cpj0822.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 30, Issue 3 (October 4, 2001)

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The Evergreen Slat. CQUelie
Olympio.WifshingtOn 9S505

Food Thoughts and Recipes

Health and Well Bei

• Yegan • Hawaii-Style - French- ... 6

- Yoga - Health Center - Healing Touch -... 8-9

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...... ......... volume: thirty . issue: three· october fourth, two thousand.one ............... .

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What do you think cf the
foodservice now as corn pared
with last year?
"The food quality is
be ttet, bu t because of
the expanded organic
options it's harder to
get adequate produce in.
From a worker pcrspecti \'c, schedu Ii ng hns not been very
dependable."
- Kri, tina PreSCOTT

"I want a Cl1l11pany that
b ni cer to th e Ilnlegu)'. I
appreciate the expanded
organic options."

- Noel Lieseke

fTIT
uL~-

~ - .' --

r;:" 'l

r:

":J
'"::-- -:!

"The fOlld quality is
better. They have a LOfu
& mushroom dish thar
is very flavorful. They
use less pepper than Fine
Host [the previous foodservice contractor], but
over:Jll, they are JUST lovely."
-Lisa S tra nge
"I like it better."

-Aura Perricka

The barren Seminar 11 site. If construcrion is debycd for a long time; the college might re-seed the land with native grasses.

Seminar II Construction on Hold While
State Takes Second Look at Budget

by Kevan Moore and Corey Pein
Evergreen's ready to build Seminar II, rhe state's just nor
ready to pay for it.
The stare budget office recently halted co nstruction on all
"I liked the food better capital projects funded by bonds, including Seminar II.
The decision to hold funds follows bleak September forecasts
last year. I miss that
by
the
state's Office of Financial Management (OFM) showing at
we could make our own
least
a
$
100 m ill ion dec rease in revenue.
salads; they only h ave '
The
legislaiure allocated $41 million for the building in
the pre-made salads now.
There don't seem to be a special session last summer, almost half of the money set
as many vegan options. 1 miss the aside for college building projects- including UW's and WSU's.
Construction on the 158,000 square foot building was set to
Evergeener [a specialty sandwich
start on the first of this month.
made last yearJ."
"Right now it's not JUSt an Evergreen problem, it's throughout
the
state."
says OFM Director Marty Brown. "We've put all the
-Sarah Collins
projects on hold to be sure we can pay all rhe bonds on them."
Brown says the state's next best guess at how much money
will be available in coming years, due in November, could bring
more reductions ranging from $200 to 900 million. According to
Brown, the fate of Seminar II won't be certain until then- or until
the next legislative session in January.
Dana Middleton, a spokesperson for Governor Gary Locke,
The CP) is hiring students for paid says the state is putting a stop to capital projects now rather
posltions of responsibility
than later to make sure money is available to actually complete

.HEY!.

News-side ;ipplicarions due

Oct. 8
Business-side applications due

Oct. 15
Applications (It CAB 316
General Meeting Mondays,S p.m.
/

TESC
Olympia, WA 98505

Jeremy Gregory
September Twenty Seventb
<C<I><I>IJl~a lP<I>ftlllQ D<I>mallllln

1'wo-Tbousand One
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1P<Il!IIIQ D<I>mallllln

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Address Service Requested
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construction.

Both she and Brown cite the September I I terrorist attacks
and layoffs at Boeing as contributing to eConomic uncertainties
that affect state budgets.
"This project is part of the governor's budget," Middleton says.
" He loves it and wants to see it happen. This is not a cost saving
move, it's a response to some really tremendous events.
Just months "go, Evergreen administrators lobbied hard to
secure Seminar 1I funds in what was widely described as a tight
budget year. Now they find themselves in a repeat performance
H

but on an even shakier economic stage.
In securing the money, administrators made it clear that in
order to make room for 1,000 new students by 2010 - which
the legislature has called for - the building would need ro be up
and running by 2003.
Steve Hunter, director of enrollment services, said that the
college will have enough space for new students for the next
couple of years. He's quick to point out, though, that "space
is getting tighter."
Evergreen President Les Puree says he's optimistic about the
building and according to the legislators he's talked ro, Seminar
II is a "top priority."
"This hold is just a bump in the road," Purce says. "It just
means it might cost more.
Purce says that schools are likely to see more students in
an economic slowdown, and points to Seminar II as a possible
relief for the sliding economy because of the labor it will bring
to Thurston County.
Purce points to one more advantage for the college.
"We're the only institution with a signed contract in hand and
the land ready to go," he says.
.
OFM director Marty Brown isn't promising anything, and says
everyone's in the same boat, but others in Evergreen's administration
share Purce's optimism.
Edie Harding, the legislative liaison for the college, says, "The
symbolism of that building is extremely important," she says. "In
30 years, Evergreen has come of age and proved it's here to stay
and provide excellent education. We've put our case as directly
as we can to [OFM) and I think they understand our picture.
We just wanna make sure that we understand what they're doing
and we're involved ."
The project will cost rough ly $150,000 more each month it is
delayed because of inflation and other factors.
I

'

please see SEM " page 1 2
PRSRTSTD
US Postage:
Paid
OlympiaWA
Permit #65

. .

.......

•••••••••• ••••••••• ••••• " .,.." t· ."" •••••••• "

--CPJ-The CPJ is hiring for paid
positions of responsibility.
Applications due Oct. 8 for
News side and Oct. 15 for
Business side.
General meeting
5 p.m. Monday
Help de<lde such things as the Vox Populi
question and what t~e cover photo should be

Paper critique
4 p.m. Thursday
(omment on that dav's paper. Air comments,
concerns, questions, etc.

Forum
2 p.m. Friday
Join a discussion aboutjoumalism and ethics
facll~ated by (PJ advisor Dianne (onrad
Business
867·6054
Business manager: Jell Blackford
Asst. business manager: Monica Fcsla
Advertising representative: Kate Stewart
Interim (Irculatlon and archivist: Nichola;
Stanislawski
Distribution manager: Nath,m Smith
Ad Designer: Lauren Storm
News

86'·621 .1
Edltor-in-chief: Whitney Kva;agl'f
Managing editor: Corev P<1Il
Interim news editor: Kevan Moore
Interim L&O editor: M.A. Selby
Interim photo editor: Patrick "Turtle" Rogers
Interim ME editor: Cbris MulaUy
Interim sports editor: Nichola; Dylanlliku
Interim page designers: Rafael ~an, Katrina
Kerr, Ben Green
Interim copy editors: Mosang Miles, Renala
Rollins, Meta Hogan
Interim calendar editor: Nate Hogen
Interim newsbriets editor: Nichola, Stanis lawski
Interim comics editor: Nathan Smith

Advisor: Dianne Conrad

The Cooper Point Journal is published 29
Th ursdays oKh academic year. when class is
in session: the 1st through the 10th Thursday
of Fall Quarter and the 2nd through the 10th
Thursday of Winter and Spring Quaners.
The CPJ is distributed' free on campus and
at various sites in Olympia, Lacey, and
Tumwater. Free distribution is limited 10 one
copy per edition per person . Persons in need
of more than one copy should canper the
CPJ business manager in CAB 316 or at
360·867 ·6054 to arrange for mulriple copies.
The business manager may charge 75 cents for :
each copy after the first.
~
The CPj is written, edited, and distributed
by stridents enrolled at The Evergreen State
College, who are sglely responsible for its
production and content.

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Time Encapsulated

Musician's Club

I am from Washingron. D .C., and
moved out to Seanic a year and a half
ago. The past two weeks have been so me
of the toughe;t .tnd mo" exciring weeks
of my lire.
I want ro do a proiect with Eve rgreen
st ud ents and facu lty. I have an idea ro
do a tim e ca psul e. T hose of yo u th at
attended the forum l teach· in on Friday
of o rienrarion week may have heard my
id ea.
I am proposing that peopl e contrib·
ute an yth ing relating ro the even t of Sept.
11 . C ontributed it ems co uld includ e
art. newspaper articles. pictures of loved

Jimet: Lowc , set:ing rhe hordes of musicians
present Jt Evt:rgreen , int ends to st a rr a

ones. essays , poeuy, prayers, o r mu sIC

that you have written in respon se to th e
WTC attack.
I hope thi s project will be well
received . This tragedy directl y affected
the Evergreen community as so me alumni
were killed. and a student's aunt is miss·
ing. This cou ld be a grea t way to hcal
from the hor rifyi ng tra gedy of 9/ 11 .
I th ink that thi .s project is imp orta nt
because ir acknow ledges the event and
will be a great memory for rhe future.
We hope to have th e caps ul e open for an
extended period. When completed , the
capsu le will be o n display.
An yo ne w ho is interested should
c·ma il me .tr musicguy8@mac.com . If you
know someo ne who may be in terested in
co ntributin g, please sp read the word.
·Nat han C. Hadden

club ror musician s. The purpose of his cl ub
wou ld be to link up musicians with simil ar
interests, o rga nize entcrrainmenr, and c rC~H e

a positive musical atmosphere. Jimee claims
to have many ideas, and anyone interested
should conmct him at (360) 867· 1345, or
JimeeLowe@hotmail.com

COPREO: Globalizing
Justice and Peace
The Conference of the Co nsortium
on Peace Research, Educat ion and
D evelo pment ' (COPRED) & the Peace
Studies Association (PSA) will be holding a
four day conference here at Evergreen. T he
conference will address a broad range of
topics associated with the title, with a focu s
o n recent eve nts. Si nce the September I 1,t,
incident. planned attendance lias jumped.
and the con feren ce schedule has been altered
to add rc~s the recen t CVC fH S. Pre-conference

workshops begin this :rhursday the 4'''. wirh
the co nference concluding Su nday. For
mort: information sec www.evergreen.eduY

First Annual Sustainable
Living Conference
With the new ;chool year just up and
run nin g. the S.E . E.D grC'up (S tudent s
at Evergreen for Eco logical Design) is
harvesting its hard work as the upcoming
Sustainable Living Conference gets under·

A One-Woman Show by
Vinie Burrows
A celebration of the joys and struggles of
women in villages and cities world-wide ... a
stunning mosaic of actual testimonies and
moving stories about women written by men
and women.

FRIDAY OCTOBER 5TH AT
7:30 P.M. IN THE LONG HOUSE,
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
wI

ID $5, General $10

Tickets Available at the Door
Contributions from any TESC l[udent
are welcome. Copies of submission and
publication criteria fur non.advertising conent
arravai lable in CAB .116, or by request at
360.86 7 ·6213. The CP)'s editor·in·chief has
final sayan the accept~ncc or rejection of all
non.advertising content.
The CPI sells display and cbssified advertising
'pace. Info rmalt on .bout advrrr ising rates.
terms. and (OndlllOm are aVd,lable in CAB
11 6 or hI' "quest at .160·86"-6054

A year's worth of CP Js is mai led First
Class to subSCribers for $35. or Third
Class for $23. For Information about

O.

000 •

CO O • •

way. Ilead linin g for the .Hlltual Harvest
Festival. the Susta in abl e Livin g Conferen ce
will highlight wo rkshops, presentations and
panels aimed at li nking mer hod" visions
and rea lities of living . To pics included
a re: composting , pe rm ac uirure, na tu ral

bui ldi ng. flower power, reclaiming publi c
space, intention al communities, personal

empowerment. and much more . Link ing
relationships is a strong focu s of this
year's conference as many panels focus on
t he relat ions hip between Everg reen and
Olympia (a nd Ids not forget the overlying
principle of sustainability: linking people
with the earth). With world peace or war ar
everyones conscious tongue, the possibility
of overl ooking important and relevant
questions is at hand. Yet S.E.E .D. remind s
us to ask. "what is sustainability?"
Th e fi rs r an nu al Sustainable Livin g
Conference begin s nex t Wednesday with
an opening ceremony on Red Sq uare ar 6
p.m. and keyno te speaker Mark Lakeman
of the city repair proiecr in Portland at 7
p.m. The Sustainab le Living Conference
con tinu es Thur,d.1Y and Friday. For mo re
inform ation about events. call S.E.E.D J[
867·6493 or x6493.

user!cop red/TESC200 I.html.

SISTER'SISTER'

ADMISSION: Students

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Presented as a part of
"Globalizing Justice and Peace: Visions and Strategies".
the annual conference of the Consortium on Peace Reseat'eh,
Education and Development (COPRED) and
the Peace Studies Association (PSA)
October 4-7 at the Evergreen State College
Co-Sponsored bythf:! TESC Office of Equal Opportunity and
the International Feminism program

Sustainable Living Conference
begins
Wednesday, Oct. 10
Opening Ceremonies stan
6 p.m. on Red Square
Followed by keynote speaker
Mark Lakeman

~aBooks

Olympia" ta,.,est

1 0 t~ '11

Inde~t Booltslo,~

Off

New

Current Qtr. Texts
We Buy Books Everyday!
509 E 4th Ave. • 352-0123
\1-111 10."

hl ~' "',\1 Ill_II,

... und.I' 11- )

CLASSIFIEDS
For Rent
Country Housing
We lme an 0100- rounay home. Priv.ue
charming:;ming. V Yi:W ofOlympia. Garrlen
spot Fruit trees. Shelton area -off

Highway 3. Narure-loving students wanm
$4OO/momh. Neg:xiable. 206-985-2335.

For Sale
Two futon bed/couches, frames and
futons in excellent shape, like new.
Handy for small spaces. Couches
fold down ro double bed. $100 for
both or $65 for one. 705-2521
Awesome surf truck. '83 Toyota
flx4 long bed 5-speed. New trans,
clutch,water pump. High-rop
ca nopy. Some rust, runs great. Take
Blue back ro the beach! $1850.
705-2521

For more information see

[)eOO1ne fc..-1ext ard payment is 3 pm fNefY

http://www.evergreen.edu/user/copred.TESC2001.html

Riday. Student Rate is just$2.00for~v.ords.
Phone (360}86Hl054 c..- stop t7y !he CPJ,,
Cab 316.

October Fourth

Two-Thousand One
~1D1Il'l' . a 'PIllOm~ n lDm ~ mfi D

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Thursday, Sept.

Ill' lett Blackford

27

to gl'l evan ce.



Within the space of an hour,
Just a definition note for every- seven people in five sepa rate
Saturday. Sept. 29
one new to the land of Police cases are told that they have
1 a.m.
Blorrer. When blorrer, with a violated the no-habitation
A suspicioLls circLlmstance
lowercase b, is referred to within policy at Eve rgree n.
happens somewhere around
the descriptions, it m eans the
Q - Dorm. Or possibly in
At 12:59 a.m. , an officer
police log that is provided to the finds a student sleeping in the
Q-Dorm. The blotter doesn't
C PJ. Blotter, with a capital B, "F ree Box" at the HCe. He
really say.
refers to this column. As in, "1 ends up staying in Housing
1:18 a.m.
gO t the blotter today, and there with a friend for the night.
Police patrol the Housing area
is nothing strange to write about
and see "in plain view" a
Less than half an hour later,
for Blotter. "
'
at 1:22 p.m., another student
glass pipe on a coffee table.
After the police knock on
is found sleeping in hi s car. H e
Monday, Sept. 24
the window and ask who it
says that he is looking for a
Minor mis chief in Housing
belongs to, one student repo rr place to stay, but is unable to
goes o n today as a bike is
find one. He is given direction s . edly attempts to hid e it, a nd
stol e n from the MODs and a
one person e nd s lip claiming it
to the nearest rest area.
co in machine is damaged in the
During the n ext ten minas h ers, along with some pot.
li Ce.
utes, three more people are ra id Her ca,e is se nt to grievance
to leave F-Lot. T\vo students
sin ce "she cooperated and was
Tuesday, Sept. 25
h o nest. "
are told their case will be forToday, ill the b lotte r. a veh ick
wa rded to g rie va n ce to look at
3:29 a.m.
prowllr h eft occ urs at 9 a.m.
A ca r that fails to use its rurn
and the other perso n says he' ll
There would be more to say if
signa l a nd crosses rh e shoulder
fi nd so m ew h e re els.e to sleep.
this report were nor open.
th e Parkway is pulled ove r.
The final.case happened at
The co p d etects alcohol on the
1:48 a.m., whcll two more
Wednesday, Sept. 26
dri ver's breath and ;Jsks him
st ud enrs, parked thi s rime ill
A fire alarm in S-Dorm and
C- Lot, are ra id to lea ve and li ke if he Ius been drinking. Hc
a n unkn ow n susp iciou s circull1- the o thers abovc, given verba l
admits that he has.
~tance somewhe re comprises
wa rnin gs for habitation vio l:1 After field so bri ety tests. h e
lh e po li ce blotrr:r today.
is
a
rres ted for DUI and poli ce
tlon.
search his car. They find two
Friday, Sept. 28
ca ns of beer under th c pa sse nger sea t a nd ask the on ly pa s---=::;;;;;;_;;~=--112:S7 a.m.
se nger in the car if he knew
Drinking in front of Housing
is not a lways wise, as two
a bout the beer. He says yes, and
students di scove r when poli ce
that he bought th e bee r.
The d ri ver is cha rged wi th
catch them doing this. One
ends up with an open-container Minor in Possess ion/
Co nsumption . As for th e paswarn in g. The other one, who
•~Ji~~i'~~~.~~".11
!I!I
is 19, gets an MIP and is told
se nge r. he is cited for suppl yin g
to em pty out hi s beer. Both are
alcohol to a minor.
also told that th e report will go
2:09 p.m.
Another s usp icio us c i rcull1 stance: Again, n o clue.

of

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Welcome
Evergreen
Students!
Come on

by and check us out

• Music: new & used· CDs,
cassettes, LPs
• Videos to rent· foreign &
art film s
• Skateboards, ince nse,
Converse shoes

on Intercity Transit!
Show your Evergreen student 10 wh€n
you hop an I.T. bus and ride Iree.
It's lhal easy! Skip the parking hassles,
save some cash, and be earth·friendly.
I.T. is your tieket to life off campus I
For more info on where I.T. can lake you,
pick up a "Places You'll Go" brochure
and a Transit Guide at the TESC
Bookstore. Or caUIT Customer Service
al' (360) 786-1881 or visit us online al
www.intercitytransit.com.

Special Orders Welcome
357·4755
In The WESTSIDE CENTER
At DIVISION & HARRISON
MON· WED 10 a.m .• B p .m.
THURS· SAT 10 a,m .. 9 p.m.

SUN 12 ·5 p.m.

OJlnlefCi/Y T ran sit

Fares paid Ihroogh student programs.

October Fourth
~1I>1I>1Jl~a

Il'lIIftma DlI>mam&D

9:21 p.m.
What is te rm ed as suspi ciou s?
In today's report , ir is an em pty
ca r in a loading zone near the
wood shop. Once inside, police
fi nd a man inside, who says h e
uses the building as a place to
wash his hand s and that he has

been doing this for about six
years. But he is not currently a
st ud ent and so he mu st leave.

9:37 p.m.
Negligent driving case that is
referred to grievance.

10:35 p.m.
Someone is arrested for fclony
narcotIcs.

Sunday, Sept. 30
1:54 a.m.
A driver sitting in a fire lane in
the housing area is approached
by the police. A cop smells
alcohol in the car and asks
the passenger if sh e has been
drinking. She admi ts to having
had six beers and being 20 years
old. ·She is not c rimin all y c ited.
bur a report is se nt to gri evance.

2:26

a.m.

So m e peopl e, walking from
Housing to Coope r's G len to
pick up their van, encounter
six Evergreen students on a fire
lane. The two groups ge t into
an a rgument an d at so me point,
on e of the stud ents was pushed .
Then. for une xp lained reason s,
everyone walked away and the
group pi cke d up their van.
At th e corner of Overhulse
a nd Driftwood. the drive r
hea rd a "cras hing so und like
breaki ng glass." 1t turns out to
be a broken right window. A
passe nger says he saw a man
throw a rock and break it , then
run away. It is implied he is one
of the students, alth o ugh there
are no clear desc ription s.
When police talk to the
own er of the ca r. who is a lso
the witness to the rock-throwing, they notice a "s tro n g odor
of intox icants" co ming from
him. He is cited for Minor in
Po ssess ion /Co nsumption after a
breath test. He is released with
a promise to appear in court.
Meanwhile, damage to the
window of the car is estimated
to be about $1000.

Harmony Antiques & Karinn's
Vintage Clothing

Welcome Back!
113 Thurston Ave. NE
Downtown
Olympia
OPEN DAILY
(360) 956-7072

Great Gift Ideas
*candles *soap
*teacups
*crystal

Your friendly neighborhood antiques,
collectibles, & giftware store
..
Complimentary Batdorf and Bronson coffee served daily.

Two-Thousand One
~lIIlDlJlt.. IPlI>dma D~mamllD

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Trustee's Corner

At Evergreen
We Share
the Air:
Evergreen's
Indoor Air
Policy ' ". .:;':>
\X'(':kom(:

I
cvcryonc

and ,hey
arfec,
peopl,··s
perforn1ance.:

C hcnllcal rragrances u:-.uall y do more

+~
":-

III Chelsca Ch'L'<.'

ti.unagc,

but

,he ",tll'lIa,ural c~sc llli .d
oib" also havl' .1I1

111:\\

Wl,.'lcOIllt: ba~k lO

O~l'n

hc.:rc: bero[\.' A!I \v<.: Or.:glll this
neW year, I wam lI) Sh.lIl' with you .Ill

Irnp0rt.HlI PICCI..' of

IIlfOrm,Hlon.

rills PIt"LC uf inturrn.HlOtl I~ to
1I1Iorrn. as inform.llIon lmpll<':s
.lIld educa te YOU !'llll' lolk.., on:l policy .11
b c:rgn:cn [h.lI proll..'ch your health a\ well
.b .dl yo ur fellow Cll·l·n(.:r~. It may coml' d~
J .')urprisl.: bl:cau:,t: Illan y mol), nul know dw•.
Arl' you ready? 1'3\' clo~c atlcntlOll It I~ of thl'
utmost

Il11pllrtd.Il~(

policy ,hdl W.13
Illlplemented in 1996 and approved by ,hl'
lvcrgrccil has:an

IIlJoor :lIf

previous prnidc.:nt, Jane Jnvi..,; vicc.:-pn..'~idl:nl
lOr stude nt aflairs, An Cost;Ultino ; provost and

\"l cc-prt.::-.idclH fo r J.cadl'mic 3(fair:-., Bubara
'lI11lth; and :lcting vi ce-presidl' llI for lif1;}f1cl'

,mtl

;)dmif1i~tr.Hiof1. N,mey l\1cKinnL'Y.

Thl· indour a ir guality pnlicy i:, ont' of !-ouch
Importance and gf(,:alm;s~; I UO IlOt know ho\~
t ll thank E\'crgr~<..'n lor PU{(lng Il IIlto u:,c,
I Ill' pruh!t:m i~ (h.lI It I~ IWl .11\\.ly~ fnllllwl'd,
rhls I:' wh.1l I .lIn .lhuLit to .IJJn.:~~ ,
The P")lnt
h,wing ,111 indoor .Iir polic~'
, " I II havl' .1 ~C[ rull' .lhoU[ [he quality of .Iir.
\ \ t' ,111 sharl' lill' ,lir hl'fl' 31 EVL'rgrn"ll, jll .... t
,L~ we .111 sh.ul' thl.' .I ir of Ihl' world. Thl.'fl·
.1.11: lot~ of people herl' .tt EVL'rg ' c.:L'n whl) .1I"l·
... onccrnl'li dbout pollution ~llld put IUl3 of
tlllH,: and energy into lill' C.IlI M.', \'(!hat :Ibou t
[Iglll here? 'X/hen peopk come to school wllh
pl'rfulTIc. co lugne. h.lIL'pr:lY, gd. ~ccllll.'d
lotion, solvent~, .lI1d olher (1.lgr.lIll,.l.· .... l'VCI1
t'" ... t'mial oil~. il CJW,l'~ hl'Jhh proukm~ JnJ
1ll.1kcs le:1.rning hard (or t'llf':YOllL'. I :an.:...... l·\'L' ryUI1I.·. becau:,c you may nuL 1l0l1l1' .IIlY 'ymp10m ... or b(.· ,IW.lre of Wh.H the:,I.' (oxic, ...:.-nlhl·lit..,
... Ill·mical rragrallcl'~ do to )'~u. but tlH:Y atl"cct

or

.00.0 •
. 0 . 00.00
0.00. ..., 0
• 0 • • 00
0.00 . coo

dlcCI on ~Ollll'.
Wh.1I .lre the dlCct; I 'peak 11P \'(feli,
flr:\l 1 of

all, mO.'i1 of th l' dTl'Cb :trl' a. . M}ci~ll·d

Wllh Multiple Chemical Sen,",vIlY, or MeS.
Man) pcoplt.: .ife 31.:J13111Vl·
to

V[

havl' l'VI.·f) a mild

moderale case of Mes. Pe"pic wllh MCS

lhrou ghoul the construction process. She
also plans to work wi, hin the co llege to make

sion h earing presentations from the President ',!>

adm illlstrati vc runct ions more efficie nt a nd

office and outlined goals fur ,h e upcoming

produc,ive .
Art Costantino , Vice-Presidel1l for SLUdenr
Affair;, described the o ngo ing work '0 increase
student recru itment and retention including
lhe redesign of Evergreen's web si leo He
also spoke aboul using ,he year to beg,n

Enrique Rivero,-Schafer, recently hired
as ProvOSt, spoke abou , implemen'ing ,h e
co llege':, Genera l Education recommendalion' . He plans to charge a Disappearing
Task Force ( DTF)
work on Gen. Ed.
impl c m c l"\lJlion and :lsscs~ m cnL lie also
di,eussed developing a Co ll ege Techno logy

'0

Pbn to make l:-.vcrgrccn 1110re compc titi vc
\\ Ith ndH'{ \X/ashmglun :,chooI3.

Fr,lnk

McGuvern. Vice-Presiden,

TRADJTIONS
CAFE & WORLD FOLK ART

campu.'i

conve rsations about t he role of Police Services
in (he community and addressing violen ce on

campus. He described the new Po lice ServICe,
Communi,y Rev,ew Board and th e DTF lor
Jlr(':v<..'I1t10n of C,UllpU ... \/lolel1l...·

Ai',er lunch, [he board reconvened "nd
took .1Clion on st:vt..'ral is.sllcs: compleLtng
President Les Purces one-),ear evalua tlun and
ex tendlllg his contract, expa nd ing Evcrg,rcl'n\
Rcserv:.Ilion~B:t~t'd Prugram lu indudl' tlu'
f'.'i.squJllr Rt.:~crv<.ltlon, and JPprUVIll~ .1
contra't wilh DrR Con:-.tructlon, Inc rOI

bcg1l1 an Jnnual sail''!> ofdl~cus ... ion~. He also
calked ahoul.streng lhcnlllg the admin istr:Jtion
of h i... depa n ll1cll(, and dc.:scrihcd expand ing
thl' (und r: li:,ing budget by a~ . . n:-'lIlg a fl'c
on rlC\V g ihs.
Ann Daley, ViC<..· ~ P rc.\idcn ( (or Fin31lCc.:
Jnd Admllll,trallon, said that one uf her

approXlmalely th"'y-,hrec mIllIon doliJrs ' a
build ~em lllar II.

Sv.'tl'm.

2

till':

Colkg,c AJvam.:elTIcnt, dc:,cribl"d the incrcasc.s
In glfl ... ttl thc College ovt..:r the last ye;lr.
Iii, g,O:lJ.... includc COIH1I1u lng to promoll'
E\ ' l'lgrl·e.."n·~ vi~ibilll)' in th e surro undin g
l:u mlllullity and llll·dia, and l'stablis hin g all
oll-c.:ampus .. Fll'lil Amcndment Forum" to

Email: New, Awkward

See Evergreen Air, page'

plan:-. to provide inrormation lu

of

gl'l ... II1U ... infl'cllon~ ~1I1d hl.·.H.Ltcht.·., wh ich .trt.'
tll'p.lrlml·lll' prim.tr), gual, tJlI:-' yl'.H I I:. to
somClImc.s cxp lodin g wilh p,lIn; thc), C\I1 I1()[
<..'IlSUfe th.n t hl' (.. . onMrUl"tlUfl of .)c..'l1l1nar II
conCl.'ntr:lIe, may have diHlcuhy hrc.nhillg,
duL'., not CliHlIpt <..ampu.s htl: tou much. hI.'
fn:1 n.lll.scOllS, gt·t "foggy." mcaning their
brain ha~ lroublt.: functioning norm.llly, .1I1d
they hecollll' VL'fy disorientcd .lIld .. Iow. \'(/jth
ClHlS i"'[{' IH l'XpO~tlrt."lO sol vc 11 I.... and frJgr~lIlces,
hI [1111 Scilellllcil
lhr.:re i ....111110.... 1 :II\V.I)'~ dam.lge donc to the
cl·IlLr.d Il l' rVOUS ~v~lC'l1l . Chl'lllic:d"',llch .1"
ThL'l"<.' 1\ .tll <.' 1ll.1i l .'iCf\'ICl' for student.')
Iho:-.I.' n.lI11ed .tbovl.' c.H1SC hrJIIl cdl ... to ..iiI.', .
through
1h(.., LlIllpUS weh PJgc thal many
dllUd lli<..' br,lin, .1I1d !',Io\\ till' i"ulluionillg
studl'l1t\ .Ire he..· ... Il.lI1t tu U"'l', "I fet.:! like tt':,
of thL' cl'lllrJI ncrvou, sv ... tcrn. R.HI Ilr\\\,
tOO .1wl{\~' .lrd to gel logged illtt>." said PJtflck
I~,lb.
Phillip"!, .11r.lIbla ,luJCI1t
I LlI1IlOt .. ill· ... \ t..'IHlllgh tll,ll l'Vn)'lIl1t.· I"
Ilooklllg lip ttl th(..' L.lIl1PU,' l'-mad Sl.'r\'ICl':
h.lrllll·d by rr.lgr~lIl~n .IIlJ dll·lIlit...d, Diy
"'Imp!) Il'qulln ylll! 10 .1CCl·~'" Ihl' ~J1t:
L'f,be..' 111.lrka....m: tcnic tho.st· \melly (·hri'lIll.l.'i
www.cvcrgllTIl.cJu / n l·\\'CIll:lil :lnd follo\\
trL'C lhillg.s for c.lrs .11'1.' toxic ruhlxr (.TIIlI.·nl
insllllcll(,l1~ lrom lil l'[ t: tu .lcn·!iS your uSt'r·
i, lo~il."; l1:Jil pnli .. h, hn()k I.lp l' , pl.' rfll IllC.
n.lI1lC.·
Jl1d pa.ss\\·ord. A lthou gh lhLTc.: wa~ a bug
l11o~1 l1.1ir prodllCt~ - I.'VI.'I1 ",lHlll' of till' h.111'
III
Lhe..'
Sy ... Ll'1ll dllnngoricllt.ltiol1 wec.k. making
gcl from thL' Co-up is scented ill 'Ul"il .1 \V.IY
th.1t it m.lkt·~ IIll' .111..1 my I.I111ily ~ILk, l\ 1.1Il )' .111 uf till' nl.:\\' p.,ssworch III drccl1\'c, D:1vid
J\ 1c..·I:lgl'r, ... tl(x·rvisDi of r"1.·(wurk SC I vices, hat-.
or I hl.':'(.' proJuCl:- ('o lll ;lin rOI"IlI.ddehydc
.dre.lCly fix(..:t.i the problL'lll alld cl1couragc~
Furnl.1ldl'hyde i.s c.1fCi IlOgCI1I l.", which IllC,tnS
s ludl.·nt., to 1ll.1k..: lISL' 01 thl' 111.'\\' c:-mad
'·callcerc. llI ~illg." FC)rl11.1IJl'h~'Je.: i~I1't thl.· only
c.ll"c inogell found in Ihe~l' toxic proJuct...

Revelations

hv lallne Rossman
The Board of 'IrUSlees held its fim meel·
ing of ,he neW schoo l year on Tuesday o/"
Or ie n tation Week. We spent the morning sc!;.-

year from the fo ur vice- presidents.

Accurding to Mct7.gl'r. :111 of Ih e bug,
should bl' out uf the .\~·MCIll by thc tilllt· c1a~se..,
.sUr!. TI\I:, I~ ~1(,lzgcr'~ primary goal. so lhal

If you

arc: interested in sCTv in g on any
of the Illl'ntiuncd cumlll i tlcc~, hJv,,: an~
questions, or want lO k ll ow more about
gOVl· rn.1I1CC opponunirle~ on campu." pl~asl'
contact !TIC. <ia imerossman@hotma il .com .~
8G7-903u, or Just COl11l' Jnd !)t:L' Ill!.! dunnb

my Office Hour; , Friday; rrom nuon-2p'"
III CAB .~20.

low-income artists and farmers? , .. . .. We work with

50

countries .

~tudc nl s can USt' the campus I'-ITI.lil sen'lel'

as a rC3QlIrCe

[0

co nt aC T tC3c hcr~ ::and make

connect l on~,

This e-mail scrVlCI: is 31f1ll"d :11 .111 s[ud~ll!:-;
hut It is ,1150 made ;I\,i1ildhk tor dlO~l." wnu
can'l gel connectc.:'d LO ,ht' Intern(,1 lO IISl' .to

lSI'. Thi, e-m.,il SYMem i, ba,ed on Micro,of,
Excha n ge and urfer:, .1 few flew trlck.\ lh;']1
you r ISP e-mail servin: mighr not have.:. "!\.e\\
,l'[Vlces rh:n thiS system oller ... are the ;lbiltty ro
forward e-mail flom your Lvergrn'll .ld lll "
to a dili"cn:nl aCCOU I1l ••1 built-ill cah..·lldJI, alld

.. di reclUry o( faculty c-mJiI addre»e,
Accord in g to a o;;urvey aone

1.1::. ,

YCJr D)

ReglS,r.II,on, only 18% o( s,u denl> .. c,ually
usc.:' the l'-ma il sys lcm. "We re trying to find
out hnw to ITI3ke il lIseful," said J\k-tzgel
JIIIl Sc/;erprch is a jirst )'rnr stUdfl11. right
now I1wo/ued III rI" Tragic Relie/pmg"""', and

also cakltV; Gruk

{IS II Illngltflgr

p/lr/~IJI!1t',

IlS JIII·iT/1!.

(lJ

Ulell

tlu'

lim worh
world on

Friday forum
.-----------------------------------------------------------------------.

Discuss journalism, ethical, and legal issues
involved in the production of a newspaper.

Equal Exchange

whi ch supports small farmer grower coops. (Besides ,
our espresso prices, as far as we can tell , are the best in Olympia.)
'Looking for excellent acoustic music
concerts , talks, poetry , classes, and community
TO rums we present In the cafe? ... ,Ch eck our website

www.traditionsfairtrade.com
300 5th Ave. SW
705-2819

II

dn.v-Io-dny bn",.

' Want a cafe with good food and a relaxed
atmosphere? .. Our espresso is from

All Students welcome.
Friday forum is held in the CPJ office (third floor of
the CAB, rm 316), begins at 4:00 p,m. every Friday
and lasts approximately an hou r.

(next to Capitol Lake park and the fountain)

at the gridiron
So I was.1t thi s football game in Federal
\'(fay, an all->tar game for a semi·pro league
thal operates 011 the West Coast. As t3r as
.III-star games go, ,his one was fairly ryp ical;
the players were good, but thev were not
.lccusromed lO plaving roge,her. The play
was sloppy. tea m execution was poor, a nd
the entire rh ing rook place on ,I n artificial
surt:'ce that looked like it had been painted
wi, h nucl ear was'e. Il jus t screamed at
vour eyes. Eve rything a' the eve n' had a
,o mewh", ,urreal feel.
Then a wide rece iver ca ught the ball
on a throw ro ,he sidelilles. He alm ost
W~I][

OUI

of hounds. hUI he recovered and

r,1I1 ,well'Y )',ud, "r,'i ghl up the side of
the tield. lie tllen r,ln out of bounds .lIld
rammed ,olidl" ill'o .l rcl'..-ee ,lI full 'peed.
rhe ref, h.lI Ilew oil I,., white · h"ired
Iw.ld ..mel I", Toppled '0 rhe ground like ,1
".Iek of h"cb. lie h.,d no "'mhhnce of
Ulj)\Clou ... nt;"\1i wh.lrliot'\'cr.
For tifrl't'n to (Wellt\' minun:~

pulsl' .md rrving (0 gt·( o.,ume rnp"IISC, The
t·u(lrh.dl rl.l\tl·r~ t.:\'(.nrually heg.tn to'\sing

~ ~$IJ1~ U lP iIlOllla ;) iIllll~IIl('~

Two-Thousand One
~<D",j)~~ 1P"~IIlJ DiIllD~IIl~ "

So here's the story,

Morning Glory:
We've gotten quite a s tack of
Letters & Opinions submissions here
at the CP] recencly. And we appreciate
it immensely. The CP] is here [0 serve
and facilitate student voice; L&O is
your pipeline to the Evergreen campus
and the greater community.
However, in addition to regular
submissions and columns, we've
received a huge influx ofleners which
concern, in one way or another, the
events of September 11 and subsequent ac;rions and activities. While .
we want to print everything that is
submitted to the CPJ, we're sometimes
pressed for space and can't print
everyone's work
To better serve L&O and hopefully allow for more voices to be hea rd,
CP] is reinstating some g round-ru les
from previous years,
I ,) Submissions shou ld be 700 words
or less.
2.) Submissions should attempt to be
clear, concise, and to the point.
3,) Submission priority is given to
students firsr, TESC faculty and· staff
second, a nd everyone else third.

hI' Zella IIa,hlllg
T he local election dramas that I spoke of
in my last column continue. The Olympian
has clearly and predictably backed the
co n se rvative c leme nt. Bur r.Hhcr than

highlighT t his bias, let's look Jt what it takes
to win an e lecrion: Yores, It is important
to remember that so me c<1I1didates will wi n
o r lose an elec tion by only a handful of
vo tes. This fact was dra matized at our la;[
p res idential election, w hen Flor id a, t he
decid ing ,ta te, came down to essentially a
few votes. Not
dweU on that debacle,

'0

but it p.lVS ro remember Ihat eve r y votu
counts,

Tha, means

\·011.

()n )eptel1lh,·r I I th,

our ll.ltiOIl cxpl'ricnccd an C'(lrl'mc anJ

trilgic lo . . s. The rl''ipUIl . . C frolll W;]~hillgtoJl
retribution. If VOU I" rl· ... plJll.... C h.l.., bct'll to
don.Hl' blood .Lnd (0 art"l'lld vigil ... or Ilist to
kl'l'P .Ihrt..'.lsr of br<..: brl'.lk1l1g nl·W\. VOl! roo

rill: s p.lr .. e LroWU -;<t[ Jpprchcnsivdy, waiting
t~)f .. 01111.: ddinile 'ilgn to break the 1(:I1 S ioll,

O.

0000 •

00 O. O.

much more if YOU are J vorer. Your VOtt ,
and those of y~ur friends, your neighbors,
your lovers, your enemies, put the people
in office who make rhe decisions tha, affect
your life.
)0 le,·s look at the local election onCe
more. The conserva tive choices made the
beSt . howill g at the primary. Of 67,855
registered voters in Thurston Co unty (or
relevant ju risdictions in Thurston County)
12,790 vote rs decided who would be on
the November ballot. Thar i, about 19% of
,he registered yoter<, or if you estimate thar
,here arc 200,000 people in the counry, that
i, .06% of the population. Les> than I % of
the population will make a huge impact on
local gove rn ment.
If every regis te red Thurston coun tv
voter at Eve rgreen cas t their ballots on
November 6 for TJ Jo hnson, Steve Hughes
and Marhew Green in the ciry of O lympia,
Karen Valenzuela in Tumwater, and Jim
Weber in Lacev, these vo'ers would make a
huge diflcrence locolly.
Rel11emher, the .Iog.,n from the earh'
enviro-movement "ill applie" Think globally, act locallv. Acting l11ean, voting. Ge,

l'i

i.Ktivc . gtt regi ... lt.:rcd. and vote.:.

,ue panicil,ating. But vou will p.HlIc'pat"

Regisler '0 vo'e by Oct. 5 online
www,wao;;hingtonvoter.org. - ir', frec!

o

the ball ,Iround. IIv,ng ro ,to), luo'c . whole

. --:,t-

a'

O. o.

What
I
Can't
Tell
You
Strategies
for Pea~e

from the licit!: "l le\ out cold ." One man
'"para ,ed Irom the ~roup around the rderee
,1I1e1 iogged otf tlJ .l pay phone to get some
real hdp. In a few minUTeS the Federal Way
Fire Department ambulance hod arrived,
It has now been over three weeks
t"lloweu ,horll\' by America n Medical
since my hometown was attacked by a
Respome. which were both leading up to
group of in sa ne, brill ianr, evil men in a
the mo.t official looking of them all, th e
red Fire Medic ,1mbulance. By this tim{)'" ~ perfecdy executed but morally twisted
the referee had regained conscious n ess, ·' ·~rategic assa ult. It was truly an amazing
(eat of death and devastarion, and t he
bll' he did not know hi. name o r where
Big Apple is st ill picking up the pieces
he was.
of its buildi ngs and its psyche.
;::
It is amazing to Ille how, with everyLike nearly everyo ne else, I have
thing e1,e going on in this world, the
spent the last 23 days desperately tryi ng
fragility of Iife was brought home to me on
to get my head straight, to figure out
one Sunday afrernoon aT a football game
how I can react to terrorism. racisnl.
in r ederal Way. I thought ,haT referee was
parriotism, and the drum beats of wa r.
dead. I was al ready envision ing his family
And, needless to say, I am very confused.
in the years to, come, tel lin g people that
their husband/father/brother was ki ll ed in
One thing I do know is that I am sura freak dccident .([ a fOOTball game--what a
rounded by people at Evergreen who
oppose m ilitary action in response to the
way lO 10'0 a loved one.
wickedness of a few individuals, and who
I've been thinking a lot about life latdy,
want desperarely to resis t the hawkishand what I should do w ith mine. These
ness that has taken over our media, our
are very vobtile limes, and it seems to me
nation, and our government.
that the entire world is poised on the brink
We are a minority. We have a great
of chaos. The quanrum bifurcations have
mountain of public opin io n to climb,
come to the poinr where eVents become
and it is going to take some creative
entirely unpredictable. The world has been
thinking and remarkable strategy if We
going crazv the past few years , decades,
le tHUri es. \Y/e've been warned for years
are to get anywhere.
r
J
First thi ngs first: if the armed forces
about the environmenral destruction, ~bout
are planning to attack Afgha nistan. and
the humdn exp loitation; we knew thar they
I feel fa irly confident that they are, t hen
were supposed to lead to some terrible
effects, bUl they all seemed so distant and
there is nothing we citizens Can do about
speculative. Well, guess what: the fu ture
it. This attack w ill take place very soo n ,
if it hasn't started already. We will drop
IS now.
some bombs, shOOT so me missiles. and
I don't know what's going to happen;
perhaps se nd in a few Spec ial Forces
that's the scary part. But whi le the tremendous uncertainties of the future do wo rry
units. Maybe we will get Osama b in
Laden, maybe we won't. Whatever hapme, I don't let it drag me down. After ali.
pens . it see ms highly un likely tha t a ny
this is mv life! Think abo ut it: isn't it just
kind of peace movement co uld have
a linle bit excitin g' My life is happening
much effect on it.
to me as I speak, and the remainder of
Don't d espa ir though. Or rather,
its cou rse could be determin ed by what I
despa ir for a diffe rent reason. O ur
do right now. So to all of yo u out there,
take this opportunity and live yo ur life
president has pledged to the American
people that even if the Afghanis roll
to th e fullest. You may not get a noth er
over easily, we srill have a long "War on
chance.

o


o
•o
••o
•o
a

o

- Mosang Miles

October Fourth

he l.\y

,here, Illlltionic", w,th people checking his

t\ friend I,f mlllC on ,he team yelled up

' Want to support fair trade with the world 's
co-ops and workers in more than

o

O. 00 00
0 •• 0. •
o
0.0

See Strategies, page 1 3

I call 't tell vou nor to cnli~r in (he..' mili~
ta ry to ca rry oul BU"ih's gloriou:, '\ rusadc"
against terrori~1ll and evil in lhe world. I

ca n'T Tell you ro evade the draft and save
yo urself, if it comes ro that. I ca n't display
the flag of Afghanistan in sol idarity with its
people. I can't write about, speak, publis h
or distribute ,uch ideas. Neither can you.
rorget the First Amendment. The Espio nage
a nd Smith Acts o udaw suc h seemi ngly clear
freedoms of speech. Both ac t, were created
ju.« before th e 1st and ·2nd World Wars
broke Ollt.
Restrictions on civil rightS are par for
the COurse during wartime. Now, o n the eve
of a threatened WW3, we shou ld come to
expect new violations of our civi l liberties.
What will they be ' Possibly an end ro trial hy-jury, as granted in AmendmenT V I of
the Constitution . Wi ll it be rep laced by
C IA assass in ations' If so, then in the war

the Russ ians are our allies. and our Afghani
pawns are turned into the new ev il enemy

of freedom "nel democracy. Why did we
support them back in the I 980s? T hey were
convenient. In American foreign policy, the
ends justify the means.
This applies ro the new war on terrorism. So what if our bombs murder 10,000
or even I million destirute Afghani civilians
and refugees. As long as we get the terrorists.
No starv ing children will stand in o ur way.
Collareral damage is the na m e of the game.
God help us Wi,., !
But w hat exactly are we winning' The
assumption is t h at bringing an end to
rogue [errorist o r ga ni zat ion s w ill leave

fi nally stop the ignored , underreported,
covert te rrorism rhat we h:1ve been agen ts
of and come out of the closet as the proud

citizens of industrialized nations feeling
more secure, a nd thus possessing a greater
sense offreedom. Yet our military is already
omnipresent. The United States h as troops
a ll over t he world. actively e ngaged in
warfare and "peacekeeping missions." We
drop bombs on oth e r cou ntries regula rly,
and interfere with internal affairs, includin g
democratic elections. State monopoly on

terror ists we arc.

force is the greatest so urce of terrorism.

The United States military carries
out the United States' fo reign policy of
continuous sma ll -scale wa r. We bombed
Afgha nistan's capital, Kabu l in 1998. Bush
sa id that the terrorist attacks on the WTC
and Pentagon were acrs of war. Co nversely,
o ur direct military attack o n Kabul was
a n act of wa r. The la test attacks we re in
retal iation against a U.S. decl a rat ion o f war
(delive red with bombs), and an expected

Fear the rogue state . It poses a far greater
th reat ro our freedoms, and to lives all over
the world, than do a few quasi-religious
zealots .
Back to the question - w hat do we win'
What the peo ple of th is wo rld (includin g
us) w in is nothing. What government
and corporations win is the ho ly grail of
capitalism - free m a rkets. Open markets
lead the way to vast profits for the already
wealthy. a nd poverty for the growing poor.
Expanding markets is the goal of U.S.
foreign policy, a nd war is the fastest route
ro them . However, as mentioned earlier. the
law doesn't permit us ro openly oppose this
war or the government's foreign policy a t
rhis time. Historian Howard Zinn noted,
"Against a lawless syste m , defiance [is] the
only answer."
For information on U.s. foreign interve ntion check out Willia m Blum's work online
at: http ://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/
Blum/US_ Interventions WbIum.Z.html

on terrorism, no one is safe.

At leas t we w ill

respo n se to wa r! It's tim e for Americans

to stop asking the ign orant question : why
would someone attack us?
In light of o ur aggressive history toward
Afghanistan, it is no t surptising that our key
military a nd financi a l ce nters were targets
of war. Maybe it is time to reco nsider our

foreign poli cy. For instance, why do we
train. finance, and arm foreign armies a nd
then a bandon them ? Is it just oversight that
we neglect to ClJnsider a blowback against
the United States? As we fuel another war
in the Middle East, we should consider
why we are there. The Cold War IS over,

- Krystal Kyer

October fourth
~<D<D Il"n lP<Dftllln D<DIIl.1Il1l0

Two-Tbousand One
~""IJlU lP.,ollla D<DIIl.IIlIlB

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Grindz

by (elva Boon

"

List in hand, I set out to the
grocery store. I was going to get all
the essential items to stock up my
kitchen. I 'd brought a cookbook
from Hawaii filled with my favorite
local dishes, including shoyu chicken.
As I pushed my squeaky cart up and
down the aisles, I was dumbstruck at
how cheap everything was. "What,
only $2.19 for a gallon of milk!" I
had become accustomed to paying
$5, but I wasn't finding all of my
ingredients.
I approached a boxboy and asked,
"Excuse me, where is the shoyu?" He
turned to me and said, "The what?"
I said tbe soy sauce. "Oh." I followed
the boy down a middle aisle, and
he told me that the ethnic foods
were in this area. What I found were
small botrles of water, black liquid
with brand names I'd never heard of.
Upset, I called home that night and
begged that my p;uents send me an
emergency care package that included
a gallon of Aloha Shoyu, Ii hing mui
kak. mochi (rice crackers covered in
dried plum powder), and rock salt.
Now that I've been here for two
yeatl, I found where I can get some of
my "local kine grinds,· but there are
still certain things that I have to get
from home, but you know what? I'm
fine with that. Otherwise it would
lack rhat liale pincb of Aloha-

Shoyu Chicken

bv Deneb Bates

As Ocrober has come stamping upon
us, and I face the inevitable gloomy
months of winter, I am intensely aware
that any blue-skied day cou ld be the last
that I see for a long time.
So as not to let these last warm days
slip by without appreciation. I seek out
celebration and community at Olympia'.
Fatmer's Market. The market is a thriving
community resource and gathering place,
as well as a functioning alternative to
corporate America, on which we are often
forced to rely. It offers us an opportunity
to buy from local farmers and to value the
way they enrich our community.
The market is a collection of restaurant
booths, craft stands, and live enreflainment. Local farmers set up boarhs abundant with piles df produce. There are
heirloom beans and tomatoes, baskets
full of foraged wild mushrooms, bright
ruby chard, baby beets and carrots with
the greens still attached, and tree ripened
fruit, rosy from the Eastern Washingron
sun.
As I walk past one particular stand,
distracted by the brightness of a huge
variery of peppers, a man offers me a
taste of a nectarine. I exclaim my pleasure
out loud for the intensely sweet, deep
summer taste of the perfectly ripe fruit.
Anything this wonderful and ephemeral
will sell itself.
I don't know if it was because of the
taste of the fruit, or because this was my
one solid way of possessing the goodness
of summer, but I bought more nectarines
than I could possibly eat. Here's a recipe
to handle some of my nectarines. You
can transplant any other fruit for the
nectarines if you want.

by Chris Mulally

T

his Friday, October 5, the Arts
Walk steps its feet into 96
businesses and 4 main streets in
downtown Olympia, It may be
foolish to avoid this event, This is
the Art Walk's 23 01 ' birthday, and it
has at least something your eyes or
ears will like.

End Of Summer Nectarine and Port Clafouti
Traditionally a c1afouti is a French cake made with dark cherries, but ri,e cherries can
be substituted for by many kinds of fruit. The result is somewhere between a pancake
and a custard. (It's good for breakfast or as a deserc).
Ingredients:
4 eggs
1 T port
3/4 cup sugar
I cup milk
2 t vanilla
3/4 cup flour
a pinch of salt
3-4 ripe nectarines, sliced
Directions:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Butter a IO-inch deep-dish pie pan. Lay the nectarine
slices in the pan, laye~ing as nec~ary. In a large bowl, beat together the eggs and the
sugar for about two mmutes. Beat lfl the milk, port and vanilla. Stir in the flour and salt.
Pour the batter over the nectarines and bake for 15 minutes at 375 degrees. Turn the
oven down to 350 degrees and bake until a toothpick comes out clean but the center is
still soft, 45-60 minutes more. Let it cool and dust it with powdered sugar. .
Enjoy.

Ingredients
5 Ibs. Chicken breasts or

no killing and it's still filling!

thighs
Equal amounts of water and

-----------brought to you by e.a.r.n.

Aloha Shoyu*
Green onions
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 T minced garlic
1 t ginger
Directions:
Thaw chicken and place in
a deep pot. Add green onions,
sugar, garlic, ginger, water, and
Shoyu. Liquid should cover
chicken. Place POt on medium
heat and allow to boil for 20
minutes or until chicken is all the
way cooked. Serve over "sticky"
rice and enjoy.
• Aloha Shoyu can be purchased at Uwajimaya's in Seattle.
Uwajimaya Village is a few
blocks away from Safeco Field
at 600 yh Ave. South. For
directions, go to their website:
www.uwajirnaya.com

VEGAN RECIPE O' THE WEEK

evergreen animal rights network

867-6555
[ earn@tao.ca

- - - - - - - - - LENT I L VEGETABLE SOUP
INGREDIENTS:

CHOP CARROTS. CELERV, ONION. AND GARLIC.
HEAT OIL IN A LARGE SOUP POT .
ADD VEGGIES & BAV LEAVES.
COOK ON
MEDIUM HEAT UNTIL VEGGIES ARE ~OFT.
ADD WATER. HERBS . & LENTILS.
COOK ON
MEDIUM HIGHT HEAT FOR 45 MINUTES.
(2 OR MORE
ADDING WATER WHEN NEEDED.
CUPS WILL EVAPORATE DURING COOKING.)

• 1-2 STALKS CELE~Y
·3 CARROTS
·1 LARGE ONION
·3 RED POTATOES

• 1 1/2-2 C GREEN LENTILS
·3-4 CLOVES GARLIC
·3 BAY LEAVES
·1 TBSP OLIVE OIL

·1/2 TSP EACH: ROSEMARY,SAGE,
OREGANO, BASIL. MARJORAM,
·1 TSP SEA SALT
.7-8 C WATER
·3 TBSP RED WINE VINEGAR

THYME

,,\VThat is Arts Walk?

W

Overall, the Arts Walk celebrates Olympia's artistic community. Inside downtown businesses you will find a variety of
2-D, 3-D and literaty art; outside
you can see dance, theatre, music,
and various performance pieces. It
is an opportunity to see Olympia
at its best, and to get to know the
streets in which you live and the
artists with whom you may not
know you live.

H ow about roots?

'-

O.

.o

Olympia's
Arts Walk
Wears Big
Shoes

Local Kine ·~Nectarine Dre
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I t originated 11 years ago
with 23 businesses, and has since
shown itself biannually. It was
born from a vision of incorporating
vacant business wall space with the
arc work of local artists.

,,\VThat time do you go
Won Friday?
It officially starts at 5 p.m . right
downtown. Many people are talking about me film "Imagine: John
Lennon," which starts at 5:00 at
the Historic Capital Theatre. If
you don't know where to find the
stuff you might be interested in,
don't worry. If you can make it
downtown, you can find a map
which includes listings of businesses, their featured artists and
events happening both indoors and
on the streets.

What else?
By the way, the Arts Walk
has arms that can hold you ifyou're
an artist and you wan t to show you r
work in the future. If you want to
submit any art or performance to
the next Olympia Arts Walk, please
call Stephanie Johnson in the City
of Olympia Arts Program Office at
(360) 709-2678.

.00 O. O.

"Life is a bowl of cherries, but we have to know what to
do with the pits." The pits? In acting, the "pits" are the
spaces between words - the opportunity to trip on your face
by forgetting the next line, or by inflecting paorly or ruining
the charge of the piece. In acting, as in our days, there are
thousands of opportunities ro screw everything up.
How do you deal with the moment you forget your lines
and you're forced to turn your body into a hammer ro beat
something good OUt on the SpOt? It's tough unless you're drunk
- but then it sounds bad. Fools Play, one of two improvisational
comedy troupes in the Olympia area, has confronted that
question every week for nine years now.
Saturday, September 29, the FOOLS PLAY acto rs Edward
Gibbs - Red Fool; Geoff Gibbs - Yellow Fool; C hris Harris Purple Fool; Michael Harris - Blue Fool; and Michael Tanner
- Green FooI(they all have different colored shirrs) performed
at Studio 321 on the fringe of downtown Olympia. Overall,
their performance was better than mediocre, but they have
had better shows before. Three guys were very funny; one guy
might have been tired. One of their five members was missing,
and as an audience member commented, "they perform best
when they're all rogether."
Fools Play started their performance each playing an
instrument: bass, electric ukulele, piano, or vocals. The lights
were dim. Thirty seats were almost full. One couch waited
with a reserved sign on it. There were also pieces of paper
all over the place that one of the acrors placed upon the wa ll
before they began acting out scenes.
Coming into the studio , my friend Heather and I were
offered mad lib style se ntences o n printer paper [hat we
were asked to fill in and set on the stage. These were used
periodically in the performances - to sp urn directions in
the stories. My sentence was"
tastes terrible if
cooked with burter. " 1 filled in "car tire." On the back of
all the papers were pictures such as stars, wings, ice cubes,
umbrellas - all drawn out of crayon. They sat on the wall
and the audience referred to them to create the next direction
in the srory.
There were awkward spaces. and Heather sa id one part
was a little long, but we were not watching a play, concert
or scripted television show. It was more precarious, so we
didn't care if I 0 minutes of the 90 were not funny. In fact, the
pauses, "urn's" and empty spaces were thrilling. Ed Gibhs says,
"we're more concerned in getting good improv than gimmicky
games." He says his group deviates from most modern improv
by stretching out of games and into technique. They purposely
break rules like cutting each other off, letting words slip, or
exclaiming their mistakes.
"We trUSt our audience to be smart, and you won't find that
in many shows," Gibbs remarks.
Fools Play has different form~ts each week. Last week it was

audience

ra ng ed
from high
school
students
to middle-aged
wo m en

and 1l1en;
5 0 m e

laughing,
some with
gray hair,
some sa rcastic.
Three
ca meras lined
the back of rhe
audience.
When I asked
two audience members to give a description of Fools Play, rhey
argued:
" Revolution ary. Best
clean fun you can have."
" It's not always clean ."
"T hey try very hard."
"They don't try so hard anymore
to be clean. "
" It's a good way ro spend a boring Saturday
night. ..

~ INFORMATION
~ location
~ address

<
~

Downtown Olympia
206 5th Ave. SE

date
info?

CHOP POTATOES INTO SMALL CUBES.
ADD TO
THE SOUP & COOK UNTIL POTATOES ARE
SOFT. ABOUT 10-15 MINUTES.
REMOVE FROM
HEAT.
STIR IN RED WINE VINEGAR.
SERVE.

New York Style Hand Tossed Pizza
Huge Selection of Fresh Toppings!
Vegetarian & Vegan Pizza's Available
SaIad8. Calzone, Fresh Baked Goods
Micro Bn1W8 on Tap, Bottled Beers, Wine

NOTE: THIS souP IMPROVES WITH TI"E.
LETTING IT
SIT FOR 2 HOURS WILL ONLY MAKE IT BETTER.
IF
YOU CAN WAIT THAT

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THE EVERGREEN ANIMAL RIGHTS NETWORK
MEETS TUESDAYS IN CAB315 AT 5:30P.M.
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OCTOBER 6TH

BRIAN FEIST

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STUDENT FOOD SPECXALS WJ:TB YOUR X.D.

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Dine In or eaD Ahead for Take Out
Enjoy Our Sid_lk Caf. On Nice Days!

360-943-8044

Located at Hamson & Division

LIVE HVSIC MENU ON OUR PlBBSITE
**VISIT OUR WEBSITE WWW.TBE4THAVE.COM**

210 EAST 4TH AVE. DOWNTOWN OLY 786-1444

October Fourtb
e<ll<lllP~a

IPillftm8 DillmammO

Two-Tbousand One
eillillIPSa lPeftJll8 DItJllaJllIIB

October 5
call 360.753.8380

for future submissions contact Stephanie Johnso n in th e City of
Olympia Arcs Program Office at (360) 709-2678 .

* * NEW KUSJ:C VENUE AND SOUND SYSTEM

NOW ACCEPTING RECIPE SUBMISSIONS

"srory format." They also do "Fools Play Trial." "Theme
Nights," "Entertainment Historically," and "Solo
shows" - where a single actor handles all five
parts and the audience participates amidst
four paper plates with faces painted
on them to represent the missing
acrors. In "Foo ls Play Audience
Party," audience members
are handed out cards to
act from, to fulfill a
particular character.
Overall. the shows
display great variety
- ranging from no
audience partici p3!ion to complete partici pation.
La s t
week, the

October Fourth
e<llilllP~a

IPillftJllO DilllllamllO

Two-Tbousand ODe
~iII<IllP~a

IPeftmo DemamllO

(233 Dlvlalon SL NW)

reen

A CPJ Guide to Yoga, Rieki , and Free Condoms

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

~Healing Touch
, of~Health Center
I
~Jt. ' .


Student Health Center:

On-Campus Site
Offers Quality Care at
a Nominal Cost
bv Rachel Thome
Feeling sick' Get well! Evergreen has a family-practice clinic
right on campus - the Student Health Center. "A lot of people
are really su rprised to hear that we have it, " says Natalie Johnson,
a Student Medical Assistant in the Center.
Routine physical exams, women's yearly exams, STO testing,
birth contro l, immunizations, and help with management of
chronic problems such as asthma. depression, and diabetes are
among the services at the Health Center. Free HIV tests are
offered Wednesday afternoons from 1pm - 4p m, and free condoms
are always available. You can even schedu le an appointment to
talk abou t ways to stay healthy using diet, nutrition and herbal
medicines. There is a pharmacy at the Student Health Center,
but only medicine prescribed by clinic staff can be filled there.
Complete confidentiality is emphasized - nothing that happens
during a visit can be released without a patient's consent.
Also offered are many no n-traditional practices, such as
therapeutic touch, Hour-long therapeutic touch sessions are
conducted by a certified practitioner for $15/hr. In cense is
burned, lights are dimmed, and acco rding to Johnson , "it is
relaxing and in vigo rating at the same time." Also offered are
acupuncture treatments, which are by referral only, and "herbal
cons ults," where patients ca n discuss natural remedies with a
Physician Assistant certified in herbal medicine. There are special
appointment tim es and extra fees for certain treatments and
medicines, so call ahead.
The best thing about the Student Health Center? You don't
need insurance to be seen. If you have paid your $37.50 Quarterly
Health Services fee, all your office visits are covered. Parr-time
students can either pay the quarterly fee or opt for a standard
office visit fee every time they are seen. Special treatments, x-rays,
laboratory tests, and medications may cost more, but the charges
can be put on your student account and paid off later.
There are some services the Health Center doesn't offer. After
hours and emergency room care, massage therapy, specialists,
dental care, eye exams, and hearing exams are not available on
campus. The Travel C linic has also been discontinued. For these
services, staff members would be happy to suggest community
resources in Olympia and beyond.
Staffinciud.,. a doctor, two family practice physician assistants,
three women's health care nurse practi tioners , and several medical
assistants and students in training. To learn more about them,
grab a "Practitioner Profiles" handout before your visit. It has
more information about each clinician at the Ce nter,
The Student Health Center is located in the Seminar building,
room 2 110. To contact them or make an appointment, call
360-867·6200. Appointments are available Monday, Thursday
and Friday 8am - noon, Tuesday 8am - noon and 5pm - 7p m,
Wednesday 8am - 7pm. Walk·in hours are Monday, Tuesday
and Thursday 1pm - 4pm (must be in the clini c by 3:3 0pm
to be seen.)

~
Healing touch is one of the l1W1y
forms of energy healing, keeping company with other modes like polarity
therapy, Reiki, and therapeutic touch.
It is a mode of physical and psychic
healing that deals with the energy that
circulates through one's body. This
healing is based on the concept that
a magnetic force or magnetic fluid
surrounds all living creatures. This
concept was originally promoted by
Anton Mesmer in the 18,h centuty and
has been incorporated into Theosophy
and embraced by rhe new age movement. This magnetic force can sometimes become altered through disease or
through an unstable mental condition,
and it is this instability that healing
touch hopes to correct.
It is a form of therapy that does
not necessarily involve the laying on of
hands. Knowing that energy surrounds
people and extends beyond the physical
body, heal·ing touch practitioners may
never accually come in physical contact
with those requesting assistance. Rather,
.......
the practitioner attempus to manipulate
pboIo: Thllle
th~ p~tient's e~ergy fields in hopes of Luke Bradford, an Evergreen student, gets healthy -at the Scudent Health
bnngmg them Into the natural state of Center, thank.. to Molly Jarchow's assistance
harmony, thereby promoting a better
physical, emotional, and mental condition.
Dolores Krieger, Ph.D., R.N., and her mentor, Dora Kunz, developed the current method of healing
touch in the early 1970's. Since its development, more than 100,000 people have been trained in ius methods,
including 43,000 health care professionals. It is practiced in over 80 hospitals in North America, and taught
in at least as many universities and hospitals. Healing touch has been incorporated into the curriculum of
the College of Nurses of Ontario in 1990.
Healing touch involves a few steps to prepare both the practitioner and the client to receive this therapy.
The first step is "centering,· where the healer attempts to align both theirs and the patient's energy level. Next
is "assessment,· where the healer tries to detect the trouble Spots in the patient's energy field. After these
trouble spots are discovered, the healer goes through a process of "unruming the field: to move stagnan t
energy to a point in the patient's energy field or body. This leads to the final step where the practitioner
releases, or "grounds: energy.
This is a form of therapy that has been dismissed by many health care professionals. They have cited many cases
where the effects ofhea.ling touch cannot be directly documented. There have 'been several srudies conducted in the
recent past that offer no conclusive evidence to support the positive effects of healing touch.
In 1996, Linda Rosa, a registered nurse, published a critique of the studies up to that point in which she
stated that "the more rigorous the research design, the more detailed the statistical analysis, the less evidence that
there is any observed-or observable-phenomenon.»
Emily Rosa, Linda Rosa's nine-year-old daughter, conducted one of the most famous srudies that hoped to
debunk healing touch. The srudy called for 21 therapeutic touch healers to sit behind a screen in which they
could not see Emily, who was the person on the other side . . The healers put their hands under the screen and
Emily passed her hands over theirs, and the healers were to determine when Emily's hands, and therefore her
energy field, passed over the healer's hands. The results showed that the healers were correct 122 out of 280 times
(44%). Statistically, a score of 50% should be achieved by guessing alone.
This hesitancy to believe in healing touch might just be the problem with patients receiving healing from it.
Healing touch and the other similar forms require a collaborative relationship between healer and patient. It is
a psychological and a physiological healing. It is believed that discomfort, either mental or physical, manifests
itsdf in order to teach the patient a lesson. During this healing, it is important for the patient to pay attention
to what they are thinking, because any repressed feelings might be the root of the discomfort. Healing touch
hopes to bring those problems to the forefront and help the patient work through those problems. Western
medicine focuses on the curing the symptoms of a disease while this form of therapy is holistic and hopes to cure
the whole person rather than alleviate the symptoms.
Healing touch is available through Evergreen's srudent health center. There is a slight charge for this
service (only $15.00, and a $25.00 charge for mose that make an appointment and fail to show up), and they
request that you make an appointment at least one week in advance, two weeks ahead later in the quarter
when they get busier. Currently, there arc three trained practitioners of he.aling touch that are aVllilable by
appointment only.
Until the srudent workers are trained, only Melissa Layer will be practicing the therapy.
Molly Jarchow 'and Kris Burkett are the other two people trained in healing touch that mi~t be available
in the future if there is a demand.
.
Stop by the Scudent Health Center forfurther questions, they are open Mondays and Thursdays 8:00-5:00,
Tuesdays and Wednesdays 8:0(tto1'!OO; and Fridays 8:00 to 12:00. Each day they arc: closed between noon and
I :00 for lunch. They are located at Seminar 2100, and their atension is 6200.

October Fourth
~<I><I>(ll~U

iP<I>ftma D<I>mummD

Two-Tbousand One
~".IJI.' lPeftma Dem.mlll

.................... ........................ ................

Alternatives to Western Medicine Address the Whole Person
- -....,................- - - . , of miracles. So much remains unexplained here in a world of
by Tyler Vega
medicine that is supposed to have a whole lot figured out. There
As is so likdy to happen in this day and age, the term "alternative
is much for each of us to learn, and this is where integrative
medicine" has actually become largely obsoLete. Preferred by most
medicine comes from.
practitioners now are the more inodern terms "complementary"
At an integrative medicine clinic, an MD will encounter a
an d/or "integrative medicine. " This is to promote a sense of
tough problem and consult the nearest NO, LAc, or DC about
working together rather than opposition. The White House has
optional approaches, and through this communication, broaden
a certain scope of healing modalities that it includes within what
their scope and allow the patient options. Patience choice is
it calls "complementary alternative medicine, " including primarily
a new phenomenon and is also an integral part of integrated
naruropathic doctors, acupuncrurists, massage therapists, and
medicine. This is because the place that medicine, health and
chiropractors. The definition by the standards of the people who
healing are truly going is the place where all points of view are
practice it often range much farther, from Laser Reiki to Braggs,
acknowledged, including the patient's. Indeed, it is the rise of
Apple Cider Vinegar to Shamanism. Below the surface, integrative
personal authority within the patient that allows the crossing of
medicine is really the simple act of communication applied to
human limitations around perception and healing.
differing yet complementary points of view. The mostly singular
Each of the plethora of healing modalities uses a particular
Allopathic health option of the West is beginning to lose, or perhaps
route to find a way to wholeness. For a Reiki practitioner, this
release, its monopoly on the common human, so the alternatives
have begun to flourish.
may be allowing divine energy to flow to parts of the body and
spirit that are starved for it from old patterns of fear. For the
Western medicine has spent a long, long time taking the study
Natutopath, this could be perfecting the ingestion of nutrients
of human physiology to the limit. Based en the body-as-a-machine
mode of thinking, it has been remarkably successful within its own
to keep the body perfectly balanced. For the Yogi, this may be
maintaining perfect flexibility of the body. Western medicine
realm. A major criticism of Western medici ne, however, is that it
uses the drug and scalpd to understand and manipulate the
only addresses the symptom of the problem without addressing the
physical body down to and even deeper than the cellular level,
underlying issue. This is based on the very accurate, but outdated,
and it may someday perfect the art . An old (and I mean
precept that the body can heal itself on its own, and that we ought
like 3,000 years old) school Traditional Chinese Medicine
to just make the patient com fortable while that happens, We
practitioner would tell you that your ill health is a result of
are now discovering that the mind and the spirit underlie some,
being "off the path," and if you just follow your heart, you'll
most or all ptoblems in the physical, and that problems left
find wholeness along with happiness. I myself would tell you
unaddressed often get far worse . This makes for the need for
simply to lisren to your body, or just listen myself and perhaps
.
breadth in the scope of our collective healing abilities and fuels
facilitate the process.
the drive behind the alternative medicine movement. It is an D . II 0
heal·
h
'.
.
.:
.
I
11
ame e upree, a
mg touc practltloner m traJnmg,
It is the rise of the other half - the internal, the patient's point
mterna movement as we . .
practices her technique on Molly Jarchow
In our continuing miSSion to explore strange new aspects of
of view - that is the deeper complementary medicine. It is the
taking of responsibility for one's own health. As people begin
ourselves and our relations, we learn rllat rllere are cerrain things
that are integral to the healing and growing process. To date, at lea.>it within my own sea rches,
to do things like fitness, yoga, meditation, singing their songs and dancing their dances,
these things are personal authority, communication, artention and intention. We also learned
health, happiness and wholeness are addressed from both the inside and the outside, and
progress is made. In the communication between healer and patient, healer and healer,
the immense innate healing powers of the human being: laughter, tears, listening, yawning
body and mind, mind and spirit, etc., growth and wholeness become more and more
and stretching, dancing, singing, or doing laps. We now find books documenting the healing
attainable, and more and more real.
power of prayet, or the wonder cure found somewhere in apple cider vinegar, and we hear

-----

Yoga Means Union:
an interview with Judith Dahn

by Chris Mulally
. .
. .
Jlldith Dalm has bun practicing Yoga for 25 years. She has bem teaching an eclectic style ofhatha yoga for the }IU' 5 ~Iln•. In 1997. ~h~ WtIS cmifo~ by ~,U ~tus FountIiuiDn I" .s:z~ta
Barbara, Gil. In 1999, the was certified to teach yoga for cancer/heart ditease patimu. She grad"aud in 2000Jrt»n TESC WIth emphllSlS In _tern ph,losophy, cillssUlll yoga, enngy _diaN!,
and health and weI/-being. She cu"mt/y teach~ for accreditation at TESC and SPSCC. She own! ud4r Yoga Snulio in downtlJWn Olympia.
Chris: Yoga is very popular today. Can you share a few words describing it?

-

,',

Judith: People today tend to think of yoga as the physical posturing that we learn in classes. It's acfU;a.lly much ~ter than tha~. Yoga in ~ts specific d~finition m~ union,
of which "Hatha Yoga" [physical postures) is a small piece. All of Yoga is about union - a coming together. Specifically to attaJn that which was pteVlously unattainable. So
people come to yoga because there's something that they're wanting.
.
.
.
.
.•
.
Jr's easy to start with Hatha Yoga and the physical postures because the body IS very tan~ble. We can ~ 1~ we can touch ~t, we ~ move It. And In that explora~on we can touch
something greater in ourselves. We end up refining what to reach for and the ways of comlllg together, m uruon as our pracnce COl\tmues.
Chris: What is the greatest effect of yoga?
Judith: I think the greatest effect is a sense of well-being, which tends to be marked with peace, and an ability to stay centered in chaotic siruations; an ability to become~~
yourself and your actions; and the ability to make choices which are to the benefit of yourself and othell.
'-.............- ~
Chris: Today we face a precarious moment in the history of the world. Can yoga have an effect on our world as a whole?
Judith: I believe that it can and that is why I teach. I sincerely hope that we can evolve our coJUcioumess as a human race. Yoga's main moral ethic, main code ofJife is Ahimsa - which is
non-harming. It is said that if you can practice Ahimra and nothing else then you'll have it all, For any
that is the highest goal. In today's world. ifwe can find altemativeways to face
the troubles that we face by finding our own center, in the midst of all these problems, to choose a way of nonviolence, then we'U dtange the world.

yap

Chris: Where <.an people start if they want to begin a yoga practice on their own?
Judith: Yoga traditionally is an oral teaching. It has been handed down orally for thousands of yean. The best place to start a yoga practice is to find a good teacher. I know
a few people that have learned yoga through a book, bur at some point they end up finding a teacher. There is something transferred from teacher to student that you cannot
get out of books. So that is the place. To find a teacher.
. .
. . . . .
.
Now the best way to find a teacher is to follow one's heart. Go to several classes With several diffim:nt teachers. Every teacher is gomg to emphas= something different III yoga. So
when you go to a cla.>is, if that teacher is speaking to your heart, than stay and study there ~
FOR MORE INFORMATION call 791-YOGA or email Judithatjdahn@home.com. ~. check Out
TESC'S Yoga Club: Monday 1-3, Wednesday 4-6, Fri 10-12 in CRC room 116. It's a
.
cooperative time/place to practice yoga in a supportive environment.

October Fourth
~e<l>IP~'

iP<I>ftma D<I>mumllD



Two-Tbouland One ..
~.elJl.a

lJIeftmo V_mamllft

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O.

Team Evergreen Kung Fu Starts Season in Winning Style

by KevlI1 Barret

Team Evergreen Bak Shaolin the new Team Evergreen captain by
second place in both the continuous
Eagle Claw Kung Fu kicked off their a slim margin to take first place in a
and black belt point sparring diviseason in top form on Sacurday, Sep- hard-hitting division. His next divisions. For third place, previous Texas
tember 15'" at the Emera ld Internateam member Steve Burris tied with
sion was the black belt point spartional Open Martial Arrs Champion- ring. Again, the hits were landing
Haskin in the Open forms division.
ship in Tacoma. The team, led by
quick and hard. Haskin finished
In the intermediate competinew captain Owen O'Keefe, claimed third in the division .
tion Kevin Barrett took second place
over twenty top three finishes with
Evergreen alumni and
in the traditional soft style forms
on ly eight competitors. The tournanational team member Jessie Smith
division. Barrett then tOok third in
ment was sanctioned by the World
dominated every division she conthe intermediate open forms division.
League of Martial Arts and hosted by tended. Smith was flawless in the
In the point sparring division Barrett
Master Chuang Lieu.
black belt traditional soft style forms once again took third ·place.
Team captain Owen O'Keefe division earning the highest marks of
After being bumped up from
the day and taking first place over
the beginner division, newcomer
started the day by taking second
place in the highly competitive black O'Keefe and Haskin. In the open
Animito Pollina in his first martial
forms division Smith did more of
beIt traditional soft style forms diviarts tournament took first place in
sion. After just barely missing a
the same, earning another first place
the intermediate traditional soft style
third place finish in the open forms
forms division over Barrett. In the
finish. The former Team Evergreen
women's captain then moved on
division, O'Keefe moved on to the
beginner open forms division he took
to the continuous sparring division
continuous sparring rings. In this
second place. Then, ~n his first
fasr moving, crowd pleasing division, where she earned yet another first
point sparring competition, the welltrained Pollina dominated the beginhe took second place, losing only to
place finish. Smith, who teaches
founding Team Evergreen member
aerobic kickqoxing and self-defense
ner division and took first plac<;,
dnd national team member Sam
During the Emerald Interseminars in the Olympia area, then
Haskin. O'Keefe looked his sharpest fought through the black belt point
national tournament intermission
in the black belt point sparring rings
Master Chuang Lieu rook time to
sparring division. After one comwhere his power and quick attacks
petit~r. forfeited midway through her award National Eagle Claw Coach
Sifu Dana G. Daniels, along with
earned him first place in his first
match, Smith found herself in a
competition as the new Team Everfamiliar J:losition: the championship
masters from all over the world, cerround. She sparred fellow national
green captain.
tificates' of recognition and appreciaSam Haskin, a founding
tion from the World League ofMarteam member Katherine McLain
winning her fourth and final first
tial Arts for their efforts in promotmember and original captain of
place finish of the day.
ing the betterment of the martial
Team Evergreen, showed his veteran
poise taking"third in both the black
McLain of Colorado, also an arts.
Evergreen alumni, took third in the
belt traditional soft style forms and
the open torlDs divisions. Haskin ' . black belt traditional soft style forms
tnen dominated the continuous "Spar- division completing the Eagle Claw
ring 'ring until he met' O'Keefe in .
Kung Fu sweep of the division.
the champjonship: Haskin defeated
Behind Smith, McLain also finishc4

information about Team Evergreen
Bak Shaolin Eagle Claw Kung
Fu Club and CompetitiQn visit
www.bakshaolineaglec!awcom or .
contact Owen O'Keefe: at 357-9137.

o

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dctoher 4
-rWORLD PEACE! Globalizing Justice and Peace: Visions and Strategies. The 30,h
annual conference of the Consortium on Peace Research, Education and Develop'+ ment (COPRED) to be held jointly with the 12'h annual conference of Peace Studies
Association (PSA) will focus on visions and str~tegies for justice and peace in the
context of globalization. October 4-7 @ TESC. For info. call Simona Sharoni
at (360) 867·6 196 or (360) 867·6553. Website: www.evergreen.edu/user/copred/
TESC2001.hunl.
FREE CONCERT! @ Le Voyeur. The ContraIl, Delta Dart, and Tim McBride will
be performing@ 10 P.M. 21+
EXPLORE WASHINGTON ARCHAEOLOGY @ Lacey Community Center.
6729 Pacific Avenue. Featuring a Slide Presentation on Alpine M~adows, Rock
Shelters , and Logging Camps: prehistoric and historic archawlog" in the Mount
Baker· Snoqualmie National Forest. This event is free and open to the public. For
I information call (360) 438-0209.

1

LIVE REGGAE! @ THEKLA featuring Po'ok,lla & One Lov,. All ages. 6-10 p.m.
Tickets are available at Th ekla. $6 PRE and $7 at door.

j
l'

o!ctober 5

~ 23'd Annual Olympia Arts Walk! A celebra tion of the local arts community by

'"'Cj artists, businesses, and The City of Olympia Arts Commission. 5·10 p.m. For

.q:

j

I

i

I

information call (360) 753-8380.
Movies @ Capitol Theater! Mymry o/Picasso & Hedwig and the Angry Inch will have
their last showings @ 6:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. For information on upcom ing movies
and event s call (360) 754·6670.
Glnbalizing Justice and Peace Cominued

Today would be a good day to make a pie. Or if you 're vegan , jusllhe yumm y
filling and a spoon.

SEED (Students at Evergreen for Ecological Design) presents the SUSTAINABL E
LIVING CONFERENCE, a collaboration of Inspiration and Integration . Thi s
conference will focus on the Cascadia Biorcgion. Key Notes @ 7 p.m. and all day
II 'h_12''- There wi ll be a $5 suggested donation.
For info call (360) 867-6493 or greenseeds@hotmail.com .
Website: www.angelfire.com/wa3/seed/seed.html.
Pug.t Sound Blood Center will be on campus from 10:00 a.m . to 12:00 p.m . and
12:45 p.m. to 4 :00 p.m. They will be located in the Library Lobby, 2nd lIoor. If you
have questions, call ·ext. 6804 or (360) 867·6804.

tober 11

;

i:tober 7

~ FOOLS PLAY IMPROV. Improv ised sketch comedy every Saturday night @ 9 p.m.
"'1;11 at Studio 321 (321 Jefferson St., dowmown). $6 general, $5 students. For info call
867·1229.
Globalizing Justice and Peace Continued

tober 6

SEED Conference continued

21st Annual Harvest Festival @ TESC Organic Farm. The festival will begin
with workshops on sustainable living and agricultural crafts. Registration will be
from 8:30·9 A.M. Live entertainment featuring six bands will run from 1-9 p.m.
The festival is free to all. For more info call 867-6145.

Globalizing Justice and Peace Cominued

FINE FOOD FROM. THE oVEN' OF

Pi lJEHmcEIW<EIw
4935 MUD BAY RD. OLYMPIA, WA 98502
(360) 866-BAICE (2253)

Natural before it was fashionable.· ......- ....
Whole foods baking since 1977

UPCOMING EVENTS:
Cross Country
WiJlamette Invitational
(Saturday, Oct. 6, 2001 at Salem, OR)

Men's Soccer
We have books & supplies
for henna body Qft·

Concordia
(Friday Oct. 5, 2001 at Olympia, WA)

If you had
unprotected
sex, you have
72 hours to
reduce your
·risk of getting
pregnant.

Cascade
(Saturday, Oct. 6, 2001 at Olympia,
WA)
~E:l'HHerbs &Massage

Women's Soccer

113 E. 5th. Downtown 357-5250

Concordia
(Friday, Oct. 5,2001 at Concordia)

KEY Students:

Women's Volleyball

DISCOVER the inner secrets of TESC LIBRARY

Western Baptist

'.'·' .
I· l

(Friday, Oct. 5, 2001 at Olympia, WA)

Concordia

..

Wed. October 10th
1:20-2:30

-: ;....

(Saturday, Oct. 6, 2001 at Olympia,
WA)

Walla Walla

_

(Sunday, Oct. 7, 2001 at Walla Walla.
WA)

_

NW College
(Monday, Oct. 9, 2001 at NW College)



October Fourth
~iIlillIJl8~

IPIIlQma

»iIlm~ml)n

Two-Tho1llalld One
~.iIllll.~

llI.ama

».m~m .. n

with librarian Sarah Pedersen

Learn about the collection and interlibrary loans to locate the books
and materiaIs you will need
Meet the reference librarians and explore how to locate academic
articles for research papers
Check out the multimedia stations and discover the listening &
viewing rooms (plus TESC's vinyl, CD, and video collections)

.. October Fourth
~Q)iIllJI.~

lPiIlftma

»Q)iD~mCln

It's called
emergency
contraception .
Got questions?

Planned Parenthood1-800-230-PLAN
www.ppww.org

,
I. The Ever.ween State College II. Procedures
1. Air Supply. Comm unity
Indoor Air Policy

Evergreen Air

rhl'

Brt'J.thing thr.:. . l· (0'<111.\ in d.!.,-" i... ld·:.l' hulling
1.1.. . . . fnlb \\'1(11 'l'Vt'n: i\1(~\ L.lI) JiL" h t't...IU'L"

111 ...

of

~(l I1\\,.·tllll.'!'1

link d.th of pl"rfllllll" hch llld IhL"
t'.lr. PIC:l.'\l". f(lr lht.: ~.l kl· nr CVl'I)'onc in '1..111>01
lIld ('no ryon\,.' wht> "h.lrl'!<! tht' .11r wllh ,'Oll , go
~11l

il . or hl'l{l'f \'l'l. dn not U'l' .\11\' il.l gr.lllLL"
.\ri..' 110 1 .il lllwnl III \lIlllkc 111
l l...., hl'..... H1~t, 1l WOullt 1t.1I1ll .1Ilt! di.,lllrh [Jliler!'..
f I m 111 III III 111 . nUl 1,.-lllKI..'PI I..ollid h<.: ,Ippllt'd
d'l'wherl' .
For your LO Il\'l'IlIt.' I h..l", I h.l\T PIII\"lh:d ,",.I!
L".lW

.n

,dl~ ~ llI dl'lll'"

pol;L). I'k.L\(.:
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'.\ IIh J .... umn1.\fV \)1 thL' lIldnor ,II I"

[c.ld dl\\, rc.:-rt',td It ,

dli.:LI . \'{/e,: \\1.1111 FVl'fgn:c!llo hl'.1 he.dlhy.
pl.let' when: p. :o plt· l.11l fn:l ,.d~·
r hl'fl' l~ .1 (Olllp bllH proLL',... , p.lrt LO lhL' POllL \
Ih,lt I ,11ll It:J.ving 0111 to !\,lYL' IHl 'P,llt.:. If YOll
llL'L'J III Lllll l p l.,in ,lholl l ,\II ,Ii i llualit y 1........ lIl' .lIld
\t 11110

\ \ 'l' kpl1llng

know 1\0\'" HI go .Ibollt d()i'lg~lJ, YCIU Lan
pWCt·~ on TE..SC\ Wdl''IHL'
unda GovcrnJI1Cl' .1Ilt.! PI.1I111111 g in th t.: I k'.llth
.lnJ SJ. I~ r)' section. or YOll L.ln Hna ~()mn)lll' I h.I I
.ll-.tl; with he.uth .tnJ policie.,. Rc.•d UI1.
Jo Ilut

lind lhe compl.ul1t

SEM II

'sLlI t: (·ol k gt.: undc:rSl:md!:l
.Ll1d rL'dlgl1i/L'~ th.1I thl' .lIr hal' i . . .slured by
L\'l'rgrl'l'lI

' 1IIJ t: llh . t.tc.:lIltv ,\!H! LomnHlni lY mcrnhc:rs.
l)u ll.lbk· .111' qu.d'lI \! I'" Im portan l f(') f crel lin!;

..1

hl'.dtl w ,\!lei I.. rC.l(I VC l'IlVlw nmL' lll in which .tll
pl'npk' c.n) Ic.lIll , wurk . .lnd perform \0 the ht.:st
01 tlll·i r .lhd it\ ' '\ t.lilll.lllllllg ... u il,lhlt:: :l ir qu.11i 1Y
Il' qtlln: .~ LI )(lll11U.11 ,1(\ L· I1U Vl·IlI.::-.... W III iligat<.' or lO
L· I illl i n.lIl' 1I1l1.1\·or.lhk, U lilt! ilion!'., "
( 'n 11lIlWIl II\ rnL'lllhl'f~ .Ir<.' t:xpcLlt'd 10 follow
11 11 ... pn IIL\- .r.... \wlt ;I.~ inform, l,dll(.HC ,lJh_l l,pl'.l k

tn olilt.:1' fdlk .... Ihollt lhi .. fJoliLV to !l1.rkc it
known .1Ild lL ... nl.
\11 prodlllh ll~l.'li 0 11 (.lInp lI ... "Iil(Hlld he
...(:It.·ernl ,md plirch.hl'd in Jccord:ll1ce to Ihi e.,
1'"1,, y.
·TI·.S( : , up!'o", the w llle!'t of.1fr.'gr:UIlC.md l'ollut:lll1 frL'l' cIlviroJ1I1lt.:llt 0 11 it\ propertil'''' .lI1d in i l '" progr,II1l!'l. Th t' college !\t:l.'ks to
1ll.1I1ll.1in rht, he'lt pn"'!'Il hle ~lIr quaJiry arrain.lhle
with in fI~cal. I..:gal and n:glllalory co nst raints.
In pursui t of rh .\[ go.d. Ih e~L' procedurc \ will
be IInpk-tl1,·tHcd."

3. Tra ining. The Dtrecro r 01" I luman
Rec;ourct: Strvice~ will ~ivl' lht: p roper training
10 ,t:lf[ \ (UJt.:nt ~. and .1Ilvonc cJ..,e in the u . . t:
of .llccr n,ui vC' produ ct . . c; uch a. . .\.t fl·, nontoxi c
<.k·~lI1illg prodllcr<; .lIla lloll -sCen re(i Ill<l rke r<;

ventin g ' y'tems will regularly be checked by
maintenance.
6. Use of Scented Products. Co mmuniry
members are asked to refrain from using ~r
we:ui ng scenred products.
7. Policy Dissemination. On a continuing
basis, rhe Purchasing Office and those with
purchasing authoriry wi ll notifY vendors and
con tractor, about rhis pol icy. Annually, the
off,ce of the Vice President for Finance and
Admin i;rratio n will inform st udents. sta ff and
facu lrv about this policy. Huma n Resource
Services will provide' all new employees wirh
a LOpy of rhis pol i c~'.
8. Facilities' Use. Non-college groups using
.UlV TESC fac ili ries wi ll be notified and given
:t '~rirren COPy of rhis policy.
~
9. Complaint Process. ,'\ com plainr proCes< is available ror addres'ing air quali tv

or paint"

cu n ce rns,

4. Information Posting. Th e Cootdin ator
of Environmental Ileal rh and Safetl' wi ll
po't at[ q u"liry guidelines on saferv b;tllerin
boards in every bui lding exccpr rhe housing

10.
Records
Mainte nance.
The
Coord inaror of Environmenra l Health and
'l"fery will keep r(-cord of all comp laints and
resolutions made in rega rds to this policv.

member< are
expected to exercise care wh en undertaking
projects which tm y affeer building air qualiry
by mitigaring o r el iminating poliutanL' from,
I,l[ exa mpl e. id ling vehicl e" cotHrrucr io n
projc"(.ts, ,ign-m.tking.
2. Approval! Adeq uate Notice. When
h.lrtnful 'Chem ical, arc going to be u,cd.
proper notice ,hould be raken. Th i, means
t.dk ing with al' prop:'iare ,tarT, makint; notice'.
making ~ ur e o ur co mmunity know\ (h ~H

harmful chem ic"Is wil l be u.<l·d and where

tllO'c lhemic:d, will be used.

Strategies for Peace
Te rrorism" ro look fo rw .trd roo I tw ill
rake years. " nd we m ust all be read y for
the sacr ifices that wi ll go a long with
rhl" war, sLl c h as restr ic t io n s on civ il
libe rti es, in creascd rh rea t of terrorism
ar home. and th e deat hs of Ameri can
troop' and c ivilian s abroad. It is this
Iorger War that we must all be p reparing

from, page 5

ro oppose right now.
Preside n t B u s h has sa id t h at the
new war won't in vo lve large batd es, and
that more often than nor rh e public
w ill n o t know that it is going o n . All
this makes the War that much m ore
difficul t to resist.
Yet i t must be res isted . [r is ve ry

evident to me t hat the War o n Terro rism
wi ll be used as a conve nient an d powerfu l excuse for American mi litary and
eco n om ic bu ll ying t h roughout the
world. Terro ri sm . is a very broad term.
Practicall y every n ation, in cl u ding our
own , could be said to have committed
acts of terrorism in the recent past. Wi ll

presents

units.

5. Inspec t io n and Updating . Air .Ind

from page I

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l' u~\ihlt.:. " ,1(.JJ i!l g d,.a tlJlh.-t,'rll ,lholll lllli~l'
.\Ild ~tudent ~JI~'r\' ,ll~o pl.t~1(,d.1 mle . l,)(li1lL' ,II
Fvt'rgreen rhlnk rh.n conLe rn over \lu til'llt ... ·
rL.'Jctlon in the form of prt) [ e~l~ \V.l'" .1
(o ntribuling f:'cror ill rht.' dl'ci~ i ol\.
With co nstr uction on ho lo . lhl' Illudcovered sitc will be .\found longer tiLtn
initially thoughr hv pi.lnncr,. Clm !, ,,,
Faciliries Direcror I\\i(hel Ceorge ,.IVS rhe
co ll ege m"y reopen rhe walkway, .Iround
the stte and put up hal·-b.t le b:trrtCldes ro
prt'vent ll1udslidl''\.
1

1"LhL'r (·(Hl'it rill II OIl df

.drt',ILiv

In 1973, Chilean Presfcfent Salvador Allende . . . depo." while ............. was on
In Europe. The young ......,. . . . found .................iOid pabta or pas8pOft. Italy
became their home for 14 y.... In 1988, ...., . . . ....,." .-.tconMrd baA to Chi •
Int... ' Jiman' became, and remafns, SOUth ~.........". of human OXiDnltSSi1ot'l1o.l
They have appared on Amnesty 1ntemadonaI ........... Peter Gabriel, Marceda ~tat<i
Bruce Springsteen, Sting, and WynfOn . . . .11' and at benefit
. for
Vidor Jam foundat~

clt.:.lIL·d thL' 'L'lll lll.lf

. CPj cditor and El'frgr""n

measure.\. 3.gains( theLl I

What can be done abo ur this? That
is a q ues tlon that we all must be ponderin g in tlie com ing weeks and month,.
One co urse of actiol] is to break down
stereotypes that allow many Americans
to group all Muslim s together as one and
defin e them as anti-Western, violent .
and trrational. Th,:se misco n cept ton s
mak e it very e'\.Sy to target Isla m ic
nations as terrorist.
Another s tep is to demand rhat
actual ev i denc e of w rongdoin g b e
shown to the American people before
any military aCli:)[1 is taken . This docs
not just apply to the cu rrent sit uat ion
in Afghanistan, bur to a ll upcom ing
offenses in rhe War o n Terronsm.
There is ralk in th e n ews today of
a battle of wills in the defense depart ment, berween those who want lim ited
strikes on Afghanistan ai m ed at milttary
targets and bin Laden's camps, and
those w ho would like to see attacks on
several nat ions that harbor terron sts,
including Iraq, Syri a, and Lebanon. Ir
is heartening to know rhar this d ebare
exi sts within th e co rridors of power.
\X'e must m a ke sure th a t this debat e
also exists in our homes and on our
sidewalks. so that rhe fu t u re can be one
of pea ce and tn ternatlonal undef>rand ing. nor sui ctd ,· b 0mn, and c rusadet
krngJ ulll'

S{'f/lor Ir'/Jlflfr)1

A'IIIHllger cONlrihuled rrporllllg to r!n's lUlIdt'.

A:n'd)}

A/oore IS

1I1lt/1I (IJe
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the United States be sending troops to
Northern Ireland ? Of course not. Are
we planning [Q investigate the atrocities
committed against Kurdish civilians by
the Turkish government' Don't be sill y
- t he Turks are in NATO.
What nation s will be targete d'
Perhaps we will shoot more missi les at
Iraq , a country th a I" has been devastated
by 10 years of bombings and sanctions,
and that ha s no demon s trated lin k
' to the recen t terrori sm. Cuba is also
on t he State Department's list of terrorist nation s, despire the fact that one
would be very hard p ressed to recall an y
instance of C uban terro ris m agai n st the
USA in rh e past rhirty years.
My point is t h a t we ca nnot tru "
th e American government to decid e
obj ectively who are terrorists and who
are not. It is mu ch more likel y that
th e ir selections will be based on rh e
d es ire to m a intain and ex te nd economi c
and political dominance through ou !
rhe world. This is nor a new concept.
Durtng th e Co ld 'Wat, A m erICa supported man y ruthl ess dictarorshlps in
order to fight th e \Xiar on Com muni sn ,
Salvado r Allende was elected presiden t
of C hil e in 1970 and began to nati onalize co rpora t ion s, in c rease wages . and
improve work1l1g conditions . PresidCnl
N ixo n and rhe C !.\ had htm deposed
and replaced with a milirary despo t
T h " expertence Wa> repeated m an~
tim es in Latin America. Th e U nited
Srates used th e Co ld Wa r as an excuse ro
depress labor prices and maintain U. ~
corporate authority. The Drug War ha,
been used to th e same end. Based 011
an exp ressed deSIre to fight cocai ne
America fund " !ratns. a nd s upp l t,,_,
th e Co lombian arm )'. O ur money t,
ac tuall y used to d efend the governmen t
again sr lefmt guerrlla, .
I fear that the W"r on Te rrorism
will be used tn ,h e same way as thest
other wars. Ir would be very easy tor
our leaders to define ~Ily Arab state t hat
does nor su bmit to American economt c
willpow e r a s terrOrist. and to tak e

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Ever wanna work for
the paper?

-HEY! The CP] is hiring students for paid
positions of responsibiliry'
News-s ide appl ications du e

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- H a rak! I-ulkl hcnnet

Business-side ap plications due
Ocr. 15

Bto: Thtrd \ 'ear <tud"nr of Midd k
E.a~lcrn and ArllCrtCln hl~~orv and

App/ierlliollS fit CIIB 3 16

culrure

Gene ral Meet ing Mondays. 5 p.m .

October Fourth
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Two-Thousand One
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October Fourth
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SAD, BUT TRUE.
By Nathan Smith

"Two heads are better than one, except when they're on the same
body. Now go pray for the poor beast's soul, Timmy:

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October Fourtb
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Two-Tbousand One
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October Fourth
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Two-Thousand One
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