The Evergreen State College Review Volume 10, Issue 1 (November 1988)

Item

Identifier
EvergreenReviewV10N1November1988
Title
The Evergreen State College Review Volume 10, Issue 1 (November 1988)
Date
November 1988
extracted text
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE

November, 1988; Volume 10, Number 1

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The Peoples of
Washington exhibition
was created to tour the,
state as part of the year•
' . . - . .
'•'
long Centennial celebration. Walking through
the exhibition is like
'"
being Alice
in Wonderland, only it's you who's
ambling through the
giant pages of a fam"
album of Washingtoi
state. There are 40
panels loaded with
riveting photographsmore than 200 images in
all. Wherever it travels,
it will give a historical
portrait of this particula
corner of America, but
the exhibition will also
paint a mosaic of the
diverse peoples who
come from/around .tr.
world to form the st<
we know today.
Peoples of Washing
is on display in Galle
of the Evans Library
Evergreen through t
end of this month. Tl
fji ciiiiCI 10 ei|j|^i \J^Jl. 1(1 tc,

since Evergreeners con^
ceived and helped produce the exhibit, and
eelebrated its opening
with Peoples of Washington Weekend,
November 11 and 12.
Welcome to the
fReVieufs Peoples of
Washington preview including a word with the

mm

jjj

geonews
Tableau of the new
It was a chilly evening outside the Seminar
Building when new students Onika Gilliam
Costas Delyanis and Tammy Rae Garland met
for an orientation improv in the photo at left
shortly after their arrival on campus Fall
Quarter. At right, Gilliam (in her Bookstore buyof-the-week sweatshirt) and Delyanis (in casual
wear he described as uniquely his own) concentrate on the here-and-now of Evergreen education
by engaging in a classic pre-seminar warm-up
exercise. Meanwhile at left, shielded from the
Northwest cold by her Geo-leathers, Garland contemplates a misty future that holds her eventual
graduation with the class of '92.

~

Fall Enrollment Adds Up
You name the type of threads and Greeners not
only try out all kinds of styles, but push them to
new levels of expression.
Greener-watchers have more to view this fall as
3,250 students have set a new enrollment level.
Those 3,250 individuals make up a total of 3,210
FTE (full-time equivalency). The fact that there's
only a 40-student difference between these two
figures means a greater percentage of Greeners
are full-time students. Last year the differential
between total students (head count) and FTE was
100, the year before it was 147—219 the year
before. "Eighty-nine percent of our student body
is attending full-time" says Steve Hunter '79,
director of institutional research. "That figure
represents a healthy trend for the college."
Another healthy indicator is the record number
of students of color (353) who enrolled at
Evergreen this fall. That figure represents a 25
percent jump from last year, and a 45 percent increase over the last 10 years. "This year's percentage of students of color matches our all-time
high of 11 percent," says Hunter. "We see this
increase as another positive step toward a
multicultural campus."
Other fall figures: students under 22 years of
age—51 percent, over 30—30 percent; 1331 new
students; graduate students—160; 2,792 Washington residents, 458 nonresidents; average credit
load—14.6, and finally, campus clock towers—one.

Booting and Building

"Indeed, Greeners were more
fervent in praising their education
than students at any other institution profiled in this book."
So writes Martin Nemko in his newly published book, How To Get An Ivy League Education At A State University. The college, one of 115 selected for inclusion by Nemko, receives a seven-page description in his book. He also writes that Evergreen students' "contributions in class often constitute the very
substance of the inquiry, not mere footnotes to lectures."

While Geoduck booters hone their soccer skills on
the campus playfield, construction workers raise
the new Campus Recreation Center Phase II .
Building, which will include a 1400-seat gymnasium, Wellness Lab, multipurpose studios and
increased office space. The building is scheduled
for completion in June, 1989. Get your green
shoelaces ready!
Meanwhile, Evergreen's men's and women's soccer squads have been ready and willing all
season. "Resurgence" is how Women's Coach
David Brown describes his squad. He's excited
about the rebuilding process underway with a
very promising core of freshmen, including
several former all-conference and all-state high
school playera Season highlights include a 1-1
hang-tough tie with the powerhouse Huskies of
the University of Washington.
Name recognition for the booting Geoducks got
a boost this fall when the men's team was ranked
12th in the country by the NAIA. It was the first
time since the introduction of soccer in 1979 that
an Evergreen team has made it into the national
rankings. The Geoduck men got as far as the first
game of the NAIA playoffs, which they dropped
to Simon Eraser on November 5, 1-0.
Much of this year's success is attributed to a potent offense that complements the solid defense
which has been a trademark of Coach Arno
Zoske since he began coaching here six years ago.
"Before, we tried to shut people out and hope
we'd get a goal somehow," said Zoske. "This year
we've worked a lot on transition, getting from a
defensive mode to an offensive mode." And the
work has paid off. As the ReView went to press,
the Geoducks have outscored opponents 42-19
this season, while enjoying an 11-2-4 season.
The bottom line for Zoske, however, is not victories or national rankings but personal growth
and motivation. "The single most important goal
for our program is to remain focused on the individual student athlete's appreciation of good, solid
teamplay, and the development of his or her own
pursuit of excellence."

Summer School for Teachers

Ingram Honored

New Division, Old Friend.

Over 130 Washington high school and middle
school teachers received some invaluable
revitalization this summer at Evergreen. That's
where The National Faculty of Humanities, Arts
and Sciences, a non-profit organization whose purpose is to improve the quality of teaching in the
nation's classrooms, hosted its second and third
summer institutes for secondary teachers.
Faculty Member Rudy Martin, who co-directs
Evergreen's office for the Northwest Region of
the National Faculty with Karen Munro, reports
that participating teachers were enriched and exhilarated by their experiences. History and social
studies teachers professed to being "rekindled"
by lectures such as those given by Professor
Emeritus Mary Land of Washington State
University, and Evergreen Faculty Members
Stephanie Coontz and Tom Rainey, while
science and math teachers viewed Mt. St. Helens
with college professors, including Evergreen
Faculty Member Pete Sinclair.

Evergreen's first Faculty Emeritus, Wini Ingram
(left) was honored by close colleagues and former
students this fall. In this photo by Provost staff
member Sue Hirst, Faculty Member Earle
McNeil presents a plaque he made for Wini out of
exotic Brazilian and African woods. The design,
which Ingram helped design, represents a mask
and a lily. The plaque, she reports, will greet
visitors at the entrance to her garden.
The celebration was the first in a planned series
of tributes to Evergreen faculty. The Provost's
Office has also established an Emeritus Faculty
Scholarship Fund. For more details about the
scholarship, contact Evergreen's Development Office, Library 3114.

Ken Winkley,
Evergreen's first 20-year
employee, has a new
position with a new
:*,
division. Winkley was
appointed vice president
for the Division of
Finance and Administration. Winkley, who had
been associate vice
president for AdWinkley
ministrative Services
since 1985, was named to the new post this fall,
following the departure of former Vice President
of Development and Administrative Services Sue
Washburn. The college is currently seeking to fill
another new vice president position for College
Advancement, which will include the areas of
Development, Information Services and Community and Alumni Relations. See story page 10.

geonews
TP he leaves keep falling and the students keep coming. Over
1,300 new Evergreeners have pushed Fall enrollment past the
record-breaking 3,200 mark, providing plenty of business for
Evergreen's faculty and staff. Thankfully, someone foresaw the
rush and hired 17 new faculty members, 14 of whom are either
people of color or have multicultural experience, and three who
are Greener grads (see Alum News, pages six and seven).
Not only are there a lot of us, but we learned recently from
researchers from Stanford and the University of Arizona that
we're happier than most (see story at right). Speaking of happy,
Greeners are in the pink as they watch the long awaited College
Recreation Center II and Lab Annex arise. Meanwhile, Geoduck
computer heads are all aglow with their acquisition of 18 dazzlingly state-of-the-art Macintosh computers. Good news doesn't
stop at the doors, either. Out on the soccer fields, Geoduck
booters are celebrating their first-ever national ranking and
NAIA playoff competition.
Evergreen graduates are also strutting their stuff out in the
workplace as evidenced by a five percent increase in this year's
overall placement figures and schoolteachers from Spokane to
Sequim are sizzling with inspiration from two National Faculty
institutes that were held by Evergreeners on campus this
summer.
But, wait, what are those weird and wonderful sounds coming
from Red Square? Don't worry—be happy! It's the BOOM BOX
BOOGIE! Better check it out along with the other happenings
below and throughout this, the latest edition of your Evergreen
ReView.

Red Square Rocks Out
It took some last-minute scrambling and the recruitment of a couple of car stereos (with cars),
but the much-heralded Boom Box Boogie
delighted Red Square denizens at noon on Friday,
October 21. Otherwise known as "Jon Appleton's
High-Impact Workout," the event began when 15
students holding tape recorders hit "play" at the
same time. Each boom box played a different
tape, all part of the same composition recorded in
New York on the new wonder of the electronic
age, the synclavier. Meanwhile Appleton led over

50 Greeners in a lively set of exercises set to the
music.
Appleton, a Dartmouth professor, was on campus for the National Conference of the Society for
Electro-Acoustic Music in the United States
(SEAMUS). Coordinated by Evergreen Faculty
Musician Andrew Buchman '77, the three-day
conference brought together the leading lights of
the electro-acoustic music scene, not to mention a
video appearance by Mr. Fender Guitar himself,
Les Paul.

Why
The question posed in this headline on the front

Are
page of the October 6 Olympian, is not an idle

Evergreeners
one. In fact, it's part of an extensive nationwide

So Happy?
study, funded by a $180,000 Lily Endowment

Educators
grant, to identity campus environments rich in

Want
out-of-class experiences.

To Know
The Olympian reported more than 60 college
presidents and higher education experts were
asked to nominate colleges that gave students
high-quality, out-of-class experiences. The list was
narrowed to 13, with Evergreen being the only
Washington college. Researchers James Lyon,
dean of student affairs at Stanford University,
and Rosalind Andreas from the University of
Arizona visited campus last month to find out
more. They interviewed over 70 students, faculty
members, alumni and administrators about the
college's atmosphere.
"What we're really hearing," said Lyons during
his visit, "is an extraordinary commitment and
excitement about learning. "Really first-rate
places like Evergreen don't cut up students' time
into fun hours and study hours." He also cited the
faith faculty have in students that "tends to free
students from the fear of failure," collaborative
learning, and program structure. Lyons reports a
real lack of traditional collegiate partying, stating,
"... their education is permeating their lifestyle."

alum
news

Seabeck Scrapbook
October 1 and 2, 1988
Photos by Chris Nelson '79

Ten Thousand Strong and Smart
by Val Thorson '75
Alumni Association President

Jon Epstein '81, a.k.a. Eppo, and Alumni
Association President Val Thorson 75.

Stuart Smith '83 and Board
Secretary Ray Fowler '83.

Okay, this photo wasn't snapped at
Seabeck, even though its subject Kate
Crowe 77, was there. Crowe is seen
here in the guise of Dr. Root (a spin-off
of cablevision's own Dr. Ruth) as she
gives a safe-sex pep talk to new
students on campus during the Orientation Week ice cream social that is
annually sponsored by the Alumni
Association. She drew on her family
background to lighten the topic's
seriousness with a heavy German
accent.

Brothers in arms: Doug Riddels '85,
Jimmy Mateson '84 and Andy Stewart '84.

Barb Felver, '88 grad and current MPA
student, strolls the grounds of
Seabeck with the Alumni Association's
student representative Jacinta McKoy.

Evergreen's Alumni Association Board
met October 1-2 at Seabeck Resort on
Hood Canal. We felt it was an especially fruitful gathering because the seeds
of our efforts were planted months
before.
In the Spring ReView, we shared our
hopes and visions for an Alumni
Association that responds to the needs
of Evergreen grads by inviting you to
answer some questions:
How can we involve more alumni in
the Association and its activities?
How do we obtain the resources we
need to survive and be healthy?
How do we become more visible—to
the public, as well as to alumni?
How can we have influence upon college issues that matter to alumni?
By asking these questions, we hoped
to inspire people to come forward, join
the Association board, and develop
answers.
Our invitation worked. The June
election for new board members
generated more interest than any other
in the Association's history. For the
first time ever, there were more people
wanting to join the board than there
were spaces. The Association found
itself with a terrific new board of
energetic, creative, and fun people.
Among those on the new board are
some old hands, who were either reelected in June or who are finishing up
a two-year term. They include Patricia
'Bliss r80, Ray Fowler '83, Elena
Guilfoil '80, Charlie Heffernann '75,
Gary Hirsch '84, Doug Riddels '85,
Val Thorson '75, Myrna Zolyomi '82,
and John Zupa '77. Two "veterans,"
Chris Nelson '79 and Margo Stewart

'80, have returned after being away
from the board for a few years. Also
joining us again this year is Student
Representative Jacinta McKoy.
New members are Casey Bakker
'77, Kate Crowe '77, John (Eppo)
Espstein '81, Barb Felver '88, Jimmy
Mateson '84, Brendan MaFarland '84,
Kitty Parker '76, Stuart Smith '83,
Giskin Southall '88, Andrew Stewart
'84 and Janine Thome '87.
Together, we represent every era in
Evergreen's history, and we bring
many "Life After Evergreen" perspectives to the board, working as freelance writers, media wizards, mushroom farmers, parents, financial planners, accountants, graduate students,
Evergreen staffers, and assorted entrepreneurs and consultants.
In all the time I've been a part of the
Association, I have never seen this
much ability, willingness to work,
humor and constructive questioning.
As our program planner, Jimmy
Mateson, mentions in his column below,
the ranks of Evergreen alumni will
swell to 10,000 this spring. This excites
me even more than working with the
wonderful people on our board
because—in your behalf and with your
help—we are all moving toward making the Alumni Association a powerful
asset to the Evergreen community.
It would be easy to go on, but my
time's up, and we'll have plenty of opportunities to talk throughout the year.
Join us as we sponsor dances, receptions, and other special events, or call
or write care of the Alumni Office at
Evergreen. We'll be keeping in touchso watch for us!

Did you know. . .
The average alumni gift to Evergreen last year increased seven percent?

Have
serious
ndeedj
fun.

From the Values and Goals Statement
of The Alumni Association.

alum

The Gig
Commission
Lives!

D

Through November Thursday
Originally a promotional wing of StuPeoples of WashDecember 8
dent Activities (in
Eric Tingstad and
ington Exhibit,
the early- and
Gallery 2, Library, Nancy Rumbel
mid-1980s), the Gig
TESC campus
perform live, 8 p.m.,
Commission has
' Of interest to all
Recital Hall,
been resurrected by
Communications
the Alumni AssociBuilding, TESC
Saturday
ation Board to plan
November 19
campus
and deliver a series Alumni Association Community and
of events for your
Fall Board Meeting campus invited
Evergreen calendar. 9:30 a.m., Organic
As noted, some of
Farm House, TESC Monday
these occasions
December 12
campus
have yet to be
All alumni welcome MPA and MES
firmed up, but
Graduate Programs
things will be hapTuesday
Reception hosted
pening this year. As November 22
by President Joe
Kate Crowe 77 and Claudia Schmidt
Olander, 7:30 p.m.,
Kitty Parker 76,
and John Gorka in
Library 4300,
both Evergreen
concert, 8 p.m.,
TESC campus
staffers and coRecital Hall, Com- All grad students,
secretaries of the
munications Build- faculty and alumni
board who coming, TESC campus welcome
posed this calendar, Campus and comprofess: "Let's rock munity invited
this place."

J
Tentative!
Saturday
January 21
End of the World
Ball—a big bash to
honor America's
new president
Time and place to
be announced
An official Gig
Commission event
Come one, come all

F

A

Tentative!
Saturday
February 11
Valentine's Day
Dance
In Seattle-time
and place to be
announced
Sponsored by the
Gig Commission
For Seattle-area
alums and their
pals

Regional
Receptions!
Possible locations:
San Francisco; Los
Angeles; New York;
Washington, D7C.; "
Boston; Chicago
and Portland.
Watch your mail!

Regional Receptions continue...
Tentative!
Saturday
April 1
April Fool's Dance
Time and place to
be announced
A Gig Commission
gig
Open to campus
and community

Seattle Regional
Reception
Late Winter-TBA
New Seattle
location
Watch for notices
Tentative!
Alumni Association Winter Board
Meeting
Look for an announcement about
time, date and place
or call your Alumni
Office, 866-6000,
ext. 6192
All alumni welcome

Get ready for Super June 3
Super Saturday!
Saturday!
11 a.m—7 p.m.,
TESC campus
Tentative!
Alumni AssociaAlumni activities
tion Spring Board include:
Meeting
••breakfast
Look for an an•-election of Alumni
nouncment about
Association officers
time, date and
*• afternoon
reception
place, or call your
Alumni Office,
>- dance til midnight
866-6000, ext. 6192 Come one, come all
All alumni welcome
Sunday
June 4
Commencement,
1 p.m., New Campus Recreation
Auditorium
A special invitation
to alums

Official Gig Commission Logo by Bilbo '80

Crank It Up!
by Jimmy Mateson '84
Alumni Association Vice President
This spring Evergreen will have 10,000
graduates. Does that knock you out
like it does me? Next question: What
good does that figure do?
Individually, lots of good, thank you.
Imagine the Greeners out there innoculating communities, businesses and
organizations with pernicious substances such as "group process,"
"facilitation," and the perpetual question of "why?"
But collectively, the question turns to
"What good could our five-figure
number do?" It's one thing for us to
have an Alumni Association, and quite
another to empower that group as a

working body, to use it to its potential.
Reminds me of having a nice car that
needs gas and oil. We are the gas in
the tank—the board volunteers. But
you can't fire up the engine without
oil—it'll burn up.
Cash greases the gears. Yep, even at
Evergreen. The last time the Association asked for money it was in the form
of membership dues. That flopped—we
got only 200 members. Once we
dropped the fees, our membership
soared to its present height of 9,600.
Roughly, operating budget is $10,000
a year. For an Association of almost

10,000 people, I think it's a piddly
budget. If, however, we acknowledged
that we wanted to work collaboratively,
we could multiply the funding level,
and put ourselves to work on projects
of international scope—drawing on the
collective experience and contacts of
10,000 Greeners!
Folks on the board are working hard.
But can we work smart? For instance,
would you rather be part of serving
chicken for five days, or put that
energy into, say, an international communications conference hosted at
Evergreen? That's not to rule out
chicken, but with your participation,

we can do more globally ambitious
things as well.
I'd like to ask you for some oil for
this engine. Just as important would be
gas—and don't forget we need maps,
too. What are the things you'd like to
see the Alumni Association do? Directions we should take? What things can
you help facilitate? We'll be continuing
this discussion on these pages, but it
won't be a dialogue until you join in.
Jump in the car along with myself and
the AA board, and let's go for it.
Whether this metaphorical beast is a
Ferrari or a Volkswagen bug, the time's
right to crank it up!

I

alum
news

Levy

Play Mestizaje For Me
Who says you can't get warm with a
radio? Only those who haven't heard
Lisa Levy's show on KAOS 89.3. Her
personable voice, full of Latino rhythm,
is as warm as a Spanish drink on a cold
night. It's a voice that makes you stop
and look at the radio: professional but
friendly, as if she's talking just to you,
sharing her excitement about Latino
music and culture.
Levy '86 is much more than a disc
jockey, however. A native of Quito,
Ecuador, she earned her wings seven
years ago on the airwaves of Evergreen's community radio station, KAOS
89.3-FM. Since then, she's evolved into
a consummate commentator on Latin
American music and news, and a
relentless believer in the entertainment and educational value of intercultural programming.
"Unlike the colonizers of the United
States, the Spanish conquered Central
and South America while mixing freely
with the indigenous peoples," says
Levy. "Latin America underwent

mestizaje, a process of combining
peoples, styles and personalities. Its
music also underwent mestizaje. Today,
you can hear the general history of the
whole continent in the music."
"Mestizaje" (pronounced mess-teezah-hay) is just what Levy delivers to
listeners over three Northwest FM
stations:
>• She continues to play the best of
Latin American folk music on KAOS
Wednesday evenings, 7-9 p.m.
>• Three years ago, she began driving
to KBCS 91.3 at Bellevue Community
College on Monday nights to do "The
Voice and Expression of Latin
America," a 9-10:30 p.m. variety of
music, live interviews, literary readings
and guest announcers.
>• In September, Levy added a new
skill to her repertoire when she took
over a mixed-format program at NPR
affiliate KUOW 94.4. Aired from 67:30 p.m. on Sundays, the show
features music and an hour of news
Levy distills from Latino satellite
sources.

Each of these shows is a bilingual
tour-de-force, for Levy translates many
of the songs into English for her audiences. Levy's listeners, many of whom
are frequest callers, clamor to hear a
wide range of Latin American songs
and performers from the indigenous
rhythms of groups like Quilapayun to
the studio perfection of artists such as
Ruben Blades.
"Latin American music is full of contrasts at every step—the rhythm, beat,
lyrics, instruments," she says. "Variety
is the name of the game. Even within
the same country, song expression
varies drastically between the highlands or the lowlands, the city or the
country, from the north of the continent or from the south, from this century or the last. Political borders have
little to do with the way the music
sounds.
"You could say that what I do is give
listeners information through interdisciplinary media," Levy says. "I play
a huge range of Latino music, but I put
each piece in its historical, geographical, anthropological and ethnic context. I want to give my audience a
global perspective."
In order to do so, Levy has branched
out as a media producer, grants writer
and curriculum developer in recent
years. Currently, she's working on
"Mirrored Images," a multi-media project which covers the relationship
between the music and history of her
native continent. Like the Latin
American music and history that is its
subject, "Mirrored Images" is all over
the map in the possible forms it could
take:
*-An educational video series for use in
middle schools across the country
»-A four-part radio series for public
and community radio stations
*• A television program that, if funded,
would air on public television and provide the basis for the educational
videos
>-A summer institute for middle and
high school teachers at Evergreen
which would focus on the cultural
history of Latin America
+• A college course for television
"Today's Latin American folk music
is a mixture of indigenous American,
Spanish and African derivations—all
components of the historical process,"
says Levy. "What makes music a good
tool to understand Latin America is
that the concrete details of history are
right there coming out of the speakers.
The music makes it so much fun to
learn."
And fun to play and listen. Next time
you're listening to one of Lisa's weekly
broadcasts, just give her a call and say,
"Play mestizaje for me."

The many faces of Binky

TH6

Binky Whiz Rolls
in the Stone
Pointing out that his name rhymes
with braining, and describing his cartoons as "caustic," his alma mater as
"progressive," and the artist himself as
"the kind, of guy who reads the fine
print and is not afraid of confrontations," the September 22 Rolling Stone
profiled Matt Groening '77. Aftergraduation, Groening moved to Los
Angeles and experienced the entrylevel miasma which still provides grist
for his now-famous cartoon strip, "Life
in Hell." Said strip debuted in The L.A.
Reader in 1978 and is presently syndicated in more than 70 publications.
Along with his wife, Deborah Caplan
(they were married in 1985), Groening
is now the driving force of Life in Hell,
Inc., creating "calendars, greeting
cards, T-shirts and coffee mugs," and,
beginning last year, a regular animation spot on Fox television's Tracey
Ullman Show. For a full copy of Tish
Hamilton's long and lively article,
check your local "progressive" library,
or write STONE/GROENING, Library
3122, The Evergreen State College,
Olympia, Washington 98505.

Hurlburt

Hurlburt Comes Full Circle
Neal Hurlburt '77 closed an academic,
as well as geographical, loop when he
came back to Evergreen this fall. By
hiring on to teach "Physical Systems,"
the college's option for advanced
physics students, he not only returned
to his alma mater, but to the very program in which he began his career as a
scholar.
Now a recognized expert in astrogeophysical research, Hurlburt had
just transferred to Evergreen in
1976—thirteen years ago this springwhen he signed up for the first-timeever offering of "Physical Systems,"
taught by Faculty Member Sig Kutter.
From that auspicious beginning,
Hurlburt went on to study indepen-

6

dently with Faculty Member Rob
Knapp, and then set his sights on a
doctorate at the University of Colorado
in Boulder. That led to a fellowship at
Cambridge University in England in
1985, and a lecture tour of western
Europe, which in turn led back to
Boulder in 1986. There he taught in
the graduate program and used the
National Science Foundation's
nationally-linked supercomputer to do
more research on the subject of his
doctoral thesis, planetary and stellar
convection, or the patterns made by
heat and cold on Earth, for instance, or
the sun.
What goes around, comes around.
Hurlburt recalls that he was admitted

to the doctoral program at Colorado
primarily on the basis of high GRE
scores—he thought. He later learned
the department had never received his
GREs, and that he, in fact, had been
admitted to the rigorous and competitive program purely on the strength of
his undergraduate records, including an
Evergreen transcript composed largely
of his self evaluations and faculty
evaluations by Kutter and Knapp.

alum
news
Class of 1973
Lindsley Cross, Wilton, ME, is the director of
Social Service at Franklin Memorial Hospital in
Farmington. She would like to hear from Vicki
Landers, wherever she may be!
Roger Goldingay, Malibu, CA, and his wife, Dr.
Carol Otis, have written a book entitled, "Campus Health Guide," which will be published by the
College Board in March, 1989.
C. Allan Hart passed away in June of this year.
Allan last worked as a staff member of the International Trade Institute at Portland State University where he served as coordinator of the statewide Field Study Program. The family suggests
remembrances be given to radio station KMHD
at Mt. Hood Community College in Gresham,
Catlin Gabel School or The Evergreen State
College.

Class of 1974
Charles Nishida, Mercer Island, WA, was promoted in April to AV/Video Production Coordinator for Puget Power.
Thorn Lufkin, Olympia, WA, earned his M.P.A.
from The Evergreen State College in 1984 and
now works for the Dept. of Ecology as an
Environmental Planner supervising the
Underground Storage Tank Project.
Terry Bonynge and David Smullin (75), Arden
Hills, MN, are the proud parents of Emily Aurora
Smullin, born May 30, 1988. Emily joins brother
Josh, 6 years.

Class of 1975
Patricia Lott Meesen, Bellevue, WA, an opera
singer who has performed with the Seattle,
Eugene, Portland, Tacoma-Pierce County Operas,
and the Seattle, Oregon, Central Oregon, and
Mesa Symphony Orchestras, began her own onewoman opera company, Cameo Opera. Cameo
Opera performed for more than a dozen schools
and clubs both in the Northwest and in Arizona
over the winter.
Gary Lorentzen, Seattle, WA, has taught high
school social studies and German for the last ten
years, the last eight at Edmonds High School. He
is currently working towards his doctorate in Germanics at the University of Washington.
Steven Lange passed away in June as a result of
drowning due to an automobile accident. Steven
received his law degree from the University of
North Dakota and opened a private law practice
in Seattle in 1984. He and his family moved to
Olympia in 1987. He used "an old country lawyer
approach," often bartering with clients in lieu of
cash. About a third of his practice was devoted to
battered women and sexually abused children.
His contributions to the Olympia community will
be missed.
Stan Marshburn, Olympia, WA, left Evergreen
in June after five-and-a-half years as assistant to
the president for governmental relations, and immediately launched into a new venture in his position as assistant director for policy in the Office of
Financial Management for Washington state.

Class of 1976
Joseph Dear and Leslie Owen (77), Olympia,
WA, are the proud parents of Benjamin Owen
Dear, born April 29, 1988.
Jan (Burnham) Dunlop and her husband, Dave,
have been married eight years and live in the
Richmond hills overlooking San Francisco Bay.
She's a teacher, he's a postal employee, and the
two of them are seeking an independent adoption.
Jan points out that this way of adopting a baby is
perfectly legal and presently accounts for 80 percent of California's adoptions. While many agency
adoptions take five years or longer, independent
adoptions average closer to one year. Working
with an independent adoption center, Jan and
Dave have sent out letters describing themselves
and are generally spreading the word as far as
they can. They ask that any information or questions be directed to their adoption counselor at
(415) 944-4744, or to their home at 1507 Aqua
Vista Road, Richmond, CA, 94805.

Laurie Jones, Minneapolis, MN, has been with
the Minneapolis Park System as a groundskeeper
for seven years. After trips to the Grand Canyon
and Canyonlands in the summer of '87, she
headed for Calgary and Banff this past summer.
Greg Irwin and Vickie Phelps, Tucson, AZ, plan
to relocate near Grand Junction, CO, and start a
new venture in tissue culture asparagus farming.
All Greeners interested in helping an asparagus
farm get off the ground—call Greg and Vickie!
Beverlee Bowman Price, Edmonds, WA, left her
job as associate editor on a Seattle magazine to
go back to school for a nursing degree. She is
enrolled in Shoreline Community College's nursing program and after completion, hopes to get a
master's at the University of Washington.
Anne Pflug, Bothell, WA, began her duties as
Bothells' city manager in June 1988. Prior to taking this position, Anne was the finance director
for the city of Springfield, Oregon, the assistant
to the city manager in Bellevue, WA, and the
chief administrative officer for Poulsbo, WA.
Frank Greif, Seattle, WA, has been named vice
president of Wright Runstad and Company, one of
the region's largest commercial real estate
developers. Frank joined the company in 1983 as
founder and general manager of WRC Telecommunciations, an affiliate formed to provide
telecommunications services to tenants in the
company's commercial office properties. He is currently involved in marketing the company's
downtown Seattle projects.

Class of 1977
Jo Feldman, San Francisco, CA, changed her
name to Jo Falcon and married William Spears on
November 1, 1987.
Peggy Gallaher, Wellesley, MA, received a Ph.D.
from the University of Texas this past summer
and will teach personality psychology at Wellesley
College during the 1988-89 academic year.
Neal Hurlburt, Olympia, WA, is teaching
"Physical Systems" at Evergreen this year. See
story on facing page.
John McLaughlin, Tfelluride, CO, received an
M.A. from St. John's College in August. After
two years of work, he has completed illustrations
for the book Going the Distance. John asks if
there are any fellow "pin-heads," telemark skiers
in the San Juans?
Diane Vosick, McLean, VA, completed a masters
in arts in geography at the University of
Minnesota in April. She is married with three
children and works part time for Resource
Management Consultants, Inc. in Washington,
D.C., in the areas of land use and agriculture.

Class of 1978
Kathy Clark, Portland, OR, a recent recipient of
a National Endowment for the Arts Interdisciplinary Arts Grant, is recovering after eight
years of performance art with the group, The Girl
Artists. She works as a public relations coordinator for The Oregon Art Institute's Northwest
Film and Video Center.
Ellen Pickell, Hoquiam, WA, announced June 9
that she would seek the state Senate seat held by
incumbent Sen. Paul Conner, (D) Sequim, for the
past 31 years. Ellen and her husband own and
operate logging and construction companies in
rural Grays Harbor County and a music studio in
Hoquiam.
Don Whiting, Olympia, WA, state director of
elections since 1974, was appointed assistant
secretary of state for the state of Washington by
Secretary of State Ralph Munro in June.
Marge Brown, Olympia, WA, an employee of the
college since 1979 and now working in Photo
Services, is teaching the "Hand in Hand" program at Evergreen this fall.
Kim Schaefer-Schnittger, Watsonville, CA,
works in a local elementary school. She spends
her free time with her husband and two boys,
Aaron, 5 years, and Maxwell, 4 years; 2 horses;
dogs; cats and assorted critters. Kim is currently
working on her primary teaching credential
through Chapman College.
Marc DeLaunay, Seattle, WA, is the senior vice
president and head of public relations at Elgin
Syferd, Seattle's third-largest advertising and
publicity firm.
Anne Stone, Chapel Hill, NC, is a senior
research technician at Duke University in the
division of cardiology.
Petrina Walker, Olympia, WA, is working on an
oral history, photo essay book about the nuclear
arms race. Petrina married a man from Spain a
year and a half ago.

Class of 1979
The Dunlops

Mea Alexander Moore, Khartoum, Sudan, East
Africa. After moving to the Sudan with husband,
Cliff, Mea taught sixth grade and worked with
Ethiopian refugees. She attended the School for
International Training in Brattleboro, VT, last
year where she completed coursework for a
Master of Arts in Teaching English as a Foreign
Language. She is back in the Sudan working on
her thesis which concerns a culture and orientation project for Ethiopian refugees who have been
accepted for resettlement in the United States.
John Petrich, Arlington, MA, completed his
M.P.A. degree at Harvard's Kennedy School of
Government in June.

Julie Grant, Olympia, WA. Julie has hired three
professional counselors who are all Evergreen
grads to work with her at her rehabilitation
counseling service, Grant and Associates. Julie's
daughter, Kendall, is now an Evergreen student.
Sutapa Basu, Seattle, WA, is the director of
women's programs at Bellevue Community College Previously, she was the head of women's programs at North Seattle Community College.
Michael Price, Urbana, IL, is working toward an
M.D./Ph.D. at the University of Illinois.
Louise Williams, Olympia, WA, is teaching
"Studio Project" at Evergreen this fall.
David Schneider, Selah, WA, is the coordinator
of the DWI Safety Belt Taskforce of the Yakima
Valley Conference of Governmenta
Allison Duryee, Falls Church, VA, received a
masters in Public Administration from the
University of Southern California and now works
as a biologist with the Environmental Protection
Agency in Washington, D.C. She and Richard
Martin were married in 1986 and are the parents
of newborn son, Alex, bom three months
premature. Alex is critically ill and Allison would
appreciate hearing from her Greener friends. Her
address is 3401 Radnor Place, Falls Church, VA
22042, (703) 241-4049.

Class of 1980
Raymond Lee, Seattle, WA, works in User
Education at MicroSoft.
Myles Mustoe, East Wenatchee, WA, earned
Fourth place in the Novelty/Miscellaneous
Category of the Professional Song Division for
the second consecutive year in the eighth annual
Music City Song Festival in Nashville, TN. His
winning song is entitled, "A Wooden Frog for
Christmas." Myles is an adjunct professor at Central Washington University where he earned his
master's degree in education in 1987.
Marilyn Sturdevant, Portland, OR, received her
master's in social work from Portland State
University in 1987 and now works at a hospice
house.
Sherry (Smith) Falkner-Rose, Mountain View,
CA, has been developing her career in human
resources with the ROLM Systems Division of
IBM since 1984. Sheny writes, "The balance of a
broad perspective and a focused goal, and the
partnership between student and instructor- in
planning and evaluating quarterly goals, were two
extremely valuable tools. Combining those
lessons with the discovery at Evergreen that 1
really could do anything I set my mind to (like
understanding science!) and the memory of the
meditative pace my footsteps traced on the running trail to the beach place my experiences at
Evergreen in their true perspective—a critically
integral part of who I am today."
Deanna Ray, Seabeck, WA, is in her fifth season
as a career seasonal park ranger at Scenic Beach
State Park. Deanna was a delegate to the Governor's ICSW Conference from Washington State
Parks.
Margaret Millard, Graham, NC, received her
teaching certificate from the state of North
Carolina and plans to teach fourth grade students
in 1989 after her second child is bom. She and
her husband, Daniel Tolfree, continue to sell
organic produce grown on their farm.
Neil Shamberg, head of a two-generation
Evergreen family (sons Bruce and Steven
Shamberg both graduated in 1982) and dedicated
alum who pioneered chicken barbeques to raise
funds for the Alumni Association, died this summer. "Neil and his family have always been loyal
to the college," comments Larry Stenberg, director of alumni relations. "His many contributions
will be missed."

Class of 1981
Noah Poritz, Bozeman, MT. After employment
with Glacier National Park and the USDA's
Rangeland Insect Lab, Noah has a new position
with the USDA's Bio-Control Facility where he
continues to work on the biological control of exotic weeds. He received his M.S. in Entomology
from Montana State University on the biological
control of the week leafy spurge. He is an avid
skier and mountain biker. His wife, Leona, is proprietor of a company which markets and distributes beneficial insects which attack exotic weeds.
They are the parents of two year old Wesley.
Leon Werdinger, Lajitas, TX. "I would like to
thank all of my fellow alumni who donated explosives for my last venture. I'll put the leftover's
to a good cause. I'm currently entering a career
in publishing. My first project is to produce a bible translated for left-handed people. Who knows
what's next?"
Jim Gilfix, Farmington Hills, MI, received his
Masters in Social Work from the University of
Michigan in 1987 and now works as a social
worker in a chemical dependency program.
David Kaplan, Seattle, WA, is an audio manager
and buyer for Magnolia HiFi and Video.
Audrey Nickell, Bainbridge Island, WA. Audrey,
her husband Eric, and three children have moved
back to Washington after several years in
Pasadena, CA. They will travel to the Philippines
in spring 1989 where they will learn the language
and culture of the Samal people and help
establish a culturally relevant Christian church.
Matt Perkins, Seattle, WA. For the last seven
years, Matt has spent half his life in the
wilderness working for Outward Bound. When
not in the woods, he worked at temporary jobs in
Seattle or traveled. He began law school at the
University of Washington this fall.

Class of 1982
Eric Einspruch, Miami, FL, completed his Ph.D.
in Educational Research and Evaluation at the
University of Miami. He is currently employed in
the Office of Institutional Research at MiamiBade Community College.
John Irwin, Pittsburgh, PA, is attending Pittsburgh Theological Seminary pursuing a Master
of Divinity degree in the Presbyterian Church.
Sue Stadler, Boise, ID, has been teaching kindergarten and first grade at the Children's School in
Boise, as well as coaching volleyball and soccer
and pursuing "outdoorsy stuff like hiking and
biking.
Kim Audette, nowhere specific, has done extensive travelling in the Orient, Europe, the Middle
East and the Yucatan. She works as a shaman
disguised as a street musician and recently
earned a B.S. from Washington State University
in microbiology with a minor in zoology.

Class of 1983
Kevin Leavitt, Grants Pass, OR, works at the
Paradise Ranch Inn in Grants Pasa
Sarah Cassatt, Seattle, WA, is attending the
University of Washington as a graduate student
in the Civil Engineering Department studying
fresh water quality control.
Andrew Harper, Seattle, WA, has been a first
and second-grade teacher at Sacajawea Early
Childhood Education Center for three years.
Andrew was one of 10 Seattle teachers awarded a
crystal apple and a $2,000 "thank you" in the
fourth annual Excellence in Education awards.
Andrew uses poetry, writing and humor to teach
math and reading, recruits parent volunteers to
assist in the classroom and brings in area professionals to work with students.
Shawn Banta, Nashville, TN, and Erik Haugland
were married June 11, 1988 in Seattle.

Class of 1984
Gary Cantrell and Mary Bittinger, Thunderbolt,
GA. Gary teaches fifth grade and recently
obtained his U.S. Coast Guard Captain's license.
Mary is the coordinator of the Expanded Food
and Nutrition Education Program in Chatham
County and is a faculty member at the University
of Georgia Cooperative Extension Service.
Jocelyn (Bucci) and Bob Van Belle, Yosemite,
CA. Jocelyn and Bob report, "Since graduation,
we've married, signed on with the National Park
Service, had our teeth fixed and begun to eat
more beef. Bob continues to drink a great deal of
coffee, and dreams of the Asterisk often. Jocelyn
continues to ruin her good work dresses with
premium brand oil paints. Bob reads Huckleberry
Finn over and over and subscribes to literary
quarterlies that he uses to dress up the living
room coffee table. We've spent much of our free
time flailing our way up steep granite cliffs
throughout Baja, the Sierras, and the American
Southwest. We live in a small shack beneath some
400 year old oak trees in Yosemite National Park
where we work as nickel-and-dime administrative
drudges. We are very happy."

Class of 1985
Nan Warshaw, Chicago, IL, works as an office
manager and rental agent for a real estate company. She is also the youth arts coordinator for a
non-profit youth organization in Evanston, IL,
where she is working to create a youth music
center.
Catherine McLeod, Aspen, CO, has started a
public radio station, KAJX 91.5 FM, Roaring
Fork Public Radio. Catherine hopes "everyone
voted this month" and reminds you all to "support
your local public radio station."
Tom Mueller, Indianapolis, IN, has been hired as
an animal trainer/zookeeper at the newly-opened
Indianapolis Zoo.
Kent Kleinsasser, Seattle, WA. Kent and wife,
Angela, are the proud parents of Sophia Rosa,
born May 23, 1988. Kent is employed by Safeco
Properties and is enrolled in City University's
Master in Public Administration program.

Class of 1986
Douglas Mackey, Tacoma, WA, has been hired by
the Tacoma Actor's Guild as the sound designer
for the 1988-89 season.
Kurt Batdorf, Monroe, WA, is a reporter for the
Monroe Monitor/Valley News.
Rachel Vickrey, Albuquerque, NM, received her
Master's degree in mathematics from the University of New Mexico and is a math instructor in
the Arts & Sciences Division at Albuquerque
Technical-Vocational Institute.

Class of 1987
Lawrence Dominguez is serving with the Peace
Corps in Liberia, West Africa.
Brian Finley, Osaka, Japan, is teaching English
at the Nichibei Eigo Gakkuen school and learning
all he can about life in Japan. His goal is to eventually work in a Japanese business.
Larry Faulk, Tacoma, WA, stepped down as
chairman of the Washington Pollution Control and
Shoreline Hearings boards to enter the race to
replace Joe Stortini as Pierce County executive.

-

Two for the Road—Just two of more
than 200 Images that will travel the
state with the Peoples of Washington
exhibit are these photographs of South
Aberdeen millworkers (above) and
Mexican folk dancers Kathy and Isaac
Shultz-Reyes (at right). Economic
development and the fact that Washington's peoples come from many
places can be seen in the Croatian,
East Indian, Filipino, Finnish, French,
Japanese, Norwegian and Polish faces
gathered in the Aberdeen photo, which
was taken at the Bay City Lumber Co.
around 1919 and provided for exhibition by Bronco's Liberty Tavern
Historical Museum. The Shultz-Reyes
photo, which displays just a peek of
the thrill and color Washington's
cultures can offer each other, was
taken during a 1984 performance at
Seattle Central Community College.

"Our role is not to interpret
other cultures.. .Ours is to bring
in other people who can do that,
giving form to their information.

Sid White leans his chair back against
the wall, face squinting into a perplexed smile, as he searches his mind
for the point in time when Peoples of
Washington was conceived.
"That would go back to about 1980,"
says White, leaning forward again. "I
produced this fantastic exhibit called
'Isaac Shamsud-Din: Public and Personal Work,' presenting the work of a
Black mural artist from Portland."
The word "fantastic" reveals White's
fascination with cultural diversity. For
the Evergreen founding faculty
member and director of Exhibit Touring Services, the Shamsud-Din exhibition was the first major manifestation
of an enthusiasm that haa guided his
work the past nine years, culminating
with Peoples of Washington.
Such exhibits are not created alone.
In the case of the Peoples of Washington exhibit, 21 scholars and museum
professionals, representing ethnic communities across the state, provided information and cultural insights. The
"Research and Production" teamcomprised mostly of Evergreen staff,
students and alumni—included a
research coordinator, three field
researchers, a text editor, graphic
designer, office manager and others.
Forty-two photographers and five artists are credited. And contacts were
made with scores of people who work
in the 37 libraries, newspapers,
museums and historical societies that
contributed photos, art and information. Even Michael Tesia, the proprietor of Bronco's Liberty Tavern
Historical Museum in South Aberdeen,
contributed a photograph (the same
photo across the top of this page) that
was ultimately used in the exhibit's
promotional poster.

Washi
By Mike Wark
Information Specialist

B

1

In the trenches with her husband
was Evergreen Faculty Librarian Pat
Matheny-White, who has balanced
White's skills as grant writer, curator
and project director on three major
projects with her skills in research and
documentation. Their combined talents
culminate in the Peoples of Washington
exhibit, an artful selection and display
of myriad images integrated with factual accounts of peoples pictured. The
result is a gallery experience that
swells with life—a visible diary of
Washington people
"Our role is not to interpret other
cultures," says White. "Ours is to bring
in other people who can do that, giving
form to their information."
Each image and paragraph in Peoples
of Washington is the tip of an icebergsized chunk of work and piles of information. Not all of that information remains submerged, thanks to extensive
archiving.
However, adventures in making an
archive from "primary research" are
seldom recorded.
"Sometimes our research gets very
primary," says Matheny-White. "Once it
involved going into Alfonso Cabrera's
garage to gather documents on the
beginnings of the Chicano Studies
Department at the University of
Oregon."
After tracing the source of a
photograph through several contacts,
the trail led to the home of an 84-yearold Croatian woman, Mary Babare Love,
in Tacoma, who invited Sid Whit6 to investigate her attic for more
photographs. There he found a treasure
of images that greatly increased the
recorded history of the Croatian
peoples in this state.

Primary research is akin to
sleuthing. You find your information
through interviews with people such as
ethnic community leaders and elders,
buried in the documents of organizations, from posters on walls and in
other unusual places. This isn't
material you can find in any library, until someone like Matheny-White is done
with it. Then you can access it from
most libraries through bibliographies
or indexes, using interlibrary loan.
"I've developed a huge bibliographic
database and an extensive archive for
Peoples of Washington, primarily
visual, and mostly photographic," says
Matheny-White. "There's a lot of intere^st by teachers in the schools about
this kind of information, and for
assistance in curriculum development
using these materials."
The duo say they couldn't have
helped to create Peoples of Washington
without the experience gained working
with all kinds of people on previous
projects. But the roots of Peoples of
Washington trace directly to the Isaac
Shamsud-Din exhibit.
"Because of that project, we thought
how great it would be to write a grant
for a similar project featuring a variety
of cultures."
The result was the National Endowment for the Humanities funded
"Chicano and Latino Artists in the
Pacific Northwest" exhibit that toured
1984 through 1985. This project was
supplemented by a huge archive, an
Evergreen-produced catalog with artists' work and scholarly essays, and
two essays co-authored by White and
Matheny-White that were published in
regional and national publications.

"In 1984 we began thinking about
Peoples of Washington," says White.
In 1985 Evergreen helped get the
ball rolling by giving White and
Matheny-White a grant to help prepare
a grant proposal for full-funding.
"There was about a year of intensive
grant writing and networking on both
our parts," says White. The Evergreen
State College Foundation later gave
Matheny-White a grant to begin
developing the archive.
The combination of grant proposals
and scholarly networking won Peoples
of Washington a $70,000 grant from the
Washington Centennial Commission in
October, 1987, followed by $19,000 in
grants from the Washington Commission for the Humanities.
"Past exhibits dealt with art and
culture, but Peoples of Washington
deals with people and culture, though
art is included. That's a change in the
focus of our work, and we felt it was
important to get to that," says White.
There is much that's important "to
get to" in the Peoples of Washington
exhibit. While it was a long road for
White, Matheny-White, their Evergreen team and a statewide network of
cultural experts, to bring the project to
fruition, the historical road traveled by
the state's incoming peoples was, and
continues to be, a long and winding
journey, indeed. Come out to Evergreen's Gallery 4 soon, or any of the
exhibit's subsequent stops around the
state, and treat yourself to this rich
and varied portrait of Washington's
cultural heritage.

Peoples on Tour
The museum and gallery version of the
Peoples of Washington exhibit is
scheduled for display in the following
locations during the Centennial year:
November 1988
The Evergreen State College, Olympia
Gallery 4, Library
For hours, call 866-6000, ext. 6062 or
ext. 6128
December 1988
Washington State Historical Society,
Tacoma
January 1989
Northlight Gallery, Everett
Community College
February 1989
House of Representatives,
Capitol Campus, Olympia
March 1989
Seattle Central Community College
April 1989
North Central Washington Museum,
Wenatchee
June 1989
Cheney Cowles Memorial Museum,
Spokane
July 1989
Carnegie Arts Center, Walla Walla
August 1989
Yakima Nation Cultural Center,
Toppenish
September 1989
Esvelt Gallery, Columbia Basin
College, Pasco
October 1989
Larson Gallery, Yakima Valley College
November 1989
Columbia Arts Center, Vancouver
The exhibit will be displayed through
1990. Also, a smaller, free-standing
version of the exhibit, designed for
lobbies, malls and other public spaces,
will tour the state. Dates and locations
for both tours are available through
Exhibit Touring Services at The
Evergreen State College, (206)
866-6000, ext. 6075.

hingtoris Family Diary

geosalute

Geoduck
Salute
People, businesses and
organizations who gave to
the Evergreen Fund,
July 1, 1987-June 30, 1988
The President's
Club
($1,000 or more)
Elizabeth Balderston
Wes and Marie Berglund
AT&T Information Systems
Barlovento International
Carolyn Bassett
Leonard Berger
The Boeing Company
David Brownwood
Burlington Northern Foundation
Yvonne and Edward Cazier
Pacific Coca-Cola Bottling
Richard Collier
Joseph Dear and Leslie Owen
Digital Equipment Corp.
James Dinerman
Robert Eggert
Victor Eisner
Margaret Enderlein
Don and Willa Fassett
Vicki Friend
William Fuller
Herbert and Carol Fuller
Ann Gavell
Gerry and Warren Ghormley
Glazer Camera Supply
The Saul and Dayee G. Haas
Foundation
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Kathy and Tom Healy
Hewlett Packard Foundation
Patrick and Maureen Hill
Jean and Ira Hurlburt
Bill Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. John (Bud) Koons
Kathleen and Gene Krattli
Barbara MacPhail
Mr. and Mrs. Neil McReynolds
Kim Kaufman Malin and Larry
Malin
George Mante
Matsushita Foundation
Miriam and Charles Matthews
Dr. and Mrs. Charles McCann
Jeanne and Raymond Meredith
Paul Mott and Kris Johansson
M. J. Miirdock Charitable Trust
June and Connel Murray
Joan and Dennis Peterson*
Peter Broffman
Puget Sound Power and Light
Tish and Robert Reeves
Alex and Suzanne Rosenkrantz
Marriott Corporation
Daniel Scheuer
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schiff
Seafirst Foundation
Adele and Ralph Smith
Mr. and Mrs. John Trimm
Helene Van Buren
Leslie and Mark Vestrich
David Wagoner
Susan Washburn
Al Melvin Weinstein
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Williams
Donna and Dwight Williamson
Gary and Sandra Worrell
Exxon Education Foundation

L&E Bottling Company, Inc.
Charles and Miriam Matthews
Robert Carol Olson
Leslie Woodruff Owen
Martha Pierce
Alice and Michael Salinero
Gerald and Patsi Scofield
Russell and Joyce Sears
Rebecca Sievers
Niels and Diane Skov
Allen and Nancy South
Joel and Mary Stein
Daphne and David Tang
Jessie Tetlow
Washington State Labor Council
Women's University Club

The Evergreen
100 Club
($100-$249)
Walter Acuna
Steven and Rose Alfred
Durwood and Dorys Alkire
Alpha Delta Kappa

Clifford and Charlotte Alterman
Barbara Altman
Theodore and Gertrude Altonen
Mary Anderson
Simon and Carolyn Ansell
William and Deborah Arney
William and Helen Aron
Shirley Arton
Susan Bartlett
William Bartlett
Joan Battuello
Robert Pike and Nancy Becker
Bruce Bedinger
John Bennett
Abraham Bergman
Gerald and Patricia Blakley
Nicholas Blattner
Renee Blattner
Fowler and Norma Blauvelt
Mary Bley
Marianna Tenney Boles
Mr. and Mrs. William Bowen
Brakeley, John Price Jones, Inc.
James and Kathleen Brewster
George and Dorothy Brodmerkel

Angela Brown
Nathan and Irene Buitenkant
Bartlett and Gladys Burns
Sandy Butler
Douglas Canning
Harriet Caplow
John Carter, Jr.
Lawton Case
Peter Cerbone
Craig Chance
Claudia Chotzen
Irene Christy
Cigna Foundation
Atlee and Mary Clapp
Stephen Clark
Janet Cleveland
Nicholas Clinch
Kenneth Coffin
Errol and Cissy Copilevitz
Cathy Corballis
Larry Grouse
Albert and Charlotte Dangler
Donald and Cherie Davidson
Joe and Garnett Davis
David DeFeyter

Dr. and Mrs. Don DeBra
A.M. DeButts
Kathryn Dernham
Stephen and Lucienne Dimitroff
Debra Dishberger
Eleanor Dornan
Wilbur Downs
Susan Dubuisson
Alfred and Ingrid Eckersberg
Marilyn Erickson
Patrice Erickson
Duane and Nada Estes
Mary Feldman
Don Fincke
Robert and Helen Fisher
Donald and Susan Forsling
Russell Fox
Patricia Frank
Paul and Genevieve Frankenberg
Mary Fross
John Gallagher
Kathleen Garcia
Robert and Sandra Gates
Arthur and Barbara Geller
General Electric Foundation

Evergreen Fund Has Banner Year
By Forrest Wilcox,
Director of the Evergreen Fund
You are all tremendous! What a fabulous year
you've given the Evergreen Fund for 1987-88.
Your generous support provided an important
margin of excellence for students and faculty as
they continued to show why Evergreen is one of the
most acclaimed liberal arts colleges in the nation.
Here's one major accomplishment for the Evergreen Fund: last year the average gift from alumni
and parents increased a whopping 16 percent from
the year before. Congratulate yourselves! Call
Guinness!
Also, the total for private gifts was very impressive indeed, as last year's total of $1.1 million
exceeded the previous year by more than $560,000.
Lots of great things happened for the Phone-AThon, too. We moved it to October to kickoff the
year in grand style. It worked. We really enjoyed
talking to you in the fall, when the school year's
beginning to pop. And talk we did: more people
were contacted by phone than ever before, and the
amount of money pledged to the Evergreen Fund
increased by 22 percent.
We still get questions about the purpose of an
annual fund. See if this helps: think of the Evergreen Fund as a living endowment for the college.
Last year, contributions came from the nearly 3,000

alumni, parents and friends you see listed on the
following pages. This support boosted the college's
45 Foundation Scholarships (see page 14 for this
year's recipients), student and faculty activity
grants, Library acquisitions, programming on community radio KAOS 89.3-FM, and many other parts
of the Evergreen cause. These gifts are irreplaceable because they're used every year in areas that
have no other source of support.
The Evergreen Fund is operated by The Evergreen State College Foundation, which is administered by the Board of Governors, a volunteer group
of donors, educators, business people and alumni
(see the next spread for two Governors in profile).
In case you're wondering, the Foundation manages
all the private and grant support that comes to the
college, and, at the same time, keeps its own
operating expenses to less than 5 percent.
As you can tell from the preceding pages, Evergreen is off to a great start. As I write, this fall's
Phone-A-Thon is well underway, and our student
callers are chatting away to alumni, parents and
friends about academic programs, faculty old and
new, and current issues on campus. It's good to be
back on one of the most intellectually energetic and
vibrant campuses in the country, and you've
definitely been a big part of making it happen.

The Cooper
Point Club
($500-$999)
Aerospace Machinists Lodge 751
Earl and Jan Anderson
James and Georgia Fowler
Herb Gelman
Thomas Ghormley
The HCA Foundation
Jean and John Hennessey, Jr.
W. Thomas Hudson, Jr.
Heather Leach
Robert and Roberta Mahler
Christina Meserve
Peter and Anna Marie Morton
Olympia Garden Club
Pacific American Institute
Michael Rainwater
Irwin and Marion Saltzman
Virginia Schmidt
Seafair
TESC Class of 1987
Joan and Mortimer Thomas
Vedder Foundation
Helene Van Buren
Marilyn Ward
Helen Wolf

Tower Club
($2504499)
Margaret Birnbaum
Kay Boyd
Harry Branch
Stephen Brozovich
Katherine Bullitt
Rita Cooper
Fred Goldberg
Harry and Rosemary Gregg
Patricia Griffith
Hafer Price Rinehart & Schwerin
I. Frank Hartman
Thomas Hornbein
Japanese American Citizens
League
Lisa Johnson
K&T Distributing
Robert and Helena Knapp

10

YOU'VE GOT TO HAND IT TO THEM!
Ready and waiting to turn your gifts into Evergreen dreams is the college's Development team of
(left to right): Shelly Allsup, office assistant; Debbie Garrington, secretary; Ellie Dornan, director
of research and records; Helen Stoutnar, secretary; Forrest Wilcox, director of the Evergreen fund
and Don Chalmers, director of corporate/fund relations and executive Foundation director.

George and Ellen Ghilarducci
Leslie and Ardelle Gile
George and Lila Girvin
H. Waldo and Shirley Goglin
Eva Goldberg
Julie Grant
Robert and Rose Green
Jon Gribskov
William and Bertha Groves
Julia Gulden
James and Susan Haley
James Hartley, III
Donna Hayes
Thomas and Kathy Healy
Wanda Hedrick
John Hennessey, III
Richard Hesik
Mark and Marilyn Hoehne
Carolyn Duniway Hoffman
Joseph Edward Hogan
Marion Hogan
Nicola Hohn
Richard Hunter
International Business Machines
Wilbur and Virginia Johnson
Theodore and Darlene Johnsrude
Henry Judd
Phelps Kelley
Janice King
Raymond Eula Kirby
Thomas Hugh Kirschner
Paul and Nancy Klotz
Jennifer Knauth
Daniel Koch
Elisabeth Koch-Greene
Mitsuhiro and Lilly Kodama
Edward Kormondy
Henry and Carmen Korn
Robert and Jean Kramer
Lyda Kuth
Elizabeth Kutter
Thomas and Evelyn Lajiness
Isabelle Lamb
James Lang
Marcia Levenson
James and Helen Linger1
Gene and Carol Little
John and Edna Lyons
Carolyn and Steven Mackey
James and Nancy MacWhinney
Rona and Harvey Malofsky
Martin Marietta Corporation
Foundation
Neil and Nancy McReynolds
Roberta and Harold McClary
Lawrence Charles McDonald
James and Jacqueline McFarran
McGraw-Hill Foundation
Peter and Shirlee Meador
Lee Meister
Arnold and Ann Millhauser
Robert and Mary Murphy
Vreni and Barbara Naess
Melissa Faith Naso-Kaplan
National Steel and Shipbuilding
James and Katherine Nelson
Charles Nishida
Mark Noble
Wesley Miles Norman
Michiko Ogasawara
William Pennie Oliver
Richard and Patricia Oltman
Olympia Lady Lions
Peter and Mary Ellen Onno
Martyn and Candace Owen
Paccar Foundation
Hamilton and Muriel Page
Leonard Pagliaro
Mark and Linda Papworth
Victoria Yeager Patton
Russell Edward Paulsrude
Glenn and Leslie Paxton
Rosemary Peterson
Wallace Quistorff
Rainier National Bank
Mary Randall
Doug and Sandra Rasmussen
Marvin Mary-Lynne Reiner
Denise Robertson
Alice Robinson
William and Katia Robinson
Arnaldo and Lucia Rodriguez
Sarah Rolph
Philip and Marianne Ross
David and Joanne Rudo
Lloyd and Norma Clayton Sabini
Oscar and Lois Sandberg
Mr. and Mrs. A.E. Saunders
John and Joan Schick
Marg and Gerry Schiele
Service Employees International
Union
Lester and Harriet Servid
Terry Setter
George and Clara Shinn
Warren and Virginia Simms
Maxine Sitts
Richard Noel Skadan
Amigo and Mildred Soriano
Mark Stephen Souder
Oscar and Barbara Soule
Tania and Tobben Spurkland
William and Carolyn Staley
William and Linda StanleyLarry Stenberg
Cheryl Stephani and Stan
Marshburn
Sarah Stranahan
Bruno and Inge Strauss
Sundstrand Corporation
Foundation
Richard and Patsy Swindler
Tyrone Thomas
Kenneth and Joan Thompson
Robert Byrd Thompson
Three Treasures Sangha
Fred Thunberg
Roberta Tidland
Jeanne Shappell Tribe
John Turner
UNISYS
Washington Federation of State
Employees

geosalute
Neil Waterman
Robert and Lnuisa Wells
Dorcas Wheaton
Sid and Pat Matheny White
Robert and Betty Williams
Irmgard and Herbert Wimberger
Janice Wood
Karen Wynkoop
Barbara Yanick
George and Carol Yarbrough
Ted and Ruth Yoshino
David Young
Marjorie Yung

Friends of Evergreen
A
Michael and Bessie Aiello
Glenn and Wisten Aldrich
Richard Alexander
Wendell and Caroline Allen
Alpha Delta Kappa
Dean and Cathy Anderson
Glen Anderson
Archibald Sisters
Anne Argo
William and Deborah Arney
Wilbur and Cynthia Ashcraft
Robert and Jackie Ashton
The Asterisk & Cheese Library

B
Dick Banter
Steven Barnes
Susan Barnes
Andrew Bartels
Richard and Sue Bass
Carolyn Bassett
Leslie Batchelor
Judith Bayard-Gushing
Marcheta Bean
Richard and Dolores Bellon
Janet L. Benke
Steven and Sandra Berglund
Michael and Drew Betz
Michael and Frances Beug
Charles Bissonette
Jeff Blakley
Ronald and Kay Bland
Nathaniel and Mary Blankenship
Mindy Blaski
Elizabeth and Stewart Bledsoe
Blue Heron Bakery
Marianna Tenney Boles
Shirley Bond
The Book House
Walter and Noreen Boy
Harry Branch
Herbert and Shirley Bridge
Gerald and Mary Brown
William and Jovana Brown
Jon and Linda Bryant
Katherine Bullitt
Timothy and Nora Burke
Julie Burman
Bartlett and Gladys Burns
Stephen and Paula Butchko
Sandy Butler

c

Carrie Camus
Harriet Caplow
Amy Carlstad
John Carter, Jr.
Roe Castillo
Wyatt Gates
Peter Cerbone
Don Chalmers
Horace Christensen
Helen Christopher
Georgette Chun
Cal Clary
Isabelle and Elmer Clausen
Tony Clayton
Mark and Karen Clemens
Lois Click
Patricia Clifford
Nicholas Clinch
Coca-Cola Enterprises
Jon and Nina Collier
Richard Collier
Consulate General of Japan
Barbara Cooley
Stephanie Coontz
Rita Cooper
Kathleen Corbett
Raine Corliss
John and Taya Countryman
Pat and Julia Cox
Matthew Coyle
Ruth Adele and Theresa Crater
Harriet Creon
William and Joan Cullen
T.B. Curtz, Jr.

D
Teri Danielson
Mark Davenport
Pamela and Jonas Davila
Joe and Garnett Davis
A.M. DeButts
Dana Delaney
Katherine Deinpcey
Doug Denherder
Richard and Fern Dermond
Christina Deweese
Ben Dimitroff
Stephen and Lucienne Dimitroff
John and Linda Dion
Paul and Montine Dobbs
Jocelyn Dohm
Kenneth Dolbeare
Wilbur Downs
Donna Dresch
Susan Dubuisson
Nancy Dufraine

E
Jesus Echeverria
Edmonds High School Faculty
Richard Edwards
Robert Eggert
Lester and Mary Eldridge
R.J. and Sonya Elend

Anthony and Michele Elhardt
Diane Ellison
Brian and Kristi Elslip
Carol Elwood
Sarah Emery
Gary Engbrecht
Kathy and James Erlandson
Evergreen Expressions

F
Francis Feikema
Torres Felix
Jane Field
Susan Fiksdal
Son and Susan Finkel
Robert and Helen Fisher
William Fisher
Lowell and Marie Fletcher
Roberta Floyd
Timothy and Lezlie Ford
James and Georgia Fowler
John and Nelda Fraker
Mary Fross

G
John Gallagher
Gannett Foundation
Gardeners and Growers, Inc.
Sylvia Gardner
Booth Gardner
Tom Geha
Edward and Lynn Geis
Herb Gelman
George and Ellen Ghilarducci
John Giesen
Dixon Gilbreath
Leslie and Ardelle Gile
Roberts Gillis

Mark and Marilyn Hoehne
Charlee Holt
Dee and Gretchen Hooper
Marilyn Horning
Alice Houston
James and Evelyn Huff
Willard Humphreys
Douglas Hunter
Judith Huntley
Karen Huntsberger
Juanita Hurst
I
I.A.M. Aerospace Workers
Doris Ivanhoe
J
Japanese American Citizens
League
Julian and Josephine Jenner
Kristine Johansson
Jan Johnson
Mark and Deborah Johnson
Russell and Patricia Johnson
William and Barbara Johnson
Marc Jones
Stella Jordan
Leyton Jump

K
K & T DistributingSandra Kalla
Ilene Kasten
Marianne Kawaguchi
Debbie Kearney
Julia Kelen
Daniel Kelleher

Lauren and Jane Lucke
Charles Lukey
Jens Lund
Anne Lunt
Jocelyn Lyman
John and Jerilynn Lyman

M
Jean MacGregor
Barbara MacPhail
Michael and Barbara Maki
George Mante
Rudy and Gail Martin
Suzanne and Robert Marx
Ed and Catherine May
Wyoma May
Bill McCausland
Bertha McGonigle
Neil and Nancy McReynolds
Dorothy McCallum
Helen McCann-Scales
Roberta and Harold McClary
Tina McCloud
Betty and Loren McGovern
Susan McRae
Jeanne Mehringer
Margarita Mendoza de Sugiyama
Joyce Mercuri
Midwest Library Service
Truck Mills
Richard and Bertha Moe
Lorri Moore
Marian Morgan
Joe Morris
Scott Morrison
Katherine Morse

POSSCA, Inc.
John and Mary Powell
Robert and Elizabeth Preble
Brian Price
Christabel Prost
Puget Sound & Light Company
Puget Sound Area Local APWU
Melora and Kevin Purell

Gladys Stark
Larry Stenberg
Roger and Geraldine Stenberg
Chris and Irene Stevenson
Esther Stohl
Robert and Helen Stoutnar
Robert and Judith Sutherland
Sue and Ray Swanson

Q

T

Wallace Quistorff

R
David and Diana Ragsdale
Gordon and Ruth Raisler
John Rasch
Mark Rauch
Donald and Helen Reed
Sam and Margery Reed
Susan Reichert
Virginia and Gary Reid
Julie Reimer
Marvin and Mary-Lynne Reiner
Christine Reinhard
Reggie Rendon
Maryan Reynolds
Jewell Rhoades
Richard's Import Auto Service
Barbara Robbins
Denise Robertson
Joyce Robertson
William and Katia Robinson
Diana Robishaw
Gail Robson
Rockin' Rebels
Laura Roderick
Arnaldo and Lucia Rodriguez
Frederick Romero

Fare Thee Well
Evergreen greeted with mixed feelings the departure of two key officers this summer. The prevailing
emotions were happiness for, and pride in, Vice
President Sue Washburn and Development Director John Gallagher, who moved on to new positions in higher education in August and September,
respectively, after a combined 14 years in development and administration for the college.
The one-two punch of Evergreen's fund-raising
efforts since 1983, the Washburn-Gallagher duo led
a hard-working Development team that raised more
than $6.7 million in private and government contributions during their tenure. Last year their
operation pushed that figure over the $2 million
annual mark for the first time.
While Gallagher started at Evergreen as
Washburn's associate director of Development in
1983 and became director before his departure,
Washburn began her stay at the college as director
of Development and executive director of The
Evergreen State College Foundation in 1979, and
was appointed vice president for Development and
Administrative Services in 1985.
President Joe Olander is filling Washburn's
vacancy by reorganizing Development and Administrative Services into two new divisions with vice
presidents to head each. Twenty-year Evergreen
veteran Ken Winkley was appointed as vice president for Finance and Administration. A national
search is underway to fill the second vice presidency for College Advancement, which will unite

Gary and Linda Kellogg
Merilynn Kelly
Timothy Kelly
Gary Kelsberg
Christine Kerlin
Ernestine Kimbro
Gary King
Charles and Pearl Kirkpatrick
Robert and Helena Knapp
Herman Koehler
William Kopp
Edward Kormondy
H
William and Susan Koss
Hafer Price Rinehart & Schwerin Julia Koszalka
Peter Hahn
Todd Kowalski
Abby Haight
Kathleen and Gene Krattli
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Margaret Kurtagh
Stan Halle
Elizabeth Kutter
David and Molly Hallock
L
Ed Hamlin
L & E Bottling Company, Inc.
Jeffrey Hanks
Patricia Labine
James and Diana Hanson
Kaye V. Ladd
James and Patricia Harnish
Roger Lamarche
Stan Harrelson
Isabelle Lamb
Jane Harrison
Harold Lane
Ann Harvill
Lucy Larosa
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Haselbach
Howard Larson
Mr. and Mrs. James Haseltine
Alice Latunen
Walter and Mikiko Hatch
Lanny Lawrence
Scott Hauser
Hondo Layes
Katherine Haynes
Robert and Mary Leahy
Paul Henderson
Susan Lehman
Peta Henderson
David Lewis
Cheryl Henderson-Peters
Dick and Jane Lewis
Elizabeth Hendricks
Pamela Lewis
Frank Hensley
Jeffrey and Eva Liang
Dale and Darlene Herron
Betty Linehan
Laura Hess
Minnie Lingreen
Robert and Arty Hilden
Richard and Shirley Linton
Patrick and Maureen Hill
Gene and Carol Little
Jacqueline Hinchliffe
Kay Livingston
Apostolado Hispano
Robert Longman, Jr.
Douglas and Linda Hitch
Rosemary Lowry
Glazer's Camera Supply
Eva Goldberg
Fred Goldberg
Alvin Gordon
Thomas and Pauline Gordon
Henry Govert
Wanda Grande
Nina Grandy
Robert Greene
William and Shirley Greene
Francis and Jewel Gresham

Frances Talley
Daphne and David Tang
Jerry and Martha Taylor
Marlyn and Judy Taylor
Peter and Virginia Taylor
David and Dorothy Teeter
W.N. and Alberta Tefft
TESC Alumni Association
TESC Bookstore
TESC Campus Recreation
Center
TESC Class of 1987
TESC Photo Services
TESC Vancouver Class of 1987
Joan and Mortimer Thomas
Mike Thomas
Dian Thompson
Kirk Thompson
Olga Thompson
Three Treasures Sangha
Fred Thunberg
Reed Tindall
Marilyn Trent
Verna Tresner
Anna Trombley
Nikola Trumbo

u

U.F.C.W. Local 1105
U.F.C.W. Union Local Number
367
United Bank
United Food & Commercial
Workers

V
-

Delia Van Brunt
Ann VanDeman
Jacqueline VanDeman
Mitzi VanDewege
Jack and Marjorie Vickers

w

Washburn

Gallagher

the areas of development, alumni relations and
public relations.
Meanwhile, the Development staff and staffers in
the other offices of College Advancement are carrying on the. Gallagher-Washburn tradition with a full
slate of fund-raising and networking activities for
Evergreen. Friends and colleagues of Washburn can
reach her at her new job as vice president for
University Relations, St. Lawrence University,
Canton, New York 13617. To get in touch with John
Gallagher, who is now an associate vice president
for University Relations at Seattle University,
write to his home at 504 Grandview, Olympia,
Washington 98502.

Peter Myers

N
National Union of Hospital &
Health Care Employees
Fred Nigito
Sandy and Chuck Nisbet
Mark Noble
Louise Nordbye
Gary and Judy Norton

o

Edward and Patricia O'Brien
Kevin and Deborah O'Carroll
Joseph and Sheryl Olander
Janet and Timothy Oliver
Mary Oliver
William and Pennie Oliver
John Olson
Robert and Carol Olson
Olympia Association of
Professional Mortgage Women
Olympia Friends Meeting
Olympia Garden Club
Olympia Lady Lions
Olympia Volleyball Club
P
Pacific American Institute
Pacific Coca-Cola Bottling Co.
Pacific NW Newspaper Guild
Ralph and Maxine Clark Padget
Charles Pailthorp
Jill Pardini
James Parker
Kenneth and Marianne Partlow
Craig Partridge
Robert Payne
John and Barbara Perkins
David Peterson
John Pfeiffer
Ralph and Linda Piazza
Rachel Pickering
Robert Pierson
Joseph Pollock

Jacob and Barbara Romero
Glen and Peggy Roper
Alex and Suzanne Rosenkrantz
Pearl Roundtree

s

Kimberly Salerno
Michael Salinero
Bruce Sanford
Curtis Sapp
Patricia Sarmento
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Saunders
Judith Saxtori
Betty Schaefer
Ben and Bev Schatz
Virginia Schmidt
Bertha Schulz
Norm Schut
Richard and Janet Schwartz
Edgar and Winifred Scofield
Raymond Scott
Glen and Lynn Scroggins
Seafair
Terry Setter
Shakey's Pizza Parlor
Hannelore Sheafe
Eva Shinagel
Dennis and Linda Shoemaker
Scott and Judith Simmons
Sandra Simon
Niels and Diane Skov
Shawna Sliva
Robert and Ruth Sluss
Matthew Smith
Paul Smith
Zachary and Sally Smith
Vytautas Snieckus
Denis Snyder
Oscar and Barbara Soule
Allen and Nancy South
John Spencer
Mary St. John
Ronald St. Laurent
Philip and Sylvie Stahl

Ronald and Dorothy Wade
Pat Wald
George Walker
Ruth Walton
Susan Washburn
Washington Federation of State
Employees
Washington State Labor Council
Kathryn Watne
Alice Watts
Wedgwood Elementary School
Gregory Weeks
Joan Weeks
Allan and Melvin Weinstein
Amelia West
Westside Bowling Lanes
WFSE Spokane Area Local 1221
Ladd Whitcher
James and Nancy White
Sid and Pat Matheny-White
Whitney Designs
Melanie Whittaker
Margaret Whyte
Phil Wiatrak
Robert Wick
Alfred Wiedemann
Ross and Cathy Wiggins
Forrest and Kerri Wilcox
James Wilke
Dennis Wilkins
Don and Mimi Williams
Thomas Williams
Lynda Williamson
Lorihe Williamson-Rathermel
Hubert Wilson
T. D. and Audrey Wilson
William and Joan Winden
Todd Wirtz
Julie Wittrock
Helen Wolf
Karen Wolf
William and Mary Wolfe
Women's University Club
Gary Worrell
Gary Worthington

Y
Barbara Yanagimachi
Linda Young

z

William and Donna Zaugg

Friends of KAOS
A
Bradley Aiken
Kenneth Albert
Diane Allen
Chuck Allison
Glen Anderson
Archibald Sisters

B
Gregory Babior
Robyn Banks
Dick Banter
Andrew Bartels
Leslie Batchelor
Richard and Dolores Bellon
Janet Benke
Karen Berkey
Michael and Drew Betz
Blue Heron Bakery
Amy Bohn
Shirley Bond
Charles Bonsteel
James Brauneis
Eric Brinker
Marcy Brown
William and Jovana Brown
Honora Brunelle
Patrick Bryant

geosomfe
Stephanie Buddenbaum
Julie Burinan
Valarie Burson

c

David Campbell
Carrie Camus
Payton Carling
Amy Carlstad
Donna Carpenter
Roe Castillo
W.D. Gates
Wyatt Gates
Heather Diane Clark
Elizabeth Clarke
Gal Clary
Tony Clayton
Lois Click
Rita Cooper
Kathleen Corbett
Raine Corliss
Corporation for Public
Broadcasting
Ginna Correa
Carmela Courtney
Safiya Crane
Ruth Adele and Theresa Crater

D

William Kopp
William and Susan Koss
Alex Kostelnik
Robert Kotta
Patricia Kovacs
Todd Kowalski
Margaret Kurtagh

L
Patricia Labine
Nancy Laich
Roger Lamarche
Michele Landa
Mikel Lane
Lucy Larosa
Hondo Layes
Peter Lesser
Etty Linehan
Robert Longman, Jr.
Rosemary Lowry
Charles Lukey
Jens Lund

Brian Price
Evan Price
Christabel Prost
Julie Puhich
Melora and Kevin Purell

Mike Thomas
Cheryl Thurston
Reed Tindall
Anna Trombley

R

Elizabeth Vail
Tobi Vail
Winston Vidor

David and Diana Ragsdale
Brian Rainville
Brian Raiter
John Rasch
Mark Rauch
Virginia and Gary Reid
Christine Reinhard
Reggie Rendon
Richard's Import Auto Service
Peter Rickett
Carl Riddels
Denise Robertson
Diana Robishaw
Gail Robson
Laura Roderick

Meserve Serves

Teri Daniel son
Mark Davenport
Claire Davis
Doug Denherder
Richard and Fern Dermond
Christina Deweese
George and Susan Dimitroff
Stephan Dimitroff
Kathy Dockins
James Dodd
Donna Dresch
Pam Druliner
Nancy Dufraine

E
Jesus Echeverria
Robert Eggert
Keith Eisner
Carol Elwood
Sarah Emery
Gary Engbrecht
Norma Epstein
Patrice Erickson
Kathy and James Erlandson
f

Francis Feikema
Tbrres Felix
Don and Susan Finkel
William Fisher
Laurie Fitzgerald
Tamara Flick-Parker
Sheila Fox
John and Nelda Fraker
Keith Fredrikson
Elana Freeland
Dorothy Freemantle
Lawrence Freemantle
Cathy Fritsch
Jan Frost

G
Gardeners and Growers, Inc.
Tom Geha
John Gerecht
Michael Gibson
Roberts Gillis
Kathryn Gordon
Michael Gordon
Susan Gordon
Henry Covert
Julia Gulden

V

w
Ronald and Dorothy Wade
Pat Boutin Wald
George Walker
Petrina Walker
Ruth Walton
Washington Federation of State
Employees
Amelia West
Ladd Whitcher
James and Nancy White
Sid and Pat Matheny-White

Meserve

J

Jerry Jackson
Debra Janison
Lynn Johanson
Jan Johnson
Mark and Deborah Johnson
Marc Jones
Joseph Joy
Leyton Jump
Kort Jungel

12

M
Masae Mackey
Robert Mackey
William Mahler
Michael and Barbara Maki
James Mateson
Walter Maun
Carol Maynard
Zo McCarty
Joanne McCaughan
Bill McCausland
Tina McCloud
Judith McKenzie
Susan McRae
Joyce Mercuri
David Miller
Truck Mills
Richard and Bertha Moe
Amy Moon
Marda Moore
Joe Morris
Katherine Morse
Logan Beatrix Mumaw

N
Fred Nigito
Sandy and Chuck Nisbet
Mark Noble

o

Edward and Patricia O'Brien
Kevin and Deborah O'Carroll
Leva Chaks
Joseph and Sheryl Olander
Michael Olson
Olympia Volleyball Club
Willow Ostergaard

K

P

Sandra Kalla
Ilene Kasten
Marianne Kawaguchi
Julia Kelen
Cynthia Kelley
Phelps Kelley
Timothy Kelly
Gary Kelsberg
David Kershaw
Gary King
Kristina Klawitter
Pamela Knudsen
Anna Kole

Charles Pailthorp
Cynthia Park
James Parker
Kenneth and Marianne Partlow
Craig Partridge
Cheryl Henderson-Peters
David Peterson
William Phillips
Robert Pierson
Joseph Pollock
Holly Porter
Stuart Poston
Richelle Potter

Ethan Rogol
Frederick Romero
Jacob and Barbara Romero
Kimberly Rosner
Pearl Roundtree

s

Kimberly Salerno
Alice Patience Salinero
Bruce Sanford
Curtis Sapp
Patricia Sarmento
Betty Schaefer
Gerald and Patsi Scofield
Glen and Lynn Scroggins
Terry Setter
Hannelore Sheafe
William and Victoria Sheldon
Mark Sherman
Mary Sherman
Michael Simmons
Glenn Simonsen
Niels and Diane Skov
James Skutt
Shawna Sliva
Paul Smith
Zachary and Sally Smith
Susan Sniado
Denis Snyder
Susan Southwick
Danny Spearman
Patricia Spears
John Spencer
Amy Sprengel
Ronald St. Laurent
Philip and Sylvie Stahl
Gladys Stark
Andrew Stebbins
Roger and Geraldine Stenberg
Katherine Sterling-Laird
Brenda Stacker
Diane Stoebe
Jennifer Strauss
Barbara Sumberg
Mary Swain
Sue and Ray Swanson
T
Frances Talley
Jerry and Martha Taylor
Daniel Tennant

Corporations and
Foundations
AT&T Information Systems
Action Power Equipment
Aerospace Machinists Lodge 751
Aetna Life & Casualty
Foundation
Alpha Delta Kappa
ARA Services
Barlovento International
The Boeing Company

Time goes by and Christina Meserve only becomes
more intertwined with Evergreen. Tracing through
the years, these are the links—a Geoduck resume in
brief—between this 1975 alumna and her alma
mater.
»• 1971: Selecting programs designed to prepare her
for law school, she enrolls for Evergreen's first year
of operation.
>• 1975: A member of the first class of "pure," fouryear Greeners, Meserve graduates and enters law
school at the University of Washington. She
graduates, passes the Washington bar in 1978, and
returns to Oympia, where she is now an attorney
who specializes in family law and a partner in the
law firm of Connolly, Holm, Tacon & Meserve.
>• 1978: Meserve is among a group of early Greeners
who decide Evergreen is ready for an "official"
alumni organization. In September, more than 100
alums show up at a meeting who feel the same way,
and the Alumni Association is born. Meserve is
elected to serve as its first president.
»• From 1984 on: Backing her belief in the potential
of alumni for greater giving, she becomes a member
of the Board of Governors of The Evergreen State
College Foundation. Since then, she has been involved in various volunteer tasks, including
assisting Development staff members in fundraising efforts, and serving on the screening committee to determine the recipients of Foundation
Scholarships. Of this, she says: "It is tremendously
rewarding—and difficult—helping decide who will
receive a scholarship. The students who come to
Evergreen are so different. Imagine having to
choose—on merit—between an excellent student
fresh out of high school and a 50-year-old displaced
homemaker who's striving to educate herself.
Reviewing scholarship files is always tough, but I
always feel like I've contributed something."
You've contributed a lot, Christina. Thanks for
your Geoduck best!

H
Barbara Haggerty
Peter Hahn
David and Molly Hallock
Ed Hamlin
Raymond Hankins
Jeffrey Hanks
James and Diana Hanson
Jane Harrison
James Hartley, III
Scott Hauser
Kelly Hawk
Leo Healey
Wanda Hedrick
Paul Henderson
Cheryl Henderson-Peters
Elizabeth Hendricks
Jacqueline Hinchliffe
Apostolado Hispano
Patricia Holm
Cheryl Hooper
Marilyn Horning
Charles Howell
William Hudson, III
Will Humphreys
Douglas Hunter
Richard Hunter
Karen Huntsberger

Stuart and Frances Shumway
Barbara Smith
Sue Staggs
TESC Vancouver Class of 1987
Kirk Thompson
Mikola Trumbo
Byron and Bernice Youtz

Whitney Designs
Melanie Whittaker
Phil Wiatrak
Robert Wick
Ross and Cathy Wiggins
Don and Mimi Williams
Thomas Williams
Hubert Wilson
Carla Wulfsberg

Y
Barbara Yanagimachi
Kathy Ybarra

Friends of
the Library
Richard Alexander
Mary Bley
The Book House
Robert and Odie Buchanan
Harriet Caplow
Jon and Nina Collier
Rita Cooper
William and Joan Cullen
Ida Dightman
Jeffrey Duddles
Richard Edwards
Diane Ellison
Heidi Engle
James Fernandez
Sylvia Gardner
Brian Gerheim
Faith Hagenhofer
Frank Hensley
Patrick and Maureen Hill
Winifred Ingram
James Jones
Charles and Pearl Kirkpatrick
Herman Koehler
Kaye Ladd
James and Helen Linger
George Mante
Midwest Library Service
Madeline Mullen
Vreni and Barbara Naess
Olympia Lady Lions
Ralph and Maxine Padget
John and Barbara Perkins
Ralph and Linda Piazza

Saul & Dayee Haas Foundation
Seafair
Seafirst Foundation
The Seattle Times
Service Employees International
Union
Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc.
Smithkline Beckman Foundation
State Farm Companies
Foundation
Sundstrand Corporation
Foundation
Three Treasures Sangha
U.F.CW. Local 1105
U.F.C.W. Local 367
United Food & Commercial
UNISYS
Vedder Foundation
W.F.S.E. Spokane Area Local
1221
Washington Commission for the
Humanities
Washington Mutual Savings Bank
Washington Federation of State
Employees
The Washington Post Company
Washington State Labor Council
Women's University Club

Local Businesses

AMT Auto and Towing
Advanced Video
Archibald Sisters
Audio Northwest
Ben Moore's
The Blue Heron Bakery
Boston Harbor Marina
Brame's RV/Klassic Coach
Brewery City, Olympia
Buffalo Sign Co.
The Bug Lady
Capitol Seafoods
Carnegie's
Cedarville Trading Company
The Chattery Down
Chinatown Cafe
Chuck's Mobile Home Service
Concepts in Motion
Country Flair Salon
Curtis Lumber Company
Dancing Circles
Dirty Dave's Gay 90's
Discovery Toys
Don's Window and Carpet
Earth Magic
Erlich's Office Supply
Evil Genius
Four Seasons Books
Freeway Records and Tapes
Good Life Health Foods
Grand Mound Video
Graphia
Griswold's Office Supply
Hair Extraordianaire
Handyman Pressure Wash
Illusions New Age Books
International Imports
The Japanese American Citizen
League
Jay Vee Health Foods
K&T Distributing
L&E Bottling Company, Inc.
Little Caeser's
Mansion Glass Company
Mrs. Powell's
Nancy Curtis
New Creations T Shirts
Old World Bakery
Olympia Association of Professional Mortgage Women
Olympia Farmers Market
Olympia Food Co op
Brakeley, John Price Jones, Inc.
Burlington Northern Foundation Olympia Garden Club
Olympia Greenhouses
CHEF Endowment Fund
Olympia Lady Lions
Cigna Foundation
Olympia Veterinary Hospital
Connecticut Mutual Life
Pizza Haven, Olympia
Insurance
Positively 4th Street
Connecticut Savings Bank
Pro Image Sports
Coiporation for Public
Radiance
Broadcasting
Rainey Day Record Company
Equitable Life Insurance
Richard's Import Auto Service
Exxon Education Foundation
Rochester Automotive
FMC Foundation
Rochester Drug
Gannett Foundation
Rochester Home Center
General Electric Foundation
Rochester Lumber
Glazer Camera
Ron's Barber Shop
The Hospital Corporation of
Rhythm City
America Foundation
Hafer Price Rinehart & Schwerin Sam's Tire
Scatter Creek Veterinary Clinic
Helen Martha Schiff Foundation
William and Victoria Sheldon
Hewlett Packard Company
The Sherwood Press
Honeywell Foundation
Shipwreck Beads
Illinois Bell
South Marine Repair'
Intel Corporation
Suntan's West
International Business Machine
TESC Bookstore
The Johnson Wax Fund, Inc.
TESC Organic Farm
King County Arts Commission
Town Tubs
Marsh & McLennan Companies
Turn water Rentals
Martin Marietta Corporation
Tumwater Tire and Wheel
Foundation
U S Marine Sales
Matsushita Foundation, Inc.
The May Stores Foundation, Inc. Verde Park IGA
Walt's Radiator
McGraw-Hill Foundation
Yenney's Music Company
McKesson Foundation, Inc.
Microsoft Corporation
Mitre Corporation
National Steel & Shipbuilding
Alumni
Office and Professional
A
Employees Union
Walter Acuna
Paccar Foundation
Michael Ahern
Pacific American Institute
Bradley Aiken
Pacific Distributors
Kenneth Albert
Pacific Northwest Bell
Sonja Alexander
Pacific Northwest Newspaper
Sara Algots
Guild
Colleen Allen
Principal Life Insurance
Diane Allen
Company
Megan Allen
Puget Sound Power & Light
Kathleen Anderson
Rainier National Bank
Linda Anderson
Ralson Purina Company
Mary Randolph Anderson
Reader's Digest Foundation
Nancy Anderson

geosalute
Thomas Ansart
Simon Ansell
Harriet Arnold
Shirley Arton
Lucy Auster
Patricia Avery

B
Toni Bailie
George Baitinger, III
Scott Baker
Christina Koons Bakei
Tim Ball
Debora Barkus
Susan Bartlett
Jeffrey Bartone
Louise Batson
Joan Battuello
Annamarie Beckmann
Bruce Bedinger
Patricia Bedinger
Richard Bender, Jr.
Janet Benke
John Bennett
Susan Bent
Michael Bergstrom
Karen Berkey
Jan Bernstein
Steven Bertran
Linda Bestwick
Richard Bestwick
Donald Bird
Susan Bird
Margaret Birnbaum
Mary Bittinger
Carla Black
Nicholas Blattner
Renee Blattner
Mary Bley
Joseph Blum
David Boggs
Neil Bogue
Amy Bohn
Jill Boniske
Charles Bonsteel
Terry Bonynge
Linda Bookey
Gregory Booth
Thomas Booze
Gretchen Borck
Ronald Bowitz
Kay Boyd
Jerry Boydston
James Brauneis
Marjorie Brazier
Joseph Brecha
Daniel Bretzke
Steven Brewster
Mari Brockhaus
Neal Broida
Angela Brown
Betty Brown
Louise Brown
Margery Brown
Robert BrbWfi< "
Peter Brack
James Brunner
Andrew Buchman
Nelsa Buckingham
Phillip Bunker
John Burbank
Daniel Burden
Mary Burg
Barrett Burr
Alan Burrer
Valarie Burson
James Byrnes

c

Lynda Caine
Susan Calhoun
Robert Campbell
Sharon Campbell
Douglas Canning
Gary Cantrell
Drew Carey
Ross Carey
Leonard Carr
Nina Carter
Lawton Case
James Cauffman
Douglas Chadwick
Melissa Champlin
Craig Chance
Joanna Chamas
Claudia Chotzen
Dianne Christensen
Erik Christiansen
Kent Christman
Irene Christy
William Clausen
Janet Cleveland
Kenneth Coffin
Andrea Coker
Lawrence Cole
Gail Collins
Cathy Conner
Nancy Connolly
Cajean Cordy
Jeanine Corr
Ginna Correa
Stuart Corsa
Clifford Cotey
Dennis Cotter
Larry Couch
Carmela Courtney
Safiya Crane
Robert Crawford
Clayton Creager
Stephen Creager
Deborah Creveling
Lindsley Cross
Jonathan Cruz
Nancy Cruz
Doris Culliton

D
Susanne Dade
Bruce Daily
Charles Davis
Katherine Davis
Ana De Give
Joseph Dear
Donald Delahunt

Jacqueline Delahunt
Linda Delorme
Michael Denoyer
Roxanne Denoyer
Kathryn Dernham
Edward Deryckx
Janet Detering
Carol Detweiler
Steven Devin
Dona Dezube
George Dickison, IV
Laurie Dieterich
Ida Dightman
Patricia Dillingham
Stephan Dimitroff
Debra Dishberger
Carmen Doerge
Randolph Dole
Peter Dolliver
Lawrence Dominguez
Margaret Donaldson

Wyatt Gilkie
Carolyn Gilmore
Laura Goff
Ronald Gold
Karen Goldman
James Gonzales
David Goodward
Margaret Goodward
Cynthia Goodwin
Kathryn Gordon
Michael Gordon
Barbara Graf
Julie Grant
Donovan Gray
Stephen Green
Joan Gregory
Robert Gregory
Jon Gribskov
Charles Griffin
Teresa Grove
Julia Gulden

For Dennis Peterson, better known as Denny, the
question was simple, but answers were not particularly encouraging.
"How in the world are we ever going to raise
money for this place?"
It was 1976, and the people gathered to consider
that question were the founding members of
Evergreen's first Board of Governors. They had
been called together by President Charles McCann
to begin The Evergreen State College Foundation
to raise funds for the new state college. Not even
six years old, Evergreen had a minimal endowment
and maximum needs.
More than twelve years later Denny Peterson still
remains. Known to Olympia's money-minded as vice
president of the Shearson Lehman Hutton investment firm and the voice of a daily stock report on
KGY radio station for more than twenty years,
Peterson recalls with pride how far the Foundation
Board and college Development office have come in
just over a decade.
Starting from scratch, the Foundation's fundraising efforts have grown to gather hundreds of
thousands of dollars every year and, for each of the
past two years, more than a million dollars for
Evergreen needs. Prominent among the string of
"firsts" was establishing Evergreen's first Foundation Scholarships, which have grown in number
from three to 45 (see story on page 14), and mounting the ..first major fund-raising event, which
featured guided tours to see Seattle's 1978 King Tut
exhibit.
An active community leader in Thurston County,
Peterson currently applies his expertise by chairing
the resource management committee, which
deliberates on Foundation investments and expenditures on everything from scholarships to lab equipment and art supplies for student projects. One
founding Governor who's still going strong, Peterson
persists at seeking new, fruitful answers for that
original question, "How in the world... ?"

Susan Donner
Eleanor Dornan
Edwina Dorsey
Janet Drew
Conrad Driscoll
James Duncan
Janet Dunlop
Carmen Dastman

E
Nancy Edwards
Heidi Ehrenberg
James Ehret
Eric Einspruch
Keith Eisner
Scott Englander
Heidi Engle
Jonathan Epstein
Marilyn Erickson
Jack Etheridge

F
Sherry Farber
Pamela Farr
Thomas Farrell
Carl Fawcett
David Fehsenfeld
Susan Feiner
Florence Feldman
Kyzyl Fenno-Smith
James Fernandez
Kent Ferris
William Ferris
Richard Finnigan
Lisa Fleming
Kimberly Foley
Robert Foster
Laurie Frankel
Steven Friddle
Peter Friedman
Jan Frost
Joseph Fuller

G
Edward Gales
Douglas Gallagher
Amy Garling
Gabrielle Geraghty
John Gerecht
Kathleen Gerrald
Vel Gerth
Thomas Ghormley

Timothy Guy

H
Jean Haakenson
Thomas Hagen
Faith Hagenhofer
Barbara Haggerty
Jon Halper
Claudia Hampton
Carmen Hanna
Robert Hanna
Peter Hansell
Mark Hansen
Michael Hansen
Kimberly Hanson
Barbara Harmala
Marilyn Harris
Charles Hart, III
Shaine Hart
Michael Harter
James Hartley, III
Leslie Harvill
Carla Hasegawa
Donna Hayes
Janet Healy
Wanda Hedrick
Sue Heflin
Therese Heinrich-Burden
Richard Helm
Cecile Henault
Ellen Henderson
Scott Henderson
Randall Henery
John Hennessey, III
Catherine Hennings
Timothy Hennings
Roger Henry
Carolyn Hoffman
Joseph Hogan
Patricia Holm
Paul Holt
Christine Holz
Charles Howell
Peter Humleker
Lynn Humphrey
Richard Hunter
Judy Hyslop
1
Brandith Irwin
Gregory Irwin

John Irwin
Robert lyall
J
W
Helen Jaeger
Catherine Johnson
IjiSci Johnson
John Paul Jones, III
David Jones
Gregory Jones
James Jones
Jeanne Jones
Laurie Jones
Richard Jones
Marcia Jordan
Joseph Joy
Maureen Juhola
K
Joshua Kairoff
Scott Kauffman

Tyra Lindquist
Karen Lohmann
Gary Lorentzen
Thomas Lufkin
Marilyn Lupinacci
James Lux
Lynn Lynch

M

Dori MacDonald
Carol MacCracken
Ronald Magram
Dennis Mahar
William Mahler
Daniel Mahoney
Kim Malin
Duncan Mann
Grace Manzie-Werner
Tracy Marsailes
Kathy Marshall
Stan Marshburn
Barry Martin

Denny Shows
'Em How

Gary Mozel
Steven Mozel
Timothy Mulcahey
Madeline Mullen
Suzanne Mulligan-Morris
Dennis Mullikin
Peter Mullineaux
Linda Murphy
Nancy Musgrove

N
Deborah Nagusky
Melissa Naso-Kaplan
Mary Neal
Douglas Nebert
Jennifer Neilson
Pamela Neimeth
Lorietta Nelson
Marjorie Nelson
Michelle Neubert
Jane Neuharth
Sharon Newell
Charles Nishida
Wesley Norman
Rebecca Northway
Richard Nuckolls

O
Patti O'Brien
Marc O'Connor
Timothy Oguri
Michael Olson
Leslie Oren
V. Lorraine Osborn
Marian Osborne
Leslie Owen
P

Jennifer Page
Leonard Pagliaro
Anthony Pantley
Dirk Park
Melissa Parker
Lillie Parks
Janet Partlow
Victoria Patton
Russell Paulsrude
David Pavelchek
Raymond Pavelko
Maris Peach
Timothy Pearce
Christine Peck
Tia Pennell
Cheryl Peters
David Peters
Karen Petersen
Mary Petersen
Christina Pohn
John Petrich, Jr
Vicki Phelps
Richard Philips
Kevin Phillips
Molly Phillips
Ellen Pickell
Bradley Pierce
Martha Pierce
Priscilla Pierce
Steven Pinard
Carol Pinegar
Mariel Plaeger-Brockway
Roy Plaeger-Brockway
Noah Poritz
Holly Porter
Stuart Poston
Judith Prest
Daniel Preston
Katherine Preston
Mary Prevost
Longueville Price, III
Evan Price
Ramona Price

Peterson

Toy Kay
Elizabeth Keeney
Richard Kelly, Sr
Mary Kelsoe
Barbara Kendziorek
Jan Keogh, III
Susan Kerber
Barbara Keyt
Ralph Kile
Janice King
Thomas Kirschner
Ellen Kissman
Eric Kjesbu
Annette Klapstein
Kristina Klawitter
Jennifer Knauth
Jennifer Knudsen
Pamela Knudsen
Daniel Koch
Elisabeth Koch-Greene
Joseph Koczur, Jr
Alan Kohl
Anna Kole
Margaret Koler
Teresa Kolp
Neill Karen
A. Kramer-Farris
Donna Kreiensieck
Alan Krieger
Lyda Kuth

L
Paul Lambert
Tanna Lambert
Michele Landa
James Lang
Patricia Lavelle-Brecha
Geraldine Lawrence
Peter Lawson
Norbert Lazar
Kevin Leavitt
Laymond Lee
Sally Lee
Kristina Lenke
Pamela Lent
Peter Lesser
Deborah Leung
Marcia Levenson
Norman Levy
Rebecca Liebman
Judy Lindlauf

Georgia Martin
Stuart Martin
Shaina Masters
James Mateson
Wendy Matthews
Larry Mauksch
Walter Maun
Carol Maynard
Joanne McCaughan
Anita Mclntosh
Edward McQuarrie
Susan McRae
Keith McCandless
Mary McCann
Richard McClure, Jr
Martha McCoy
Lawrence McDonald
Amy McFarlan
Judith McKenzie
John McLaren
Gerald McLaughlin
Thomas McLaughlin
Deborah McLellan
Charlene McQuarrie
James Mead
Lee Meister
John Mellen
Mark Meredith
Matthew Mero
Christina Meserve
Christopher Metz
Janet Meurs
Margaret Millard
David Miller
Norma Miller
Pamela Miller
Steven Miller
Michael Mills
Ralph Minor, Jr.
Martha Mistretta
Laurie Moody
Steven Moore
Roland Morris
Diane Morton
Allen Moser
Jeremy Moser
Sarah Moser
Susan Moser
Judith Mosier
Susan Moyer

Michael Rainwater
Mary Randall
Victoria Randlett
Lisa Randlette
Scott Rapp
Deanna Ray
Emily Ray
Brett Redfearn
Alexander Reed, Sr.
Kathron Richards
Janet Richardson
Peter Rickett
Carl Riddels
John Ridgway
April Rieck
John Riley
Roberta Ritter
Cynthia Roberson
Harvey Roberts
Ronald Roberts
Tamara Roberts
Alice Robinson
Tyler Robinson
Barbara Roder
Gareth Rohde
Lisann Rolle
Sarah Rolph
Leslie Romer
Pearl Rose
Geoffrey Rothwell
Diane Royal
Marie Russo
Katharine Rutherford
Anson Rutherford-Olds
James Rymsza

s

Albin Saari
Raymond Sachs
Alice Salinero
Scott Salzer
Terrese Salzer
Jane Sameth
Antonio Santoy
James Sayce
K.Burnell Schaetzel-Hill
Laurie Schaetzel-Hill
Lillian Schauer
Jane Scheffer
Stephen Schramke
Steven Schreurs
Mary Schroeder

geosalute
Pablo Schugurensky
Douglas Schuler
Mark Sciscenti
Susan Scott
William Scott
Kathy Scovel-Rodrique
James Seekins
Thomas Shackle
Mary Shacter
Robert Shannon
Devi Sharp
Edward Sharp
Marjorie Shavlik
Chuck Shelton
Suzanne Shelton
Mary Sherman
James Shiflett
Judith Shoshana
Deborah Shulke
Robert Shumate
Andrea Siani
Sergio Siani
Maria Siegler
Gillian Siegrist
Rebecca Sievers
Mikael Sikora
Linda Silber
Janet Silliman
Christiane Silverthorne
Michael Simmons
Janet Simons
Glenn Simonsen
Richard Simonson, Jr
Connie Sinclair
Richard Skadan
James Skutt
Jack Slagle
Roo Slagle
Paul Slate
Susan Slate
Willene Smith
David Smullin
Margaret Snyder
Susan Snyder
Mark Souder
Susan Southwick
Danny Spearman
Patricia Spears
Mary Speelman
Peter Speer
Wendy Squires
Sue Stadler
Richard Staehli
Loy Stafmbil
Sue Staggs
Martin Staley
Joyce Stancioff
Annette Standifur
Andrew Stebbins
Carla Stehr
Janet Stein
Cheryl Stephani
Charles Stephens
Jonathan Stephens
Nancy Stevens
Diana Stobart
Sarah Stockwell
Anne Stone
Daphne Stone
Janet Stonington
Sarah Stranahan
Jeffery Strauss
Conni Strope
Kaye Sullivan
Craig Swanson

Sheri Wertheimer
Margaret Wharton
Frances Wilk
Patricia Wilkins
Ronald Wilkinson
Edward Willert
Richard Williams, Jr
Charles Williams
David Williams
Debbie Williams
Donna Williams
Elizabeth Williams
Patrick Williams
Steven Willis
Hazel Willmarth
Colleen Wine
Betsy Wolf
Carl Wolfhagen
Sanford Wolgel
Nina Wolsk
Paula Wong
Carla Wood
George Wood
Janice Wood
Annette Woolsey
Theresa Wright
Karen Wynkoop

Y
Kathy Ybarra

u

Maillian Uphaus
V
Laura Van Dilla
Doris Tandenberg
Jeanne Vanderiet
Martine Vanpee
Andrea Varcalli
Elizabeth Vargas
Lewis Vaughan
Richard Veach
Alan Venning
Mark Vestrich
Winston Vidor
Diane Vosick

w

Warren Waldorf
Petrina Walker
Renee Wallis
Linda Walsh
Gregory Ware
Janet Ware
Carole Warner
Sherry Warren
Nancy Warshaw
Andrew Wasserman
Hugh Watson
Malta Watt
Kathleen Waugh
Roberta Webber
Stephen Webster
Richard Weeks
Karen Weingarth
Gerald Weishaar

George and Susan Dimitroff
James Dinerman
George and Mary Dolan
Patricia Douglas
Gail Drillings
James and Rachel Dudek
Richard and Mary Dunlap
Jude and Vicki Duvernay
Dale and Edith Dubay

E
Alfred and Ingrid Eckersberg
Karl and Nancy Eikeberg
Robert and Ingrid Eisenman
Dr. Victor Eisner
Richard and Rose Elway
Margaret Enderlein
Andrea English
Frederic and Linda Engstrom
Donald and Susan Enright
Jane Espy
Duane and Nada Estes
John and Gloria Evans
Bernie and Richard Everson
Clayton and Janet Fairo
Robert and Gerry Faley
Steven and Norma Fameli
Ruth Farber
Thomas and Marjorie Farrell

Linda Goldberg
Ruth and Robert Goldman
Arthur and Ann Gorai
Ann and David Gordon
Dorothy Gordon
John and Adele Gorham
Sylvia Gorsline
Richard and Mary Gowell
Dorothy Graeff
Frank and Virginia Green
Robert and Rose Green
Alfred and Adele Greenberg
Sanford and Inez Greenberg
Harry and Rosemary Gregg
Glen Greisz
Marilyn Gresseth
Dororthy Griffin
Patricia Griffith
William and Bertha Groves
David and Lois Gruber
James Grutz

H
Kenneth Haan
James and Susan Haley
Milton Hamlin
Ronald and Barbara Hammond
Thurston and Carolyn Handley
Carol Hannum
Ernest Harburg

Evergreen Foundation Scholars Named
Cause for celebration is
the annual announcement of the recipients
of Foundation Scholarships, made possible by
the Evergreen Fund.
Forty-five students
have been selected as
Foundation Scholars,
for which they will
receive full tuition for
the 1988-89 academic
year (one quarter for
graduate student recipients). The Scholarships
are awarded on the
basis of students'
superior academic
achievement and contributions in the arts,
Community activities,
leadership and athletics.

Sarah J. Batchelder
Montdair High School
Montclair, New Jersey
Christopher R. Branch
Wenatchee Valley Community
College
Wenatchee, Washington
Courtney Boatsmen
Oregon Episcopal High School
Portland, Oregon
Linda D. Canfield
South Puget Sound Community
College
Olympia, Washington
Robin L. Cline
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
Daniel Christensen
Wenatchee Valley Community
College
Wenatchee, Washington
John Dempsey
Spanaway High School
Spanaway, Washington
Julie Ann Douglas
Rhode College
Memphis, Tennessee
Jerry Fernandez
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
Tbdd Field
Indiana University
Thomas Mitchell Freeman
Seattle Central Community
College
Seattle, Washington
Caitlin Hahn
Mendocino High School
Jennifer Helpenstell
Port Angeles, Washington
Adrienne Julius
Hoquiam High School
Hoquiam, Washington

Jessica Kelso
Olympia High School
Lucy Key
Green River Community
College
Sunnier, Washington
Vince LaLonde
Seattle Community College
Seattle, Washington
Scott Leo
Pe Ell High School
Pe Ell, Washington
Emily A. Licastro
South Whidbey High School
Langley, Washington
Hanna Luther
Green River Community
College
Auburn, Washington
Donna Michane Lona
Seattle, Washington
Kirk Edwin Miller
Tahoma Senior High School
Tacoma, Washington
Michelle Minstrel!
Mercer Island High School
Mercer Island, Washington
Roxann Mulvey
University of Washington
Seattle, Washington
David Gunnar Nyberg
Urban School of San Francisco
San Francisco, California
Susan Prichard
Oak Harbor High School
Oak Harbor, Washington
Erik.J.Ray
Reed College
Portland, Oregon
Kristine A. Reese
Tacoma Community College
Tacoma, Washington

Kirsten Roberts
J.R. Rogers High School
Puyallup, Washington
Leanne C. Roberts
Middlesex High School
Middlesex, New Jersey
Shannon Ross
Broad Ripple High School
Indianapolis, Indiana
Susan Searles
Naches Valley High School
Naches, Washington
Sheilah G. Seymour
Peninsula College
Port Angeles, Washington
Lee Ellen Shoemaker
Arlington High School
Arlington, Washington
Melissa Stanley
Foster High School
Seattle, Washington
Patricia Swanson
Pierce Community College
lacoma, Washington
Celeste Thompson
Pennsylvania Community
College
James Wallace
Portland Community College
Portland, Oregon
Anthony Waters
North Seattle Community
College
Seattle, Washington
Sandra L. Weber
Shorewood High School
Seattle, Washington
MES and MPA Graduate
Scholarship Recipients:
Bonnie K. Long
Margaret "Peggy" Britt
Lauri W. Anderson
Eric Seabloom
Jule Smith

Thomas Yesberger
Geoffrey Young
Mary Youngman
Arbin Yu
Marjorie Yung

Brian and Danielle Butz
Eleanor Butz
John and Heather Byrne

Mr. and Mra W. Fawcett
Mary Feldman
Don Fincke
Myron and Elka Fink
David and Nancy Finkelstein
Louis and Elena Fischer
Louis Fiset
William and Adele Fletcher
Gladys and Billy Fogg
James and Ann Fontaine
Donald and Susan Forsling
Patricia Frank
Paul and Genevieve Frankenberg
Donna Franklin
Ralph and Mary Franklin
Karen and Timothy Fraser
Gene and Margaret Frazier
Sharon Frazzini
Alan and Kathleen Freeman
Donald and Lizabeth Freeman
Marc and Lorna Freshwater
Norma Fried
August and Jeanne Fromuth
Herbert and Carol Fuller
William Fuller
Jean Fulton
Anne Futterman

Elizabeth Hardisty
Frank Hartman
James and Ruth Hasegawa
Robert and Edna Hauser
Dorothy Heal
Thomas and Kathy Healy
Reuben and Mary Held
Jean and John Hennessey, Jr.
Susan Hennie
Gertrude and James Herbert
Susan Herman
George Hernandez
Kathleen Hernandez
John and Jackie Herum
Richard Hesik
Roger and Nancy Hibbing
Clark and Cynthia Hilden
Robert and Sharon Hilgenberg
Raymond and Katheryne Hill
Richard and Joan Hill
Robert and Dagmara Hill
Elizabeth Hirshman
Joseph and Lois Hogan
Marion Hogan
Nicola Hohn
Susan Holland-Schafer
David and Sarah Hollier
Richard and Jacqueline Holmes
Ferenc and Betty Holonics
Martin and Mary Holt
Thomas and Frances Hopkins
Thomas Hornbein
Richard and Christine Horner
Michael Hosterman
Thomas Hudson, Jr.
William and Marion Hunt
Francis and Wilhelmina Hunter
I
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ingersoll
Cecile Isaacs
Mary and Joseph Iski
Donald and Helen Ivey

T
Sandra Tarzan
Stephen Tarzan
Marcus Teters
Dorothy Tenkhoff
Richard Thacker
Amy Thayer
Kathleen Theoe
Ann Thomas
Tyrone Thomas
David Thomson
Valerie Thorson
Kris Thorsos
Roberta Tidland
Daniel Tolfree
Jamie Tolfree
William Tomlinson
Joseph Tougas
Jeff Traugott
Jeanne Tribe
Anne Turner

Elizabeth Blades
Charles and Janis Blair
Marianne Blake
Gerald and Patricia Blakley
Thomas Bomas and Donna
Blanton
Fowler and Norma Blauvelt
Faith Bleasdale
Sherrill Boardman
Larry and Mary Boatwright
Jean Bolton
Oscar Bonnevie
Jeanne Bonynge
Frances and Jack Bookey
Mr. and Mrs. William Bowen
John and Gay Bowles
Mary and Lloyd Brandt
Robert and Carol Brenna
James and Kathleen Brewster
Henry and Barbara Brockhaus
George and Dorothy Brodmerkel
Stephen Brozovich
Wilma Bucci
Robert and Odile Buchanan
James and Judy Buddenbaum
Thomas and Joan Buell, Jr.
Nathan and Irene Buitenkant
Harlan and Karen Bunnell
Victor and Mary Burdo

z

Vicki Zarrell
Dolores Zschomler

Parents
A
David and Ilene Adams
Dale and Jenene Alberda
Eugene and Marilynn Alexander
Steven and Rose Alfred
Durwood and Dorys Alkire
Cecil and Doris Allen
Grace Allen
Robert and Marjory Alper
Clifford and Charlotte Alterman
Barbara Altman
Theodore and Gertrude Altonen
Earl and Janice Anderson
Thomas Armstong
Anthony and Ruth Arnold
William and Helen Aron
William and Shirley Ashby
Walter and Jeanne Atkinson

B
David and Mary Ann Bader
Ralph and Jean Baierlein
Martha Bailey
Franklin and Mary Balch
Elizabeth Balderston
Joseph Balogh
Phillips and Eva Barker
Mary and Joseph Bartek
William Bartlett
J.F. and Hazel Beatty
Duane Beck
Robert and Nancy Becker
Dery and Barbara Bennett
William Benoist Jr.
Marta Berg
Leonard Berger
Abraham Bergman
Arthur Berlin
Anita Bierdermann

C
James Lila Cammack
Ellen and Charles Campbell, Sr.
Marilyn Canaris
Glen and Jean Carey
Mr. and Mrs. James Carey
John Carr
Hamilton and Margaret Carson
Wayne and Audrey Cassatt, Jr
Johnny and Carol Castelletto
Yvonne and Edward Cazier, Jr
Rebecca and Pete Caitin
James and Addis Chapman
David and Betty Christiansen
Atlee and Mary Clapp
Raymond and Alice Clark
Stephen Clark
Frederick and Jessie Cohen
Jose and Marilyn Colon
Eugene and Jeanne Commerford
Michael and Linda Cook
Errol and Cissy Copilevitz
Cathy Corballis
Thomas and Sandra Cox
Marion Creveling
Larry Grouse
Gordon and Sheila Currie

D
Dr. and Mrs. Carroll Damron
Albert and Charlotte Dangler
Curtis and Britt Danielson
David Brownwood Charitable
Foundation
Donald and Cherie Davidson
Marilyn and John Davis, III
Dorothy Davis
Robert Davis
Dr. and Mrs. Don Debra
Ruth and Harold Deery
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Dehaven
Americo and Janice Del Calzo
Charles and Mary Dethier
Pete and Elsie Devries
Robert and Genevieve DeWeese
Jeno and Judith Dibuz

G
Ann and Lee Gagnon
John and Betty Gallagher
Bernard and Constance Games
James and Velma Garrison
Roland and Gundrun Gary
Thomas and Theresa Gaston
Robert and Sandra Gates
Ann Gavell
Jean Gaznier
Keith and Sara Gehr
Arthur and Barbara Geller
Alice Gendell
Warren and Gerry Ghormley
Dorathy Gibson
Marilyn Gillette
Gordon and Doris Gilan
Richard and Katherine Gilpin
George and Lila Girvin
Salvatore and Joan Giusti
Waldo and Shirley Goglin
Alvin and Judy Goldberg

David and Rose Jacobs
Michael and Virginia Jameson
Louis and Theresa Jeannot
William and Paula John
Don and Liby Johnson

Donald and Jacqueline Johnson
Henry and Lesley Johnson
John Johnson
Wilbur and Virginia Johnson
Theodore and Darlene Johnsrude
Jane Johnston
Ruth Jokinen
Jo Anne Jones
Albert and Gloria Jordan
Margaret Joyce
Henry Judd

K
Ludlow and Norma Kaeser
H. and Margaret Kaltenthaler
Marion Karecki
Julia Kassens
Mildred Katz
Marion Kaufman
James and Marilyn Kavanaugh
Marion and Dorothy Kennedy
Fay and John Keogh, Jr.
Inez Kertson
Lawrence and Darlene Kerwin
Veselin and Lydia Kesich
W and Wilma Kidwell
Joseph and Gail Kiefer
Jerry and Dona King
Raymond and Eula Kirby
Arthur and Melva Kirkbride
Joan Kirshner
Donna and William Kiskaddon
James Kittrick
Norman and Harriet Klein
H. Klopfenstein
Paul and Nancy Klotz
Gerald and Claudia Knutson
Lowell and Shirley Knutson
Wayne and Louise Knutson
Charles Koch
Ayako and Joseph Koczur, Sr
Mitsuhiro and Lilly Kodama
John (Bud) Koons
George and Ruby Koppelman
Henry and Carmen Korn
Walter and Audrey Kosman
Robert and Jean Kramer
Nava and Elbart Krieger
Mascha Kushner

L
Rose and Donald Lacina
Edie Lackland
James and Barbara Ladd
Thomas and Evelyn Lajiness
Jerry and Geraldine Larrance
Florence and S. Lasswell
Heather Leach
Kathleen Learned
Anna Leas
B. and Carista Leathers
Louis and Joan Lepry
Norman and Louise Levy
H. Lewis
Leroy and Carolyn Lewis
Joseph and Corinne Linesch
James and Helen Linger
Ivan Lipman
Eugene and Pearl Lipner
Peter and Anna Littlewood
Paul and Rose Livingston
Herbert and Ellen Loewenthal
Robert Loftfield
Marvin and Nancy Loftness
John and Evelyn Loftus
C. London
E. Love
Robert and Norma Lucas
Ernest and Paula Luders
Luther and Patricia Lund
J. Lundry
Frank and Patricia Lussier
John and Edna Lyons
Jo and William Lysak

M
Michael and Cynthia Mack
Carolyn and Steven Mackey
James and Nancy MacWhinney
Robert and Roberta Mahler
Rona and Harvey Malofsky
Emily and Leonard Mendelbaum
A. and Nancy Manseth
Barbara and Elliot Marple
Timothy and Margaret Marshall
Clyde and Patricia Matteson
Charles and Miriam Matthews
Mr. and Mrs. Richard May, Jr.
Kinnie McCabe
Ernest McCall
Anne and Andrew McThenia, Jr.
Charles and Barbara McCann
Beale and Dana McCulloch
David and Nell McDonald
James and Jacqueline McFerran
Mr. and Mrs. Edward McGrath
Donald and Hilda McLaren
Barbara McLaughlin
Peter and Shirlee Meador
Marilyn Meardon
David and Joanne Mehus
Gordon and Greta Meiklejohn
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mellen
David and Penelope Merrel
Deena and Ray Mersky
Frank and Bettimae Metheny
Franklin and Jean Michaels
John Mildenberger
Stanley and Elouise Millar
Daniel and Isabel Miller
James and Florence Miller
Melvin and Roberta Miller
Robert Miller
Arnold and Ann Millhauser
John and Katharine Mills
Robert and Elizabeth Mills
Henry and Eulia Mishima
Marvin and Constance Mooney
Marda Moore
William and Joan Morgenstern
Peter and Anna Morton
Lewis and Mabel Mosier
Marlene Moubry
Margaret Moulton

geosalute
James and Kathleen Mountjoy
Terry Mulcancy
Murray Murphey
Frank and Carolyn Murphy
Robert and Mary Murphy
Robert and Shirley Murvihill
Robert Musser
Robert Myhr
Vreni and Barbara Maess

Barry and Indra Remsberg
Dale and Elaine Reynolds
Leah Rice
Charles and Kathleen Richardson
Joyce Robertson
Angela Robinson
Donald and Margaret Robinson
Richard Rodrigues, Sr
Israel and Betsy Gail Rosen

Shirley Sainsbury
Irwin and Marion Saltzman
Evelyn Salzer
Oscar and Lois Sandberg
Valri and Lester Sandoe, Jr.
David and Marcella Scales
James and Prudence Scarritt
William and Annette Schaefer
Brian and Linda Scheffer

William and Joan Scott
Russell and Joyce Sears
J. Marvin and Carol Seemann
Milton and Betty Seidman
Lester and Harriet Servid
David and Sarah Shames
Robert Sannon
Edward Sharp
Albert and Ethel Shepard

Maxine Sitts
Jay and Ellen Sklar
Ron and Patricia Slabaugh
Albert and Carib Smallman
Alice Smith
Ralph and Adele Smith
Warner and Lorna Sneed
John and Florience Sniado
Ernest Sokal

N
Robert Nassau
William and Magdaline Nearn
John and Barbara Neff
Barbara Nelson
Evelyn Nelson
James and Katherine Nelson
Leonard and Bonita Nelson
Tim and Mary Newcomb
Betty Newell
Doris and Marvin Newman
Harry and Joy Newman
James and Mieko Nhorni
Mary Nichols
Chris and Helen Nicholson
Donald and Hilda Nicoll
Richard and Mary Nolting
Howard and Barbara Norris
Amando and Ventura Nunez

o

Nichael O'Brien, Jr.
Bernard and Jeanne O'Connor
Allen and Harriet Oakley
Jay and Dorothy Odell
Michiko Ogasawara
John and Elise Olds
Arne and Jo Olson
Warren and Maurine Olson
Richard and Patricia Oltman
Peter and Mary Onno
Catherine Ormand
Robert and Mary Ornberg
Francis and Teruko Ostrom
Gary and Carolyn Owen
Martyn and Candace Owen
P

William Page
Hamilton and Muriel Page
Lloyd and Constance Painter
Mark and Linda Papworth
Lowell and Anna Park
John and Nancy Parker
June Parker
Glenn and Leslie Paxton
Russell and Lois Pearson
Peter and Christine Pell
James and Connie Pemble
Shirlee and James Perkins
Mi', and Mrs. Arthur Peroni
Dennis and Regina Peters
Arthur and Idella Peterson
Rosemary Peterson
Glenn and Betty Pfaff
Dr. and Mrs. Harold Phelps
Byron and Joanna Pinick
Lynn and Marianne Pless
Paul and Cecilia Plumer
Raymond and Marilyn Pollard
Joan Poultridge
K. and Joan Powers
Edward and Anne Praczukowski
Ivan and Roberta Preston
Paul and Mary Pruitt
Carolyn Purser

Q
Philip and Barbara Quinn
R
George Rainville
Leland and Betty Ramsey
Irving and Shirley Rappaport
Doug and Sara Rasmussen
Ranee Ratliff
Robert and Virginia Ray
F and Ann Reading
Howard and Verna Reagan
Robert and Mildred Reed
David and Enid Reese
Robert and Tish Reeves
Carroll and Elnor Reid
Paul and Jane Reid
David and Dorothea Reinthal

Levers That Move
The WorldWords from a
foundation Scholar
"What a joy diversity is," writes Freshman Jessica
Kelso, a 1988 Foundation Scholar. The Olympia
native has experienced that joy first-hand through
student exchange programs in Brazil and India. The
following excerpts are from her letter of application
to the Foundation.
Dear Committee,
"About ten years ago, (when) my dad and I took a
walk through our neighborhood.. .a tall man in a
bulky sweater with a backpack approached us and
smiled. We.. .listened to some jumbled syllables in
his attempt to ask directions to the bus station.
After giving him directions, the man shook my dad's
hand heartily, patted my cheek and walked away.
"This scene.. .rooted itself in my memory. It was
the first time I was conscious of the presence of
foreigners. Now, ten years later, I myself have been
a stranger in strange lands. Through my experiences, I've come to the conclusion that too many
people view the global community in much the
same way a seven-year-old does.. .as a place of
political, social and economic boundaries between
the peoples of the world.
"I began reaching out to the world by.. .writing
to pen pals in Europe, Africa and Asia, doing class
projects on foreign affairs and trying to learn
Italian from a cookbook. My interest escalated to
include foreign language clubs, hosting a French exchange student and becoming a Rotary International Exchange Student in Brazil.
"Living.in Brazil for a year offered me the
chance.. .to live as if I were Brazilian. The excitement came from not knowing. I didn't know how to
act and react among people; I didn't know Portuguese or the standards of their culture. But I
learned—sometimes quickly, sometimes more
gradually. I came to appreciate differences and
similarities, and developed a strong desire to experience more of the world.
Philip and Marianne Ross
Frank and Sabina Rotecki
Marjorie Rowe
Lawrence and Ivern Rubida
David and Joanne Rudo
John and Margaret Saari
Lloyd and Norma Sabini
Pat and Virginia Sainsbury

John and Joan Schick
Marg and Gerry Schiele
Lillian Schiendelman
Robert and Shirley Schlorff
Calvin and Alice Schmitt
Robert and Dolores Schuh
Dolores Shuna
Rudy and Winona Schuver
Walter Schwindt
Gerald and Patsi Scofield

Info Central
Anything in this issue whet your appetite for more? The following materials
provided the basis for, or informed, ReView stories:
>• The full-length article by Barbara Leigh Smith which is excerpted on the next
page
»- Centennial Scholars Speakers Bureau guide (see next page)
>• Annual update and fact sheet of the National Faculty for Humanities, Arts
and Sciences (see page three)
»• Limited copies of Matt Groening's profile (see page six)
If you are interested in any of these publications, call Information Services,
(206) 866-6000, ext. 6128, or write Info Central, Library 3121, The Evergreen
State College, Olympia, Washington 98505. Please request the piece you want
by title and wait three weeks for delivery.
Greeners, get cookin'— The Greener Cookbook, to be published this winter, is
looking for students, teachers, staff and alumni who are willing to share their
favorite recipes, or essays and illustrations, dealing with food and nutrition.
Send your contribution to current student Dan McGrady, editor, 1-309, TESC,
Olympia, WA 98505. Include some information about yourself and the reason for
your selection(s). Your submissions cannot be returned but you will be given full
credit for your creation, if it's published. Gooey Duck Press, publisher of this
enterprise, is not affiliated with The Evergreen State College or the state of
Washington. Deadline is January 1, 1989.
Writers, let it rip—calling all poets, photographers, illustrators, essayists and
writers of fiction: Slightly West, Evergreen's literary quarterly is accepting submissions for its winter edition through December 9. Address correspondence to
Coordinator Paul Kimball, CAB 305, The Evergreen State College.
Submissions will not be returned.

Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Stephens
John and Ellen Stephenson
Robert and Ruth Stewart
Robert and Helen Stierhoff
Walter and Anita Stolov
Michael and Annelore Stone
Bruno and Inge Strauss
Phyllis Sturges
Warren and Norma Styner
John and Dorothy Swanberg
Richard and Patsy Swindler
Elizabeth and Edwin Sykes, Jr.

T
Rosa Tatz
Frank Webb and Charlotte Taylor
Joseph and Sylvia Taylor
William and Joan Taylor
Jessie Tetlow
William and Mary Ann Thebus
James and Glenda Thistle
Kenneth and Joan Thompson
Givens and Barbara Thornton
Jim and Phyllis Titterington
Wing Tom
Irwin Touster
Eleanor Townsend
Samuel and Julie-Ann Traub
Ranger and Dolores Travis
Robert and Mary Lou Treat
Duane and Judy Trefethen
Paul and Shirley Trexel
John and Sally Trzil
Forrest and Dorothy Tucker
John Turner

u

Joseph and Coreene Underwood
Jolene Unsoeld

V
Wilber Van Pelt
Wade and Shirley Vaughn
Denis and Judith Versweyveld
Gunars and leva Veveris
Anne Viekery
Mark and Wendy Visconty

w

Kelso

"Through my experiences, I have learned how to
learn... I look forward to attending Evergreen,
because it's been an important, exciting part of my
life. My mother worked on her master's degree at
Evergreen. When I was in the seventh grade I
learned algebra on one of your computers. In Brazil
I used (faculty member) Pete Sinclair's journalwriting format.
"Evergreen offers programs that encompass the
education I want to pursue—communications,
politics, economics and language. Evergreen will
help me develop a way to promote my conviction
that as a global community we can create a more
peaceful, plentiful and pleasing world."
(Kelso closes with the following quote:) "Experience, energy and invincible determination with the
right motive are the levers that move the world."
—Noah Porter
Charles and Dorothy Shephard
George and Clara Shinn
Larry Short
Eugene and Jean Shultz
Stuart and Frances Shumway
Gary and Marlea Shurtleff
Gary and Diane Sieber
Gillian Siegrist
Warren and Virginia Simms
Orin and Dorothy Simonsen

Robert and Helen Solinger
Amigo and Mildred Soriano
Kay Sparks
Tania and Tbbben Spurkland
Virgina Staggs
William and Carolyn Staley
William and Linda Stanley
Ivan and Michalea Starke
Jerry and Billie Steiert
Joel and Mary Stein

Gunter and Lucile Waehling
Roger Wagoner
Barbara Waldow
Helmut and Lois Wallenfels
George and Christine Walsh
Frank and Joyce Warner
Neil Waterman
James and Susan Watson
Theodore and Donna Weeks
Ursel Weinman
Charles and Claire Weller
Robert and Louisa Wells
Estelle Wertheimer
Frank and Jan Wetzel
Joseph and Merida Wexler
Dorcas Wheaton
Sheryl White
Lois Will
Thomas and Judith Willging
Robert and Betty Williams
Janet and Joseph Williamson
Dwight and Donna Williamson
Robert and Judy Wilson
Irmgard and Herbert Wimberger
Ken and Kathleen Winkley
Robert and Joyce Winsor
Charles and Jane Wisseman
Daniel and Judith Witmer
James and Nancy Wolcott
David and Libby Wolf
Russell and Rebecca Wolfe
Kar-Ellen Wollam
Roger and Donna Wolthuis
Richard and May Wong
Richard and Jo Wright, III
John and Winifred Wright

Y
Barbara Yanick
George and Carol Yarbrough
Ted and Ruth Yoshino
Frank and Marilyn Youngman, Jr
Byron and Bernice Youtz
Z

Sidney and Rosemary Zwick

You Here?
If you gave between July 1, 1987 and June 30, 1988, and your name has
been left off the Honor Roll or listed incorrectly, we would appreciate hearing from you. Let us know by writing to the Evergreen Fund, Library 3114,
The Evergreen State College, Olympia, Washington 98505, or by giving us a
call at (206) 866-6000, ext. 6565.

The Evergreen ReView
Editing: Mark Clemens, Keith Eisner
Graphic Design: Mary Geraci, Marianne Kawaguchi
Writing: Mark Clemens, Kate Crowe, Keith Eisner, Karen Huntsberger, Jim Mateson, Kitty Parker,
Barbara Leigh Smith, Val Thorson, Mike Wark, Forrest Wilcox
Photography: Steve Davis, Sue Hirst, Chris Nelson, TESC Photo Services
Typesetting: Shirley Greene
Illustrations: Bilbo
Other help: Dale Baird, Patricia Barte, Don Chalmers, Ellie Dornan, Vern Quinton, Larry Stenberg
Peoples of Washington photographs: (Cover) Grandmother Koua Moua with Grandson Dang Moua at
Laotian New Year's celebration, Seattle, 1981, photo by Greg Gilbert, courtesy of The Seattle
Times; (top, pages 8 and 9) Bay City Lumber Co., South Aberdeen, ca. 1919, courtesy
of Michael Tesia, Bronco's Liberty Tavern Historical Museum; (page 8) Kathy and Isaac ShultzReyes, Mexican folk dance performance at Seattle Central Community College, 1984, photo by
Gilbert W. Arias, courtesy of The Concilio for the Spanish Speaking. Thank you.

.

Nonprofit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Olympia, WA
Permit No. 65
The Evergreen ReView
Fall, 1988

MARY G E R A C I
SE4124

Published by Information Services and Publications
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, WA 98505

A Grass-Roots
Approach to
Improving
Education
By Barbara Leigh Smith
Academic Dean, The Evergreen State
College

Smith

We thank Academic Dean Barbara Smith for the
following excerpt from "The Washington Center: A
Grass-Roots Approach to Faculty Development and
Curricular Reform," which appeared in the October
issue of To Improve The Academy. Smith, a founder
of the Washington Center, currently serves as its
director.
We encourage submission of articles, opinion pieces
and literary efforts for possible publication in the
ReVieufs guest column. Please address inquiries and
entries to Mark Clemens, Editor, Information
Services, LIB 3122, The Evergreen State College,
Olympia, Washington 98505.

Four years ago, an effort began in
Washington state that dramatically
altered perceptions of revitalizing
faculty and improving undergraduate
education. It began modestly with two
colleges (Seattle University and Evergreen) working together; their efforts
produced a model that became the
foundation for a statewide consortium.
Known as the "Washington Center for
Improving the Quality of Undergraduate Education," the Center is a smallscale, grass-roots effort emphasizing
faculty and curriculum development. In
just two years, the consortium tripled
in size and was institutionalized with
funding from the state legislature.
Headquartered at Evergreen, it now
serves 35 institutions, both public and
independent colleges and universities.
Two closely linked features define the
Center's approach to educational improvement: first, structural alteration
of the educational environment into
"learning communities"; and second,
faculty exchanges into collaborative
teaching situations.
A variety of curricular models are
being piloted. The model most typically used by Center institutions replicates Evergreen's curricular approach.
Instead of taking a series of disciplinary courses, students enroll in an
intensive interdisciplinary program for
one or more quartern This single program is the "full load" for both the
faculty and students. The program
typically enrolls 70-80 students; three
or four faculty plan and teach the program together.
The emphasis in these programs is
on developing students' analytical and
synoptic skills and their capacity to
deal with complex issues from a multidisciplinary point of view.
The Washington Center also acts as a
statewide broker for inter-institutional
faculty exchanges. Unlike most faculty
exchange programs, this program complements and extends curricular

reform by placing exchange faculty,
wherever possible, into team-teaching
situations in new model programs.
Teams often include one faculty
member from another institution, one
veteran from a previous learning community program, and two newcomers
to collaborative teaching. Many of the
institutions rotate faculty members
through the programs to broaden the
impact on the institution, but a balance
of newcomers and relatively experienced faculty members is also important to the programs' success. By June
1989, we estimate that more than 160
faculty in a dozen institutions will have
participated in the faculty exchange
program.
Many faculty members report an initial sense of anxiety about entering a
new institution. Teaching in front of
ones' colleagues is also disquieting at
first, but most participants quickly find
that team teaching provides an important social and intellectual base from
which to experience the new community. Exchange faculty say it is an enormously important learning experience
for them, often more stimulating than
a sabbatical. Most leave the exchange
relationship with a new sense that
there is, in fact, one educational community with many shared interests.
Collaborative teaching can be powerful in bringing people together who
were previously only passing acquaintances. Faculty report that the experience substantially alters their patterns
of collegial interaction and gives them
an enhanced sense of camaraderie and
respect for one another. These new
efforts are also powerful in building
new rapport between faculty and
administrators.
Faculty exchanges and collaborative
teaching provide important opportunities for "re-framing" simply by altering
the routine work environment and
social relations in substantial ways. The
social context is dramatically re-

Higher Ed
Speaks:
Happy B-day,
Washington!
As a 100th birthday gift to Washington, 22 institutions of higher education
in the state are offering the services of
more than 90 of their faculty members
through the Centennial Scholars
Speakers Bureau. Participants include
all six of the public four-year institutions, 12 of the 27 community colleges,
and four independent institutions.
Evergreen's five Centennial Scholars
are faculty members Kenneth
Dolbeare, Pat Labine, Russell Lidman, Thomas Rainey and Sid White.
Dolbeare will speak on a wide range
of economic and political topics about.
Washington, while Labine's talk is
about the art and science of organic
farming. Lidman's talk, "The World of
Our Grandparents: Washington in the
1890s," dwells on ways people then
made their living; while Rainey will
give oratorical renditions of pioneer
figures of the Washington territory. Sid
White will talk about the cultures of
16

defined and new conceptions of educational community are born. Collaborative teaching, especially across institutional boundaries, disrupts old patterns
and expectations. It presents genuine
puzzles and new surprizes.
Our experience compels us to also
think more broadly about leadership.
When colleges think of leadership, it is
usually in terms of administrative
leadership and in a single institutional
setting. We seldom think in terms of
leadership in the classroom. We almost
never think of it across institutions.
Team teaching gives faculty the opportunity to serve as mentors and leaders
in the most useful possible place—the
classroom itself.
The new model curricula put faculty
totally in charge of their teaching, in
terms of both content and structure.
They are jointly empowered to create
something new that is substantively
and pedogogically sound and stimulating. Designing and delivering this
curriculum entails risk taking, and it is
public and collegial. A more emergent
curriculum can perhaps be fully appreciated only when contrasted with
the redundancy of much college teaching, the isolation many faculty feel, and
the bureaucratization that has undermined people's sense of personal power
and community.
This model offers a promising and
relatively low-cost approach to faculty
revitalization and curricular reform. It
has opened up a productive dialogue
about education among our institutions. The Washington Center has done
this by operating from the assumption
that, despite our differences, we are
one educational community with many
overlapping concerns, that we can
make substantial accomplishments
together that we cannot make alone,
and that small scale, grass-roots and
collaborative approaches are the best
places to begin.

Centennial Scholar Pat Labine and
student Mark Koch mull the mulch at
Evergreen's Organic Farm.

- ' - . - / :i& • ' •'

Washington and their artistic contributions (see pages 8 and 9).
The Centennial Scholars Speakers
Bureau has already begun booking
engagements, which are free of charge,
with civic organizations and community groups around the state. The
Scholars' availability coincides with the
State Centennial, which climaxes
November 11, 1989. Evergreen's

'

Scholars will speak anywhere west of
the Cascades.
A guide describing Centennial
Scholars and their talks is available
upon request. Call the institution of
higher education nearest you and ask
for their Centennial Speakers contact
person, or call Pat Barte at Evergreen,
(206) 866-6000, ext. 6128, for a copy of
the guide.

White

ti
i