The Evergreen State College Review Volume 9, Issue 1 (November 1987)

Item

Identifier
EvergreenReviewV09N1November1987
Title
The Evergreen State College Review Volume 9, Issue 1 (November 1987)
Date
November 1987
extracted text
Friday,
April 5,1991
6:40 AM
Two students—we'll call them Maria,
class of '91, Dorm K; and Jim, class of
'91*, Dorm J—walk across the soccer
fields toward the gym. Their breath
smokes in the chilly air but they agree
it's a lot easier to get up this early
than it was a month ago when it was
still dark outside.
Passing the Housing Community
Center, they wave to Laurie, who's
already up in "the Corner," fixing coffee and tea for other early-morning
people. What a night, thinks Jim. The
Center was packed for TNPT (Thursday Night Poems and Tunes). Practically everybody he knew was there,
playing guitars, singing songs and
listening to some pretty good and pretty awful poetry around the fireplace.
There are still wisps of smoke coming
out of the giant chimney.
Maria likes walking past the huge
amphitheater outside the gym. In the
early morning mist, it really looks like
something from ancient Greece. It
brings back good memories. Two years
ago, right after it was built, a lot of her
friends staged a madcap, moonlight
rendition of "A Midsummer Night's
Dream" there. It was THE event of the
quarter.
Jim hurries off to his modern dance
class, but Maria pauses in the gym's
entryway. It's sort of a ritual with her,
just before she plunges into another
day's activity. It's a good place to
pause. It's large, circular and full of
light. "Mind and body," she thinks on
the way to her aikido class, "mind and
body."

Renaissance in Green
by Keith Eisner '79
Acting Director of Information Services and Publications

This scenario is imaginary (the
ReView's time machine is in the shop),
but it's based on some long-held Evergreen dreams that are fast becoming
reality. The college is currently in its
busiest and biggest building phase
since the early '70s. Thanks to legislative approval of nearly 100 percent of
Evergreen's capital budget request this
year, over 200 remodeling, maintenance
and building projects worth $13.1
million are underway.
In addition to the massive jobs of the
College Recreation Center Phase II
(read "gym/multipurpose space") and
the Lab Annex Addition (art studios),
the campus is being revitalized with
projects that include everything from
creation of the Student Advising
Center to the repair of Red Square and
reupholstering of Lecture Hall seats. It
all adds up to an Evergreen renaissance that affects everyone on campus
and in the surrounding community.
There are many impressive things
about Evergreen's building boom, such
as the teamwork between divisions and
the speed with which projects are com-

It's here! Student Manager Jamie Gaston (left) and Housing Director Jeannle
Chandler celebrate Evergreen's first new residence halls since 1971. The document taking flight is the architect's drawing of the new housing. Its culmination
is pictured In the background.

pleted. But the most impressive and
far-reaching aspect is found beneath
the surfaces of bricks, mortar, blueprints and timelines. It is, simply put, a
depth of caring about Evergreen's
quality of life.

Rec Center Phase II (In white)

7:16 AM
"One—two—three—and—four," counts
Jim's dance instructor. His class
pauses as the instructor changes tapes.
He's in one of the two movement
studios. Maria's aikido class is next
door and every now and then he can
hear the sound of bodies falling on
mats. Down the hall, a partition
divides the gym into two large rooms
where over 150 students, faculty, staff
and community members bend and
groan in two aerobic fitness classes (a
low-impact class and a more advanced
class). It's a neat feeling, like the whole
building is waking up and stretching.

"The important word is play" says
Recreation and Athletics Director Jan
Lambertz. "In a community of intense
academic rigors, it's crucial to the
wholeness of our mental, physical and
spiritual health to provide a quality
place to re-create ourselves."
The $6.8 million CRC Phase II project provides such a place with a facility that will include a 1400-bleacherseat gymnasium, a Wellness Lab,
multipurpose studios, a sports
medicine area and increased office
space. It's not just the space, but the
quality of the space that excites campus planners. "Most gymnasia are big
boxes without contour," says Lambertz,

luiMLwmamt

"but our gym won't be a huge obstruction. It'll be excavated down a level and
attached to the existing building in a
way that will blend in with the campus."
Campus Architect Jon Collier, who
says he kept his sanity in college by
playing handball, points out several
other distinctions. "The new building
will be oriented toward the whole campus. If you're on Red Square, you'll
pass through the CAB, walk on a promenade through and behind the existing
Rec Center and find yourself at the
central point of the whole complex. The
plan also provides a solution to the
perceived contradiction between public
and campus access. A beautiful, twostory lobby will greet visitors coming
from the parking lots."
An outdoor amphitheater will serve
as an aesthetic link between the gym
and the Communications Building. The
semi-circular structure will be a great
site for fair-weather concerts, plays,
rallies, and lecturea

Once inside the gym, visitors can
partake in a number of activities," says
Lambertz, "including dance, basketball, badminton, pickleball, volleyball
and new games." The Wellness Lab will
offer the latest technology in fitness
assessment, including bicycle and rowing aergometers, treadmills, equipment
to test body composition, computers
and the latest assessment software.
Collier, who has been involved with
the project since 1981, is pleased that
the new facility will give people the
space they deserve. "Right now," he
says, "a CRC staff of 11 is jammed into
a suite designed for five, creating a
workspace that's almost vertical. The
new building will triple current space,
creating nine offices, a large reception
area and a conference room." A longstanding point of Evergreen debate
will also be resolved as the new facility
will feature saunas and locker rooms
that are the same size for men and
women.

• e ee

e ee• •

9

9:35 AM
It's big... it's loud, subtle, bright and
nightmarish, too. It's a 12' x 7"
multimedia installation that Maria
and two other members of her group
contract are damn proud of. They've
been working on it nights and
weekends as well as during class
times. Entitled "Diane Arbus Returns
To Your Hometown," the work features
photographs, prints, painting, light
sculpture and a soundtrack, Maria
steps back to study the work. It looks
great in the natural, diffused Lght of
the studio. It occurs to Maria that they
never would have had the right space
to pull it off in the old artrooms. She
adjusts a m.onofilament line and steps
back again. "This, mis amigas," she
says, "is it!"

"Just as the new gym will overcome
some long-standing frustrations regarding physical exercise," says Collier,
"the Lab Annex Addition will provide
student artists with a space that meets
their creative needs."
The new facility, which will be
located on top of the existing annex
near Parking Lot B, will feature one
38' x 26' studio, two 44' x 39' studios
and a critique room. "Big, open boxes,"
is how Faculty Artist Susan Aurand
describes the new studioa "I'm very
excited," she says, "For the first time
at Evergreen, we'll be able to teach in
spaces specifically designed for studio
work. Our current facilities, which
were really designed for science
studies, haven't had sufficient floor and
wall space. They've been chopped up
with windows, counters and sinks. The
new studios will have stripped-down,
'warehouse' interiors. There'll be open
trusses on the ceiling, and bare floors
that we won't have to worry about
spilling paint on. We can work in large
scales, do more collaborative work
among art students and, with students
from other programs, hang shows and
create performance pieces."

Bringing Dreams To Life; Campus Architect Jon Collier and Model of the Lab
Annex Addition (Art Studios). Recently completed projects Include eight new
faculty offices, remodeling of the offices of the Controller and Registration and
Records, three new Library offices, expansion of Library Reference, campus
roadway facelifts, and brighter, energy-saving outdoor lighting.

grams will incorporate Wellness Lab
assessments into their curriculum,
while student interns will be able to
earn credit in a variety of activities.
There will also be more room for noncredit instruction. Currently, says
Lambertz, there are waiting lists for
many of the Leisure Education classes,
with no place for the overflow.
Parkway Roadwork

"It'll be barn-like," agrees Collier,
"we're not looking for elegant surroundings." But he becomes almost
poetic about the lighting. A row of
4:20 PM
skylights will cast natural light on the
Maria
makes
her
weekly visit to the
walls. The angle of the incoming light
Mary
Ellen
Hillaire
Student Advising
and translucent wall panels will reduce
Center
(SAC)
to
pore
over graduate
any harsh glare, and will "wash" the
school
catalogs
in
the
center's library.
room with light. When the sun goes
A
SAC
staffer
helps
her
track dmvn the
down, full-spectrum fluorescent tubes
requirements
for
a
school
in Ontario.
will continue the effect.
Looking around, Maria, reflects that
Collier is as concerned with lungs as
the center has seen her through four
he is with vision. "Great pains are beyears of decisions. Folks in Cooperaing taken to provide sufficient air
tive Education, Academic Advising,
changes per minute so that students
and faculty won't be breathing turpen- Career Development, KEY-Special Services, and the First Peoples' Coalition
tine and paint fumes."
As with the gym, plans are underway have all played important roles in her
education.
to integrate the studios with the rest
The Center doesn't look as brand-new
of the campus. "We'll still be using conas it did when it opened in the fall of
crete," says Senior Facilities Engineer
1987 and a nervous Maria was one of
Darrell Six, "but the building will
its first visitors. It's still as efficient
reflect a different set of needs. Artists
and helpful as it was then, maybe
look at things differently and that's a
more so, but it's more like home now.
healthy difference."
"It'll look a little different," agrees
Aurand, "but aesthetically the art
studios are going to be a statement of
Located in the C Wing of the Library,
vitality. As one of the first buildings to the Student Advising Center opened
greet people on campus, it will be a
this fall with a clear purpose: to provisual representation of the flourishing vide students with integrated, compreof the arts at Evergreen."
hensive advising. All the services listed
above are now housed in one center.
"Students don't have to run all over
campus now for advising needs. They'll
find it all under one roof," says SAC
Director Joyce Weston '76. "We're able
12:10 PM (Lunch hour)
to communicate more easily and that's
"The best thing about these forums,"
an advantage for keeping up-to-date on
curriculum changes, internship requirethinks Jim, "is watching everybody
watch everybody else." He's sitting in
ments and a lot more." Standing in the
the bleachers, watching the gym fill up middle of the Center, one is aware of a
for the President's Forum. Rows of
free and easy flow between its compofolding seats are set up on the floor.
nent services, a design that mirrors the
The forum used to be held in the Board staffs commitment. "Yep," says
Weston, "we're becoming a team."
Room, but increased attendance has
not only caused it to be held in a bigger space, but to be held more often.
The gym buzzes like a giant beehive
as students, staff and faculty exchange
greetings and find, their seats. "Looks
like the whole campus is here," says
5:55 PM
Jim to his neighbor. Seated on the plat- "Good to be home," thinks Jim as he
form are several student coordinators, walks in the door, "especially when
S&A board members, the president and someone else is cooking." Two of his
the chairman of the board of trustees.
five roommates are making enough
There's a wild whoop and then laughter lasagne and garlic bread to feed
as a guerrilla theater troupe (dressed
everyone in the apartment and the
in gorilla suits) dances across the
folks from doimstairs, too. After
stage. As far as Jim can tell, their skit greeting everybody and sampling the
has something to do with the Free Box bread, Jim walks down the hall to his
(some things never change). Whatever
room for a few minutes of quiet before
its message, the president smiles and
joining the crowd.
shakes hands with one of the gorillas
He flops on his bed and looks at the
on his way to the microphone. "Hello," ceiling. "What a day. Words, words
he says to the Evergreen community,
and more words!" The quiet is refresh"thanks for coming!"
ing. The noise from the crowd in the
kitchen is just a hum. It's not like
some dorms in other colleges he's
visited, where everything sounds like
It may be idealistic to suggest that a
it's happening right in your ear and
bigger space for all-campus meetings
the only way you can study is to go to
will encourage more participation, but the library or stuff cotton in your ears.
at least the new gym will offer that
Looking out the window, he sees the
potential. "Right now," says Lambertz, squirrel he's been watching for months
"we have no space where the whole
spiral up the trunk of a tree. It freezes
campus can gather under one roof and as a skateboarder glides by on her way
see who we are."
to the Housing Community Center.
Ed Trujillo, manager of the Commu- People are already gathering for the
nications Building, says, "We'll be able Rites of Spring Barbecue and DJ
to use CRC Phase II more experimen- dance. It's going to be quite a, weekend.
tally than the Comm. Building. There's
potential for modern dance troupes,
ballets and more big-name music."
CRC Phase II will also serve as an
academic facility, providing a space for
students and faculty in programs to
participate in team-building play.
Lambertz speculates that Core Pro-

Comfort and community. These two
words go a long way in describing the
goals of the planners of Evergreen's
newest housing. The college's first new
housing since 1971 represents elements
of a dream that Facilities Director Ken
Jacob has had since 1973.
Jacob, a former director of Housing
and Auxiliary Services, relates that
several years ago an administrator requested him to write a proposal for
new housing. "I only had two weeks to
write it, but I knew exactly what kind
of housing students wanted.
"The best college housing I had ever
seen was a complex called Steven's
Court at the University of Washington.
It had huge living and dining areas
conducive to community meals and
celebrations, nice kitchens and single
bedrooms. The buildings were light and
airy, three-story apartment houses
with lots of storage space."
The only problem, says Jacob, was
cost. "I knew there was no way we
could afford it, but I wrote it into the
proposal anyway." He pauses and
shakes his head. "I get chills now when
I think about it. What wasn't possible,
is out there in a beautiful setting, full
of students.

New Housing

Located directly between the highrise residence halls and modular housing on Driftwood Road, the new complex adds 200 much-needed beds to oncampus housing. Most units are four to
six single-bedroom apartments that
share a kitchen, living room and bathrooms. Each residence hall, built largely of wood, is three stories high and
receives generous natural light from
southern exposures.
Project Manager Jim Copland is
visibly proud as he conducts a tour of
the seven residence halls and the Community Center. He points out the bicycle sheds and wide, smooth sidewalks
("skateboard heaven," he says); roomy
and efficient kitchens; warm lighting
and the rich gray, cream and mauve interiors, and hardwood chairs that have
been beautifully refinished by Housing
Maintenance Manager Rick Horn,
Scott Putzier and their crew.
"These buildings," he concludes at
the end of the tour, "are a manifestation of Evergreen's philosophy. They're
not institutional monoliths. They're
built on a human scale."
One human who really appreciates
that scale is Housing Student Manager
Jamie Gaston, a junior enrolled in
"The Great War" program. As the first
resident in F Dorm, she's had a chance
to watch students settle into their new
homes. "There's something special

Housing Community Center

about this place," she says, "something
apart from bigger living spaces and
brand-newness. I sense that with only
about 28 residents per building, people
will really get to know their neighbors." Privacy is also important. Gaston
says that every window she's seen
looks onto woods or the playfields.
"Everybody has a view, but nobody's
looking directly into somebody else's
space. That's pretty amazing."
Speaking of "pretty amazing," it's inspiring to take a look at the gritty
Greener determination that made new
housing possible. Faced with increasing
enrollment, 100% occupancy rates and
a growing waiting list for on-campus
housing, Evergreen submitted a request to the Department of Education
for a low-interest loan. It was turned
down last fall.
"New housing seemed financially impossible," says Jacob, "but [Associate
Vice President for Administrative Services] Ken Winkley would not give up."
He and other staffers kept working,
consulting and exploring options. Finally, a "design-build" project, financed by
a $4.1 million sale of local revenue
bonds, was approved by the trustees in
March. Rossiter Glen, a Vancouver construction firm, was awarded the bid,
ground was broken for the fast-track
project on March 13 and six months
and two weeks later 200 students were
able to wake up in a beautiful, lively
environment only minutes from their
classea
"I'll never forget the day students
moved in," says Copland. "Parents said
'I wish / was moving in here' and a student said 'my room is so coo-ool!' That
was the payoff for me."
Jacob hopes that the campus keeps
sight of those eventual payoffs during
the coming months. "Everyone's excited about our new capital budget, but
in the meantime there'll be inconvenience, noise and mud. But I think
Evergreen will rise to the challenge."
Offsetting the stress of keeping
massive projects on schedule and
within budget, is the energy Jacob
detects in the community. "You can see
dreams in a lot of eyes—the whole campus is being revitalized."

Evergreen A-Building: Majosr projects
Project
New Housing
|
Housing Community Center
\
Lab Annex Addition (art studios)
CRC Phase II

Targeted
Completion Date
September, 1987
October, 1987
September, 1988
June, 1989

Cost
$4.1 million
(part of above)
$1 million
$6.8 million

Projects in process include repaying Red Square, building constructions to
house grounds equipment and hazardous wastes, an automatic door to provide
physically-challenged access for each of the academic buildings, and repair of
tables, chairs, desks and file cabinets.

•>

Olympic Dream
May Be A
Reality For
Olympia
By Mike Wark, Information Specialist

M
President Olander and one of the
newspaper headlines (reproduced
above) that was generated by his
September visit. The column on fche
toft translates Into "Kobe University of
Commerce," Evergreen's partner in a
faculty exchange program. Tits other
column? You guessed St~-*'The
Ivergreen State College."

A Japanese Journey

.

"On my way to Japan, it occurred to
me that my fellow passengers were on
a 747 jet. I felt I was on a time
machine," says President Joe Olander
of his September trip to Japan, where
he represented Evergreen and the
Northwest as part of the U.S. Opinion
Leadership Program.
Olander had last seen Japan 24 years
ago when he lived there while serving
in the U.S. Air Force. "I lived in a
rural area that was very traditional. I
remember women in kimonos and
wooden shoes clattering down village
streets. Now I was flying into Tokyo. I
was prepared for change, but not the
intensity of activity and energy."
That intensity involved Olander from
the moment he left the plane on
September 3 until his departure on
September 16. His early-morning-untillate-at-night schedule included travel to
Kobe and Kyoto as well as meetings,
tours and ceremonies with leaders in
education, business, government and
the arts. Nominated by the Seattle
Office of the Consul-General of Japan,
Olander was a guest of the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. The officials he spoke
with were deeply interested in the
following areas: Japanese higher education and how it compares and contrasts
with its American counterpart; friction

regarding trade deficits between the
U.S. and Japan; his views of Japan and
the Japanese after a 24-year absence,
and ways Japan could be more innovative in the international arena.
For his part, Olander was interested
in discussing the technopolis or "miti"
plan, in which 40 areas have been identified as sites for intense research,
testing, development and manufacturing; social and educational reforms proposed by Prime Minister Nakasone,
with whom he had a private interview
during his visit, and the preservation
of local values.
He also worked on behalf of Governor Booth Gardner to advance relations with Hyogo Prefecture, Washington's sister-state. To that end, he
presented Evergreen's first honorary
Masters in Public Administration
degree to Tokitada Sakai, Hyogo's
outgoing governor. He also signed a
formal agreement with Kobe University that provides for a student exchange
program with Evergreen.
"The Japanese are very interested in
Evergreen as a viable alternative to
the structure of higher education," says
Olander. "I talked at length about our
interdisciplinary programs, team
teaching and close faculty-to-student
ratios."
Despite his packed schedule, he was
able to spend time observing Japanese
culture and contemplating the changes

that have occurred in the last quarter
century. "The global community has
definitely impacted Japan. While at a
traditional Kabuki performance, I saw
very few people under 20 years of age.
That certainly wasn't the case 24 years
ago. Then a couple of days later, I read
that thousands of young people
mobbed the Tokyo airport to welcome
Michael Jackson's tour."
Asked about Japan's destiny, Olander
pauses and then replies, "For centuries, ever since encountering the
West, the Japanese have been listening
very carefully. Now it's time for them
to speak out, to become more affirmative internationally. It's time for the
world to be influenced by Japan beyond video cassettes and cars. It's time
for the Japanese to share their
'Japaneseness.'"
One of the most beautiful aspects of
that culture, according to Olander, is
the Zen value of being purposely imperfect. One of the highlights of his
trip was a visit to the Kyoto gardens.
"To the Western eye, the Japanese
garden is perfect and symmetrical, but
the Japanese artist purposely places a
plant or a rock in the garden that
doesn't quite fit in order to demonstrate the reality of fallibility and to
celebrate it."
Sounds like a college we know!

An Olympic dream is becoming a reality in Olympia.
Last month the U.S. Olympic Committee gave unanimous approval to the
concept of a permanent U.S. Olympic
Academy to be located in Olympia,
thanks in part to two Evergreeners
who have championed the project.
The Academy is the educational arm
of the United States Olympic Committee (U.S.O.C.), and a permanent
academy would educate Americans
about the Olympic ideal and its potential role in our everyday lives.
That's the message that President
Joe Olander and Jan Lambertz, the college's director of Recreation and
Athletics, have spread in their travels
across the country. With groups representing the Pacific Northwest Amateur
Sports Foundation (P.N.A.S.F.), they've
lobbied U.S.O.C. committees for support of an academy to be built in
downtown Olympia.
In Oklahoma City, a big nod of
approval finally came from the 80member Executive Committee, following a speech by Olander on October 24.
"Olander articulated the visions and
feelings of the P.N.A.S.F., demonstrating how a permanent academy would
serve America's Olympic movement,"
says Lambertz.
Final approval of the academy hinges
on the P.N.A.S.F.'s ability to raise $13
million to fund the project, which includes an educational center with a
national Olympic library, offices and
conference facilities, and an exposition
hall that will bring Olympic lore to Jife.
Lambertz says the Foundation, comprised of business, civic and education
leaders from Olympia and Seattle, is
confident the funds will be raised.
An added honor for Olander came in
the form of an appointment to the
U.S.O.C. Educational Council. He and
Lambertz will continue to help develop
an "Olympic curriculum" and make
other Academy plans. Both serve on
the Foundation's Education Committee.
Currently, the Olympic Academy is a
week-long symposium sponsored by a
different college campus each summer.
It serves coaches, trainers, administrators of amateur sport organizations,
scholars and journalists. Evergreen is
the 1989 sponsor. A permanent academy, such as the one proposed by the
P.N.A.S.F. will vastly increase the
effectiveness of the educational arm of
the U.S.O.C., taking the Olympic ideal
beyond the scope of the elite athlete,
into all levels of amateur athletics and
everyday life.
"The Olympic ideal serves to inspire
fairness, whether you're aspiring to be
an Olympic champion, or to excel in
any other facet of life," says Lambertz.
"The U.S.O.C. needs people who are
good at pulling things together and
making them work. Because Evergreen's interdisciplinary style of education brings people of different backgrounds and ideologies together, the
college is uniquely suited to help make
the Foundation's effort successful."
Evergreen could take advantage of
the Academy location by promoting
crosscultural exchanges, or linking
studies in sports and social sciences.
Stay tuned for an update on the
Academy effort in the Winter ReView.

Greener
By Land. . .
What a weekend—Larry Stenberg
closed Super Saturday festivities at
2:30 a.m. when the Alumni Dance came
to an end. The next day the director of
Alumni and Community Relations
boarded a plane for a 450-mile walk he
describes as "the most powerful emotional experience of my life."
That feeling was widely shared by
the 229 other Americans and nearly
200 Soviet citizens who were
Stenberg's companions on a Peace
Walk from Leningrad to Moscow this
summer.
Organized by Allan Affeldt and Joe
Kinczel of International Peace Walk,
Inc.. the walk set an historic first—
never before had an American, let
alone over 200 of them, been allowed to
walk through Soviet territory with
backpacks, tents and cameras.
American participants for the threeand-a-half-week walk underwent an extensive selection process. Stenberg's
"I have very vivid images of how
interpersonal expertise stood him in
similar we are," he says, "I had heard
good stead. He also negotiated with
that people of the USSR are a little
the Seattle Times to write a series of
more distant, more cautious with
on-the-spot reports.
strangers than we are. Our situation
The American walkers reflected the
may have been uncommon, but what I
diversity of our society as Black,
experienced in every case, were people
Hispanic, Native American and Asian
immediately willing to interact and
walkers were in the group, including
Judy Imai, who brought the Hiroshima exchange ideas."
That willingness to interact was highLamp, a lantern that has been lit in the
lighted one evening in Moscow when a
name of peace for over 20 years.
group of Soviet dissidents spoke to the
Three babies, several 75-year-olds
walkers. "A hot debate between the
and people from every age group indissidents and some hardcore members
between walked to Moscow. "You rareensued," says Stenberg. Nickolas, a
ly see babies in the Soviet streets.
party-member, introduced himself to
They're usually left at home," says
Stenberg, and pointing to the dissiStenberg. "So they were astounded
that we were taking babes in arms and dents, said, "I want to kill them all."
"Somewhat shocked by his candor, I
small children on a 450-mile walk. The
babies were magical—they just opened replied, What if they should want to
up arms and hearts. Maybe the best
kill you?' In a typical party-line
way to peace," he muses, "would be a
response he said, "That is a very in'baby exchange'"
teresting puzzle' Seeing the slightest
Following a five-day orientation sesopening, I added, 'Maybe we most
sion in Washington, D.C., the walkers
want to kill what we fear and maybe
arrived in Leningrad, where they imthat fear is a mirror reflection of
mediately became front-page, primeourselves.' He paused and said in a
time news. Crowds cheered them in the much softer voice, 'And you are as my
streets and thousands joined in their
father.'" An hour later he approached
walk to Piskareva Cemetery, where
Stenberg in the lobby and gave him a
they listened to speeches on disarmapostcard which read, "For my
ment. "Beginning with that event,"
'American Father,' Yours Truly, 'Son,'
writes Stenberg in the June 29 Seattle Peace and love Please write"
Times, "we have been greeted by
Stenberg says that the Soviet
throngs of people everywhere we go.
peoples' desire for peace is generally
deeper and more present than Amer-

icans'. "It's really understandable.
We've never had our borders invaded
or a war on our soil in over 100 years.
By contrast, their country has been invaded from almost every angle and
direction. Americans have almost
forgotten World War II, but in Russia,
where they suffered 20 million military
and civilian deaths (about 70 times the
American war losses), almost every
veteran still wears his medals, and
almost every family remembers a
sharp, painful loss."
Consequently, Stenberg does not find
it surprising that a major part of the
group's itinerary involved up to four
ceremonies a day at memorials to the
"Great Patriotic War."
"The graciousness of the Soviet
people is astonishing," says Stenberg.
"There was almost an ecstasy of
friendship and hospitality. We'd hike into a village at the end of a dusty, tiring
16-hour day to find the community
waiting for us with three-course dinners served on linen tablecloths."
"Soviet people really know how to
celebrate," says Stenberg, who adds
that his legs were strengthened due to
repeated performances of the Russian
kick-dance
Although some of the welcome was
motivated by the government,
Stenberg points out that the government cannot dictate feelings. "We dealt
with bone-crushing hugs and very real,

There was an ecstacy
off friendship and
hospitality."
very powerful emotions. Eventually,
governments will have to follow their
peoples' genuine fervor for peace They
won't be able to block it."
"I'm more certain than ever that to
view the Soviet people as the enemy
makes as much sense as placing
nuclear warheads in Chicago and aiming them at Seattle." Following that
conviction, he hopes to travel to
Helsinki, Finland in January to meet
with five other Americans and six
representatives of the Soviet Peace
Committee to create an international
magazine. He's also in contact with
organizers who are seriously considering a similar Soviet/American peace
walk in the U.S. for this summer.
Stenberg says that his Evergreen experience, especially in the early days,
was an invaluable preparation.
"Walkers were faced with 16-, sometimes 18-hour days, a continually
changing schedule and physical and
emotional demands. We learned to be
adaptive and to go with the flow. It
was just like being home."

.. . And By Sea
For thousands of years these kayak-like boats
served as the lifeline of hunters who roamed the
seas in search of otter. Now, two Evergreeners,
Lincoln Post and Greg Welpton, will paddle
their replicas of the "Baidarka" on a 1,200 mile
mission of peace from Olympia's Budd Inlet,
across the Bering strait and into the U.S.S.R. Icy
seas, rip-tides and rough weather are among the
physical challenges that await them.
Welpton and Post traveled through the U.S.S.R.
this summer, where they met with representatives of the Soviet Peace Committee—a national
organization with membership throughout
Russia—and SOV, an organization that promotes
international relations through sporting events.
They received support from the two organizations, but not official permission, a process that
requires successful lobbying of the Ministry of
Defense by their Soviet supporters. By gaining
the trust of their Soviet sponsors, Welpton and
Post believe they are demonstrating the basis of
what's necessary for peace between the
superpowers.
The ancient Baidarkas, a craft indigenous to the
Pacific Coast, are a symbol for the mission.
Following a design developed over centuries and
used until the 1700's, Welpton and Post spent
several months building the boat frames on Evergreen's Red Square last spring. A skin-like covering will be stretched over the frames this year.
Welpton and Post are currently raising funds to
support their mission. If you're interested, call
Forrest Wilcox, (206) 866-6000, extension 6565.
Checks should be made payable to The Evergreen State College Foundation, L 3114, The
Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA 98505.

geonews
Placement Still Running
Strong

Update- Evergreen Booters!
By Dennis Held, Information Specialist
Dave Brown (pictured above), Evergreen's new
women's soccer coach, has an idea: "I'd like to
see Evergreen field a nationally-competitive
women's soccer team."
Brown alse has a problem: so few players
turned out for the team this year that he had to
postpone an early-season game, and if more than
one player is out of the lineup, his team plays
shorthanded.
How does he expect to get from point A to
point B? "By using what Evergreen has to offer"
he says.
"Evergreen has a growing reputation for excellence in education," he says, leaning on a stack
of paperwork. The forms come with the
territory—Brown is also the new business
manager for Recreation and Athletics. "It's very
fortunate that soccer seems to attract a lot of
good students. We also have some of the best
facilities in the Northwest, and we don't have to
compete with football and basketball for funding
or field space.
"The player pool around here is one of the best
in the country, especially for women. I see one of
my main roles as letting people know what Evergreen has to offer. If enough people know about
Evergreen's benefits, we'll be able to draw good
players here."
Brown has a lot to offer Evergreen. He received a B.A. in Music and an M.A. in Education
from Western Washington University, has studied
in Scotland, and completed an intensive training
program at England's National Sports Center.
He followed that up with a month-long tour of
Great Britain, discussing strategies and techniques with coaches from some of the best soccer
clubs in Europe. "Coaches would bring out their
little magnetic boards, with dots for players, and
talk about tactics for hours."
What he learned in Europe was added to a
store of knowledge gained by 12 years of coaching
youth, high school and college soccer. He served
as an assistant coach for men's and women's soccer at Western Washington University for two
years, and went from staff coach to co-director of
the Mountainholm Soccer Ranch in Easton,
Washington.
A high point in his career was coaching the
Sehome High School men's team to the Northwest AA League championship in 1984. One of
his goalies from that team, Craig Heisinger, is
having a good year for Evergreen's men's team.
The Geoducks have relied on tough defense and

intelligent ball handling to jump out to their best
start ever. Men's Coach Arno Zoske says that
Heisinger has what it takes to be a successful
athlete at Evergreen. "He's got a great attitude,
and that's so important—to look at what you have
to do, what you like to do, and set your priorities.
Put your academics first, your soccer second, and
then your social life. That's how you reach your
potential, and maybe even a little more."
Heisinger says the lessons he learns on the field
carry over into the classroom. "There are so
many different attitudes out there on the field at
once, and you have to get along. I find I'm more
accepting of people in seminar—I'm willing to
give them the benefit of the doubt."
What is it like, playing soccer at a school that
deemphasizes competition between students?
Tiinya Estes, a defender for the women's team,
says the main difficulty is playing to an empty
house. "Nobody on campus has ever said anything
negative to me about playing. The biggest problem is lack of support—some games there are
only five or six fans out there, and that can get
discouraging."
For Brown, playing under those difficult conditions provides an important kind of learning. "For
a program to be competitive, it requires an extremely cooperative environment within the
team. That's the same type of cooperation it takes
to work on a team of doctors, a business team or
a Peace Corps team.
"And soccer is great for developing intercultural
understanding. It's played all over the world, so
you could have a team from Sweden playing a
team from Nigeria, with a referee from Brazil, a
linesman from Thailand, one from Israel, a Russian crowd, and everyone would know and could
agree on what happened at the end of 90
minutes."
But right now, the most immediate hurdle
Brown has to overcome is simply to attract
enough student athletes to the program.
"Sometimes it's hard to play on a team with so
few players," Estes says. "There have been times
when I got kicked and wanted to come out, but I
couldn't. But everybody gets to play, to improve,
and I can see improvement in my skills, so I just
kind of keep going."
The new coach says that despite the difficulties,
this year is paying off for all of his team
members. "We're at 12 players right now, and you
have to put 11 on the field, so we're struggling.
But we're all working hard, and that's what
counts."

Despite an 8 percent drop in placement from last
year, the classes of '84, '85 and '86 continue the
Evergreen tradition of competing for jobs successfully with undergraduate students across the
country. Each year Evergreen surveys its last
three graduating classes. Results for '84:86 alums
show an 86 percent placement rate, with a 2 percent increase in graduate school entry. That compares to a 94 percent placement in last year's
survey with a 2 percent drop in graduate school
entry.
"The placement rate usually drops or raises a
few pecentage points depending on how many
report they're in between jobs, are planning to
travel or are applying to graduate school," says
Joyce Weston '76, director of the Student Advising Center and former director of Career
Development.
The 8 percent drop also may be attributed to an
unusually high interest in social service and
environmental science fields at a time when state
and federal budget cuts are making it difficult to
find jobs in those areas. Counseling and social
services has been the first career choice for
Greener grads every year since 1971. Biological
and environmental science has run a close second.
This year's report shows that 63 percent of the
graduates are employed at a professional level.
Paraprofessional positions, such as teaching
assistant, natural resource aide or program assistant, account for 17 percent of those employed,
while alums in other positions, such as small
engine mechanic, book binder and house painter,
account for 17 percent of the group. Tight governmental budgets have forced agencies to resort to
hiring part-time or temporary paraprofessional
positions rather than filling full-time professional
jobs.
"The job market is tough for any grads. However, it amazes me how very resourceful and
resilient Evergreen grads are. They are willing to
do a whole variety of things so they can afford to
implement very creative job hunting strategies,"
says Weston.

Greener Books of the Year
As usual, a broad array of literature can be found
in rucksacks across campus, including Steinbeck's
Grapes of Wrath and Goodwin's Groping For
Ethics In Journalism for students in the "Mass
Communications and Social Reality" program. In
the "Technology and Human Reason" program,
student reading includes Ellison's Invisible Man,
Gould's Mismeasure of Man and Randall's
Manual of Oregon Trees and Shrubs. A sampling
of books from other programs is listed below:
^- Social Science Research and the Computer:
The Business of Computers
Mythical Man-Month: Essays On Software
Engineering by Brooks
Faust by Goethe
*• The Pacific Northwest: Culture, Religion and
Design
Tradition and Change on the Northwest Coast
by Kirk
Eyes of Chief Seattle by Suquamish
*• Energy Systems
Thermal Delight in Architecture by Heschong
Perspectives on Energy by Ruedisili
»• Cross-Cultural Perspectives: The Arts of
Eastern Europe
Ethnic Relations in the U.S.S.R. by Karlins
Dear God I Wanted To Live by Ruta
*• The Experience of Fiction
Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hatby Sachs
Less Than Words Can Say by Mitchell
*• Japanese Studies
Modern History ofJapanby Beasley
Rabbits and Crabs: Stories by Japanese Women
by Birnbaum
*• Political Economy and Social Change
Worldly Philosophers by Heilbroner
Age of Revolution\sy Hobsbawn
*• Molecule to Organism
Molecular Biology of the Cell by Alberts
Tissues and Organs by Kessel
>• Management and the Public Interest
Women's Ways of Knowing'by Belenky
Cultural Environment of International Business
by Terpstra
If you've been away from academia too long, or
if you just had your curiosity piqued, you can
order any of these books in stock at the Evergreen College Bookstore by calling (206) 866-6000,
ext. 6213. The bookstore mails books to anywhere
in the country free of charge. Orders must be
paid in advance.

Vancouver Campus Transition
Responsibility for higher education in Vancouver,
Washington, will be transferred from Evergreen
to the Washington State University over the next
two years. Guidelines set forth in an August 31
memorandum of agreement between the two
institutions insure that the current level of educational service in the region will be maintained. A
smooth transition is also a top priority as complete program control will be assumed by WSU at
the beginning of the 1989-90 academic year. Evergreen opened the branch campus in 1976.
Resources freed by the transition will be
redirected to the college's Olympia campua

Business Gives
Great Support
To Evergreen
If you measure a college's health by its
grant receipts, Evergreen is in great
shape, with more than a half-million
dollars flowing in from businesses
between July and October.
Science education is the focus of
AT&T's University Equipment Donation Program (UEDP), which granted
computer hardware and networking
equipment valued at over $400,000 to
Evergreen. Forty-six institutions were
chosen out of 75 applicants from across
the United States for the UEDP
grants. Awards were based on innovative support for computer-aided
research and instruction with an
emphasis on how the equipment is networked into the campus computing
environment. AT&T also contributed to
Evergreen's computer program last
year, bringing the company's investment in the college to almost $700,000.
"The AT&T site selection team was
very impressed with how AT&T equipment was used during the previous
grant. They consider our computerbased labs as a showcase for undergraduate use of their computers, as
well as a model for education involving
computers in general," says Don
Chalmers, director of Corporate and
Foundation Relations and executive
director of the Evergreen Foundation.
The grant supplies more computers
for the Computer Teaching Lab and
the Computer Applications Lab, used
by earth and physical science students.
Faculty will have computers in their
offices that are networked with the
labs and other faculty offices.
A $162,284 grant from Puget Power
will be used to upgrade campus exterior lighting for energy conservation.
The grant is part of Puget Power's
Commercial Conservation program.
Burlington Northern Foundation provided $22,500 for The Washington
Center for the Improvement of Undergraduate Education. The program,
centered at Evergreen, works to
improve undergraduate college education by introducing interdisciplinary
"learning communities" through a consortium of 31 public, private, two- and
four-year colleges and universities in
Washington. The Center uses development seminars, seed grants and coordinates faculty exchanges throughout
the consortium.
Washington Mutual Savings Bank
Foundation provided Evergreen with a
two-year grant of $5,000 per year to
support the Masters in Public Administration program.
The Evergreen State College Foundation supports scholarships and contributes to college programs. The
Foundation has increased receipts by
more than 300 percent in the past five
years, and last year received more than
$1.6 million toward college activities.
"We are particularly gratified by the
confidence Washington businesses and
national corporations like AT&T, have
in the college," says John Gallagher,
the Evergreen director of Gift
Planning.

Evergreen Welcomes Aboard 24 New Faculty
Add the Alaskan tundra, cinema and
television studies, radiology and much
more to Evergreen's growing treasury
of knowledge and expertise, as two
dozen new and returning faculty
members are welcomed aboard. The
following is a brief description of the
faculty class of 1987-88.

Valerie Bystrom

James Ebersole

Peter Bohmer

Mark Clemens

Tim Gregg

m
Betsy Hllbert

Sara Hideout

Yoshlo Klmura

5

James Harnish, an exchange faculty from
Peter Bohmer teaches in the "Technology and
North Seattle Community College, teaches in the
Human Reasoning" program this fall. He studied
"Russia/USSR" program. Degrees: M.A. Russian
in the Ph.D. program at the Massachusetts Inand Soviet History; B.A., Journalism, Seattle
stitute of Technology, where he earned a B.S. in
University. He studied at the University of
Economics and Mathematics, earned a Ph.D at
Washington Far East and Russian Institute, and
the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and
learned to speak Russian at the Defense
taught at Penn State and San Diego State
Language Institute, Monterey, California. He has
Universities.
organized and taught several coordinated studies
Valerie Bystrom, an exchange faculty from
programs
Seattle Central Community College, teaches in
the "Politics, Values and Social Change" program.
Betsy Hilbert teaches in the "Health, InShe has worked in several learning communities,
dividual and Community" program this fall.
encouraging such projects across the state.
Degrees: Ph.D., Union Graduate School, Union
Degrees: Ph.D., University of Washington; B.A.
for Experimenting Colleges and Universities,
in English and History, U.W
English; M.A., University of Miami, English
Mark Clemens is taking time out from directLiterature; A.B., University of Miami, English.
ing Evergreen's Information Services and editing
She comes from Miami-Dade Community College
the ReView to teach in the "Experience of Ficand has published articles in popular national
tion" program. Degrees: B.A., History, Iowa
, magazines and in academic publications.
State University; M.F.A., Creative Writing,
Yun Yi Ho, an exchange faculty from Tacoma
University of Montana. His prize-winning work
Community College, teaches in the "Civilization
has been visible for years in catalogs, viewbooks
East and West" program. Degrees: Ph.D. and
and other Evergreen publications.
M.A., History, University of Minnesota; B.A.,
Neil Delisanti teaches in the "Management and History, National Taiwan University.
the Public Interest" program. He brings 24 years
Brooke Jaeobson teaches in the "Moving
of managerial experience in the U.S. Air Force,
Image" program this fall. Degrees: Ph.D. and
along with a B.S. from the Air Force Academy
M.A., Cinema and Television, University of
and an M.B.A. from Auburn University to EverSouthern California; B.A., Anthropology, Portland
green. He taught at the Air Force Academy,
State University. She previously taught at the
featuring an interdisciplinary curriculum in the
School of Cinema Television, Los Angeles.
sciences and humanities.
Sara Julin teaches in the "Matter and Motion"
James Ebersole teaches in the "Habitats:
program this year. Degrees: M.A.T., Physics and
Marine and Terrestrial Natural History" proB.A., Physics and Chemistry, Lewis and Clark
gram. Degrees: Ph.D., Plant Ecology, University
College. She taught at Whateom Community Colof Colorado, Boulder; B.A., Natural Science,
lege and was a consultant with a research and
Goshen College, Indiana. He's published several
engineering firm.
papers on the disturbance and recovery of
Ernestine Kimbro joins the faculty this year
Alaskan terrain and jokes about adjusting from
from her position as reference librarian for Evertundra to an environment loaded with trees.
green. Degrees: Master of Librarianship, UniverGerald Fresia teaches in the "Political
sity of Washington; B.A., Gonzaga University.
Economy and Social Change" program. Degrees:
Yoshio Kimura, an exchange faculty member
Ph.D., Political Science, University of
from Kobe University in Japan, teaches in the
Massachusetts; M.A., Political Science, Purdue
"Data To Information" program.
University; B.S., Electrical Engineering, Virginia
Roger Nelson Lancaster teaches in the
Military Institute.
"Studies in Cultural Survival-Latin" program. He
Ellen Grant became coordinator of Media Sercomes to Evergreen from the Department of
vices in July and brings a diverse background in
Anthropology at the University of California,
financial consulting, law and TV news to EverBerkeley. Degrees: Ph.D. and M.A., Anthrogreen. She studied law at Washington University
pology, University of California, Berkeley; B.A.,
and St. Louis University, and received an A.B. in
Anthropology,
University of North Carolina,
Political Science/Urban Studies at Occidental ColChapel Hill.
lege in Los Angeles.
Donald Middendorf teaches in the "Matter and
Tim Gregg, a 1976 Evergreen graduate, teaches
Motion" program. Degrees: Ph.D., Plant
in the "Psychological Counseling" program this
Physiology and M.S., Applied Physics, Cornell
year while continuing his private practice in
University; B.A., Biology, University of Colorado.
Olympia. Degrees: Ph.D. and M.A. in Counseling
He's published several articles on reaction centers
Psychology, University of Texas at Austin. His exin bacteria.
perience includes individual psychotherapy,
Linda Okazaki will teach in "Studio Project:
marital and family therapy, personality assessTrack 1" this winter. Degrees: M.F.A. and B.A.,
ment and mental status examination.
Washington State University. Her work has apBob Haft, a former adjunct faculty member
peared in shows throughout Washington and
and slide curator for Evergreen, teaches in the
across the country, with solo shows in Seattle,
"Expressive Arts: Track 1" program. Degrees:
California, Colorado. She has published articles in
M.F.A. and B.A. with distinction in psychology
Artweek, Seattle Arts and Ms. Magazine.
from Washington State University. Haft has
Brian Price teaches in the "Political Economy
shown his photography across the country, and
and Social Change" program this year. Degrees:
his work has been featured in Puget Soundings
Ph.D., Economic and Labor History, and M.A.,
magazine and The Seattle Weekly.
History and American Studies, Purdue University; B.A., American and English Literature,
University of East Anglia, England. He's
presented several papers on the effects of
management practice on workers.
Sara Rideout, a 1978 Evergreen graduate, joins
the library staff this year. Degrees: M.A. in
Library Science, University of Washington; M.A.,
Literature, University of Puget Sound. She's
worked in libraries for Boeing, the University of
Washington and for the Olympia Timberland
Regional Library.
Camilla Stivers teaches in the MPA program.
Degrees: Ph.D., Center for Public Administration
and Policy, Virginia Tech; M.P.A., Health AdBrooke Jaeobson
Ykin VI Ho
ministration, University of Southern California;
Master's of Liberal Arts, Johns Hopkins University; B.A., Wellesley College. She has done a wide
variety of consulting for health agencies.
Fred Ttechida will be a visiting artist Winter
Quarter, while taking sabbatical from New York
State College of Ceramics at Alfred University.
Degrees: M.F.A., University of Minnesota; B.A.,
St. Cloud State University; A.A., University of
Minnesota.
Sherry Walton teaches in the Teacher Education program. Degrees: Ph.D. with emphasis on
theories of reading, research and evaluation
methodology, University of Colorado; M.A. and
B.S. in Education, Auburn University. She was an
Assistant Professor of Elementary Education at
Sara Julln
Montana State University.
Arthur Warmoth teaches in the "Human
Health and Behavior" program this fall. Degrees:
Ph.D., Psychology, Brandeis University; B.A.,
Theatre, Reed College. He taught psychology at
Sierra University in Santa Monica, and is a
member of the American Psychological Association in the Division of Humanistic Psychology.

Roger Nelson Lancaster

Not pictured! Nell Dellsanti, Gerald
Fresia, Ellen Grant, Bob Haft,
Ernestine Kimbro, Linda Okazaki and
Fred "fechlda.

James Harnish

Donald Middendorf

Brian Price

Camilla Stivers

Sherry Walton

Arthur Warmoth

Alaska Sketches
by Larry Stenberg
Director of Community and Alumni Relations
If you're ever in Anchorage, Alaska, drop by the
Cafe Del Mundo on Benson Boulevard. I was
there last month and met a dozen delightful
Greeners at our annual informal reception. Their
vitality could warm the frostiest igloo.
There seemed to be several common bonds
shared by this particular group of Greeners—they
all spoke fondly of their days at Evergreen and
wear their experiences proudly. All those
assembled are involved in providing service to
the citizens of Anchorage—some in the political
arena, some in legal services, some in rehabilitation and social work, some in education and all
definitely making a contribution to improving the
quality of life in their community. They all share a
deep appreciation for Alaska but, due to a struggling economy, some are reluctantly looking to
shift south.
Kimberly Martis '85 walked into the cafe
following her last day of work as a rural investigator for the Commission for Human Rights. She
brought two friends working as legal assistants,
one interested in enrolling at Evergreen and one
hoping to land a job at the college. As for
Kimberly, she is preparing to take the LSAT and
hopes to attend Emory University in the fall of
1988. She also finds time to mother two boys and
sneak in some commercial fishing, Softball and
racquetball.
Chris Daugherty '82 also has itchy feet and is
dealing with the attempts to merge the state
higher education system. She is right in the middle of the action by serving as program manager
of an education and service center for women and
minorities interested in non-traditional careers.
Chris' commitment as an advocate keeps her in
Alaska but she does look forward to turning
south in 1988 so she can spend more time on her
small farm in Tenino.
Nancey Goforth '78 an Alaska stalwart, has
graduated from nursing school, passed her boards
and currently works as a registered nurse in
pediatrics at Providence Hospital. Like most
Alaska Greeners, Nancey loves the outdoors and
is an accomplished mountain climber who stays in
shape by biking and running. Nancey is exploring
the possibility of returning to Twisp, Washington.
Dee Frankfourth '74 made an unsuccessful run
for city council but is still in the thick of political
activity. She currently works as special assistant
to the outgoing mayor of Anchorage. This winter,
Dee and her husband, Peter Scholes, are traveling
to Europe for two months. Dee has developed a
reputation as an outstanding community leader
and you can bet that when they return she will
once again make her presence known in
Anchorage

Erik Leroy '75 has been in Alaska five years
where he got hooked on sea kayaking. During his
last memorable trip of two weeks, Erik and his
wife, Kirsten, were attacked by a "flirtatious sea
lion." Erik's law activities have gone through
several stages. Currently he's committed to working on Native Alaskan issues. A major portion of
his work is representing native corporations in
bankruptcy. Between work, family and play, Erik
has somehow found time to take up flying lessons.
Neil Bennett '75 manages the Alaska office for
a private firm called National Vocational Rehabilitation. He is also serving as chapter president of
the National Association of Rehabilitation Professionals in the private sector, His job is demanding
but pays for a remote cabin. Like all his Alaskan
counterparts, Neil gets in more activity than
normal human expectation. He finds time to ski
and competes in the annual Errondy Downhill
Canoe Race which he won in 1984.
After picking up masters degrees, George and
Brenda (Schwartz) Dickinson '75 headed for the
first good job which brought them to Alaska.
Brenda is currently working as a guardian ad
litem for the Office of Public Advocacy. George is
operations manager for the North Slope Borough
Geographic information system. When not busy
at work, they are raising two children and George
"goes for the gusto" by brewing state championship beer.
Lisa Jamieson '82 another five-year Alaskan, is
making her mark as Coordinator of Instructional
Media at the University of Alaska-Anchorage.
Her skills spill outside her professional work into
independent film and television production. Lisa's
current projects include PSA's for Alaska Lung
Association and Municipal Parks and Recreation
Department. The joy of her life is her two-yearold daughter, Sophie, who she claims "has the
spirit of a future Greener."
The first person in the door and the last to
leave was Lisa Oakley '78 who just happens to
manage the Cafe Del Mundo. Lisa is currently
taking business classes and plans to open her own
eatery in 1989. Last spring Lisa and her husband
spent three weeks in the Aleutian Islands helping
lead a bird-watching tour and returned to buy
their first "fix-up" house.
During the annual Anchorage College Fair, I
saw over 300 interested prospective students.
Based on this expanding interest and the increase
in Greener grads relocating in Alaska, more success stories from the north will be filling future
pages in the ReView.

Since the early seventies,
Evergreen grads have spread
throughout the United States.
Over 40 percent of our 8,000
grads have settled or temporarily perched outside of Washington state. It's clear that the
major reason for our growing
national recognition is the professional success and civic contributions of our expanding
alumni ranks. What's most exciting is that, with 800 to 900
graduates annually, our alumni
will double in the next decade
on its way to Greening America.

Key
3,000-4,000 Greeners

*

500 plus
100-200
50-100
10 plus
a few

Association
Plans for
Coming Year

Alumni
Association
Welcomes New
Board Members
At its Annual Meeting in June, the
Alumni Association welcomed eight
new members to the Board. They join
current members in providing leadership and activities for the Alumni
Association. A new slate of executive
officers was also elected. They are:
Val Thorson '75, President
Elena Guilfoil '79,
First Vice President
Chris Shaw '84,
Second Vice President
Gary Hirsch '84, Treasurer
Doug Riddels '85, Secretary
Newly elected members include:
Curt Bondurant '85, Pam Bowe '77,
Ray Fowler '83, Frances Moeller '85,
Peter Moulton '83, Doug Riddels '85,
Roberta Ritter '80, Myrna Zolyomi
'82, and John Zupa '77 and Student
Representative Jacinta McKoy.
Continuing members are:
Christina Koons Baker '81, Patricia
Bliss '80, Rob Fellows '80, Charlie
Heffernan '75, Doug Scrima '79, Neil
Shamberg '80, Patricia Shaw '84, and
Lyle Tribwell '77.

By Chris Shaw '84

Alumni Board, taking » break at summer planning
session, include: Pam Bowe, Ray Fowler, Charlie Heffernan, Gary Hirsch, Frances Moeller, Alice Patience,
Doug Riddels, Roberta Ritter, Nell Shamberg, Chris
Shaw, Val Thorson, Lyle Tribwell and John Zupa.

As the ReVlew went to press, the
Alumni Association Board of Directors
headed into their Fall Retreat full of
energy and ideas for the coming year.
Under the auspices of Elena Guilfoil
'79, vice president for Program, the
Program Committee has been assembling proposals for consideration by the
Board of Directors. At the Fall Retreat
the Board will review each proposal
and develop a calendar of events and
activities for the Alumni Association.
These events and activities are open to
all alumni, and the variety of this
year's proposals guarantee that there
will be something for everyone. A
preliminary list of proposals includes:
- Summer Seminars targeted for alums
- Thurston County Networking
- Alumni Directory
- Organic Farm support project
- Enhancement of fundraising
capabilities
- Funding for an Alumni Association
personal computer
- Increased outreach to Seattle area
alumni
- Continued support of Alumni Association activities, receptions, Greener
Gathering, and the ReView.
We will give you the finalized, more
detailed list of activities and a report
in the Winter ReView, so stay tuned to
see what the Alumni Association has
for you!

International Geoduck Survival
Kit
The Alumni Association wants to hear your ideas
for an international travel/work survival kit. We
have many alumni who have traveled or worked
overseas and have some tips and ideas that could
prove useful for other alums or current students.
For example, we have some alums in Japan who
have worked there in various professions and can
offer tips on visa requirements, work regulations,
lodging information and employment contacts. We
would like to get more information so that we can
publish a "survival guide" for future Geoduck
travelers.
So if you live abroad now or have in the past
and you have some tips... send 'em on in. The
packet will be available from the Alumni office.
Special note for those alumni that are living in
Japan: the Alumni Association would like to do a
feature article about your experiences there.
Please send anecdotes, travelogues, work stories
and photos to Chris Shaw, c/o Alumni Office,
TESC CAB 214, Olympia, WA, 98505.

Answers
1. A quarter-ton petroglyph, carved by the
Squaxins, was discovered on the college's beach.
Evergreen cooperated with the Squaxin Indian
Tribal Council to move the sacred object to the
State Capitol Museum in 1970.

It. 16,000
5. Anchorage, Alaska
6. 18.2%
7. Wini Ingram
8. Peanut Butter
9. Susan Strasserfor her 1982 book, Never Done:
A History of American Housework
10. "Man and His Art"

Quiz on back cover

The series of annual Fall Alumni Receptions has
been finalized. If you live near any of the following locations this is your chance to exchange tall
tales with other Greeners, catch up on the latest
campus news and make new contacts that may
bring you fame and riches.
New York
Thursday, November 12
6:00 to 8:30 pm
Yale Club, 50 Vanderbilt (across from Grand
Central)
Boston
Saturday, November 14
7:00 to 10:00 pm
Unique Physique Fitness Center, 45 Danforth St.,
Jamaica Plain, MA
San Francisco
Friday, December 4
6:00 to 8:30 pm
Hotel Californian, 405 Taylor St., San Francisco,
CA
Los Angeles
Monday, December 7
6:00 to 8:30 pm
Hyatt Hotel, 6300 Telegraph Rd., Commerce, CA
During the month of October receptions were
also hosted in Alaska and Washington, D.C. We
look forward to seeing you at functions in your

Class of 1973

Class of 1975

Doug Kahn, San Francisco, CA. Doug's book,
John Heartfwld: Art and Mass Media, was
released in England by Comedia in May. He is
currently working on a book on the artistic use of
sound in the 20th century. He works at the InterArt Center at San Francisco State University.

Nance Thomsen, Tacoma, WA, works as an occupational therapist at Western State Hospital, is
involved with a local peace and social justice
group and is an avid folk dancer.
Greg Booth, Alexandria, VA, is a Natural
Resources Advisor with the U.S. Dept. of State in
Washington, D.C. He is the biological diversity
coordinator in the Agency for International
Developments' Bureau for Africa. Previously,
Greg had a contract with Congress to research
appropriate low-resource agricultural
technologies in Africa.

Class of 1974
Jane Rensel, Honolulu, HI, is a self- employed
researcher, writer and education consultant. She
is a doctoral student in cultural anthropology at
the University of Hawaii, and she recently
traveled with husband, Alan Howard, for four
months through Tahiti, the Cook Islands, Fiji,
New Zealand and Australia.
Teresa (Boyer) Grove, Vancouver, WA, has taken
the position of Nursing Education Coordinator for
Southwest Washington Hospitals in Vancouver.
She says, "My experience at Evergreen encouraged an energetic approach to adult learning
which continues in my new job!"
Roxanne and Michael (75) Denoyer, Kanab, UT,
are the proud new partners in a river company,
Grand Canyon Expeditions, which runs river
trips through the Grand Canyon.
Robert Messer, Selah, WA. After 12 years as an
environmental health technician for the Yakima
Health District, he has embarked on a new career
as a fireman for Rockwell Hanford. He is also the
proud father of brand new son, Jacob Robert
Malcolm, and six-year-old Robert, Jr.
Joseph Ochoa, Portland, OR, taught English and
basic skills to Hispanic and Southeast Asian
refugee children of migrant workers from 1977-84.
He received his elementary teaching certificate
from Oregon State University in 1980 and did his
student teaching in an Eskimo village on the
Bering Sea. He entered Northwestern School of
Law of Lewis and Clark College in 1984, graduated in 1987, and was awarded membership in
the Cornelius Honor Society. Joseph now works
as an attorney for Multnomah Defenders, Inc.,
where he took the place of Jim Lang ('76).
Michael Hall and Peggy Valenti ('83), Albany,
CA. Michael is starting work on a masters program in organization behavior at the California
School of Professional Psychology, Berkeley campus.. He has worked there as the coordinator of
student services for the past year. Peggy has one
semester left before receiving a masters in the
Politics and Economics of Pacific Basin Countries
from Dominican College.

Patricia Bedinger, San Francisco, CA, has been
hired as an assistant professor in the biology
department at the University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill, and is working on a grant from the
National Institutes of Health, researching pollen
development in maize.

Class of 1976
Kristi George Shaw, Holualoa, HI, runs a pottery business called Sunbird Pottery and
Porcelain and designs wearable art for wholesale
and retail outlets. She has two boys, ages 3 and 8.
Rick Cohen, Lake Oswego, OR, is a psychiatrist
doing psychotherapy with individuals, couples and
families. He also works part time in Health
Service at Portland State University and teaches
psychosocial aspects of medicine to internal
medicine physicians in training at Providence
Medical Center.
Duncan Mann, North Adams, MA, joined the
Williams College economics department in
September.
Shelley Morse, Baltimore, MD, is a project director/instructional designer at the Center for Instructional Development and Evaluation at the
University of Maryland, University College. She
designs computer based interactive video instructional systems for use in business and industry.

Class of 1977
John Reichle, Portland, OR, is attending the
Oregon Health Sciences University School of
Medicine.
Susan Richards Donner, Santa Rosa, CA, is
working as a sign language interpreter. A note to
Kathy: I am at 425 Hewitt St. Where are you?

Class of 1978
Kathy Young Scheuer, New York, NY, is an assistant District Attorney for the city of New York.
Patricia Gibbs, Auburn, CA, works for the Placer
County Environmental Health Department in the
Underground Tank Program. She recently moved
into a new house which is available to traveling
alums in Loomis, CA (45 minutes northeast of
Sacramento).

Joyce Jill Smith, Fort Worth, TX, was married
to Andrew Stancioff on October 3, 1987 in
Camden, Maine.
Charles Moore, Seattle, WA, is the founder of
Success Cybernetic Training, a personal growth
development company supporting participants in
restructuring habit patterns in a caring
environment.
Roberta Tidland, Camas, WA, is still active in
city and county government in the field of planning, park development and historical preservation. She is also a counselor and teacher for
individuals needing mental health care.
Marcia Levenson, Berkeley, CA, is working
toward a graduate degree in geography at the
University of California, Berkeley. She delivered
a paper on Soviet environmental policy in the arctic at a conference at the University of Alberta in
Edmonton last winter.
Nancy Connolly and Joey Blum, Seattle, WA,
have ended their breather, living in the woods
near Fall City and plan an autumn trip to Italy,
completion of a novel, and more gardens for
Nancy to make beautiful.

Class of 1979
David Millhauser died June 2, 1987 of cancer. He
was employed by the University of California at
Berkeley as Coordinator of the Agricultural
Department. He worked with the California Farm
Bureau, the Los Angeles School Department and
was appointed to the Los Angeles County Task
Force on Nutrition.
Timothy Pearce, Ann Arbor, MI, has been a
teaching assistant at the University of Michigan
Biological Station for the Natural History of Invertebrates this past summer, and has begun doctoral work at the university in land snail ecology.

Class of 1980
Roland Morris, Milwaukie, OR, works as a
substitute teacher. Alumni are welcome to drop
in to share life histories and dinner.
Thorn and Karen Farris, Kennewick, WA,
operate an independent fruit and vegetable
brokerage business in the Tri-Cities area.
Debra Williams, Tacoma, WA, received her
masters in library science from the University of
Washington in March and is employed as the
cataloging librarian for Pierce County Library.
Deanna Ray, Concrete, WA, is a park ranger
working at Scenic Beach State Park in Seabeck,
WA.
Annette Rickles (new name—Nessa Elila),
Portland, OR, is in the masters of arts program in
counseling psychology at Lewis and Clark
College.
Elizabeth Colwill, Binghamton, NY, spent 18
months in Paris doing research for her doctoral
thesis on the role of women in pre-revolutionary
France. She has accepted a faculty position at the
State University of New York in the history
department, teaching courses in women's studies
and women's history.
Elizabeth Schy, Los Angeles, CA, has been
working as a registered nurse in obstetrics since
1982 and has been assisting in delivering very
large babies (the record—11 lb., 2 oz!)
Sarah Stranahan, Philadelphia, PA, is working
toward a doctorate in communications.
Susan Kerber (Culbertson), Olympia, WA is the
special assistant to the Executive Director of
Sound Home Health Services—Hospice. She also
serves on the board of directors of Twin County
Credit Union.

Class of 1981

Tina Hoggatt T8 Is the first Oeoduck
to be accepted Into baseball's Hall of
Fame In Cooperstown, New York. One
of her creations, a watercolor of Billy
Martin turning the double play, will
hang In the Yankee exhibit through
next year. "For the last six years my
work has been almost exclusively
concerned with Images of baseball,
both action shots and portraits of
players," says Hoggatt. In the course
of her research, she became fascinated with the history of black

organised baseball, which flourished
In the U.S. during the first half of the
century. Reproduced above Is an
Image of outfielder Oscar Charleston
from a suite of eight black-and-white
prints of great players from the segregated, pre-1947 "Negro Leagues."
Made from linoleum cuts, each print
features a brief oral history and
biographical sketch. The suite
received rave reviews during Its show
at the Davidson Galleries In Seattle
during August.

Pat desChene and Hugh Bridgeford ('82),
Arlington Heights, IL. Pat has joined the staff of
the Arlington Veterinary Clinic where she hopes
to get lots of exposure to surgery as well as the
occasional exotic animal. Hugh is attending the
Master of Fine Arts program in electronic
visualization at the University of Chicago. Hugh
would be glad to talk to any current students or
alums who would be interested in the program.
Electronic visualization is a study of computer/video generated artforms.
Deborah Darling, Chicago, IL, has been promoted to regional manager, midwest region, for
Atelier International, an Italian residential and
contract furnishing firm.
Jonathan Moceri, Mercer Island, WA, is presently a foreign fisheries observer with the National
Marine Fisheries Service in the Bering Sea.
Barbara Brundage Yunker, Olympia, WA, and
her husband are the owners of Puget View
Guesthouse, an Olympia waterfront bed and
breakfast.
Bruce Pavitt, Seattle, WA, a former DJ at KAOSFM, has been writing about independent record
labels in Seattle's Rocket magazine for the past
four years and helped start Fallout records, a
store specializing in independent labels. Bruce
recently started his own rock 'n roll label, Sub
Pop, and plans to release records by Green River
and Soundgarden.

Leon Werdinger, Lajitas, TX. Since graduation,
Leon reports he has spent the majority of his
time hanging around in bus stations and laundromats, mostly in Tbledo and Omaha. He's taken
up smoking but still maintains a macrobiotic diet
and may move to Peoria soon and get a job.
Barbara Levy, Boston, MA, is an office administrator/fundraiser at Alice James Books, a
cooperative with an emphasis on publishing New
England women's poetry. A recent visit to the
Northwest has stirred up her longings to return.

Class of 1982
Donovan Gray, Seattle, WA, is occupied with a
wide range of arts management consulting activities. In between road trips he holds down
responsibilities as Director of Development for
Meany Hall for the Performing Arts at the
University of Washington and writes articles and
reviews for regional and national arts
publications.
Steve Engel, Sausalito, CA, is the training
facilitator and program coordinator for the
Headlands Institute. He also works with the San
Francisco Bay Chapter of the Oceanic Society
Expeditions office as a naturalist aboard whale
watch trips.
Charles Eberhardt, Ithaca, NY, graduated this
June from Cornell Law School, first in his class of
170. He is married to fellow greener Deborah
Johnson ('81).
Kurt Danison, Okanogan, WA, is an associate
planner for Okanogan County, where his work
focuses on developing new zoning regulations
aimed at minimizing impacts to wildlife and rural
values which could result from the development
of Early Winters. Kurt is interested in organizing
a gathering of North Central Washington alumni.
Interested alums can contact him at P.O. Box
1431, Okanogan, WA 98840.
Jon Gribskov, San Diego, CA, is responsible for
scheduling a $290 million shipbuilding project,
and serves as chairman of the local chapter of the
Computer and Automated Systems Associated.
He was married to Nancy Willenburg on May 3.
Ronni Hacken and Maureen Foye Parker ('83),
Olympia, WA, both received masters in applied
behavioral science from L.I.O.S/City University
in 1986 and currently have a private practice as
therapists ami consultants,
Laurel Boyajian, Portland, OR, is working
toward state licensure in massage therapy and
studying herbal medicine.

Class of 1984
Pablo Schugurensky, New York, NY, recently
received a position on the staff of the New York
State Council on the Arts, the largest such council in the United States.
Christopher Halsell, Farmington, CT, is a doctoral candidate in biomedical science at the
University of Connecticut Health Center
specializing in neuroscience. His goal is to "get
finished, escape Connecticut, and come back to
the great Northwest!"
Amos Davis, Boise, ID, has been appointed to the
position of audio visual production specialist with
the Deptartment of the Interior, Bureau of Land
Management, Boise Interagency Fire Center.
Lillian Schauer, Tacoma, WA, received her juris
doctor degree from the University of Puget
Sound School of Law in June and plans to practice law in Kitsap County.
Michael Faubion and Erin Eagan. Lubbock,
TX, were married on June 13,1987.
Patrick Morris, Olympia, WA, has started a new
business, Ad-Image Video Service, in his home.
Susan Scott, Okanogan, WA, is one of eight
people chosen to comprise the initial class of
Executive Fellows, a new program created by the
legislature to give the "best and the brightest"
an early first-hand look at state-level management. Susan works for the Department of Social
and Health Services.

Class of 1985
Deborah McLellan, Olympia, WA, and husband,
Steve, are the proud parents of Daniel, born
September, 1986.

Class of 1986
Lisa Schoening, Frankfurt, Germany, is
employed by Chemgrate Corporation where she
is responsible for establishing a distribution network in northern Europe, acting as an interface
between the U.S. corporate office and the European distributors, and charting a direction for the
company in Europe.
Rick Rodriguez, Eugene, OR, spent last summer
as an employment counselor with Thurston Youth
Services. He was granted a full fellowship, the only one granted to an out-of-state student, to begin
work on his master's degree at the University of
Oregon this fall.

Geoduck Givers
Top $1.6 Million
By Forrest Wilcox,
Director of the Evergreen Fund

The President's
Club

($1,000 or more)
Aerospace Machinists Lodge 751
Allied Paper Company
American Express Foundation
AT. & T.
Earl and Janice Anderson
Arity Corporation
Arthur Young Foundation
Edward and Patricia Baines
W.P. and Elizabeth Balderston
Leonard P. Berger
Wesley and Marie Berglund
The Boeing Company
David 0. Brownwood
Yvonne and Edward Cazier, Jr.
CEIP Fund, Inc.
Richard B. Collier
Consulate General of Japan
Conway Data, Inc.
Michael E. Corrigan
Data General Corporation
Norman and LeAnne Deshon
James Dinerman
Edna Bailey Sussman Fund
Robert T. Eggert
Robert Fanfant
Don and Willa Fassett
Fisheries Management
Foundation
Frankie Foster
Vicky Draham Friend
Ulriche Fritzsche
W.H. and Claire Fuller
Herbert and Carol Fuller
Tim Girvin
Warren and Gerry Ghormley
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Thomas and Kathy Healy
Helen Martha Schiff Foundation
John William Hennessey, III
Patrick and Maureen Hill
The Hospital Corporation of
America Foundation
Industrial Development
Research, Inc.
Ira and Jean Hurlburt
Edie Ingersoll
Intel Corporation
John W. Johnson
John (Bud) F. Koons
Barbara B. MacPhail
Kim Kaufman Malin
Charles and Miriam Matthews
Charles and Barbara McCann
Raymond and Jeanne Meredith
Microsoft Corporation
Bob Moore
Paul Mott
Connel and June Murray
Joseph and Sheryl Olander
Richard S. Page
Dennis and Joan Peterson
POSSCA, Inc.
Rainier National Bank
Alex and Suzanne Rosenkrantz
SAGA Corporation
The Saul and Dayee
Haas Foundation
Seafirst Foundation
Shell Oil Company
Ralph and Adele Smith
Bruce and Mary Stevenson
Joan and Mortimer Thomas
Tectronix Foundation
UNISYS
Mark Urmanski
Mark Vestrich
David and Landon Wagoner
Susan Washburn
Washington Federation of State
Employees
Washington Mutual Savings
Bank
Washington State Labor Council
Allan M. and Mel Weinstein
Charles Williams
Gary and Sandra Worrell
Irwin Zuckerman

The Cooper
Point Club
($500-$999)
Alpha Delta Kappa
Don Anthony
George Beckman
Roger J. Bounds Foundation
Jack Everett Bozarth
Harry Branch
Continental, Inc.
Corning Glass Works
Foundation
Corporation for Public
Broadcasting
Peggy Schiff Enderlein
Judith Espinola
James F. and Georgia Fowler
John and Becky Gallagher
Herb and Barbara Gelman
Hewlett-Packard
Intl. Fed. of Professional and
Technical Engineers, Local 17
Sara Jane Johnson
L & E Bottling Company
Line Lite Laser
David Marcus
Morris and Elizabeth
Marmalstein
Roger Duane Mellem
Peter and Anna Marie Morton
Renah Blair Rietzke Family
Foundation
Irvin and Marion Saltzman
Virginia Schmidt
Joan and Mortimer Thomas
Helene Van Buren
Vedder Foundation
Marilyn B. Ward
Walter B. Williams
Byron and Bernice %utz

Tower Club
($250-$499)
1199 Northwest National Union
BancAmerica Corporation
Susan Bartlett
Margaret M. Birnbaum
Gerald and Patricia Blakley
Kay E.M. Boyd
Ritannette Cooper
Samuel Graham Farmer
Ann Dear Gavell
Carol Green
Harry and Rosemary Gregg
Patricia W. Griffith
Louis and Frances Hilton
Thomas F. Hornbein
Intl. Business Machines
Jamison Thomas Gallery
Japanese American Citizens
League
Lisa Anne Johnson
Karen Lichtenstein
D. Peter and Shirlee J. Meador
Wesley Miles Norman
Robert and Carol Olson
Readers' Digest Foundation
Robert and Letitia Reeves
Service Employees Council
Shearson Lehman Brothers, Inc.
Joel and Mary Stein
Stonington Gallery
Tags Trophies
Fred G. Thunberg
The Westwater Inn
Janet and Rudine Yoder

Take a bow! You can be very proud of
your support to Evergreen. This past
year the college Foundation received
2,625 gifts totalling more than
$1,630,000.
This year's total topped the record
setting performance of 1986 by 22 percent. The number of gifts grew by
more than 10 percent. Gifts came from
over 900 Evergreen alumni, making
this the first year that alumni have led
other categories of donors in the
number of gifts.
Corporations and foundations which
support higher education like to see
this high level of alumni participation.
This year the number of grants from
businesses and foundations grew a
whopping 50 percent over last year.
Government grant income also increased by more than 25 percent.

Julie Anne Grant
Constance Gray
Josef and Stephany Gray
($100-$249)
Robert and Rose Green
Jon Russell Gribskov
Steven and Rose W. Alfred
William and Bertha Groves
Durwood and Dorys Alkire
Clifford and Charlotte Alterman Julia G. Gulden
Shirley L. Hanson
Barbara Altman
Theodore and Gertrude Altonen Marilyn Soriano Harris
American Postal Workers Union Ray and Christine Hayworth
Wanda M. Hedrick
Jamie K. Andersen
Ralph Hein
Anne B. Appleby
John and Jean Hennessey, Jr.
Armco Foundation
Joseph F. Hennessey
William and Helen Aron
Richard Hesik
Christina Koons Baker
Hispanic Arts Committee
W. Thomas Bartlett
Mark and Marilyn Hoehne
Joan Lee Battuello
Edward and Carolyn Hoffman
Robert Pike and Nancy Becker
Douglas S. Hunter
Alan and Carol Bensman
Richard Stephen Hunter
Nicholas S. Blattner
Neal Eugene Hurlburt
Renee Couchee Blattner
Mary Cay Johnson
Mary Hester Bley
Charlotte M. Jones
Marianna L. Tenney Boles
Stella M. Jordan
Curtis Charnell Bondurant
Henry C. Judd
Suzanne Marie-Therese Boyer
Samuel X. Kaplan
Clarence and Katherine Brabb
Eleanore M. Kenny
Katharine Anthony Bradley
George and Caroline Kinnear
Herbert and Shirley Bridge
J. Henry and Barbara Brockhaus Raymond and Eula Kirby
Jennifer E. Knauth
Nathan and Irene Buitenkant
Daniel Brandon Koch
Peter Cerbone
Joseph and Ayako Koczur, Sr.
Craig Dwight Chance
E. Alfred Kremer
Drs. Richard and Donna Childs
Isabelle Lamb
Claudia Maria Chotzen
Janice Lambertz
CIGNA Foundation
Dr and Mrs. Paul Lauer
Atlee and Mary Clapp
Nicholas R Clinch
Geraldine Irey Lawrence
Paul Nicholas Ledbetter
Kenneth Lee Coffin
Elizabeth Levy
Joan and Frank Cohee
Ann Lidzbarski
Lawrence Garner Cole
Drennan Lindsay
Winifred and Jack Colwill
Judith Lindsay-Knight
Michael and Linda Cook
Carol and Gene Little
Barbara Cooley
Robert A. Longman, Jr.
Susan Graver
Ernest and Paula A. Luders
Albert and Charlotte Dangler
Sharlene Lugenbell
Barnard M. David
James and Nancy MacWhinney
Robert Danielson Davis
Ronald Wayne Magram
Dr. Don W. DeBra
Robert and Roberta Mahler
David W. DeFeyter
Rona and Harvey Malofsky
Stephen and Lienne Dimitroff
Barbara and Elliot Marple
Debra Dishberger
Ralph and Frances Martin
Richard and Norma Dominguez
Rudy and Gail Martin
Gayer Patricia Dominick
Reynaldo and Mildred Martinez
Eleanor Margaret Dornan
Miriam S. Mathes
Wilbur G. Downs
John and Penny Matlick
William and Judith Driscoll
John and Elizabeth Matthews
Susan A. Dubuisson
Jo Helen Maynard
William and Vasiliki Dwyer
Lance Earl Earnet
Richard L. Maynard
Lynn McAllister
Mary Eberhardt
H.W. and Roberta McClary
Elizabeth Leach Gallery
James and Jacqueline McFerran
Todd Lewis Engle
John and Catherine Meehan
Marilyn Ruth Erickson
Lee Henry Meister
William Hardy Eshbaugh, III
Margarita Mendoza De Sugiyama
Duane and Nada Estes
Meridian Bancorp, Inc.
Sherry Falkner-Rose
Christina Ann Meserve
Robert and Pamela Faro
Orville and June Mestrovich
Mary K. Feldman
Anne W. Miller
Jane Irene Fisher
Arnold and Ann Millhauser
Robert and Helen Fisher
Paul and Genevieve Frankenberg Ames Frederick Moore
Nannette Fortune Morgan
George and Betty Gaetke
John and Ginny Murray
Arthur and Barbara Geller
Melissa Faith Naso-Kaplan
General Electric Foundation
William and Darnell Needham
General Mills Foundation
Charles Malcolm Nishida
General Telephone Company
William and Norma O'Neil
George and Ellen Ghilarducci
Richard and Patricia Oltman
Richard and Katherine Gilpin
Peter and Mary Ellen Onno
Charles and Rebecca Gipson
H. Martyn and Candace Owen
George and Lila Girvin
Leslie Woodruff Owen
Eva Goldberg
Barbara Smith and
The Goodman Management
David Paulsen
Group
Pacific Northwest Bell
Ann and David Gordon
William H. Page, II
Betty H. Gordon
Hamilton and Muriel Page
Pauline and Thomas Gordon
Leonard James Pagliaro
Alice Elizabeth Patience
Lee S. Pembleton

The Evergreen
100 Club

Your gifts were wonderful. You supported 50 scholarships to students of
need and merit. You supported important student research projects in such
fields as computer fractal graphicscombining it with music in a way that
had never been tried before; neurology—looking for a better understanding of Alzheimers disease; and forest
management—seeking a more efficient,
more profitable, but less destructive
form of harvest. You supported KAOS
FM—one of the most highly acclaimed
community radio stations in the country, and many, many more worthwhile
projects and programs that could not
exist without your generous support.
Evergreen is a more dynamic,
challenging and rewarding place
because of you.

Luann E. Perkins
Rosemary J. Peterson
George K. Pickett
Pierce County Labor Council
Political Education Fund
Thurman and Laura Poston, Jr.
Robert and Elizabeth Preble
Wallace W. Quistorff
Ralston Purina Company
Mary L. Randall
Howard S. Reed
Marvin and Mary-Lynne Reiner
Janet A. Richardson
Richard and Bonnie Robbins
Peter and Cynthia Rockwell
Laura Roderick
Irwin and Zelda Rose
Robert Charles Rudine
A.E. Saunders
Richard Thomas Scheffel
John and Joan Schick
Russell and Joyce Sears
Seattle Painters Local #300
James Claire Seekins
Lester and Harriet Servid
George and Clara Shinn
Gillian Ann Siegrist
Linda Diane Silber
Chester Silva
Warren and Virginia Simms
Maxine K. Sitts
John Skadan
Richard Noel Skadan
Gary Thomas Smith
John and Florience Sniado
Amigo and Mildred Soriano
Oscar and Barbara Soule
Sperry Corporation Foundation
Betty and Murray Spiegel
Richard Alan Staehli
William W. Staley, Jr.
State Farm Companies
Foundation
Michael Anthony States
Larry Stenberg
Sarah S. Stranahan-Cubbon
Bruno and Inge Strauss
John and Dorothy Swanberg
Daphne and David Tang
Diane B. Tickell
Jeanne Shappell Tribe
Leslie and Devora Turner
UFCW Union Local Number 367
United Indians Of All Tribes
George and Joan Wallace
Patsy E. Warren
Washington Education
Association
Washington Public Employees
Association
Neil and Mary Waterman
Zelda Jane Waxenberg
Jack Weeden
Robert and Louisa Wells, Jr.
Robert and Betty Williams
Irmgard and Herbert
Wimberger
Donald and Anne Winks
Michael Stanton Witz
Arthur and Gertrude Wolcott
Thomas and Anna Mae Wolfe
Benjamin Ruth Woo
Janice Marie Wood
Karen J. Wynkoop
John and Dorothy Zimicki

Corporations and
Foundations
Aerospace Machinists Lodge 751
Aetna Life & Casualty
Foundation
Allied Paper Company
Alumax
American Express Foundation
American Postal Workers Union
ARA Services

Arity Corporation
Armco Foundation
The Arthur Young Foundation
Association of Washington Cities
AT&T Information Systems
BancAmerica Corporation
The Boeing Company
Cabot Corporation Foundation
CEIP Fund Incorporated
Charles Schwab & Company
CIGNA Foundation
Connecticut Mutual
Life Insurance
Continental, Inc.
Conway Data, Inc.
Corning Glass Works Foundation
Corporation For Public
Broadcasting
Data General Corporation
Edna Bailey Sussman Fund
Equitable Life Insurance
FMC Foundation
Fisheries Management
Foundation
General Electric Foundation
General Mills Foundation
General Telephone Company
Tim Girvin Design, Inc.
The Goodman Management
Group
Helen Martha Schiff Foundation
Hewlett Packard
Hispanic Arts Committee
Honeywell Foundation
The Hospital Corporation
of America Foundation
Industrial Development
Research, Inc.
Intel Corporation
International Business Machines
Intl. Federation of Professional
and Technical Engineers
International Woodworkers
of America
Japanese American
Citizens League
K-Mart Corporation
Line Lite Laser
Meridian Bancorp, Inc.
Merrill Lynch & Company, Inc.
Metropolitan Life Foundation
Microsoft Corporation
The Northern Trust Company
1199 Northwest National Union
Pacific Northwest Bell
POSSCA, Inc.
The Procter & Gamble Fund
Puget Sound Power & Light
Rainier National Bank
Ralston Purina Company
Reader's Digest Foundation
Renah Bair Rietzke
Family Foundation
Roger J. Bounds Foundation
The Saul & Dayee
Haas Foundation
Seafirst Bank
Seattle Painters Local
Tumwater School District #300
The Seattle Times
Shearson Lehman Brothers, Inc.
Shell Oil Company
Smithline Beckman Foundation
Sperry Corporation Foundation
State Farm Companies
Foundation
Tektronix, Inc.
Times Mirror
Unisys
UFCW Local Number 554
UFCW Union Local Number 367
United Indians Of All Tribes
Vedder Foundation
Washinton Federation of State
Employees
Washington Education
Association
Washington Mutual
Savings Bank
Washington Public Employees
Association
Washington State Labor Council

Evergreen
Foundation
Scholars Named
Forty-seven students have received
Foundation Scholarships and will be
receiving one full year of tuition for the
1987-88 academic year (one quarter for
MES/MPA recipients). The scholarships are awarded on the basis of
students' superior academic achievement and contributions in the arts,
community acitivities, leadership and
athletics.

Local Businesses
ABC Printers
Altrusa Club of Olympia
Anchorage Well-Pump Service
Archibald Sisters
The Asterisk and
Cheese Library
Childhood's End Gallery
Counterpoint Bookstore
Desco Electronics Corporation
Dice T-Shirts
Elizabeth Leach Gallery
Francine Seders Gallery
Fungi Perfect!, Inc.
Gardeners and Growers, Inc.
Jamison Thomas Gallery
Kimura Studio
L & E Bottling Company
Mansion Glass
Martin and Nordstrom, PC.
Mud Bay Pottery
Olympia Association of
Professional Mortgage Women
Olympia Food Equipment
Service
Peterson's Food Town
Pierce County Labor Council
Political Education Fund
Rain Barrel Seamless
Gutter Company
Rainbow Sports
Richard's Import Auto Service
Service Employees Council
Seven Gables Restaurant
Shakey's Pizza Parlor
Stonington Gallery
Stormans Incorporated
Tags Trophies
Westside Bowling Lanes
The Westwater Inn

Alumni
Stephen Francis Agnew
Michael Ray Ahem
Kenneth E. Albert
Douglas Scott Albertson
Sonja R. Alexander
Edward Arthur Alkire
Colleen Georgia Allen
Megan Elizabeth Allen
Bruce Alan Altheide
Fernando Neftali Altschul
Jamie K. Andersen
Kathleen Mary Anderson
Linda Ann Anderson
Nancy C. Anderson
Ronald Wayne Anderson
Thomas N. Ansart
Carolyn Jean Ansell
Sirnon Robert Ansell
Hannah Antokol
Allan Edwin Anttila
Craig Douglas Apperson
Anne B. Appleby
Harriet Michelle Arnold
Patricia Anne Avery
B
George Fred Baitinger, III
Christina Koons Baker
Scott D. Baker
Tim J. Ball
Kenneth D. Balsley
Eric Bruce Bardsley
Debora Griffith Barkus
Susan Bartlett
Jeffrey A. Bartone
Louise Frieda Batson
Joan Lee Battuello
Julia Margaret Becker
Annamarie Beckmann
Bruce Jonathon Bedinger
Patricia Anne Bedinger
Mary K. Bensen
Janet Roberts Bent
Mary Jean Bergstrom
Michael Lawrence Bergstrom
Steven Boyce Bertran
Linda Bestwick

Lauren Elise Biddle
Susan Stinson Billedeaux
Terry Charles Billedeaux
Susan Caroline Bird
Margaret M. Birnbaum
Mary Laurance Bittinger
Carla Christine Black
Donald H. Blanchard
Julie Gail Blanchard
Nicholas S. Blattner
Renee Couchee Blattner
Mary Hester Bley
Joseph Emil Blum
Phil Boawn
Betsy Bogardus-Gallagher
David A. Boggs
Neil Magnuson Bogue
Amy S. Bohn
Curtis Charnell Bondurant
Gregory Allan Booth
Gretchen L. Borck
Laurel Dawn Boyajian
Kay E. M. Boyd
Jerry Ray Boydston
Suzanne Marie-Therese Boyer
Jack Everett Bozarth
David H. Brannon
Marjorie G. Brazier
Neal Garth Broida
Angela S. Brown
Betty Jennings Brown
Janie Lu Brown
Linda Ruth Brownell
Peter Kergan Bruck
James Bret Brunner
Nelsa Morrisson Buckingham
Thomas C. Buell, Jr.
Priscilla A. Bull
Phillip Gordon Bunker
John Richardson Burbank
Daniel John Burden
Mary Ellen Burg
Barrett Nelson Story Burr
Lynn E. Busacca
Byron Edward Butchart

C

Lynda Marie Caine
Susan Dawn Calhoun
Robert Alan Campbell
Sharon Ann Campbell
Michael Allen Canfield
Douglas James Canning
Gary F. Cantrell
Drew Alan Carey
Lucille Marie Carlson
Donald Owen Case
Lawton E. M. Case
Douglas Bartlett Chadwick
Angie M. Chambers
Melissa 0. Champlin
Craig Dwight Chance
Claudia Maria Chotzen
Erik Robert Christianson
Kent Gregory Christman
William Evan Clausen
William H. Cleaver
William E. Cleland
Colleen Jane Clement
Janet Grace Cleveland
Kenneth Lee Coffin
Daniel Howard Cohen
Lawrence Garner Cole
Pat R. Cole
Gail Marie Collins
Randall Nelson Collins
Karen Marie Conn
Cathy May Conner
Nancy Ann Connolly
Keith Laird Considine
Carol Jean Cordy
Jeanine Marie Corr
Michael E.P. Corrigan
Stuart B. Corsa
Clifford W. Cotey
Dennis James Cotter
Larry Carl Couch
Virginia M. Cox
Maribeth Crandell-Hansen
Kimberly Ellen Craven
Kenneth G. Crawbuck

Leonor A. Allison
Pierce College
Tacoma, WA
Jennifer Anderson
William Winlock Miller H.S.
Olympia, WA
Linda Armitage
Tacoma, WA
Norma Baum
Seattle Central and North
Seattle C.C.
Seattle, WA
Maria Bellon
Tumwater H.S.
Tumwater, WA
David Borden
Seattle Central C.C.
Seattle, WA
Lisa Brandenburg
Port Ibwnsend H.S.
Port Tbwnsend, WA
Andrew Brown
Mark Morris H.S.
Longview, WA
Lorraine Burt-MPA
David Capers
South Seattle C.C.
Seattle, WA
Gretchen Case
North Carolina School of
Science and Mathematics
Durham, NC

Barbara Chantry
University of Nebraska
Lincoln, NE
Patricia Chichinski
Seattle Central C.C.
Seattle, WA
Barbara Cronin
Tacoma C.C. and South Puget
Sound C.C.
Tacoma, WA and Olympia, WA
Rocklynn Culp
Okanogan H.S.
Okanogan, WA
Claire Davis
University of Wisconsin
Milwaukee, WI
Philip DeCillis
Peninsula C.C.
Port Angeles, WA
Megan Fitzgerald
Skagit C.C.
Mt. Vernon, WA
Sharon Franklin
Woodinville H.S.
Woodinville, WA
Kelli Jo Fry
Mountain View H.S.
Vancouver, WA
Kendall Grant
Capital H.S.
Olympia, WA

Eve Griffith
Lacey, WA
Nancy Gudaitis
Dupont, WA
Sylvia Harris
Seattle Central C.C.
Seattle, WA
Linda Hoover
Lower Columbia C.C.
Longview, WA
Cheri Howe
Peninsula C.C.
Port Angeles, WA
W. Larry Jefferson
Olympia, WA
Jessica Judy
Gonzaga Prepatory Academy
Spokane, WA
Kara Kodama
Renton H.S.
Renton, WA
Theodore Koska-MPA
Hank Lentfer
University of Alaska
Fairbanks, AK
Amilia Love
Gig Harbor, WA
Lori Lovering
Scripps College
Claremont, CA
Amanda McCloskey
Northwest School of the Arts,
Humanities and Environment
Seattle, WA

Robert J. Crawford
Clayton S. Creager
Stephen Elliott Creager
William Davies Croft
Sharon S. Cronin-Miyaji
Lindsley Beach Cross
Jonathan David Cruz
Nancy Tess Cruz
David John Current
Olivia Joyce Curtis

William Glenn Ferris
Jane Brooks Field
Richard Allan Finnigan
Jane Irene Fisher
Lisa Louise Fleming
Gary A. Floyd
Kimberly Ann Foley
Laurie D. Frankel
Julie Frederick
Steven Dale Friddle
Peter J. Friedman
Joseph Jude Fuller
Kristine Louise Fulsaas
Jane D. Futterman

James Martin Hester
Joseph Edward Hogan
Paul Douglas Holt
Christine Marie Holz
Diana Joan Holz
Jane Hope
Susan M. Horowitz
Dale Edmond Hough
Peter Martin Humleker
Lynn M. Humphrey
Sherry Ann Hunt
Amy Beth Hunter
Elizabeth Libby Hunter
Richard Stephen Hunter
Randall Eugene Hunting
Neal Eugene Hurlburt
Judy Rush Hyslop
I
Brandith Gail Irwin
Gregory Neal Irwin
John Timothy Irwin
J
Helen Dixon Jackson
Pauline Neal Jackson
Linda J. Jacob
Helen Ruth Jaeger
Debra Louise Janison
Jessica Lynn Jastad
Joan Balis Jevne
Bernard John Johansen
Catherine Ann Johnson
Dora E. Johnson
Lisa Anne Johnson
John Paul Jones, III
Craig W. R. Jones
David Allen Jones
Dora Mae Jones
Gregory Lee Jones
Jeanne Meree Jones
Laurie Louise Jones
Leonard Clinton Jones
Richard Douglas Jones
Shirley Maxine Hardin Jones
Joseph William Joy
Maureen B. Juhola

D
Kathleen C. D'Acci
Bruce Wayne Daily
Kurt Ellis Danison
Charles Folsom Davis
Katherine Lynn Davis
Steven Dorsey Davy
Kathi Edmison De Garden
Ana Katherine De Give
William Howard Dean
Donald Allan Delahunt
Linda Delorme
Michael Reese Denoyer
Roxanne Denoyer
Steven J. Dentali
Kathryn Diane Dernham
Lee Ann Deshon
Janet Virginia Detering
Deborah Dethier
Dona Sara Dezube
Guy Zigmund Diamond
Michael K. Diamond
Justin Dick
Brenda E. Dickison
Laurie Elise Dieterich
Ida I. Dightman
Robin B. Dilley
Patricia Carol Dillingham
Lynn M. Oils
Stephan Daniel Dimitroff
Debra Dishberger
Randolph R. Dole
Peter Morgan Dolliver
Margaret S. Donaldson
Susan Manci Richards Donner
Eleanor Margaret Dornan
Edwina Dorsey-Travis
Peter K. Downey
Robin M. Downey
Janet M. Drew
Ann Sandra Duncan
Dean Michael Duncan
James Allen Duncan
Christopher Taylor Dupre

E
Lance Earl Earnest
Nancy Ann Edwards
Heidi Elizabeth Ehrenberg
Adolph Ehresmann
James William Ehret
Craig Harlow Eidsmoe
Janet Kristine Eidsmoe-Ward
Eric Lawrence Einspruch
Keith David Eisner
Nessa Elila
Donald Leroy Elsensohn
Rose Ann Elway
Steven J. Engel
Scott L. Englander
Heidi Grace Engle
Todd Lewis Engle
Marilyn Ruth Erickson
Richard Degay Ernst, Jr.
Shelley Ann Evans
F

Gregory Alan Falken
Sherry Falkner-Rose
Christiane Fara-Skalecki
Samuel Graham Farmer
Michael Lyon Faubion
David Thomas Fehsenfeld
Susan F. Feiner
Florence Feldman
Anthony Bryan Felice
Carlota Tbrres Felice
Robert Ellsworth Fellows
Betty J. Ferguson
Kent Wallace Ferris

G
Roger Quinn Gaines
Edward J. Gales
Douglas Fay Gallagher
Patricia Jane Gallup
James Phillip Garey
Ann Currier Garling
Leslie Ann Gatton
Natasha Rose Geiger
David Charles Geist
Gabrielle Woolf Geraghty
Vel S. Gerth
Patricia Gael Gibbs
Wyatt Gilkie
Tim Girvin
Marian J. Glossner
Karen Lynn Goldman
Charlene Goldstein
Roger Joel Golub
James L. Gonzales
David Michael Goodward
June Ellen Gorcester
Barbara Jean Graf
Julie Anne Grant
Constance Gray
Ellen Louise Green
Jon Russell Gribskov
Jettalee Raines Grimes
Jenny Lee Grones
Jean M. Gruye
Goodman 0. Guess
Julia G. Gulden

H
Jean Ann Haakenson
James Frederick Hale
Michael John Hall
Jon Halper
Nowlin Eugene Haltom
Suzanne L. Hamaker
Claudia D. Hampton
Carmen McMinimy Hanna
Peter Louis Hansell
Mark Walsh Hansen
Michael C. Hansen
Kimberly Craig Hanson
Shirley L. Hanson
Barbara Ann Harmala
Andrew Jordan Harper
Marilyn Soriano Harris
Pamela Kay Harris
William Warren Harris
Charles Allan Hart, III
Marcia Leanne Hart
Shaine Kenneth Hart
James Wilfred Hartley, III
Leslie Young Harvill
Carla Marie Hasegawa
Prudence P Hathaway
Donna Patricia Hayes
Stephen M. Haykin
Wanda M. Hedrick
Sue Ellen Heflin
Ellen Sogge Henderson
Scott Lee Henderson
Douglas A. Hendrickson
Randall Steven Henery
John William Hennessey, III
Catherine Hennings
Timothy Joseph Hennings
R. Michael Henry
Roger L. Henry

K
David Maxwell Kaplan
Scott Frederick Kauffman
Toy J. Kay
Richard T. Kelly, Sr.
Evelyn Louise Kelly
Mary M. Kelsoe
Barbara L. Starr Kendziorek
Eleanore M. Kenny
John Keogh, III
Susan Marie Kerber
Barbara Ann Keyt
Ralph Oliver Kile
Janice Mary King
Thomas Hugh Kirschner
Ellen Kissman
Annette Marie Klapstein
Jennifer E. Knauth
Mary Jane Knecht
Carol Ann Knight
Jennifer Lee Knudsen
Pamela Ann Knudsen
Margaret Knudson
Kathryn E. Knutson
Daniel Brandon Koch
Elisabeth Ann Koch-Greene
Joseph John Koczur, Jr.
Elizabeth Mary Koenig
Alan Carter Kohl
Margaret Lorraine Koler
Teresa A. Kolp
Stephen Michael Kopp
Alan Jay Krieger
Lyda Ebert Kuth

L
Lee D. Lambert
Paul Kenneth Lambert
Tanna Stotts Lambert
Geraldine L Lawrence
Norbert Lazar
Kevin Dean Leavitt
Paul Nicholas Ledbetter
Jennifer Storrs Lee
Raymond Hem Lee
Alan Leo Lehman

Barbara O'Hearn
Clark C.C.
Vancouver, WA
Kaia Petersen-MES
Michaela Pohl
University of Maine
Presque Isle, ME
Leah Pratt
Bartlett High School
Anchorage, AK
Mary Randall
Pierce College
Tacoma, WA
David Reese
Centralia College
Centralia, WA
Darrel Riley
Seattle, WA
Diana Robinshaw
Grays Harbor C.C.
Aberdeen, WA
Sandra Schaad
University of Washington
Seattle, WA
Daniel Smerkin
John A. Logan College
Carterville, IL
Lili Snieckus
Skagit Valley C.C.
Mt. Vernon, WA
Vicki Trail
Liberty H.S.
Issaquah, WA
Carla Wulfsberg-MPA

Jacqueline Reed Leighton
Kristina Marie Lenke
Diana L. Leonard
Peter S. Lesser
Deborah Cayue Leung
Marcia Levenson
Norman Larry Levy
Patrick Mullen Libbey
Sandy F. Libbey
Rebecca Jane Liebman
Judy Carol Lindlauf
Theresa Jean Locke
Bette A. Low
Diane Louise Lucas
Marilyn R. Lupinacci
James J. Lux
Lynn Marie Lynch
Dorothy Stockwell Lyons
M
Carol Sue MacCracken
Pamela Ann MacEwan
Alan Bernard Mador
Lois Anntoinette Maffeo
Ronald Wayne Magram
William Harold Mahan
Daniel J. Mahoney
Kim Kaufman Malin
Eugene E. Maltzeff
Donna Beatrice Manders
Duncan Paulson Mann
Merrily R. Manthey
Grace Ann E. Manzie-Werner
Mariko Marrs
Tracy A. Marsailes
Stan B. Marshburn
Barry Nolan Martin
Joann Elizabeth Mason
Linda Olivas Mathews
Wendy L. Matthews
Larry B. Mauksch
Christopher T. Maynard
Peg G. McAdam
Martha R. McCartney
Catherine M. McDonald
Brenden Kenneth McFarland
Gerald Brady McFerran
Lee Ann McGarity
Anita Louise Mclntosh
Tina Lynn McKernan-Fox
Edward Francis McQuarrie
Susan McRae
Michael C. McCallum
Keith Lawrence McCandless
Mary McCann
Katharine L. McCarthy
Deed Annette McCollum
Martha Ferris McCoy
Tamara Jeanne McCracken
Daniel Welch McDonald
Lawrence Charles McDonald
Geraldine McGowan
Linda S. McLain
John T. McLaren
Gerald Keith Mclaughlin
Thomas Joseph McLaughlin
Deborah Ann McLellan
John M. McMally
Charlene A. McQuarrie
Lluann McVey
James A. Mead
Corey M. Meador
Patricia Lott Meessen
Lee Henry Meister
Roger Duane Mellem
John B. Mellen
Sally P. Mendoza
Matthew William Mero
Christina Ann Meserve
Robert Micheal Messer
Christopher Roy Metz
Sandra K. Malicoat Milano
Margaret J. Millard
Norma Joan Miller
Pamela A. Miiier
Michael Pittock Mills
Theodore 0. Minims
Ralph H. Minor, Jr.
Mrtha J. Mistretta
Jonathan David Moceri
Christopher J. Mondau
Laurie Montero

Myths of Giving
By Sue Washburn,
Vice President for Development and
Administrative Services

Myth One: Evergreen doesn't need my
money because it's a public college
and gets all the money it needs from
the state of Washington.
The majority of the college's funding
comes from state coffers, but competing state priorities mean that all of
Evergreen's vital needs cannot be met.
In order to remain innovative, distinctive and future-focused, Evergreen
depends on private gifts and grants
from generous alumni, parents, friends,
corporations and foundations.

Go
Sharon L. Moody
Renee Hillary Moomau
Charles T. Moore
James Frederick Moore
Jamie Melissa Moore
Martha Shinn Moore
Steven Don Moore
Ibdd Somers Moore
Carol Ann Moorehead
Jerrold Howard Moos
Thomas Joseph Moran
Dorothy S. Morgan
Nannette Fortune Morgan
Patrick Gene Morris
Roland Arnold Morris
Judith A. Morrison
Diane Gail Morton
Allen William Moser
Jeremy R. Moser
Susan Katherine Moser
Susan M. Moser
Judith L. Mosier
Peter C. Moulton
Susan Moyer
Gary Donald Mozel
Timothy Lee Mulcahey
Madeline Marie Mullen
Suzanne Mulligan-Morris
Dennis Eugene Mullikin
Peter Rees Mullineaux
Elizabeth A. Muncton
Alan Kent Mundal
Anne Stevens Mundal
Marcianne M. Munson
Linda Anne Murphy
Lisa Caroline Murphy
Velina Dianne Murray
Leah Jane Musgrave
Nancy A. Musgrove
N
Louis Scott Nadelson
Melissa Faith Naso-Kaplan
Mary Jeannette Neal
Jennifer J. Neilson
Pamela Neimeth
Guy R. Nelson
Lorietta C. Nelson
Marjorie C. Nelson
Robin G. Newman
Roosevelt Newman
James Remington Newport
Roderick John Newton
Charles Malcolm Nishida
Mark Heywood Noble
Michael Francis Nolan
Wesley Miles Norman
Susan K. Norris
Sharon Lee Norton
Marya J. Nowakowski
Richard James Nuckolls

o

Marc Solignac O'Connor
Shannon Leigh O'Neill
Sara Suzanne Obern
Barbara M. Olson
Charlotte F. Olson-Alkire
Christina Marie Orange
Arlee J. Osborne
Marian W. Osborne
Leslie Woodruff Owen
P

Jennifer W. Page
Leonard James Pagliaro
Anthony Joseph Pantley
Patricia B. Parfitt
Lfflie M. Parks
Alice Elizabeth Patience
Lorna June Patterson
Victoria 'Yeager Patton
Russell Edward Paulsrude
David Bruce Pavelchek
Raymond Joseph Pavelko
Bruce Sammis Pavitt
Timothy Allen Pearce
Karen Pearson
Mary Barbara Petersen
Abbo Orrin Peterson
John Arthur Petrich, Jr.
Vicki Sue Phelps
Kevin William Phillips
Ellen Pickell

Myth Two: If I give money to the
Evergreen Foundation, the Legislature reduces Evergreen's appropriation by that amount.
Not true! In fact, the Legislature
encourages private gifts to augment
and enhance the college's programs.
For example, we will receive $250,000
in state funds if we are able to raise
$250,000 for an endowed chair (in any
area of study of our choice).

Myth Four: A big part of my gift goes
to cover administrative overhead
rather than being used for something
important to the college.
While this may be true for some institutions, it's not true for Evergreen.
Only 5 percent of contributions goes to
the cost of such things as printing,
postage and phone calls (and that's the
important cost of keeping in touch with
you).

Myth Three: If I can only make a
small gift, I shouldn't make any gift
at all.
All gifts to the college are important—and every bit helps. "Your participation is especially meaningful to the
college and frequently grantgivers ask
about the percent of participation from
members of the Evergreen family
(alumni, parents, friends, faculty and
staff). Many people start with a small
gift.

Myth Five: I don't have any say in
how my gift is used.
You can have as much say as you like
Many people make their gifts unrestricted and tell the Foundation's
Board of Governors (made up of alumni, parents and friends) to use the
money where it's needed most. Others
restrict or designate their gifts for
specific purposes, such as "scholarships" or "library books" or "student
and faculty research." Gifts are always
used for their designated purpose.

Get Green-'

Green!
George K. Pickett
Bradley Steven Pierce
Steven Frederick Pinard
Carol A. Pinegar
Mariel L. Plaeger-Brockway
Roy W. Plaeger-Brockway
John Francis Pohl
Jordan David Pollack
Michael J. Polli
Noah H. Poritz
Hlly Jan Porter
Rita Agnes Pougiales
Judith Ellen Prest
Daniel F. Preston
Katherine K. Preston
Mary Lynn Prevost
Longueville Howe Price, III
Ramona Provost
Madeleine Pullman

R
Mary Rachael
Teri Lee Ramsauer
David Lynn Ranals
Mary L. Randall
Victoria Schurz Rand
Deanna Ray
Emily H. Ray
Russell S. Rayburn
Alexander Reed, Sr.
Marjorie Loraine Regmund
M. Virginia Reid
Jean Marie Reynolds
Joan R. Bege Reynolds
Michael J. Richard
Kathron R. Richards
Janet A. Richardson
Peter W. Rickett
April Dawn Rieck
Roberta Louise Ritter
Ronald D. Roberts
Rosemary M. Roberts
Tamara Roberts
Alice A. Robinson
Barbara Fay Roder
Gareth Scott Rohde
Lisann Rose Rolle
Leslie Harris Romer
Alan Mark Rose
David Henry Rosenfield
Anthony Glynn Ross
Geoffrey Scott Rothwell
Diane J. Ryal
Pat A. Rubida
Robert Charles Rudine
Walter T. Russell
Barbara Davis Ryan

S

Albin T. Saari
Scott Alan Salzer
Terrese Ann Salzer
Donna Lynn Sammons
Robert W. Sandelin
Barbara W. Sanders
Lillian Ruth Schauer
Richard Thomas Scheffel
Jane E. Scheffer
Eric J. Schlorff
Judy L. Schneyer
Susan May Schoos
Pablo Schugurensky
Douglas Clayton Schuler
Scott James Schultz
Elizabeth Janet Schy
Susan Kaye Scott
Kathy Ann Scovel-Rodrique
James Claire Seekins
Thomas W. Shackle
Judith J. Shafer
Bradley Eugene Shannon
Robert Wayne Shannon
Marjorie Jean Shavlik
R. Christopher Shaw
William Gordon Shaw
Chuck R. Shelton
Susanne Hall Shelton
Deborah Kaye Shulke
Robert Edward Shumate
Eric Merrill Shutt
Richard Brady Siddoway
Gillian Ann Siegrist
Kathrine Siegrist

Linda Diane Silber
Christiane D. Silverthorne
Wendy Anne Simms-Rudolph
Patricia Ann Simon
Richard Howard Simonson, Jr.
Robert Hamilton Sims
Connie Marie Sinclair
Richard Noel Skadan
Joanna Page Skinner
Jack S. Slagle
Roo Wblcott Slagle
Richard Allen Slansky
Paul Dwayne Slate
John Ledyard Fletcher Slee
Gary Thomas Smith
Sharon Diddy Smith
Margaret Anne Snyder
Susan Jo Snyder
Janice Rathbun Socha
Duane Lee Sogge
Marianna T. Sokol
Mark Stephen Souder
Susan Lorraine Southwick
Lionel D. Spears
Patricia Louise Spears
Mary Jane Speelman
Peter A. Speer
Donald L. Sprague
Richard Alan Staehli
Loy James Stafinbil
Martin Wood Staley
Annette Beatrice Standifur
Michael Anthony States
Marsha J. Stead
Carla M. SteinCheryl Sue Stephani
Charles Eric Stephens
Jonathan Smith Stephens
Terry A. Sterley
Nancy Gray Stevens
Jill Lynn Stewart
Diana M. Stobart
Anne Exton Stone
Daphne Fisher Smith Stone
Janet Amelia Stonington
Stuart Leven Stotts
Sarah S. Stranahan-Cubbon
Steve A. Strasen
Kaye Sullivan
Craig Allen Swanson
Hally E. Swift

T
Sandra Ann Tarzan
Stephen Robert Tarzan
Dorothy Tenkhoff
Kathleen Mavis Theoe
Ann Marie Thomas
Tyrone N. Thomas
Janine Marie Thome
Storme L. Thompson
Valerie Jean Thorson
Kris Earnest Thorsos
Roberta J. Tidland
Charlotte Y. Todd-Kerr
Daniel Ellis Tolfree
Jamie Tolfree
Maria Denise Towle
Jeff E. Traugott
Jeanne Shappell Tribe
Glenn Thomas Tucker
Sally Louise Turnbull

u

Talbot Uehlinger, Jr.
Devora J. Ukrain
Krag Eric Unsoeld
V
Eldon Wayne Vail
Christina L. Valadez
Margaret Mary Valenti
Maggie A. Van Camp
Laura Kathryn Van Dilla
Doris M. Vandenberg
Jeanne Colleen Vanderiet
Lewis Campbell Vaughan
Richard D. Veach
Alan C. Venning
Mark David Vestrich
Winston Lee Vidor
Gay Vogt
Richard Gupton Vogt
Diane Jayne Vosick

W
Warren P. Waldorf
Linda N. Walsh
Marilyn B. Ward
Gregory Jon Ware
Carole E. Warner
Nancy Randy Warshaw
Andrew Glen Wasserman
Natalie Handy Waterman
Catherine S. Watson
Hugh Warburton Watson
Kathleen Mary Waugh
Zelda Jane Waxenberg
Linda Long Weaver
Stephen D. Webster
Steven Alan Weigner
Karen A. Weingarth
Lynda Susan Weinman
George Francis Weirich
Gerald B. Weishaar
Jeffrey Lawson Wendt
Sheri Kay Wertheimer
April L. West-Baker
Joyce Weston
Margaret Ann Wharton
Charlotte Gumming Wheeler
Gregory A. Wichelns
Frances J. Wilk
Patricia Kay Wilkins
Kristen Lynn Will
Richard Williams, Jr.
David Andrew Williams
Donna R. Williams
Elizabeth Ann Williams
Steven Willis
Hazel Marie Willmarth
Janet Marie Winans
Colleen Trowbridge Wine
Andrea Pineo Winship
Michael Stanton Witz
Albert Thomas Wolf
Sharon P. Wolff
Carl Frederick Wblfhagen
Nina Esther Wolsk
Carla Maureen Wood
George Stanley Wood
Janice Marie Wood
Theresa Louise Wright
Karen J. Wynkoop

Y
Lynne Mariko Yamamoto
Kathy Jean Ybarra
Thomas David Yesberger
Janet Lynn Yoder
Marjorie Anne Yung
Z

Terrence F Zander

Parents
A
David and Ilene Adams
Eugene and Marilynn Alexander
Steven and Rose Alfred
Durwood and Dorys Alkire
Anna M. Allen
Cecil and Doris Allen
Robert and Marjory Alper
Clifford and Charlotte Alterman
Barbara Altman
Theodore and Gertrude Altonen
Ruth and Morton Amster
Charles Anderson
Donald and Ludonna Anderson
Earl and Janice Anderson
Tom Armstrong
Anthony and Ruth Arnold
William and Helen Aron
William and Shirley Ashby

B
Agnes L. Badgley
Jack and Dinah Baker
Franklin and Mary Balch
W. P. and Elizabeth Balderston
Joseph 0. Balogh
Esther R. Barclay
R. Phillips and Eva Jean Barker
W. Thomas Bartlett
Duane W. Beck
Robert Pike and Nancy Becker

Julia M.F. Becker-Jackson
Gerald and Nancy Belcher
Barbara and Dery Bennett
William Francis Benoist, Jr.
Dr. and Mrs. Knute E. Berger
Leonard P. Berger
Arthur E. Berlin
Edith M. Berman
Mary Alice Billings
Marguerite D. Bishop
Charles and Janis BlahGerald and Patricia Blakley
Allyn and Jean Bloom
SherrilJ A. Boardman
Jeanne R. Bonynge
Jack and Francis Bookey
Rebecca and Robert Bown
Mary and Lloyd Brandt
Robert Brenna
J. David and Kathleen Bristow
J Henry and Barbara Brockhaus
George Brodermerkel, Jr.
Jack and Judith Brown
Leland and Barbara Brown
Marilyn Brownstein
David O. Brownwood
Bill and Mary Ann Brumsickle
Wilma Bucci
Thomas and Joan Buell, Jr.
Nathan and Irene Buitenkant
Beth and Truman Bullard
Harlan and Karen Bunnell
Elizabeth Olmsted Burchall
Eleanor W. Butz

C
Seymour and Rhea Cabin
Thomas and Jacqueline Cain
James and Lila Cammack
C. F. and Ellen Campbell, Sr.
Marilyn Jo Canaris
James L. Carey
Patrick B. Carr
Vernon and Jeanette Carstensen
Philip L. Carter, Jr.
Wayne and Audrey Cassatt, Jr.
Yvonne and Edward Cazier, Jr.
Rebecca and Pete Chaitin
James and Addis Chapman
Drs. Richard and Donna Childs
Horace J. Christensen
David and Betty Christiansen
Atlee and Mary Clapp
Raymond and Alice Clark
William D. Cleeves
Liane K. Clorfene
Susan P. Coe
Joan and Frank Cohee
Frederick and Jessie Cohen
Ellis and Colleen Collins
Jose and Marilyn Colon
Winifred and Jack Colwill
John F. Comfort
Michael and Linda Cook
Leona F. Corsa
Henry R. Corwin
John and Mary Frances Couch
Ronald and Tresa Covington
Janice M. Cramp
Susan Graver
Richmond C. Cross
Barbara and J. L. Crow
Frank W. Cubbon, Jr.

D
Erika D. d'Albert
Roy and Mary Damonte
Carroll Damron
Albert and Charlotte Dangler
Curtis and Britt Danielson
Louise Dattila
Barnard M. David
Alice and Harry Davidson
A. John and Marilyn Davis
Dorothy M. Davis
Robert Danielson Davis
Sylvia A. Davis
Don W. De Bra
Mary C. De Rocher
Robert and Gennie De Weese
Betty J. Dearborn
Ruth and Harold Deery
George and Joanne Delyani

Eva and Clifford Dernham
Charles and Mary Dethier
Pete and Elsie Dervies
Annaweiss Dezube
Joseph and Mary Di Domenico
R. H. and Idalice Dickinson
Robert and Joan Dillingham
George and Susan Dimitroff
James Dinerman
George and Mary Dolan
Richard and Norma Dominguez
Clayton and Helen Douglass
Charles and Carol Dragul
William and Judith Driscoll
Rita Dubrow
James and Rachel Dudek
Richard and Mary Jane Dunlap
Margaret H. Dykes
Dale and Edith Dzubay

E
Mary Eberhardt
Alfred and Ingrid Eckersberg
William and Ruth Blair Eidsmoe
Karl and Nancy Eikeberg
Alden and Marian Elberson
Virgil and Helen Elliott
Elwood and Lorna Elwood
Lewis Elwood
Margaret Shiff-Enderlein
Kaj Enderlein
Andrea L. English
William Hardy Eshbaugh, III
Duane Carl and
Nada June Estes
Richard and Bernice Everson

F
Clayton and Janet Fairo
Arthur and Ruth Farber
W. B. Fawcett
Mrs. David T. Fehsenfeld
Mary K. Feldman
Limneo G. Fernandez
Norman and Barbara Ferry
Myron and Elka Fink
Denis Flaherty
John and J. B. Fletcher
William and Adele Fletcher
H. Patrick and Marianne Flynn
Patricia Frank
Paul and Genevieve Frankenberg
M. L. Frantz
Alan and Kathleen Freeman
Donald Freeman
Marc W. Freshwater
Norma Fried
W.H. and Claire Fuller
Herbert and Carol Fuller
Jean M. Fulton
Philip and Alice Fuqua
Anne Futterman

G

Richard V. Gaines
John and Betty Gallagher
Michael R. Galvin
Gloria and Lewis Garling
Roland and Gundrun Gary
Marshall and Beverly Gates
Ann Dear Gavel!
Michael and Marlene Gaza .
Keith and Sara Gehr
Arthur and Barbara Geller
Alice F. Gendell
Nancy M. Germain
H. Warren and Gerry Ghormley
Keith and Dorothy Gibson
Bob and Colleen Giles
Marilyn E. Gillette
Gordon and Doris Gilman
Richard and Katherine Gilpin
Charles and Rebecca Gipson
George and Lila Girvin
Ruth and Robert Goldman
John and Therese Goodrich
Ann and David Gordon
Dorothy A. Gordon
John and Adele Gorham
Richard and Mary Lee Gowell
Dorothy Graeff
Jeff and Debbie Graham
Josef and Stephany Gray
Robert and Rose Green

Total Gift and Grant Income
Fiscal Years 1979-80 to 1986-87

1,614,360

503,547

370,474

1979-80

Inez and Sanford Greenberg
Harry and Rosemary Gregg
Jack and Dorothy Griffin
Patricia W. Griffith
William and Bertha Groves
James A. Grutz
Louise and Rich Guthrie

H
Joseph and Julianne Haefeli
Fred arid Marjorie Hahn, Jr.
Robert and Dorothy Hall
Allen and Mary Haller
Barbara and Ronald Hammond
Carolyn and Thurston Handley,
Jr.
James P. Harris
Myrna Harrison
Rose M. Harvey
James and Ruth Hasegawa
Al Haslebacher
Robert and Edna Hauser
Erail Fujiko Hayashi
Martin and Doris Haykin
Ray and Christine Hayworth
John and Dorothy Heal
Gloria J. Healy
Thomas and Kathy Healy
James and Gertrude Hebert
Richard and Carol Heimburg
Ralph Hein
Laurie and James Hendricks
John and Jean Hennessey, Jr.
Joseph F. Hennessey
George Hernandez
Richard Hesik
Charles and Helen Hill, Jr.
Richard and Joan Hill
Louis and Frances Hilton
Elizabeth Hirshman
Edward and Carolyn Hoffman
Joe Hogan
Richard and Jacqueline Holmes
Ferenc and Betty Holonics
Thomas F. Hornbein
Jacob and Leah Horowitz
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Hoskins
Gordon Hough
Joseph and Virginia Howell
William and Marion Hunt
Francis and Wilhelmina
Hunter, Jr.
Alfred and Shirley Hunting
Ira and Jean Hurlburt
Frederick and Mae R Hutchison
I
Mary and Joseph Iski
Donald and Helen Ivey
J
David and Rose Jacobs
Jacob and Sarah Jacobson
Nicholas Biel Jacobson
Dixie Johansen
William and Paula John
Otto and Mary Johnson
David and Margaretta Johnson
Don and Libby Johnson
Donald and Jacqueline Johnson
Henry and Lesley Johnson
John W. Johnson
Mary Cay Johnson
Sara Jane Johnson
Jane B. Johnston
Earl and Jill Jones
Glenn and Jeane Jones
Harold and Wanda Jones
Jo Anne Jones
Joanne L. Jones
Sherril Hillis Jones
Henry C. Judd

K
Ludlow and Norma Kaeser
H. J. and Margaret Kaltenthaler
Alice Kaplan
Samuel X. Kaplan
William and Lucille Karr
Mildred Katz
Marion Kaufman
Jennette Keeney
Marion and Dorothy Kennedy

1980-81

John and Fay Keogh, Jr.
Robert N. KenInez R. Kertson
Lawrence and Darlene Kerwin
Veselin and Lydia Kesich
Jack and Elizabeth Kezele
W.J. and Wilma Kidwell
Jerry F. and Dona King
Raymond and Eula Kirby
A.E. and Melva Kirkbride
Donald and Dorothy Kirsch
Donna and William Kiskaddon
James Kittrick
Alice Klayman
Norman J. Klein
Norman and Harriet Klein
Forest and Alice Knoper
Lowell and Shirley Knutsen
Charles Koch
Joseph and Ayako Koczur, Sr.
John F. Koons
George and Ruby Koppelman
Michael and Evelyn Korhonen
J. Walter and Audrey Kosman
Z.W. and Patricia J. Kowalewski
Arlene and Noah Krall
Ernest and Kate Krauss
E. Alfred Kremer
Elbart and Nava Krieger
Ron Kriekenbeck
Ronald F. Krumm
Steve and Rita Kuklish

L
Zane and Solveig Lambert
Anita Landa
Florence and S.E. Lasswell
Helene F. Lattimore
Dr. and Mrs. Paul R. Lauer
J. Kathleen Learned
BJ. and Christa Leathers
Girvis and Dorothy Ledbetter
Louis and Joan Lepry
Norman and Louise Levy
Stanford and Lorain Levy
H. Marc Lewis
Leroy L. Lewis
Stanley and Inez Liben
Ann Lidzbarski
Drennan Lindsay
Judith Lindsay-Knight
Joseph H. and Corinne Linesch
James and Helen C. Linger
Ivan Lipman
Eugene and Pearl Lipner
Jackie Livesay
Mary Locke
Herbert and Ellen Loewenthal
Robert B. Loftfield
Marvin and Nancy Loftness
John and Evelyn Loftus
Joseph and Virginia Longan
Scott and Patricia Love
R.W. and Norma Lucas
Ernest and Paula Luders
John and Edna Lyons
William and Joann Lysak

M
Lawrence and Rosalie MacCary
Michael and Cynthia Mack
Carolyn and Steven Mackey
James and Nancy MacWhinney
Robert and Roberta Mahler
Josepha Mains
Rona and Harvey Malofsky
Thomas and Mary Lou Malone
Emily C. and Leonard
Mandelbaum
Morris and Elizabeth
Marmalstein
Barbara and Elliot Marple
Ralph and Frances Martin
'Reynaldo and Mildred Martinez
William and Carol Masters
John and Penny Matlick
Clyde and Pat Matteson
Charles S. and Miriam Matthews
John C. and Elizabeth Matthews
William and Sheila Mattick
George and Norvena Matties
John and Phebe Max
Joan and Richard May

1981-82

1983-84

1982-83

Jo Helen Maynard
Lester J. Mazor
Charles J. and Barbara McCann
Richard and Muriel McClure
Beale and Dana McCulloch
M. Elaine and George McCunn
David and Nell McDonald
David W. McDonald
James and Jacqueline McFerran
Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. McGrath
Paul B. McKinley
William and Margaret
McLaughlin
Jack and Carol McPherson
Charles and Abbie Meach
D. Peter and Shirlee Meador
Marilyn M. Meardon
John and M. Catherine Meehan
Gordon and Greta Meiklejohn
William and Doris Meister
W. Roy and Ellen Mellen
Deena and Ray Mersky
George and Margaret Meyers
Franklin and Jean Michaels
John J. Mildenberger
Anne W. Miller
Daniel and Isabel Miller
Frank and Evelyn Miller
James and Florence Miller
Norman and Kathryn Miller
Robert G. Miller
Roberta and Melvin Miller
Arnold and Ann Millhauser
John and Katharine Mills
Robert and Elizabeth Mills
Roger and Chariot Mills
Henry and Eulie Mishima
William Keith Montgomery
Marvin and Constance Mooney
Alfred and Isabel Moore
Marda J. Moore
William and Joan Morgenstern
Peter and Anna Marie Morton
Lewis and Mabel Mosier
Margaret C. Moulton
James and Kathleen Mountjoy
Harold and Susan Mozer
H.D. and Phyllis Murphy
Hugh and mary Murray
John and Ginny Murray
Robert and Shirley Murvihill
Robert M. Musser

N
Vreni and Barbara Naess
Mark and Rita Nagusky
James and Sarah Navarre
Jerome and Eleanor Neal
William and Magdaline Nearn
William and Darnell Needham
John and Barbara Neff
Leonard and Bonita Nelson
Lester and Vita Nelson
David and Charlotte Nesbit
Betty A. Newell
Doris and Marvin Newman
Harry and Joy Newman
Chris and Helen Nicholson
Donald and Hilda Nicoll
Richard and Mary Nolting
Ivan and Merna Nordstrom
Howard and Barbara Norris
Amando and Ventura Nunez
Michael C. O'Brien, Jr.
Bernard and Jeanne O'Connor
Jay Scott and Dorothy Odell
Arne and Jo Ann Olson
Warren and Maurine Olson
Richard and Patricia Oilman
Peter and Mary Ellen Onno
Thelma Orleck
Martin and Catherine Ormond
Francis J. Ostrom
H. Martyn and Candace Owen
P

William H. Page, II
Hamilton and Muriel Page
Emilie and John S. Paine
Joseph and Joyce Palaia

1984-85

June C. Parker
Judith E. Peabody
James L. Peace
Russell and Lois Ann Pearson
Arthur Pembleton
Shirlee and James Perkins
Luann E. Perkins
Winnifred and Phillip Pertee
Dennis and Regina Peters
Arthur and Idella Peterson
Rosemary J. Peterson
Harold and Nancy Phelps
Byron and Joanna Pinick
William and Lillian Poe
Raymond and Marilyn Pollard
Julius and Ruth Poritz
Linda R. Post
Thurman and Laura Poston, Jr
Ralph and Elaine C. Potter
Edward and Anne Praczukowski
Gordon and Ellen Profitt
Paul and Mary Pruitt
Don and Sondra Purcell

R
Robert and Ruthe
Lyons-Ramirez
Leland and Betty Ramsey
Doug and Sandra Rasmussen
Ranee D. Ratliff
Robert and Carol Raup, Jr.
Robert and Virginia Ray
F.W. and Ann Reading
Howard and Verna Reagan
Robert and Letitia Reeves
Carroll and Elnor Reid
Paul and Jane Reid
Mary-Lynn Meyer.Rein
David and Dorothea Reinthal
Barry and Indra Remsberg
David Resnik
Dale and Elaine Reynolds
Leah R. Rice
Dr. Norman and Eva Rickles
Kent and Marlys Riedesel
Angela and Ryland Robinson
Donald and Margaret Robinson
Peter and Cynthia Rockwell
Richard M. Rodrigues, Sr.
John C. Roeder
Kermit and Barbara Rohde
Irwin and Zelda Rose
Murray and Ceeile Rosenthal
Laurids and Anne Ross
Marianne and Philip Ross
Frank and Sabina Rotecki
Sunseed Roth
Marjorie Rowe
David and Marcia Royer
Lawrence and Ivern Rubida
Mary H. Ruddy
Thomas Ruther

S

Shirley Joan Sainsbury
Ivin and Marion Saltzman
James and Evelyn Salzer
Doris and Richard Saunders
David and Marcella Scales
William and Annette Schaefer
Karin and John Schandle
John and Joan L. Schick
Marg and Gerry Schiele
Lillian G. Schiendelman
Robert and Shirley Schlorff
Calvin and Alice Muir-Schmitt
Robert and Dolores Schuh
Lauren and Reta Schwisow
Gerald and Patsi Scofield
Robert and Joy Scott
Russell and Joyce Sears
J. Marvin and Carol Seemann
Milton and Betty Seidman
Lester and Harriet Servid
Samuel and Ellie Shacter
David and Sarah Shames
John and Betty Shelton
Albert and Ethel Shepard
Charles and Dorothy Shephard
David and Mary Shields
George and Clara Shinn
Stuart and Frances Shumway
George Shutak

1985-86

1986-87

Gillian Ann Siegrist
John and Marilyn Siemens
Chester A. Silva
Fred and Eleanor Silverstein
Jimmy and Susie Simmons
Warren and Virginia Sirnms
Maxine K. Sitts
Jay and Ellen Sklar
Albert and Carib Smallman
Alice Copp Smith
Ralph and Adele Smith
John and Florience Sniado
Harold P. Soderberg
John and Bodil Sorenson
Amigo and Mildred Soriano
Arnold and Eileen Souder, Jr.
Kay Sparks
Raymond and Theodora Speer
Shirley and William Speidel
Betty and Murray Spiegel
Virgina Staggs
William W. Staley, Jr.
Philip and Elaine Stalheim
Joel and Mary Stein
Steven W. Stephens
Robert and Ruth Stewart
Jesse and Mildred Stice
Robert and Helen Stierhoff
Richard and Virginia Stockwell
Walter and Anita Stolov
Mrs. Charles H. Stone, III
Oliver and Catherine Stonington
Bruno and Inge Strauss
Peter and Nan Strauss
John and Dorothy Swanberg
Elizabeth W. Swift
T
Joseph and Sylvia Taylor
Marvin and Margaret Thomas
Virginia L. Thome
Henry D. Thompson
Givens and Barbara Thornton
Diane B. Tickell
Jim and Phyllis Titterington
Viola and Lester Todd
Mrs. V. Francis Torode
Irwin Touster
Eleanor J. Townsend
Samuel and Julie-Ann Traub
Ernest and Gloria Traugott
Ranger and Dolores Travis
Robert and Mary Lou Treat
Paul and Shirley Trexel
Carl and Priscilla Triebs
Leslie and Devora Turner
Dr. Arnold Turtz
Anita I. Tuttle

u

Joseph and Coreene Underwood

V

Helene Van Buren
Wade and Shirley Vaughn
Gunars and leva Veveris
William and Penny Vincent
John and Jane Vosick

W

George and Joan Wallace
Helmut and Lois Wallenfels
Ron and Shirley Walter
Robert and Patricia Wark
John and Kitty Wason
Neil and Mary Waterman
Ann Weingarth
Robert and Louisa Wells, Jr.
Estelle A. Wertheimer
Roy Wessel
Joseph and Merida Wexler
Wayne and Lola Wheeler
Harry and Margaret Wicklund
Larry and Bernice Wiliams
Joseph and Janet Wiliamson
Sarah and W. Loren Williams, Jr.
Darrell and Barbara Williams
Robert and Betty Williams
Laverne K. Wilson
Irmgard and Herbert
Wimberger
Ken and Kathleen Winkley
Donald and Anne Winks
Donald and Shirley Winnie
Robert W. and Joyce Winsor

Charles and Jane Wisseman
Daniel and Judith Witmer
Arthur and Gertrude Wolcott
James and Nancy Wolcott
David and Libby Wolf
Thomas and Anna Mae Wolfe
Herman and Jacqueline Wolfson
Benjamin and Ruth Woo
Richard and Jo Ann Wright, III
Christopher and Margaret Wright
Jo Ann Wright
Mary Lou Wright

Y
Thomas and Carol Yamamoto
Sandy Young-Merrival
Byron and Bernice Youtz
Z

John and Dorothy Zimicki
Sidney and Rosemary Zwick

Friends
S. Thomsen Abbott
ABC Printers
Jerry Aeschilmann
Richard Alexander
William and Wilma Alkire
Grace Adelle Allen
James D. Allen
Wendell and Caroline Allen
Yvonne G. Allen-Devault
Alpha Delta K
Altrusa Club of Olympia
Fernando Altschul
American Postal Workers Union
Anchorage Well-Pump Service
Herluf and Else Andersen
Jon David Andersen
Ernest and Ana May Anderson
Glen A. Anderson
Don Anthony
Archibald Sisters
Wilbur and Cynthia Ashcraft
Association of Washington Cities
The Asterisk and Cheese
Library

B
Ruth A. Babcock
Edward and Patricia Baines
Verna D. Baker
Richard and Beverly Balkwin
Joseph Baque
Steven Barnes
Richard and Cynthia
Barnes-Moore
Pat Barte
F. Andrew Bartels
Frank and Janet Bates
Judith Bayard
Marcheta K. Bean
George M. Beckmann
Richard and Dolores Bellon
H.S. Benedict
Paulus Berensohn
Steven and Sandra Berglund
Wesley and Marie Berglund
Michael and Drew Betz
Michael and Frances Beug
Claudia Beyer
Michael and Susan Bieker
Richard Bigley
Ken Billington
Jeff Blakley
Nathaniel and Mary Blankenship
Maureen Solemslie Bo
Marianna L. Tenney Boles
Shirley Bond
Dave Bowers
Gordon Box
Clarence and Katherine Brabb
Harry Branch
Ted and Lynda Bren
Herbert and Shirley Bridge
Robin Briggs
Alan and Karen Brisley-Brown
Gail Brown
George and Mariette Brown
Gerald and Mary Brown

Sources of Private Support

Gift and Grant Income by Program

Fiscal Year 1986-87

Fiscal Year 1986-87
Annual
Fund
$122,973
(7.6%)

Foundations
$12,262

Other
$20,372

Alumni
$32,513

(4.3%)

(5.1%)

(1.9%)

Parents
$73,251
(11.5%)

Government
Grants
$974,691

Restricted
Gifts
$516,696

Friends
$95,187

(32.0%)

(14.9%)
Corporations and
Businesses
$398,199

(60,4%)

(62.3%)

Barbara J. Brundage
Anne Buck
Bill Buckles
Michael J. Buckley
Sandy L. Butler

c
Terry Galen and Jerlyn Caba
Lance Campbell
Harriet M. Caplow
Barbara M. Carey
Donald and Susan Carlson
James and Virginia Carlson
Peter and Deborah Carter
Wyatt Daniel Gates
Catholics of S.W. Washington
Peter Cerbone
Herbert E. Childers
Childhood's End Gallery
Helen M. Christopher
Georgette Chun
Paul Cienfuegos
Mark and Karen Clemens
Brad Clemmons
Nicholas B. Clinch
Christine Clishe
Teresa Clocksin
Robert Cole
Jon and Nina Collier
Barbara C. Collins
Consulate General of Japan
Barbara Cooley
Ritannette Cooper
Raine A. Corliss
Counterpoint Bookstore
Patricia M. Cox
Doranne Crable
Harriet McFadden Creon
H. G. and Nancy Curtis
Michael and Alice Curtis

D
Joel Davis
Bonnie Day-Orr
Dana Lynn Delaney
Harlan Demuth
Desco Electronics Corporation
Dice T-Shirts
Rodney W. Dicks
Ben Dimitroff
Stephen and Lucienne Dimtroff
Nhi C. Doan
Dan Doers
Jocelyn Dohm
Gayer and Patricia Dominick
Greg and Galin Downing
Wilbur G. Downs
Janet Drago
Susan A. Dubuisson
Nancy Dufraine
William and Vasiliki Dwyer
E

James A. Echtle
Robert T. Eggert
Elizabeth Leach Gallery
Carol Elwood
Emergency Communication
Center
Sarah S. Emery
Gary Engbrecht
Kathy and James Erlandson
Judith C. Espinola
Evergreen Expressions
F
Falcone Schwinn
Robert Fanfant
Robert and Pamela Faro
Evelyn Farr
Robin J. Farrin
Don and Willa Fassett
Lancelot A. Fekete
Robert and Helen Fisher
Mary Fitzgerald
Henry Fong
James and Georgia Fowler
Mike Fraidenburg
John Nelda Fraker
Francine Seders Gallery
Dr. and Mrs Ulrich Fritzsche
Fungi Perfect!, Inc.

G
George and Betty Gaetke
John F. Gallagher

Rebecca J. Gallagher
Gardeners and Growers, Inc.
Debbie Garrington
Helen and Alton Gaston
Herb and Barbara Gelman
Peter Gerard
George and Ellen Ghilardticci
Mark Gilbert
Roberts Gillis
Roberta Gluck
Eva Goldberg
Otto and Phyllis Goldschmid
The Goodman Management
Group
Betty H. Gordon
Pauline and Thomas Gordon
Robert and Lloydine Graham
Martha Grazier
William and Shirley Greene
Brad and Sarah GHswold
Maris Grobbins
Wayne and Carol Gruen
Kevin Shaw and Lynn Guerrini
Gladys E. Guilbert
H
Karren A. Hadley
Peter K.J. Hahn
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Ed Hamlin
Andrew and Dara Hanfman
Jeffrey H. Hanks
Mary F. Hansen
Tim Hanson
Maurice and Betty Harmon
Jane Harrison
Carol and Brian Hart
Maureen A. Hart
Ann Lasko Harvill
Walter F. and Mikiko Hatch
Scott Hauser
Robert and Catherine Haynes
Ed Hazelwood
Michael and Yolanda Heist
Peta Henderson
Bryon and Velma Henry
Kathleen M. Hernandez
Michael and Sara Herrett
Patrick and Maureen Hill
Jacqueline Hinchcliffe
Richard and Carol Hinklin
Hispanic Arts Committee
Dana L. Hoaglund
Mark and Marilyn Hoehne
Donald and Fay Holden
Charlee Holt
June Holzmeister
Lynne Horsman
Douglas S. Hunter
Elmer C. Huntley
Judith A. Huntley
Michael Huntsberger
Juanita Blakley Hurst
Mary M. Huston
Hybrid Arts
I
Edie Ingersoll
Intl. Federation of Professional
and Technical Engineers
Donna Iverson
J
Yuma Jacks
Marilyn and Michael Jackson
Peter C. Jackson
Karan Wade and Leonard James
Jamison Thomas Gallery
Japanese American
Citizens League
Julian and Josephine Jenner
Kristine Johansson
Dan Jolly
Charlotte M. Jones
Stella M. Jordan
K
William and Mary Kay Kalenius
Robin Karlstedt
Julia Kelen
Robert E. Kellum, Jr.
Christine Kerlin
Sherri Kernodle
James and Judy L. Kersetter

Kimura Studio
Gary W. King
George and Caroline Kinnear
Charles and Pearl Kirkpatrick
Jeff Kishman
Marion Kline
Robert and Helena Knapp
Dale and K. Mcmillin Knuth
B. Kolba
Robert and Anita Kovich
A. Connie Kuhrt
Siegfried G. Kutter

L
L & E Bottling Company, Inc.
Roger La Marche
Patricia A. Labine
Isabelle Lamb
Janice Lambertz
Sarito Larsen
Charles and Ann Laubach
Jean and Richard Lawrence
Ronald and Dianne Lawson
George Leago
Daniel Leahy
Mark Levensky
Elizabeth Levy
David L. Lewis
Dick and Jane Lewis
Karen Lichtenstein
Kristy Lindgren
Robert Lippold
Carol and Gene Little
Gene Roy and Carol Little
Robert A. Longman, Jr.
Sharlene Lugenbeel
Jenora S. Lyons

M
Jean MacGregor
Barbara B. MaePhail
Michael and Barbara Maki
Mansion Glass
George Mante
Brian and Andrea Mardon
Patty Marks
Kenneth and Judith Martig
Martin and Nordstrom, P.C.
Rudy and Gail Martin
Suzanne and Robert Marx
Andrew B. Mason
Miriam S. Mathes
H. John and Barbara Maurer
Thaddeus S. May, Sr.
Sandra M. Mayes
Catherine Maynard
Richard L. Maynard
Lynn McAllister
Robert Clara McCann
H.W. and Roberta McClary
Ken McElroy
John F. Me Lain
Dorothy B. McCallum
Betty and Loren McGovern
Margarita Mendoza
De Sugiyama
Raymond and Jeanne Meredith
Orville and June Mestrovich
Lily and Maurice Methven
Robert L. Miller
John and Marjorie Mitchell
Thomas P. Monahan
Haruko and Lawrence Moniz
Lorri E. Moore
Scott Moore
Louise E. Morrison
Bob Moss
Vaughn A. Moyer
Mud Bay Pottery
Connel and June Murray
Diane Murray

N
Peggy Nagae
Raymond and Mary Nelson
Forrest and Kay Newton
William and Mary Niedert
Laurence and Mary Nielsen
Peter and Alisha Nielsen
Walter A. Niemiec
Mitchell and Thelma Nimey
Kenneth J. Niolu
Sandra L. Nisbet
1199 Northwest National Union

o

Ronald J. O'Connor
William and Norrna O'Neil
Craig Aare
Joseph and Sheryl Olander
Audrey L. Olson
Robert and Carol Olson
Olympia Assn Prof
Mortgage Women
Olympia Film Society
Olympia Food
Equipment Service
Olympia Waldorf Association
P
Barbara Smith and
David Paulsen
Richard S. Page
James S. Parker
Kenneth and Marianne Partlow
Walter and Sarah Pawelko
Robert S. Payne
Puja Pecovsky
R. Michael Perez
R.N. and Margaret B. Peters
Dennis and Joan Peterson
Kendra Peterson
Lillian L. Pitt
Political Education Fund
Joseph Pollock
Possca Inc.
Hugh and Wilma Potts
Ardis A. Praefke
Robert and Elizabeth Treble
G. Scott Provost

Q

Wallace W. Quistorff

R
William and Mary Ann
Radcliffe, Jr.
Randall H. Rahn
Rain Barrel Seamless
Gutter Company
Rainbow Sports
David J. Rauh
Carl Reder
Michelle A. Reece
Howard a Reed
Sam and Margery Reed
Christine L. Reid
Marvin and Mary-Lynne Reiner
Reggie Rendon
Marion Rice
Richard's Import Auto Service
Richard and Bonnie Robbing
Gail Mottishaw Robson
Laura Roderick
Arnaldo and Lucia Rodriguez
Manuel and Ellen Rodriguez
Eleanor Roeder
Cynthia Rogers
Frederick Romero
Dolores T. Rorvik
Holly Rorvik
Alex and Susanne Rosenkrantz
Donald and Janet Rubert
Daniel C. Ruymann
S
Ray Salter
Bruce Sanford
A.E. Saunders
Robert S. Saunders
Judith M. Saxton
Kari Lynn Schiele
Virginia Schmidt
Sue M. Schneider
Michael E. Schreiner
Vincent Schueler
Bertha M. Schulz
William and Beverly Seabloom
Ken and Nancy Seright
Terry A. Setter
Seven Gables Restaurant
Shakey's Pizza Parlor
Elgin Sharpe
Ilene A. Shaw
Patricia Shaw
Hannelore Sheafe
Lynn Sherwood
Eva Shinagel
Isaac and Cathy Shultz-Reyes

Sandra M. Simon
Leslie Sirag
H.H. and Mary Skinner, Jr.
Robert and Ruth Sluss
Lynn Raylor and Paul Smith
Matthew E. Smith
Zachary and Sally Smith
Smithfield Cafe
Kathy Marshall and
Denis Snyder
Oscar and Barbara Soule
John Earl Spencer
Pamela Stasiuk
Larry Stenberg
Nicholas Stephens
Richard and Tracy Stern
Bruce and Mary Stevenson
David and Susanne Stirling
Elden Stockey
Stonington Gallery
Storrnans Incorporated
Patrick D. Sutherland
Philip and Doris Swain
Sue and Ray Swanson
Carlton and Richard Swearingen

T
Frederick Elizabeth Tabbutt
Tags Trophies
Daphne and David Tang
Jewell and Ralph Tayjor
Peter and Virginia Taylor
Ted and Betty Tenney
TESC Alumni Association
TESC Bookstore
TESC Campus Recreation
Center
TESC Photo Services
Ernest L. Thomas
Joan and Mortimer Thomas
Nancy and Steven Thompson
Kathleen Thorn
Fred G. Thunberg
Paul and Dorothy Thurston
Waynelle Timme
Bobby and Marian Tolan
Janet C. Towle
Jean L Towne
Dale and Berna Tresner
Debbie Tretikoff
Steven Trettevik
Anna Trombley

u
UFCW Local Number 554
UFCW Union Local
Number 367
Mark Urmanski

V

John R. Valiton
Delia V. Van Brunt

W
Ronald and Dorothy Wade
John Pierce and Christine
Wagner
Richard Wagner
David E. Wagoner
Kim Walter
Donnagene Ward
Marian Ward
Patsy E. Warren
Washington Federation of State
Employees
Susan Washburn
Washington Public Employee
Association
Washington State Labor Council
Alice A. Watts
Glenn Curtis Waugh
Peter and Margaret Waugh
Gregory C. Weeks, Jr.
Joan B. Weeks
Allan M. Weinstein
John H. Weller
Janice Wells
Westside Bowling Lanes
The Westwater Inn
James and Nancy White
Sid and Pat Matheny-White
Robert H. Wick
Forrest and Kerri Wilcox
Jennifer A. Wilhelm

Charles Williams
Thomas L. Williams
Walter B. Williams
James and Marty Wilson
Julie Wittrock
Elayne and Marvin Wolfenson
Ronald and Melissa Woodbury
Gary and Sandra Worrell
Bianca D. Wulff

Y
William J. and Diane Young

z

Myrna Loy Zolyomi
Arno 0. Zoske
Irwin Zuckerman

Friends of
the Library
Richard Alexander
Anchorage Well-Pump Service
Don Anthony
Joseph 0. Balogh
Robert Pike and Nancy Becker
George M. Beckmann
Gordon Box
Gail Brown
Harriet M. Caplow
Patrick B. CanRobert Cole
Ritannette Cooper
Walter and Louise Cothary
Bonnie Day-Orr
Wilbur G. Downs
Judith C. Espinola
Barbara and Ronald Hammond
Michael P. Hansen
Rose M. Harvey
Jane Hope
Stella M. Jordan
Marion Kline
Robert H. and Helena Knapp
Siegfried G. Kutter
Robert Lippold
Lily S. and Maurice S. Methven
Dennis and Regina Peters
Kent and Marlys Riedesel
William L. and Beverly Seabloom
Timothy Goodrich Tapping
Mark Urmanski
Ann Weingarth
Sid and Pat Matheny White
Andrea Pineo Winship
Ronald G. and Melissa T.
Woodbury
Byron L. and Bernice L. Youtz

Friends of
the Gallery
Elizabeth Leach Gallery
Ed Hazelwood
Jamison Thomas Gallery
George Mante
Lynn McAllister
Lillian L. Pitt
Robert L. and Letitia Reeves
Roger J. Bounds Foundation, Inc.
Stonington Gallery
United Indians of All Tribes

Gifts
received from July 1, 1986 to
June 30, 1987. Problems? We
have made every attempt to be
accurate in our reporting, but
we sometimes make mistakes.
i If you are listed incorrectly, or
if you are not listed and should
be, we would appreciate hearing
from you.

..9
Nonprofit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Olympia, WA
Permit No. 65

The Evergreen ReView
Fall, 1987

THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

November, 1987; Volume 9, Number 1
Published by the Office of Information Services
and Publications
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505

Address Correction Requested
Forwarding and Return
Postage Guaranteed

Greater Geoduck Genius
Here's a chance to rate your Greener Gnowledge.
Answers are on page 9. Have fun.
1. Over 20 years ago a large Native
American artifact was found on the
Evergreen beach. What was the name
of this artifact? Which tribe carved it?
2. What percentage of the state's
operating budget does Evergreen
receive?
3. What percentage of our faculty hold
a Ph.D. or terminal degree?
4. Based on current projections, how
many alumni will we have in 10 years?
5. There are six cities outside the
Northwest where more than 50 Evergreen alumni live. Five of those cities
are Boston, New York, Los Angeles,
San Francisco and Washington, D.C.
What's the sixth city?

The Evergreen ReView
Editing: Keith Eisner
Writing: Keith Eisner, Dennis Held,
Chris Shaw, Larry Stenberg, Mike
Wark, Sue Washburn, Forrest Wilcox
Graphic Design: Mary Geraci,
Marianne Kawaguchi, Paul Pope
Typesetting: Shirley Greene
Photography: Steve Davis, Woody
Hirzel, TESC Photo Services, unless
otherwise noted.
Other help: Patricia Barte, John
Gallagher, Karen Huntsberger

6. Student tuition accounts for what
percentage of Evergreen's funded
operating costs?
7. Who was Evergreen's first emeritus
faculty member?
8. What was the name of the most
famous dog on Red Square?
9. What Evergreen faculty member's
work was critiqued in both The New
Yorker and The National Enquirer?
10. What academic program was largely responsible for the painting of the
dragon mural in the Library stairwell?
Scoring: In keeping with our Evergreen roots, there will be no numerical
rating of test results. Those wishing an
individual conference to discuss test
performances can send a selfevaluation to the ReView office.

A Special Day
Sunday, January 17, 1988—a special
day. That's when the Sixth Annual
Tribute to Japan takes place from 11
a.m. to 5 p.m. at Evergreen. The free,
community celebration features
elegant costumes, traditional dancing
and singing, dazzling exhibits, craft
demonstrations (a calllgrapher who
appeared at last year's Tribute Is pictured above), children's activities, lectures, fantastic food and much more.
Call (206) 866-6000, ext. 6128 for complete details.

Inside: Renaissance on Campus