Newsletter_197504.pdf
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Part of The Evergreen State College Newsletter (April 1, 1975)
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April 28, 1975
...SPRING ENROLLMENT COUNT 2110...Tenth day class count at Evergreen shows a Spring Quarter
enrollment of 2,110 students, according to Registrar Walker Allen. The total includes 1,121
men and 989 women, Allen said. Broken down by academic levels, there are 658 first-year
students at Evergreen, 547 sophomores, 536 juniors and 339 seniors.
The non-white enrollment at Evergreen shows 110 Native American students, 88 AfroAmericans, 22 Asian Americans and 21 Spanish Americans. The total enrollment count of 2,110
compares with 1,936 enrolled in Spring Quarter, 1974.
...THIRD WORLD ART SHOW OFFERS VARIETY OF CULTURAL EXPRESSIONS...Artworks from throughout
West Coast non-white communities are currently on display in Evergreen's main gallery.
The show, the first of its kind in Thurston County, is a comprehensive exhibit of Third
World art, including more than 40 pieces by more than two dozen artists. Evergreen Exhibits
Coordinator John Woo, a Seattle junior, says the works represent what he calls a "friends
and neighbors" show. He personally selected each piece by traveling the length of the West
Coast visiting artists recommended to him by other artists. Together, the varied and
complex exhibit portrays what Woo calls the "distinctive flavor of Third World Art" as
opposed to art reflected by the predominant American culture.
The exhibit, to be displayed through May 10 at Evergreen, includes two dozen pieces
of pottery shaped by Pacific Northwest artists Ed King, coordinator of TESC art workshops,
and Jerry Threlkeld, a Seattle art instructor. It also includes some 40 paintings, drawings, collages, kinetic and wood sculptures, prints and photo scrolls, produced by artists
from Chicano, Asian, Black and Native American communities.
The entire display represents an artistic statement of what Woo feels is happening in
contemporary non-white cultures
the desire to communicate and share ethnic heritages
and accomplishments with each other. Woo says the exhibit will be displayed at the Wing
Luke Memorial Museum in Seattle later in May. He hopes other communities will also want
to display it. He invites interested persons to contact him at Evergreen
and to view
the show at the Library gallery before May 10. Gallery hours are from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Mondays through Thursdays; 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Fridays; 1 to 5 p.m. Saturdays and 1 to 9 p.m.
Sundays.
•
...EVERGREEN SCIENTIST APPOINTED TO NATIONAL COMMITTEE...Dr. Elizabeth Kutter. an Evergreen
faculty biologist, has been invited to serve with the National Institutes of Health's
Program Advisory Committee on DNA Recombinants. Task of the committee is to develop foolproof ways to eliminate potential hazards before permitting use of certain powerful new
techniques for genetic analysis in higher organisms.
Dr. Kutter has been conducting scientific research on the biochemical genetics of
bacterial viruses. Her work, which has involved Evergreen students, has been partially
financed by the NIH.
Dr. Kutter was invited to serve on the advisory group by Dr. Dewitt Stetten, Jr.,
Deputy Director for Science, National Institutes of Health, an agency within the Department
of Health, Education and Welfare. Dr. Stetten selected Dr. Kutter for both her knowledge
of biology and her appreciation of the ethics of research.
...NEW YORK SENIOR AWARDED ECONOMICS FELLOWSHIP...Susan Feiner. a Nyack, New York senior at
Evergreen, has been awarded a $3,350 Victoria C. Lapham Fellowship for graduate studies in
economics. The 20-year-old Evergreen student, who expects to graduate in June, is the
first recipient of the newly-established national fellowship program administered by
Southern Methodist University. Ms. Feiner has already been accepted to graduate school at
the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, where she will major in economics.
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...SEATTLE BLACK POET PERFORMS MAY 1 AND 2...Aaron Dumas, Seattle actor, poet and playwright, will stage two presentations and three workshops at Evergreen next week. Director
of his own theatrical troupe at the age of 19, Dumas, now 26, has published two books of
poetry and numerous poems in literary magazines. A black man, Dumas says his poetry offers
"reflections of the lives of all persons, not just blacks, but from a black man's point of
view." He will read selections of his poetry May 1 and present sequences of his newest
play, "After Midnight," May 2. Both presentations are set for 8 p.m. in the main lobby of
the library. He will also offer three afternoon workshops: one on black literature April
28, a second on creative writing April 29, and a third on drama April 30. All of the
1:30 p.m. workshops, as well as his two performances, are free and open to the public.
Workshop locations will be announced through the Evergreen Information Center, 866-6300.
...READING WORKSHOP SET THURSDAY...Dr. Lois Roth, supervisor of Reading for the Office of
Superintendent of Public Instruction, will conduct a workshop on the Teaching of Reading
May 1 from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Evergreen in Library room 1612. Co-sponsored by Evergreen
and the Timberland Regional Library, the half-day session is designed to help Timberland
staff, Evergreen students and other interested persons teach reading and identify the kinds
of materials children most like to read. Persons interested in attending the free public
workshop are invited to contact the Library, 866-6262.
...NEW EDITOR FOR COLLEGE NEWSPAPER...Ralph Smith, a Pullman sophomore, has been named (
acting editor of the Cooper Point Journal, Evergreen's weekly student-run newspaper. Snitch
replaces former editor Sam Solomon, who resigned April 17. His appointment is expected to
be confirmed by Evergreen's Publications Board at a meeting set for May 2.
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April 25, 1975
he didn't reenroll
" BYRON'S DISMISSAL REVERSED BY HEARING BOARD
Lack of due process, lack of specific statements of violations, and lack of evidence
led the seven-member All Campus Hearing Board Tuesday (April 22) to find in favor of former
student Jerome Byron, who appealed his Fall Quarter dismissal by Evergreen Vice President
and Provost Ed Kormondy.
The hearing was the second in three months which reversed a decision by a vice president in favor of a petitioner. February 27 a similar hearing reversed Vice President
Dean Clabaugh's appointment of John Moss to the dual directorship of Personnel and Auxiliary Services.
The April 22 decision, issued in a two-page memorandum to Byron, followed more than
four hours of public testimony April 21, preceded by court action in which Byron had asked
Thurston County Superior Court to restrain Evergreen administrators from carrying out his
disenrollment. Superior Court Judge Hewitt Henry requested a psychiatric examination of
Byron. When the examination revealed the Sherman Oaks, California sophomore was not a
danger to himself or others, Evergreen's legal counsel, Assistant Attorney General Richard
Monteccuco^agreed to let Byron reenroll at Evergreen and to arrange for the Monday hearing.
Byron did not elect to reenroll. He told Hearing Board members he was not sure
whether or not he would enroll, even if their decision was in his favor. Byron, represented
by John Braithwaite of Thurston-Mason County Legal Aid Association, charged that his disenrollment was a violation of due process since there was no formal hearing before he was
disenrolled in December.
"...POTENTIAL FOR INCITING OTHERS..."
Provost Kormondy said he was "empowered to disenroll students for cause," and that
those causes included "disruption of the learning process." He cited problems Byron and
his Fall Quarter instructor William Burford had encountered and asked Security Officer
Gary Russell and Dean of Student Development Programs Larry Stenberg to indicate their
involvement with Byron. Stenberg, who indicated he had a number of conversations with
Byron, said it was his opinion that "Jerome's continuing in this college could be harmful
to him...because of the potential his behavior has of inciting others to act out against
him." Kormondy also offered letters by Burford, who is now in Texas, and by Academic Dean
Lynn Patterson, who was off campus during the hearing but who had been in contact with
Burford when the conflicts between he and Byron began.
The Hearing Board agreed with Byron that he had been denied due process, because
informal mediation between himself and Burford had not taken place before Byron was disenrolled. The Hearing Board also said Kormondy's letter of disenrollment to Byron "did
not sufficiently inform the petitioner of the charges against him..." and that evidence
presented by Kormondy to support possible violations of the Evergreen Social Contract "was
not sufficient to substantiate those alleged violations."
The Hearing Board also indicated that it had difficulty deciding the case because:
(1) the hearing was convened "without informing the Board Members of the specific reasons
for the petitioner for wanting a hearing, without a response from the respondent and without clarification of the charges prior to the hearing;"(2) the Hearing was forced before
all attempts at informal mediation had been made, and (3) because Burford was not present.
"DUE PROCESS" A MUST
The Campus Hearing Board also affirmed the authority of the Provost to disenroll
students who violate the Social Contract, but pointed out that any disenrollment must be
done in accordance with "procedural as well as substantive due process guaranteed in the
COG document." The Board concluded with an affirmation of faculty members' rights to*
remove disruptive influences from their classrooms, again subject to the guarantees of
mediation and hearing as set forth in COG.
Byron, commenting on the results of the hearing, said he was still not prepared to
answer questions about whether or not he would reenroll at Evergreen.
Members of the Hearing Board included Chas Davies, who acted as chairman, Faculty
Member Ron Woodbury, Staff Members Gail Martin and Al Spence and Students Corrie Haight,
Neil Bogue and Ellen Mosier. Permanent Hearing Board Members Carlos Rose-White, a student,
and Russ Lidman, faculty, were challenged by Byron and replaced with Haight and Woodbury.
POSTAL INVESTIGATION UNDERWAY
U.S. Postal and Secret Service authorities were at Evergreen last Thursday and this
week, investigating apparently unintentional but technically unlawful activities involving
the printing and subsequent mailing of 200 illegally-stamped post cards. The incident,
involving a part-time student, three classified staff members, and one member of the
faculty, had resulted in no charges being filed by the time The Newsletter went to press.
The investigation of the possible counterfeiting of $16 worth of government stamps and
mailing them illegally continued.
Indications were that the student, under an individual study contract with a faculty
member, had sent a stamped post card to the college Print Shop and asked that 200 copies
be run on a rush basis. The post cards, containing invitations to Olympia-area residents
to attend a special campus meeting next week, apparently were printed here and then
mailed by the student last week from the Olympia Post Office. Postal inspectors,noticing
the stamped post cards were copies
albiet poor ones
of an original (the stamps
were black instead of orange), launched an immediate investigation.
Those involved said the incident was an innocent series of mistakes; that no intent
to defraud existed, and that the student had assumed the postage was completely legal
when she mailed the cards.
CPJ HAS NEW EDITOR; GRIBSKOV ANNOUNCES INTENTION TO RESIGN AS ADVISOR
Ralph Smith, a Pullman sophomore, has assumed the editorship of the Cooper Point
Journal following the resignation April 17 of former editor Sam Solomon for "personal
reasons." Smith, who edited an underground newspaper in Boise, Idaho before coming to
Evergreen Fall Quarter, is the fourth CPJ editor this year. He has named Brian Murphy,
who served as CPJ editor Fall Quarter, 1973, as his news editor, replacing Aubrey Dawn,
who also resigned.
Faculty Advisor Margaret Gribskov said she expects the Publications Board to confirm
Smith's appointment at its next meeting May 2 at 1 p.m. in Library 3121. Gribskov said
applications for editor for Fall Quarter, 1975 are now being accepted in Library 1414 and
will be until 9 a.m. May 20. The Publications Board will meet again May 23 to name a
Fall Quarter editor.
Gribskov also announced that she intends to resign as advisor to the student-run
weekly newspaper the end of Spring Quarter. She has served in that capacity since she
joined the Evergreen Faculty in the Fall of 1973.
MARROM OVERSEES SAFETY PROGRAM
Rod Marrom, Evergreen's Security Supervisor since 1970 and additionally responsible
for campus safety programs since March, 1974, this week was requested by Administrative
Vice President Dean Clabaugh to devote "100 per cent" of his time to completing plans
required of the college by the Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act (WISHA). The
full-time temporary assignment will expire on June 30. Marrom, reporting directly to
Clabaugh from quarters in the Development Office (third floor of the Library), undertook
the expansion of his safety duties early this week.
(
In a letter to Marrom, Clabaugh said, "You will continue to work with the Safety
Committee previously established and will, in addition to preparing the WISHA plan:
coordinate safety activities; keep and analyze accident records; conduct activities for
stimulating and maintaining safety interest of employees; develop employee safety
education programs and conduct education activities; serve on the Safety Committee;
conduct accident investigations and appraisals; plan and direct a regular program of
safety inspections; check for compliance with applicable safety laws and codes; and issue
regular reports showing safety performance and accident trends."
Clabaugh added, "The exempt administrative assignment to which this letter appoints
you is temporary. Although Evergreen may, after completion of the WISHA plan, decide to
establish a 'safety coordinator' position, it would probably become a classified position
to be filled through civil service procedures established by the Higher Education Personnel
Board. In no event, therefore, should you anticipate that this assignment will continue
beyond June 30, 1975."
Clabaugh and Dean of Student Development Programs Larry Stenberg, to whom campus
security functions are directly accountable, have not yet determined how administration
of that office will be handled in the immediate future. An announcement is expected
next week.
TRUSTEES APPROVE COOPERATIVE AGREEMENTS; ADOPT ORGANIZATIONAL CHART - by Judy Annis
Evergreen's Board of Trustees approved two cooperative agreements
one with St.
Martin's College, the other with the City of Olympia
and adopted the college's current
organizational chart with a precedent-setting resolution sponsored by Spokane Trustee
Hal Halvorson.
The resolution accepted the college organization chart in effect on April 17, which
includes the recent combination of Director of Personnel and Auxiliary Services. Perhaps
with that combination in mind, the Trustees also approved, as part of the organization
chart, a one sentence paragraph simply stating: "The organizational table may be changed
only after approval of the Board of Trustees." Halvorson, again, encouraged the addition
of the words "only after" in the paragraph.
The five-member board also approved the lease of seven acres of farm land from St.
Martin's for a $1 fee. Evergreen students in the Native American Studies program this
summer will cultivate the land, using traditional Indian farming methods, and harvest
their produce for distribution to the needy in Thurston County. Faculty Member Cruz
Esquivel, sponsor of the Native American study program, said his students are purchasing
seeds for the project in cooperation with the Hunger Action Center. Students will also
work with the Department of Social and Health Services to distribute farm produce.
Esquivel said the reason his program sought land apart from Evergreen's 1,000 acres
was that "clearing would be necessary for us to use that much land on campus." He said
the Good Earth Coordinated Studies program, a three-quarter academic study, is already
using the farming area at the Organic Farm, which isn't big enough to support both programs.
Trustees also approved a request by the City of Olympia to drill a second test water
well on college property adjacent to a similar well drilled in 1971-72. City Engineer
Al Kimball said the well is part of the city's effort to develop new water sources and
storage facilities on Olympia's Westside. Initial development of the water project,
according to a letter to the Trustees from Olympia Mayor Tom Allen, will involve construction of a two-million-gallon storage reservoir on the Westside.
Drilling of the new, shallow well, on college property near the Corner of C-Road and
Kaiser Road, will take less than a month to complete. Construction of the new reservoir
will begin in September. Kimball estimated the reservoir, to be built on city property
near Elliot Avenue, will take a year to complete. If the campus wells prove to be productive as water supply sources, college and Olympia officials will later negotiate
changes in water rates charged Evergreen by the City.
SPRING ENROLLMENT COUNT 2110
Tenth day class count at Evergreen shows a Spring Quarter
enrollment of 2,110 students, according to Registrar Walker Allen.
The total includes 1,121 men and 989 women, Allen said. Broken
down by academic levels, there are 658 first-year students at
Evergreen, 547 sophomores, 536 juniors and 339 seniors.
The non-white enrollment at Evergreen shows 110 Native American students, 88 Afro-Americans, 22 Asian Americans and 21
Spanish Americans. The total enrollment count of 2110 compares
with 1,936 enrolled in Spring Quarter, 1974.
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AVQNOW A3 IHDHOS DNINNVld WniflOI'SHnO HOI SNOIISaODHS
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April 21, 1975
...THIRD WORLD FORUM SPONSORS ANTICIPATING BIG TURNOUT...An estimated 2,500 persons are
expected on campus April 25, 26, and 27 for the Third World Bicentennial Forum. Sponsors of
the three-day event, most of them members of TESC's Non-White Coalition, say a wide variety
of speakers
many of them nationally known
will participate in the Forum, which will
offer workshops, panel discussions, lectures, films, dances, ethnic food and entertainment.
Enthusiasm for the celebration grew last summer after interested students traveled the
length of the West Coast sharing their ideas with other non-whites. John Woo, one of the
Forum coordinators, says the event is "more a celebration than a conference." "We want to
celebrate and commemorate the achievements and contributions of non-whites in the 200-year-old
history of the United States," he adds.
•The conference is aimed also at "establishing channels of -dialog between different
community organizations and individuals who share the same concerns and problems," Woo says.
Students hope to demonstrate that different ethnic nationalities "can, are and will work
together to correct injustices suffered in the past"
and at the same time offer interested
community residents a chance to understand attempts by non-whites to retain and combine their
cultural traditions within the nation's predominant culture.
Sponsored in part by a $2,500 grant from the Washington State Bicentennial Commission,
the Forum will also feature an exhibit of Third World art gathered from throughout the nation,
*d the selection (and possibly painting of) a giant mural depicting Third World cultures on
„ cement wall site yet to be selected.
An exact schedule of events can be obtained from the Non-White Coalition Office, 866-6034,
or the College Information Center, 866-6300.
...STUDENTS PREPARE TO LAUNCH TOTTEN INLET STUDY...Armed with transits and floats, oars and
binoculars, ten Evergreen students and two faculty members are about to cast off
onto the
waters of Totten Inlet, there to begin serious research that could affect the future of aquaculture industries in Mason and Thurston Counties and the quality of water in southern Puget
Sound.
Their task: to provide a comprehensive picture of tidal patterns in Totten Inlet. Its
purpose: to help oyster growers, ecologists, developers and others interested in the use of
lands and waters around the inlet gauge the flow of potential pollutants
such as sewage,
industrial effluents, or oil spills
into the area.
The project is one of six being undertaken by members of the Environmental Studies
academic program. After two quarters spent studying economics, urban planning and ecology,
students have sought and obtained working agreements with off campus agencies facing environmental problems. The Totten Inlet study was arranged through the Olympia Oysters Growers
Association, which is vitally concerned with preservation of the inlet's water quality.
What students want to know is how tidal action affects the spread of pollutants. Where,
for example, sewage once dumped into the Sound, is then carried. To find out, students will
launch their tidal study April 24 at low tide, and work full days through April 29, the period
of highest Spring tides. Working closely with faculty members Oscar Soule, biologist, and
Pete Taylor, oceanographer, they will concentrate their efforts on three sites along the inlet
Steamboat Island, Olympic View and Kamilche Point.
\MIMMS TO ADDRESS APRIL 24 ECCO LUNCHEON...Evergreen Faculty Member Maxine Mimms will be the
o-eatured speaker at the annual Spring luncheon of the Evergreen College Community Organization
(ECCO). The luncheon is set for noon, April 24 in the Big Chief room of the Tyee Motor Inn.
Reservations for the luncheon, which cost $3.60 per person, should be made by 5 p.m.
April 21 with ECCO member Jane Hopkins (943-1118).
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...OLYMPIA HOMEMAKER DESIGNING FALL QUARTER "HOUSEWIVES" MODULAR...Evergreen student Mayy
Moorehead, an Olympia homemaker and mother of four, has undertaken an ambitious project she
hopes will result in the enrollment of increased numbers of women from the community in
college study programs. Working on an individual study contract with Faculty Member Maxine
Mimms, Mrs. Moorehead is planning a Fall Quarter, 1975 Modular Course for "housewives between
the ages of 25 and 75 who are returning or thinking of returning, to college." "After 25 years
of being a homemaker, wife and mother, I enrolled at Evergreen and have found it to be a
tremendous resource for me," she says. "I feel that the Olympia-area homemaker is also a real
source of ability and potential. My idea is to put the two together for the benefit of both."
Mrs. Moorehead has launched an all-out recruiting campaign in Thurston County, trying to
contact anyone willing to help put together a planning group of homemakers who can design the
Fall Quarter modular offering. She will host a coffee, tea, and discussion session April 29
at 3 p.m. in room 3112 of the Library. "All women
whether definitely interested or mildly
curious
are invited to attend," she says. Those wanting further information may call her
at 866-7869.
...TALK ON RAPE SCHEDULED...Maureen Saylor, therapy supervisor for the Sexual Offenders Unit
of Western State Hospital, will discuss "The Personality of a Rapist," in a 2 p.m. address (
April 23 in Lecture Hall One. The free, public talk has been organized as a response to the
film showing last week of "How to Say No to a Rapist," which has aroused objections from many
women on campus.
the
evergreen
state.,
college
newsletter
)[
April 18, 1975
THIRD WORLD FORUM SPONSORS ANTICIPATING BIG TURNOUT
An estimated 2,500 persons are expected on campus April 25, 26 and 27 for the Third
World Bicentennial Forum- Sponsors of the three-day event, most of them members of TESC's
Non-White Coalition, say a wide variety of speakers --- many of them nationally known --will participate in the Forum, which will offer workshops, panel discussions, lectures,
films, dances, ethnic food and entertainment.
Enthusiasm for the celebration grew last summer after interested students traveled
the length of the West Coast sharing their ideas with other non-whites . John Woo, one of
the Forum coordinators, says the event is "more a celebration than a conference." "We
want to celebrate and commemorate the achievements and contributions of non-whites in the
200-year-old history of the United States," he adds.
The conference, which has been publicized nationwide and is expected to draw considerable off-campus media interest, is aimed also at "establishing channels of dialog between
different community organizations and individuals who share the same concerns and problems,"
Woo says. Students hope to demonstrate that different ethnic nationalities "can, are and
will work together to correct injustices suffered in the past" --- and at the same time
offer Evergreeners a chance to understand attempts by non-whites to retain and combine
their cultural traditions within the nation's predominant culture.
Sponsored in part by a $2,500 grant from the Washington State Bicentennial Commission,
the forum will also feature an exhibit of Third World art gathered from throughout the
nation, and the selection (and possibly painting of) a giant mural depicting Third World
cultures on a cement wall site yet to be selected.
Student organizers say they're ready and waiting for the event --- but they need
community help in securing sleeping arrangements for their visitors. Space has already
been approved for pitching tents on campus for hardier participants, and other arrangements
have been made in campus housing and the College Recreation Center. Woo says, however,
that there's still a need for more spaces and he's hopeful community members will volunteer
to house guests in their homes during the Forum. If you're interested and able to offer
such space, contact the Non-White Coalition Office at 866-6034.
volunteers needed
STUDENTS READY TO LAUNCH TOTTEN INLET STUDY
Armed with transits and floats, oars and binoculars, ten Evergreen students and two
faculty members are about to cast off --- onto the waters of Puget Sound's Totten Inlet,
there to unfold one age-old mystery of the sea. Sounds romantic, especially in the bright,
chill mornings of Spring. Yet the Evergreeners are engaged in serious research that could
affect the future of aquaculture industries in Mason and Thurston Counties and the quality
of water in southern Puget Sound.
Their task: to provide a comprehensive picture of tidal patterns in Totten Inlet.
Its purpose: to help oyster growers, ecologists, developers and others interested in the
use of lands and waters around the inlet gauge the flow of potential pollutants --- such
as sewage, industrial effluents, or oil spills --- into the area.
The project is one of six being undertaken by members of the Environmental Studies
academic program. After two quarters spent studying economics, urban planning and ecology,
students have sought and obtained working agreements with off campus agencies facing environmental problems. The Totten Inlet study was arranged through the Olympia Oysters Growers
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Association, which is vitally concerned with preservation of the inlet's water quality.
"The inlet is the only remaining area in southern Puget Sound which still supports
small oyster companies," Dan Tishman. a New York sophomore, explains. "Any sewage or other
pollutants dumped into the inlet
or where tides can possibly carry it into the inlet -f
degrades the water quality and increases the possibility for decertification of the oysters
by the State Department of Social and Health Services." Decertification, already ordered
along one section of the inlet, means oysters grown there cannot be sold.
What students want to know is how tidal action affects the spread of pollutants. Where,
for example, sewage once dumped into the Sound, is then carried. To find out, Tishman and
nine other students will launch their tidal study April 24 at low tide, and work full days
through April 29, the period of highest Spring tides. Working closely with faculty members
Oscar Soule. biologist, and Pete Taylor, oceanographer, they will concentrate their efforts
on three sites along the inlet
Steamboat Island, Olympic View and Kamilche Point.
But, they need help. Tishman says they'd like at least ten other students to volunteer
at least two days of their time to work with them crewing boats, tracking floats and
taking field notes. He asks all interested students to sign up in Library 1503 or call
866-6601 or 866-6604 as soon as possible. He says two dry runs are planned April 21 and 22
before they'll begin their real study April 24. Workshops are set to prepare students for
the study and Tishman hopes volunteers will sign up soon enough to take advantage of the
training sessions. He says the work will be demanding. "But," he adds, "it's also important.
It .may help preserve not only the water quality of the inlett but the way of life now enjoyed
by the small aquaculture farmers along it."
BYRON REENROLLED; HEARING SET MONDAY
Jerome Byron reenrolled at Evergreen Monday. The Sherman Oaks, California sophomore
was disenrolled Fall Quarter following a dispute with Faculty Member William Burford and
unsuccessful negotiations with Dean of Student Development Programs Larry Stenberg and
Provost Ed Kormondy.
Following his dismissal, Byron sought a hearing by the All Campus Hearing Board. Whd(
the request was denied, he filed suit April 2 against Evergreen in Thurston County Superior
Court asking that the court issue a restraining order to prevent Evergreen administrators
from expelling him before he received a formal hearing. Judget Hewitt Henry heard the case
April 7 and agreed to request a psychiatric test on Byron.
Evergreen's legal counsel, Assistant Attorney General Richard Montecucco, said results
of the tests issued April 11 indicated Byron was "not a threat to himself or other persons."
Montecucco then agreed to have Byron reenrolled April 14 and set up a hearing for April 21
at 10:30 a.m. in Library 3112. Named to the Hearing Board are permanent panel members Russ
Lidman, faculty; Chas Davies, staff, and Carlos Rose-White, student; staff members AI Spence
and Gail Martin and students Neil Bogue and Ellen Mosier. Alternates have also been
selected for the Monday meeting, which is open to the public.
FOUR NEW FACULTY SIGN ON
At least four new faces will be among the Fall Quarter faculty roster come September.
Virginia Ingersoll, Kaye-V Ladd, Susan Strasser and York Wong have all signed three-year,
full-time faculty contracts.
Ingersoll, an assistant professor of communications at the University of Pennsylvania,
has taught at California State College in San Bernardino and at the University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign.
She has also been a magazine editor, a reporter, and an editorial assistant
She earned her bachelor's degree in journalism and philosophy from Marquette University and
her doctorate in philosophy from the University of Illinois.
An assistant professor at Suffolk University in Boston, Massachusetts, Ladd has served
as a research consultant from the New England Aquarium in Boston and as a staff scientist
for Tyco Laboratories, Inc., in Waltham, Mass. She earned her bachelor's degree in chem
from Reed College in Portland, Oregon and her masters degree (in physical chemistry) and
doctorate (in inorganic chemistry)both from Brandeis University.
Strasser, now completing her doctoral dissertation on "The Effects of Household
Technology on the Roles of Women in America," has been a teaching assistant at the State
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University of New York at Stony Brook for three years. She earned her master's degree in
American history from Stony Brook and is completing her ph.d. there. Her bachelor's degree
in history was awarded from Reed College, too.
Wong, director of computer services at Evergreen for the past two years, taught the
Fall Quarter group contract in Minority Economic Development. He formerly served as a
management consultant for the City of New York, as a special assistant to the President of
Columbia University, and as a program consultant for the I.E. M. Watson Research Center.
He has a bachelor of science degree from the University of Arkansas, and a master's degree
in business administration from Columbia. He is currently chairman of the Tacoma Human
Relations Commission.
OLYMPIA HOMEMAKER DESIGNING FALL QUARTER "HOUSEWIVES" MODULAR
Evergreen student Mary Moorehead, an Olympia homemaker and mother of four, has undertaken an ambitious project she hopes will result in the enrollment of increased numbers of
women from the community in college study programs. Working on an individual study contract
with Faculty Member Maxine Mimms, Mrs. Moorehead is planning a Fall Quarter, 1975 Modular
Course for "housewives between the ages of 25 and 75 who are returning or thinking of returning, to college." "After 25 years of being a homemaker, wife and mother, I enrolled
at Evergreen and have found it to be a tremendous resource for me," she says. "I feel that
the.Olympia-area homemaker is also a real source of ability and potential. My idea is to
put the two together for the benefit of both."
As a result, Mrs. Moorehead has launched an all-out recruiting campaign in Thurston
County, contacting news media, clubs, organizations, and individuals
anyone willing to
help put together a planning group of homemakers who can design the Fall Quarter modular
offering. "The subject matter for the program is open," she says. "It can include samples
of the fun to be found in several disciplines at Evergreen, transition buffers for those
returning to college after long absences, examinations of how the college really works for
students, discovery of each woman's hidden potential
just about anything."
"The big problem is to find the housewife interested in learning more about the
possibilities for her at Evergreen, talking about what she needs in education, and then
planning studies for herself and others," she adds. "I feel that the woman who wants to
continue her education has special advantages in life experience and in the skills perfected
but often unrecognized, at home or in the community. The housewife who returns to college
has special problems, too, from her apprehensions, through dovetailing the roles involved,
to finding her own abilities and goals."
The next step for Mrs. Moorehead is the hosting of a coffee, tea, and discussion
session, scheduled for 3 p.m. April 29 in room 3112 of the Library. "All women
whether
definitely interested or mildly curious
are invited to attend," she says. Those wanting
further information may call her at 866-7869.
HATCH NAMED SOUNDING BOARD MODERATOR
Marcel Hatch, a sophomore from Priest Lake, Idaho, has been named Spring Quarter
moderator of the Evergreen Sounding Board. He replaces fellow student Larry Mauksch. Any
students interested in serving on the board are asked to contact Hatch or leave their names
and phone numbers at the Information Center.
MIMMS TO ADDRESS APRIL 24 ECCO LUNCHEON
Evergreen Faculty Member Maxine Mimms will be the featured speaker at the annual
Spring luncheon of the Evergreen College Community Organization (ECCO). The luncheon is
set for noon, April 24 in the Big Chief room of the Tyee Motor Inn.
Mimms, currently coordinator of Evergreen's Learning Resources Center, will discuss
"Bits and Pieces of Fascinating Womanhood." Mimms has her bachelors degree in education
and master's in sociology, and her work experience includes serving as special assistant
to the director of the U.S. Department of Labor's Women's Bureau, director of Iri-Service
Education for Seattle Public Schools and program coordinator for the Seattle University New
Careers Project. She has also taught in public schools at all age levels, and served as a
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teacher of special education in the Lake Washington School District. In addition, Minims
is well known on campus for her candor and wit!
Reservations for the luncheon, which costs $3.60 per person, should be made by 5 p.m.
April 21 with ECCO member Jane Hopkins (943-1118).
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EVERGREEN MUSICIANS WIN AWARDS
Two members of "Evergreen Grass," a bluegrass band sponsored by the Country Music
study program, won individual awards in the Blitz-Winehard Northwest Bluegrass Festival
at Eugene, Oregon April 12. Student Mike Bristow won the guitar-playing competition and
former Evergreen student Tom Moran captured first place in the mandolin contest during the
day-long festival, which attracted Bluegrass groups throughout the Pacific Northwest.
Following the individual competition, "Evergreen Grass"was invited to play a set as
part of the festival's prime afternoon concert. Faculty sponsor and "Evergreen Grass"
Director Tom Foote said, "Saturday's individual performances and the invitation to play on
the main part of the Festival program established our band as a major professional performing group in the Pacific Northwest."
FILMMAKERS FESTIVAL PLANNED
Student filmmakers are being sought by staff members of KAOS FM radio for a one-night
Film Festival, slated for May 28 in Lecture Hall One. Kim McCartney says the non-competitive
festival is open to all interested Evergreeners and urges filmmakers^ to contact her in person
or in writing at KAOS Studios, third floor, CAB. Deadline for submitting films is May 21.
CAREER SEARCH SEMINARS OFFERED
Four Career Search Seminars will be offered by Evergreen Counseling Services Spring
Quarter. Career Counselor Michelle Hayes says each of the four seminars will be held
twice
once in the morning and once in the afternoon
on Thursdays beginning April 2{
Each seminar is designed to cover basic introductory information, Hayes says. As they progress, the seminars will focus on individuals and help them decide what steps they want
to take after they leave Evergreen.
Hayes invites students to contact her at 866-6151 for details and urges all interested
persons to attend the seminars. "Now," she says, "is the time to think about what your
education means to you."
TALK ON RAPE SCHEDULED
Maureen Saylor, therapy supervisor for the Sexual Offenders Unit of Western State
Hospital, will discuss "The Personality of a Rapist," in a 2 p.m. address April 23 in
Lecture Hall One. The free, public talk has been organized as a response to the film
showing last week of "How to Say No to a Rapist," which has aroused objections from many
women on campus.
SPEAKER FROM INTERNATIONAL MEDITATION SOCIETY HERE NEXT WEEK
Tim Jones, Western Regional Coordinator for the International Meditation Society, will
open an eight-day program at Evergreen next week to inaugurate the "Dawn of the Age of
Enlightenment." Jones will give an introductory lecture on Transcendental Meditation April 22
at 3 and 7:30 p.m. in Laboratory Builidng room 3033. Preparatory lectures and discussions
of T.M. are also set for April 24 and April 30 , both at 7:30 p.m. in the same room. A
90-minute television special, set for 10 a.m. April 28, will also feature discussion of T.M.,
by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and Merv Griffin.
Special events for those already practicing T.M. will include a Meditators Conference
at 1 p.m. April 27 in Lab 3033, followed by a potluck picnic. A refresher course is also (
planned April 28 and 29 at 7:30 p.m. in ASH C-27.
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April 14, 1975
...FOOD DAY PROGRAM OFFERED APRIL 17...An all-day public forum to discuss rising costs of
food, the declining quality of American diets and the severity of world hunger problems will
be held at Evergreen April 17 beginning at 10 a.m. in the College Activities Building.
Featured speaker at the day long event, which is being commemorated throughout the United
States as the "national day of action on the food crisis," will be Dr. Ruth W. Shearer, a
researcher at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
Dr. Shearer, a molecular geneticist, will discuss "Biological Aspects of Nutrition,
Food Pollution and Cancer," in an 11 a.m. address in Lecture Hall One. She will also offer
a highly technical discussion on "Alteration of Genetic Mechanisms by Carcinogens (cancer
agents)" at 1 p.m. and a talk on "Legal and Financial Aspects of Nutrition, Food Pollution
and Cancer" at 2 p.m. Both of her afternoon talks will be held in CAB room 110.
Other events scheduled for Food Day, which is sponsored nation-wide by the Center for
Science in the Public Interest, include film showings, workshops, demonstrations and lectures.
Call the Evergreen Information Center (866-6300) for a complete schedule of events.
...JONES NAMED OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR...Dr. Richard Jones, an Evergreen faculty member in
psychology, has been named one of the outstanding educators of America. Jones, nominated for
the honor by Provost Ed Kormondy, will be featured in a national awards volume, "Outstanding
Educators of America," which is published under the auspices of Fuller and Dees, Inc.
An original member of Evergreen's planning faculty, Jones was a Phi Beta Kappa scholar
at Stanford University where he earned his bachelor of arts degree in psychology, and a
Rantoul scholar at Harvard University where he earned his doctorate in clinical psychology.
Prior to joining the Evergreen staff in 1970, he served as Chief of Psychological Services
for the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health and as a professor of education at Harvard.
He has also taught at the University of California at Santa Cruz and at Brandeis University,
where he was also director of the school's Psychological Counseling Center.
Jones has authored seven books and numerous articles in recent years dealing with the
subjects of psychology, counseling and dreaming.
...NEW FINANCIAL AID COUNSELOR SELECTED...Don Von Volkenburg, currently acting director of the
Development Office, has been appointed to the full-time post of Financial Aid Counselor. The
appointment, effective April 23, was announced by Financial Aid Director Kay Atwood April 8.
Von Volkenburg, a June, 1973 graduate of Evergreen, joined the Development Office staff
as a program assistant in July of 1974. He was later promoted to an administrative assistant
and assumed the responsibilities of acting director following the resignation of Marianne
Nelson Godwin in November. Before attending Evergreen, Von Volkenburg worked as a bank
payroll clerk, an operations analyst and an editor and marketing representative for an Ohio
trust company, as a public information officer for the City of Toledo, Ohio and as a publications editor for the University of Washington.
...DEPT. OF INTERIOR PUBLISHES EVERGREEN RESEARCH...Seven months of intensive field research
in early 1972 by thirty Evergreen students and five faculty members has borne fruit with the
recent publication by the United States Department of the Interior of a land use study of
Washington's Hood Canal. Entitled "Hood Canal; Priorities for Tomorrow", the 110-page
report—including an extensive set of tables and maps—offers an in-depth look at the
ecological aspects; natural and cultural resources; land and water uses and use conflicts;
and guidelines for the conservation and management of the canal.
Authors describe the report as "an initial step in providing a biological basis for
consideration in development of a comprehensive plan for the Hood Canal region which is
imperative for orderly development."
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...BAROQUE CONCERT FEATURES FLUTE AND HARPSICHORD...A concert of Baroque music will be
performed by two visiting artists at Evergreen April 14, beginning at 8 p.m. in Lecture Hall
One.. Flutist Alexander Murray, a professor of flute at the Royal Dutch Conservatory in Hague,
The Netherlands, and Martha Goldstein, harpsichordist from the Peabody Conservatory of Music,
will attempt to recapture the performing style and sound of the Baroque flute sonata as it
was played in the 18th century. Historical instruments or modern copies of them will be used
and the musical practices of the 18th century will be followed.
...POET TO READ HER WORKS APRIL 15...Anita Barrows, a poet and experienced translator of
French and Italian, will read selections of her works at Evergreen April 15 at 8 p.m. in the
third floor lounge of the Library. Author of three books and numerous magazine articles,
Barrows has also scheduled appearances with two Evergreen programs this week.
...UNSOELD SERVING AS CONSULTANT OVERSEAS...Dr. Willie Unsoeld, an Evergreen faculty member
in philosophy, is spending this week in Germany serving as an environmental/outdoor education
consultant to the U.S. Overseas Dependents School System in Europe. Unsoeld will help school
officials draft a handbook on behavioral objectives, curricular design and safety regulations
for outdoor education which will then be applied throughout the entire system of U.S. overseas
schools in Europe.
Unsoeld recently returned from a four-day trip to the Grand Canyon where he was asked by
the National Park Service to lecture park ranger trainees on spiritual values of wilderness.
...CO-OP DIRECTOR NAMED TO NORCUS COMMITTEE...Evergreen's Director of Cooperative Educatif
Ken Donohue has been invited to become a member of the Northwest College and University
Association for Science (NORCUS) Selection Committee for the 1975-76 appointment year. The
six-member committee selects about 40 undergraduate and graduate interns and 25 post-doctoral
fellows each year for participation in the Richland Research programs.
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April 11. 1975
Kuehnle defeated
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES APPROVES EVERGREEN BUDGET
by Dick Nichols
The Washington House of Representatives Thursday morning (April 10) approved
$12,733,685 in state general operating funds for Evergreen during the 1975-77 biennium
following a floor debate in which three amendments proposed by arch-Evergreen foe Rep.
James Kuehnle (R. Spokane) were soundly defeated. The total approved was $350,815 lower
than requested by the governor but $461,100 higher than.originally requested by the House
Ways and Means Committee. Evergreen's operating budget and those of all other agencies
funded by the state will, when floor action is completed, return to the Rules Committee for
scheduling as one massive bill on third and final reading next week. The state budget, on
second reading this week, has been considered in separate sections but will be presented
as one package for final consideration. Evergreen Assistant to the President Les Eldridge
says the next stop for the budget bill will be Senate Ways and Means, which already has
completed most of its hearings. "The Senate version of the budget should be ready for floor
action the week after next," he added.
LOWER THAN THE GOVERNOR'S BUDGET
Governor Daniel J. Evans last December proposed state general fund appropriations
(exclusive of local and grants and contracts funds) for Evergreen of $13,084,500, which,
while an increase over 1973-75 totals, represented an effective decrease from current
operating levels. Last week's draft House Ways and Means version of the budget cut
$811,000 from the governor's proposed budget, plus $211,000 more which would have been
held in reserve until the second year of the biennium under the "lag enrollment" approach
which bases biennial enrollment projections on current-year enrollment levels. President
Charles McCann persuaded Representatives A. N. Shinpoch and Del Bausch to propose a successful amendment which added $461,100 to the budget to accommodate a 200-student-per-year
growth and reduced the effective cut in the governor's proposed Evergreen peneral fund
budget to $350,815. That brought the House request to $12,733,685, whichwas approved Thursday. At the same time, representatives also deleted an amendment from all of the higher
education budgets which would have specified faculty/student ratios at the upper division
and lower division levels. Defeat of the amendment allows the institutions more flexibility
in internal budgeting, a matter particularly crucial to Evergreen because of the nature
of its programs.
KUEHNLE FLOOR ATTACK FAILS
Rep. Kuehnle launched a floor attack on the college, charging that there is a lack of
acceptance of Evergreen degrees in the "real world"; asserting that out-of-state enrollment
figures are higher than reported; contending that there is an imbalance (liberal versus conservative) in the makeup of the faculty and consequently academic programs, and stating no
legislative mandate exists for innovation at the institution. He also said that interviews
with four of five Evergreen trustees indicated a desire for "changing Evergreen's directions.
Each charge was soundly refuted by other representatives led by Bausch, John Hendricks,
Charles Savage, Eleanor Lee, Jeff Douthwaite, Bob Charette, John Bagnariol, and Shinpoch.
Kuehnle offered an amendment which would have stripped all of Evergreen's funding. It
failed 88-6. Another amendment which would have removed the $461,100 restore<ito the Ways
and Means recommendation was defeated 75-20. And, an amendment requiring the Board of
Trustees to report to the next Legislature how well Evergreen is reaching its goals and
objectives, serving Southwest Washington students, and reflecting the "values of the state
and local community" was defeated 68-28.
' T
P.,
TRUSTEES MAY SEEK APPROVAL POWERS
Agenda items for the April 17 Board of Trustees meeting, scheduled for 10:30 a.m. in
Library 3112, include a resolution, requested by Spokane Trustee Halvor Halvorson, to prohif
changes of Evergreen's organizational staffing pattern without prior approval of the Board.
The resolution, which Halvorson said he would not present unless all five Trustees were
present, refers to the Board's "belief" that "no changes in the organizational staffing
pattern which would include professional exempt positions should be made without its approval."
It resolves that the organization chart, revised by the Trustees last August, "shall not be
modified without the prior approval" of the Board.
Other items listed on the Board agenda as the Newsletter went to press include the
approval of sale of tuition bonds and a presentation by the Gay Resource Center on
inclusion of the terms "political ideology and sexual orientation" into Evergreen's Human
Rights document.
WORKING CLIMATE DTF REPORT EXPECTED SOON
A complex 18-page report by the Disappearing Task Force on Working Climate at Evergreen
may be in faculty and staff mail boxes today. The five-member DTF which began its work last
summer, completed its recommendations March 25 and referred them to President Charles ^J.
McCann, who is expected to request campus-wide distribution of the report today or the first
of next week.
In its opening remarks, the DTF report recommends a "broad policy change" and offers a
list of specific problems which "must be attacked individually now." The broad change,
outlined under specific recommendations to the President, calls for initiation of new
administrative policies that "will result in all employees functioning under a directive
rather than a supervisory system." It also recommends that the President set aside funds
for hiring temporary employees at critical times and for inservice training programs. It
asks that he explore the institution of rotation systems in all units and explore "ways to bring people in the community together informally and often."
In its section on Vice President's offices, the DTF report calls for the selection of
new employees to be made on the basis of how they fit the Evergreen system. It notes, "they
(new employees) should be examined on their understanding of the COG and Human Rights
Documents, social contract and the academic system before being hired..." It further
suggests that "in filling all vacancies, Evergreen employees should be considered first..."
. The document, obviously a product of long, hard work by its authors
Chairman Paul
Marsh, and members Burt Guttman, Ed Reid, Larry Stenberg and Pearl Vincent
could mean a
lot of changes at Evergreen. The Newsletter, which does not run editorials, DOES suggest
that everyone read this document thoroughly and respond to it.
FOOD DAY PROGRAM OFFERED APRIL 17
An all-day public forum to discuss rising costs of food, the declining quality of
American diets and the severity of world hunger problems will be held at Evergreen April 17
beginning at 10 a.m. in the College Activities Building. Featured speaker at the day long
event, which is being commemorated throughout the United States as the "national day of
action on the food crisis," will be Dr. Ruth W. Shearer, a researcher at the Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center in Seattle.
Dr. Shearer, a molecular geneticist, will discuss "Biological Aspects of Nutrition, Food
Pollution and Cancer," in an 11 a.m. address in Lecture Hall One. She will also offer a
highly technical discussion on "Alteration of Genetic Mechanisms by Carcinogens (cancer
agents)" at 1 p.m. and a talk on "Legal and Financial Aspects of Nutrition, Food Pollution
and Cancer" at 2 p.m. Both of her afternoon talks will be held in CAB room 110.
Other events scheduled for Food Day, which is sponsored nation-wide by the Center for
Science in the Public Interest, include film showings, workshops, demonstrations and leeturf .
Check the Happenings for a complete program schedule.
JONES NAMED OUTSTANDING EDUCATOR
Richard Jones, an Evergreen faculty member in psychology, has been named one of the
outstanding educators of America. Jones, nominated for the honor by Provost Ed Kormondy,
will be featured in a national awards volume, "Outstanding Educators of America," which
is published under the auspices of Fuller and Dees, Inc.
An original member of Evergreen's planning faculty, Jones was a Phi Beta Kappa scholar
at Stanford University where he earned his bachelor of arts degree in psychology, and a
Rantoul scholar at Harvard University where he earned his doctorate in clinical psychology.
Prior to joining the Evergreen staff in 1970, he served as Chief of Psychological Services
for the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health and as a professor of education at Harvard.
He has also taught at the University of California at Santa Cruz and at Brandeis University,
where he was also director of the school's Psychological Counseling Center.
Jones has authored seven books and numerous articles in recent years dealing with the
subjects of psychology, counseling and dreaming.
VON VOLKENBURG NEW FINANCIAL AID COUNSELOR
Don Von Volkenburg, currently acting director of the Development Office, has been
appointed to the full-time post of Financial Aid Counselor. The appointment, effective
April 23, was announced by Financial Aid Director Kay Atwood April 8.
' Von Volkenburg, a June, 1973 graduate of Evergreen, joined the Development Office staff
as a program assistant in July of 1974. He was later promoted to an administrative assistant
and assumed the responsibilities of acting director following the resignation of Marianne
Nelson Godwin in November. Before attending Evergreen, Von Volkenburg worked as a,.bank
payroll clerk, an operations analyst and an editor and marketing representative for an Ohio
trust company, as a public information officer for the City of Toledo, Ohio and as a
publications editor for the University of Washington.
In his new position, Von Volkenburg is assuming the post formerly held by Atwood, who
was promoted to Financial Aid Director following the resignation of Bill Smith.
Also new to the Financial Aid staff as of April 23, will be Georgette Chun, secretary
in the Housing Office.
UNSOELD SERVING AS CONSULTANT OVERSEAS
Willi Unsoeld, an Evergreen faculty member, will spend the week of April 11-18 in
Germany serving as an environmental/outdoor education consultant to the U.S. Overseas
Dependents School System in Europe. Unsoeld will help school officials draft a handbook
on behavioral objectives, curricular design and safety regulations for outdoor education
which will then be applied throughout the entire system of U.S. overseas schools in Europe.
Unsoeld recently returned from a four-day trip to the Grand Canyon where he was asked
by the National Park Service to lecture park ranger trainees on spiritual values of wilderness.
FOSTER HEADING 0/A OFFICE; "WATCHDOG" APPROACH INITIATED
The Ombuds/Advocate Office will take on more of the "watchdog" role Spring Quarter and
divide its time more evenly between advocacy and ombudsmanship, according to its new
coordinator John Foster.
Former business manager of the Cooper Point Journal, Foster assumed the new post following the resignation of Andy Ryan, who remains on the 9-member 0/A staff, but did not want to
continue as coordinator.
Foster says the 0/A Office, located in Library 3228, is being reorganized and is
"assuming new functions." "We want to assume more of a watchdog approach," he says. "We
want to help the community interpret documents, we want to attend meetings and be able to
use campus media as a means of letting people know what's going on
before issues develop."
Foster says his staff needs the help of volunteers "to help write papers, conduct
research, attend meetings and, in general become involved in college governance." Describing
the functions of his office as "filling the governance vacuum at Evergreen," the new 0/A
coordinator invites all interested students to stop by his office, which is open from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. weekdays, or call him at 866-6496.
DONOHUE NAMED TO NORCUS COMMITTEE
Evergreen's Director of Cooperative Education Ken Donohue has been invited to become \ me
Committee for the 1975-76 appointment year. The six-member committee selects about 40
undergraduate and graduate interns and 25 post-doctoral fellows each year for participation
in the Richland Research programs. The internship and fellowship competition is national,
though most of the research is done in the Richland area. Three Evergreen students have
been selected for NORCUS internships in the past academic year.
NEW BUSINESS MANAGER FOR CPJ; TWO NEW PUB BOARD APPOINTEES, TOO
Jim Feyk, a Lewistown, Montana junior has been appointed to a two-quarter stint as
Business manager of the Cooper Point Journal. Feyk replaces John Foster, who has been
named coordinator of the Ombuds/Advocate Office. The appointment, made April 4, by the
Publications Board, is effective for Spring and Fall Quarters.
Two new appointees have also been named to the Publications Board by President Charles
_J. McCann. Aubrey Dawn, a Longbeach, California freshman who is currently managing editor
of the weekly student newspaper, has been named to the board for the rest of Spring Quarter,
along with Valarie McFeely, a first-year student from Seattle.
upcoming events
CONFERENCE ON LEARNING DISABILITIES HERE TOMORROW
More than 500 persons are expected on campus tomorrow (April 12) to attend an all-day
conference sponsored by the Washington Association for Children with Learning Disabilities.
Registration for the meeting will begin at 9 a.m., and the day's final "wrap-up session"
is slated from 3:15 to 4 p.m.
BAROQUE CONCERT MONDAY
A concert of Baroque music will be performed by two visiting artists at The Evergreen
State College April 14, beginning at 8 p.m. in Lecture Hall One.
Flutist Alexander Murray, a professor of flute at the Royal Dutch Conservatory in
Hague, The Netherlands, and Martha Goldstein, harpsichordist from the Peabody Conservatory
of Music, will attempt to recapture the performing style and sound of the Baroque flute
sonata as it was played in the 18th century. Historical instruments or modern copies of
them will be used and the musical practices of the 18th century will be followed.
POET TO PERFORM APRIL 15
Anita Barrows, a poet and experienced translator of French and Italian, will read
selections of her works at Evergreen April 15 at 8 p.m. in the third floor lounge of the
Library. Author of three books and numerous magazine articles, Barrows has also scheduled
appearances with two Evergreen programs next week.
JEWS AND ISRAEL PROGRAM MEETING APRIL 16
Faculty Member Ted Gerstl invites all students interested in the Jews and Israel program
which begins Fall Quarter to attend a meeting April 16 at 2 p.m. in the Library 1500 lounge.
He invites interested persons to contact him for additional information by calling 866-6616.
SECURITY DIRECTOR TO RESIGN
(
Evergreen's Director of Security Rod Marrom will resign on or before June 30, according to Dean of Student Development Programs Larry Stenberg. Marrom has been director of
security at Evergreen since July 1971. Prior to joining Evergreen's staff, Marrom served
as security manager at Seattle Community College for five years and as a security officer
for the Seattle Public School System for three years. He was also an officer in the
Seattle Police Department for nine years.
the
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newsletter
April 7,
1975
...EVERGREEN STUDENTS AWARDED $35,980 BY NSF...Three Evergreen students have received a total
of $35,980 from the National Science Foundation for research projects which began March 15.
The three are among five students in the State of Washington to receive monies through the
NSF Student-Originated Studies program. Evergreen NSF recepients and their awards include:
Carl Maass, $12,530; Nancy Musgrove, $12,640; and Cynthia Swanberg, $10,810.
Maass, a Spokane junior, will serve as student director of the $12,530 project entitled
"Distribution and Concentration of Heavy Metals in Wildlife near Kellogg, Idaho." Goal of
his project, to be supervised by Dr. Steve Herman, faculty biologist, is to examine the
effects of lead, cadmium and arsenic on the natural community near Kellogg, a mining center
of Northern Idaho where the effects of heavy metal pollution have been recognized by health
officials as a serious threat to humans.
Musgrove, a Longview junior, will direct seven students in a $12,640 research effort to
study the distribution and biomagnification of polychlorinated biphenyls (man-made, highly
toxic chemicals) in the bottom-dwelling communities of southern Puget Sound area. Dr.
Michael Beug, faculty chemist, will supervise the PCB study. Swanberg, a Seattle junior,
will explore the possible effects of wolves in the Olympic National Park. She'll work with
several other students on the $10,810 project which is under the supervision of Dr. Dave Milne.
Evergreen faculty biologist.
...SUMMER QUARTER OFFERS VARIETY OF STUDY OPPORTUNITIES...Opportunities for studies in Europe,
farming on Cooper Point or in Lacey, and trips to the Washington coastline are all described
in the Summer Quarter brochure now available at Evergreen's Registrar's Office. Registration
for the 10-week session is planned from May 19-30, with one final, walk-in registration day
also set for June 23. Nearly all academic programs begin June 23 and end on or by August 29.
Three Coordinated Studies programs head the 10-week curriculum, along with 17 group contracts,
two modules and nine individual contract sponsors. Interested persons are invited to call the
Registrar, 866-6180, for more details.
...PORTLAND DANCE TROUPE SLATE APRIL 7 & 8 PERFORMANCES.., The Portland Dance Theater will
present a "Choreoconcert" April 7 and a "Complete Concert" April 8 in the main lobby of the
Evergreen Library. Both events are slated to begin at 8 p, m. Admission is 50c for the
April 7 performance, and $1 for students and $2 for others for the April 8 presentation. The
dance company will also offer free workshops at Evergreen: April 7 from noon to 5 p.m.; April
8 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and April 9 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. A complete schedule of the
workshops will be posted in the main Library lobby Monday.
...ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES STUDENTS TACKLE PLANNING PROBLEMS...Advanced students from the Applied
Environmental Studies program have packed their pencils and prepared for a demanding schedule
this quarter. They are already working with professional planners, city engineers, county
commissioners and state officials to:
—develop a subarea plan for the Griffin Peninsula in Thurston County and draft planning
reports for the Newaukum Hill area in Lewis County;
—author a comprehensive solid waste management plan for the Thurston County Regional
Planning Council;
—prepare a study on the carrying capacity of the tri-county Yakima River Basin for the
Pacific Northwest River Basin Commission and the State Department of Ecology; and
—desiga a strategy for the Olympia Oyster Growers Association to preserve and maintain
the present and future water quality of Totten Inlet which joins Mason and Thurston Counties.
It's all part of their year-long study program into the fields of economics, urban planning and ecology. Each of the tasks, undertaken through work agreements with outside contractors, will be completed in June.
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...VARIETY OF SPRING WORKSHOPS OFFERED...Nearly four dozen art and recreation workshops
ranging from painting, drawing and photography to metal and wood working, dance,horticulture
and mountaineering
are available at Evergreen Spring Quarter. Registration for the noncredit generating workshops,sponsored by the Office of Recreation and Campus Activities,
begins at 7 a.m.April 7 and concludes April 11 in room 302 of the College Recreation Center.
Office hours for registration, handled on an in-person basis only, will be maintained from
7 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Thursdays, and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
on Friday. Workshops with enrollment limitations will be filled on a first-come, firstserved basis. Fees must be paid in person before registration is finalized. Copies of the
workshop brochure are available at the Information Center and the College Recreation Center.
...PUBLIC INVITED TO UPCOMING EVENTS...Three public events are slated this week at TESC:
Frank Pestana, Los Angeles attorney and officer in the U.S.-China People's Friendship
Association, will discuss "criminal law and juvenile delinquency in China" during a free
address April 9 at 7:30 p.m. in Lecture Hall Three. He will also discuss the "Sino-Soviet
Dispute" in an informal talk April 9 from 2 to 4 p.m. in room 110 of the CAB.
Seattle Mayor Wes Uhlman will discuss "Governmental Problems in a Large City" in a
talk April 8 beginning at 2:30 p.m. in Lecture Hall Three. Uhlman is being presented
through efforts of the Democrats at Evergreen, a student group.
"How to Say No to a Rapist and Survive", an hour-long film produced by the National
Organization for the Prevention of Rape and Assault, will be shown April 10 at 10 a.m.
in Lecture Hall Three.
...JOB DAY FOCUSING ON EDUCATION...Educators and employers from 17 schools, colleges and (
educational agencies will attend a six-hour Job Information Day conference on campus April 9.
Scheduled from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., Education Job Day is the fifth in a series of six conferences sponsored by Evergreen's Placement Office to acquaint seniors with employers and
employment practices in their perspective career areas.
the
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April 4, 1975
MOSS APPOINTMENT DISPUTE NOW IN COURT
Washington State Superior Court is the next step in the continuing controversy
over Vice President Dean Clabaugh's appointment of John Moss to the dual directorship of
Personnel and Auxiliary Services. The dispute was finally settled
at the college level
—
February 26, when the Board of Trustees acted as a quasi-judicial board to hear the
case, appealed by Clabaugh, after the All Campus Hearing Board found Clabaugh's appointment
of Moss in violation of both the letter and the spirit of Evergreen's Affirmative Action
Policy. The Trustees, by a four to one vote, upheld Clabaugh's appointment, thus reversing
the All Campus Hearing Board.
Evergreen Faculty Member Hap Freund, an attorney, filed a petition with Superior Court
Mareh 27, asking the court to "review and reverse" the decision of the Trustees. The
petition was signed by Evergreen Faculty Members Nancy Allen and Naomi Greenhut, Staff
Members Lee Chambers and Ed Evans, and students Perry Pittman and Tina Wear.
In the petition to the Superior Court, Freund charged that the Trustees' decision was
in violation of the Higher Education Administrative Procedures Act; that it exceeded the
Trustees' statutory authority, was a "clearly erroneous" decision "in view of the entire
record" of the case, and that the decision was "arbitrary and capricious." He also called
for the Court to reinstate the decision of the All Campus Hearing Board.
Assistant Attorney General Richard Montecucco, who serves as Evergreen's official
legal counsel, said he had no idea when the petition would be heard by a Superior Court
Judge. He noted that a judge can elect to refuse to hear the case, dismiss it, affirm or
reverse the Trustees' findings
or "just about anything he wants to do."
THREE STUDENT PROJECTS WIN NSF AWARDS TOTALING $35,980
Three Evergreen student projects have received a total of $35,980 from the National
Science Foundation for research which began March 15. The three are among five grants
in the State of Washington made through the NSF Student-Originated Studies program. Evergreen NSF project directors and their awards include Carl Maass, $12,530; Nancy Musgrove,
$12,640; and Cynthia Swanberg, $10,810.
Maass, a Spokane junior, will serve as student director of the $12,530 project entitled
"Distribution and Concentration of Heavy Metals in Wildlife near Kellogg, Idaho." Maass is
a member of the Ecology and Chemistry of Pollution Coordinated Studies program, and he will
work with Mark Rutherford, Liam O'Callaghan and five other students under the direction of
Faculty Member Steve Herman, a biologist.
Nancy Musgrove, a Longview junior, will work with Jacques Monrer and Bruce Drager and
five other students
all also members of the Ecology and Chemistry of Pollution Program —
in a $12,640 research effort to study the "Distribution .and Biomagnification of Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) in the Benthic (bottom-dwelling) Community (of southern Puget Sound)."
Faculty Member Mike Beug, a chemist, will serve as advisor to students as they try to
determine how the highly toxic, man-made PCB chemicals are distributed in six sites in
southern Puget Sound.
For the third NSF award, student project director Swanberg, a Seattle junior . along
with Peter Dratch and five other students, will attempt to explore the possible effects of
wolves in the Olympic National Park. Dave Milne, faculty biologist, will advise the "wolf"
study which will involve field research at the park as well as extensive literature research.
ADDITIONAL LEAP FUNDS GRANTED
Evergreen has received a $4,759 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice for the Law/"
Enforcement Assistant Program (LEAP). Evergreen Financial Aid Director Kay Atwood says
the grant brings Evergreen's total of LEAP funds for this academic year to $26,759.
Funds from the program are used to help pay tuition for some 40 Evergreen students
currently engaged in (and planning to continue working in) the fields of criminal justice
and law enforcement.
She says ten percent of the funds are also used for students who
are not currently working in those fields but plan to after graduation.
ADMINISTRATIVE PROCEDURES DTF WILL MAKE APRIL 11 DEADLINE
Provost Ed Kormondy, co-chairman of the Administrative Procedures Disappearing Task
Force, said the group fully expects to make its final report to President Charles McCann
by April 11. McCann named Kormondy and Vice President Dean Clabaugh to co-chair the DTF
following a public address March 5 in which he cited the need for clarification of certain
administrative procedures relating to affirmative action and recruiting and hiring of
exempt personnel. The DTF was created after the Board of Trustees reversed the All-Campus
Hearing Board's decision on Clabaugh's controversial appointment of John Moss to the dual
directorship of Personnel and Auxiliary Services.
The DTF is scheduled to finalize its recommendations at a meeting April 8, at 1:00 p.m.
Kormondy said the location had not yet been selected.
Named to the DTF are: Faculty Members Jeanne Hahn, Richard Jones, Don Jordon; Staff
Members Judy Annis, Jovana Brown, Helen Hannigan, Jim Johnson, Rindy Jones, Doris McCarty,
Willie Parson, Jerry Schillinger, Charen Sharar, Darrel Six, Larry Stenberg, Dan Weiss and
Ken Winkley; and students Carol Curtz, Ned Swift, James Tatz and Raymond Turner.
LELAND RESIGNS FROM BANK; SHORTER HOURS TO CONTINUE
Marie Leland, manager of Evergreen's branch of the South Sound National Bank, resigned
last week. In a telephone interview, Leland said she resigned because the bank's directors
were eliminating the need for an officer at the Evergreen branch and had reduced services
to its TESC customers.
"They (the Bank's directors) plan to make the Evergreen branch just a depository bank,"
Leland said. Operating hours have been cut from eight hours a day to three and she said
she "couldn't continue working there without being able to provide the services I feel are
necessary." Leland added that she feels bank officials "will have a rude awakening" if they
continue operating the bank with shorter hours and fewer services. "They're building up a
lot of resentment toward the lack of services," she said.
Brian Brown, executive vice president of South Sound, said his agency plans to continue
operating the bank three hours a day. He said the Evergreen branch has lost money since it
opened three years ago, and that bank officials had to decide between either closing the
branch office
completely or reducing its hours. He also indicated that no new manager
has been named to replace Leland; that the bank's management, for the time being, will
continue with supervisory help from officials of the Lacey branch.
upcoming events
EDUCATION JOB DAY SET WEDNESDAY
Educators and employers from 17 schools, colleges and educational agencies will attend
a six-hour Job Information Day conference at Evergreen on April 9. Scheduled from 9 a.m.
to 3:30 p.m., Education Job Day is the fifth in a series of six conferences sponsored by
Evergreen's Placement Office. The program is designed to acquaint seniors and other inter-/
ested students with employers and employment practices in their perspective career areas.
Joyce Weston, student coordinator of Education Job Day, said representatives from
nine colleges will attend the event: Seattle Central and Fort Steilacoom Community Colleges;
Olympic College, Central and Western Washington State Colleges, University of Washington,
University of Puget Sound, Pacific Lutheran and Portland State Universities. Other agencies
3.
represented at the day-long meeting include: the federal Office of Education, Washington
Education Association, Office of Public Instruction, Rainier High School, The Little School
in Bellevue, Littlerock Elementary School, Olympia Head Start, and Jefferson Junior High.
One more Job Information Day is scheduled before the end of the 1974-75 academic year.
Weston said representatives from the fields of counseling and social services will attend a
similar meeting on the Evergreen campus May 14.
CHINA TOPIC OF APRIL 9 SPEECHES
Frank Pestana, Los Angeles attorney and officer in the U.S.-China People's Friendship
Association, will discuss "criminal law and juvenile delinquency in China" during a free
public address at Evergreen April 9 at 7:30 p.m. in Lecture Hall Three.
Pestana, a graduate of the University of California Law School, has visited China
three times in recent years. He has observed the Chinese legal system through observations
of several trials, visits with three appellate court judges in the Canton Province, talks
with Peking law professors, and a visit to a Chinese prison.
Pestana has been active in the U.S. civil rights movement, especially in the South.
He has also visited Cuba twice at the invitation of the faculty of the University of
Havana, and served as a regional attorney on the Fair Employment Practice Committee during
Franklin Roosevelt's presidency. Pestana also served as a witness on the "law of the land
warfare" during the 1967 Bertrand Russell War Crimes Tribunal.
Pestana will also discuss the "Sino-Soviet Dispute" in an informal address from 2-4:00
p.m. in CAB 110, April 9.
FILM TO EXAMINE RAPE PREVENTION
"How to Say No to a Rapist and Survive" is the provocative title of an hour-long film
to be shown at Evergreen April 10 at 10:00 a.m. in Lecture Hall Three. The color documentary features Frederic Storaska, executive director of the National Organization for the
Prevention of Rape and Assault, sharing information on his group's programs and its tenyear long research effort to understand the causes and preventions for rape.
Storaska's program is credited with preventing serious assault and/or saving lives
in more than 275 documented cases, and is endorsed by the National Crime Prevention Institute.
His book, of the same title as the movie, details the development and application of his program and is recommended as a useful adjunct to the film.
FOOTE AND TROUPE TO PERFORM IN EUGENE
Six Evergreeners will be performing at the Blitz-Weinhardt Bluegrass Festival in
Eugene, Oregon April 11 and 12. Faculty Member Tom Foote and the Evergreen Grass
composed of Foote, one TESC grad and four students
have been invited to perform at what he
describes as "the biggest event of its kind yet in the Pacific Northwest."
The two-day event, scheduled at the Lane County Fairgrounds, will feature Saturday
competition for prizes as the best musicians. Foote invites all bluegrass enthusiasts to
attend the festival. Admission is $5 for the weekend or $3 for each of the three main
events, slated for Friday night, Saturday afternoon and Saturday evening. If you're
interested, contact Foote at 866-6676.
SEATTLE MAYOR TO SPEAK APRIL 8; PORTLAND DANCE TROUPE HERE APRIL 7, 8 & 9
Seattle Mayor Wes Uhlman will discuss "Governmental Problems in a Large City" in a
free public address at Evergreen April 8 beginning at 2:30 p.m. in Lecture Hall Three.
Uhlman is being presented by Democrats at Evergreen, a student group.
The Portland Dance Theater will stage two performances at Evergreen next week: a
"Choreoconcert" April 7, admission, 50c; and a "Complete Concert" April 8, admission $1
for students, $2 for others. Both events will be performed in the main Library lobby.
The dance troupe will also offer free workshops: April 7 from noon to 5 p.m.; April 8
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and April 9 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. A complete workshop schedule
will be posted in the library lobby April 7.
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
...Three Evergreeners recently discussed "Experiences at TESC" at a symposium in
Perth, Australia. Faculty Member Al Weidemann and former Faculty Members Lorraine Marshal/
and Dave Hitchens addressed planners of Murdoch University March 11. Both Marshall and
Kitchens are currently on the faculty of the new university which opened in February with
500 students. Weidemann reports that although Murdoch's curriculum "in no way resembles
Evergreen's, its philosophy and intent is not far afield." He says the university is
being "radically innovative (for Australia) in its multi-disciplinary approach...and its
open admissions policy." Average age of its students is 24, and the university's faculty
members, including five "yanks", have come from all over the world.
... Faculty Member Mary Nelson, ill since last November, has returned to full-time
teaching. Nelson, who suffered a massive nerve pinch last Winter, is now busily preparing
her group contract, "Exploring Native American Art: Pueblo," for a three-week trip to
New Mexico. She says her 15 students will leave April 26 and camp along the way
stopping
to visit three Native American tribes and study their art and culture. The group is expected
back on campus May 18.
... Faculty Member Carie Cable has begun a sabbatical leave in North Carolina where
she is studying weaving at the Penland School in Crafts. Cable, an enthusiast and scholar
of Japanese folk art, also hopes to study art in Europe before she returns to Evergreen
next Spring...
...Dorothy Buchanan, secretary in Auxiliary Services, has requested a six months
military leave of absence. Buchanan will report to San Antonio, Texas April 25 for six
weeks basic training. She'll spend the rest of her six months active duty in Rantoul,
Illinois studying small motor maintenance and repair. She expects to return in December.
...George Smith, a June, 1974 graduate, died in Tacoma in February. Smith, who was
confined to a wheelchair all his life, enrolled in Evergreen Fall Quarter, 1972, after
studying at both Wenatchee Valley and Central Washington State Colleges.
...Newly hired this month is Vickie Mikota, office assistant in College Relations.
Mikota formerly worked in the Admissions Office and has been a student at Evergreen. She \s
in Seminar Building 3154...Also newly hired are Grace Phillipson, part-time Library
technician, and Floyd Kloepfer, media maintenance technician.
...Five persons were on campus this week interviewing for the post of Financial
Aid Counselor, a position vacated by Kay Atwood when she assumed the directorship of
that office. Being interviewed this week were: Kay Williams« an administrator for the
Council on Higher Education; Adan Tijerina. financial aid assistant at Washington State
University; Paul Mendoza, financial aid counselor at California State College; Georgette
Chun, secretary in Evergreen's Housing Office; and Don Von Volkenburg. acting director of
TESC's Development Office.
...Chas Davies, media producer, has been named to the permanent staff of the All
Campus Hearing Board. Davies replaces Staff Architect Bill Knauss who resigned following
the Board of Trustees decision to reverse the Hearing Board's findings on the Moss appointment.
...And, finally, word just reached us that March graduate Tom Maddox has been
awarded a three-year doctoral fellowship in literary studies to American University in
Washington, D.C. Maddox is also the current recepient of a National Endowment for the
Humanities Youthgrant to study the works of American author Thomas Pynchon.
VARIETY OF SPRING WORKSHOPS OFFERED
Nearly four dozen art and recreation workshops—ranging from painting, drawing and
photography to metal and wood working, dance, horticulture, and mountaineering—are
available Spring Quarter. Registration for the non-credit generating workshops, sponsored
by Evergreen's Office of Recreation and Campus Activities, begins at 7 a.m. April 7 and
concludes April 11 in Room 302 of the College Recreation Center. Office hours for registration—handled on an in-person basis only—will be maintained from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Monday , 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Friday.
Workshops with enrollment limitations will be filled on a first-come, first-served
basis. Fees must be paid in person before registration is finalized. Registration fees
are not refundable except in the case of a cancelled workshop.