cpj0828.pdf

Media

Part of The Cooper Point Journal Volume 30, Issue 9 (November 15, 2001)

extracted text
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The Evergreen State College
Olympia, Waehington 98505

art .by.

. Ja1Sen

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PwQt~eYo~ 1

than kful for this
holiday season?

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with ,\ ]il l;LUurt prok5~or thl· next.
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To Se rve More, with Less
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( crill.

hl'rl' ,lIld n.:;tlizing
lil.1I I h.•d .• hOllle
wht.: n I didn't kllow
<1:.11 I did, "

The LlCUh y work on the curriculum two
yt.: .lrs ,Ihe,ld of lime. Right IJOW, Ih ey're

pl.lIlIl ing I~)r 20 03.
,, 's like purr i,,).: ' u~cdler .1 iif?,S.,w pU LZIc

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/\11 ll!' ,he I:.rul, y. 1O~,·.her "i,h dIe
dC.IIl'i, pl.lI1 E\'l'rgn.l' ll\ cll rriculum . i) (,:, lll ,s
.I re LILl I!t \' who LIke 0 11 ,lllll li!1 I~ Lr.lli \' 1'

duties, uSl~,d l y ~i \'il\g up tl.',l(h ill g f~)f thei r

' Th ,1I I ,lllI co ming,
hOIll . .:, (:uming b,ICk

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Addre"s SL' r v iu: Rl"C} u L::-.tcd

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(" lr thqu,Ike.
About '1,200 s tu den ts go 10 t.\,l'fgrcen
righ. now. Th.ll to"d will in crc.lSe by 100
.In

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spen t Sa turda y night with the Evergreen
S.ate Police Services. It was easy to do
- I i ust ca lled and talked to Ch ief Steve
Huntsberry and told him I would like
to do a ride-along. We briefly discussed
logistics and deci ded Saturday night
would be the best. Saturday night came
and Officer Kirk Talmadge showed lip at
the mods to pick me up.
We spenr lhe first part of ,he evening
patrolling. First F-lor, behind the library,
the CAB, to the H CC, back to F-Lor.
Officer Talmadge drove slowly on th e
campus walkways, occasionally waving to
s,udents he knew - you've seen how they
do iJ. He explained he was looking for
any thing out of the o rdinary, anyt hing
unusual. We chatted a bout his history, his
training, rhe way Evergreen cops interact

':tU llll' llmn

,he

II.

see ·Curriculum page 5

The Evergreen Beat: ANight with TESC Cops.

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l'very ye;lr, for Ihe Ill'X! (.·tgl ll ye, H\ ~ I he

by Corey Pein

Lt)upk·

h, I 11.1 h.•""

nd" III

UnIque CurrIculum Faces 'C oI11 mon Challenge

I·or th,11 10 \\orl" ,ite ltdlq:,l Iwn..l ..... 1

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JI.1t1frJllf1, nt left, StflJlr.iS Ih'X//U lI('Ij;·jl'//(/ h'rin (7f 1"5/ U1t'fk's IIIl'e bllck.IIJt. JI/~f!,I}1 "d!y. TI,t' flllllfl rt/ ('l't'nl brings pe()ple ulIl '" /ht'
(I"r/..' "0111"5 10 rio wl"'l tilt' ml(y> ml}lI( j"NJl/Sc'S - n ·r/",·m ,hi' niyJ1I from fl'"'' flJltillio/{'1/i't' flgfllnsl {lI(IJIIOI. Abuul soprup/l'

conunentary

wirh students. Talmadge is an Evergreen
grad and a shop steward, mediating
disputes beween the administration and
the on-campus workers' union.
About then the dispatcher called,
sayi ng he heard squealing tires coming
from the Parkway area and thought there
might ha ve been an accident. We cruised
up and down the Parkway, escorted by
the reflection of sirens on trees, but could
find nothing. Eventually, he turned off
the lights. Maybe it was a car swerving to
avoid a deer. The small shot of adrenaline
I had felt eased and we continued to talk
about his role as a police officer in the
Evergreen com munity.
Within two minures a car had flagged
us down and the people inside said a car
had
farther back,
Overh ulse
directionts, the

PRSRT STD
US Postage
Paid
O lympi .• WA
Permi! #65

3
Prevention of
Violence DTF

C

ontribute to the CPl. You can do it however you wanr to do it. You
can write a stgry ~r an opinion piece. You can take pictures or design a
graphic. You can drop off an announcement. or you can just come up with ideas.
The CP] has a staff to ~ve Yolras much or as little help as you want.
Last week the CP] ran a bunch of pictures of people who work on your
(the students') paper. This week the CP} is doing the same thing. because it's
important thar you know wlto PUts together these sixteen-to-twenty pages that
show up on camp';s every week. .
.
.

Every Wednesday. 3-5 PM..
Library 4300

C Ollllllunit y Ill (' nlbe rs now h:1vC the

l .a_,r ~ p r ill g. Prc.:~ h k'lll I .e\ PUfl..'l'
clppo ill tl'd .1 ~nHlp ~) ~' "( U.. k lll '" .ln t!
tt:'.lLhL' r ~

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II K n:.I~ If) ~ . H ~' rh<.· end
of d, i ~ \\ Inte l. hl' wa n ted !l1 l' g.r() ll p Il )
" ,\t.'1gI CL' il \\',1')

kate stewart..---..

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L

In my third quarter at £vagreen. I came to the CPj to sell advertisiug.
Wh} you ~night ask. did I decide to sell advrrtising? I've spent most ofmy
workllIg lift sellmg or "ounting Ihi1lgs. JO it seemed to be the uext logiral
step. I like to spend my sparr time baking and pracliring rrludOIll arts of
kiudnm arJd semelrss acts of rookin Whl'1l J;" /101 doing that. I climb
trees. make artwork. and sew. liu fiimds wit/; Nair.

volunteer

advertisin2 representative

to ,tlld~' C.'poclta Angola at
~ Ie, rre lu r:ll1dir. a C.'poeira
DlJ s t e r wh o (cac hl..'s III Sl" allk~ ,

" ppo nllni, ),
fr. S(' \\' ith

L.l p ot.:'i rcl An ~o h is .1 1ll .1I"ti .d ~llt
turll l [h.u i .... 11 (J lh ."L' .\ ~illn (' , .1 d,l nce.

.\ 'lt ll .d . ,Inc! ., \l' irilll.\l ' p", n i, e. It is
.\ ,r., dll"")'\I ' \ (rl c.,,, - Br.' lI li .\n .Hr th ,\(

The Dlly of

Bll r I'h , II ,\ I..lllc'. De'.II' nl 'r udl" H
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d Ie l()b j , '0 Lo mp k\ th L'v mi ght 11 0{
Ill e'l' t J e" dl ill e.

lO lllbin l''' IlHI'ii il, .H.: rllh,n il"' • .lllt! Iluid.
"h \' lhI1111.: Ill o (i on. ( ~i\ PQl'ir ll o ll gin .lt ('d

Reflectio1J and

go t to 1I ll c.lnh 'in Illudl

slave r\' ~lflll (0 defend :1UtOIlOIllOU:-'
L'o mmuniri ~s o f focmL' I' sbve,. I[ h", been
pa s~ed d n\',!Jl fr o m maste r to Illas tcr sin ce

I l'UllllIlH.:l1d

" W 't:' \' l"

how to

,[UP

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,1Iul ~.It her .IS III L1L h as W l' C.lll ~ o we
CJ.11 hJ. vc at l e.I 'I l !)o IIH:t h in g to [.Ike.' to
th l' C Ol1llll ll nlt~'. Th l~ i . . ;l hi g l h~H ge , "

, hL' \.,id .
l.a ne ';; ;1 \,' g ro up Ill e mber,. ; h <lve
f..,[ thrce hour, CVl.'r y \X/cdncsday
.. 1J1 Ce "lh ooI Ii LHI c: d. ,tll d th t=y' rl.' still
tr), in g t o In.lk e :-.t: tl SI' ofb.l 'i l C\ , How do
!Il L'!

"ou t"cklc " pruhle·m li ke I'iok-n ee' ir

nate hagen

Dy~CLCapaelraX;DmmJ1Di1'>L

b'jWhifuey KvaSJiger

The CP] office is on rhi: th}rd noor of the CAB (the building with the deli and
bookstore) behind the glass doors in ,he Studenr Activitics arca. Come up any time or
call x6213. Use ,he Cooper Poinr Jo~rnal. ~o make yoursdfheard .

I'm Nat. Ih. Grtal. I like 10 date.
mate, ratt, s~dat~, tlate, shart fate.
and I'm fiimtis with Kate. lin hyped
011 caffi;ru and I have duams outside
ualify f don rlmow me yn. 50 don r ask.
I don't wear a mask and I like to "lax.
live lift to the max. I write at the CPj
and play with fonny idms to compleu
1Iomeme. My life doem't really makl' a1lY
seme. JO this is what YOrt gel.

Come Play Capoeira
Angola at Evergreen

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rn e~II1 ' ~e l{Jn g p Ullch ed ? ( )r Oll e

J e fin e\ ,ex lI;d

.1... ... ,1 11 11 ,1.'\

.Inolh ~ r person d e fin es

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program . I flO Degrl'L". to crcatL' and

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11111 { / "III<' II!"O /iurd i" At/mlltl . G'I'OI;~/n .

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, d ll ''' )'.1 IHOI O/'H'JJt'(/ U I Il /' /('IJI O JIOU I-('(/

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volunteer

theCPJ
General Meetin
5 p.m. Monday
Help decide such things as the Vox
Populi question and what the cover
photo should be.

Pa~er (rin ue
4 p.m. Thursday
Comment on that day's paper. Air
comments, concerns, questions, etc.

Friday Forum
2 p.m. Friday
Join a discussion about journalism
and ethics facilitated by CPJ advisor
Dianne Conrad.

the

Advisor ............................................ ...................... Dianne Conrad

rnovember 15,

2001

'(PJ

_....!.>+¥J.!..!o!~!.illUl 29 Thursdays each academic year. when cI :\.IS is in smion:
the Ist through the 10th Thursday of Fall Quarter and the 2nd through

News ............................................. ........... ............ .. ...... 867-6213
Editor-in-chief......... ........... ................................. Whitney Kvasager
Managing editor .................... ........................................ Corey Pein
News editor ................................................. .... .......... Kevan Moore
l&O editor ....... .. ........................................................... M.A. Selby
Photo editor ............................... ................. Patrick UTurtle" Rogers
A&E editor ....................................... .......................... Chris Mulally
Sports editor ................. ................................. ...... .... .... . Ben Green
Page designers ............................ ......... ...... Katy Maehl. Katrina Kerr
Copy editors ................. :.......................... Meta Hogan, Mosang Miles
Calendar editor ....................... ............................... Chama Calamba
Newsbriefs editor ................................................... Andrew Cochr.ln
Comics editor ........................................................... Nathan Smith

" We're If yin l; ru g rab h u ld o r
reopl"" attirude<." said Lane. "Tha,
way. we can sal' we did rake a compr,,hL'n, il'e luok at th e problem. "
FreemJn', d a" will giw rhe , urvey
to a s mall group of s[Udenrs a' ,he
beg.nning o f nexr quarrer. and L1n e
will Lise th~ informa(ion '0 det ermine
how deep rh e prohlem of viol en ce
go~s and wha( the college should do
about it.
Lane's hunch is rhar students don't
realize when they'r e. in dange rou s
sltua[1on~_

----------------------------------------------1---------------------------------

Business ....... .. ..... ..... ............................ ........................ 867 -6054
Business manager ................... .............................. .... Jen Blackford
Business manager tr.linee ............................................. Sophallong
Asst. business manager ..... .... ...................... ................ Monica Festa
Asst. business managel trainee ................................... Ursula Becker
Advettising representative ................... ......................... Kate Stewart
Ad Proofel and archivist.. ............................................... Jill Hannay
Distribution manager ........................ ........................ Gr.lham Hamby
Ad Designer ...................... ...................... ....... Nicholas Stanislawski
Circulation Manager. ............................... .. .......... . Michaela Monahan

adll1inilirer a Ii lJr\'l:y to see whJ( peopl e
:I ( Eve rgreen t hink viole nce is.

the 10th Thursday of Winter and Spring Quarrers.

i tri ed Free on c,unpus and at various sires in Olympia, Lace)"
and Tumwater. Free distribution is limited ro one copy per edirion per
person. Persons in need of more than one copy should contact the
CPJ business manager in CAB 316 or at 360-867-6054 CO arrange for
multiple copies. The business managet may charge 75 cents for each
copy after the first.
_ is

written edited, and distributed by students enrolled
ar The Evergreen State College. who are solely responsible for its
production and content.

sells

dis la and classified advertising space. Information
about advertising rares, terms. and conditions at< available in CAB 316.
or by request at 360-867-6054.
Contributions from anyTESC studellt dre welcome.
Copies of submission and publication criteria for nonI advertising content are dl·aildble in CAB 316, or by request at
360-867-6213. The Cprs editor-in-chiefhas final say on the
acceptance or rejection of all non-advertising coneene.

Ayear's worth of CPJs is mailed First Class to subscribers
for $35, or Third Class for $23. For information about
subscriptions, call the CPJ business side at (360)
867-6054.

the cooper point journal

" Peop le have a se ns e of , afet y
here." ~he said.
" This is one thou sand acres o f
furest, but there's an assumprion rhat
rhis is a place vou don't have to pay
attenrion. People don't even lock rheir
doors ...
The group isn't ready yet, but Lane
hopes theill have a strong enough
grip on the problem by the middle of
next quarter so she'lI be able to set up
public meerings where students can
say what they think abour violence
at Evergreen_.

••

F.vc rg rccll adlll i ni <it ra{ o r~

Vit't]\/am

brew ing ..l

BX Andrew Cocnran

On Monday. November 12.
Evergreen honored veterans in a
ceremony at the Longhouse. The ceremony-known as Day of Reflec(ion
and Gratirude--gave Evergreen s(aff.
studen ts, and alumni a ch ance to
show appreciation to those who have
give n swea t. blood. and even life
and limb so that (he rest of us can
enjoy the freedoms we toO oFten take
for granted. Even in the strangely
oppressive climate of all-or-nothing
patriotism we see today. we can still
speak out against the governmenr
wi thout fear of state-sanctioned
repercussions. lr should never be
forgotten that this freedom was
earned. at least parrially, rhrough rhe
sacrifices of our men and women in
uniform.
The ceremony at the Longhouse
consis ted of six veterans and one
longtime army wife. It began with
a tradirional song/prayer by the
spiritual leader of the Skokomish
Tribe. The speake rs ran rhe gamut
of experience from a World War [[
veteran of Guadalcanal who sar on
the Evergreen Board of Directors
for six years to a young veteran of

Evergreen in rhe Running Start program.

If rhe legislar llfc .,menll< rhe law. then .he
college's 'board of trusrees will have final say
o n the whether the college participares.
At Tue",c!.IY·,,, board mCt:ting, some tru st-

eeS lVere concerned with some of the plan\
impli cations. New rrusrce Merrirt D. Long
- .00 so chai rm an of Washingron's liquor
conrrol b03fd - worrieJ "bout the plan's
c:: ffccr all Evcrgn:cn·s recruitment of minor·
i ry students.

Most Running Start stlldents 1V0ulJ
come from rhe Olympi., Hca. and Long
pointed out that Hthere's a lack of studenrs
of color in rhe area. "
Trustee David Lamb said rhat it mighr be
,ime to rerhink the college's growth. because
Evergreen mighr no, have the resources to
handle an inAux of students.
"We have a great product." Lamb sdid.
"Too much demand , not enough money. "
The plan. still in its early stages. should
be brough, to the facLilty for consideration
by rhe end of the year.



~

~a

R D.

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peacekeeping missions in Europe and
Africa. The army wife , who moved
thirty rimes in twenty-six yea rs to
follow her artillery-officer husband,
spoke of her deep respect for the army
and its so ldiers. She was followed
by Rebecca Gallogly. a former inteiligence officer who is now the Assistant
Director "f Student Activities. All
included this message: even if we don'r
agree with the policies or leaders of
the current government, we should
support the troops, who are there to
do a nightmarishly unpleasant job and
have no control over what decisions
are made at the highest levels_
These people-indeed all veterans
and their family members- have done
things for rheir country that most 0;
us will never have to contemplate_
They did these things not out of their
own self-interest. but because ir was
their job. Some were drafted unde;
threar of imprisonment; others joined
out of a sense of patriorism. To others.
it was simply the righr rhing to do.
For the innocence they lost. the youth
they surrendered, and rhe sca rs they
bear. they should be remembered,
respected and revered.

• •

••

Books

Olympia's liirsesf Independent Bookstore

(360) 866- BAKE (2253)

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





BLUE
HERoolBl\l<E:RY
4935
BAY
OLYMP'A. WA 98502
MUD

1'(tt'Tlln ,

>Veteran's Day in the Longhouse

more money. 1\lso. rhey hope thar stuJl'l1ts
who f,articiparc in the progralll will choose
to <fJY"' Evergreen a(rcr high school.
Washington State law does nor include

FINE fOOD FROM THE OVEN OF

t radltlOrllll

Twana people and

.1dmin istraro rs wa nt to bring th e program
[ 0 E v~ r g rc.:cll l1L'ca u..,c it will brinb lhl: <;chool



II

splrilualleada of II;,

pl.'n (0 bring high school sll,denr s ro the
co llegr . On Tu""hy. rhey pi. ehcd the plan
ro rh e college's govnnin~ boarJ - Jnd
~ ome all the bO:1rd Iud reSCfV;Hions.
The Running Start prograni allow, high
sc hool srudenr, ro take college class", felt
credir while .he stJte pay' ruition. College





,Ire

1V1'"

pmy" b)' Sub'Y;'

DY Carey Pein

(o rn e-o ns?

meta hogan l

m

Homeroom:
Evergreen

1 11l \\, ~llll l'd

o lh t: r g ro llp Ill e mberli 3 n .'
g rappling widI.
The )' [ 0111111 issioll c d Ccorg c
FreCnl :l l1·o;; Illlliri c uituLll coun selin g

It

GraNl'ude I' ushaed

e ll s L1H.: d
to e~L .'pl·

its firsr d.,),s and i, now "ffcrcd to u, by
Me'stre Jur.,nd,r.
C apo(, lr<1 i.. .1 gam e of wits and hUlllor.
and it " ver v FUN . Beg inners 3nJ
L''1lOeri , t.ls o f ..11 levels .lfC encouraged ro
co m e .1nd pl .1 ~I. No l:'xperi",n ce IH: ce ~s ;1ry.
The ( ",t is S I 0 p~ r lesson .

Ik T S\ ) l1

1 .111 ': :llld

h

f ruln

rap e. lHll

Tho,e , rl' .h e kind , of llue"i"",

rC "' I\l.lllu.' \\'11

Afri eam in Brarit \\'ho uscd

o ne pcp;o n t h ink s "hourin g i\ ,1 'S,Ulh .
h ut .11l othe r pe r\oll t h i nk " .1 .. .. ,l U I ,

..--

or

Button s

1 O (~) Off New

I I I Le gIOn Way SW

Current Qtr. Texts

Downtown Olymp,a
(360) 75 3-5527

We Buy Books Everyday!

' 0 A.M . ' 8 P.M .
FRI. k SAT.

509 E_ 4th Ave_ • 352 -0123
\\ - Ih HI- H,

iTthe cooper _point journal

Fn

~\.

.... ,11 111- '1

.... und,n

"lU ES .. TIIUR5.

10 A,M, · 10 P).1.

II· )

SUN,

No{)~

- 5 p, ~\.

*ea rds

and

Postcards

"Queer

'Glass

Gear

Art

'Sterling Silver
And Lot s More

november 15, 2001

5
---------------------------

-

~1

Oh

for th e week that li es ahead.
, A week offun, a week of joy,
a week of nm h.IYing to be at a school where
people set ofF fire alarms just so they have
something to do. But then, it wouldn't be
college without that brand of tOmfoolery.
This week is
like the preceding
ones in that not a lo r

one student is ta ken to the hospital h r some
ill ness, while the other has an "e1ectrica l
shock injury" in Housing.
Friday, Nov. 9
Do you recall about a
11:34 p.m.
mont h ago or so w hen

· T I_ k a boot was stOlen? You
Yea Verily, G lVe 1 nan S don't? Well, you have
t he chance to rel ive
Fo r Yon Fire Alarms this incide nt as ano ther

happened. We have
some broken glass,
a couple of thens, and of course, fire alarms.
Not to mention the accident that occurred
on Saturday with a green Camaro. Such a
shame. I'm sure it was a lovdy car.
Three more weeks, fo lks, until [ depart
the land of Blo rter. Weep not, for I dm
sure worthy people will fill the space that
[ leave behi nd.
Until then, on with rhe mayhem.
Tuesday, Nov. 6
8:37 a.m.
A window is broken ' n
the door of the Library 4,h noar gallery.
Nothing's missing, which illdiclles the cause
is probably not a cat burglar aher precious
objets d'art.
10:06 p.m.
Like .1 le.lf wahing in the
chilly autumn .Iir, so does ., car drih from
Ian; to lane this nighr. But it is pulled
over and the driver is t:'\·t"IHually .trrc: ..."tt·d

for DUI.
Wednesday, Nov. 7
Nothing happens.
Thursday, Nov. 8
Two medical illl il.k~lH:-' h.lppt·J1

boot is stole n roday.
T he case is still open.
In F·Lo t, anoth er glass1 p. m.
rdated tragedy occurs. as the left rear wi ndow
of a car is damaged. !r "ap peared to have
been hi t with a peller or BB or other pointed
object." The horror, oh the horror. ..
Saturday, Nov. 10
4:05 a.m.
Well, if it's not ,l fire alarm,
it's someone serring off a fire exri nguish{'r in
T- Dorl11. Acco rding ( 0 the rt:porr, a wit ness

heard "three nuics asking each other if the),
should do it and they s;lid, '00 it.'" If ani),
the answer had nor been that.
8:30 p.m.
,\ or flips OHr on
Overhulse Ro.ld. ~ee Ne\\,; for det,lils.
11:46 p.m.
Another fire alarm goe,
ofT ill A-Dorm, btl t tht-'rt' i~ no burning
food. Nay, someone pulled the alarm , but
to wh,lt purpose'
Sunday, Nov, II
Norhing luppens.
Monday, Nov. 12
10:2) J.m.

{OJ.l\', .1:-.

th.ll i\

nO[ .1\

:\ h.1fJ\o;;mt'1H

(.I .... t·

occur,

.lil.lhlL'.

(". Ime h .lck

No Arrests Yet for Bookstore Theft
...Maybe Last Years Perps Graduated. ..
by: .len BlackfOid
t's almoS( th e e nd of fall q uarte r,
and ma nager Pat Miller says thar no
one's bee n arrested yet fo r stea ling from
the Evergreen Bookstore. But that mea ns
no th ing. he says.
"The sim ple fact that there have n't been
any arresls does n't mean it's nOI happen ing, "
Mill er said.
And he wo n't know yet what exacrly has
been stolen until he completes Ihe inventory
on books leftover fro m this quarrer.
T his yea r, Miller said rhey bro ught in
some securiry poople who specialize in retai l
ro go undercover ar rhe beginn in g of the
q uarte r. When the pol ice ar Evergreen did
this last year, M iller s ~ id thaI there were

I

Illl rnerous

a r r eSlS.

After a few weeks, however, th is year's
'il'curiry S3W no act ual thieves. Mill~r S.IYS hl'

knows Ihar there were somc thefrs.
One way he says he can rell is by broken
l':Icbging. Thar's what it's called when a
perso n rakes an item our of its corllaim:r

.md leaves rhe wrapper there.
Th.1' kind of rheft, or rhe raking of
!'o1l1.11lt.'r iren1!oo, such as pens or CIndy b.us,
m,lkes up rhe bulk of the things stolen.
Bur that's not what concerns Miller.
Irs textbook thef" he say', th.lt com the
hooksrore the

1110!)t.

Books arc generally the mo,t e.\l'c,,,,,·o

Oil,

,llI d we sped b.lck lip lh e

P,,,k<V,I~'

• ••• •
The E"<r{'orL"" 5',lIe College Pol ice .II 'CIId ,he

items in the sto re , h e S;]ys. Last yea r,

tex tbooks cost an average of abour $ 105
per book. [-I e sa id rhat most of, the ones
raken were science and math books, which
are usua ll y more expensive than regular
books.
Mill er says Ihat sleali ng fro m rhe
Bookstore is "li ke stea li ng from yo ur fell ow
stude nts," s in ce rhey raise coses to covcr the

amounr rhey lost. LaS! yea r, ,Y1 ill er eSlimates.
bookstore Ih eft COSI T he Evergreen Stale
College $30,000 to $40,000.
"It's eilher thar peop le have a prope nsiry
to steal or they don'r. T he largeS! number
of students on campus are not illlo doing
Ihar," he said. It's Ihe sma ller amount thaT
drive up the costs to students.
T his year, thar amount seems to be even
smaller. While Miller doesn'l know fo r ;lIre
the amounl That rhe bookstore Imt in thefl,
he'll most likely know what alllOUllr it i,
quarrer.
,
He speculaled on :J couple of r~Jsons
why more: people wcn.:: not stc.-:.ding from
I1('X[

the booksrore. "Ir could be Ih,[t The people
who IVere doing it h"ve graduared." Miller

\X:t\h illgtol1 Stilt: H.t\ic (~IW 1':nfc)r("t'1l1t'nl r\cldt'nw,
the s.mlt: .IS ()lympi.1Policl'. -Ii) ger in. d,t.-y' musl p.I::"'..,
.1Sc:'ries of tl'srs: psychologic d. physiC-II. Illt.'dicll, t.'vc:n

"

pol\'~r, ' ph to

check rhc' hnn",r), of ,ht' Glndid,lIe.

()IKt· .1C(c:pu:d into Ihl.· Ac.ldelll)" LlIldid, lIl'!i sp":f1d
lillie ill rhl' t.I.L'-"f{X)1ll Ic.lrning I.IW, pnx.u./urt'. how
10 pn. .~'f''\'e .1 crilllt: \Ct:ne, civil [ighl~ - .111 (hl' (heon'
,\ (O P should kllow lX:tl1It: elHcring (he Iv.1i world.
~I1lC..Tl' l!t .d.so th<..' drivin~ r.IIlv,t.· (w hich ,telll,lll), sounds
likt' .1 101 of 11.111 - you h.I\'l' .1 huge. du,·.ed (\)1I~ to
!!,O .1.-') 1:l':.1 as you CIIl, ,mti .1 profC:.sion.11 ,II \'our ~Ide
urgil lg yuu tu ~o i.:.'\'I;:11 1:15It."r) .1Ild Iht: shooting 1~IIlf.C.
The ""hool
lor live .llId " h,dI' mUIlt!". ThCII
COITles g[';ldlLUio[1.llld EV{Tgra:n.

I.""

The Everl'",,,n I'oli«seem,o {'oenuind~"ike lheir
job;. \Xlhile mas' police S<:e 1ll,lIly dilICn:1H pLul'lc
lor ,I shorl pe riod of tillll'. EVc'rgn:l.:.'n copS.s.t't,' ,I slll."1
group of ptopk' COIlSI.lIltiy. TIn:)' <1ft.' work ing ill .1
closed t'nviroJ1lllel1r - the cOlllmunity they police

is 1ll,lLle lip of hit;h-sehool {'or.,dua,,,,, middle- ,lI\d
UI'I1<:r-d.lss college ,nldenLS. TllL'Y dun', have '0 dd
wit h ti ll' S:1l1. de:.1L1-enJ l if~ \Iurit's Illeircclll nft..'I'}J.lrIS ill
(JI)·lI1pi.1,S(,"'\: I..'\'t.'''' t!.I}~ Evt:rgn..'cn cops ,Irt..' pro[l.'CttXl
by our bubble: t.,,\'ery bil .l<'; much .tS wc .Ire.
Fvefgn.'C1l Poilce: .In: .11sa .tHc>fl:k1.I .1 luxury' must
(Op~ .lfl:l1\: h.lpPY cIHJing", M.lIl), tilll~ ,I l:~P will
lr.lck down .I ~to l en bikc ur lind a Mudent lor .I
worried p:Ul'nl ,lIld .)L"1..: dIl fl'W11i1 iUIl uf tiu::ir dIe>r{s.

3pm Lecture Hall 3
&

7:3 0pm at Temple Beth Hatfjloh , 802 Jefferson St, SE

Israe li checkpoints, protestin g the pr iso n co ndition s of Pal es tini ans, and
witnessing the afterm ath of m assive hou se dem olitions by th e Israe li army.

with Orthodox Jewish friends , and met with the for mer direc to r of the
Palestinia n Jerusale m Ce nter fo r Wom en. Throug h her sli des, you can
see th eir faces and hear th ei r stories.

Their Heart s" (C urb ston e Press). Penn y also ch airs t he Jewi sh Caucu s of th e
Natio nal Wo men's Studies Assoc iat ion and is a docto ral candid ate at t he

What is T



A project designed to work with Evergreen
students to reduce harmful effects of substance
use.



[u .1silu.llion
11t.1l rt'tlllirni .1 firearm .1Ilt! wa\ ht.'lplC5.\ IX'C. l l~ Iht.'

firt'.mn \\',IS lock"d in .1 box. Other oll icers S.IY th,1I
,he)' .lrc' fi,lIy ,r.li ned police, the ~ lI nc' ,IS ,1Il),'olhL'I"
gUIl-c..lrrying cop in i\1lll'fiGI, .1Ild ~huliid rllerdu rt." 1..,l'
rrl:;Ht'd Ih<.: ~ I mt: ,lI1d .dlowcd 10 Glrry ~"llnS,
Opponents Soly
EVl'rgfL"en h,1S .1very low r.JtL'
of violcm ni m(~: .Kcidems .InJ misl.tkc:s with gUIl~

"\,I(

CIIllx: f;II.l I; ,lIld (lien.: .m: lIIyri'lJ .I!tt'rn.lliv~ 10 gum,.
Addi rion,dly. if Evc:rgrt.'t:J1 Sllldl'rllS ()\'cr.vhellliingly
OppO~l.' .Irllled of1icers, tl,e .H_itnilli~lrd:lion <;l1ou ld
~lpillIl.lle 10 fhe m.tlufity. ()nl..' 1~)fIlll'l sludt:nl .15k,.
"How elll wt.° joop,lfdi7..c our r'H:.I(t:iul (umlnullif)'
wilh l!.UIlS?"
Thl.Tt: h.t!:. Ile\'l'r lxl'll .1 [!I,d !!IHx>lillg froll) ,\11
lvcr~reell Pulice OlliLer, bu, ill 1')')8 .11\ ollin'r
n:.signt.xJ .Iltl~r two ,11Iq.!,.lIlons of " imp roper displ.l)'

\1lher t)1l~dUly l.·op, 1....111,1 Brt.'\\'Mt.T, \,\ 'l' ~{OP 1Il ,I~'lx:
.1 [holl,lIld Id.'1 frnlll [ill' filpp<:d elr ,lIld ht' Lip Ol/{
n.lres .md 1')c,t.!,111S lu nllll!!, II' llli.: .Iround. ~lllL .1("Lidel ll
lIx,li'i.., h.lld;o ""-'l' - II ~ I~,~l,:' ulll ,lIld rhe L.lr i:-. hiddl'll
[,1' ,lellr\'C ill UHrh"I",·.,\1I1 c,n 1l\,lkeOlIl i, 1I.I,hin~
Ii!!-h IS .Ind pl.'llpll' milling ,lfOUllll.
\'\,idHIl m[I1lIt~ . .I Clr ~t(JpS by [hl' I..nu'l.·[ .1Ilt..!
~i.\ youllg pt'Oplt..' ~t·[ out. ()ill' i~ lill.· cumlIl
Ihe
dri\'l'r. ()f!lu:r ·J:dlll.ll.lgc dt~ nOI W,111I dH.:1I1 10 1!ll
,IllY doser, J() IHLVcnt Ihl'1ll Irom iJ1(~rlcfillg wil h
R~L1e effons. )0 Ihe}' s[.md. grim, 1l0! t.llkjn~, ill .I
~l1li-ciTcic fH..'.\l to Ih<.: cop c lr. ()Vl'r tht r.ldio, we
hC.IT Ill_I( Ihe IIljuries ,Ire nOI Ih.11 o;eriOtl\, but (0 thl'
Llmil\', it's nOl much cumrort.
S:x,n [\\'0 middlt~.lged wOIlle:n .Irnve -, onl' i~

or

,he llIu,her or ,he dri"rr: T,lm.ldge gelS on rhe r"dio

No one will tell you to quit drinking.
No one will tell you to stop smoking .
Help us understand use patterns, what's happen ing
to students, and what you think.
Watch in your mail for the next two weeks for your
chance to learn more about yourself and your
community.

For mo re inform ation c ontact; El izab eth Mc Hugh o r J aso n Ki l mer at 36 0-867- 5516

MC ' is a collaborative alcohol and drug research/health promotion project conducted by
The Evergreen State College, Western Washington University, and the University of
Washington PBSCI Dept,

disse rtat ion on intern ali ze d ant i-Semitis m.

· sponsored by the Evergreen President's Diversity Fund, the
Jewish Cultural Center and Temple Beth Hatfiloh.

the cooper point journal·

rhe scene. I If"il th=

,i~hr

people,

lollowin~

e.ery

t:ll11ily's \\ nfSt IlIgh 1111.1 re, imo rhe tog, lo\V.mis Lhl'

1I,lShing li~lltS.
Ah,..,d, on ,ho righ' dnd in the ditch,
d0\\11 Cumru lies on ,I crumpled rool:
The Elmil)' breaks into.! run.

• ••• •

"flin:.mll. "

III

,Ig.lin Clnd gels permi'i'iion for C'veryone 10 .lppro.lCh

California Ins titu te of In te gral St udies in San Franci sco, compl eting her

r november 15, 2001

i, would"" .,

protbting this i~"lll: .. Ind no lorums.lfl: bl.'ingpl.lllllcll
ill rill' ncar fi..lI11n:. Thi~ is llClpilt' lilt' Lill Ih,1( Ihe'
i!)...,ul' \\,1\ Ill'\'c,:r re.i1ly <;clllni - We h,1\-l' unly Ihe
\\'.iI<:rl'l.l~dtl\\'1l (tJll1prUl1li~l' til' gUIl\ beillg ~ r urt:d

justice in Israe l / Pales t ine sirrce 1989. In 1992 , Penny publ is hed her boo k
"Voices from a 'Pro mise d Lan d': Palesti nian and Israe li Peace Act ivi sts Speak

~Iy'

or

Penny works w ith t he Mi ddl e East Childre n's Allian ce. th e Coal it ion of Jews f or
Just ice, and Bay Area Wom en in Bl ack: she has bee n w orki ng for pe ace with

I'olice disp,lIeher Ilri,1I1 ",-,hby

"~ rcil injust icl..''' if.lIl uHiler rc.:-.pun lk'tl

r.l[hl·r Ih.m bU!'>IJllg devl'n-Yt'".lf olds lor s«:iiing Cr.Kk.
III OIill'l wor(h.;, the..: cops 011 i.:.. II 11plI~ k'd Iher Lilt
111,lkl' ,I difl~' n.·Illt.·.. lIltl d1.l[ i!l t.:\,lldy \\'Ii\' (he", gOI
inlo polit.l work III (iIe fir~1 pl.llt:'. .
.
..

She also visi t ed the Palestinia n Co unseling Ce nter w hich helps chil d ren dea l
with their emotional trauma resu lti ng fro m Occu pation, ate Shabbat dinner

Proponen ls Oi'.lrllK'\.1 of lice", includinp..llIl}f Ihc
pulit.c I I.likcd 10. poilll ro crime ~t. l ri~lics Ihal ~Jy
.111 .lfl1KXI o/J in-r decn:.LSc.:S. ralher lh.1I1 incre.IM:S. Ihl'
pn)b.lbiiil), llf.1tH. IISllootillf!, in .lll1l1gerou~<; i lll.l ! iOIl.

Surprisill~ly, ,h;; i"'lIc - unCe ,hc'lmn,-p,,~e ,'or),
f<Jr tile e p] nt:;l riy l:'\tT)' wet'k fo r .1 yl':lr - ll.ls .lll1lo~1
wmple,dl' died . There is nu lorrn,u Or~.1llil.II'OIl

Penny Rosenwasser spent 3 weeks in July doing so li darity actio ns with peace
act,vists in Israel & Pales tine: r emoving West Ban k roadblocks, mo ni torin g

h.lI~ml()lL" ~illl.llioll:-.

dru~ \\,:Ir Ill.:re COII~ist~ I.lrgt.:ly ol-:-.c.:ndillg rx:opk' whu
POMl.'S.<; slll.tll .111l011nl~
1ll.lriju.lIl.1 10 griev.1ncl',

Penny Ro senwasse r 's tr ip to

November 15

D avid Pi.I 1I15(.:n, a SC i ~IlLl" proll:sso r, h .l\ l:x:t.:n .11 Ev~rgf(_1.:11 sinLe ]t)7{)' I Ie's lIl.!rriLJ Iu
E\'cr~J't'l:n's f~)rn llT cilitf:lcldclllic ofiic..l.T, B.l rl XIr..1 Smi lh. ( )uring. his lirnt here, Iht' 'i£..hcK)1 h;'lS

"T ime will always lell on the now crop
of freshmen," ho s,lid. Miller S.IVS th.lt jll"
because it diJI1'[ h.lppt.·n in ,:111 d~)(:':-n'[ mean
that winter WO,,'I be din",,·n!.

Slides and Stories from

Thursday

The Same but Different

rhem on ly in '· l if~~d1re. Il t' ll i n ~ situ,uio lls." This
f(;.\.1Jlll lllt.:nlLltion lx:c.l lnc inslilutiufl.lliuJ, .IIIJ t(Xl l"
tlte E\'ergrccl1 Polin' Sl'rvicl'!! Col rr)' Wt:, l pt)n~ 0;1
Iheir hips on ly dllrill~ Ilnll -bu..silless hours (();O(J
p.m. - ROO .un .), OIl1l'rwiSt..." Ihe ~lIn, ,IfI.' SlOrl.'J
111 luck~b<..)xt"S in sqll.ld car~ uf ill Ihe Polin· St:f\'icl.'S
build ing. There .ll't· l'xccplium, lu (hi~ rulc, such
. I ~ es~oJ'lill~ ;1 VIP Ill' responding [0 po[t'llti.dk

-n,t:)· do nm h.tv<" the helpless, ligilling-.lg.lins, -d,e,,, .u,IIKh,· ic-dint; cops III ,he innor ci,y I""·e. The

Hr lite limc \\·t· gl'l ro till' .Iccil.kllr !t(ene.
·l.lllll,l:lgc .dn.-.Ilh h.b.'1 pl'lIl workl.'t.l nUl \\ilh till'

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upsidc-

Tho STickiest issue surrounding ,he cops is the
6'lln question.
As fAr back.1S 1992", pri'''lteconsulring liml hi red
by ,he Vice-President's OHicr recommended "tlw "
Ii mired number ofqual iRed security office", be "rme<1
lVith srandard police duty firearms . .. so that ,\11
armed officer is on CUllpUS at ;ul times."
In 1993, lnrerim President l.es Puree presenred
.mother recommendarion to Ihe Board ofTrus,ees,
rhis one ur!?oing " fully equipped and fully trained
police loree. The Board approved L'Vety point except
one: giving fire,,1l1S ro Evergreen Public Safety (as
Police Services was known). This \V,IS due, in I,nge
part, to Strong sllldent aaivism.
[n 1995 came the ruming point; thar yen, public
fOru ms were hdd ro fucilimle debare on the gun issue.
Despire vety strong sn,denr opposirion, the Bo,ltd of
TIllStees VOTed in FebnL1ty 1996 to arm Evergreen
Public Safety Officers. Immediarely Jfrmv,uds, ,\
student protest spilled out onto Re<I Squ.1re and the
Evergreen Park-w:lY, blocking t..afllc fTom enrering
Ihe College.
Shortly afrer this, ,Ill Armi ng Commitree pU l
fOri h " list of idC<Ls aboUl the scope and exrenr of
Evergreen Selte guns. Among other suggestions was
,I recommendauon tnat Evergreen officers Slore their

.ompage

Welpons in lock-boxes cluri ng II" (by .lIlci relfiew

-.;a id. ()r, he said. the new s(uJl'n[~ might
not be inrerc~ t l'd in steali ng.

• •••

Israel and Palestine

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• ••• •

\\ '1..' It.·,ICI! till.' lI\·t.Tlllrlln l l....lr. Tlit. dll\'l,.·1 I..,
unlt.1I mt:d. t.';trllI..:...,dv r.dklll!!- lU ,I \l.l1e [roupt.:r, lie
p,llI.\a, 1~)tlk-..l/OlIlld, .11ll1 dtlX)JiUdy \llI'Il~\.
Ili.\ Llll1iir. 111H1ill~ Ililll Ull hurt .ll1d h,I\JIlf.!,
llothiIlg IX[It.T h) dll. t.:.~.II11i I1L"" d1l..· (~1Il1.lrn. ()Ill' ~r
till' \\O;lll:1l \.:[I..k.s tilL g.}S Link O.I\'l'l' ~hul ~,md)(x.I>
d'>l' cl.lInlXT\ 1Il1l) rhl' (. If ro get tht.' CL )~.
1\ klll\\ hilt.' Ihl.· p.I~llgl·r, who 11.1.\ LlCi.t1 LUI.~
.lIld .1 po~"ihll' Ill.'lk injury. i. . o.;lr.Jp,x"tIIO .1 w()(k.icn

I)(wd 'o. keep h,", i11\ 11101>"<. I lis ,hin Ius been cut
ulr The dnn:r, bcl\\'L't'n qUt'!Ilium fmlll till' Irl>opl'f.
\\'.Itch~ hi\ Iril..'nd gt.::t io,ldl'J illiO .In .lmbul.lI1u:. Ilis
ITPI'l~iOIl i.\.1 sort of pcrpetll.d sllrpri\.(:.
LUl'r. Wt' lind out Iherc h.l\'l' lx:en no scriulL'"
ilijuriD. dDpill' Iht.' ber I~1.1I neither pc::rsnn Iud ,I

ch.lngl.'ti, blll thl' fUIHi. IIl1t'nt.d"i h.lvl.· reln.lint'tl .
"Sollll' pl.\.)pll' diml)' rL'l11t:mlx:r ,I go/Jell .Igl.·," Solid P,IUISt:I1, whl.·n [hl' curriculum

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ullpl.lIlned ,llId 1I1ll'redict.lble. '1",ILhe" didll" knuw ",1\,11 they would Ix: 'L<'lhinf',. or with
whom, frolll yc-.lr 10 yelf. J~ OIK·lullg-tlllll' t:lt:ulry Je.'M...rilx:d !he pfOC~, "Wnl pur ,III ril\;.'
f;ll.uh \' in ,I h lg. ~i l,lkl' ir ..lltd ~'(.' wll,1I LillI\;.' <HII."
~I 'hl' L'.lrly Yt".lrs werl'n't .dlmilk .\IId hOIlt'y. ~1l/(.IelHs h.ld .1 h,lrd I il11t· ~t' l lIllg in [0 gr.Klu,i{L·
54.:11001 (lX°C'.llI~.: rhl'rt' wt'n.:n'r IIMIl)' .ldv.lI)u.'l.1 (O U IX~), .lIld dlt:)' rlli~J out on prUl!.I";lIlh
tlI.1l di:-"Ippc.lfl'li .Ifier Olle ),t.';Ir.
"You Llluldn'l l.Olllll Ull fl.1!,u l.lr on~rill~\ Ull d rq!,ul. lr b;t!:.i~" P.lul:-.c.:11 .... liJ.
~o till' llirriLullllll gUl .1 link lIlurl.· prl.'llicl.lblc. F<ludlY urg,lIIi7l.'d dlt:lIl..,ekt..'\ hy
SUh'L'CI ,lIld ~t1l'tH mo re rilill' {ugc.:lhcr pl.lIl1l1l1g p rogr.lJ)J~. Morl..· progr,ull\ .Ippe.lred
Oil , I fept::l1 jllg LYLle.
By i1ll' lllid -'l)O!->, /:1C.:ulty \\:nrril.'(l dt.1I I ht' curriculum h.ILIlx.--col11e ~l.lgll.Il1L '(00 111.111)'
I)(:oplt' \wre It"lChil1g Iht· ~tnll' progr.uns wi th Iht-' 5..lllle pl.'ople. ~ ,hl..' I:KlJIY "g.un rl.-'lll.lJt.'
EVl'q!,rt.'en'<; .1c.IJl.'lnic S{nIctun:. "'nlt.'ir go.J \Y;L-') [0 !!,ivc St udcnlS cumistcI1 1 un~rillf!,.\, whilt.:
~d lowing. !:luII IY tlll·fruJoll1 10 o:p<:riml'1l1 wllh illlerdiscip li n.lry <; rudies.
Tiley I1I.1Jt: k'wn f!.rolipS 01- r.lndry wilh more mem bers, ,lIld cdled [hem "pl'lIll1lJ1g
units." !\IlJ tilcy dl.'vi~l."L1 .1 ~ystcll1 n..'qlllrin~ l:lClihy 10 spend .thOUI h.llr of dll.'jr lime
c:ilhc:r te.tchin~ lirsl ~yc lr ~l lI dl.'n1s ill .1 Curc prog,r,1 III , or 1e.ICltillg wilh r.lndry ou[sidc
tht:ir pl.umillg ulIiL
"If' Ihe 1..lculIy dOIl'1 \\,;1111 10 do \\ h.1I studt'llls W.lllt to do. lhere\ .1 prubk': IIl ," P.HII~1I
~•.l\'S.

. A... , t.uurdlll.llvr of EVt·fgrt.'l·II~ ~il'l1(e p!.um ing un it, 1'.IUbell ! ri~ to ~ive \llIJtll[!-. wll.1I
lilt·), \V,lIlr. I It..- !l. 1"~ u)/L<;i~ll'IICV III thc utrril.ulllill i~ L"i!x-:1..i.llly ill1POfl.HlI III Ihe scienu.~. whtrl'
:-ludcl!l~ 1I 1LL\! learn the 1J.l.\iL\ before Ihey Lin 11I0VC OIl.
"\'(Ie Iry IU rel leel SllldL'1II ilJ[cf'l..:'![s li l'l m,lking Ihe curricuium )," said P.lulscn. 'flit:: lullegc.:
j!..llIW..:... , ~ l lIdl'nl IfIll'fCS{ by l(x,klllg.1I which d,~ lill up quic..kly, rhrough (llIl1:.II(}lIin~
.Ind \vofd~o f ~11 1011rh.
(.)"11.-'. 'Jubjcc[s. like hi~tury and tlte illllll.l1lilie!!, don'l nct.:d 10 be .Is structured ~b
~Lil·IILL'. BUI lll.tIl)' progr. l l11:-' repc.1t .11l)'W,ly. bec.lusc.-: siuJconls prd~r n::gul<lr ufl~·rillgs.

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f.ICult), dOIl't like

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"hill don " progr.ml ,h,1I works well, jlL\! lor the sake 01

Iryingsum<:lhin~ 11t'w.

I I." th,1I kind ufcollS;;'eIK), de'r.JLled fro m ,he ""II{IOI, philosophy of experimtnt,lIion'
·· I<II\.Itl' f;" ,hi, pl.lce 'u !!oct ,o,."ly rolltini7.t:d ,lIld pl1.·dict"blo," 1',luiS<:n 5.lid.l lowL'u, he
.1CkllowkxlJ..!,o (h.lt pl.1r1llers' priority i."i In pruvide I.OnSlslcll t pf{Jgr.J1Il on(..ril1~.
PI,\I1Ill:r:-. !l.ly Iht: Lurri(ulull1 ~1;Jy,) !lIixl.'l.I Ix.'C.llL\e beu"y i"i <;Iill Hying nt"w idt"~t.s ••ll1d dlt:
LKtdry IC:II11~ Ih,1I Ictch progr:llns !-.lill..,wilCh I11t"Jllhc:rs.
I !m'\'L,\·tT. if t11I..Tl· .1n:n'l cn( High (Kuhy [0 letch .1 t.l'rt.lin ~uhjL'U, ilK' f.KUlty \\·!to 1...11l rtlll.')1
"i11\.1 wuh their ,tn..'.l uf t."\(pcrris(:. And Ih t: lollegt: tfit..~ \(.I kL't:p mOfl' o.lx.Tll·nu.:d L\Cu!ty III c.ort:
pro~r_ ull '" - lu n ilc...:r \Illlilill).!,lhc llulIll)(.,.'r oll.IUIIt~ who Com try IIt..'W U.lCL..,.
Nl,\\ rcqu m:1l Will.'" pl.lCl'l./l11l J \ t:q.!.rt..'t:JlII.I\l· 111.lde j r lovell lou!!l'l..'r lor tKtdl)' 10 t::>:pc:nmUl [
\\'[rh II1[cn..II'-liplill.ir.- f)/'l1gr.lllh .
[.1..,1 Ie.lr (ltl' ( :, Jill III I'\.... i( 111 (Ill ( o( ,lIq!.u, \om l (h,1t I-\'crgrn:n ..,1Udt'IH" \\trl.·!l·1 IX.'lI1g CXpl 1~'l.i
HI l'nuu~h llilkrl'lli \u hil.'ll\ ~ p.lrt ii.:.ul. lrly 111,1111, \Ul.·llce, .lIld IhL' .in,". j'hl' COl11m~iul1 ~ ..Ill
,ll.t..Tt.'tlil.llll>!l ho.ml !lUI gr, lIl1!! ~h()()I.., rhe pO\\l.-'r to 1t.lIld out k-giUItI.lIl· dl'Wl~. WidlOlIl
thl'if ,lppm\·,tl, .ll.!JpIOI11,II'" JlI!I! p.q'X:l'.
So Ihe college. ,!lIlT ye.lr.., ofdeh.lIl' .IJ1IUllg the fJL'lIiry. Llmt: lip wuh "~~nl'r:t1 L1..llIc..uion'
rt..'qliirellll'llt~. '1'1161.: t.h,1 11!!t'l1 Ih e..: W,I) Fvt.'rgrcen', cU TTI(ulurn Is ~lruL !Lln;d. r\o\\' I.-'\'cry
progr..Ull i... "iUppo_,t:d [0 h,l\'l' .1link, bl! Illore Ill,tlh, SLil'llo,:, ,1Ild .trI .
Virgiill.1 (" lin") I ).JrIll'Y I~ thc d<:.Ul in lh.lrgl' or the Evcrgn.:c.:n's cu rriculum. ~ht..'·~ bn.:n
,Il LwrgrcclI ~ 1I1lt..' I~)-~. ~Ill' 's;'1)'S Ih.1I rli.lIlk. . 10 delll.lIld from Mudcnl5 .lnJ I:Kul!\" and
(Ill' !In.'' gt:IIl·r.11 t::d tlClIloll rcqllirL'mt:nt~, [n::rf,rt'ell will h,lvc more fepc<lIing pro~r.lm s
III COil

ling !,<..:Ir>.

Ilml:'it':lch. I think they're: lx:ing rltxl. lllt;C unlil l rClliA'
how I1UII\, .lCcldelll SCl'IlD Iht..'\"vl' lx:t'll 10.
Even'tu.liI), dll"~lle iscle.lI'lc:d up. -nlc.;..lln15uJ.II1Cl'

°1111' mure prugrallls rqx. ·.H, rh<.: more slruL'llIn:d [he pl.ll1ning unib lX'come, f).lrtll·Y
.... 1)'\. BlII . . he pOIIW. our 111.11 f.lculiy ';witch lip t:\·tn when programs rq:x:'-II. i\ progr.lm
could h.I\·t: IhL' .."II11l' lidt.· l'ver)' )"l·.lr, but Iht.: cu ntent will ch.lIlge depending on (he
/.ll.,tilry who [t:Kh II.
fllrney .... I}'') Ih,1I hi'ing enuugh Lludlv is kt.:y to kecping the cu rri c ulum (rom
"'1,I~n.ilin/-!.. "! lllIcrJi..,uplill.lry ~tuJy] n.:quirc~ enough f.lcuity ~o th.1I tilt.' rul.lllun t:.I 1l

):'-"'" '0 the hospi,.", lht' I:llnil)' 16110", .. llId .1 'ow

luppe",' ,hcsaid.

S,-,"belt 011 . BOIh COP' keLp "yin~ ho\\' luck)' ,he)'
both wort th,1' lIS<: ,ht' word 'Iueb' ,Ibuut ,hree

truck Lumt'S to right lht' overturned c.U. We ndt'

b.lck TO Police Services where the set'ne will !."ve
ro be immort,u iZL1.1 in paperwork. Vehicul.lr 'error
dett:fior..ltes inro bultlucr.lC.y.

• ••• •

Regardless of how you Ittl about police dlicm in
gener"I, i, hard to come """.Iy fmm d scme like this
wilhouT d newlound sense or respect. 11,is is 'Nh,1t
cops spend mosr of their rime doing - the actual grir
work of ,I(cidem seen", <lnd "lIi ng our rcpom, of
directing Imfne and patrolling parking 10LS.
An evening witl, Evergreen Police Services t,lugh,
me th"t rhey reall)' a", here for us. They bOlh desire
'a and are m.Uldlted '0 prorect us. Conflias between
Ihose who possess ,11Ithoriry and those who fall under
such authority are ineviGlble - indeed, such con flict is
necesS<lrY'0 maintain the balance of power. However.
when we chal lenge rhose in power it shou ld be
consequential, dlOughtful, and legiti male. We musr
bring mf>lningfui issues to me table, and we must strive
ro unde"'tand ti,e otl,er side's point of view.
[f you \vould like lOsee whal it means to be ;m
Evergreen State College Police Officer, JUST call x6 140
or x6 155 and ask to talk to ChicfSlcve I-1U1llSberry
[I may rake a couple of days and a little paperwork,
but ti, e police are more Ihan happy to have you
ride along with them. Itsa fascinati ng experience, it
widens your perspective, and it mighl even convince
you to wear your scatbelr Ihe next time you get
behind t.he wheel.

s

the cooper point journal

Change's Course
These citys, rhl' pressures on EvcrgfLm ,Ire heavier. And lhis lime, 'hech,mges to Ever!\reen's
curriculum migh, be SUbsLUI,ial.
This Y"Ir, Evergreen P""idem L.es Purce hired ,I new pruvost, Or ch ief academic officer.
Enrique Riveros-Schdfer e'me from Dc An", College in G liforn ia, where he ran lhe
26,OOO-Sludenr school's language arLS division.
Riveros-Sch;ifer is st ill b rn ing abour Ihe way Evergreen works. Nevert heless, he
knows what he W'dOLS to do. One of his priorities i< implemen ting the general educalion
requirements. Another is bringi ng more people to Evergreen - and he sees part-time
courses as a way to do rhis.
Evergreen did not offer part-ti me courses unci! five Y"'I'" ago. Now, college planners envision
p,trt-lime courses as a palh 'a growth - 5,000 sludenrs by 20 IO.
But U1C same planne", say rhat srudenLS who take only part-li me classes do not get
the s.ame inrerdisciplin. ry ex perience OUI o r Evergreen. The pa n -time fac ul ty are n't
,r.lined like regular facullY, and the cou""" don'r bring different .u-eas together Ihe way
a full-time progrJffi does.
O ne £,culty planner sa id the growth of pan-time srudies is the most importanT change
ar the school, "because it opens the opportunity fo r full -lime srudems ro take four COUI'SCS which is like an education they could get at Western or UW"
Riveros-Schafer agrees that parr-lime srudenrs don't have dle SlIlle experience as ful l-time
studenLS, but says that people in the Olym pia community w,lOr Evergreen 'a do more.
He thinks Iha, parr-rime classes can be added in a way that does not interfere wilh the
school's regula r curriculum.
Bur it comes down to money: money for the reachers, equipmt:nt, and space il takes
to keep d= small and inrerdisciplinary. "We ca n certainly funaion ... if new resources
are added," Riveros-Schafer s.aid.
Will the state come u,rough with [he funds'
"We have vety litTle idea abour thal."

november 15, 2001

letters and opinions
Wrong Information = Wrong Opinion

The Tao of
Nonsense Says

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to do with getting an education (or job
I month, me U.S. Supreme COU[[
,dused to hear a case challenging training skills)?
Studen[S go to school to learn. At
J Virginia law that requires public
,dwul., 10 observe a "moment of silence" least, that's what we're told mey are there
for. That's another subject for another
- -- I, ""V, presumably because, according
to l he l u urt ®f
violate
tic~.Yubli£ s<;,h ools offer...9n~ way of
.11' V IJW, regarding separation of church learnmg while teaching specific subjects
.",d SI.lle. [ts re;:soning was that students deemed worthwhile by me Establishment .
could do something else during me brief Religious beliefs and values are not one
pniod; prayer was not a requirement. of tho.e subjects, or at least shouldn't
Civen rhe nature of the act, it's obvious be. 'Separation of church and slate has
rhdt wlutever they do, they would have always been a mym, and for students with
different faiths or no faim, a "moment of
[0 be silellt! Maybe they could color, read,
dayd'<.lm, o'r leave the vicinity (with a silence" is another moment of oppression,
11.111 p.1SS) , but they surely couldn't jump discrimination, and fear, just like school
up .rnd down, talk or sing. If they leave, celebrations of Christmas and Columbus
thC)· wou ld be targeted by peers and Day.
The futility of the "/Tiornent of silence"
reache" ali ke for harassment. Clearly;
is
absurd.
Anyone who has ever meditated
Ihe C<1n«rvative court is protecting some
ind,v,du,.t" rights at the cost. of others-if in any form knows that one minute of
quiet (not in your head) is insufficient to
nothin~ else, at the cost of all citizens' (even
minD"' ) right to think about whatever accomplish anyming, except a quiet room.
they Wdlll whenever they want. But the Rather, the act 'is a self-serving moment
question I ponder is this: why should there of atonement for one's complicity. It only
be J "moment of silence" during school serves the interests of those perfor,m ing it
hours in the first· place? What', that got -,or those requesting that. it be performed,

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heritage. Throughout history these have all been words of
pain. degradation, and violence.
3.) As to me multiple references to the penis, cock and
masturbation - is me penis really all that interesting? Do we
really need multiple drawinl}' focused on the penis and issues
of masturbation? Isn't that rather phallocentric and possibly
misogynistic? Isn't there anything more entertaining than mat
lump of flesh between your legs? Congratulations, you know
about masturbation - is it really necessaty to create a cartoon
illustrating this fact for the entire community?
However, the comics mentioned above all pale in
comparison to the offensiveness of Ben Parrish's "Anarchist
Parody Cartoon." First let me say, I love the humor and non
sequitur-ness of "Who Likes Milkshakes," but the ca[[oon of
November 8 is utterly offensive.
It depicts a male entity representing "Major Corporations"
having forcible sex with another man bent over on all fours.
If you disagree thar it's forcible, look at it this way: A.) The
common phrase used when describing this situation is that
one is "getting screwed by the Man" or "getting fucked by
the corporations"; B.) The words "screwed" and "fucked" in

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ar the Steve Hughes post-election parry
(Saturday, Nov. 10) and made a number
of pronouncements' about how he saw the
e1ecrion, Matt _nt on about the middle
10% thar T.]. losr. He implied that it was
the "undecided. uninformed" electorate; actually, that was the centrist Dem9s who
don't care about who the candi4ate is, as

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that "bitch is as offensive to some women as "f.aggot" is to me

as a gay man or as n···.-. tl is to somwne ofMrican-American

this connotation are negative; C.) If the usage is negative,
that means the actions are unwanted; D.) If the actions arc
unwanted, that means it is forcible sex. and forcible sex is
just a polite way of saying rape. Why is male-to-male sex
so amusing? Examine your own ideas about sex: most often
people ridicule that which they don't understand or feel
uncomfortable with. But on top of that, and much more
importandy, what me hell is ever funny about rape of any
kind in any context?
If a comic were handed in to the CP] depicting a woman
getting raped by a man. it would never see me printing press.
So why did the CP} decide to publish mis particular comic?
Additionally, if any of mese pieces had been submitted in
written form, mey would have gone through severe revisions
based on acceptability, so what makes mem so much mone
acceptable in cartoon form?
I am not calling for out-and-out censorship, but what
I personally see as an application of common sense, or
what me court system refers to as the "reasonable person·
standard, and the creation of a[[istic guidelines. If mere are
rules and regulations for writers, reporters, columnists and
photographers (and mere are rules and regu1ations for all of
mose positions). men mere should also be rules and regu1ations
for cartoonists and visual artists who wish to contribute to me
CP}, so mat never again will I or anyone else be presentedwim
a visual depiction of rape in me "funny" pages.
- Selby

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COllllC pages an amusing romp and a nice way to
fi,mh that week's edition.
Nor ") (or the comic.< of November 8, 2001. There's a
H.,llov.c<·11 edi tion of "G ive the Kids What They Want"
i'0rtr.lvtn~ _o meone who appears to be of African-American
de,cellt dre~'cd as 3 "white" peni.< and later as a Klansman.
,\ddirron.dlv. within the comic are at least three references to
,he penIS, [he l ock, or masturbation. There's another comic
entlticd "Slick My Dick," with more cock references. The
<omit "0111 cn Lunch," while vague, appears to be about a
t .lllun~ p"n" ,Ind masrurbation. AddiTionally, mere are two
I..'OnllC\ th .1t refe r [0 women as bitches.
I ) Now .1\ for someone dressing up as a Klansman of
the KKK for H.Jlow«n, the same incident happened down
In Auburn , Abbama this vear with not-at-all humorous
r,·,ult.< I'm more informat'ion, read The Atlanta JournalComritutlon ,H www.ajc.com or The Auburn Plainsman at
\\\\'w. {hel'l.ll l1\nl J Il.com.
2 ,) CJ.llcng .myone a bitch is a big no-no in my book. And
I'll be the firq !O admit - I'm human and not perfect - me
n.lmc hJS p.lSS<·d my lips. However, I strive on a daily basis to
exam,"e the I.mguage and word choice I use. I would imagine

school gymnasium during assemblies at me
unfurling of Old Glory and the inevitable
pledge of allegiance. Unlike most, I didn't
place my hand on my heart and recite the
pledge of allegiance (although I do have
it memorized , th anks to all those yeats
of schooling). I just srood mere. Defiant
to authoriry, rejecting the use of god in
an oath to government, not believing in
a god. If I had said it, it would've been a
lie anyway. Yet I stood. Why did I srand?
Ironically, not to stand would've made
me st3Q,d out. For a teenager, that's the
end.
1 thank god (?!) that I am not a teenager
anymore. After 20 years of schooling I
am learning how to de-school myself. It's
hard. It's unpleasant. Uncovering me lies
and illusions is never enjoyable, but it is
worth it. My privileged real:tt is a ~e
that maintains order in the system that
governs my life and yours. Without it,
things fall apart. Now I take it one day .
at a time, steadily chipping away with
my metaphorical axe at the false truths,
assumptions, myths and habits' that prevent
me from seeing the world as it is. When
I chop wood I feel myself taking control
of my life and my mind. Right now the
cf.lcks are small and it takes a lot of hard
work. Every once in a while I strike me log .
just right, and it splits in two. A moment of
clarity. Those momentous breakthroughs
arc when 1welcome a "moment of silence"
in my own private space. my mind.
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while harming those who refuse roo It
is a subtle form of social control and
co nformity, just like si tting at desks,
driving cars, and watching Tv.
What the "moment of silence" doesn't
do is teach anything, except where people
fit in. In short, the "moment of silence"
has no place in public schools. Public
schools tend to be places of diversity,
so one method of forc ed atonement
cannot respect others' beliefs. We should
leave expressions of group faith out of
the classroom . This does not mean that
individuals can't practice or express their
religious views. It means that classrooms
should be used for learning what they
were set up to teach, not what a majority
or minority religious sect feels is the
appropriate reaction to an eveni.
An assumption to be addressed in the
"moment of silence" is the notion that
e"eryone feels or at leaSt ought to share
the same feelings that 'elicit a call for the
moment of quiet. What happens to those
who do not feel the same? Most likely, they
lower their eyes like the rest of the sheep in
fear of being discovered. The lesson is mat
it isn't okay to have a 'different opinion.
Your opinion isn't requested. The idea
that someone, especially a student, may
hold a different sentiment isn't considered.
~ow could anyone feel differently man
you? If mey do, what is wrong wim them?
They are less human, less patriotic, less
worthy.
A decade ago r s!ood up in my high

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lection night found me dropping - 'most-of the Republican vote plus.the part
in at the SWaDtown Inn to celebrate of the Demo vote tharseeks a conservative
with all the Friends ofT.J.]ohnson. candidate. T.}. gor the liberal side of
Bur as the night wore on, the numbers the Demo parry plus the Greens. It just
didn't look good. T.]. was [osingby over wasn't enough (or as many suspect, the
500 votes. Doug Mah. his opponent and "liberal part of the community docs not
the presumed victor, is a Republican consistently'show up at the polls to vote)
posingasa Democrat, and my guess is mat 'So Doug Mah most likely has position
a considerable number of Republicans felt 5.
.
comfortable "cr()SSing over." So Mah got
I heard that Matt Green showed up

the cooper paint journal

Q

Fin.ishing
T0 U c he s

Orissi Dress Rehersai

Paths of Glory:

a Review

Fra?~
T~~,
(Kirk LJot:iglas)ii 4~

;61i 'Ii'l'm'ltr
World.. War 1 We af'(' InlJ
l«g
ntalrlif'OLig

...... .

til e gl'lS~. trenches.
[t is t he fi gh t for I~o rr DouamotH during the Bat rl e of Verdun, a six-mo nth
bloudbath th ar claimed the lives of3 15,OOO french soldi ers.
Last Thu rsday, th e Capito l Theater held a special view in g of Stanley Kubrick's
breakthrough feat ure Paths of Glory, and o nce again I was co n vi nced (as I
Jm every t im e I watch anyt hi ng eve n remote ly relati ng to it ) that war is
absurd.
Pat/)s of Clory, II rst released
in 19 57, was Kubrick's first
maj or success and was the first
of three orhis movies with ant ian d
war senr im enrs. Ir was followed
by Dr. Strange/ave or: HoUi f

A"

hour imo dress rehearsal, it's a jumble of confusion.
Three musicians sit on rhe stage and wonder if they could
have anything between them and the floor - "Whar's the status of
the rug, dude? " - but get distracted by their instruments. "Play that
parr again .. . does this sound out of rune?"
The tech crew has hes out light cues. "Ratna speaks, rhe n the
ligh ts come up?" "No, the ho use lig hts go OUt. " "This is for the
hand gesrures?" "Yeah, there's another light for rha!." "This is her
dance, rltis is her ex.it ". you , 1)Quld be writing these cues down ".
do you need a flashlight?"
Dancers adjust their costumes and stretch and la ugh.
Slowly, tech ni cal components are smoot hed into place. The
performance begins to take shape.
Feet slap hard and rhythmic, replacing puddles of cab les on
cemer stage.
The liquid sitar invades territory stolen by a rgumenrs and
small talk.
A technician, talking imo a headset, walks off stage. "I think
we're looking good here. "
Abov_, Jami. Lynn Collry and Frank Cauy. Right, John Abrams
usts th_ tllning of his tab/as.

1

Glory ,q.a tionalism,

vlctory

at
all costs.

Leamed to Srop Worrying alld
LOl'e rbe Bomb ( 1964) a nd Filii

The House That Died and Lived
We root for and cry about Kevin Kline in the movie My Life as a House

~--------------------------------------,

by Cbns MutaUy

I

know a big ho use that comains a stepfather, a prostitute, a co nfused and helpless
morher, a few kids that hate their stepfather, and a few pictures of Marilyn
Manson . I'll not forget the main character, Kevin Kline, who has four months to
live and is the filther of all of the children, including the prostitute. He is our mam
arrraction . He lives in a shack where the sea kisses rocks on the shore.
[n th e new movi e My Life as a H OIISI;', we wa rch thi s man as he is fired
from hi s job, finds out he h as cancer, a nd realize. he mu st change hi s li fe
before he dies.
As dea th is ham mering o n the d oor, he realizes he has a m iss ion to co mpl ete. To
do it , he needs hi s so n, b ur his so n's no help. His so n hares everyo ne and maintains
hi s drug abuse by selling him self to va rious men, including h;s father's neighbor.
The scripr rwists like rhi s, so thal characters exist wirh their feel in t he web of each
other's lives. Everyone's rel ated to eve ryone else.
Ove rall, the story is wi lt y. 1 warn you, th ere a re a few minutes of cheesy
footage, bur yo u sho uld prac ti ce some Ru dJhisl non-allachment. Besides, you
can only predict pan s of rhe movie. Overa ll. it is fun to watch. and rhe re are
sO lll e reall), bea utiful shors . So if you have ever beel! depressed, felt weak or
raken advantage of; or if you have fallen so mewhat in love, )'ou wi ll probab l)'
be Jble to relJte to this movie.

!lfetal Jllcket (1987) . Adaptcd from the 1935 nuvel of the "llne name by
Humphrey Cobb, Paths of Glory draws a rhick li ne betwee n lh o!>" who g ive
orders and rhose who must carry t hem out in what sho uld ar leasr be a team
effurr when thousa nd s upo n thousands of lives are at stake .
Unbek nownsr to Co lo nel Dax, a sc heme is building behind hidde n and
closed doors wirhin the grand chateau of military headquarters, f.1f away from
any conceivable h arm .
.
.
Ge n e ral George Broulard (Ado lph e Menjou ) has b ee n mal1lpulartng
h is s ub o rdinate oFficer-the division a l Ge nera l Pa ul Mire a u (George
Macready)-into sending his men on a s ui c ide mission to capture a " key
position" call ed the Anthill.
Mireau knows (he plan is ill conceived and that his men are doom ~d, but
when promised glory, respect, and a promotion for taktng such brave acti o n (o n
rh e sidelines) , he qui ckly ch anges his mind with blind ambition and heads for
the trenches to carry out the order.
Emc:ring the trench es in a fl awless and imm acula te uniform , he greets t he
men, "Hell o there , soldier, ready to kill more Ger man s~" These are the same
men that, upon failure of the mission , he is willing to sac rifi ce in court to
save h is own reputation.
T he men h e g reets are scratch ed, brui sed , bloodied and sh e ll -s hoc ked ,
all of whi c h appea rs to be normal to Mireau as h e continu es to let vam
pride gu ide him.
.
..
After hearin g rh e order, Colonel Dax IS stunned and, at first, unwilltng, but
he k nows if he doesn't co ncede, someone else will.
O bviously. th e a[[ack is a failure, and Mireau is di sgra~ed and must cove r
I' P hi s misjudgmenr to Save face. He purs three of Dax s m en on rna l for
mutiny and coward ice in the fa ce of t he enemy, borh charges pul1ts h able by
death in ( he military co urts.
T his trial IS agreed upon by Broul ard to set an example for the other trOOps. At
this point , D:lx is for('ed to d efend hi s own troops 10 the co urts, but he IS unable
to bring fonh rel eva nt evidence that will help the cases of the men.
.
If you h zvcl:t al ready figured out thi s tragedy, I reco mm end you rent rhl s
film as soon as possible. It has d efinitely insp ired some of our favorites from th iS
generati o n. And besides, how could you turn down Stan ley Kubrick' .
Th e film is in b lack and white and almost fifty years o ld , but It Is a good
remi nder t hat universa lly, thc main milirary purposes are glory, nationalism, and
victory at all costs. even jf ir means putting yuur own men o n m al. ThiS fdm
just might hdp make scnse of today's tragedies.



M~ETING
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Deadline for text and payment is 3 p.m. every Friday. Student Rate is just
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stop by the CPJ, Cab 316.

the cooper pOint Journal



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the cooper point journal

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november 15, 2001

£10
this week's

top stories

world news and commentary

arts it entertainment

-WTO Meets in Qatar,Admits China


pom EPIC ""

ElItrgrt'fll Po/if icnl

-Global Warming Fears Further Substantiated
-Bush Pushes "Armies of Compassion"Bil in Senate

by Steve Karma!. Brad MartTris: KiiilfIiii-MoirTs,' aiiCJ MatfWiils1i~~

fllfo,.,,,,uion Center.
EPIC IIbo pllblish" II
roaki), <-mflilupdflte
on politiedlfy relfltt'd
")ClUJ hflppming
around ollr arm and

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charges with signed confessi o ns. However,
rhe evidence lroduced to the court by _ __- _
recently slain human rights attorney
Digna O choa proved the confessions
we re produced ill egally through the
to rture of the two men . This evidence,
acknowledged President Fox,
the c atalyst for their rele ase.
www. e ns .lycos.com)
WTO conflict over TRIPS: Brazil. India
and other developing nations a re challenging the stringency of intellectual property
rights in the w a ke of U.S. con s ideration to
revok e Bayer's patent on Cipro, the much
tou ted dtug used to treat the recent outbreak
of a nthrax cases . Intellectual property rights
are considered by many de'leloping nations
to be a barrier to ' supp lying ailing populations with affordable treatments. (see
www. nytimes.com)

China
gains
membership
into the world's
most elite club: Saturday, November 10. at the World Trade Organization
meeting in Doha , Qatar, the WTO voted unanimously to make China
a member, a decision pending since 1986. when China first expressed
interest . The invitation was also extended to Taiwan, mak ing the rivals
the WTO's 143rd and 144th members. China's e ntry accelerates its
growing role as an economic power and illustrates the desire of the
world economic community to incorporate this power. By the time
negotiations were finished, the Chinese government had agreed to a
package of market-opening measures expected to radically transform the
$1.1 trillion economy and change the lives of its 1.3 billion people. The
terms of China's WTO accession allow foreign companies to develop
their own wholes ale and retail distribution centers in China. double
agricultural exports to China, and force the dismantling of unprofitable
state indusrries . Amo ng the harsh austerity measures that accompany
membership into the WTO. China's promised agricultural reforms will
produce the most wrenching and violent adj ustments. Problems have
arisen around the issue of farm trade liberalization as the U.S .• Canada.
Brazil, and· Australia demand abol ition of farm export subsidies.
while the European .Union sees these subsidies as necessary, regarding
farmers as serving a wider environmental role that deserves publicly
funded compensation . By agreeing to eliminate export subsidies and
curtail other forms of farm support. m illions of suddenly "inefficient"
farmers will be forced off the land and into urban labor poo ls. (see
www.latimes.com)
Political prisoners released in Mexico : Mexico's President Vincente Fox
ordered the release last week of political prisoners Rodolfo Montiel Flores
and Teodoro Cabrera Garcia . The two men had ' organized opposition

International

InoVember 15,·, 20(1

-

_

...Ih~ Crocodile Cafe fell In love with the band named Pinback

___ _

-

-

-=- _ _ - - -

b? n~dl, IWO singc rs_sj1a red 'rhe lyrics. Olle was Ihe piallo player (whu "Iw srood up alld played bass), and one w'" the gUI""'" (w h" also pial'L:d b,,>; sometimes, but

a wa) s rt:; ITI .lI lh ; ....ta n dll1~). ,l hc)' we re helV)' 0 1.1 loop ing. telli ng lokes h(,..'rwct.:11 . . u ll g.'!. harmo n iL'. . , and g usto. .
.
. \'\1" fdl till' we lgh,t ,,1,he'II' eyebrow r;mes. lacia l. grimaces. 'Illiks, h.lrrull1p hs, IOllg hdu · IHltC\, and all rhal hllsiness. Wc' were .,Ilracted to thelll . ,1Ild I rcmcmDcr the
stla nds nt lilt" ~? I ~1/11~( 5 ha ll: a. . rhL'y \i\vung like fl ny vine . . dUring so mc .'!(HI of .'!oln of h.lllllll l.' n ng key. . .

p.m. 70 I1Jflk, romm ents 0 7J tlu nt'ws,

I III :er~lS of I-" elr II ll1SlC everyone I ,alked lt~ Iud heard Ihei r record, before and was iml' IT\\ed by rhei r melodie s, loop, .ll1d h"rmonie,. MUll had nor' 'ce n
I lem I'" hIli had some SOl I of deep adora tln ll lor ,hem. AI d,C\' pl.l.l·cd. rhe,v :" ked rh.lt the lights be tll rned dowlI Inw. Their lonp were d,"I} , mt"i"uic, 1.1d anu

' . ' rv.f"""P

Bubbl" or for

bC;llIlilul -sO llh.' (.I ... l, ... orn e slow.

information

ThC\· did cre.lI e catc hy mdodi e" but wi tl"'''1 clW,, \C. Thc\' rail \\Ilh ".Ilh olh el IIlc! hdd e,'eh
other lip. a nd lhi ') \Y:'I~ evinced III t11 t: ir inr\:rl..h.lngl...',lhilllv ( "~L'\' .111 ..,wltc hed off or' ill'l{rUllll.'lll~
and b,lLi" •.:d (..', 1(11 orher lip and encouragcd C..:.llh (;IIII.:r h<.:(w<..'(,: I; \ung'd. IJ1nh.l lk h.I,.1 !-. p,lnktllg

on EPIC, pkfIJr
(all 867-6144

nl'\\' ,dhum th.1t I will desL ribe

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\0 \\',lit, \\;1 11 , \\'.Iil.

name)~

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Chh[!; utA . tllc HCW Arts and Entertainment Editor.
1)0 ~ou wallt to IwCp out oJ nQQ n~ a:
Gill

1-- - a l~eporter

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1

Thousands of
Korean work·
ers march for
shorter hours, against WTO: Some
20,000 workers and students from across
South Korea marched to the capital Seoul
on Sunday, demanding shorter working
hours and job security, witnesses said . They
said the demonstrarors. who were distributing
leaflets and chanting slogans, were involved
in scuffles with the police. One protestor was
injured and sent to the hospital. The protest involved a number of South Korea's
industrial unions, including. metal work;
ers and teachers, as well as foreigners
. from 16 countries protesting against the
World Trade Organization (WTO) . The
protestors against the WTO believe the
trade body worsens poverty and helps developed
countril's by forcing und eveloped n a tions to open the door to forei g n
products . (see www.dailynews.yahoo.com)
Democratic Republic of Congo miners strike over rights: Thousands
of miners in the southern Congolese province of Katanga are on strike to
protest wh at they see as the failure of a series of joint ventures be twe e n
rhe government and international companies .' The miners , whose action
s t a rted last Monday, a re also angry abo,~t the non-payment of their
salari es. The largest of the protests took pl ace in the Democratic Republic
of Congo's second largest city, Lubumbashi, where more than a thou sand
angry miners and students took to the streets to protest the fact th a t
state-run Gecamines had cut all benefits and nor paid them for five
months. They crowded the state governor ' s office and mobbed the
visiting minister for human rights. Strikes and similar essentially peaceful
protests also took place in other mining towns in the southern province .
(see www. news. bbc.co .uk)

• •••



••







,9 ItI((j~t YOU,I ItrQp ill tlle~(' Wlea~ . 9Jr.I(."S tll,we ltlCly~ Ob ~eOcl\ing ", e.
CaQQ 86/·62 1g O~ CIIICliQ cmulallv@ hatmail.cam alld Qeave filly ~ifld ob
llIe~~o~(' tllnt you want [0 Qcavl!. (j),\ d,lop 0 1I0[e (II tlte Jbts alld 8 11teJttCliluMent
hoy at HIe CPJ, CAB 3 16 CIt YOUh COllvrlliellce. .9 aQso wall t [0 heWl all
(deo Oh two (t ~OIl'tlP got fIlly.

' ~ chris

Tradi.ti.ons

g

'Faidy tradet{ 8ood5 from {ow -income artisans
and fa rmers fro m around the wodd
?lco ustic con certs , forums, cfasses, yoe tr.y , an d
thea t er
?l cafe wit h 800d food and a we{come

environment to meet or srudy

Capi t al La ke and

~eritaQe

3 00 5th Ave.

Fntn .

SW , 705-2819

www . traditionsfairtrade.com

THEY HAVEN'T QUITE FIGURED IT All OUT,
BUT THEY'RE GETTING AUTJLE WARMEIt

New York Style Hand Tossed Pizza

Ken

Huge Selection of Fresh Toppings

•• "N""

died Saturday at age 66. Mr. Kesey d ied at the Sacred Heart Med ical
Center in Eugene, Oregon two weeks after a cancer su rgery that removed
40% of his liver, Mr. Kesey authored t hree great American novels: "One
Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest " in 1962, "Sometimes a Great Notion" in
1964, and "Sailor Sonjl" in 1992 . He was also well known for leading a
group a friends known as "the merry pranksters" o n a psychedelic trip
to the 1964 world fair in New York City, wh ich was recorded in Tom
Wolfe's classic, "The Electric Koo l-Aid Acid Test ." In a recorded message
from Kesey's office. his wife Babbs said, "Ken Kesey, a great husband,
father, granddad, and friend. Done in by a bum liver. As always, he gave a
great fight, but his body pulled its last dirty trick and done him in. If he
has one legacy it is for us the liv ing to carty on with courage, compassion .
generosity and love." (see www. news.lycos.com)

R

Cofe & World Folk Art

K
.
.
~~C.<k
age 66:

I 1 nformer for the LOca 1 'I us ic Scene?
local Nusic Show Calendar person?
Skateboardinz photol,(rapher?
Bathr oom photozrapher (for ~raffi tl Ie. ooetrv)?
Graf. fiti photoz r apher ( hi2hli~htlll11 loc~l lIr~ffiti~?J
pe r son that calls music labels
(ma jor &: independent) to zet f r ee stuff?

*

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K'.
y
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passes away at
fI

Ilext i"l'llll',

ea~insert

Labor

Domestic

I FO,r tl:e

meets ru,h Wednesday
ill Lilml? 3500 III 2

mor~

__ _ _

p i;1hack has " ~l.lnoi L~s l Sarurday, Hea lh er all d I ''It thruugh two mediocre. 1.>,, "(1; in order to hear them, alld when their piano playn starred their set with rhe
. guns of h" keys .I nc! some emotiona l chords, I was happ\'. I m usl h"w h" Heather With a spl lnler of m)' fee ling hec""e sh" looked luck at me and ,miled
li ke , "I bel you're happ)' now are n'r you. '"
,

i,," (// EvrrgrUII. EPIC

l-~l... .. ~.,

._

Keyboard.L9~emaking!

IiY-CfWs MulalJy.

prouidrs resources for (lC(iu-

in rh ei r s ra re of G u e r rero aga in s t
rh e logg in g of o ld g row th whi te
pin e a nd fir fores t s by th e r ra n snat io nal co mpan y Bo ise Casca de. T he
two ca mpe s ino e n vir o nmentali sts

Bush pressures Senate leaders
to pass 'Faith-Based' bill: The
President is insisting that an
"Armies of Compassion" bill be passed before the e nd Qf this congressional session. Bush 's leuer to prominent senators ca lls for le gislation
offering tax incentives for charitable donations and 'equal treatmenr'
for religious groups. Although Bush's initiative passed the House of
Representatives in July, it has stalled in the Senate ove r concerns that
the so-called "charitable choice" components of the initiative violate
the First Amendment. Those provisions could undercut civil rights by
allowing for employment based on religious discrimination, funded by
tax dollars, that could create competition between houses of worship
for federal funds , and could subject poor Americans to religious
proselytism in order to receive "help" from Christian charities .
(see
www.commondreams .org)

_

A

11

Vegetarian & Vegan Pizza's Available
Salads, Calzone, Fresh Baked Goods
Micro Brews on Tap, Bottled Beers, Wine

IA·

Dine In or Call Ahead for Take Out
Enjoy Our Sidewalk Cafe On Nice Days!

36J)-943-8044

Located at Harrison & Division

(233 Division Sl NW)

OPENS WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 21 AT THEATRES EVERYWHERE

thEfeQoper pOint.journal

the cooper paint journal

november 15, 2001

sports

~2

f

ca1endar
saturday

Team Evergreen Black Belts and Beginners Bring Home the Gold
frv KevID BarretL -

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- _---

T

eam Evergreen, rhL' 13.lk Shaolin Eagle
Claw Kung Fu T<'am compered in rh eir
second [Ollrnamcnr of [hl.' ),c.1r on S3fUrf.by.
November 10, in Tenino, Wash ingron. The
Grearer Tenino Tournament of Ch'-lIl1piolls
was hosred by Chuck Cameron and sancrioned hy rhe Inr<'rn .ltion,tl Manial An,
Counc il (IMAC) . Evcry compe,iror on
Team Evergreen [)laced in rhe rop rhree
in at least one di\' is ion, .tnd rht: [e.1m wa . .
awarded a plaque honoring rheir dedic,ltiun
to marriJi arts and c0l11pl'tilivc spirit.
Nationa l (e:lITI represent-Hive 5.1111
Haskin and l~i1m EVt.~ rgr~l'n CoII1f.l in (hvl'n
O'Keefe took firsr and seco)ld pl.l( e re'pectively in the men's b l.l ck be lt [[adirion"l
forms division. Jessie Sm ith , another
national team member and Evergreen
alumna, placed fir>t in the women's tr.lditional forms division. In ,he beginner
traditional forms division Team Evergreen
rook go ld, silver, and bron1.e. Newcomer
Rob Brewer rook first pl ,lCe follow ed by
Robyn Holmes and Anim ito l'ollino.
1n the open forms division Team
Evergreen swept tht' bl"ck belr division as
well as the under belt division. In rhe men
and women's black be lt open forms division
Smith rook first place aga in on her way
ro another flawless perfo rm ance. Haskin,
the founding ream caprain at Evergreen,

r ok rhe silver wi,h hi, 'luick-handed Eagle
€Claw La Ilan . O ' Keefe displayed hi s
overwhelming power in his form and wa<
.Iwarded the hronce. I n the under hlac k
belt divi,ion Rob lIrewer placed flr« wi th
hi s clari ry and power. Iiolm e, took a
close ,econd with st rong stances and sharp
movements and Pollino h.ld another "rang
perform:lllce in hi, \('cond rournamC'nt,
taking third [,LIce.
The hlack belt point 'parring di vision
began 1,I[e in ,he af,ern uon and absorbed
the (lOw,!. Sume uf 'it e top com petitor, in
the NorthwcH, including Mike Regliatti ,
IMAC wo rld ci,amp ion, and Marty May,
NRL. world champ ion, ga,hered in T,'nino
[0 make ir a rru e rournamenr of champio n!>;
their teamm",e Mi ke Mathers was also in
attendance. In the heavyweight hlack belt
divi sion O'Keefe foughr a close champ ion sh ip match, and kept the 'core tied for the
majority of rhe time, but finished .1 close
seco nd . Il:tskin lini ,hed the day with a
bronze in point sparring. In ,h e wOlllen's
black belt point s parring division Je>sie
Smith finished in first place making this
her $Ocond stra ight tournament with go ld
medals in all her division s.
Robyn Holm e< finished first in the
women's beginner point sparring divisio n ,
giving her rwo gold medals and one si lver in
her first tournament 3ppearance. Morgan

I

Thornberry came in a elme second to flni ,h
w itll a silver. In the highly comperitive
men's beginner d ivision Mark Germano had
a dramatic come-from-behind victory in
the champ ionship match, ,aking first place
and beating a fighter from the local favor ite
"S pirit force" team und er rh e direction
uf Sense i D:lve Smith. Andrew Brcsllik
finished th ird with a strong performance
in his first tournament appearanCe. In the

I

intermediate point sparring divi sion Kevin

I

Barrett f1ni,hed in third place.
The showi ng illuminates th e up-andcoming compe titive presence uf a young
junior Evergreen Team followin g in the
footsteps o fI ast year's World Champ ionship
sq u ad. Also of note, team leaders Owen
O'Keefe an d Jesse Smith hdve bee n 'teadily
racking up nation al rating points in IMAC,
which leads to Wo rld Championship invitations in yet another sanctioning organi1.ation that l3ak Shaolin Eagle C law has chosen

giving training: Cookie Can rest. It', not too late ro celeb rate th e rest of
Animal Rights Awa reness Weck. Vore on yo ur favor ite cookie. MI11I11I11. II a. m .-I
p.m. in the CAB. Sponsored by the Evergreen Animal Rights Network.
Radical Catholics for Justice and Peace meet every T hursday at 6 p.m. in the
Women's Cenrer. All are welcome regardless of religious association. For 1110re
info rmation, call Martha Deckman ar 867-1845.
The Jewish Acts Collective presents Open Mic, From 7-9 p.m. in the Longhouse
Cedar Room. Open to all forms of arrisrry. Free event. Come ready if YOll want to
perform. Sign up at the door. For more information, ca ll extension 6092.
Slides & Stories from Penny Rosenwasser's solidarity trip to Israel & Palestine.
Rosenwasser spent three weeks in July working with peace activisrs in Israel &
Palestine. 3 p.m. in Lecture Hall 3, and 7:30 p.m. at Temple Beth Hatfiloh ,
802 Jefferson St. SE.
Film viewing on the School of the Americas: "Schoo l of Assassim." A talk
by veter:ln activist Steve Hughes on the SOA will follow. Takes place at noon in
the Library L.obby; also at 7 p.m. at O lympia World News. Sponsored by LASO,
MEChl\, and Radical Catholics for Justice and Peace.

fritiay
~

1
I

Stop the School of the Americas! Anti-SOA rally. Hold rh e ,nstltution
respons ible for rhe worst human rights abuses in Larin Amer ica. In Sylvester
Park ar noon,

, Meeting to organize a gender and sexualiry conference ro be held at Evergreen.
, Co me share YOllr ideas and find out what we've been up to so far. Everybody
IS welcome. Meeting every Friday at 3 p.m. in Library Room 3500. E-mai l
gendersexcon@olynerwork.org or visit the EP[C office for more in formarion.
I Guest Le<;ture by Charlie Hill, A member of the Oneida tribe, Hill is a well -kno,vn
, co median :lnd actor. ll e'll give a 90-m inute presentation about his lif,· o n th e
reservation and how he becan:e a successful perform er. At 7 p.m. in Lecture Hall
I. Suggested donation of $5 for Native Ame rican Student Scholarship,. Campus
park ing is $1.25. Ca lilrudi Pulsifer at ext. 67 18 for more info. Spo" ,o red by the
Longhouse Education & Cul tural Center.
Check out musical revue "Babies With Big Hair" to su pport AIDS prevention
, and ca re services. A benefit for UCAN (United Commun ities AIDS Networks).
Show and tickets at rhe WashingtOn Center for the Perform ing Arts Box Office.
Show starts or R p.m. For marc information, ca ll UCAN at 352-2375.

to c.: JHe r.

The Evergreen Kung fu te,"11 would
like to thank Grandmaster Fu Leun g
and Sifu Dana G . Daniels for their
co untless hours of instruction and d edication. For more information about
Team Evergreen Bak Shaolin Eagle Claw
Kung Fu C lub and Competition v isi t
\V\V\V.babhaolineagleclaw.com or contact
Owen O'Keefe at 357-9137,

13

Jessie Smith, Evergreen alum pl(~l'er/
coach rrlted # J in [MAC for 2001
will to the World Championships.

E!lergr,,,, by faking gold.

Women's Tip-Off

bY BenJamm Green

by Head COaCh MODIca Heuer

E

vergreen sw imm ers Misty Westphal and
Ryan Miyake dominated rh e competition and newcomer Kacie Luderus won
rwice, but the team's small si1.e helped give
the Pacific Lut heran team victories in both
the men's and women's despire excellent
individual performances.
Westph al, a junior out of Capital High
School, took first in both the 1000- and
the 500-yard freesryles, winning the 500 by
38 seconds. In the 200 in dividu al medley
she came in first fo r the third time of the
day. At the end of the day, PLU won th e
women's team competition 128-76.
The men's team, with only three competitors lost 139-32, but Miyake, a twOtime All-America choice, blew away the
competition in the 1000-meter freesty le,
finishing 43 seconds ahead of PLU swimmer, Ryan W iley.
Evergreen's swimmers performed admirab ly last Saturday, competing well in the
face of being outnumbered 3-2 on the
women's team and 2- 1 on the men's.

Opener Goes to
Cascade

North'west Nabs
2 nd Round Vicotry

W

T ooking to bounce back from Friday night, the
.l.....women's basketball team proved that they a re
ready to compete, They came out ready to play
defense and ready to take it to Northwest, who
finished in the middle of the cascade conference
last season , Evergreen trailed again at the half,
but stepped up their game in the second half
after being down by 10 points. With the hot
hands of Kristin Zompetti who fini shed with 18
points, Belqui Guardado with 15, and Chandra
Rathke with 14, the Geoducks led the game with
one minute left in regulation . After a c.'ouple of
costly mistakes at the end, the Geoducks were
defeated 74-69,
Our team has improved with each game. Last
night we played a good first half and ton ight
we played a good 30 minutes our of 40. The
young ladies showed a lot of heart in coming
back aftet being down by 10 points. The best
is yet to come!
.

e came out with a goal ro
com pete and ro go all ou t,
The first half we did just that,
We opened our season against
Cascade College, who finished
2nd-to-Iast in OUt confetence last
season, We played tough man to
man and ended the half down by
8, Cascade got hot and shot 40%
ftom the 3pt line in the second
half. The Geoducks could not
recover and Cascade ran away,
with the final sco re at 78-55 .
"We competed in the first half,
now we just have to put two
halves together", said head coach
Monica Heuer. Belqui Guardado
led the way for the Geoducks by
scoting 22 points in the home
opener_

[november 15, 2001

Ken Kesey: th e revered author who
gave Evergreens 2001 Commencement
address, dt.ed f~om cancer complicatfons
In a hospItal In Eugene, Oregon, last
Sat urday. He W:lS 66 ye:lrs o,ld.
In IllS speech to last year s Evergreen
graduates, Ke.,ey railed againS! America's
gun cu lture and the youth violence
that results. The address was based
on a 199 8 articl~, for Ro llin g Stone
magazIne called Land of the Free,
Home of the Bullets," in which Kesey's
granddaughter Kate asks hlln whether
the Constitution, or what he ca lled "the
American rule book," gives Americans
the right to own bullets.
Kesey's answer was a resounding no.
He lived in Pleasant Hill. Oregon,
just five miles north ofThursron High
I d d h'
5Cl00,
I I were
h
K ·'I' K'tn k
e mur ere
IS
own parents before killing rwenry of his
classmates the next morning.
"\'i/e don't need foreigners to terrorize
us," Kesey concluded in the article. "We
seem to ~~ doing a pretry fair job of it
ourselves.
Kesey wrote his first and maS!
successfu l book, "One Flew Over the

Nf,lrk Germano (L) has an ,'xeel/fIIl first showingfi'"

Geoduck Swimmers Too
Few to Win Despite
Excellent Performances

4Women's basketball games!
3Men's basketball games!
2Swim meets!

TESC Photo

Evergreens Class 0'2001
IllS!
JKmy
.addresm
R dSqUllre.
~ '
fine m r

Cuckoos Nest, " in 1962, just five years
before Everg reen was founded. Time
Magazine called the book "a roar of
protest aga in st middlebrow society's
Rules and the invisible Rulers who
enforce them."
The movie version, starr i ng J ack

Harmony Antiques &
Karinn's Vintage Clothing
Christmas Open House
December 8th & 9th
113 Thurston Ave_ NE
.Downtown
Olympia
OPEN DAILY
(360) 956-7072

and one sports section

~~~l ~U l~t ~~~t~

Great Gift Ideas
*candles *soap
*teacups
*crystal

Your friendly neighborhood antiques,
collectibles, & giftware store

when you get back!

the COOper point journal

su

"Romanian Odyssey": a Temple Beth Hatfiloh Video Screening. Comp leted last
June by two Evergreen College f.1Clllty emeriti, Sid White and Pat Matheny-White.
Shot on location in ~omania,. it includes encounters wi.eh past and contemporary
RomanIa. Those Interested ,n famdy fi lm proJ ects, Imm'gratlon hlSrory, and
ge nealogy should cOl11e. Upstairs at the Temp le, located on the corner of 8th and
Jefferson, Downtown. For 1110re information, call 754-85 19.

hd~

.

Hello Thanksgiving Break! Leave that nasty instant noodle/add hot warer
crap behind (at least for now). Hello real food. And remember, Buy Nothing
I Day is on the 23rd.
I

m~nday - sunday

z:Thanks~ving Breald
monday
~ Writing Workshops.

Writi ng groups en hance work by offering audience reaction.
Discussion questions arc provided for focus . Bring copies of your drJft to receive peer
feedba ck. Dorm A at the Edge, 6 :30-8:30 p.m. Also on Tuesday, Nov. 27, in Lib.
2 11 8,6:30-8:30 p.m . Sponsored by the L.RC & Prim e Time Advising.

wednesday
op LASO

and MEChA meet at 2 p,m. every Wednes(by. Call 867-6 143 for more

01 information.
I ASIA meets at 1:30 p,m_ in CAB 320_ For more information ca ll 867-6033
Or emai l Asia_ tesc@ hotma i!.com.
Film Series Presenting "Coca Mamma," Film & discussion series. 4-6 p.m. in
Lib. 1316. Sponsored by LASO.

Ken Kesey, Author, 1960's Icon, Dies at 66 X-Country
R
d

fry Kevan MOore

Rob Buwrr from Purdue Unilln'sif)' Eag/t' Claw joins
uam ElIl'rgrun

1~I

Batdorf and Bronson coffee served

r

the cooper point journal

Nicholson, was released in 1975 and
won five Oscars the fo ll OWIng year,
including best picture. Kesey was
unhappy with the fi lm and rerused
to watch it, suing the producers for
5 percent of the movi e's gross and
$800,000 in punitive damages befo re
settling out of court.
Kesey's second book, "Sometimes a
Great Notion," was published in 1964
and was nOt as s uccessful as hi s first.
Some, however, feel the book captured
the essence of the Northwest.
Many readers are familiar with Kesey
through the work of anot her writ er,
Tom Wolfe, ..nd his book "The Electric
Kool-Aid Acid Test," The non-fiction
narrative looks at a series of Kesey's
cross-country journeys in the 1960 's, as
well as LSD-laced Kool-Aid trips and
the psychedelic culture that Kesey was
so much a part of.
The college is putting together a
memorial book of signatures, thoughts
and condolences for Kesey's wife, Faye.
The book will be available from 11 a.m.
to 1 p.m. in front of the Bookstore
on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
in th e first week of classes following
Thanksgiving break.

Natural Remedies for
Women's Health

0 U n Up

On November 3, Evergreen's cross-<oountry
teml went to L'tke 5.'Unmamish State Park to run
in the Cascade C.onference Ch'Ul1piomhips. In
,he Women's Top 9 All-Conference, Molly Allen
broke 20 minutes, placing 13d" while teammates
Gina Blankenship and Shawn Olson carne in
scarcely more than a minute later, placing 24d,
and 26th respectively.
The men competed well, placing 5d, in team
scores and tuming in good individual times as
weU. Keith Darrock (27:21) placed 20th and
Mark Bearrie followed 1:38 later, raking 3 Isr. Ina
stream offinishes widlin 15 seconds ofeach other,
Pat laJmaclge, Kent Uglick and Derek Dillman
placed 33rd, 34th and 37th ""ptx:tively.
In the Women's 5K cross-country, Allen broke
20 minutes again, taking 30th with a time of
I'): 16. Edging closer to d,at SUlle elusive goal,
Blankenship and Olson finished 55th and 57th.
The Greenerwomen finished 12th in team scores,
averaging 21 :56.60.
In the Men's 8K, Darrock placed 52nd with
Beattie dose behind. Talmadge, Uglick and
Dillman again finished in a group. Overall,
the men averaged 29:00.80, placing 11 th as
a team.

~anagentent

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november 15, 2001

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november 15, 2001