Cop-Out: The Underground Newspaper of Lanai High, 1970
The "Cop-Out" was founded by Colbert Matsumoto and myself in the Spring of 1970--our Junior year at Lanai High.
Surrepticiously mimeographing double-sided legal paper at the ILWU office in Lanai City,
we published eight issues and distributed the paper in the classrooms of Mr. Bagley (our English teacher),
Mr. Fedak (our French teacher) and Mr. Yarlott. (We avoided distributing in my stepfather Jim Bollingmo's
classroom to distance him at least publicly from his stepson's rabble-rousing.)
Colbert and I alternated as "hands-on" editors of the "Cop-Out;"
the typeface of each issue
reflects who was editing it that week. Clearly, Colbert was the superior typist, as my issues
tend to be lighter and are marred by typographical errors. We each wrote pieces for every issue, except
perhaps for the sole single-page issue no. 4. We solicited submissions via a
box in Mr. Bagley's room, and managed to spark some major controversy by printing honest opinions.
We also published a number of excellent poems written by our fellow students. Although I cannot
recall the precise details of the launch, it was no doubt a mutually
inspired project; I remember being influenced by a magazine article on underground newspapers.
Colbert conjured up the name and the printing facilities and the "Cop-Out" was born.
Burk Bagley's mentoring role deserves special mention.
Although I don't think he suggested the
newspaper idea to us, he certainly encouraged us, and other students, to express ourselves via writing
and poetry and to exchange ideas and opinions in public. Sadly, Burk died in 1998, before I had
the chance to thank him for his mentoring. His "letter to the editors" can be found in Issue no. 3.
It seems the paper was popular; in its heyday, the submissions box was stuffed with all sorts
of poems and notes.
I recall Mr. Yarlott telling me that students literally leaped over
chairs to grab a copy of the "Cop-Out" when it arrived hot off the mimeograph press. Even granting
his account some small exaggeration, it is fair to say the paper was widely read.
My memory is sketchy about its demise; though we ceased publication with a bang-up "last issue,"
the approaching end of the school year probably prompted our decision.
The quality of the writing led skeptics to question whether Lanai High students were capable of
producing the "Cop-Out;"
some in the school administration and community assumed it was penned
by faculty members. (We issued a searing challenge to this slur in our last issue.) I believe the writing
holds up rather well; not just our own work, but that of our student
contributors as well. (Memo to Myles Hokama: I hope you're still writing poetry.) This disconnect
between the creativity and literacy of our work
and the low expectations of the community around us may well hold an enduring lesson about
what public high school students can acheive if given free expression.
Given that we were all of 16 years old,
the initiative, drive and creativity required to launch and sustain the "Cop-Out" remains impressive.
Equally impressive, I think, was our "hands-on" grasping of two different but equally difficult
nettles--writing, editing, assembling,
publishing and distributing the newspaper, and also organizing ecological meetings and actions
during the first stirrings of the modern ecology movement.
That Fall my stepfather Jim Bollingmo took a position at Punahou School, where I finished my
high school career (three schools in four years). Colbert and I would occasionally cross paths
when we both attended U.H.-Manoa, but we lost touch
with one another after those early college days. I think he was in law school while I pursued
my interests in the People's Party and A.F.S.C.
Of course I'm hoping Colbert will add his memories and commentary to this account.
Founders: Colbert Matsumoto and Chuck Bollingmo
Colbert was the Mandarin of Lanai High: everyone knew he was the smartest student in our class,
and it was natural for him to gravitate to the student council and similar activities.
Fortunately for me and the school, he also possessed a deeply subversive interest in looking
for the truth and raising unsettling issues--traits which I believe led him to the very public and
high-profile position as Master of the recent investigation into the Bishop Estate.
Not every one of our collaborations was a complete success. Our joint science fair entry, a fairly
complex but boring chemistry project, rightly lost to Ricky Oyama and James Toguchi's "Steps in Making Moonshine."
What chemistry project could possibly compete with a moonshine still?
I was using my stepfather's surname at the time, and as the "new kid in town"
along with my brother Craig, had the usual challenges of adapting to a new home and school.
I distinctly remember being unable to understand pidgin at first. Douglas Daguay
and my other mates on the basketball used to call me their "Hawaiian haole," and always
encouraged my halting attempts to speak a little pidgin. I picked pineapple that summer with a
Lanai crew; I recommend it to anyone wishing to lose weight and increase their fitness.
Controversies
Issue no. 2 features a rather pointed critique (I don't recall the author, but it wasn't Colbert or I) of the school's
sports director and the short shrift being given to sports other than basketball. This was a
sensitive topic; as a member/bench warmer of the basketball team, I benefited greatly
from all those inter-island trips. Even worse, the athletic director was the honest and admirable
Donald Matsui, our basketball coach, who certainly didn't deserve criticism from a team member.
We also counted coup rather consistently on the moribund P.T.A., and raised hackles by publicizing
the environmental pollution fouling the island. We called a meeting April 2, 1970, in advance the first
Earth Day on April 22, to organize a clean-up. While I don't recall the outcome of the meeting, the poster
is reprinted here along with Issue no. 4.
Fulfilling its primary function as an underground newspaper, the "cop-Out" tweaked the
administration on various issues as well; see Issue no. 5 for an example.
From the start there were rumors that the paper was simply too literate to be
the work of students. In the final "death issue" no. 8, we ran an open challenge
in which I named
myself as one of the editors and demanded skeptics address me directly. Needless to say, no one
ever did.
The Archives: All Eight Issues of the "Cop-Out"
All web publishing of original documents requires trade-offs between readability and resolution;
the higher the resolution, the bigger the file and thus the longer the download time. I have
done the best I could with poor-quality mimeograph sheets which have been moved from Lanai to
Oahu to the Big Island to Berkeley over the past 33 years. To improve legibility, I have saved
these as GIF files rather than JPGs; as a result, each file is about 200K as opposed to 60K.
Despite my best efforts, these pages remain difficult to read.
I begin the archives with a page from
the official school newspaper, "Hi-Lites," just to establish the zeitgeist of the era and some
context for what Colbert and I published.
"Hi-Lites" the official school newspaper
(March 20, 1970)
Issue 1, page 1
(March 30, 1970)
Issue 1, page 2
Issue 2, page 1
(April 7, 1970)
Issue 2, page 2
Issue 3, page 1
(April 13, 1970)
Issue 3, page 2
Issue 4, page 1
(April 20, 1970)
Earth day flyer
Issue 5, page 1
(April 27, 1970)
Issue 5, page 2
Issue 6, page 1
(May 4, 1970)
Issue 6, page 2
Issue 7, page 1
(May 11, 1970)
Issue 7, page 2
Issue 8, page 1
(May 21, 1970)
Issue 8, page 2