The Evergreen State College Newsletter (March 26, 1973)

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Identifier
Eng Newsletter_19730326.pdf
Title
Eng The Evergreen State College Newsletter (March 26, 1973)
Date
26 March 1973
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March 26, 1973

five courses offered
SPRING QUARTER REGISTRATION FOR PART-TIME STUDENTS SET APRIL 2
Spring Quarter registration for part-time students has been set for 7 to 9 p.m.
April 2 in the Evergreen Admissions Office, room 1101 of the Library. Associate Dean
Oscar Soule, who is coordinating the part-time studies program, said one program has
been especially designed for part-time students and four other regular academic programs
are open to part-time students.
"A part-time student at Evergreen can earn one unit of credit per quarter," Soule
said. "This is the equivalent of five quarter hours elsewhere, and involves academic
work at the rate of approximately one-third of the full-time student load at Evergreen."
Tuition is $115 per quarter, plus initial payment of an application fee ($15) and
an advance deposit ($20), Soule said. The advance deposit is returned to the student
when he withdraws or graduates (see Evergreen Bulletin, pages 200-201).
Faculty members for the academic programs outlined below will be available for consultation April 2. Registration and payment of fees will take place in the Admissions
Office immediately for those part-time applicants whose interests can be served, Soule
said.
Programs offered for Spring Quarter are:
Politics Values, and Social Change: The Contemporary Ideological Firmament
This program is especially designed for part-time students. Behavior in contemporary society is heavily influenced by various limitations of a social, political and/or
environmental nature. This program will involve a review of some of the contemporary
ideological statements provoked by those limitations. This will then be followed by
a critical analysis of ideologies pointing to constructive change. The part-time program
will consist of lectures Monday evenings from 8 to 9 p.m., followed by lunch/seminars
on Tuesdays from Noon to 2 p.m. The seminars will center on weekly books and their relationship to the lecture. Participants for credit will complete a paper on one of the
nine lecture/seminar topics.
For further information, contact Faculty Member Beryl Crowe, 753-3985.
The following are regular Evergreen programs and are designed so part-time students
can work in conjunction with full-time students in various areas.
Cinema Studies
Seminars dealing with in-depth study of the following films;
Thursday Evenings
Monday Afternoons
WHY
WE FIGHT
Capra
CULPEPPER CATTLE COMPANY
SPELLBOUND
Hitchcock
CHEYENNE AUTUMN
Ford
LA TERRA TREMA
Vixconti
WILD RIVER
Kazin
I
VITELLONI
Fellini
SINGIN' IN THE RAIN
Donen
ORDET
Dreyer
IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT
Capra
VIVRE
SA
VIE
Godard
A WALK IN THE SUN
Milestone
ECLIPSE
Antonioni
GRAPES OF WRATH
Ford
THE SERVANT
Losey
PORTRAIT OF JASON
Clark
REPORT ON THE PARTY AND THE
GUESTS — Nemec
Students will be expected to write a minimum of four papers for this program,
further information, contact Faculty Member Gordon Beck, 753-3975,

For

Physiology and Population Biology
One group will meet three times a week to discuss topics within the area of population biology and another group will meet to deal

-3-

-2with general physiology. Scheduling will be worked out once the groups are organized.
For further information contact Faculty Member Burt Guttman, 753-3945.
Multi-Media, Slide Tape and Video Production
This program is designed for persor
with appropriate media skills who can formulate a project which could be used to document, explore or promote a social or institutional need. Time arrangements can be made
to suit the individual student.
For further information contact Faculty Member Sid White, 753-3975.
Readings in Dramatic Literature
One weekly seminar will be held on Wednesdays
from 10 a.m. to Noon. Discussions will focus on literature dealing with twentieth century
drama.
For further information contact Faculty Member Ainara Wilder, 753-3972
For additional information about all opportunities currently available, interested
persons are asked to contact the faculty leaders named in each program description. Additional information on admissions and registration procedures can be obtained from the
Office of Admissions, 753-3150, room 1101 of the Evans Library, Soule said.
FORTY-THREE TO GRADUATE WINTER QUARTER
Forty-three Evergreeners are scheduled to complete their four-year degree program
Mar. 23 according to Registrar Perrin^Smith. Eighteen graduates are from the Olympia-area,
seven from Tacoma, six from Seattle, two from Spokane, two from Chehalis, and one each
from Tenino, Suquamish, Yakima, Centralia and Rochester. Three graduates are from out of
state.
Graduates and their home towns are:
Olympia: Thomas Ball, Franklin Benecke, Ken Christman, Walter Fitzgibbon, Tena
Huizenga, John Jones, Maryanne Lewis, Eric Meyer, Nicholas Miklovich, Diane Senn, Thomas
Tascher, Jacob Thomas and Terry Wyncoop.
Lacey: Ruth Jones and Ricky Slager
Tumwater: Francis Bergman and Phillip Bridges
Tacoma: Gary Foreman, Richard Haaga, Bruce Haley, Mildred Herron, Donna Newell,
Arther Rico, and Diane Tiffany.
Seattle: James Chappell, John Metke, Arthur Rosenbaum, Charlotte Sellin, Richard
Todd, and William Winje.
Spokane: Kristine Esvelt and David Snyder
Chehalis: Helen Jaeger and Richard Scheffel
Also graduating are Elaine Jones, Centralia; Gerald Erlich, Tenino: James Forsman,
Suquamish; Donald Dough, Yakima; Debby Steelhammer, Rochester; and three out-of-staters;
James Blanchard, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; Charles Rayner, Portland, Oregon; and Richard
Stocker, Taylorville, Illinois.
MARTIN NAMED ACADEMIC DEAN, CADWALLADER ROTATING INTO FACULTY
The appointment of Rudy Martin as an academic dean at Evergreen was announced Mar.21
by Provost Edward J. Kormondy.The appointment is effective on or about July 1. Martin,
who has been a member of the Evergreen faculty since 1970, will replace Dean Merv
Cadwallader, who at his own request, will move into a faculty position the first of July.
"The change is part of a developing program proposed by our current deans in which
we will shift academic administration assignments on a regular basis by rotating faculty
members into deanships and, ultimately, back to teaching positions," Kormondy explained.
"This will provide flexibility and broadened participation in academic administration
while also allowing some very talented people who serve as deans a chance to become part
of our instructional team."
The 37-year-old Martin currently is a member of -the faculty team directing the
Politics, Values and Social Change Coordinated Studies Program. He received his
bachelor's degree in English from the University of California at Berkeley in 1957, a
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master's degree in English from San Francisco State College in 1961, and will complete
his doctorate in American Studies at Washington State University this June.
"Martin will be a decided asset to Evergreen's academic team," Kormondy added. "His
strength of character and conviction, his personal warmth and charm, and his commitment
to Evergreen's programs will help us as we move from our present solid foundation into

new programs in the future."
Prior to joining the Evergreen faculty, Martin taught at WSU, Modesto, California
Junior College, San Francisco State College, and at a high school in Susanville, California. Martin and his wife Gail have five children: Skip, 15; Lori, 12; Grant, 13;
Gregg, 12, and Paul, eight months.
PAPER STAFF FORMED, EDITORS APPOINTED
Twenty-two students have signed up for the staff of the Evergreen campus newspaper,
and seven of them have been named to the newly-created student Editorial Board. Editor
Andy Ryan said the first staff meeting was held Mar. 20 and an editorial board was
created to meet "at least weekly to review the status of news and feature stories and
to determine editorial policy."
Named to the Editorial Board as associate editors were Charles Williams and Nina
Devoe, feature editors; Stan Shore and Anne Hoffman, news editors; Jim Fleming, entertainment editor; Kevin Hogan, Happenings editor, and Skip Berger, editorial page editor.
Doug Ellis was appointed managing editor earlier this month and will also serve on the
Editorial Board, along with Ryan.
The community newspaper, whose first edition will be off the presses April 17,
will be headquartered in rooms 203 of the College Activities Building and 3205A of the
Library. Seven issues will be published Spring Quarter, with the final edition due
May 29.
In other news relating to the newspaper, Publication Board member Sally Hunter has
resigned. Ms. Hunter, who was recently named assistant to the provost, said the time
restrictions of her new position prevented her from devoting enough energy "to do a
good job on the Publications Board."
First meeting for the Editorial Board is scheduled for 8 a.m. April 4. The Publications Board, composed of students,faculty and staff who govern overall operation of
the paper, will also meet April 4, at 10 a.m. Locations for the two meetings have not
yet been set.
McCANN TO TRAVEL TO LOS ANGELES, GREEN BAY
Charles J. McCann, Evergreen President, will travel to Los Angeles, California
and Green Bay, Wisconsin the first week of April. Invited to participate on a panel
in Los Angeles April 2, McCann will address a national conference of the American
Society for Public Administration. April 4, McCann will discuss "Problems of a ProblemFocused College" as a lecturer in the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay Lectures and
Fine Arts Program.
252 INTERNS ON THE JOB IN FEBRUARY
The Office of Cooperative Education reports 252 interns were on the job in February,
an increase of 39 over the January report. One hundred and fifty students are serving
full-time internships while 102 are working part time. Fifty faculty members are
sponsoring intern programs along with 11 staff. Total monthly income for the 66 offcampus students who receive wages was $18,893 in February.
18-YEAR OLDS MUST STILL REGISTER FOR THE DRAFT
A news release from the Washington State Headquarters of the Selective Service System
released Mar. 8 reminds all 18-year-olds that they still must register for the draft
and be classified by their local draft boards "even though we are not now drafting any
young men."
State Director Dick Marquardt said that the Military Selective Service Act which
Congress passed into law in 1948 remains in effect and requires young men to register
within 30 days of their 18th birthday. "Only that section of this law which deals with
the authority to actually induct expires on July 1," Marquartdt said. Anyone with
questions concerning the draft laws is invited to call his office in Seattle: 442-4144.
JAZZ ENSEMBLE, CHAMBER SINGERS SLATE CONCERTS
The Evergreen Jazz Ensemble and Chamber Singers have lined up a full schedule of
concert dates for Spring Quarter. Faculty Member Don Chan, director of both groups,

-4said the performances will take students to Portland, Centralia, Hoquiam, Kent, Auburn,
Tacoma, Shelton and Bremerton and will also include several concerts in the Olympia
area and on campus. First performance of the quarter will feature the Jazz Ensemble
in concert with the Hoquiam High School Stage Band April/ 4 at 2:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. in
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Hoquiam. More details on other Spring Quarter concerts will be available after the
first of April.
TRYOUTS FOR CHAMBER ORCHESTRA SET APRIL 2
Tryouts for the Chamber Orchestra will be held April 2 at 4 p.m. in room 2101 of
the Library, according to Faculty Member Robert Gottlieb, director of the musical group.
Students skilled in performing on string, wind or brass instruments
including violin,
viola, cello, double bass, oboe, clarinets bassoon, trumpet or french horn
are
encouraged to audition. The orchestra holds rehearsals every Monday from 4 to 5 p.m.
in the Library.
OLYMPIC COMMUNITY COLLEGE THESPIANS TO PERFORM HERE APRIL 4
Thespians from Olympic Community College will perform the classic Russian play,
"Uncle Vanya" Apr. 4 at 8 p.m. in the fourth floor cafeteria of the Library. Directed
by Olympic Faculty Member Bill Harvey, the 20-student cast will be hosted by students
in the drama and theater arts group contract for their overnight stay, which is one of
their first stops on their Spring Quarter tour. They performed the production last
quarter on the Bremerton campus.
EVERGREENERS TO PERFORM IN TACOMA OPERA
Six students and Faculty Member Don Chan will be involved in the Tacoma Opera
Society's production of "The Gypsy Baron," Mar. 29-31 in the Eastvold Auditorium at
Pacific Lutheran University. Chan, who will serve as artistic director for the production, said the six students, who will all be participating in the chorus, are Colleen
Hunt, Brian Magruder, Bruce Olsen, Dena Reeves and Roberta Schmitz.
/

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