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Newsletter_19740308.pdf
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The Evergreen State College Newsletter (March 8, 1974)
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8 March 1974
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newsletter
March 8, 1974
MCCANN RESUBMITS REQUEST FOR COMMUNICATION LABORATORY BUILDING
President Charles J. McCann has notified the governor's budget agency, the Office
of Program Planning and Fiscal Management, that he will try again --- that he has
resubmitted Evergreen's supplemental capital budget request to the April legislative
session for the Communication Laboratory Building.
The request for the $6,752,180 follows an uphill battle waged in the JanuaryFebruary session in which the building came close to approval. "We're encouraged by
the fact that the project nearly won approval during the first part of the split session,"
McCann said recently. "We think there is a general Legislative awareness of the need
for funding the building, but we also understand the complexities of state funding and
the need for careful study of all proposed new projects. With the additional fiscal
information available during the forthcoming special session, we feel there is a good
chance the facility will be authorized."
McCann also said he is optimistic because lawmakers in the first part of the split
session did grant Evergreen additional operating revenues to fund an official enrollment
increase of 150 for the 1974-75 academic year.
The Communications Building --- the final major capital construction project needed
to provide Evergreen with balanced facilities for current enrollment projections --- was
approved by the House of Representatives in the first part of the split Special Session.
The project finally was deleted when the House and Senate agreed on a compromise state
supplementary budget in the waning moments of the January-February session.
"This project calls for no expenditure of state funds during the current biennium,"
McCann explained in announcing the college's renewed efforts to secure Legislative
approval. "Of the $6.75 million total, $1,032,000 would be provided through the sale
of Evergreen tuition bonds ; the balance from state general obligation bonds , amortized
at the rate of $381,000 per year, beginning with the 1975-77 biennium."
McCann added that in 1972 the Legislature authorized $125,000 to bring the project
to final design stage. "We can advertise the building for construction bids as soon
as final funding is approved and bring it on line in 1976. At current rates of inflation,
the total project cost will increase by $500,000 every year the building is delayed. It
is important to note that the inflationary factor substantially exceeds the projected
bond retirement costs."
SPRING ACADEMIC OFFERINGS ANNOUNCED
Spring Quarter will arrive with the first of April, and Evergreeners have an
opportunity to enroll in six new group contracts, four 'old' Coordinated Studies programs
or six new modular courses. Full-time students can also consider individual contracts
with eight faculty members.
The Spring Offerings Brochure, available now in the Admissions Office, at the offices
of program secretaries or the offices of faculty members, outlines group contracts in
ceramics, taught by Linda Kahan; Public Information, by Margaret Gribskov and Sid White;
Music Theory, Composition, and Performance, by Robert Gottlieb; Image Workshop, by Marilyn
Frasca; Imperialism, by Charles Nisbet and Ron Woodbury, and The Ecology and Chemistry of
Pollution, by Michael Beug and Steve Herman.
-2Four Coordinated Studies programs are also open for added enrollments: A Matter
of Survival, coordinated by Al Wiedemann; America's Music by Bill Winden; Form and
Function by Stan Klyn; and Nature and Society by Jeanne Hahn. Individual contracts can
be worked out with Paul Marsh,
in political science; Faulene Main in business;
Eric Larson in anthropology, Gordon Beck in film, theater, drama, environmental arts
/
and literature; Peter Elbow in writing; Bob Barnard in supervised learning package
production; Karin Syverson in literature, writing or humanistic psychology; and Linnea
Pearson in learning resources writing workshop.
SPRING MODULARS OPEN, LIVING CATALOG SET MARCH 13
Full-time students may want to enroll in one of six modular courses, which are
also offered to part-time and auditing students, according to Academic Dean Charles
Teske. An introduction to these academic programs
specifically designed to serve
adults from the immediate college service area
will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m.
March 13 in Lecture Hall Three. Teske said the special "Living Catalog" presentation
will offer interested students an opportunity to meet faculty members and discuss academic
program content.
Full-time students can register for the one-credit modules, which are equivalent
to four quarter hours of credit, from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., March 14 and 15 in the first
floor lobby of the Laboratory Building. Part-time and auditing students can register
from 4 to 8 p.m. April 3 in the Office of Admissions.
Modular offerings include: Films and Writings of Alain Resnais, Robert Bresson and
Jean-Luc Godard, taught by Gordon Beck; Introductory Physics, by Rob Knapp; Philosophy
of Science, taught by Charles Pailthorp; Nineteenth Century Russian Literature by Tom
Rainey; The Future of Sino-American Relations, by Paul Marsh, and Varieties of American
Childhood, by Wini Ingram.
Teske said persons with questions about any of the Spring academic programs should
contact the sponsoring faculty members.
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION TOPIC OF MARCH 14 EOT MEETING
Final consideration of Evergreen's Affirmative Action policy
tops the list of agenda items for next week's Board of Trustees
meeting, set for 10 a.m. March 14 in Library 3121. The policy
has been the topic of campus-wide discussions for months, and
prompted considerable debate at the February Board meeting when
out-going Affirmative Action Officer Joe White presented a preliminary draft of the policy.
Rewritten by Vice President Dean Clabaugh with the advice and
assistance of both White and the newly-appointed Affirmative Action
Officer Rindetta Jones, the policy establishes goals and time
tables to ensure that Evergreen operates toward attaining and/or
maintaining an appropriate representation of non-white and women
students, faculty and staff members in order to develop a "richly
mixed, multi-ethnic student body, faculty and staff."
The proposed policy commits the college to (for example): a
non-white student population comprising 25 percent of the 1984
enrollment; a female student population comprising 50 percent
of the total enrollment; a faculty comprised of 25 percent nonwhites by 1984; a faculty comprised of 37 percent women by 1984,
and other special goals for employment of non-whites and women
as officers and managers, professionals, technicians, office and
clerical workers, operatives and service workers.
The policy also "requires that its (Evergreen's) faculty,
administration, staff, students, and persons who develop programs
at the college; and all contractors, individuals and organizations
who do business with the college; comply with the letter and spirit
of all federal, state and local equal employment opportunity
statutes and regulations."
Other items on the Thursday Board agenda may include revision
of the tuition and fees schedule for Summer Quarter and consideration of the Policies for Campus Cable Television.
(
-3SIXTY-THREE INTERNS ASSIGNED TO OLYMPIA
Sixty-three Evergreeners are currently completing internship assignments in the
Olympia-Lacey-Tumwater area. Ken Donohue. director of the Office of Cooperative Education,
said the students are among more than 120 new Winter Quarter interns. An additional 70
students are continuing Fall Quarter intern assignments. All are earning academic credit
for field experiences in a wide variety of businesses, governmental and social agencies
throughout the state and the nation.
In addition to the 63 students placed locally, ten interns each have been assigned
to Seattle, and Tacoma, five each to the Vancouver, Wash, and Chehalis-Centralia areas;
three each to Shelton and Bellevue, two to Brinnon, and one each to Bremerton,
Electric
City,
Federal Way, Hoodsport, Littlerock, Snohomish, Walla Walla and Winslow.
Six Evergreen students are interning out of state: two in uraii and one eact. in
Vermont, California, Oregon and Texas. Two students are conrletiag assignments in
Canada and a third Evergreener is completing an internship in France.
GOOD NEWS FROM SENIORS AND ALUMS
Gail Martin, counselor for the Office of Financial Aid and Placement, reports
some good news this week
from both seniors and alums. Sally Mendoza, who hopes
to graduate in June, has received acceptance to the Stanford Medical School, Stanford
University. Ms. Mendoza, who is one of four persons accepted Into the neuro-biological
behaviorial sciences program at the medical school, has also been awarded a Stanford
stipend. Another June 1974 graduate, Jim Anest, reports he has been accepted by two
law schools, Rutgers University and Northwestern University. He has not decided which
one he'll attend.
Alums reporting their activities to Ms. Martin include: Marsha Morse, a December '73
graduate, is working as a veterinary assistant in Seattle; Eldon Vail, also December '73,
has been accepted into the University of Washington School of Social Work; Rick Rico,
June '73, is a counselor in Special Services at the University of Nevada in Reno; Mary
Lou Peron, June '72, is a field direr zor for the Neighborhood Youth Corps In Southern
Oregon; Rick Stocker, March '73, is working as an instructor of the St. Louis Juvenile
Court in a program entitled Stress-Challenge.
Neil Hiserote, a December '73 alum, is foreman of a production crew for the Calvert
Company in Vancouver, Wash.; Tyler Robinson, June '72 is studying architectural drafting at Portland Community College; Barbar LaBarge, June '73, is enrolled in the Yakima
School of Medical Technology and working as a laboratory clerk at St. Elizabeth Hospital
in Yakima; Robyn Smith, June '73 is a public information trainee for the Office of
Program Planning and Fiscal Management in Olympia; and James Cameron, December '73
is a planning aide on the North Bonneville Relocation project.
And finally, two Evergreen graduates, Douglas Raymond and James Denison, are
working as appraisers for the Pierce County Assessor's Office in Tacoma.
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
...Steve Wiggins, who is enrolled in the PORTALS program, is collecting old pictures
of Napavine (a small town south of Chehalis) for a film he is producing. Anyone with
pictures or information on the town's early years should contact Steve through the
PORTALS program or in Napavine (262-3535).
...Student Richard Leon Brown, Jr. has announced his intentions to marry Sharon
Smart March 29 in a Lacey ceremony...Faculty Member Steve Herman spoke to the Western
Forest Insect Work Conference in Salt Lake City March 5 and 6. Herman also attended
a February meeting at the Denver Wildlife Center on the Peregrine Falcon. Herman used
to capture and train the falcons before they became so scarce...
...New to the staff March 1 is Jody Douglas, part-time accounting assistant in
the Business Office. Michael Jacobsen. also in the Business Office, has been promoted
from program assistant to Inventory Inspector...
EXTERNAL CREDIT AWARD PLAN TO BE REVIEWED MARCH 14
A means of granting credit for life experiences
of enabling persons to achieve
academic credit for work done or understanding gained prior to their attendance at
Evergreen — will be the topic of a noon discussion March 14 with members of the External^
Credit Disappearing Task Force.
Chaired by Academic Dean Lynn Patterson the ten-member DTP will review a draft of
the committee's final report and discuss its findings with two guest speakers: Peter
Mayer, chairman of the Department of Social Work, School of Health and Social Services
at Florida International University, who is currently working on a national study of
crediting life experiences; and Anne Winchester of the Washington Council of Higher
Education, who will discuss external credit possibilities in this state and Evergreen's
potential role.
A draft of the DTP policy, available in Ms. Patterson's office, clearly does not
recommend "a credit give away." "We're being very cautious and conservative", Ms.
Patterson says. "We're talking about granting credit for considerable blocks of experiences
and limiting the amount of credits to be granted to one full year at this time."
The program is designed with the older student in mind, she says. "It's not meant
to exclude others," she notes, "but it is geared for older students who've been working
at a fully professional job and have had some college and can't afford long time on
campus."
The preliminary DTP report recommends that Evergreen continue its present way of
giving external credit, through the CLEP general and specific subject tests, AP tests
and others, but also seeks to go beyond that method so that credit can be given to the
person who writes a report which demonstrates what he or she knows and wants credit for.
Help will be provided for those who have difficulty demonstrating their credit-worthy
knowledge.
"We feel that Evergreen should not give credit for experience or skills in themselves,
the report reads, "but rather for DEMONSTRATING UNDERSTANDING: conscious, conceptual,
verbal understanding
knowing what you know, understanding what you have experienced
or can do."
/
To help persons demonstrate their knowledge, an office of external credit will
be created which will be staffed with a counselor who can help students assess what
they are likely to be eligible for and how to proceed. The counselor will give students
directions and models for writing a report that may earn external credit. If a person's
paper is not given credit, he or she can get feedback from the counselor and rewrite
it to turn in again. There's no limit or penalty on the number of times a student
submits an application for credit.
The DTP reports that some requests for external credit may be reviewed Spring
Quarter, but no credit will be awarded until next fall. Only those who have been out
of school for a year or more will be eligible. The DTP also recommends that credit
be sought within the first year of a students' entrance to Evergreen — or return
after a year's absence, and that credit be granted only in blocks of four, eight or
12 Evergreen units.
"We request these guidelines in a spirit of admitted caution and conservatism,"
the committee says. "We must be, in a sense, unfair: we will perhaps not yet grant
credit for something that
after we learn more about what we are doing
we might
later grant credit."
The committee members (Faculty members Peter Elbow, George Dimitroff, Carolyn Dobbs,
Jim Gulden and Jack Webb; Staff members Laura Thomas, Maureen Karras and Sally Hunter,
and Student Cathy Burnstead,) have given long hours of consideration to the proposals.
They plan to be on hand the afternoon of March 14 in the Library lobby. They need
your input and your ideas and suggestions. Be there.
SOULE, DOBBS CALL FOR STUDENT HELP
Faculty Members Oscar Soule and Carolyn Dobbs, organizers of the Applied Environ- '
mental Studies Coordinated Studies p'rogram for next fall, are asking for student help.
-5In a letter to program coordinators, the two professors are asking students
interested in their three-quarter program, which will involve economics, ecology and
urban studies, to contact them by the end of the quarter. "We're hoping students can
work with us to help establish the form of the program, to develop a level of interest
sufficient to create a positive, dynamic and enjoyable atmosphere for the program, and
to increase the total level of commitment to it," Soule says.
Student input can "greatly shape the direction, form and content" of the program
which Soule says will concentrate on modulars the first two quarters and on environmental
projects at the city, county and regional levels Spring Quarter.
Interested students can contact Soule, an ecologist, at his office (Laboratory
Building 3003) or by calling 866-6733. Dobbs, an urban planner, has an office in
Library 2413 and can be reached at 866-6643.
ART-IN-SCIENCE EXHIBIT ON DISPLAY
The Art-in-Science Exhibit, organized by the Albany Institute of History and Art
and circulated for two years by the Smithsonian Institution, is currently on display
in the reference area of the Evergreen library.
The exhibit, described by art critics "as one of the most unique exhibitions
to come along in many years," was organized in 1965 and includes two-dimensional
scientific representations based on the theme of the contemporary relationship between
the visual arts and sciences. The photographs attempt to trace parallels in the
developments in modern abstract art and in advanced scientific discoveries, especially
in the formal patterns and kinds of imagery observable in each.
On display through March 22, the exhibit is free and open to the public. Copies
of the original interpretative Art-in-Science Catalog are on sale in the Evergreen
Bookstore for $2.50.
JAZZ ENSEMBLE OFFERS CONCERT/DANCE
Twenty-five years of jazz will be featured in an evening concert/dance by the
Evergreen Jazz Ensemble March 12 at 8 o'clock in the main foyer of the Evergreen Library.
Directed by Faculty Member Don Chan, the concert will feature guest artist, Chuck
Stentz, an Olympia tenor saxophonist and co-owner of Yenney Music Company.
The 21-member Jazz Ensemble is staging the two-and-a-half hour program to raise
money for an upcoming trip to Spokane's EXPO 74 World's Fair. A 50-cent admission
fee will be requested at the door.
The Evergreen group will also stage a concert at Hoquiam High School March 14
and another at Centralia College April 3.
EVERGREEN PREVIEWS SLATED
Prospective students, their parents, high school and college teachers, principals
and counselors, and members of the general public are being invited to attend special
get-acquainted sessions with Evergreen representatives in five major Washington cities
(Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia, Vancouver and Spokane) in the coming months.
The program, entitled "The Evergreen State College Preview", is sponsored by the
Office of Admissions, as part of a continuing effort to take Evergreen to the people
in various areas of Washington, according to Director of Admissions Ken Mayer.
Evergreen representatives include admissions personnel, faculty members, students,
financial aid officers, and student services personnel. "Our basic idea is to share
information about Evergreen's philosophy, current and future programs, and such
services as financial aid, placement, Cooperative Education internships, counseling,
veterans' affairs and admissions procedures," Mayer says. "The meetings are informal
and allow ample time for everyone to have questions answered concerning all aspects
of study and campus life at Evergreen."
-680-100 hours per week
DEDICATED STUDENT SCIENTISTS EXPLORE ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
They've made the news in Seattle and Spokane. NBC's traveling television newsman
came all the way to Evergreen to talk to one of their professors and to them about their
research. And, they've been praised (and damned) by state officials, legislators, editorial
writers throughout Washington and Oregon.
They are members of the Ecology and Chemistry of Pollution Coordinated Studies program.
And, their work has only just begun.
A committee and dedicated group of student scientists, the 35 members of the program
often spend between 80 and 100 hours per week listening to lectures, conducting field
research, and gaining laboratory skills in chemical analysis, electronics and computer
programming. Under the direction of ecologist Steven Herman and chemist Mike Beug, the
students have concentrated their efforts on two primary projects this year: a study of
the tussock moth infestation in eastern Washington and Oregon forests and an analysis of
pollutants in the Puget Sound.
TUSSOCK MOTH STUDY PUBLICIZED
The Tussock moth study has received most of the publicity so far, Beug says, but
it represents only about one-third of what the students are doing. The study began almost
with the start of Fall Quarter when it became obvious that the use of DDT to control
tussock moth populations was a major issue. With prompt funding by the Environmental
Defense Fund, Herman, Beug and crew took to the Douglas Fir stands of eastern Washington
and Oregon for a week-long field study of tussock moth populations. They brought back
not only detailed written data on what they had observed, but tussock moth egg masses
which are now hatching
in the Laboratory Building.
"We're studying the development of the larvae to determine the amount of parasitism,"
Beug explains. The moth eggs are infested with parasite eggs
such as those of wasps
which hatch first and eat the moth larvae. "So far we're finding a high percentage of
parasitism," Beug continues. "This indicates that the moth population for 1974 may be
substantially reduced." If the larvae do survive the parasite, they then face a virus
which scientists believe frequently lies on the outside of the moth egg cases. When the
larvae eat their way out of the egg cases, they ingest the virus and die before reaching
maturity.
Compiling data on both the parasites and the virus will "enable students to assess
area by area the population density of tussock moths which we can expect by early June,"
he says. "That way we can predict in what areas some sort of treatment may be necessary."
So far students' research indicates that the combination of parasites and viruses may
reduce the moth population substantially in some areas this year, which Beug says, means
that there may not be much need for insecticide use.
Members of the program have presented their evidence to hearings, to news conferences,
and to anyone willing to listen. The response by environmentalists has been encouraging.
Two state officials, Stu Bledsoe, State Agricultural Director, and John Biggs, Director
of the Department of Ecology, have gone on record congratulating the students for their
thorough and invaluable research. Others, including some newspaper editors and legislators,
have been critical of Evergreen's involvement.
ONLY PART OF THE STORY
But the moth controversy is only part of the story. The other part lies in the waters
of Puget Sound where students have established a dozen sampling sites, including ones on
Hood Canal, San Juan Island and on the Evergreen beach property. The sites provide the
young scientists a chance to study seasonal fluctuation in population levels of a number
of beach organisms, including crab, shrimp, mussels and seaweed. "We're examining the
effects of absorption of various pollutants by the organisms and the seasonal variations
of both pollution and organism populations," Beug says.
Working with the Department of Ecology, the University of Washington and Western
Washington State College, the program members are restricting their studies to the effects
of marine/water pollutants
heavy metals, oil, pesticide residues, and "P.C.B.s",
which are toxic byproducts of plastics.
The samples they gather are all brought back to the Laboratory Building where
~?~
students work "in one of the finest environmental laboratories for chemical analysis
of pollutants in the country," he adds. The variety and capability of the equipment is
enormous, but it takes time and effort to learn how to use it all.
And that's the third main component of the program
the lectures and laboratory
work sessions which instruct students not only on the operation of the expensive and
highly technical equipment, but on philosophical background of how the equipment works
and why. "It's not enough for them to know how to turn the dials," Beug says. "They
must also understand the principles of chemistry, electronics and biology which are
involved."
The involvement doesn't stop with those three academic disciplines, Beug is quick
to add. So far, the students have been introduced to computer programming, to inorganic,
organic and biochemistry, to analytical chemistry, ecology, grant writing, entomology,
marine biology and environmental law. They have published two papers on the Tussock
moth, and they're working on another paper describing their Puget Sound Baseline Study.
They've applied for and received one grant from the Environmental Defense Fund, and
have applied for additional grants from the National Science Foundation and the Department
of Ecology. Throughout their work, they have cooperated with several Federal Agencies,
including the U.S. Forest Service, the Environmental Protection Agency, and the Department of Interior.
And this is only the second quarter of the eight-quarter program. Plans are well
laid out for more research in coming quarters. The two professors hope most of their
students will secure summer internships with state and federal environmental agencies.
And, by fall, they think students will be ready to plunge into individual research
projects with all the enthusiasm and dedication they've already shown on the group efforts.
INSTITUTIONAL SELF STUDY REPORTS AVAILABLE
The institutional self study report, which is being prepared for an accrediting visit
in late April by the Northwest Association of Secondary and Higher Schools, is nearing
completion, according to Provost Ed Kormondy.
Final version of the report is scheduled to go to the printers March 15, Kormondy
says. Wide circulation of the document has not been possible, he adds, "because of the
nature of the report." It is an add-on to all of the other reports which various deans
and directors have already completed," he explains.
Copies of the document are available at the Information Center and the deans'
lounge in the Laboratory Building. Kormondy urges Evergreeners to read the document
and add their suggestions or criticisms before March 15.
The document has to be published by March 30, but Kormondy hopes there will be
additional discussion about its content in April, when he will arrange several open
forums. Discussions and criticisms developed in those forums will be consolidated in
a separate document to be presented to the evaluators during their visit later this Spring.
VETERANS RAISE $300
More than $300 was raised at the first "Benefit Boogie" staged by the Evergreen
Veterans' Affairs Office at Captain Coyote's March 4. Bard Slaymaker, director of
the veterans' office, said profits from the benefit will help establish an emergency
loan fund for veterans and dependents.
The Veterans' Affairs Office, opened last fall in the Student Services area of the
library, serves veterans and their dependents, who comprise more than ten percent
of Evergreen's enrollment.
ASIAN-AMERICAN COALITION ESTABLISHED
The Asian-American Coalition, established in February, is seeking members from
both the Evergreen community and Thurston County, according to Alan Karganilla,
coalition chairman.
-8"We want to serve the Asian-American community on and off campus," Karganilla
says. "We need help in publicizing the establishment of our coalition and in involving
local Asian-Americans with our organization."
The group hopes to sponsor an Asian Day later this year and would like to involve
f
local Asians in the planning and organizing of the special day. A meeting to begin
organizing the event is scheduled for March 18 at 3 p.m. in the coalition office (Library
3209). Interested persons should contact Karganilla at the coalition office or
call 866-6033.
WIDEMAN RETURNS TO CAMPUS MONDAY
John Wideman, author and associate professor of English at the University of
Pennsylvania, will present a reading of his works March 11 at 8 p.m. in the third floor
rear lounge of the Library. Sponsored by Eye-5, Wideman will discuss his most recent
novel, The Lynchers in his talk, which is free and open to the public.
Wideman has been described by the Philadelphia Enquirer as, "Bright, young black
man, Rhodes scholar and athlete...who has written a novel that firmly establishes him
in the front rank
as the white critic says
of contemporary black literature."
Wideman's second appearance at Evergreen (he was here last fall) is made possible
by the National Humanities Faculty, a federally funded organization designed to improve
humanities teaching at the high school and college levels. He will spend three days
at Timberline High School talking with students about the relationship between the black
movement and the women's liberation.
FINAL BALLET NORTHWEST FILM TUESDAY
Dance in the Twentieth Century is the topic of the final evening of the four-week
dance films series presented by Ballet Northwest March 12, at 7:30 p.m. in Lecture
Hall Five.
Included in the evening's entertainment will be a modern ballet film entitled
(
"Pas de Deux", danced by two dancers from Les Grands Ballets Canadiens; "Echos of Jazz",
a film on jazz dance; "Dance: A Reflection of Our Times", discussing dance as social
commentary; and "Anna Sokolow's 'Rooms'", the highlight of the event, a film showing a
dance expressing the loneliness and alienation of modern man.
A nominal contribution from adults and students is requested; children will be
admitted free when accompanied by an adult.
WORKSHOP FOR PROSPECTIVE SMALL BUSINESS OWNERS/MANAGERS PLANNED
A free one-day workshop for people interested in starting or operating a successful
small business of their own will be co-sponsored by the Small Business Administration
and Evergreen on March 19, from 9:15 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in Lecture Hall One. The primary
purpose of the program is to provide an understanding of the basic requirements and
considerations necessary in starting and managing one's own business.
Attendance at this workshop will be limited to a first-come, first-serve basis.
Additional details and registration may be obtained by calling the Seattle District
Office, Small Business Administration, 710 Second Avenue, Seattle, WA - phone 442-4436
or The Evergreen State College, phone 866-6205.
GOTTLIEB TO DIRECT FRIDAY NOON CONCERT
Music from the Renaissance and Baroque periods will be featured in a noon concert
March 15 in the main lobby of the Library Building. Directed by Faculty Member Robert
Gottlieb, student musicians from the Words, Sounds and Images Coordinated Studies program
will present an hour long concert.
Highlight of the noon event will be a classical piano sonata by Beethoven performed
by violinist Cheryl Pegues, of Seattle, and pianist Mary James, of Denver, Colorado.
The concert is free and open to the public.