversary!

1

I

• •

Help us celebrate
our anniversary and
being voted



.



Spend your spring break f
~ on the SUNNYSIDE of the ~
~
Cascades.
~
~
Ski Mission Ridge
~
~

~
_

Open Wed-Sun 9am to 4pm
Call 800-223-6811 for info.

enes! pair COuld
De a s:gn 01 r.ear ;
dIsease The SOOi"lE" you se e
YOUI d OCIO! Ihe betle r yc'Iu '

;:::~-"

(III!

_
........................................................

Association

I
I

For

ARE E~COt:R.~GED TO .... PPl Y
REGARDLESS or SE),XAl ORIE~TATIO~. RACE. SEX. AGE. H ... "l>I·
CAP. RELIGlOts OR POLITICAL BELIH OR "~TlO:"AL ORIGI~ .

$3.00

There's onlv I
one way 10 I
come out ahead
of the pack. i
i
I

LSAT

AS A

COUPON
towa rd. any

. fOQd purchau o f

KAPLAN
BREAKFAST
MON-FRI
7·1o.m

DJNNWt!-SUN

MON-THURS
5-1Opm

SfANLEY H. KAPLAN
EDUCATIONAL SERVICES

Thr- S A; A Boa rd Coor~ in a l or nr n~!I as tht' S b..: .A. Board'5 st a fr and is
al(ountab lt' hI th(. B ~ ,ard and 1h(. Dircctor of Studen t Activ it ies _ Duti~!to rr quirt'd b~ lhi s pos itiun indudc collaborate" il h tht' Board ill tht ~cI('cti on of
nt'\'!' Board members : dir('ct. oq~a niZ(', an d pr<,\·iCIc info rm a tion an d st' T'-ict'!to
that 1h(' Board require!» : (nnourt re~rarch projects: organizt- Board orien t a'
tiun : prepa r e' Board '!I o p era tion b\Jd~ct: organiu and m o dcrat~ a ll mcC' tin~ s :
prrparc. agcnda~, retain 3. r(' co rd · k('~per . di!>!>cminOlt(' iIdo rmation l onn:rni'TH!
ac ti ltO~

SKILLS

I

I

1107

S••ttl.

$7.50 General Admlulon
$5.50 Studenu, Semon 6:
AlWDDI.
larvup

cll8COUlit.

for 10 or more)

uf lil, Bu ard: a~!>i51 ~ruup!oo .1.pp l yin~ for fund !> ,
A~D QL~LIFICATIO~

Thy pooilion Y to be. IIUed I'Dr Sprina Quaner 1989 only a. a TRAINING
OPPORTUNITY ror 11189-90 S • A Board. SucceeaIUI applicant will be expected to
attend and obeerve put or an oleach ol the Spina Quarter Board meetinp and
conauU with the tUlTOnt Coordinator and AdmInletrative Coordinator. Applicanta

. TICKETS: Yenney'., The
BooluDark, TE8C Bookstore

.ud at the door.

ohould have a good unclerotandiJqr of Evo"",8I\'. polic\ea and practice•. PreYiOUI
."""lien.. wUb the board would be belpl\1l.

For application contact:

5-8pm

LOCATED IN NEW TESC
COMMUNITY CENTER

I

8PM
TESC RECITAL HALL

The 1989·11190 Sem. . and Aclivlti.. Fo. Revl .... Board
Ie currentJ,y belnjr IOlic:iled.

J OB DESC RIPTIO?\

USE THIS AD

March 4th

I~TERESTED [\·ERGREE~ ST t·DE~TS
I".

BEST PIZZA

Page 8 March 2, 1989 Cooper Point Journal

Notice

S & A BOARD
COORPINATOR TRAINEE

I

'0J" . F~

Prepare

Exhibition" by Russian Compoller Mussorgsky. A display
of visual masterpieces will accompany the music. Join us
for this captivating modem performance you can hear as
well as see.

SATURDAY

W:"7t t ~· .." .:;. ;...:,-.

in the

This renowned concert pianist will play "Pictures at an

raur chest. " aliin
In lIIe neCIi.
Complain t. a doctor.
' -~'.-

~........................................................

Notice

" lIIere's a lain In

FELTON

S I; A AdmInialralive

nsc CAB 306

om..

• 886-6000 X8220

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

All applicationa mutt be Sled with the

S • A AdminIalralivo

11>' a p.m. FricIe,y,

om.. In CAB 306
March 8. 1l16li

(WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE)

Cooper Point Journal March 2, 1989
-,

Pa~e
,

.... .

,

9

f

Pesticides harmful e·ffeets being realized
by WASHPIRG
I have a long-standing desire to be as
healthy as I have the power to be. So I
buy and grow natural. "organic" food.
Allhough a chemist will argue Ihat
organic means only made from carbon
compounds. Ihe accepted public usage of
organic has become wilhout pesticides.
has not been irradiated. nor treated with
preservatives. hormones. anti-biotics or
synlhetic additives and has been grown
wilh nalunll mineral fertilizers. on soil
whose humus is created wilh compost
(Rodale. Frontpiece).
I garden organically in my garden. In
olher people's gardens. I use artificial
fertilizers. I used to use "ROood-up". a
synlhetic herbicide. but have since fOood
out that it causes mutations in plants. and
new information links it wilh cancer
("Western Washington Toxics Coalition".
p.3).
Early on in my schooling. I read
Silent Spring, Rachel Carson's 1962
expose on DDT and related pesticides
She points out that "man" wants to
control the world and all its creatures.
but that what we need to do is to live in
cooperation wilh Ihe creatures of Ihe
earth ralher !han blatantly kill Ihem off.
Especially when we knew nothing of the
long-term effects of Ihe pesticides that we
have been using since WW II.
Now we know. DDT. aldrin, eldrin.
and Ihe related chlorinated hydrocarbon
pesticides are stored in Ihe fatty deposits
in animals' bodies. and when one animal
eats anolher. these fatty deposits wilh Ihe
DDT are passed along. only Ihey increase
exponentially. And cause cancer in Ihe
human, twenty-five years later.
The Environmental Protection Agency
has banned many pesticides. The EPA
banned the cancerous fumigant EDB in
1982. but too late. It and many olher
pesticides are now in our groWld water
in 23 staleS because on use by
agricullurc, aDd will effect our drinking
watet. (BOB was found in the
groundwatet in Whatcom County at 5ppm
[parts per million]. The accepted parts is
.02ppm. [Eric Esswein]). We "live as if
the universe revolves aroood us, that our
needs are more important !han Ihe needs
of all other forms of life." Pesticides are
pollution. If you look at each polluted
part of Ihis world you will see a "failure
in human thinking" (Roadale 201).
Pesticides are formulated t,o be poiSOns.

The pesticides sprayed in the garden
around urban and suburban areas are
supposed to be safe, we have been told
for years, but the evidence is here. and
the EPA bans more and more pesticides.
But not as fast as Ihey are created. The
pesticide industry. (Shell and Chevron Oil
companies are two of Ihe largest) has
made millions from pesticide sales the
world over. and is relying on public
ignorance of these poisons in order· to
continue.
Anolher problem with pesticides that
needs to be considered is that in the
laboratory. it is a control situation. Only
one pesticide is used at a time. In our
gardens and on the farms we have no
control. The amount being used is not Ihe
amooot tested in Ihe Iaboratorv. What are
the effects of sprayingdiazioo four times
a year on our fruit and foliage trees for
aphids.
and
orothene'
on
the
rhododendrons for root weevil and using
ROood-Up, and Casaron for weeds all in
Ihe same garden? We have a situation in
which no one knows the combined.
overall effects of these poisons on the
plants. the people. or the soil.
There is .a scientific melhod.
Integrated Pest Management (!PM) Ihat
has been developed for insect, and
disease control in farms aJ)d gardens.
lPM is a decision making process for
figuring out IF you need pest control.
WHERE you need it, and WHAT
strategy and mix to use to control Ihe
pest. In other words. you would only
treat the pest when you found it. And
pesticides may never be used because a
mix of olher melhods are just as good.
(Olkowski 1).
Gardening is not a simple malter.
the natural ecology is thousands of
interrelationships among plants and all the
olher living creatures, including Ihe pests.
The pest population is very small in
relation to the olher living creatures.
When you use pesticides (you Idll
butterflies) you disrupt the natural
controls in your garden. your problems
may get worse. And you will create new
ones. The insect pest population may
have a resurgence. and increase because
the insecticide kills off all the natural
enemies. The natural predators are always
in a smaller proportion in relation to the
"bad" bugs because they depend on the
"bad" bugs for food. Insects also have in
their population a few individuals that

have a natural resistance to insecticide,
no matter how much it costs to invent
and produce. So when you spray with
chemical insecticide you kill the
susceptible insects, leaving Ihe resistant,
which get the signal to reproduce. So the
more you use this insecticide the faster
you get an insect that is not affected by
that pesticide.
When your garden is sprayed with an
insecticide, all the beneficial insects are
killed also. All the lady bug beetles, lace
wings. praying mantises. and mites and
gnats. etc. that wO.uld help keep your
harmful insect population ooder control if
they were allowed to live. The common
large Black ground beetle is very
ferocious looking. It will eat three. times
its weight in harmful insects. a day.
including slugs (yes, slogs). snails.
aphids, houseflies. mosquitoes, elmleaf,
beetles, caterpillars, and even termites
(Grossman 46).
An lPM program will identify,
monitor and keep records of pests and
natural enemies. It will figure the
economic or aeslhetic injury level to see
when you need control actions, and will
prediC\ injury lev~1s if no action is taken
depending on different variables. such as
weather. The lPM program will tell
different treatments Ihat will be the least
disruptive to Ihe natural controls and to
human health and the environment. The
major treatments are correct selection of
plants.
(no
monoculture):
habitat
modification: human behavior changes
(changing irrigation): using physical
controls (hand picking): biological

controls (introducing the natural enemies):
and chemical controls (using attractants to
lure the pest) (Olkowski 2-3).
Creating healthy soil so our plants
can be as large, strong, and green as
possible is my goal. A healthy plant is
not as susceptible to insect and disease
attack. So I make compost, and I
encourage olhers to compost. Even Ihe
city government is teaching how to
compost and minimize our waste stream.
Compost is all Ihe weeds, dirt. grass
clippings, and leaves mixed or layered
togelher, and eilher let sit for a year to
rot, or turned so that it will tum into rich
black organic matter, or cornpost. This is
the humus that gl!rdening books ta11t of
with awe. Organic matter in the soil is
absolutely necessary as it is the stuff that
the nutrients from Ihe fertilizer hold on to
be transferred to the plants roots in order
to feed Ihe plant. Compost is created by
Ihe bacteria in Ihe soil eating away and
multiplying and decomposing weeds we
create our compost with. If we spray our
plants we kill these bacteria and fungi in
the soil. and our soil is not alive.
There is for me a certain
satisfaction, a pleasure that exists outside
among the Irees. Shrubs and flowers. The
smell is wonderful in an organic garden.
There is a huge variety of insects, birds.
and butterflies, lighting on the plants,
especially in the sun on a warm summer
day The soil is soft under my feet, and
the plants are full of buds. flowers. green
and bright. A natural peaceful ganlen.
The kind of garden Ihat will sustain Ihe
earth.

,



INVEST 10 MONTHS FOR THE CHALLENGE OF A LIFETIME.
Willamette University seeks 20 students to enter a highly competitive 10 month program leading to teacher certification for grades 512. and a Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) degree.

CelebratIng TEN years of crystal business.
<J~o,,~ ~ou fOr your appreciation of natural
form and beauty...and I~f)"~ you for helping
to bring these natural treasures of the Earth
to our great Pacific Northwestl

MARCH 27th-APRIL 1st
CELEBRATION WEEK SPECIALS

200/0 OFF ALL QUA·RTZ
(CINI'.A/nlChy.t.SmolwyoCltrlneoRo... Rulll.ted)

and

ALL GEMSTONE BEADS
ENTER OUR TREASURE DRAWING
FILL OUT THE COUPON BELOW AND BRING IT TO USI

FInl Prtu:

s.Oand Prtu:
Thin! PrfzI

_Ic

'2110 Quartz Sphere or Quartz ca.-ler
,71 ShoppIng Spr.. II EMIlI
'50 o.m.tal1l IMcia 01 Vallr Choice

Located at 205 E. 4th, Olympia, WA 98501
~ lIon-&at 11-6:30

Drawing will

c;n Saturday,

April 1 at 3:00 pm

1989-90 PROGRAM: AUGUST 21, 198~UNE 15, 1990
Call or write now for essential deadline and admission information for the. Fall ·89 program.

MIDDLE AND HIGH SCHOOL CERTIFICATION AVAILABLE IN:

Art Education
Biology & General Science
Chemistry
Chemistry. Physics, Gen. Science
English Language & J-iterature
French
German
Spanish
Japanese

Russian
Health
Mathematics (Basic, Advanced)
Music Education (K-12)
Physical Education (K-12)
Physics
Reading
Social Studies

Q
Wi Ilamette
UNIVERSITY

For more Information.contact:
Office of Admission, MAT Program, WlIlamette University
900 State Street, Salem, OR 97301 (503) 370-6303

Calendar
J

~

.1

,J

Tbe Policy
Calendar information should be
submitted Ihe Friday prior to
publication and include date and time
of event, location. cost. and a contact
for more information. Space for the
calendar is limited Iherefore not every
event in Ihe Ongoing section will be
listed every week.
THURSDAY, MARCH 2
"Tbe Geoduck FUm Festival," a
40 min collection of Evergreen student
mm and video works will be shown on
TCTV. Cable channel 31 ot 10 p.m.
Orientation meeting for anyone
interested in participating in Ihe
OPTIFAST
Program.
St
Peter
Hospital·s program for sustained weight
control at 7 p.m. For more information
or to reserve a spot at Ihe orientation
meeting call 456-7979.
"Tbe Journey; From Faith to
"Guatemala:
saint
or
Action,"
subversive" and a panel discussion on
liberation theology will be from 7 to
10 p.m. in Lecture Hall #3 for free.
FRIDAY, MARCH 3
Tbe 'Salon Olympia' show at Ihe
Reko Muse Gallery (112 E. State) is
opening tonight at 7 p.m. Show
features original works of art by local
artistS and will run through March 31.
For more information stop by the
gallery or call 352-4683.
SATURDAY, MARCH 4
"Cinderella," tbe magical ballet,
will be performed tonight at Ihe
Washington Center by the Eugene
Ballet Company at 8 p.m. Tickets are
priced between $5.50 and $15. and are
available at the Center Ticket Office.
Yenney's Music. the Bookmark or by
calling 753-8586.
"Tbe Geoduck Film Festival," a
40 min collection of Evergreen student
film ' and video works will be shown in
Lecture. Ha!l #3 at 7:30 p.m. for fr<;e.
Judith Felton, acclaimed concert
pianist, will play "Pictures at an
Exhibition" at 8 p.m. in the Recital
Hall. Tickets are $7.50 general. $5.50
students.
seniors
and
Alumni
Association members. For more
information or ticket reservations call
866-6833 weekdays between 8 a.m.
and 5 p.m.
MONDAY, MARCH 6
"Peoples of Washington," a Iraveling
exhibition that is part of the
Washington State Centennial. will be at
the Olympia Timberland Library
starting today and continuing through
March 28.
Women's Lacrosse bas arrived!
Meeting for anyone who is interested is
at 5 p.m. in Ihe Rec. Underground. For
more information contact Laura at 7541417.
Dr. Stepben Gloyd will give a slide
show on "Rural Health Care in
Mozambique Under the Gun of
Apartheid" at 7:30 at Temple BEIh
Hatflloh (8th and Jefferson) for free.
Public Forum from noon to 1 p.m. in
CAB 108 about Ihe policy for
elimination of ozone depleting material'
at TESC. Everyone is welcome!
Today tbe "Breastfeeding and
Working" class series offered at The
Black Hills Community Hospital starts.
class are every Monday from 7:30 to
9:30 p.m. through March 27. Cost is
$35 for individuals, $50 for couples.
For more information and reservations
contact Jane at 459-4318 or Debby at
866-1876.
St. Peter Hospital's Parent Education
Program is offering a class covering·
the techniques and theory of infant
massage starting today and continuing
every Monday through April 3. Classes
are held from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
each Monday. cost is $35 per family.
For more information and registration
call 456-7016.
Contemporary Quilting Class starting

today and continuing through April 3.
Cost is $45. For more information
contact Hilary Canty at 459-7671.
Organic Farm organizational meeting
for those interested in discussing Ihe
future of Ihe Organic Farm, 9 am to
noon at Ihe Organic Farmhouse. Call
extension 6160 for more information.
TUESDA Y, MARCH 7
George and Patty Lowe will be
speaking on "The Greenhouse Effect What is happening to our world?" at 7
p.m. in the Timberland Regional
Library. For more information contact
Harry Bowron at 866-1374 or Mary
Oliver at 352-0376.
Planning meeting ror National
Volunteer Recognition Week to plan
activities to show our appreciation for
all Ihe quality wo* volooteers do on
campus at 9 a.m. in Library 3205. For
more information contact Teri at ext.

6428.
All campus interviews ror
Campus Grievance Officer will be
held from noon to 1 p.m. today, March
8 and 9 in Library 3500. For more
information call ext. 6296 or ext 6785 .
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 8
Tburston County Fair Board is
meeting at 7:30 p.m. at the fairgrounds
and the public is welcome.
Oscar Soule, Evergreen raculty
member who spent time living in
Bejing Institute in China, will give a
lecture and slide show at 7:30 p.m. in
Lecture Hall # 1 for free.
THURSDAY, MARCH 9
" Abortion Rights Under Attack,"
a panel discussion about Ihe threat
being posed to women' s right to
abortion. Sponsored by Thurston
Coooty National Organization for
Women and TESC Women's Center at
noon in Ihe Library Lobby. For more
informanon calT Linda Malanchuk at
357-7272 or Jamie Moore at 754-4492.
ONGOING
The volunteer readers who read
books onto tape for TESC visually
impaired students need to borrow some
books this quarter. For information on
which books are needed or to loan
books please contact Sharon McBride
at ext 6348.
Evergreen
is
still
accepting
applications for 1989 Fall Quarter
Teacher Education, Master of Public
Administration
and
Master
of
Environmental Studies Programs. For
more information about admission into
Evergreen call ext 6170.
The Washington State Arts
Commission is offering grants to nonprofit organizations and units of state
and local government to help support
arts activities for residents. The
Program and Staff support application
deadline for Fiscal 1090 will be March
3. 1989. For more information contact
Josie Tamayo. Karen Gose or Mary
Frye at Ihe Washington State Arts
Commission. 91h and Columbia Bldg.
MS: MS-ll. Olympia. WA 98504. or
call 753-3858.
National College Poetry Contest
sponsored by International Publications
will be from now until deadline on
March 31, 1989. For more information
contact International Publications. P.O.
Box 44044-L. Los Angeles. CA 90044.
Rec, Sports is organizing a spring
break ski trip to MI. Bachelor. Cost
will be around $130 for all four days.
For more information call ext. 6530.
During snowy weather the Intercity
Transit bus routes may be affected. For
information listen to the radio or call
786-1881.
Tbe
Student
Conservation
Association has a Resource Assistant
Program through which people are able
to volunteer their services for the better
management and conservation of our
nation's parks, public land and natural
resollfC()s. often at minimum cost to Ihe

Tburston County Treasurer Mike
Murphy has announced that the 1989
Property Tax and Special Assessment
Statements will be sent from his office
on February 14. 1989. AU payments
received or postmarked by May 1.
1989 will be considered paid in a
timely fashion,
BEWARE! Some IT buses are
having to make detours because of the
incredible weight they put on the roads
which have been weakened by Ihe
weather. So the bus you take may not
actually get you where you want to go.
For more information call IT at 786188l.
March 6
10 has been
designated International Women's
Week, everyone
is
invited
to
participate. For more information stop
by the Women's Center, Maarava,
Women of Color Coalition. LGRC, or
EPIC.
Olympia's
Friends
or
Macrobiotics meets twice a month.
Every second Friday there is a study
group and every fourth Friday there is
a potluck. For more information contact
Loren at 943-3043.
A
Contemporary
Theater
(Seattle) is accepting applications for
Prop Master/Head of Scenic Art Dept.
and for internships in its production
department Those interested in Ihese
positions should submit a letter of
interest and resume of work and/or
performing art experience to James
Verdery. Production Manager: A
Contemporary Theatre; 100 West Roy
Street: Seattle, WA 98119. Application
deadline is March 1. 1989.

individual. About 75% of Ihe positions
are offered during the summer monlhs.
selection process for Ihem begins
March 1. For more information contact
The S~dentConservation Association.
Inc. P.O. Box 55OC, Charlestown. NH
03603.
The Judge Carol and Herbert Fuller
1989 Poetry Contest is accepting
submissions now until March 15. 1989.
For more information call 357-3801.
The Washington Centennial Film .
Festival is sponsoring a centennial mm
contest open to all Washington State
residents. All films must be received
by Pierce College's .Centennial Office
by May 5. 1989. For more information
contact Roland Weis at 964-6637. Bill
Krieger at 964-6735 or Jenny Marugg
at 964-6750.
Critical Mass is hosting a student and
faculty art show in the Library's Fourth
Floor Gallery which will continue
through February 28. Don't miss this
show!
South Puget Sound Community
College is offering courses in English
and civics to assist iIrJmigrants in
obtaining permanenl residency. For
more information contact Nancy Elliott
at 754-7711 ext. 316.
The Olympia Timberland Library is
offering several story time programs for
children. For more information on_
times
contact Rosanne
specifiC
Thompson or Cayt Stephens at 3520595.
Tbe Lacey Timberland Library
is offering toddler storytimes. For more
information contact Bob Stalder at 4913860.

Individual and Group Counseling. Healing the
ChDd Wrthin; AduH Children of Alcoholics.
Women In lransitionj work with couples,
relationships, career and role changes,
peiSonal growth. Nan Netherland M.S.w.,
C.S.w.943-8695

~~~[Q)CLASSIFIED RATES
,30 words or 1ess-$3.00
·10 cents for each additional word
·Pre-payment required

PROfESSIONAL COUNSELING for low sellconfidence, trans~ions, stress, relationships.
CONFIDENTIAL BRIEF THERAPV. Judith
BouHiou, M.A., 208 Ully Rd. N.E., IB, Olympia

oCIassIfied deadllne-2 p.rn. Tuesday

TO PLACE AD:
·PHONE 866-6000 X6054 or
·STOP BV THE CPJ, CAB 306A

45~733.

PETS

,SEND INFO TO: TESe, CAB 305A
OLVMPlA, WA 98505

I NEED A HOMEII'M VERY CUTE, CUDDLY,
AND JUST A WONDERFUL HOUSE·DOG.
THE PROBLEM IS THAT I CAN'T STAY
WHERE I MIl LIVING AT FOR VERY MUCH
LONGER. CAN YOU GIVE ME A HOME?
'CALL 357.5074.

WANTED
ORIGINAL ARlWORK FOR PUBUCATION.
BLACK & WHITE MOST USEFUL. ART
USED TO ILLUSTRATE AND'()R
ACCOMPANY CPJ POETRY PAGE. LEAVE
MSG FOR DAYID HENSHAW X6213.

1--------------1
U.S.C. TOURS. COULD VOU GIVE ONE?
I'M FROM COI..ORADO~.T:
::~~~' .. " OFF.
ATTENDING ~,~..~,

,

~~~S~RE.siEvD'. .

runy

PERSONAL

AROUND PLEASE CAll AMY
(303) 458-6377.
Inllrelted In forming an Intenllv~~_,
wrlt,rllarlll" group contract forIIII'(
. ,.
I am, and I'm looking for other serious .
individuals. F-l&ase give me a riOgfWiiltJwy
86f.6567.

Zeus desires Hera. Spiritualy oriented prebiophysicist conducting library research of
laser acopundure & lissue regeneralion
desires pre-biqlhysicist same, for old
fashioned romantic rela1ionshp. 866-0083.

.FOR-SALE
STEREO FOR SALE: 20w NAD Recelver,
CO PIa";,.CUaetle Deck, and Advent
SptekIrI. Fanta,tlc Sound for only $1000.
Fanta,tlc Sound for $1000. AlIO, many
Used CD's for $7 each. See Larry B. in J-307.

WanUKI: Valdl, homII and garden, for
FrN Organic Ptet Management Survey for
school ProJect WlU consult about your insed.
disease or other pest problems. Would ike to
discover 'how you think about peslicides. Have
12 years experience with professional organic
gardening. Call willow at 352-8896.

FOR RENT
HoUIIII'IIII wanted. ClIIJ1, qul,t room on
the ea.t Side 1 block from the buill",.
$1501month + utilldil. No amok.,.., p......
754-7858 Ilk for Peter.
Wanted gay male or female to share 3
bedroom hou.. $3OOImonth, plus part
uIIitIIs. Call 943-2656.

I

SPRING BREAK ROAD-TRIP CAR. 1872
_CURY LOVE-BOAT. BIG,
DEPENDABLE. RUNS GREAT.
EVERYTHING WORKS. $1000 O.B.O. CALL
MITCH AT 866·1321 .

...·T·IC·K·ET-S--------....
SItIng the OrIent? Need a ride home? Oneway tickal from Talptl to Sea-Tac wibrief
stopover In Tokyo. Good unUI Sept 1.CaJ1
Kate II 753-9919.

HELP WANTED

SERVICES
Chrll Synodll, Certified Acupuncwrl,t.
Uoanced ".assage Therapist, Mast81S In
CounseIi1g. PIlICtice of acupundure Integrated
with acupressure, Chinese he!bs, and aanialaacraJ techniques. Adults $2G-$35Jhr: children
$5-$16.Watment. 754-0624.

My gerbils Egg and Bacon had four ittIe ones
on the 14th of January. Three of them have
been adopted by loving famiies. There is one
wonderful gelbilleft in a very big, lonely cage.
Will you adopl him and make his life happy?
call Mall al
al 866-2205.

AI. . . SUmmer Job. with ARA OuIdoor
Wolld. Positions In aI aspects of hoIeI
opendlons. l.ocaIed in Denai Park (MI.
McKInley), A1aska. Sign up for March 3rd
In1Irvlew at Career Development In Lib

1401.

Cooper POInt Journal March 2, 1989 Page 11
Page 10 March 2, 1989 Cooper Point Journal