cpj0798.pdf
Media
Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 29, Issue 8 (November 9, 2000)
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The Evergreen State College.
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--~~--------------------------------------------------Catalog update
Results of the
parking lot DTF
by Corey Pein
Very soon, the Evergreen
Administration will make important
decisions concerning the future of
parking issues on campus. Unfortunately, if you didn't make it to the
Parking Expansion DTF meetings
this week, you missed your last
chance to participate in the decisionmaking process. Following is an excerpt from the Evergreen Website
(under "What's New"), where this
stuff is archived. You might wanna
check it out.
"The DTF discussed and
eval uated various opt ions based on
four criteria:
Environmental Issues, User
Impact, Cost and Aesthetics (see
Appendix for complete list). Although a hired consultant developed options which provided parking for anticipated growth, the DTF
decided to recommend building
only enough parking spaces to satisfy permh requirements for Seminar II. After reviewing twelve formal options, as well as numerous
variations, the DTF recommends
Option 7. This option involves minor modifica tions to B, C, and F
parking lots with a net gain of 400
sta ll s at an estimated 'cost of
$400,000.
The rounded areas at the end
of each row of existing parking, as
well as the landscape "peninsulas"
current ly interspersed between
groups of parking stalls would be
removed to create additional stalls.
This option preserves the general
character of the parking lots and allows retention of many of the trees
in the current lots."
---------------------------------------------------------------,
Acetone fire, FBI masturbator
now available
by Mosang Miles
self together, Paula! The school catalog has been updated, and the Winter Update is now available at a catalog-dispensing location near you.
Now you can rest easy at night,
knowing that you are not missing
out on your desired education.
If you are an Evergreen student who plans to attend TESC thi s
winter, chances are you're shaking in
your sneakers at the thought of selecting a winter program without
being fully informed of your options.
Well, buck up, Buckley! P).lll your-
Jazz Expo .at
Pierce College
provided by the same
The Jazz Expo will explode
onto Pierce County stages November 16-18.,The big kick off on the 16th
showcases Micheal Powers, a jazz
guitarist who has shared showbills
with Ray Charles and Diane Schuur.
The show gets going at 7:30 p.m. at
Pierce College in Fort Steilacoom
with a wine and cheese reception
starting at 6:30 p.m. Tickets with the
reception are $15, performance only
price is $10.
Next up is Kurt Elling, and
Pierce College's award winning jazz
band, Farwest Jazz, on the17th.
11 :37 p.m.
by len Blackford
Elling does everything from scat to
ballads and is a three-time Grammy
nominee. This show is at the Wilson
High Auditorium at 1202 N. Orchard
in Tacoma, 8 p.m. General Admission tickets are $18.
November 18, the expo features saxophonist Eric Marienthal,
who has released 7 solo albums, including 1996's "Easy Street." This is
also located at the Wilson High Auditorium and costs $15 for general
admission. To order tickets for any
night of Jazz Expo ca \I Ticket Master
253-964-6283.
.
So it's November and I'm depressed. Why?
Could it be because Bush will most likely be our next
President? Perhaps. Could it be because there's pretty
much nothing I'm dying to take this winter for classes?
Maybe. Could it even be because no one's saying anything remotely original in their graffiti anymore, and instead repeating tired old slogans that motivate me to do
nothing more than sigh heavily and shake my head? You
betcha.
I don't know, there's just something about "1
don't even like Evergreen," scrawled on a much more
original and creative mural in the Ubrary stairwell, that
gets me thinking some people aren't even trying to be
different. Just because they put an anarchist symbol on a
piece of concrete, it doesn't make them a revolutionary.
What it means is that they don't have the actual courage
to do something about their beliefs or engage in a rational and persuasive discussion. Instead, they're just going
to play Zorro minus the swashbuckling, feats of
athleticism, and concern for their peers.
Oh well, on with the mayhem ...
Friday, Oct. LJ
2:22a.m.
Here'sasampleproblemforyoutopractice on. A--Student is seen leaving the loading docks with
two white carts. B-Afew hours later, Greenery carts are
reported missing. Now, does A equal B? The answer to
this: no. It develops that the carts the student has are file
carts from the CRC thatwere disposed of in the dumpster,
and thus, he gets to keep them.
7:55 a.m.
Someone calls 911 and hangs up-twice.
5:22 p.m.
One luckless driver is detained for driving with a suspended license, and an expired vehicle registration.
Today's incident that begins with an investigation into a fire alarm Lc; so great it can only be told
in the suspect's words. "I had some acetone in a plastic
container. I used the acetone to clean my pipe. I could not
get it clean so I used my lighter to bum the rest of the t.:'1f
out of the pipe. I did not realize how flammable acetone
is because when I used the lighter on the pipe the pipe
caught fire. I puta washcloth on the pipe to putitout, but
the wash cloth caught on fire. I dropped the pipe because
it was on fire and got too hot to hold. ll1epipe fell into the
plastic container that had acetone, the container caught
on fire,} put my sweatshirt on the flames to putitoutbut
it continued to bum. I went in the h.:.U and got the fire
extinguisher and was able to put out the fire."
Saturday, Oct. 28
1:40 a.m.
Someone tries to sleep in C-Lot, but is
kicked out of its warm embrace.
4:17 a.m,
Police take a person to the hospital after
he appears to be intoxicated on Reel Square. It turns out
he took some mushrooms, which would explain why he
kept repeating "hello, what, fine, asshole, yes."
1:23 p.m.
The other fire aIarm of the week besides
yesterday's far more interesting one, this one occurs on
the 3m floor of the COM building.
11:05 p.m.
There is a MIP on Indian Pipe Loop
Road, but no more details since the report is open.
Sunday, Oct. 29
A very creepy and disturbing event occurs today in BLot. Police catch a naked guy with a blanket over his lap
and a porno magazine at his feet in his car. "All the while
speaking with me the sweat was beading on his face,"
quotes one officer in the report. He says he was in the
deserted parking lot because he was "taking pictures of
some leaves and thought this was a secluded spot." Why
did he want a secluded spot? He replies "I was mastur-
bating." The man gelc; dressed, is arrested for lewd conduct, and is discovered later to have a criminal hi:.tlJry.
No word on what it i:" but an FBI number is written on
the report.
Monday, Oct. 30
A staff member comes in to work and finds the words
"Disarm TESC Now Les Puppet" and "Disarm TESC"
written on the Library 3100 hallway wall. Well, that certainly took a lot of thought.
Tuesday, Oct. 31
Surprisingly quiet. except for a case of someone impersonating a police officer. Gee, and on Halloween. Who
could have guessed that? Strangely, no one is arrested for
impersonating a professional wrestler, a plague victim,
or a man with duct tape on his face. This is reaUy quite a
shame.
Wednesday, Nov. 1
1:40~.m.
You knew we couldn't have a proper
police blotter week unless we had something strange
happening in P-Dorm. This time, it's reported that a window is broken, and graffiti is found on it. Something tells
me that's just the tip of a very large iceberg.
2:50 p.m.
An old classic for Evergreen, the car
prowl makes its return, with someone looking mighty
suspicious in-F-Lot. It's nice to see some traditions do continue.
Thursday, Nov. 2
4:29 a.m.
Another person tries to sleep at Ever'green, this time on the 3,d floor of the Ubrary. Alas, he or
she is sent out into the cold.
4:32 p.m.
A driver unwilling to pay money tries
to alter a parking pass and is busted. But you know, it's
only the unsuccessful criminals we've heard about ...
9 p.m.
And ~e end on a fairly boring and predictable note with graffiti on H-Dorm.
The Cooper CAB 316
Point Journal cpj@evergreen .edu
News
867-6213
Editor-in-chlef
Brem Seabrook
Managing Editor
Whitney Kvasager
Coordinating Editors
Erica Nelson
Corey Pein
Design Coordinators
Paul Hawxhurst
Perrin Randlettc
Business
867-6054
Business Manager
M. A. Selby
Asst. Business Manager
Jen Blackford
Advertising Representative
Ian Paden
Circulation and Archivist
Michaela Monahan
Distribution
Will Hewilf
Copy Editors
Ad Designers
Mosang Miles
Jonathan Noble
Corey Pein
Lauren Storm
Sports Editor
Shasta Smith
Adviser
Dianne Conrad
The Cooper Point journal is published 29 Thursdays each academic year, when
class is in session: the 1st through the 10th lllursday of Fall Quarter and the 2nd
through the 10th Thursday of Winter and Spring Quarters.
The CP] is distributed free on campus and at various sites in Olympia, Lacey,
and Tumwater. Free distribution is limited to one copy per edition per person.
Persons in need of more than one copy should contact the CP] business manager
in CAB 316 or at 360-867-6054 to arrange for multiple copies. The business
manager may charge 75 cen ts for e.lch copy after the first.
No 401 (k).
No profit sharing.
No stock options.
Yet, you vvon't
find better
benef~its anyvvhere.
PEACE CORPS -
How far are you willing to go to make a difference?
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Stale College, who are solely responsible for its production and content.
Contributions from any TESC student are welcome. Copies of subm ission and
publication criteria for non-advertising content are available in CAB 316, or by
request at 360-867-6213. The Cpr s editor-in-chief has the final say on the
acceptance or rejection of all non-advertising content.
Find out more when recruiters visit campus:
Tuesday, November 14th
Information Table:
The CP] sells display and classified advertiSing space. Information about
advertising rates, terms, and conditions are available in CAB 316, or by request
at 360·867-6054. n,e Cprs business manager has the fi nal say on the acceptance
or rejection of all advertising.
Evergreen Grad shares slides and stories of
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A year" worth of CPjs is mailed First Class to subscribers for 535, or Third Class
for S23. For informdtion o n how to subscribe, call 360-867-6054.
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Library Room 2118, 4:00 - 5:30 pm
www.peacecorps.gov • 1-800-424-8580
The Coop~r Point Journal -2- November 9, 2000
November 9, 2000 -3- The Cooper Pojnt Journal
,,'
-------~~
Indecision 2000: Waiting in line
Ana lysis by Corey Pein
The library building was amok
Tuesday ni g ht , like th e city of
Sodom. I arrived after dark, and the
voting lines were sti ll long . Longhaired g irl s with macrame jewelry
fretted with their peers about voting
for Nader o r Gore. I didn't see any
warding in a civic duty kind of way.
Bush evangeli sts, I imagine they fled Jowels to Snobbish Woman In Bright
Six hundred and sixty-two Greeners
Pink
Suit.
Whenever
the
television
to a safer polling place to punch their
announced a victory in a state, the made their choices final on Tuesday,
ballots.
about half from local districts and
Upstairs, about a dozen students studen ts chewed their knuckles,
half from the outside.
crowded around the television, jeered, joked, and did the electoral
Apparently the volunteers had
watching Larry King jabber at pun- arithmetic.
quite
a bit of trouble that day with
"Who's got Florida?"
dits ranging from Old Guy With
(he
ever-energetic
Evergreen stu"Nobody knows ... "
"I got a friend in line down there dents. According to the law, no campaign advertisements are to be althat needs to know."
"It's close, tell 'em to vote for lowed within 300 feet of the polling
place. Dick had spent quite a bit of
Gore ... "
Great Events Coming this Week and publicity!
Unsure about the legality of time taking down posters, only to
Brought to you by the Evergreen
TUES 11/14 3:30 pm Library what I was witnessing, I went back watch people put them up again.
Political Information Center (EPIC) Lobby Forum on General Education
downstairs to check out the line. It Later on, two young men arrived
and others.
requirements at Evergreen. Manda- was even longer than before, dou- with a bullhorn, and emplored
THURS 11/9 - 7pm Lecture tory classes at Evergreen? Changes to
bling over the library lobby. And people to not vote. Dick threatened
Hall #1 The classic, "Manufacturing the way classes are structured? How
that, friends, is why I did not vote. to call the sheriff, whereupon the two
Consent: Noam Chomsky and the do you feel about it? Shape the fuyoung men left.
The line was too damn long.
Mass Media" Chomsky lays out the ture!
Boredom set in as I returned to
I stuck around and spoke to one
facts about why the US isn't just bad, - 7pm Lecture Hall #1 "Logs, Lies,
the
TV
election coverage, accompaof the vote-taking volunteers. Dick
its is REALLY bad. If you haven't and Video Tape", "Bison Winter",
nied
by
feelings of gUilt. This horwas an incredibly elderly man,
seem it, don't miss it.
and footage from regional Earth First! gentle in appearance but strong of rible combination prompted me to
FRI 11110 7pm Lecture Hall tree sits. "Bison Winter", made by
opinion. Dick's presence made me leave the library at about 10:00, right
#1 In May of 1968 students sparked TESC st udents , documents the
think that all that's wrong with the when things were getting interesta revolt that brought the govern- s laughter of Bison in Montana.
world is that there are too many col- ing. I heard screams of horror rising
ment of France to its knees. What
WED 11115 Time TBA. Protest
lege kids and not enough old men. in chorus when Bush was declared
was it all about? Slideshow and pre- the local Staples, a national chain of
When I first approached him he told winner. I was afraid to go outside. It
sentation.
office supply stores that still uses old me bluntly that the polls were started to rain . But then, a twist:
SAT 11/11 11 am Library growth wood for its produ cts .
closed; I had a little trouble explain- NOBODY KNOWS WHO WILL BE
Room 3500 Teach in on the Indus- - 3pm Lecture Hall #3 Come see Abe
ing that I didn't want to vote, just PRESIDENT. Not for sure, not as I
trial Workers of the World, the union Osheroff, a radical Jewish activist
ask him about his job. I managed to write this. The Chinese have a curse:
sung abou t by Joe Hill, feared by the who's been at it for decades and who
gather that he had been at it for "may you live in interesting times."
ruling class, and forever part of fought the fascists in the Spanish
about five years, and that it was reWashington's history. Following th e Civil War
presentation, and meeting at 1 pm - 6pm Vegan Cooking Wor kshop in J:;;'=~====::~;::::::=~=~~:::::::;:~:;:=::::::=::==:::~
at th e Bus Loop, th ere will be a the Longhouse and release of
carpool to a remembrance ceremony. EARN's holiday cookbook.
- 7 pm Lecture Hall #1 "La
THURS 11/16 EARN campus
Dialectique Peut-Elle Cassez des wide vegan cookie contest. Submis"Care to know where
Briques 7 " (Can Dialectics Break sions due by 10 am to EARN office
Bricks?) A kung fu flick dubbed Time/Place TBAJohn Ross, author ot'
your money goes?"
over; martial artists spout many outstanding books on Mexico
Support fair trade with low-income artisans
Situationist a phori s m s about con- and the Zapatistas.
and farmers and you will...
q uering a liena tion ; decadent bu - 7pm Lecture Hall #1 "Koyaanisqatsi"
We are:
reaucrats ply the ironies of a stalled Intense documentary film contrastA
center
for
fairly·traded
products
from around the world
revolution . Huh? Be sure to come to ing hum an use and abuse of technolA cafe with good food
the pre-mov ie teac h- in at 7pm on ogy with the dauntingly beauty of
A performance space for concerts, classes, forums, and more
Friday in Lecture Hall #1
nature. Beautiful sound track, amazing imagery.
Website: traditionsfairtrade.com
SUN 11/12 1-5 pm Timber- - 7pm Vegan Potluck in Longhouse
300 5fh Ave SW, Olympiil • 705·2819
land Library Confe rence Room. Free EARN
"Just a splash from Heritage rO,,(Ilain & Capitol Lake"
Skool Workshop. Radical alternative
FRI1l11712:30 pm in Lecture
education. What it's all about ...
Hall #1: George Katsiaficas, Author
- 7 pm Rad concert in the of "I magination of the New Left" and
Longhouse l Dana Lyons, Casey Neil "The Subversion of Politics: Euroand Citizen's Band l
pean Autonomolls Soc ial Mov eMON 11 / 13 Ani!TIilI Rights ments" A Icading "a uthority" on
Awareness Week 11·2 pm all weck sq uattcrs and ilutonomous mov ein th e CAB for morc info: Co me ments around the world! George will
adopt a turke y!
be presenting a co mparison (lnd
The Evergreen State College offers three graduate programs at its Olympia campus:
- -l -7 pm in the TESC Art Annex ana lysis of social moyements in the
Wood Shop. A mnesty International U.s., Europe and Korea.
Puppet Making workshopl Learn Check http: // www.olynetwork.org /
ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES • PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
how to make puppe ts for protests
TEACHER CERTIFICATION
An EPIC Calendar
GRADUATE STUDY
AT EVERGREEN
Vic s Pizzeria
Attend an Informational Forum - Learn how Evergreen can help you
reach your educational and career objectives. A representative
from Part-Time Studies will also be available.
Take the next step - Earn your master's degree at a college that's a
national leader in innovative. high·quality educationaJ programs.
Upcoming Informational Forums:
Monday, November 6, 4 p.m.
The Evergreen State College.
Library Building, room 2205
Monday, November 13,6 p.m.
Olympia Center, room 101
233 DIVISION ST NW
Ana makes a lovely vegan sauce!
For more information and
directions, call (360) 867-6707.
EVERGREEN
By Brian Frank and Vanessa Lemire
Beyond the Bubble is published each
week as a service from EPIC (the
Evergreen Political Information
Center). EPIC also publishes a
weekly email update of politics
related events. To receive this
update, to make suggestions for the
news, or for more information,
please
contact
epicupdate@hotmail.cotn or 8676144 . EPIC meets at 2 p.m.
, Wednesdays in Library 3500.
This week's top stories:
Israeli-Palestinian Violence
Continues. Arch-Druid
David Brower dies at 88 •
'Worst Ever' Radioactive
Leaks Found In
Siberia • Occidental beginS
drilling on U'Wa land
Domestic
-The presidential race is still
undecided, due to a demanded
recount in Florida, where voters say
there was a confusing ballot.
Absentee ballots also cause about a
ten-day waiting period. The Senate
is almost a 50 - 50 split, but
Republicans will still maintain
control regardless of who takes
office. The House of Representatives
will also remain Republican. Less
than 50% of America is voting.
(more at lens.lycos.com/)
- A team of well-known lawyers
is planning a lawsuit against the
United States government that seeks
damages for all African-Americans
whose ancestors were slaves .
Amongst the all-star legal team are
a Harvard Law Professor, two of the
lawyers who won the $1 billion
settlement for black farmers suing
the USDA, one of the lawyers who
won the recent $368.5 billion
settlement
against
tobacco
companies. and one of the lawyers-
who won the $400 million settlement
in the "Phen-Fen" diet drug case .
(more
at
I
www.washingtonpost.com/)
• The Cen ter for Stra tegic and
International Studies, a highly
influential U.s'. policy think tank,
released a new report last week
entitled "Peace and War: Isr ae l
versus the Palestinians." The report
encourages the use of "psychological
and/or physical torture " and
"interrogations, detentions and trials
that are too rapid :md lack due
process," and which are '''arbitrary'
by the standards of civil law." In
addition, it encourages "break-ins
and in telligence opera Hons tha t
violate the normal rights of privacy,"
"levels of violence in making arrests
that are unacceptable in civil cases,"
and "measures that involve the
innocent (or at least not probably .
directly guilty) in arrests and
penalties" in order to put down the
Palestinian revolt. (more at I
www.csis .org/
and
I
www.independent.uk.co/)
- Bill Gates spoke at a Seattle
conference on using computers to
help the Third World, where he
denounced the use of technology to
better the world's poorest countries.
His change of priorities evidently
came from his recent visit to Africa
and other Third World areas, where
he witnessed their needs running'
painfully deeper than a laptop .
(more at Idailynews.yahoo.com/)
-Occidental Petroleum began
drilling on the historical land of the
U'Wa tribe of Colombia; this despite
protests from the tribe that impacts
associated with the drilling -which
in Colombia often include bombing
from paramilitary groups - will
destroy their culture. Al Gore is the
executor of a family trust in
Occidental worth over 500,000
shares. The Vice President's ties to
the company have generated more
than thirty protests in the last month
alone. (more at Iwww.ap.org/)
-In related news, Spencer Alder,
a lawyer who had claimed to
represent the U'Wa people of
Colombia and then used this
platform to endorse Gore, was forced
to admit that he never had
represented the tribe .after being
exposed by activists and the press.
(more at Iwww.ran.org/)
Foreign
- In Israel, 164 people have been
killed, among them 152 Palestinians,
and 6,000 people hav e been
wounded in the recent violence. The
daughter of a leader of.Israel's right
wing National Religious Party was
among those killed last week in a car
bomb blast. On Wed ne sday, the
Palestinian observer to the United
Nations suggested that the U.N.
deploy 2,000 military observers to
protect Palestinian civilians from
Israeli forces. Its mandate would be
"to contribute in providing safety
and security for Palestinian civilians
under Israeli occupa tion ~nd to
contribute in ensuring the f~eedom
of movement of Palestinian persons
and goods, as well as freedom of
worship, in the area of operation."
The United States has already made
it clear that it will veto any draft
resol ulion in the council tha t is
critical of Israel. (more at I
dailynews. yahoo.com)
·A new report has just been
issued by U.S.-based Doctors for
Human Rights, which examined the
bodies of murdered Palestinians. It
finds
that
Israeli
soldiers
deliberately shot to kill, aiming for
their victims' heads in situations'
where there was no risk of death .
Police and miLitary forces are
supposed to be trained not to fire at
the head or vital organs unless under
risk of being killed. Amnesty
International released a new report
on the Palestinian-Israeli conflict last
week stating that the Israeli
government's actions may fall under
the defini tion of wa r crimes,
sp(>cifically
for
using
live
ammunition on youths armed only
with
rocks .
(more
at
I
www.guardianunlimited.co.uk/ and
Iwww.phrusa.org/)
- Forty-four years after being
evicted from their native land, the
British courts have ruled that the
2,000 inhabitants of the Chagos
archipelago were illegally evicted.
The British had removed the
indigenous inhabitants of the Indian
Ocean islands in 1966 to allow the
construction of a u.s. military base
in a location that was strategically
close to Cold War enemies China and
Russia.
(more
at
I
www.latimes.com/)
-Malawi President Baliki
Muluzi unexpectedly fired his entire
33-member cabinet last week,
allegedly to calm accusations of
extreme corruption. Evidently, a
U.S. loan of $2.5 million was spent
CLASSIFIEDS
Students Wanted
For Sale
~
VOLVO
'66 122 Sedan: 2 door,excellent
condition, well maintained. A
great student car. $3500. If
interested, call 866-8727.
Deadline for text and payment is
3 p.m. every Friday, Student
Rate is just $2.00 for 30 words.
Contact Michael Selby for more
info at (360) 867-6054 or stop by
the CPJ, CAB 316.
The Cooper Point Journal
November 2, 2000 -5- The Cooper Point Journal
on extravagant vehicles for the
members, but Muluzi recently sold
back these cars to obtain th e money
for its intended use . Malawi is
ranked as the world's 16th-poorest
nation . (more at la llafri ca.coml)
• Rioting and ethnic clashes
er upted last week in Sri Lanka
following the massacre of 25
imprisoned Tamils. The Tamils are a
minority group in predominantly
Sinhalese Sri Lanka. The murdered
Tamils were accused of being part of
the armed rebel group Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), which
is demanding a sepa rate minority
s tate from Sri Lanka. (more at I
www.hrw.org/)
• Bangladesh has proposed tha t
each of the five U .N. veto-wielding
members - namely the United States,
United Kingdom, France, China and
Russia - be obligated to provide five
percent of the total number of troops
needed for each peacekeeping
operation they help create. All five
members have agreed to send funds
and equipment, but not troops .
(more at www.ips.org/)
Environmental
-David Brower, possibly the
best-known environmental activist
of the 20th century, died last week
of cancer. Brower's successful
projects included the creation of nine
national parks and seashores, the
removal of dams on the Grand
Canyon, and the passage of the
Wilderness Act. Brower was a
founding member of the Friends of
the Earth, the Earth Island Institute,
and the Alliance for Sustainable Jobs
and the Environment, as well as the
first executive director of the Sierra
Club, although he has renounced the
group in recent years for being
wimps. (more at lexaminer.coml)
- Radioactive con tamination,
described by scientists as "the worst
ever" recorded, was detected nearby
rivers in western Siberia near a top
secret Russian nuclear weapons
complex. Rivers and plant life in the
nearby city of Tomsk were found to
contain radioactivity 20 times the
safety standards. The waste is being
piped straight intb the environment;
but the source is difficult to
determine, as researchers can't gain
access to this secret plant. (more at
Iwww.guardianunlinlited.co.ukl)
See BOBBLE on page 8
THE INTERVIEWS: LOAARNOTH
By : Shasta Smith
Loa: Really cool, because I'm not the
only woman and there's another person who understands where I'm
coming from. Some times you get
emotional or you fee l great and the
guys just don't understand that.
Loa is a graduate of Evergreen as of last year, and is co-captain of the women's team on Team
Evergreen. Loa is nationally ranked
for the NBL Super Grands and will
be competing against the top women
in the country.
CPJ: So Loa, how did you become
such a wild kicker?
Loa: Well, the gi rl s were taller than
me, so I h ad to keep them away
somehow. So I developed some
kicks to beat them.
CPJ: All your opponents, even guys,
say you kick hard. How do you do
that?
Loa: (laughing) I enjoy it; r just do it
really hard.
CPJ: What's that triple kick you're
doing right now?
Loa: It's a double side to hooking
heel kick.
CPJ: How do you achieve that?
Loa: Fifty to a hundred a day, one at
a time.
CPJ: How does it feel to be a small
girl in the fighting ring aga inst big
people?
Loa: Scary, but once I get hit and get
mad I forget about it and go all out.
CPJ: Do you ever fight people your
own size?
Loa: Occasionally. I've fought a
couple my size, that's really fun.
CPJ: Why is that?
Loa: With a sma ller opponent the
odds are even, and I don't have to
worry about their power, strength,
and height advan tage.
CPJ: You win forms competitions a
lot; what's that like?
Loa: Lotsa fun and very hard, very
focused. A form is like lots of choreographed martial arts movements
in a row, which lets you express,
your energy, your crea ti vity, a nd
your understanding of the movement.
CPJ: Loa, you are really competiti ve;
wou ld you consider yourself aggressive?
Loa: Yes, absolutely.l can't stand losing. I like to win. Since I'm so small
and come from a family of shorties,
I always felt I had to be tough to defend myself.
CPJ: You graduated from Evergreen?
Loa: Finally.
CPJ: What did you study and what
were you into?
Loa: The only class I ever really enjoyed was anatomy and physiology
in my senior year. Though I also took
a wilderness first responder course,
which I totally liked, and got certified .
CPJ: Where do you see yourself
headed?
Loa: I'm looking into acup uncture
school, I'm gonna teach kung fu, and
r really love the outdoors. l see myself eventua ll y helping wome n and
children find themselves.
CPJ: What's it like being on a winning women's team on the winning
Team Evergreen?
CPJ: What's your greatest accomplishment?
Loa: That I'm winning in life, in competition, at my job, with people, with
my peers, and in myself.
CPJ: Is there anything you want to
say to Evergreen?
Loa: Recognize that there's a winning team on campus that has
Greener ideals, that shares Greener
philosophy, and that combines Evergreen ideals with winning attitude
to help you fulfill your liberal and
non-mainstream goals. One that
doesn't make you sell out and be a
Republican jock to be successful.
CPJ: Hey Loa, you grew up a vegetarian, yes?
Loa: Yes, because my parents were
hippie-yoga-SRF people. I didn't
taste meat until my second year of
college.
CPJ: What was that like?
Loa: Itwas a bite of filet mignon and
it was terrific, delicious.
CPJ: Who did you vote for?
Loa: Nader, of course.
CPJ: Why?
Loa: He's the only one who's got a
spiritual conscience and has a head
on his shoulders. He's not a total dip.
CPJ: What's your advice to other
women on campus?
Loa: Find someth ing that makes you
feel good abo ut yourself, that makes
you do the right thing for yourself,
and keeps you on track with your
inner higher motives and ideals.
!\rrrrntin!J
~rttlal
@rateful
WINNING PART 2
By: Shasta Smith
Ralph Nader, Green party,
Greener values, save the National
Forests, WTO, automobile safety,
get big business out of poli tics,
all the good and rig ht things .
When was the last time you had
someone in a political race speak
so eloq uently about something
we a ll believe in? Did you vote
for him? Did he WIN? The answer is yes, the Green party won.
They won the a mount of votes
needed to establish themselves CjS
a party and get government funding for the next elections . What
an amazing vic tory for a group
with "Gree ner " et h ics. Also
so und s like Evergreen's Bak
Shaolin Eag le Claw Kung Fu
Team, doesn't it?
This team has won more
medals, trophies, acco lades, and
has more n ewspaper art icles than
any other team on thi s camp us in
ages. We're not right-wing, Bushvoti ng, forest-cutting, NRA jocks;
we're organic, progressive, openmjnded, and basically follow
Buddhist and Taoist philosophical values . We have fun and compete, and we've done an amazing
thing a t Evergreen ... WIN. We
have three nationally ranked
compe titors, and we're going to
the N a tiona I Championships.
Then why is Rec Sports refusing
to give us funding to go?
Last year Rec Sports and
S&A rea ll y helped us in our collegiate a thletic pursuits. What do
yo u think? Should Team Everg ree n, which is Evergreen's Buddhist val u ed, organic, "Greener,"
winning team be s upported and
helped by the administration to
get to the championships? 1 want
e- mail s to print about this, send
me
a
line
at
smish a13@evergreen.edu.
~eall
/! oncnts JIn -aI:beir Qfntiretp
An open letter Comic complaint
about Veteran's Day
Dear Greeners,
This Sa turday is the Veterans' Day
Holiday. It's a holiday that even today, even as
a veteran, is hard for me to "celebrate." My
ambi valen ce is rooted in my personal
opposition to war and in my persona)
participation in a war against the people and
the land of Vietnam.
My reasons for serving in the military are
persona) but not entirely unique. Growing up
in the 1950s, I was exposed to constant
indoctrination in the movies, in newsreels and
in school that America always fought the good
fight, that our battles were always for liberty
and justice. At eighteen, I was nei ther
eq uipp ed nor inclined to challenge my
government's decision to send me and
hundreds of thousands of other young men
and women to fight a war that we could not
understand or judge.
In 1969, the war machine was huge. It
had legitimacy and momentum. Thousands
had gone before me and thousands had already
given their lives. The war protests and the war
moratorium that occurred two weeks before I
received orders to go to Vietnam were not
enough to counter the government's demand.
mainstream soc iety's historical support of
wars, and the blood that had already been spilt.
I chose to accept the draft and follow orders to
Vietnam. I might make the same choice today,
if I were eighteen and lacked the personal
conviction that comes with experience.
Not everyone goes to war reluctantly.
Many of the young men who were my brothersin-arms believed the Vietnam war was a just
cause. Some may have been in denial, but some
came to that conclusion after thoughtful
evaluation of the circumstances there. Some
went suppo rting the war and returned in
opposition. Some returned fully supporting
the war. And I respect that.
Regardless ofeach soldier"'s politics, every
veteran left a part of him- or herself on the
battlegrou nd . Everyone who went was
changed by the experience. Iknow that it is true
as well for veterans of World War II, Korea,
Kuwait. Panama, the Balkans and every other
military action. All veterans of military service,
including all who served in non-com bat
settings, have given of themselves in important
ways.
After many years ofavoiding this holiday.
I gradually came to appreciate and value its
purpose, other veterans and myself. What I
believe and ask you to consider is that Veterans'
Day is not a celebration of the military or of
war. It is an acknowledgment of our fathers,
mothers, brothers and sisters who, for many
different reasons, have given of themselves in
ways that our government and society have
expected. It is an acknowledgment that many
of these men and women were put in
compro mising situations, life-threa tening
situations, life-changing situations. Finally. it
should be a time to reflect on what we dema nd
ofour youth, or currently. whatwe entice them
to volunteer for.
In 1983 I was an Evergreen student. On
Veterans' Day that year, students interrupted
our class clad in camouflage fatigues. They
charge d into our lect ure hall, yelling and
brandishing toy machine guns in a mock
assault. To me and others in the hall, their
message was clear: vets enjoy killing; they are
not folks we should honor. In recent years as
an employee, I've had other experiences with
Greene rs who welcome the chance to
acknowledge our veterans, including folks
whose fathers, mothers, sisters. brothers or
frie nds are veterans or were lost in combat.
And I'm wondering, "W hat do Evergreen
students think and feel today about veterans
and about this holiday?" I invite you to
respond to me, in the CPj or directly at
gallegos@evergreen.edu.
I hope you will take th e opportunity to
acknowledge the veterans who are faculty, staff
and students this Friday on campus, and the
vets in your family on the holiday, this
Saturday. They have earned it.
Dear Ed itor,
J was prompted to write this letter as a result of
some questionable content in two recent issues
of the CPj. The first regards the Editor's Note
explaining submission policies in the November
2 issue, and the second regards the comic "Life
of Maude" by the Comix Editor, which appeared
in the October 26th issue.
According to the submission policy, a submission
that contains a personal attack, promotes a selfserving agenda, feeds a squabble, or invades
someone's privacy will need to be revised. The
comic strip "Life of Maude" violates all of these
policies as well as a guideline in the Student
Conduct Code by containing a direct personal
threat. J know this (as do the various'people who
have come up to me in the last week saying things
like "You're fa mous' '') because I am the chintzy
crack whore in the comic (or Lardass if you'd
prefer) whose car gets torched wi th keroselle.
My issue here is not with the way Iwas portrayed
in this comic - I could care less about that - m)
issue is with the fact that an editor was allowed
to abuse her power and compromise her position
by breaking some of the e rrs own policies. Is it
the practice of the Crj to allow its staff to prin t
items that go against its own standards? Why
hold student submissions to guidelines its own
editors ca n't even abide by?
The student newspaper should not be used as a
space to get back at and/or threaten someone.
Isn't it supposed to be a place to inform readers
and showcase student talent?
Laurie Cox
~~
Editor's response
Last year the staff of the CPj attended a
college newspape r conventi on in Seattle. Many
members complained afterward, because little
of what was said applied to our situation.
That's exactly why I go t so milch out of
the confere nce. It opened my eyes to how
uniqu e our situation is. Most co ll ege
newspapers are produced by journalism
students, but not the CPJ. In fact, few of its
contributors have any interest in the tenets of
traditional journalism.
This allows the CPj to explore alternative
ways to inform and entertain its readers. It also
leaves its editors without much in the way of a
safety net. when it comes to making decisions
about what goes into the paper and what
doesn't. We can't rely on traditional standards,
but are forced to devise our own.
It 's especia lly difficult to apply traditional
sta ndards to comics. The medium is not
without power- the cartoons ofThomas Nast
shatt ered political corruption at the turn of tile
century-but our pe rception that comics are
inherently comical is beguiling.
Twe nty people gathe red in CAB 316
yesterday to discuss what standards we co uld
apply to comics. Some believed the publication
crit er ia should be less rigo rous th an those
applied to wholly textual submissions. Others
pointed out that clip art or stick figures could
camoufl age prose of any sort.
We may need to differentiate between
submissio ns, or we may need to app ly a more
rigorous illterpretation ofour criteria to all. We
need your help making this decision. for in the
words ofour comics ed itor, "the CPJ functions
acco rding to the input of the students who own
it. I look forward to hearing /Tom you."
Brent Seabrook, Editor-in-chief
Sincerely,
Paul D. Ga llegos
Special Assistant to the President
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_
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November 9, 2000 -7· The Cooper Point Journal
I
A
Astral- Bubble
cont. from page 9
Aquarius
January 20- February 19- Practice waking up in your dreams
and taking part in directing the
outcomes of your choosing on the
whim of the moment. When you
recline certain chemical reactions
oxidize your vortextual sense,
which is buried in a travel pack
on the center rift of the reflectory
device. This is right behind the
place that makes your mouth
water when you smell lemon. Locate those trigger zones; corners
of brain that layout the most
deep inferences and prevailing
fancy. Go with it. Let the tangential dichotomies coalesce in
front of your forehead and ga ther
into a column of halogenic apparition, then bend your self into
that blasting stream and
reparticulate at the destination of
your choosing. Exist there for a
while, till you can feel its
otherworldly draw that you remember crayoning on the belly of
a paper booklet. Then just click
your heels three times and say
there's no place like home.
Pisces
February 19- March 20- Tattoo
yo ur arms, and back, and belly.
Pain t sha pes on your legs, and
fingers, and toes. Map out the
s tars on your palm, and sketch
the Milky Way down the insid e
e dge of yo ur arm, down onto
yo ur belly button where you will
place th e center altar of the galaxy. Imagine the universe in s id e
yo ur bod y, holding all of yo u toge ther lik e s titching on a shi rt .
E mbroid er yo ur collars and
wr ists wi th ropy s nak es and
masks of Vik in g go d /desses.
Photograph yo ur sk in with th ese
Impressions upon yo u. Invite a
co ho rt to p ar tak e of yo ur ritual.
Pa rticipate verbally in your unmasking , t he exposure of your
sys te m s, an d th e decor a tion of
yo ur face. Project the canvas of
yo ur s kin to the interestedd artist . Learn to tru s t yo ur nakedness by shar in g its potentiality.
I l
I
I
tral Projection
by Courtney Haedt
cont. from page 5
of mu s ic that you ha ve, bending
meanings and altering the original perception to whatever leaps
to your mind. Then chant, drum ,
cl nd sing it out loud! Bellow your
so ng to the woods in the rain, all
a lone, and fee I how it changes
you to be loud and full of creative
echoes calling up voice like wind
from the North. Croon your
dreams in to crea tion.
I
• Illegal genetically modifi ed (GM) co rn produced by
Mon sa nto Corporation wa s
found in tortilla chips throughout
Britain 's food supply last week
by the environmental group
Friends of the Earth. Supermarkets are refusing to remove the
products until further tests are
made. Laws preventing the use of
GM food s are significantly
stricter in Britain than in the U.S.
(more at Idailynews .yahoo.com/
)
• Last week, legislation established a $1 billion payment to
counties throughout the United
States. 80-85% will go to maintaining schools and roads, and
the rest will go to local county
RETIREMENT
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and res toration proj ec ts. This is
meant to cu t th e dependence on
loggin g profi t s to fund rural
sc hool s.
( more
at
I
e n s. lycos.com /)
• Illegal quarrying in the
Zambian capital of Lusaka is
leaving ditches that are increasingly threatening people's health.
Water settles in abandoned
ditches, where it s tagnates and
becomes a breeding ground for
waterborne diseases such as cholera, dysentery and diarrhea. The
Zambian government has been
trying to issue permits and relocate the miners to more suitable
land, but despite the spread of
disease, illegal quarrying appears
to be on the rise, and is fueled by
unemployment and poverty.
(more at / ens.Jycos .com)
MUTUAL fUNDS
TRUST SERVICES
·The Supreme Court is
hearing a case that may have a
major impact on the ability of
federal environmental agencies
to prevent development projects.
Developers are trying to convince
the Supreme Court tha t the Army
Corps of Engineers should not be
able to regulate wetlands because
they do not effect interstate commerce. The Supreme Court ruled
earlier this year that federal antihate crime laws protecting
women were unconstitutional
under simiiar arguments . (more
at lens.lycos .com/)
·United Kingdom government statistics report a dramatic
increase in experimen ts on genetically modifying animals last
year, up 14% to 511,000 tests .
(more at I ens.lycos .coml)
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Ensuring the future
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Full Moon on Saturday, Nov.
ll'h_ Center into the expression of your
developed intentions. Chance has sped
this cycle at warp speed, but don't waste
time reeling in the wake of it all. Allow
the inevitable changes to occur and
avoid stagnancy. Participate in the social expression of your gathered
thoughts. Grasp any random ideas
buzzing in your ear and tuck them in
your pocket like the gems that they are.
Aries
March 19-April19- Coincidence aside,
there really is something to be said about
the way that time transpires in just such
a way that things occur in the sequence
that they do. Many agree that there
must be some purpose for the particular way things happen. What reasons
do you see for your surroundings revealing themselves in the manner that
they have happened in the recent era of
your life? Or, do you doubt the existence of an intended lesson? Whatwindow of perception would you have to
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The Cooper Point Journal -8- November 9,2000
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Virgo
August 22-September 22- Tension .
Angles of bone twisted slightly, exuding pressure on layers that bruise the
inner lining of the muscular structure.
Tendons stretch like a cat flexing claws
J when we remember our feline tendencies. Gleaned from some star planet lifetime, we carry the urge to extend our
limbs in directions that engage memory
of watery pools, the scent of herbs on
the surface, and the pummeling pound
of strong hands on flesh. Beneath the
smooth aqueous mirror a storm wave
crawls to release its calvary down the
spinal column. It rejects lost causes and
reclaims its vital functions. Heal those
hidden wounds you nurse in the dark.
Libra
June 20- July 22- Taken folly of the
Spring rings like aching wasp songs in to
the aural memory of a fragmented tear.
Long ago is only through the beaded
curtain in your n eighbor's hallw ay.
Those passages we used to walk in stone
temples were stacks of Legoland .
Grasping for our figurines, calling on
our plastic heroes, we created stories of
salvation mimicking our inner need s.
As children, we were so in touch with
the thin lining betwee n the worlds; so
able to call on doorways to open a twill.
Playing games with our personas- we
became Barbie and GI Joe and went on
their mission with clear purpose. Reactivate that sensitive connection that a l-
September 22- October 22- Project into
foreign bodies of light. Other gala xies
need yo ur ex pe rtise to weld the ir itch
for perfection away with your utter determina tion to crea te it. Scra tch the surface of the future with a scrying wand
and orchestrate vast decisions by rand om ly selecting ordinary mod alities
and shifting them into hyperspa ce
superdive. You, commandeering champions of courageous effort, bold and
tragic in your solitude may now emerge
from your body cast in full protective
transparent armor to frolic with delight
and manifest your heroic tend e ncies
with wild abandon and infinite pride.
Stretch bows with the strings of your
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sheens of material around your fore- Tortured like we are at times with its icy
head and chant an encoded mystery charge, its infinite pressure upon our
prayer. Summon up with heartfelt in- delicate frames, we may fear the emotentions the most sacred of your reflec- tion of water. Yet, certain depths and
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which mask hordes of unlocked treasure
to fill the faces of the plastic commeI'cial
Taurus
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April 19- May 20- Temporary adjust- into the void of indecision and dwell in
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times when we do not participate, when
we choose to stand aside and observe
the outcome. This too is a choice we
make, to be silent. Connect with the
essence of your infinite expression beyond boundaries of space and time.
Where do you look to find the answers
to the unasked questions? Be your own
bread, feed on the wisdom that rises
from your bones. Call up fragments of
your persona that have been unconscious; let their garbled voices echo in
your head until you see their worth.
Share them with the trusted ones.
FINDERS KEEPERS
~
• ANTIQUE •
~
MALL
~
November 21-December 21- The
Minotaur was bred to be a guardian.
The labyrinth, which surrounded his
genetic petri-<iish world, was not contained by its physical structure. For beyond the life of wandering and battle, a
legend was birthed that carried on
through millennia. Despite all the torture, there was beauty waiting to be
found, words to be passed on, lessons
to be learned . But what of the minions
who never answered when the blame
was called in? Who stirred this test tube
of creation and combined the elements
deemed most effective for the purpose
of existence for that particular animal
combination? Where were our fingers
when the thumb was added on for the
purposes of hitching a ride? lndeed, let
us examine our personal role in the legends we speak of. Then, let us create
new ones without feeling the need to
involve battle, and torture, and sorrow;
for the old warlike cry of sadness has
played it<;e1f out.
Capricorn
December 21 -Janu ary 20- If you wrote
the kick ass a ma zinges t so ng in the
whole world, what would it be? Select
a few top picks that leap into your recollection, the ones that yo u can sing
mos t of the words to, excepting thilt
co uple of lines they always mumbled
or we seem to forget. Then set it in motion and, pen in hand, write a song full
of a ll the lost parts of the bes t memories
See Astral page 8
I
Kee9 recycilng workIng. I
:Suy recycled.
:''1:' J. [:'~rJ ~~'oc:
~..tase
·.::'e,
caJ . ·:·:c · z·~ -:.cyr ~::
www.envlronmentalderense.org
e
WeekI
Thursday 11.9.00
;-p. m.
I reI' Sclll1nl meeting ,1t t) 16 Ad,l1n~ . Call
8 p.m.
BallrollJl1 dan ce at the O lympi a Elks,
1818 E. ·Hh Ave . Dance class at 7. $8, or
$6 for members of the Ballroom Dancers
Association . Ca ll 459-5469 or 748-9999.
"hh -!\511 .
Sunday 11.12.00
Friday 11.10.00
1.30 - 4.30 p.m.
Cl imbing trip departs to Smith Rock,
O regon $22. Call the Wilderness Center
ilt R67-6533.
Free Schoo l workshop in the library
lobby. Ca ll 866-85 11.
Monday 11.13.00
8 a .m.
I reaks of Nature walk departs (rom the
clock tower. Call H67-6784.
2p .m.
Photojourna lism workshop with Martin
"ane at th e CPl, CAB 316. Conta ct
Whitney at 367-6213.
Evergreen Animal Rights Network 's
Animal Rights Awareness Week begins.
Call 867-6555.
4.30 p.m.
Dance 0' Dance on channel 22. Arrive
at TCfV' s Studio A by 7 to participate.
Con tact Justin Wright at 866-4524,
justinb@writeme.com,
or
www.danceodance.com.
11 a.m. - 2 p.m.
EARN distributes vegan holiday
cookbooks in the CAB. Donations go to
Farm Sanctuary's turkey adoption
program.
4 p.m.
Saturday 11.11.00
7-9 p.m.
Tellabration, a worldwide storytelling
eve nt for adults, at the Masonic
Building, 521 North St in Tumwater. $5.
Call 754-8796.
10 p.m.
Bike adventure departs (ro m Value
Village. Ca ll 866-8511 .
Thursday 11.16.00
Wednesday 11.15.00
12 noon
Poet, novelis t, and faculty member Bill
Ransom loses a piece of his mind down
at the Olympia Timberland Library.
11 a.m. - 2 p.m.
EARN' s vegan cookie contest in the
CAB. Donations go to Farm Sanctuary's
turkey adoption program .
12.15 p.m.
Local geologist Nadine Romero reveals
the seamy side of Olympia's geology at
the Women's Club of Olympia. Contact
Shanna Stevenson at 786-5745.
12 noon
Author John Ross discusses the Indian
rebellion in Chiapas in the LibraTY
Lobby. Contact Peter Bohmer at 8676431.
1.30 - 3.30 p.m.
1.30 p.m.
Learn to climb in the CRC Climbing
Gym. Call the Wilderness Center at 8676533.
Review this issue and prepare for the
next at the CPJ, CAB 316. Contact Brent
at 867-6213 or cpj@evergreen.edu.
Tuesday 11.14.00
Women's art group in the Drawing
Studio of the Arts Annex .
8 p.m.
7 p .m.
EARN prl'sents Bisoll Willler, a film b y
Eve rgreen animal acti vists, in Lecture
flail 1.
Dance 0' Dance on channel 22.
7p.m.
Local historian Shanna Stevenson
reveals the seamy side of Olympia's
history at the Women's Club of
Olympia. Contact Shanna at 786-5745.
2p.m.
Freaks of Nature meet in front of the
Longhouse. Call 867-6784.
5.30 p.m.
Prepare for a hot spring trip the 18th &
19th in CRC 112. Call the Wilderness
Center at 867-6533.
6p.m.
Vegan cooking workshop in the
Longhouse.
6.30 p.m.
Jazz Expo kicks off at Pierce College
with wine, cheese, and guitarist Michael
Powers (no relation to Austin). $15, $10
if you skip the wine and cheese. Call
253-964-6283.
W"'~T
Sp.rn.
{A:)H AT 1>0 You
Author
John
Ross
discusses
globalization in Mexico at Traditions
Cafe, 5th and Water downtown. Contact
Peter Bohmer at 867-6431.
bo
yov
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6.30 - 9 p.m.
Activist networking meeting at the
Olympia YWCA, 220 Union Ave. Call
352-8526.
9-11 p.m.
Women's Center Night at Skateland.
Stop by the WRC for directions. $5.
What is Me ?
2
Nll~ 1 ~ l.42E W!1.4T
~-1I!it-.-./i.'"';'J.,«--I-O.-t.-.-u-tJo------I
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a) Me Hammer's little brother
b) What "en equals
c) The nickname for that new first
year student, John McMc '
d) A research project coming soon
to our campus ___ Stay tuned!
,
/
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DEAD &1\&"<
MIf'lE
CHI(K IN
IT.
For more information contact:
Jason Kilmer at (360) 867-55.16
..-'
MC is a collaborative alcohol and drug
research/health promotion project
conducted by the University of
Washington Department of Psychology,
The Evergreen State College, and
Western washington University.
2
The Cooper Point Journal -10- November 9,.2000
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November 9,2000
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