The Evergreen State College Newsletter (April 1, 1979)

Item

Identifier
Eng Newsletter_197904.pdf
Title
Eng The Evergreen State College Newsletter (April 1, 1979)
Date
1 April 1979
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Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114

...EVERGREENER WINS DANFORTH FELLOWSHIP...Reginald Maxwell, a Tacoma Marine Corps veteran,
has become Evergreen's second graduate to win the prestigious Danforth Graduate Fellowship.
Maxwell, who completed his degree Fall Quarter, 1978, is one of only three persons in the
State of Washington this year to win tuition and fees paid to the graduate school of his choice
for up to four years, plus an annual stipend of up to $2,500.
Maxwell, who currently works as a counselor at the OK Boys Ranch in Olympia, completed
his Associate of Arts degree at Fort Steilacoom Community College, then enlisted for a twoyear stint in the Marines. He completed his bachelor's degree in literature and cultural
history at TESC and plans to attend Claremont College for his doctorate in English literature.

...DR. BECK SELECTED FOR HUMANITIES SEMINAR...Dr. Gordon Beck of Olympia is one of ten
college and university professors from throughout the United States selected to attend a Faculty
Summer Seminar sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) in Italy. Dr.
Beck, an Evergreen faculty member in cinema arts and art history since the college opened in
1971, will study "Paintings in Renaissance Venice" from June 18 through August 10, in a
special art history program sponsored by Columbia University and funded by NEH. Taught by
Dr. David Rosand, professor of art history and archaeology at Columbia, the two-month summer
seminar will be based at the Giorgio Cini Foundation in Venice.
Dr. Beck, who has led Evergreen study tours to Europe for the past six summers, leaves
Jlympia the first of May to direct a two-month study called "The Classical World" and involving
11 full-time TESC students. The program, which concentrates on providing students a first hand
study of the art and architecture of ancient Greece and the early Roman Empire, began in March
and required students to spend five weeks of preparation on campus before leaving for London,
Paris, Athens and Rome.
...COMMUNICATIONS BUILDING CITED FOR EXCELLENCE...Evergreen's Communications Laboratory Building has won the llth annual Grand Award for excellence in the use of concrete from the Washington Aggregates and Concrete Association. Award plaques honoring participants in the project were presented at the association's annual banquet April 26 in Seattle.
The building was designed by Walker/McGough/Foltz/Lyerla, a Spokane architectural firm,
which also served as structural engineer. Jones and Roberts, Tacoma, was general contractor
and Olympia Sand & Gravel Company supplied the concrete.

...GUIDE TO "WINNING SCHOLARSHIPS" OFFERED...Persons who want to attend college but think they
can't afford to are invited to a free 90-minute workshop on "The Art of Applying For and
Winning Scholarships," offered May 2, beginning at 7:30 p.m. in room 110 of the College
Activities Building at Evergreen. The free Wednesday evening session will focus on "how to prepare yourself for scholarship competition," according to workshop leader Maureen Pierre. "We
will explore ways to pursue applications, to present your positive side to the review teams
who award grants, and to make your applications stand out."
The free evening program, sponsored by Evergreen's Office of Financial Aid, is open to
all persons interested in going to college
any four-year college, state or public. Complete information on the Scholarship Workshop is available at 866-6205 weekdays.

...FOUNDATION TO STAGE PHONE-A_-THON. . . The Evergreen Foundation will conduct its third annual
phone-a-thon the weeks of May 7 and 14 to raise funds for continued support of academic and
cultural events not financed through regular funding. Coordinated by TESC's Development Office,
the phone-a-thon will raise money for such projects as scholarships, academic research and
campus events.

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UPCOMING EVENTS AT EVERGREEN
May 1

Central Washington University Faculty Trio presents "An Evening of Classical
Music" featuring Beethovan's songs performed by mezzo soprano Lynn Dupin, 8 p.m.,
Recital Hall, Communications Building. Admission: $2.50 general; $1.50 students,

May 4

Pedal steel guitar great MAURICE ANDERSON performs in concert with four local
musicians, 8 p.m., second floor lobby, Evans Library Building...Admission: $3.50
general or $3 students and senior citizens...

May 4,5,6

"A View From The Bridge," a play written by Arthur Miller and performed by TESC
students under direction of P.C. Bowyer, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications
Building...Admission: $1.50 general; $1 students...

May 8

Evergreen faculty anthropologist Dr. Eric Larson offers "Visit to Polynesia," a
slide/lecture program in Tuesdays at Eight series, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications Building...Admission: $1...

May 8

Opening and reception for "ONE WITH THE EARTH" exhibit compiled by Bureau of
Indian Affairs for Bicentennial Celebration, 7-10 p.m., fourth floor, Evans
Library Building...Admission: free...

May 9

"Transitions in Community Life," a discussion of role of community planning in
forging essential link between heritage and future in communities featuring
Ron Clarke, local planner, and Russ Fox, TESC faculty member, 7:30 p.m., Olympia
Public Library... part of continuing "Future of Our Heritage" Series...Admission:
free...

May 15

RED KELLY AND JACK PERCIVAL perform jazz concert in final Tuesdays at Eight
show, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications Building...Admission: $2.50 general;
$1.50 students.

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three awards to Greeners
MAXWELL WINS DANFORTH
Reginald Maxwell, a Tacoma Marine Corps veteran, has become Evergreen's second
graduate to win the prestigious Danforth Graduate Fellowship. Maxwell, who completed his
degree Fall Quarter, 1978, is one of only three persons in the State of Washington this
year to win tuition and fees paid to the graduate school of his choice for up to four
years, plus an annual stipend of up to $2,500.
More than 2200 persons this year applied from colleges and universities throughout
the United States for the awards, which are designed to help students who are committed
both to completing their doctorate and to careers in college or university teaching at an
undergraduate level. Some 480 of the 2200 were interviewed and from them 100 finalists
have been selected who have achieved an academic record of excellence and have demonstrated
promise for future strength in their professional field, as well as a commitment to obtaining
a well rounded, humane education.
Maxwell, who currently works as a counselor at the OK Boys Ranch in Olympia, attended
Laughbon High School in Dupont until the tenth grade. He then enrolled in a special program
at Fort Steilacoom Community College which enabled him to complete both his high school
diploma and his Associate of Arts degrees from FSCC. After completing a two-year
assignment in the Marine Corps, Maxwell enrolled at Evergreen in 1976 and completed his
bachelor's degree in literature and cultural history last fall.
The former Marine, who plans to attend Claremont College for his doctorate in English
literature, is the son of William and Gloria Maxwell of Lakewood, and is the second TESC
graduate to win the prestigious award in the past three years. Robert Shepard became
Evergreen's first Danforth recipient in 1977. Shepard also selected Claremont Graduate
School for his doctoral work.
BECK SELECTED FOR HUMANITIES SUMMER SEMINAR
Dr. Gordon Beck of Olympia is one of ten college and university professors from
throughout the United States selected to attend a Faculty Summer Seminar sponsored by the
National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) in Venice, Italy. Dr. Beck, an Evergreen
faculty member in cinema arts and art history since the college opened in 1971, will study
"Paintings in Renaissance Venice" from June 18 through August 10, in a special art history
program sponsored by Columbia University and funded by NEH.
Taught by Dr. David Rosand, professor of art history and archaeology at Columbia,
the two-month summer seminar will be based at the Giorgio Cini Foundation in Venice and
will include examination of works by major Italian artists, including Gentile, Bellini,
Giorgione, Titian, Tintoretto and Veronese. In addition, the study will involve Dr. Beck
in intensive research on three historic paintings now located in Venice's Gallerie
dell'Accademia.
Dr. Beck, who has led Evergreen study tours to Europe for the past six summers,
leaves Olympia the first of May to direct a two-month study called "The Classical World"
and involving 11 full-time TESC students. The program, which concentrates on providing
students a first hand study of the art and architecture of ancient Greece and the early
Roman Empire, began in March and required students to spend five weeks of preparation on
campus before leaving for London, Paris, Athens and Rome on May 1.
Traveling with Dr. Beck to study the Classical World will be Evergreen students

- 2-

Monica Bargielski, Susan Bogni, Amy Hay, Allen Matteson, Susan Meier, Sara Negus, Erich
Roe, Mark Souder, Howard Springer, Eleanor Wallace and Dorcas Whealan.

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COMMUNICATIONS BUILDING CITED FOR EXCELLENCE
Evergreen's Communications Laboratory Building has won the llth annual Grand
Award for excellence in the use of concrete from the Washington Aggregates and Concrete
Association. Award plaques honoring participants in the project, and those involved in
the projects named for special merit awards were presented at the association's annual
banquet, yesterday at the Washington Athletic Club in Seattle.
The Communications Building was designed by Walker/McGough/Foltz/Lyerla, a Spokane
architectural firm, which also served as structural engineer. Jones and Roberts Company,
Tacoma, was general contractor and Olympia Sand & Gravel Co. supplied the concrete.
Members of the professional jury praised the structure, calling it, "A professional
statement...a convincing and imaginative sculptural form in concrete, carried through to
the last architectural and engineering detail." Jury members included Don Winkelman of
N.B.B.J.; Victor 0. Gray of Victor 0. Gray & Co.; William Cranston of Kramer, Chin and
Mayo; and Relta Gray of Relta Gray and Associates.
Special merit awards also went to those who built the Pasco Kennewick Intercity
Bridge; Brier, Seaview and Meadowdale Hall at Edmonds Community College; and the
Viewland Hoffman Receiving Substation owned by the City of Seattle's Department of Lighting.

sports news
GEODOIKERS PLAY IN REGIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS SUNDAY
Evergreen's six-man volleyball squad, called the Geodoikers, plays Sunday in the
regional tournament set at Highline Community College. Coached by alum Mark Schmitt,
the men's squad last Sunday took second place in the "B" Division in a tournament also
sponsored by the U.S. Volleyball Association at HCC. Twelve teams competed last weekend
for the tournament title, which went to Pacific Lutheran University, who beat out Evergreen
in the final round. But the Geodoikers still qualified for the regional meet this Sunday,
which will see 15 teams from Oregon, Washington, northern Idaho and western Montana volley
for another championship.
The Evergreen team, says Schmitt, has "done incredibly well this season, especially
considering we don't have a regular place to practice." TESC spikers include students
Dave Crosby, Gil Crosby, Gregg Bennett, Michael Halperin, Ken Phillipson, Tom Erlichman and
Dave Hatfield and staffer Robert Kim. They'd welcome your enthusiastic support at Sunday's
tournament, which begins about 8 a.m. in the Highline pavilion.
SOCCER AND SWIMMING COACHES SOUGHT FOR FALL
Evergreen is formally seeking to hire its first three coaches for the new intercollegiate athletics program which begins Fall Quarter. Pete Steilberg, director of
recreation and campus activities, says the college is recruiting applicants for a men's
soccer coach, a woman's soccer coach and a coach willing to direct both men's and women's
swimming. All three positions are "seasonal contracts", carry a $1,000 salary, and have
an application deadline of Monday, May 14.
Complete information on the coaching jobs, which are open to Evergreeners as well as
off-campus applicants, may be obtained from the Personnel Office, 866-6361, Library 3238.
GUIDE TO WINNING SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED WEDNESDAY

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Persons who want to attend college but think they can't afford to are invited to a
free 90-minute workshop on "The Art of Applying For and Winning Scholarships," offered
May 2, beginning at 7:30 p.m. in room 110 of the College Activities Building at Evergreen.
The free Wednesday evening session will focus on "how to prepare yourself for scholarship

- 3-

competition," according to workshop leader Maureen Pierre. "We'll explore ways to pursue
;applications, to present your positive side to the review teams who award grants, and to
make your applications stand out."
Pierre, a 1978 Evergreen graduate and mother of two, says she financed her entire
college education on scholarships and work study employment. "I couldn't afford to go any
other way," she says, "so I had to find out where the scholarships were and how to make
myself look like the right recipient."
Winner of scholarships from the National Business and Professional Women, Women in
Communications, Scripps-Howard Foundation, Fidelity Mutual Savings and National Press
Women, Pierre says she won every scholarship she applied for except one, for which she
came in as first runner up.
Pierre, who now works for the state's Council for Postsecondary Education, says she's
anxious to share "psychological tips" on how to apply for financial help. "It's important
for applicants to project a winning image because the scholarship committees will choose
to finance a potentially successful person," she advises.
The free evening program, sponsored by Evergreen's Office of Financial Aid, is open
to all persons interested in going to college
any four-year college, state or public.
Complete information on the Scholarship Workshop is available through Evergreen's
Financial Aid Office, 866-6205, weekdays during regular working hours.
FOUNDATION TO STAGE PHONE-A-THON, SEEKS VOLUNTEERS
The Evergreen Foundation will conduct its third annual nationwide phone-a-thon
the weeks of May 7 and 14 to raise funds for continued support of academic and cultural
events not financed by regular funding. Coordinated by Evergreen's Development office, the
phone-a-thon will raise funds for such projects as research in molecular biology, admissions
recruitment efforts, the Foundation Merit Scholarship Program, Career Planning and Placement
Job and Graduate School Information Days, and other campus activities.
Phone-a-thon '79 volunteers will call more than 3,500 parents of current students
and alums, and other friends of the college during the two-week fundraiser. Volunteers
will also answer questions about Evergreen and its events during their calling.
Persons with questions about the phone-a-thon or who would like to volunteer to
help with calling may contact Bonnie Marie or Russell Flemming, in the Development Office,
Library 3103, 866-6565.
ASIAN CONFERENCE SET JUNE 15 & 16
An estimated 200 college and university teachers from five states and one Canadian
province will share research and scholarship on modern Asia June 15 and 16 when they
attend a two-day conference of Asian Studies on the Pacific Coast at The Evergreen State
College. Chaired this year by Paul Marsh, an Evergreen faculty member in Asian studies and
international relations, the conference is one of eight regional meetings of the national
Association for Asian Studies and features 29 panel discussions on a variety of scholarship
topics dealing with Asian history, politics, religion, languages, literature and art.
Graduate students, librarians, and university professors from Alaksa, British
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Columbia, Washington, Oregon, California and Hawaii are expected to divide their time anong
six sessions, three each on Friday and Saturday, covering such topics as "Secluded Scholars:
the Education of Muslim Women in South Asia," "Local Government in Republican China," "The
Vietnamese-China Border War," "Economic Development in Asia," and "Teaching Asian Thought
to American Undergraduates."
The sessions, says Marsh, "are offered as a means of sharing research on current
issues and analyzing ancient thoughts, not only with professors who will carry it back to
their colleges, but with interested graduate students and others concerned about modern Asia.
Helping Marsh with arrangments for the two-day session at TESC are two fellow
Evergreen professors: Dr. Robert Gottlieb, who will present a paper on Indian Tabla Drumming
and chair a panel discussion on "Indian Music, Poetry and Thought;" and Carie Cable, a
member of the program committee and founder of Kyodai, a consultant firm created to help
American businesses improve their dealings with the Japanese.
Complete details on the two-day Asian Studies Conference are available from Marsh.

- 4upcoming events
CWU TRIO BRINGS VOCALIST TO TUESDAY AT EIGHT
Four music professors from Central Washington University will present an evening ofr
classical music Tuesday, May 1, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Communications Building. Performing in the Tuesdays at Eight concert series, Central Washington
Faculty Trio members will present compositions by Mendelssohn and Turina in their evening
concert, which carries an admission charge of $1.50 for students and $2.50 for others.
Members of the CWU trio include Dr. Bonalyn Bricker-Smith, pianist and head of
Central's piano studies division; Jeff Cox, violinist and veteran performer with the Rymour
String Quartet; and Maria DeRungs, cellist and seasoned performer with both the Lewis and
Clark College String Quartet and the Brescia College Piano Trio.
Performing with them in a series of five songs by Beethoven will be Lynn Dupin,
a mezzo-soprano who has sung
as a soloist with a number of major symphony orchestras
in addition to serving as an associate professor of music at CWU.
Reservations for the Tuesday evening concert may be made by calling the Office of
College Relations, 866-6128.
" A VIEW FROM THE BRIDGE" OFFERED MAY 4-6
The trials and tribulations of two illegal Italian immigrants in New York City,
as told by celebrated playwright Arthur Miller, come to The Evergreen State College for
three performances the first weekend in May. Directed by drama student P_. C^. Bowyer,
"A View From The Bridge," plays May 4, 5, and 6 beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall
of the Communications Building.
The story takes shape when Rudolpho, the younger of the immigrants, falls in love
with Catherine, the niece of his cousin Beatrice, with whom he and his brother are
staying. Catherine's Uncle Eddie, strongly protective of her, views the young love as a
threat and fears Rudolpho seeks to marry his niece only to gain secure
and legal
.,

entry into the United States.
It's a story of prejudice and romance, sorrow and joy, as told by an all student
cast featuring Gary Strandt as Rudolpho, Diane Goodrich as Catherine, and Thomas Lindsey
as Eddie. Also starring in the production are Douglas Wright as Louis, Jace Knievel as
Marco, Bradley Grabill as the lawyer and Jennifer Baldwin as Beatrice. Crew members for
the all-student production are Ben Fuchs and Connie Monaghan; faculty advice has been
provided by Dr. David Powell.
Tickets for the production, which go on sale at the door of the Communications
Building at 7:30 each evening, are $1.50 general admission or $1 for students and senior
citizens.
VOLUNTEER AWARENESS PROGRAM THURSDAY
Evergreen will host a Volunteer Awareness Day Thursday, May 3 from noon to 2 p.m.
to introduce students to the benefits of volunteering and to give them an opportunity to
meet representatives from 20 human service agencies in Thurston County. President Dan
Evans will keynote this all-campus event, along with Lowell Kuehn, special assistant to
the president, Sara Bassett, Co-director of Volunteer Connection, and Carolyn Dobbs,
faculty member.
Volunteer Awareness Day will be held on the main campus plaza if weather permits,
or on the second floor of the Evans Library Building.
STEEL GUITARIST PLAYS FRIDAY
Pedal steel guitar great Maurice Anderson returns to Evergreen Friday, May 4 for
an evening concert set to begin at 8 o'clock in the second floor lobby of the Evans
Library Building. Performing with Anderson, who played before a large and enthusiastic
audience at TESC last spring, will be local jazz musicians Chuck Stentz on saxophone,
Dan Adams on drums, and Chuck Deardorff on bass. Popular and well known Olympia songstress
Jan Stentz will also join the quartet for a special guest appearance.
Anderson, noted for his jazz style and improvisational melodic lines, performs a

— 5 —

broad repertoire of musical material, ranging from old swing tunes, such as "Faded Love"
and "San Antonio Rose" to the more modern Bossa Nova and rock materials like "The Girl
from Ipanema," "Watermelon Man" and "Ode to Billy Joe." A veteran musician who most
recently has toured the Southwest with the Ray Price show and a 20-piece orchestra,
Anderson has also played or recorded with a wide range of artists, including Bob Wills and
the Texas Playboys, the Right Crust Doughboys, Merle Haggard, Willie Nelson, Loretta
Lynn, Les Paul and Hank Thompson.
Tickets for his Friday evening concert at TESC are on sale now at Yenney's Music,
Budget Tapes and Records and Rainy Day Records, all in Olympia, and at the Evergreen
Bookstore. Tickets will also be sold at the door for $3.50 general admission or $3 for
students and senior citizens.
EXPLORE "VOCATIONS FOR SOCIAL CHANGE" WEDNESDAY
Representatives from a variety of organizations dedicated to social change will
be on campus to meet with interested Evergreen students Wednesday, May 2 from 10 a.m. to
3:30 p.m. on the fourth floor of the Evans Library. Sponsored by the Office of Career
Planning and Placement, the information exchange on "Vocations for Social Change" will
feature off-campus persons working for organizations whose structures are alternative
(cooperatives or collectives), as well as those who have as their ultimate goals some kind
of social change.
A panel will discuss the definition of social change vocations and the political
and economic implications of this type of work. Small workshops will also be offered to
provide Evergreeners a chance to meet personally with each representative.
Organizations scheduled to send representatives to the Wednesday session include:
Seattle Tenants Union, Cause Celebre Cafe Collective, the Hunger Action Center, Aradia
Health Clinic, and the Energy and Jobs Program. Also attending will be a student
representative from the Pacific Oaks Little School Teacher Certification program.
For further details on the "Vocations for Social Change" program, call Career
Planning, 866-6193.
STUDENT CAST NAMED FOR "THE SEAGULL"
/

A twelve-student cast will present Anton Chekhov's "The Seagull" at The
Evergreen State College next month, director Ainara Wilder has announced. The play will
run May 17-20 and May 24-27 at 8 p.m. in the Experimental Theater of the Communications
Building.
Described by Ms. Wilder as "a rare and beautiful classic," "The Seagull" will
feature Amy Fowkes as Irina Arkadin, Tim Streeter as Constantine Treplev, Mary Schickling
as Nina Zarechny, and Robert (Ted) Roisum as Boris Trigorin.
Other Evergreen students in the cast include David Raddatz as Peter Sorin, Becky
MeAninch as Masha, Ruthe Reed as Polina, Joe Rice as Eugene Dorn, Ed Kaye as Shamrayev,
David Tinny as Simon Medvedenko, James Bass as Jacob, and Richard Lewis as Butler.
Kevin Porter and Peter Waldron are set designers for the production; Glenn Horton
is light designer. Costumes are by Jean Elliot, Alyseum Lamb, and Didi Mitchel. Jo Charras
is stage manager.
"The Seagull" is a story of the theater, of actors and writers, of art itself,"
director Wilder explains. "Chekhov, considered by many to be a Russian Hamlet, focuses
his skill to create an absorbing, intricate mosaic of characters struggling with themselves
and each other for love and meaning in their lives. The story is played out against an
elegant country estate, a haunted, faded photograph of a society of lost Russian grandeur."
Tickets for "The Seagull" are available at $3 general admission or $1.50 students
and senior citizens at Yenney's Music in Olympia, at the Evergreen Bookstore, or at the
door.
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
Academic Dean Will Humphreys has been named chairman of the advisory board for

- 6Youth Employment Services (YES) of Olympia. The organization, sponsored by Employment
Security and the Senior Center's R.S.V.P. program, seeks to provide employment (full-time,
temporary or part-time) for youths between 18 and 23 years of age.
f
Evergreen alum Adele Hansen has been hired by Western Washington University as an
alcohol consultant, charged with helping educate students about alcoholism. "In this
country we program our kids to be drunks," says Hanson. Her job at Western is to help
students learn how to watch for their own behavioral changes and to work toward "responsible
drinking." Hansen studied counseling and development at Evergreen. Three years ago she
began working in Olympia with teenage alcoholics and their parents, and she later went on
to design and implement the Youth Substance Awareness Program within the Community Alcohol
Center in Thurston County.
Faculty Member Lovern King reports that a crew of Evergreen Native Americans,
including students from the Symbolization program and alums, are attending the Indian
World's Fair in Phoenix, Arizona this week. They are recording activities on color video
and colored slides. King, who is attending the fair with students, says she'll participate
in the National Indian Media Conference set in Phoenix this week, too. King also reports
she has published an article on "The Effective Use of Television in Adult Education,"
which appears in the March, 1979 issue of "Lifelong Learning: The Adult Years."
December graduate Sean McLin, reports he has begun teaching in the "Talented and
Gifted Program" at James Sales Elementary School in the Franklin Pierce School District
near Tacoma. McLin, who studied film at Evergreen, is working with 10 elementary youngsters
through June 8 and is filming his efforts. Though he completed his degree Fall Quarter,
he plans to return to campus June 3 for commencement.
And, two Evergreen students will present papers at the sixth annual Sociology/
Anthropology undergraduate research conference to be held at the University of Santa Clara
tomorrow. Patti Heinis will present "Language of Loggers", a socio-linguistic analysis
of terms, cliches, and special vocabulary used by workers on a logging site near Shelton.
Debby Taylor will read "Literary Reactions to the Notion of Progress in the U.S. Nineteen^1
Century". Debby's paper describes how such changes as industrialization and urbanization'
were perceived in the romantic literature of such writers as Ralph Waldo Emerson and
Henry Thoreau. The two papers came out of research conducted while Pattie and Debby were
enrolled in "The Novel Experience," taught by Faculty Members Sandra Simon and Eric Larson.
Both papers seek to explore the connections between language and culture within specific
social mileaus.
ALEXANDER REPORTS ON HIS ADVENTURES IN KOBE
Faculty Member Richard Alexander, just beginning an exchange program at the Kobe
University of Commerce in Tarumi-ku, Japan, reports he's already settled into a "standard
Japanese house" about 30 minutes from the college. He has "four compact rooms with bath,
tatami mats, enormous closets...no heating or central hot water." It has been especially
furnished for him with "a desk, a western toilet and the longest bed purchasable in Kobe."
With the help of his neighbors, most of whom are Kobe faculty members, he has learned to
ride the local buses and trains and to shop in downtown Tarumi, "which is like nothing so
much as the Pike Street Market."
Kobe, he reports, is a large city, "very crowded and busy, located on a beautiful
bay and backed up against precipitous, thickly wooded hills." So far, he adds, "I have
experienced little or no culture shock" though he did "make one gaffe" recently when he
wore slippers into a house. "The custom is to remove ANY shoes, no matter how soft, before
entering." He says he "strains to be properly polite, to remember or try to guess what
will seem polite here." "Of course, I often find myself falling back, unconsciously on my
old Southern Gentleman training. Thus, I find it especially vexing to adjust to what seems
to be expected etiquette towards women. Here in southern Japan the customs are the revere~
of all that careful southern training. I have to restrain myself forcibly from rising whl
women enter the room...which would merely embarrass them. The wives still prepare the
meals and serve them while the men eat, eating only later themselves and alone."
Alexander notes he is "constantly tested about food. For example, offered raw fish
with the clear anticipation that I will gag on it. I surprise everyone by gobbling it up
voraciously," he adds. His long and detailed letter, open to all interested readers in the
Office of College Relations, includes detailed accounts of the opening day of school,

of the students "who are not at all regimented", the faculty "which appears to be nearly
all male" and the Japanese educational system. He concludes with a note of "hunger for
news of Evergreen and Olympia" and promises "all letters would be gratefully received and
replies forthcoming." And, he urges you use this address soon and send your letter air
mail. "The boat takes six weeks..."
Richard Alexander
2-18 Miyamadai, 3 chome
Tarumi-ku, Kobe 655
JAPAN
FREE MAGAZINES OFFERED TO EXIT INTERVIEWEES
"The Graduate" magazine will be given free to all Evergreen graduating seniors
completing their exit interview in the Career Planning and Placement Office, Library 1200.
The 120-page "Handbook For Leaving School" is an easy-reading, educational magazine.
It includes information on careers, job hunting and lifestyles, as well as numerous other
articles designed to prepare seniors for life after college. All graduating seniors are
urged to contact the CP & P office as soon as possible to conduct the short interview and
receive the information packed magazine.
Legislative Memo Volume V, No. 13
By Les Eldridge, Assistant to the President
Capitol Budget
The capital budget was brought before the House Wednesday, April 18, and contained
more than $1 million in appropriations for Evergreen: $635,000 was recommended for the new
soccer and baseball field, $194,000 for gymnasium planning, $110,000 for emergency roof
and set and model shop repairs, and $150,000 was reappropriated for final equipment purchase
for the Communications Lab. In a vote taken Thursday April 19 the bill ran into trouble.
The first vote taken was 30-62 against passage. Evergreen's section is intact. It appears
that the House may not pass the bill, but may leave capital budget framing (and the edge
in negotiations) to the Senate. The Senate's capital budget is considerably less than that
of the House. The Senate hoped to bring its versions of both operating and capital budgets
to a vote this week.
Master's Bill
On April 17, the Senate concurred with the House amendment to SB 2610, the Evergreen
Master's bill, by a 43-3 vote. Voting against the bill were Senators Slim Rasmussen of
Tacoma, Kent Pullen of Issaquah, and Ray Moore of Seattle. The bill has been reprinted
with the amendment included, and signed by the President of the Senate, the Co-speakers of
the House and sent to the Governor on Friday, April 20. The Governor signed the bill
April 26.
The bill, sponsored by Senator A.N. "Bud" Shinpoch, authorizes the award of a Master's
degree at Evergreen. The appropriation for the first program in the public administration
study area is already in the budgets of each house, appropriating $296,000 for next biennium.
The modified amendment added by Phyllis Erickson requires annual reports by the College to
the Council for Postsecondary Education on our progress in raising enrollments, cutting
costs, and expanding service to Southwest Washington. It suggests that the Legislature
review CPE recommendations on the College's curriculum and performance in 1985 and act upon
them. It does not impose any sanctions in statute for failure to meet enrollment goals.
A Social Note
A dinner/reception for legislators serving their first session was held at the
President's residence on April 16, and was attended by 26 legislators plus guests. Evergreen
staff, faculty, alums, and ECCO steering committee members rounded out the attendance of
nearly 80 persons. The Board of Trustees was represented by Jane Sylvester and her husband,
Jack; and Dennis Peterson, Chairman of the Board of Governors, represented the Evergreen
State College Foundation. The event was co-sponsored by the Evergreen College Community
Organization (ECCO) and the Evergreen Alumni Association.

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April 23, 1979
"help wanted"
SPRING FESTIVAL SET JUNE 1-3

Take five high school bands, a raft of cartoons, a sunny day's worth of softball
games and a zigzag skateboard rally. Add art exhibits featuring Thurston County craftspersons, community displays for upcoming summer festivals, and a variety of student and
faculty entertainment and exhibits and you'll come up with just some of the plans for
the first Spring Festival planned at Evergreen June 1, 2, and 3.
The event, still in design stages by an industrious committee, seeks to serve two
purposes: to celebrate the successful conclusion of Evergreen's eighth academic year
with a "show and tell" Open House that encourages the public to visit every nook and
cranny of their local state college; and to herald the coming of summer and the variety
of festivals and activities that come with it —— from Lakefair to the Mad Arts Festival,
from the McCleary Bear Festival to Yelm Prairie Days.
The idea for the festival, which will conclude with graduation ceremonies June 3,
was generated by the Enrollment Design Disappearing Task Force, which pointed out the
need for more social activities at Evergreen
a lack also noted in the January report
by the Council for Postsecondary Education.
Duke Kuehn, special assistant to President Dan Evans, two weeks ago appointed
Larry Stenberg and Judy Annis to cbchair plans for the event, which many hope will become
an annual "rite of spring". Stenberg and Annis invited some 15 persons to meet with them
last week to begin laying the groundwork and, when the committee met again Friday,
tentative schedules were to be finalized and a host of work assignments delivered.
"We kind of see this as Evergreen's gift to the Thurston County community," Stenberg
says. "It's our way to say "thank you' for having us." At the same time, Annis notes,
"It's our chance to show what we've done with all the resources the state has given us
what projects our students have completed, what exhibits or displays they've compiled
what we've done here during academic year 1978-79."
Within the next two weeks, invitations will go out to a variety of on and off
campus groups, seeking performers, craftspersons, all folks who'd like to become involved
in the festival in some way.
"We're still looking for activities and ideas to enrich our agenda," Annis says.
"We plan on starting things off on Friday afternoon, going all day Saturday with a variety
of activities for nearly every age group
from athletics to classical music, from tours
to a mud-generating tug of war game
and concluding Sunday with commencement."
The committee, which meets Friday mornings at 10 o'clock in Library 3112, invites all
interested Evergreeners to volunteer now to help with the festival. If you'd like to help
but can't attend the meeting, call either Annis (866-6128) or Stenberg (866-6296). All
suggestions are welcome.
PRAG BEGINS WORK WITH CONSULTANTS

Following four weeks of interviews with consultants from marketing, public relations
and advertising firms, the Public Relations Advisory Group (PRAG) this week recommended
selection of Hill and Knowlton, the largest public relations firm in the United States, to
assist the college in its efforts to double enrollment within the next five years.
President Dan Evans conferred with PRAG and his special assistant Duke Kuehn, last

- 2-

,

,

Monday, following an hour-long orientation by Norm Calvoe and Archie Tucker, both of Hill
and Knowlton's Seattle office. The president agreed with PRAG recommendations and expected
representatives from Hill and Knowlton to meet again with PRAG members Thursday to begin
final determination of contract responsibilities.
/
The firm was one of four which offered to help the college explore both short-term
plans to boost Fall Quarter's enrollment, and long-term efforts to impact the college's
public image and help Evergreen double its student body by 1985.
With the Hill-Knowlton contract still in the negotiations stages, another consultant
has already been hard at work since the first of April. Earlyse Swift was hired as a
special consultant to "develop a marketing approach for the college's curriculum" between
now and October 1. A former teacher and head for the "Focus on Opportunity" outreach
program at Whatcom Community College, Mrs. Swift will meet with faculty members, particularly
specialty area conveners and program coordinators, to help them identify potential audiences
for their Fall Quarter programs and to develop "marketing tactics." She'll also strive to
identify key groups of potential Evergreen students within Thurston County, especially
those already working as public employees, and she'll help coordinate publicity for the
Vancouver and Port Angeles Outreach programs.
TRUSTEES TO MEET APRIL 26
Evergreen's Board of Trustees convenes on campus Thursday, April 26, to consider
a proposal altering the faculty salary schedule and to weigh approval of a contract that
will enable Evergreen to offer teacher certification to its undergraduates through work
with another four-year institution. Trustees will also be asked to formally approve the
appointment of Byron Youtz as provost and to consider tuition waivers on certain grantsupported activities.
Dominating what appears to be a full agenda, are eleven presidential reports to
the board, ranging from an update on academic advising and on enrollment statistics from
Spring Quarter, to a recent faculty vote to abolish the Evergreen unit of credit and use /
the more standard hours of credit per quarter.
The board meeting, which begins at 10:30 a.m. April 26 in Library 3112, is open to
the public.
upcoming events
BROTHER AELRED PERFORMS TUESDAY
An "Evening of Classical Music" will be performed by tenor Brother Aelred Woodard,
O.S.B., of Saint Martin's music faculty Tuesday, April 24, beginning at 8 p.m. in the
Recital Hall of the Communications Building. Accompanied by pianist Carolyn Hoover and a
quartet composed of local musicians, Brother Aelred plans to present works by Handel, Bach,
Beethoven, Wolf, Brahms, Strauss, Faure, Debussy, Giordano, Massenet and Vaughan Williams
in his Tuesdays at Eight concert, the second musical event of the Spring Quarter series.
Admission is $2.50 general or $1.50 for students. Reservations and ticket information
for all Tuesdays at Eight performances is available through Evergreen's Office of College
Relations, 866-6128.
SAN FRANCISCO MIME TROUPE APPEARS WEDNESDAY

The San Francisco Mime Troupe brings its latest original musical comedy "Electrobucks"
to Evergreen for one performance only Wednesday, April 25, beginning at 8 p.m. in the main
lobby of the Library Building. The multi-racial troupe, which has earned a national and
international reputation with its special blend of zany comedy and penetrating satire,
packed houses at Evergreen last year with a comic dramatization of urban renewal, "The
Hotel Universe." "Electrobucks" dissects in one hour, the "me" movement, the emerging
V
Chicane middle class, and the glittering new electronics industry.
The scene is the windowless assembly line of a microprocessor plant in the Santa Clara
or in the Willamette Valley. Wisps of harmful solvents and acids hang in the
Valley

- 3-

fetid air as Edith, an Okie Dust Bowl survivor turned company loyalist; Dolores, a black
labor rebel turned cynic; and Dela, a Chicana street siren, strain their eyes to inscribe
programs on tiny components that might be destined for Pong games or for guided missiles.
Haunting the women's every move is Juan Hernandez, alias John Henderson, an upwardly
mobile production manager who has dropped the Mexican in him to become 99 percent "American."
Henderson wants a penthouse at the top, and to get it he has to squeeze more and more work
out of the overworked, underpaid women.
"Electrobucks," designed, directed, composed, produced and performed by the entire
Mime troupe, features original songs in English and Spanish, as well as a medley of countrywestern, soul and salsa tunes.
Admission price is $3.50 general or $2.50 for senior citizens and high school students.
MUMMA HEADLINES SEMINARS, CONCERTS

Dr. Gordon Mumma, internationally recognized performer and composer of contemporary
music, will highlight this spring's Labyrinths week of contemporary performance and
seminars April 25-28 at Evergreen. Mumma, a professor of music at the University of
California, Santa Cruz, will visit the campus for four days of seminars, climaxing with a
Friday night workshop/panel discussion and a Saturday night concert. All Labyrinths
activities are open to the public.
The week's activities begin with seminars from 9 to 12 each morning in the Communicatio
Building Recital Hall. The Wednesday seminar, titled "The Making of EAR HEART", is a study
of the collaborative process used in the production of a full-evening multi-media work.
Thursday's seminar, "John Cage", discusses the North German Television documentary directed
by Klaus Wildenhahn, while Friday's seminar focuses on "Two Applications of Electronic
Music in Other Media."
Each of the morning seminars will be followed by informal sessions with Dr. Mumma,
covering his special interests in dance, visual art, and electronic music. Seminar tickets
are available in Room 324 of the Communications Building for $1.50 per day.
On Friday evening, a workshop and panel discussion will feature Mumma's presentation
"Timekeepers, Music Makers and Technology". The workshop begins at 8 p.m. in the Experimental
Theater of Evergreen's Communication Building. Admission is $1, with tickets available at
the door.
A formal evening of contemporary performance featuring Professor Mumma's work as
well as student and faculty compositions will complete the Labyrinths week Saturday, April 28,
at 8 p.m. in the Experimental Theater. Tickets will be available at the door for $2.50.
All events are sponsored by Evergreen's Electronic Music Studios and the 3-Dimensional
Design and Making Dances academic programs; which are also offering a complete admission
package for $7. For information or advance ticket registration, contact Dr. Greg Steinke,
866-6059.
IZQUIERDA ENSEMBLE PLAYS FRIDAY
Acoustic jazz comes to Evergreen Friday, April 27 when the four-member Izquierda
Ensemble returns to the campus for one performance only, set to begin at 8 p.m. in the
Recital Hall of the Communications Building.
Based in Portland, the Izquierda Ensemble specializes in an innovative form of
acoustic jazz, emphasizing vocal harmonies among its four members: Naomi Littlebear, who
writes most of the group's songs, and Izetta Smith, Robin Chilstrom and Kristen Aspen.
Reflecting strong sympathies for the feminist movement and awakening of third world
consciousness, the group has crisscrossed the country several times on performance tours
since it was formed in January of 1977.
Brought to Olympia by the Tides of Change Production Company, the Izquierda Ensemble
will feature the addition of four local women musicians for its Friday night concert at
Evergreen. Joining the group will be Barbara Moreno, Myra Melford, Lorree Knutson and
June Hoffman.
Tickets for the concert, at $2.50 each, are on sale now at Rainy Day Records on
Olympia's Westside, and at the Evergreen's Women's Center (Evans Library, room 3214) and
the Duckhouse, a student-operated store on the second floor mall of the College Activities
Building. Tickets will also be sold at the door.

BEAUX ARTS BALL SET SATURDAY

A Parisian tradition of more than five decades returns to Evergreen Saturday,
April 28, when students stage their third annual "Beaux Arts Ball" at 8 p.m. on the fourth/
floor of the Evans Library. The dance, a celebration of the fine arts first originated
in Paris during the 1920's, will offer participants a chance to create and wear costumes
that recognize both the coming of spring and the vitality of the arts. Music by two
professional bands, including Portland's Montuno Latin Jazz group, will also be featured.
Students invite persons of all ages to the event, for which advance tickets at $3
each are now on sale at the Evergreen Bookstore. Tickets will also be sold at the door
of the Library Building beginning at 8 p.m. April 28.
SUMMER PHOTO EXHIBIT OPENS SATURDAY

Eight photographer/artists from Portland's Blue Sky Gallery Group and The Evergreen
State College will open an exhibit of their works Saturday, April 28, beginning at 7 p.m.
in the Second Floor Gallery of the Evans Library Building. The opening and reception, set
from 7 to 10 p.m., is open to the public and offers photography enthusiasts a chance to
both meet the artists and discuss their upcoming academic program, "Summer Photography
Institute," which begins at Evergreen June 18, according to faculty member Dr. Kirk Thompson.
Featured in the exhibit
and participating as instructors in the summer academic
study
are Blue Sky Gallery members Christopher Rauschenberg, Donna Mitchell, Terry
Toedtemeier, Ann Hughes, Craig Hickman and Robert D_. Franco, along with Evergreen faculty
members Sid White and Dr. Thompson.
In addition to the April 28 opening, a gallery talk on "Contemporary Photographic
Trends," by photographer Terry Toedtemeier will be offered Wednesday, May 2, from 3 to
5 p.m. in the Second Floor Gallery. Joining Toedtemeier for the talk will be the other
seven participating exhibitors, who'll be on hand to discuss their work and their plans for
the Summer Institute with interested students.
The exhibit, on display through May 11, is open to the public free of charge as an (
introduction to the intensive ten-week summer study program which, Dr. Thompson says,
"will cover all aspects of the art of photography." "This summer study is open to intermediate and advanced photography students," Dr. Thompson adds, "and it's designed to help
them produce a strong portfolio of their work."
The Summer Photography Institute generates 16 credit hours of undergraduate work in
arts and offers participants use of Evergreen's newly opened black and white photographic
studios along with use of "limited color facilities" for advanced studies. Tuition for
Washington residents is $206.
Complete information on both the summer school program and the photography exhibit
is available from Dr. Thompson at 866-6009.
EVERGREENERS TO PERFORM IN CABARET INTERNATIONALE

Evergreen musicians, dancers and technicians will be performing Friday for Cabaret
Internationale79, a dinner, show and dance performance at the Tyee Motor Inn to benefit
scouting in Mason, Thurston and Lewis Counties.
Gretchen Christopher Matzen, frequent Leisure Education instructor at Evergreen, will
headline entertainment along with Gary Troxel, reviving two-thirds of their successful
recording trio, the Fleetwoods. Playing with them will be the Evergreen Quartet, comprised
of Jez Graham on piano, Dave Marcus on guitar, Tim Koss on bass and Dave Christiansen on
drums. Also performing Friday night will be a number of dancers from Gretchen's Leisure
Education classes, including Evergreeners Corey Meador, Cindy Levesque, Paula Hardy, Keith
Hammerfield, Katherine Hamilton, Heidi Wirt, Rick Selvage and Barbara Kerber.
Tickets to Cabaret International are $50 per person and are tax deductible. Information on the seven-course gourmet dinner and the entertainment is available at 357-3331. (^

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April 16, 1979

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...EVERGREENER WINS STATE'S_ONLY NSF/SOS AWARD...Robert Roach, an Illinois senior, and TESC,
have been awarded a $7,538 grant to evaluate means of preventing Acute Mountain Sickness
(AMS). This is the only grant awarded this year in the State of Washington through the Student Originated Studies program by the National Science Foundation. Roach, a science student,
says his year-long project will involve six other Evergreen students, working with the advice
of Evergreen faculty member Dr. Jeff Kelly, in concert with Dr. Tom Hornbein of the University
of Washington Medical School and Dr. Jeff Bland of the University of Puget Sound.
Purpose of the grant, Roach says, is to evaluate treatments proposed for AMS, an illness
which may involve headaches, nausea and vomiting. It seems to occur when persons climb to
high altitudes so rapidly that their bodies do not have time to adjust to the new environment.
Roach's Evergreen student team will evaluate the effectiveness of proposed treatments for
AMS and submit a final report to the National Science Foundation by next February.

...FOUR FINALISTS FOR ASSISTANT DEAN...Four Evergreen faculty members have accepted nominations
for a two-year appointment as assistant academic dean, according to Screening Committee chairman Thad Curtz. The four
Dr. Jeff Kelly, Dr. Richard Cellarius, Dr. Greg Steinke, and Dr.
Kirk Thompson
will be interviewed on campus the week of April 23. The Screening Committee
hopes then to complete recommendations on the finalists and forward their report to Provost
Byron Youtz by May 2. The appointment, a nonrenewable one to fill the post currently held
by Dr. Rob Knapp, becomes effective Fall Quarter and continues through Summer, 1981.

...HIGH SCHOOL POETS SOUGHT FOR FULLER CONTEST...Student poets from Mason and Thurston County
high schools and TESC are invited to submit their works to the third annual Carol and Herb
Fuller Poetry Contest, now underway, Dr. Craig Carlson, Evergreen faculty member and chairman of the annual contest, says entries from high school poets are due in his office by Monday,
April 30. Evergreen students are asked to submit their work by Monday, April 23.
Purpose of the contest, supported by donations from Olympia attorneys Carol and Herb
Fuller, is to "encourage the composition of poetry and to recognize the achievement of student
poets," says Dr. Carlson.
Awards for the contest are $50 for the high school winner. Evergreen poets may win $100
for first place; $75 for second or $50 for third. All works must either be previously unpublished or have been published since September, 1977.
Entries may be mailed to Dr. Carlson, Library 2114, TESC, Olympia, Wa. 98505.
...KAWASAKI TO EXPLORE JAPANESE ART TUESDAY AT EIGHT...Kazuhiro Kawasaki, a calligrapher and
art historian who's been perfecting his techniques since the age of three and a Japanese
national who's become a stranger in his own country, will explore "Contact With Japan Through
Its Art History" in a public slide/lecture Tuesday, April 17, at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall
of the Communications Building. Kawasaki, a member of Evergreen's faculty in art and art
history since 1976, will offer clues to understanding what he calls "the conflicting messages
that bombard foreign visitors to modern Japan" in his presentation, part of the Spring Quarter
Tuesdays at Eight concert/lecture series.
...HISTORIAN TO EXAMINE "HEROES_AND HEROINES" WEDNESDAY...American historian, author and professor Page Smith believes that we live in a period of the anti-hero, where our old models for
leroism, bravery and courage have broken down and we're forced to busily search for new examples. In a free, public presentation April 18, Smith will shed new light on old theories
about "Heroes and Heroines in American History", the fifth event in the Future of Our Heritage
Series. His talk begins at 7:30 p.m. at the Olympia Public Library and will be followed bydiscussion and refreshments.

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...STOREFRONT THEATER PERFORMS "KENNEDY'S CHILDREN" APRIL 21...Kennedy's Children, a satirical
drama that paints a spiritual portrait of America in the 1960s, comes to western Washington
for one performance only Saturday, April 21, at Evergreen. Written by Robert Patrick, who has
been called "Off-Off-Broadway's most produced playwright," the award-winning drama will be
staged by Portland's Storefront Theater beginning at 8 p.m. in the Experimental Theater of
the Communications Building.
Set in a New York bar in 1974, the play focuses on five characters who never interact
with each other; instead they individually relive their experiences during the post-Camelot
era. Together the quintet presents what reviewers have described as "an expert mixture of
bittersweet nostalgia, self deprecating humor, sarcastic social commentary and a subtle but
moving sense of lost youth and failed ideas."
Reservations for the production may be made by calling 866-6128. Tickets go on sale at
7:30 p.m. April 21 at the door of the Communications Building for $3 general admission or
$1.50 for students.
...YUGOSLAVIAN DANCE PERFORMANCE SET APRIL 22..."Music and Dance of Yugoslavia" will be
celebrated in a public performance by the Olympia Folkdancers, the Vela Luka Tamburica Orchestra, and the Olympia Balkan Singers Sunday, April 22, beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the Experimental Theater of the Communications Building. The musical production, which carries a $1
admission charge, will be directed by former Evergreen student Richard Home, currently
director/choreographer of the Vela Luka Dance Ensemble of Anacortes.
Clad in Yugoslavian costumes, the Olympia Folkdancers will present nine dances from the
Yugoslavian Republics of Serbia and Croatia in the 90-minute program, which will be interAspersed with historical and cultural commendary by Home. Providing music for some of the
dances will be the six-member Vela Luka Tamburica Orchestra, also of Anacortes. In addition,
a number of songs will be performed by the Olympia Balkan Singers.
Tickets to the April 22 dance go on sale at 7 p.m. at the door of the Communications
Building.

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50 more recommendations
SYMPOSIUM GENERATES STUDENT SUGGESTIONS, PLANS TO CONTINUE WORK
By Carolyn Byerly, College Relations Editor

Carol Gilliland discussed the need to strengthen academic advising rather than impose
set requirements for graduation. Steve Francis observed that the word "pathways" to degrees
connotes singularity: one road, one end. Martha Turner raised the need for students on independent contract or internships to meet each other. In all, more than a dozen student spokespersons and over 50 concrete recommendations for Evergreen's future formed the finale of a twoday symposium Wednesday afternoon when a crowd surpassing 200 gathered on Red Square. The
mood was festive, yet participants seemed concerned and aware that more work on the part of
students, faculty and staff still lay ahead before future studies and enrollment plans would
be final.
The two days of small group and plenary sessions, initiated by students last week and
endorsed fully by Evergreen faculty, examined nine issues related to college operations,
academics and plans for enrollment boosts. Participants took excused leave from regular
academic schedules to examine these issues: contracts and internships, graduation requirements,
curriculum prediction and career pathways, part-time studies, advising, college image and
marketing, social activities,and student involvement in decision making and academic planning.
PRESERVE, BUT STRENGTHEN
Recommendations had grown out of many hours of discussions and debate in small workshops
Tuesday and Wednesday, when students spoke out on concerns about the college's future and
offered their own suggestions for shaping it. Some recommendations overlapped; others offered
new light on old subjects. Preservation of Evergreen's present system was a recurring theme,
as was the need for stronger freshman and continuing academic advising; many felt that the
more students are informed about the Evergreen system and its options, the better decisions
they can make about their personal education. Another strong theme centered on a need for
expanded part-time studies for working persons and women returning to the classroom.
The need for local community involvement in Evergreen affairs was mentioned nearly half
a dozen times, with one workshop proposing a survey to determine educational needs of local
residents. Other presenters pinpointed the need for different campus information systems to
inform students about faculty expertise, college resources, and how to become part of various
activities.
Recommendations for a better public image for the college gave rise to thoughts like placing more emphasis on Evergreen successes (alums, programs), expanding our use of photos and
other broadcast media, and taking personal responsibility to talk to others about the college.
To expand enrollment, some thought everyone should "bring a friend to campus
permanently,"
or that Evergreen could expand its exposure by outreach to county fairs and other forums
around the state.
WORKSHOPS WILL MEET THROUGH MAY
Responding to strong expressions for student involvement in academic planning and college
affairs, Provost Byron Youtz recommended a process that would allow student input while still
recognizing the responsibility of faculty and administrators for final decisions. Essentially,
symposium workshops will continue meeting as study groups now through early May, when recommendations on specific programs will be finalized. New participants may join during this time.
Interested Evergreeners are encouraged to keep pace with the sessions through the
campus Information Center which will be adding new boards for use in following these developments .

- 2FOUR ASSISTANT DEAN CANDIDATES NAMED
Four Evergreen faculty members have accepted nominations for a two-year appointment as /'
assistant academic dean, according to Screening Committee Chairman Thaci Curtz. The four

Jeff Kelly, Richard Cellarius, Greg Steinke and Kirk Thompson
will be available for open
interviews by faculty, staff and students April 23-26 at noon in Library 2600. Exact interview
schedules will be announced in next week's issue of the Happenings.
The Screening Committee hopes to complete recommendations on the finalists and forward
their list to Provost Byron Youtz by May 2. The appointment, a nonrenewable one to fill the
post currently held by Rob Knapp, becomes effective Fall Quarter and continues through Summer,
1981.
Portfolios of the four finalists will be available April 16-26 at the Library Reference
Desk, and are open to Evergreeners for comment and review. Persons who can't attend the open
interviews may direct questions to Screening Committee members: Ron Woodbury, Bill Winden,
Marilyn Frasca, Kaye V_. Ladd, Rudy Martin, Susan Smith, Dan Weiss, Marissa Zwick, and Stephen
Charak.

Legislative Memo Volume V, No. 12
MASTER'S BILL PASSES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
By Les Eldridge, Assistant to the President
On Monday April 9, the House of Representatives passed Substitute Senate House Bill 2610,
the Evergreen Master's bill, adding a House Higher Education Committee amendment. The
amendment described in last week's legislative memo merely requires reports on progress
(
in implementing the CPE report recommendations "increasing enrollment, reducing costs and
expanding service to Southwestern Washington." It calls for the college to report annually
"steps taken with respect to achievement of: target enrollment levels, provision of a
master's program in evening credit offerings, the expansion of career preparation pathways,
the re-examination of admissions procedures, expanded efforts in Southwest Washington
high schools and community colleges to increase Washington resident enrollments at the
college" and a number of other recommendations of the CPE report.
There was no floor debate opposing the bill Monday. Speaking in favor of the bill were
Representatives Dan Grimm, Democrat-Puyallup, who moved its passage and Representative
Ron Dunlap, Republican-Bellevue, who moved that the bill be advanced from second to third
reading for its final passage. Also speaking on behalf of the bill were Representatives
Scott Blair, Republican-Seattle, Representative Jeff Douthwaite, Democrat-Seattle,
Representative Delores Teutsch, Republican-Kirkland, Representative Hal Zimmerman,RepublicanCamas and Representative Dick Barnes, Republican-Seattle.
The appropriation for the bill was placed in the House budget two weeks ago on an
amendment offered by Representative Ron Keller, Democrat-Olympia, along with two other
Evergreen amendments totalling $428,000.
The bill now goes to the Senate for concurrence with the House amendment. If the
Senate concurs, the bill will be signed by co-speakers of the House John Bagnariol and
Duane Berentson, and President of the Senate Lt. Governor John Cherberg and delivered to
the Governor for her action. Upon delivery, the Governor has five days to sign the bill
or veto it. If she fails to act on it within that time, the bill becomes a law without
Gubernatorial signature.
The Capitol Budget Bill (HB 235) is being written this week by the House Appropriations
Committee. The Governor's budget contained no appropriation for TESC's capitol request.
f.
It appears likely that the House will add some capitol projects for Evergreen.
An effort to remove the Faculty Collective Bargaining bill from the House Labor
Committee and place it on the calendar, failed 49-49 on Tuesday. Wednesday was the last
day for consideration of this bill under current cut-off date agreements.

ROACH AWARDED STATE'S ONLY NSF/SOS GRANT

(

Robert Roach, an Illinois senior, and Evergreen have been awarded a $7,538 grant to
evaluate means of preventing Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS). This is the only grant awarded
this year in the state of Washington through the Student Originated Studies program by
the National Science Foundation. Roach, a science student, says his year-long project will
involve six other Evergreen students, working with the advice of Evergreen faculty member,
Dr. Jeff Kelly, in concert with Dr. Tom Hornbein of the University of Washington Medical
School and Dr. Jeff Bland of the University of Puget Sound.
Purpose of the grant, Roach says, is to evaluate treatments proposed for AMS, an
illness which may involve headaches, nausea and vomiting. It seems to occur when people
climb to high altitudes so rapidly that their bodies do not have time to adjust to the new
environment.
"In the past few years," Roach says, "several therapeutic agents have been suggested
for the prevention of AMS. Among these treatments is the ingestion of large amounts of
Rolaids (up to 24 tablets a day) as recommended by Larry Penberthy of Mountain Safety Research
in Seattle."
An Evergreen student team will evaluate the effectiveness of such treatment by
utilizing Rolaids and a placebo in a "double-blind, randomized" procedure. "This means
that neither the climbers, nor the person distributing the tablets will know which agent
is being given," Roach says. The physiological signs and symptoms will be monitored to
determine the effectiveness of the treatment as well as to gather further information
about AMS.
Working on the project full-time with Roach will be Evergreen students Susan Bartlett
of Concord, Massachusetts and Debbie Johnson of Chester, Vermont, and working part-time
are Jeff Hardesty of Eugene, Oregon and Jeri Edelston of Armonk, New York. Roach plans
soon to add two more full-time students to the project, which will be conducted primarily
during the summer, with final reports due to the National Science Foundation by
February, 1980.
EVERGREEN POETS SOUGHT FOR FULLER CONTEST
Student poets from Mason and Thurston County high schools and Evergreen are invited
to submit their works to the third annual Carol and Herb Fuller Poetry Contest, now underway.
Dr. Craig Carlson, Evergreen faculty member and chairman of the annual contest, says
entries from high school poets are due in his office by Monday, April 30. Evergreen
students are asked to submit their work by Monday, April 23.
Purpose of the contest, supported by donations from Olympia attorneys Carol and Herb
Fuller, is to "encourage the composition of poetry and to recognize the achievement of
student poets," says Dr. Carlson. "Both the Fullers feel that other students engaged in
the arts
dancers, musicians and actors
have a chance to perform; or, in the case
of painters, sculptors and photographers, to exhibit their work," Dr. Carlson says.
"The Fullers, devotees of poetry and also parents of Evergreen students, feel poets, too,
should have a chance to display their works," Carlson adds. "They offer this contest as
a vehicle for that recognition."
Awards for the contest are $50 for the high school winner. Evergreen poets may win
$100 for first place; $75 for second or $50 for third. All works must either be previously
unpublished or have been published since September, 1977.
The contest also requires participants to submit three or more short poems or a total
of 200 lines of verse, whichever amounts to the smaller number of lines. Five copies of
each poem must be typed and submitted without the name of the poet on them. An envelope
containing the poems will carry the poet's name, which will not be seen by the four-member
panel of judges. The envelope should contain the poet's mailing address, telephone number
and student status. All poets who want their poems returned must supply a self addressed
stamped envelope. Contestants who do not follow these rules will not be considered for the
prizes.
Contest judges are: Dr. Charles Teske, Evergreen faculty member in literature;

Molly Phillips, TESC graduate and current legislative analyst for the Office of the Council
of State College and University Presidents; Rusty North, Evergreen alum, artist-printer
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and poet; and Cal Kinnear, poet, dancer and owner of Word of Mouth Bookstore.
All entries should be mailed to Dr. Carlson, Library 2114, The Evergreen State College,
Olympia, Washington 98505.
upcoming events
KAWASAKI TO EXPLORE JAPANESE ART TUESDAY AT 8
Kazuhiro Kawasaki, a calligrapher and art historian who's been perfecting his
techniques since the age of three and a Japanese national who's become a stranger in his own
country, will explore "Contact With Japan Through Its Art History" in a public slide/lecture
Tuesday, April 17, at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Communications Building. Kawasaki,
a member of Evergreen's faculty in art and art history since 1976, will offer clues to
understanding what he calls "the conflicting messages that bombard foreign visitors to
modern Japan" in his presentation, part of the Spring Quarter Tuesdays at Eight concert/
lecture series.
The conflicts most visitors perceive but don't understand arise from Japan's "borrowing
of cultural attitudes" from China throughout its history and from the United States since
the end of World War II, Kawasaki says. Modern Japan offers immediate and ready evidence
of western influence
in its media, its transportation, even its fashion, he adds. The
country has, since 1945, adopted various western cultural ingredients that contribute to
convenience
such as discarding of kimonos by women office workers who now favor more
comfortable western style dresses.
But, the most difficult concept to grasp is how the Japanese have incorporated these
western influences, he says. And the best way for him to share his understanding of modern.
Japan is through its art and art history.
Presenting slides which span 14 centuries of Chinese influence and two decades of
westernization, Kawasaki says he'll offer a thematic approach to his talk, emphasizing
aesthetic trends in Japanese art history and pointing out the "extremely sensual and
emotional approach to art employed by the Japanese."1
Kawasaki has had ample opportunity to explore Japanese art, having been born into a
Tokyo family of calligraphers. He began learning that art at the age of three. His
life-long involvement with drawing and calligraphy led him to a job as a fashion illustrator
for a Tokyo department store. He soon rose to the task of fashion coordinator,, charged
with responsibility for hiring models, staging fashion shows of western clothes and improving
the "cultural awareness" of his models, many of whom lacked formal education. He directed
them to the city's art exhibits and concerts, attempting to offer them a sense of their
cultural heritage.
While working in that post, Kawasaki began to perceive himself as a "misfit," because,
as he recalls, "modern industrial Japan seems to require conformity and suppression of
individuality. I needed to break away from that." Joining family friends in Seattle,
Kawasaki enrolled at the University of Washington where he has completed his bachelor and
master's degrees and all but his dissertation for a doctorate
all in art and art history.
After five years in Seattle, he returned home in 1970. "The shock was so great," he
remembers, "I didn't go gack for five more years." The country had undergone changes
which Kawasaki had predicted. What he had not forecast were his own changes in attitudes.
"I'd become a stranger in Japan," he says. "Even taxi cab drivers would ask where I came
from. Though I speak fluent Japanese, I guess I'd lost my regional accent and I'd come
to behave in a manner distictive from my countrymen."
Kawasaki will share his views about the transformation of his country
and the
continuing sophistication of its art
in his talk Tuesday at Eight. Tickets go on
sale at 7:30 p.m. April 17 at the door of the Communications Building for $1.

" 5-

"HANTA YO" AUTHOR TO SPEAK TUESDAY
Ruth Beebe Hill, who spent nearly 30 years of her life researching and writing the
Indian epic Hanta Yo will be the featured speaker at the annual meeting of Olympia Friends
of the Library, April 17, at 7:30 p.m. Hill, a resident of Friday Harbor, meticulously
traces the ancestry of two Dakotah Indian families from the 1750's to 1830 in her work,
recreating the Indian culture as it was before white people's influence.
Smithsonian
magazine has called Hanta Yo a "blockbuster novel" and a "linguistic spectacular", and
ABC-TV has purchased rights to the manuscript with plans to dramatize the work
using the same team that produced "Roots" three years ago.
Author Hill devoted nearly half of her 65 years creating Hanta Yo. A white woman,
she became inspired by her own discovery of an ancient Dakotah document printed on tanned
elk hide. With the assistance of Chunksa Yuha, a Santee Sioux, Hill translated the
manuscript into Dakotah, and finally into nineteenth century English. The story finally
woven from this rare document depicts the tortuous sun-gazing ceremony, routine scalpings,
brutal children's games, the tender growth of friendship, and the intimacy of the marriage
ceremony. Hill calls her work, released in February, a "spiritual travelogue." She
believes that in the process of writing the book, she became quasi-Indian herself through
daily life on reservations.
Evergreeners and Olympia area residents may hear her personal account of Hanta Yo
during her April 17 talk. The event is free and open to the public. For more details contact
Ed Younglove, 357-7793.
HISTORIAN TO EXAMINE "HEROES AND HEROINES" WEDNESDAY
American historian, author and professor Page Smith believes that we live in a period
of the anti-hero, where our old models for heroism, bravery and courage have broken down
and we're forced to busily search for new examples.
In a free, public presentation Wednesday, April 18, Smith will shed new light on old
theories about "Heroes and Heroines in American History," the fifth event in the Future
of Our Heritage series, funded by the Washington State Commission for the Humanities and
coordinated by the Senior Center of Thurston County, The Evergreen State College and other
local organizations.
Professor Smith will speak at 7:30 p.m., at the Olympia Public Library, with refreshments and informal discussion following his talk.
Born in Baltimore, and educated at Dartmouth and Harvard, Dr. Page Smith has taught
American history at William and Mary College, and the University of California at
Santa Cruz and Los Angeles. Dr. Smith currently resides in Santa Cruz, where he continues
work on a several volume series on our nation's history since the Revolution.
Traditionally, Smith says, western culture's heroes were men who performed extraordinary
physical feats in battle or somewhere else. Even today, he continues, we tend to identify
the heroic with the conspicuous
public figures for the most part
when there is
evidence all about us that we seek a new kind of hero, a person more like ourselves.
"We have overlooked, been embarassed by the feats and day-to-day survival of
ordinary people," Smith says, "people like ourselves." "Yet we have recently begun to go
back, to find heroism in the person who struggled for a belief or cause or just daily
existence."
Noting the overwhelming success of the television program "Roots," as one example,
Smith says we are looking into our own past histories to celebrate the achievements of
ordinary people, especially people to whom we are linked.
Smith recalls new insights into heroism formulated by contemporary thinkers like
Harlem teacher Tom O'Gorman, who has written that in his own work his most essential task
is to "help students recognize the enormous presence of the hero in themselves," a concept
that Smith feels extends far beyond the ghetto and into all of society.
We are looking for the commendable in ourselves and we will come to celebrate it in
persons with whom we can identify, he predicts.
Through historians like himself we are coming to know more about some of the little
known heroic men and women in our own cultural past. In his research and writing Dr. Smith

6-

says he has sought "to do as much for women as for men in pointing out notable people."
His works include Daughters in American History, A People's History of the American
Revolution, The Chicken Book, and As a City Upon a Hill (the story of towns in American
history).
The Future of Our Heritage series seeks to explore how individuals and the cultural
experience link the past with the future. Dr. Page Smith will discuss his views on this
theme informally after his talk. He will be joined in this informal session by elders
from the Olympia community who are participating in the Heritage series.
The next Heritage event will present Ron Clarke and others who specialize in
community planning, in a program about community planning, policies and the environment,
May 9, 7:30 p.m., in the Olympia Public Library.
STOREFRONT THEATER

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TO PERFORM "KENNEDY'S CHILDREN" APRIL 21

Kennedy's Children, a satirical drama that paints a spiritual portrait of America
in the 1960s, comes to western Washington for one performance only Saturday, April 21 at
Evergreen. Written by Robert Patrick, who has been called "Off-Off-Broadway's most produced
playwright," the award-winning drama will be staged by Portland's Storefront Theater
beginning at 8 p.m. in the Experimental Theater of the Communications Building.
Set in a New York City bar in 1974, the play focuses on five characters who never
interact with each other; instead they individually relive their experiences during the
post-Camelot era. Together the quintet present what reviewers have described as "an
expert mixture of bittersweet nostalgia, self deprecating humor, sarcastic social commentary
and a subtle but moving sense of lost youth and failed ideas."
Focusing on what his characters say rather than what they do, Patrick has crafted a
dialogue which sticks to the minds of theatergoers and insures that their involvement with
each character intensifies as the evening
and the degree of alcoholic blurring
continues. Telling their tales of disappointment are Jerry West, as the spaced out Vietnam'
veteran who got high on the war; Luna Pettebone, as a social worker quietly obsessed with
President Kennedy's assassination; Dana Clavin as the political activist who has run out
of causes; Joanna Connolly, as an actress who once hoped to replace Marilyn Monroe as the
nation's sex goddess; and Sunny Sorrells, as the cynical and defeated Off-Broadway actor.
Seated at separate tables, the five present a tapestry of interlocking, yet isolated
monologues, carefully guided by director Richard Nesbitt, currently the manager of
Evergreen's Communications Building, but former business manager for Storefront. Nesbitt
and the cast of Kennedy's Children spent a week with the playwright, gaining his interpretations of the characters, men and women who were not only Patrick's friends, but his
heroes.
Their dissolution and loss of innocence make for what reviewers have called a "must
see" performance. Reservations for the Saturday evening production may be made by calling
866-6128. Tickets go on sale at 7:30 p.m. April 21 at the door of the Communication
Building for $3 general admission or $1.50 for students.
YUGOSLAVIAN DANCE PERFORMANCE SET APRIL 22
"Music and Dance of Yugoslavia" will be celebrated in a public performance by The
Olympia Folkdancers, the Vela Luka Tamburica Orchestra and the Olympia Balkan Singers
Sunday, April 22, beginning at 7:30 p.m. in the Experimental Theater of the Communications
Building at The Evergreen State College.
The musical production, which carries a $1 admission charge, will be directed by
former Evergreen student Richard Home, currently director/choreographer of the Vela Luka
Dance Ensemble of Anacortes, a city which encompasses a community of persons of Croatian
descent.
Home, who will serve as master of ceremonies for the Sunday evening performance,
says he conceived the program as part of his Winter Quarter studies in Slavic dance and
folklore with Evergreen Faculty Member Dr. Al Wiedemann, who will participate in the

- 7performance as one of the local dancers.
Clad in Yugoslavian costumes. The Olympia Folkdancers will present nine dances from
the Yugoslavian Republics of Serbia and Croatia in the 90-minute program, which will be
interspersed with historical and cultural commentary by Home.
Providing music for some of the dances will be the six-member Vela Luka Tamburica
Orchestra, also of Anacortes. In addition, a number of songs will be performed by the
Olympia Balkan Singers.
Tickets to the April 22 performance go on sale at 7 p.m. at the door of the
Communications Building.
MECHA OFFERS CHICANO SYMPOSIUM

Students in Evergreen's MECHA organization have announced plans to offer a two-day
Chicano Symposium April 26 and 27 especially designed to provide a Third World perspective
for current students. An invitation has gone out to all faculty members on campus,
asking them to "add some of these important lectures or workshops to your program schedule,"
thus providing what MECHA organizers hope will be a "valuable learning experience through
contact with educators and ideas from other communities and cultural viewpoints."
Scheduled are morning workshops each of the two days, followed by afternoon lectures,
with a two-day film series set to begin at noon each day. Special guest speaker at
Thursday's events is Dr. Rudolofo Acuna, founding chairman and professor of Chicano
Studies at California State University at Northridge. He'll present a workshop on "Chicano
Perspective on U.S. History" from 9 a.m. to noon in Library 2205, followed by a talk
on "Undocumented Workers and Their Exploitation," from 1 to 3 p.m. in the main Library lobby.
Friday, Francisco Hernandez, coordinator for Bilingual Education at Sonoma State
College and former director of the Chicano alternative school, Casa de la Rasa at Berkeley,
vill present a faculty workshop on "Incorporating a Third World Perspective into Interdisciplinary Studies," from 9 a.m. to noon in Library 2205. That afternoon he'll discuss
"History of Chicano Education" from 1 to 3 o'clock in the main Library lobby.
Scheduled both days at noon are a Chicano Film Festival, offering "Requiem 29,"
"Salt of the Earth," "Chulas Fronteras," "El Teatro Campesino" and "Mexico Frozen Revolution,"
all in Lecture Hall Four.
Also scheduled for Friday noon is a performance by Teatro Piojo of the University of
Washington, staged in the main Library lobby. All events are free and open to Evergreeners.
For more complete information on the two-day Chicano Symposium, call MECHA's office,
866-6033.
PLANNING MEETING FOR BEAUX ARTS BALL TUESDAY
Evergreeners are warmly invited to grab their sewing machines and create their
costumes now for the third annual Beaux Arts Ball, planned Saturday, April 28, beginning
at 8 p.m. on the fourth floor of the Evans Library. The event, a celebration of the fine
arts first originated in Paris during the 1920's, will offer participants a chance to
create and wear costumes which recognize both the coming of spring and the vitality of
the arts. Music by two professional bands, including Portland's Montuno Latin Jazz group,
will also be featured.
Persons willing to help finalize plans for the Beaux Arts Ball and to provide "person
power" to create decorations, stage publicity and handle other tasks for the event,
are invited to attend a planning meeting on campus Tuesday, April 17, beginning at 5 p.m.
in CAB 108. More information on the event, historically viewed as one of "THE" major
social activities on campus, is available from Mark Chambers at 866-5039.
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
...Faculty Member Nancy Taylor has announced plans to marry University of Washington
history professor Fritz Levy June 10. Following the wedding, the newlyweds will travel
to England for year-long studies. Faculty Member Don Finkel and his wife Susan have added

to their family. A son, Daniel, born March 15, joins siblings Zoe, 9; and David, 6.
Staff member Lucy Hershey, a secretary in the Personnel Office, retires today, Friday/
the 13th. A potluck luncheon in her honor will be held this noon on the fourth floor of
the Library. Lucy joined Evergreen's staff in December 1976 to work for academic advising,
then joined the Personnel Office this past year, bringing with her ten years experience
working for the Division of Vocational Education and more than eight years working for the
old Department of Public Assistance. Lucy says she plans to "loaf a few weeks" then she
and her husband, Harold, will take off for a two-week Caribbean cruise, celebrating her
new retirement and his, which began a year ago. Then they'll return to Olympia where
Lucy says she'll continue writing poetry and enjoying her family, which includes two
daughters and two grandsons.
Anne Turner, student services coordinator for
Evergreen-Vancouver, writes
that she'll meet with the local YWCA April 18 to discuss Evergreen's two-year program in
Community Studies and the new program, opening next fall, in Management and the Public
Interest. She says "regulars" at her Wednesday talk will include government
employees,
"Y" staff and volunteers, and participants in the Y's Women in Transition program. On
Thursday, Anne will also speak to Clark County high school counselors gathering at a meeting
at Clark College.
Hazel Pete, an Evergreen graduate from Lewis County, has opened a "Museum of Puget
Sound Indian Arts" in Oakville. Her new museum, which is open weekdays from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m., houses canoes, replicas of a cattail mat house, long house, sweat lodge and teepee,
authentic Native American clothing, dried and smoked native food items, five generations
of baskets and materials from the Pete family, and a variety of Native American art, including wood and bone carvings and Puget Sound paintings. Lectures on a variety of topics
are available through the museum and tours are provided for the general public and student
groups. Persons interested in the new museum are invited to contact Hazel through the
Museum of Puget Sound Indian Arts, 137 County Line Road, Oakville (206-273-7523).
/
Lloyd Corgan, a Vietnam veteran who completed his final two years at Evergreen and
graduated in 1974, has earned his law degree from the University of Washington.
Faculty
Member Paul Marsh reports that Corgan, who graduated from the U Law School in June of 1977,
may well be our first official lawyer, though the Newsletter knows of two other Evergreen
alums who have also earned their coveted law degrees: Bart Vandegrift and Chris Meserve.
Chris, who currently heads the Alumni Association and works for the State Supreme Court,
was recently named "Young Career Woman" by the Business and Professional Women's Club
of Olympia and by District Five of the State Federation of BPW clubs. Judging was based
on the candidate's ability to project an image reflecting the role of today's young women
in society. Chris will represent District Five in statewide competition at the Federation's
annual convention in Olympia next month.
Some newcomers have joined Evergreen's staff of late: Linda Swanson is the new
program assistant in College Relations; David Hoyt and Maria Potter are new custodians;
and Robert Williams is a new office assistant in Purchasing. Those who have recently
left the college include Janet Slater, accounting assistant in the Business Office;
Jane Petty, custodian; Helen Hannigan, accountant; Virginia Cummings, housekeeper; Thomas
Foster, and Joyce Stephens, custodians. Vicki Iden-McKinlay, program assistant, has also
left her job in Admissions to take a counseling post with Maple Lane School in Rochester.
Lois Gottlieb reports the date of the national television program on which her children
are scheduled to appear has been changed. As we reported last week, both Mark and Karen
Gottlieb, former Evergreen students, will appear on a network show on the Guinness
Book of Records next month. The date has been changed from May 6 to May 20. Watch your
television listings for exact time and channel.
WESTWATER OFFERS SPECIAL RATES

I

The Westwater Inn (formerly Greenwood Inn) has offered to provide a corporate rate
for Evergreen visitors needing a place to stay. Campus persons expecting visitors who
may welcome such accommodations are invited to make reservations through Westwater's
Director of Sales Elizabeth Stump or Sales Manager Deani Shurtz. Savings amount to $6
per night. These requests should be made only for persons visiting Evergreen on collegerelated business, according to President Dan Evans.

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...BILL EVANS DANCE PERFORMS WEDNESDAY...The Bill Evans Dance Company of Seattle, whose program has been called as "varied as the facets of a well cut diamond" performs at 8 p.m. Wednesday, April 11, in Evergreen's Experimental Theater of the Communications Building. On
tour to more than 20 communities in 13 states this spring, the popular Seattle based modern
dance company features the dancing and choreography of its founder, Bill Evans, along with
five featured soloists.
Tickets to the one-night-only performance are $6 general admission or $5 for students
and may be reserved by calling 866-6128. The Experimental Theater seats only 250 persons and
some 130 persons have reserved tickets, which will be available at 7:15 p.m. April 11. Only
a few (if any) tickets will be left for sale at the door after 7:30 Wednesday night.

...CABLE TO DISCUSS "DOING BUSINESS WITH JAPAN"...More and more Americans are "doing business
witn Japan" and are increasingly interested in improving their understanding of how business
is best conducted with that country. Businesswoman Carie Cable will offer her suggestions
and insights into ways American businesses can increase their relationships with the Japanese
in a public program Tuesday, April 10, beginning at 11:45 a.m. at Arnold's Restaurant at 900
South Capitol Way in Olympia.
Cable, an Evergreen faculty member in Japanese cultural studies since 1972, will discuss
her new Seattle-based consulting firm, her years of travel in Japan, and her personal experiences there in the Tuesday program, sponsored by the Evergreen College Community Organization
The noon program carries a $4.20 admission charge, which includes a luncheon of crepes a la
Reine. For reservations, call 866-6128.

...WOMEN IN CHINA AND CUBA FOCUS OF JOINT LECTURE... Though women served alongside men in key
combat and support roles during the Chinese and Cuban revolutions, Olympians Pat Larson and
Peta Henderson find some differences in the way women's roles are perceived in the two socialist nations. Larson and Henderson, who traveled through China and Cuba, respectively, last
year, will reveal their travelers' impressions in a program titled "Women in China and Cuba:
A Comparison," Tuesday, April 10 at 8 p.m. in the Communications Building Recital Hall.
Their presentation carries a $1 admission charge.

...FOUNDATION SPONSORS ESTATE PLANNING SEMINARS...The Evergreen Foundation will present a two
part Estate Planning Seminar April 19 and 26, from 7-9 p.m. in Lecture Hall Three. The
seminar is designed for the general public and will include current information about trusts,
probate, wills,joint tenancy, estate and inheritance taxes, community property agreements,
and guardianships, as amended by the Tax Reform Act of 1976.
According to Foundation chairman Dennis Peterson of Olympia, the Estate Planning Seminar
will be useful to persons concerned about distribution of their property and the impact of new
federal legislation on these personal plans.
Faculty for the two-part event will include Olympians Rick Sweeney, certified public
accountant for Vadman, Dimon and Briggs; Frank Owens, attorney for Owens, Weaver, Davies and
Dominick; and Bob Frazier, trust officer at Seattle First National Bank.
Registration is open to the public and costs $15 per person or $25 per couple. For more
information and reservations, call the Development Office, 866-6565.
...WATERFALL PERFORMS FRIDAY...Recording artist Linda Waterfall returns to Evergreen Friday,
April 13 for an evening concert with the Gone Johnson Band beginning at 8 o'clock in the main
lobby of the Library. Waterfall, a popular Pacific Northwest performer, composes most of her
own songs, accompanies herself on piano and guitar, and records with Windham Hill records.

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...SEATTLE'S ECLECTIC THEATER PERFORMS SATURDAY...A two-person drama which provides what
reviewers have labeled a "riveting theatrical experience" comes to Evergreen for one performance only Saturday, April 14, when The Eclectic Union Theater of Seattle stages its premiere
production of "Paper Flowers" at 8 p.m. in the Experimental Theater of the Communications
Building. Performed by Helen Szabyla and Barry Meiners, founders of Eclectic Union, "Paper
Flowers" offers an intense, searing and occasionally humorous exploration of the relationship of a financially comfortable woman and an impoverished man from "down by the river."
Set in Chile, the six-act drama was written in 1970 by Chilean playwright Egon Wolff,
regarded as a major voice in the resurgent theater of South America. Eclectic Union, the
first group to show the courage to produce "Paper Flowers" in the U.S. was founded three
years ago as a non-profit organization dedicated to showcasing new talents, performing new
works and teaching new approaches to the theater arts.
Tickets to the April 14 performance go on sale at the door of the Communications Building at 7:30 p.m. for $2.50 general or $1.50 student admission. Reservations may be made by
calling 866-6128.
...NEW EXHIBITS OPEN EASTER SUNDAY...A variety of ceramic works completed by graduate students
and an exhibit of black and white photography, color xerox works and paintings open Sunday,
April 15, in two Library Galleries at Evergreen. "Clayworks," a display of contemporary
functional and sculptural ceramics, opens in the Fourth Floor Library Gallery through May 5.
"Shadows," an exhibit of two-dimensional art work, culminates two quarters' work by
20 Evergreen student photographer/artists and goes on display in the Second Floor Library
Gallery April 15-27.
Both exhibits are free and open to the public. Complete information on them and on
future Evergreen art shows may be obtained by calling Sid White, exhibits coordinator,
866-6119.

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April 6, 1979
FACULTY ENDORSES TWO-DAY SYMPOSIUM, DUMPS "UNIT"
Evergreen's faculty members have fully endorsed a plan presented to them by students
April 4, calling for a two-day symposium to discuss Evergreen's future, and they voted
to alter that future by dropping the use of the Evergreen "unit" as a measure of
credit.
The symposium, presented to faculty members by students Ellen Kissman and David
Weeks, begins Tuesday at 9 a.m. in the main library lobby and seeks to "involve the entire
community" in discussing results of the study by the Council for Postsecondary Education
and subsequent work by faculty members on college structure and curriculum. The session,
which will continue throughout the day Wednesday and conclude with reports by workshop
leaders, was first suggested and fully endorsed at an all-campus meeting March 8, and
endorsed again by faculty members April 4 at their regular monthly meeting.
SERIOUS DEBATE, NOT CONFRONTATION
Provost Byron Youtz, who has supported the proposal for the Symposium since it was
first suggested last month, told faculty he didn't view the event as a "confrontive one,"
but as a "serious discussion/debate," during which he wanted to keep two things in mind:
that the final responsibility for decision making lies with the faculty, which needs
dialogue with students on academic issues; and that the decisions Evergreen faces must be
made during this academic year. "We have to know where we are headed before everyone
leaves in June," he said.
A motion from Faculty Member Tom Rainey called for support of the symposium, suspension
of classes, and enthusiastic participation by faculty in the symposium. Faculty Member
Paul Sparks, dubbing the symposium an "all campus coordinated atudies program," offered a
"friendly amendment'7to Rainey's motion, giving faculty members the option to reschedule
Tuesday's classes on a program-by-program basis. Both motions were approved with little
dissent.
Following a keynote speech at 9 a.m. Tuesday on "the gravity of the situation" facing
Evergreen, the symposium will divide into nine workshops on: definition of degrees and
graduation requirements; curriculum predictability and career pathways; individual contracts
and internships; advising; "understandable curriculum"; freshman requirements and problems
of entry; Evergreen's image, marketing and outreach; social space, activities and athletics;
part-time and evening studies; student involvement in decision-making; and student involvement in curriculum planning.
After lunch Wednesday, workshop facilitators will present summaries of their discussions and consider possible future action, perhaps leading to the formation of study groups.
EVERGREEN UNIT OUSTED

Faculty members Wednesday also agreed to drop use of the Evergreen unit and "use the
more common system, the quarter hour of academic credit" beginning Fall Quarter, 1979.
Full-time academic programs will continue to be designated at 16-quarter hours, three unit
programs will generate 12 quarter hours, half-time programs will generate 8 quarter hours,
and one-unit courses will generate four quarter hours. Faculty recommended that part-time
courses carry one to four quarter hours of credit, but they defeated motions to permit
students to register for more than 16 hours per quarter.
Faculty recommendations on the unit's demise will be forwarded by Provost Youtz to the
Board of Trustees, which next meets on campus April 26, beginning at 10:30 a.m. in Library 3112

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- 3as the facets of a well cut diamond" performs at Evergreen Wednesday. On tour to more than
20 communities in 13 states this spring, the popular Seattle based modern dance company
features the dancing and choreography of its founder, Bill Evans, along with five featured
soloists.
Tickets to the one-night-only performance are $6 general admission or $5 for students
and may be reserved by calling 866-6128. The Experimental Theater seats only 250 persons
and some 130 persons have reserved tickets, which will be available at 7:15 p.m. April 11.
Only a few (if any) tickets will be left for sale at the door after 7:30 Wednesday evening.
Bringing with them a repertory of dance that reflects a concern for human communication, the Bill Evans Dancers will perform five vastly different works in combinations
ranging from two to five performers. Each of their works seeks to provide what they call a
"balanced and accessible program for audiences with little or much exposure to modern
dance."
Evans, who serves as artistic director of the company, its school, and the Seattle
Summer Institute of Dance, has been honored over the past several years as a recipient of a
Guggenheim Fellowship and several choreographic fellowships from the National Endowment of
the Arts. His works are performed by 18 professional ballet and modern dance companies
in the U.S. and Europe, and he has served on dance faculties of a number of schools.
"IT'S ONLY MONEY" OPENS TONIGHT
"It's Only Money," a three-act "new theater" play written, produced and directed by
three Evergreen students, opens tonight, beginning at 8 o'clock in the Experimental Theater
of the Communications Building.
Offering "employment of non-traditional theatrical techniques," the drama is the work of
graduating seniors Brent Ray, Stephen Gallira and Jeffrey Morgan, who have been studying
with Faculty Member Marilyn Frasca. Their production, they say, "reflects some of the
best that Evergreen has given us." "Besides," they note, "it's a barrel of fun
and it
may even affect your lives."
The drama repeats Saturday night, same time, same place. Tickets are $1.50 general
or $1 student admission.
CABLE DISCUSSES JAPANESE BUSINESS AT TUESDAY LUNCHEON
More and more Americans are "doing business with Japan" and are increasingly interested
in improving their understanding of how business is best conducted with that country.
Businesswoman Carie Cable will offer her suggestions and insights into ways American
businesses can increase their relationships with the Japanese in a public program Tuesday,
April 10, beginning at noon at Arnold's Restaurant at 900 South Capitol Way in Olympia.
Cable, an Evergreen faculty member in Japanese cultural studies since 1972, has
spent the past decade studying, traveling in and gathering information on Japanese culture
and business. Her studies led her to conclude that Americans needed an increased understanding of Japanese culture in order to improve their business relationships. No one seemed
able to offer that kind of information, so Cable took a year's leave of absence from
Evergreen and founded Kyodai, a consultant firm which she says "helps American companies
prepare for or improve business contacts with Japan."
Cable will discuss her business, her years of travel in Japan and her personal
experiences there in the April 10 program, sponsored by The Evergreen Community Organization.
The noon program carries a $4.20 admission charge, which includes a luncheon of crepes a la
Reine. Reservations may be made by calling 866-6128.
WOMEN IN CHINA AND CUBA FOCUS OF JOINT LECTURE
Though women served alongside men in key combat and support roles during the Chinese
and Cuban revolutions, Olympians Pat Larson and Peta Henderson find some differences in
the way women's roles are perceived in the two socialist nations. Larson and Henderson,
who traveled through China and Cuba, respectively, last year, will reveal their travelers'
impressions in a program titled "Women in China and Cuba: A Comparison," on April 10, at

- 48 p.m., in the Communications Building Recital Hall. Their presentation is part of
Evergreen's Tuesdays at Eight concert/lecture series and carries a $1 admission charge.
Pat Larson, a dramatist and historian, has devoted most of her past five years to
research and theatrical presentation of women throughout history in her involvement with
the "Co-Respondents," a women's theater group. She will begin her presentation of Chinese
women with readings from Han Suyin and Agnes Smedley, to illustrate how women's life
and Chinese history were defined by Confuscianism before the revolution which was completed
in 1949.
Larson recently spent a year living in Polynesia with her husband Eric Larson
an experience which she says helped introduce her to the Orient, but which was still afield
from the unique nation she found upon entering China a year ago.
Dr. Peta Henderson, an anthropologist and faculty member at Evergreen since 1974,
has had a long-standing interest in women and Latin America. Doctoral research into
health care and female sterilization led her to on-location work in Puerto Rico several years
ago, and other travels have taken her to Belize and Mexico, before Cuba. She teaches women's
history and women's studies, in addition to her own field of anthropology at Evergreen.
To introduce her discussion of Cuban women, Henderson will describe Cuba's
African-Spanish heritage, a major cultural force in the island nation until the socialist
revolution of 1959.
WATERFALL RETURNS ON LUCKY FRIDAY
Recording artist Linda Waterfall returns to Evergreen Friday, April 13 for an evening
concert with the Gone Johnson Band, beginning at 8 o'clock in the main lobby of the
Library. Waterfall, a popular Pacific Northwest performer who packed the library when she
performed there last spring, composes most of her own songs, accompanies herself on piano
and guitar, and records with Windham Hill records.
Advance tickets to her Friday evening concert are $3.50 general admission or $3 for
students and senior citizens. They're already on sale at the Bookstore. Tickets will
cost one dollar more at the door.
ECLECTIC THEATER STAGES "PAPER FLOWERS" SATURDAY

A two-person drama which provides what reviewers have labeled a "riveting theatrical
experience" comes to Evergreen for one performance only Saturday, April 14, when The Eclectic
Union Theater of Seattle stages its premiere production of "Paper Flowers" at 8 p.m. in
the Experimental Theater of the Communications Building.
Performed by Helen Szablya and Barry Meiners, veterans of the Iowa Theater Lab and
founders of Eclectic Union, "Paper Flowers" offers an intense, searing and occasionally
humorous exploration of the relationship of a financially comfortable woman and an
impoverished man from "down by the river."
Set in Chile, the six-act drama was written in 1970 by Chilean playwright Egon Wolff,
regarded as a major voice in the resurgent theater of South America. His play won Latin
America's most prestigious award, the Casa de las Americas prize, the year it opened. Last
fall it opened in Paris to wide acclaim and its premiere in the U.S.
just a few weeks
ago in Bellevue
was immediately labeled a "must see" by reviewers from the Seattle
Times to The Weekly.
Eclectic Union, the first group to "show the courage" to produce "Paper Flowers" in
the United States, features the direction of Anne O'Connell, a New England actor, director
and dramatic teacher who has lived in several Latin American countries, and the original
music composed and recorded by Patrick Purswell of Seattle.
Starring in the two-person story are Helen Szablya as Eve, the upper class woman in
her early thirties who meets Hake, played by Szablya's husband, Barry Meiners, the shabbily /
dressed, foul-smelling man who offers to carry her groceries to her apartment. Enriching
their highly reviewed performance, Szablya and Meiners apply their experience in dance and
nonverbal performance forms, summoning what one writer called "the deeper unspoken levels
behind Wolff's drama with the aid of no more than some battered stage furniture."

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^.

- 5Founded three years ago as a non-profit organization dedicated to showcasing new
ew
talents, performing new works and teaching new approaches to the theater arts, Eclectic
Theater comes to Evergreen for one performance only. Tickets to the April 14 performance
o on sale at the door of the Communications Building Saturday night, beginning at 7:30 for
v2.50 general or $1.50 student admission. For information or reservations, call 866-6128.
NEW EXHIBITS OPEN EASTER SUNDAY

A variety of ceramic works completed by graduate students and an exhibit of black
and white photography, color xerox works and paintings open Sunday, April 15, in two Library
Galleries at Evergreen.
"Clayworks," a display of contemporary functional and sculptural ceramics, opens in
the Fourth Floor Library Gallery through May 5. Organized by Evergreen Faculty Artist
Susan Aurand, the "Clayworks" display features work by 13 artists "who represent a variety
of artistic interpretations and viewpoints," Aurand says. The artists, all graduate
students, hail from colleges and universities throughout western Washington.
"Shadows," a display of two-dimensional art work, culminates two quarters' work by
20 Evergreen student photographer/artists directed by Faculty Member Paul Sparks.
Their works will remain on display in the Second Floor Library Gallery through April 27.
Primary emphasis of the "Shadows" academic study has been, Sparks says, "for students to
develop personal imagery through the form of extended bodies of work." "We wanted students
to create art work equal in quality to those completed by first-year graduate students in
other universities," he adds. "I think it's led to an outstanding exhibit."
Complete information on both displays
and on upcoming exhibits scheduled in
Evergreen's Galleries
is available from Sid White, exhibits coordinator, 866-6119.
COMMUNITY COLLEGE REPS HERE APRIL 19
Representatives from Washington's 27 community colleges will be on hand to talk to
.iterested Evergreeners Thursday, April 19 beginning at 9 a.m. in the main Library lobby.
Students may gain information about Summer Quarter studies at the two-year state colleges
or explore technical programs with a three-member team comprised of two community college
counselors and a representative of the State Board for Community College Education.
STAFF WOMEN CHALLENGE FACULTY TO DIAMOND MATCH

If Evergreen faculty women look a bit worried and defensive
these days, they have every reason to quake in their cleats, according
to Kris Robinson, champion first baseman and coach of an upstart
team of staff baseball players.
Robinson, encouraged by her motley crew, has challenged faculty
women to a seven inning slowpitch Softball game to begin at noon,
Saturday, April 28 (The date was originally set for April 21 but has
been changed to accommodate the female Academic Deans.) on the campus
playfield. Stakes for the one-time-only event, says Robinson, are
"the honor of the players
and the first round of refreshments at
the Two-Mile House."
As the Newsletter went to press, Faculty Member Carolyn Dobbs had
formally accepted Robinson and her team's challenge, and rumor has
it that Dobbs, and Lynn Patterson have been recruiting baseball bums
from throughout academic ranks. Staff women who have not yet formally
joined Robinson's Irregulars are invited (urged, begged, pleaded,
cajoled) to volunteer for April 28 service by calling Kris at 866-6340
as soon as possible.

- 6VARIETY OF CONFERENCES BOOKED

Nearly 40 conferences and conventions have been scheduled at Evergreen for Spring
and Summer Quarters, according to Donnagene Ward, conference coordinator. The events,
(
which include 17 for the month of April alone, vary from one-day meetings of state
agencies to a four-day session of the Association of Humanistic Psychology and a two-month
stay by Camp Murrieta, a program for young women seeking to become more physically fit.
Of special interest to educators, says Ward, are meetings by the Library Media
teachers from Area III high schools April 13, a day-long workshop with the Olympia Association for Education of Young Children April 28, a three-day conference on Asian Studies
of the Pacific Coast June 14-17, the four-day Humanistic Psychology conference June 22-26,
administrative retreats from the Wenatchee, Ellensburg and Selah School Districts
August 13-14 and the Evergreen School District August 27-29, a four-day session for the
National Federation of Community Broadcasters August 15-19, and a three-day meeting of the
Washington Journalism Education Association August 23-26.
"VANCOUVER AND PUGET" STUDY PROGRAM FEATURED ON KOMO

The Vancouver and Puget Coordinated Studies program taught on campus last year was
highlighted this week in a special 15-minute feature on KOMO Television's nightly program,
"P.M. Northwest." The production, which has taken nearly a year to finalize, was the work
of a number of Evergreen students and Faculty Member Dr. Bob Barnard, who met Tuesday with
KOMO television staffers and found out their long-awaited premiere was Wednesday (April 4).
Also responsible for the successful production were student Bond Sandoe, who
produced it, and Faculty Members Robert Sluss and Pete Sinclair, who directed the Vancouver
and Puget Study Program.
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS

Dave West, who has served as acting facilities director for the past three months,
returns to his former post as building and grounds supervisor Monday when the new, permanent
director David Wallbom joins the college staff. West says he wants to express "sincere
thanks to all who have helped make my short term directorship a pleasant experience."
He says that "things have hummed right along without any major problems" and he appreciates
the cooperation he's had, especially from his 80-member crew in the Facilities Office.
Gail Martin, director of Career Planning and Placement, has been selected as a
participant in the National Conference on "Career Development Models for the Liberal Arts
College" to be held at Madonna College in Livonia, Michigan May 14 and 15. Purpose of the
two-day meeting will be for representatives: to share benefits derived from a federally funded
study on career development, to demonstrate the need for career education in liberal arts
colleges, and to suggest strategies for gaining support of community groups and educational
decision makers.
Evergreen alum and former editor of the Cooper Point Journal Knute (Skip) Burger
is finishing up his first full year as an editor for American Adventure Association, a
publishing company which produces a book series, a monthly magazine and a monthly newsletter.
Skip edits the four-color national magazine, which, though just one year old, already has
a 100,000 circulation.
Another former CPJ editor, Bill Hirshman, also works with the AAA, as editor of its
newsletter. Veteran CPJ writer, Nick Allison, writes for the AAA book series, while a
fourth Evergreen alum, Kris Fulsaas works in the AAA production department. Skip's wife,
Diane Hucks, an Evergreen alum who also worked on campus publications, is working for
Standard Records and Hifi in Seattle as a bookeeper and sales person.
A more recent CPJ staffer, Brian Cantwell, has been named news editor of the Mount
Vernon Argus, a weekly newspaper. He found job hunting for newspaper positions very difficv"4and advises current journalism students that "a weekly newspaper is a person's best bet."
He credits his internship experience with the Legislature and his work on the CPJ, coupled
with his evaluations which "acted as excellent letters of recommendation" for his success
in landing the new Mount Vernon job.

Evergreen graduate Mark Gottlieb will be appearing on national television May 6 to
demonstrate two inventions he created while studying here. He and his sister Karen will
play (underwater) aqualin and hydro organ for a special program on the Guinness Book
of Records, in which Mark and Karen are recorded as the world's only underwater violinist
and organist, respectively. Mark is currently attending graduate school in computer
science at Stanford University and has landed a summer job with Tektronix in Portland.
Karen, also a former student, continues her studies at the Cleveland Institute of Music.
Student Kay Rawlings has won an internship with the Washington, B.C. Center for
Learning Alternatives. A student of Leo Daugherty and Charles Teske, she hopes to work
with the Folger Shakespeare Library as an intern on individual contract with Teske.
And, alum Marcia Levenson has been accepted into an exclusive study program in
Leningrad. Faculty Member Andrew Hanfman reports Marcia is enrolled in a Russian Semester
program at the University of Leningrad from February through June of this year. She's
finding the work "very difficult" but is managing to take time to enjoy organized cultural
and educational trips, including one this week to the Capitol of the Latvian Republic.
Marcia studied Russian languages and area studies at Evergreen and visited Russia in 1977 as
part of the "Russia and U.S." academic program. Her six-month Leningrad study is sponsored
by the Council on International Education Exchange based in New York.
And, three Evergreeners have accepted appointment to the All Campus Hearing Board.
Student Tim Ball will serve until June, Director of Cooperative Education Barbara Cooley
will serve until February, 1980, and Faculty Member Al Leisenring will serve until March, 1980,
Legislative Memo, volume V, no. 11
MASTER'S BILL ADVANCES IN HOUSE
By Les Eldridge, Assistant to the President
After passage of second substitute bill 2610, March 28 by the Senate with brief comments
by its prime sponsor, Senator A.N. "Bud" Shinpoch, Renton Democrat, the bill was referred
to the House Higher Education Committee. That committee heard the bill April 2 and after
adding an amendment by Representative Phyllis Erickson, Democrat of Parkland, the bill
was moved out do pass by a 10 to 0 vote to the House Rules Committee to be scheduled for
second reading. The Erickson amendment calls on the College to report annually its
progress toward implementing the goals of the Council for Postsecondary Education's recent
report. It no longer calls on the Legislature of 1985 to "determine the need for continuing
the College" but merely states that the 1985 legislature will "review the recommendations
(of the CPE) and act upon them."
In a House Rules Committee meeting April 3, Democratic Speaker of the House John
Bagnariol moved that the bill be placed on the second reading calendar and this action was
approved by voice vote of the 20-member Rules Committee. Floor action, including possible
hostile amendments to the bill, was expected before the end of this week. If no
amendments are added, the bill could conceivably be advanced to third reading in the House
and be moved out by today. Or it may be returned to the Rules Committee for scheduling
for third reading. If the bill passes the House in its present form (with the Higher
Education Committee amendment in tact), then the Senate must decide whether to concur
with the amendment or recede from the amendment and call for conference committee.
Capital budget discussions have begun with the House staff this week and a presentation
of Evergreen's capital needs to the House Appropriation's Subcommittee on Education was
scheduled at 3:30 p.m. April 5.
The cut-off date for returning bills to their House of origin from the other House
is 5 p.m., April 11. Evergreen's Master's bill and all the bills except appropriations,
energy measures, and a few other topical exceptions must be passed by the receiving House
and returned to the House of origin by that time. The Legislature has thus far voided
conference committees because of difficulties in deciding on composition of these committees
ving to the even split in the House of Representatives.

I The Evergreen State College

April 2, 1979

Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114

...SUMMER REGISTRATION OPEN... Registration for the most extensive program of summer studies
ever offered by Evergreen has officially begun and will continue through June 25, according
to Summer Academic Dean Barbara Smith. Up 50 percent in full and part-time offerings over
last summer's curriculum, this year's session opens special studies for teachers, artists,
women and ethnic minorities, as well as other summer students
39 separate programs in all.
An additional bonus for out-of-state students is the new summer tuition, approved by
Evergreen trustees earlier this year. Residents and non-residents alike will now pay the
same summer tuition at Evergreen
$83 for one unit, $123 for two units; and $206 for
three and four units of Evergreen credit.
Summer Session 1979 will offer two five week sessions, June 18-July 20 and July 23August 31, and one ten-week session from June 18-August 31. Students may register for the
summer offerings in three ways: by completing and mailing in a Special Student Registration
form (now available in the Summer Quarter catalog in the Registrar's Office); by attending
the Summer Quarter Academic Fair May 16; or by registering in person in the Registrar's
Office between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. weekdays through June 25.
...THREE NEW APPOINTMENTS ANNOUNCED...Three new administrative appointments have been
announced at Evergreen within the past week...Byron Youtz, acting provost and academic vice
president, was named to that post on a permanent basis by President Dan Evans. Youtz, who
came to Evergreen in 1970 to serve on its 19-member planning faculty, was first appointed on
a temporary basis to the top academic spot last fall following the resignation of Edward J.
Kormondy, who will return to the college's teaching staff next fall.
David Wallbom, currently director of plant operations at Bellevue Community College,
was named last week to direct the Office of Facilities by Administrative Vice President Dean
Clabaugh. Wallbom, who has directed the BCC plant for the past 12 years, begins his new job
April 9. And, Susan Washburn, vice president for development of Centenary College in
Hackettstown, New Jersey, was appointed to head Evergreen's Development Office by Assistant
to the President Les Eldridge. She'll begin her new duties the first of July.
...CORNISH MUSICIANS PERFORM TUESDAY AT EIGHT...Four faculty musicians from the Cornish
Institute of Allied Arts in Seattle will open the Tuesdays at Eight Spring Quarter concert/
lecture series April 3 at Evergreen. The concert, set to begin at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall
of the Communications building will feature the Cornish String Quartet performing Mozart's
Quartet in E Flat Major, K. 428, Shostakovitch's Quartet No. 1, and Beethoven's Quartet in
A Minor, Op. 132.
Described as one of Seattle's most successful resident ensembles, the Cornish String
Quartet was formed in 1976 and for the past two years has been affiliated with the Cornish
Institute.
Reservations for the Tuesdays at Eight concert April 3 may be made by calling 866-6128...
Tickets will be sold beginning at 7:30 p.m. for $2.50 general admission or $1.50 students.
... NEW EXHIBITS OPEN...Three new art exhibits adorn Evergreen's galleries this week. The
displays include: historical studies on paintings by "the masters" on exhibit in the Second
Floor Library Gallery; a variety of pieces completed by artists in the college's Leisure
Education Programs showing in the Lecture Halls Rotunda; and creations of elementary school
youngsters from Olympia School District on display in the Fourth Floor Library Gallery. All
three exhibits are free and open to the public. Complete information on the displays and
the gallery hours is available through the Campus Information Center (866-6300) or Exhibits
Coordinator Sid White. 866-6119.

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UPCOMING EVERGREEN EVENTS

April 3

Faculty String Quartet from Cornish School of Music performs in concert,
8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications Building...$2.50 general; $1.50 students..

April 10

Seattle businesswoman and Evergreen Faculty Member Carie Cable discusses "Doing
Business with Japan," noon, Arnold's Restaurant, 900 South Capitol Way, Olympia.
$4.20...Reservations, 866-6128...

April 10

"Women in China and Cuba: A Comparison," presented in joint slide/talk by
Evergreen Faculty Anthropologist Dr. Peta Henderson and Olympian Pat Larson,
8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications Building...$1...

April 11

Bill Evans Dance Company of Seattle performs in concert, 8 p.m., Experimental
Theater, Communications Building...$6 general, $5 students...Pick up reserved
tickets at 7:15 p.m.; remaining tickets go on sale at 7:30 p.m....Call
866-6128 for your reservations now!

April 13

Recording artist and songstress Linda Waterfall performs in concert with Gone
Johnson Band, 8 p.m., Second Floor Lobby, Evans Library Building...Advance
tickets $3.50 general; $3 students and senior citizens at TESC Bookstore, Yenne
Music, Budget Tapes and Records and Rainy Day Records...$1 more at the door...

April 14

Eclectic Union Theater of Seattle performs its U.S. premiere production of
"Paper Flowers," 8 p.m., Experimental Theater, Communications Building...$2.50
general; $ 1.50 students...Reservations, 866-6128...

April 17

"Contact with Japan Through Its Art History," a slide/talk by Evergreen Faculty
Artist/Historian Kazuhiro Kawasaki, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications
Building
$1...