Newsletter_197508.pdf
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Part of The Evergreen State College Newsletter (August 1, 1975)
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August 29, 1975
STAFF ACADEMIC PROGRAM EXPANDS
Faculty Members Maxine Mimms and Charles Lyons report that their Summer "Education
Opportunity Program" for Evergreen staff will be continued and expanded during Fall Quarter.
Eleven members—meeting regularly for lunch and discussion sessions focused around reading
and writing assignments—earned full academic credit for their Summer studies. The program,
attached to the Learning Services Center and featuring reading, writing and seminaring,
will be offered in two segments during Fall. The first—still entitled "Education Opportunity Program"—will include new staff/students, with some nine openings available for
the program's beginning-level academic work taught by Mimms and Lyons. The second segment—
entitled "Inquiry and Discovery"—will feature intermediate-level work for staff who
participated in the Summer Quarter effort. Lyons will be the primary instructor for this
group. Mimms and Lyons remind interested staff that they should complete regular admissions
and registration procedures to enroll in the program.
Selection of "Inquiry and Discovery" as the title for the intermediate segment of the
program followed a class contest, Mimms reports. Lyons and Registrar Walker Allen evaluated
suggestions submitted by the staff/students, finally selecting a program title submitted
by Jan Krones, Administrative Secretary to the Vice President and Provost. As a reward,
Krones will be treated to a steak dinner early in September, with Mimms and Lyons footing
the bill.
HIGH SCHOOL LEADERS COMING
Evergreen will play host September 11 to the Black Hills Leadership Conference, an
annual program for student leaders in high schools throughout Thurston, Mason, Lewis, and
Grays Harbor Counties. The event—scheduled from 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.—will draw between
250 and 300 students. Conference activities will center in the Lecture Halls and Library
Buildings.
whale of a project:
STUDENTS PLAN UNDERWATER CHATS
Move over, Dr. Doolittle. You're about to have some competition. While you're
conversing with the land animals, several adventurous scientists, students, and techniciansmost of them from Evergreen—are about to begin a series of underwater "chats" with Orca
Killer Whales off the shores of Washington's San Juan Island. The scientific endeavor—
called "Project OPRA: Intercommunication with Killer Whales"—will take place during the
month of September from headquarters in the Limekiln Point Lighthouse on the island.
According to studentsMark Overland and Sara Heimlich, the project's primary purpose is the
study of communications and interspecies behavior, in this case between man and Cetaceans,
the marine family whose members include the whales and dolphins. Researchers will attempt
to determine the kinds of responses the whales will make to synthesizer-produced mimicry
of their own sounds, reactions of the whales to the presence of humans in the water during
the experiment, whether the whales' sounds bear a relationship to a formal language
structure, and, if so, to begin studying how that language functions. In addition, they
hope to help science unravel mysteries about Killer Whale behavior patterns and culture,
and—in the end—to see if it is possible to establish a communications link between humans
and the whales by using a logical language structure or some different mode of expression.
The research crew—including nine Evergreen students and alumni, a commercial diver,/
and Dr. John Sundsten, an instructor in neurobiology at the University of Washington—vr±r±
set up an elaborate communications system at the lighthouse, near an area of intense Killer
Whale activity which extends from Summer to late Autumn. "From this base, we will engage
in acoustic exchanges by means of sound reception with recording instruments and the
transmission of electronically-produced noises resembling the sonic output of the whales,"
explains Overland, a Gig Harbor, Washington senior at Evergreen and prime mover of the
research project. Overland says an audiosynthesizer—linked to hydrophones and underwater
loudspeakers suspended from anchored buoys 100-300 feet offshore—will produce dolphin-like
sounds. Receiving devices will record the entire set of "conversations." "As this
acoustic exchange takes place," Overland says, "divers will document the Orca behavior with
still, movie, and video cameras. Synchronized commentary on the activities of both crew
and the whales will be made from the water and at several key observation points on land.
Immediate analysis of the signals received will be made using an oscilloscope and frequency
readings. Data will be stored on magnetic tape for further, more extensive analysis."
Once the month-long field trip is over, the researchers will return home to begin extensive
data analysis at both Evergreen and the UW Medical School.
Team members—in addition to Overland, Heimlich (a senior from Los Angeles), and Dr.
Sundsten—include Evetgreen students Mark Gottlieb of Olympia, Richard Osborne and Frank
Foster of Bellevue, Fran Allen of Seattle, and Anita de Give of Atlanta, Georgia; Evergreen
alumni Mac Brenner and Mark Kenoziorek; and commercial diver Brian Brown. One of the team
members—Gottlieb—spent part of the summer in the Bahama Islands, doing experimental work
with acoustic shark repellents. He used Project OPRA's wild Killer Whale tapes as part of
his research.
CAMPUS HAPPENINGS
(August 30-September 5)
BUMBERSHOOT SPECIAL; Evergreen's Gig Commission will send a 15-passenger bus to the
Bumbershoot Arts Festival at the Seattle Center on Saturday, August 30. The round-trip
bus leaves at 11:00 a.m. from the circle at the head of the academic plaza and will return
at 11:00 p.m. Cost is one dollar.
Steam service to campus buildings will be shut down from 9 p.m. September 5 to 5 p.m.
September 7. No hot water, heat or steam cooking facilities during that period.
Other Events
Aug. 30-Sept. 2:
September 4:
Student International Meditation Society meeting on campus, CAB 110.
Office of Community Development meeting.
Building.
Board of Trustees Room, Library
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August 22, 1975
NEW HOUSING POSTS FILLED
Appointment of two "veteran" Evergreeners to fill newly-created positions in college
Housing was announced this week by Director Ken Jacob. Bob Carlson, a maintenance
technician assigned to Housing since 1972, will shift from the Facilities staff on
September 2 and become Housing Facilities Manager. Carlson will be responsible for all
housing maintenance work, will supervise custodians and part-time employees in the
maintenance area, and will coordinate conference activities as they relate to use of
housing facilities. And, 1975 graduate Anne Lewin has been appointed as interim Coordinator
of Conference and Resident Advising Programs. She will serve until December, when a
permanent coordinator will be appointed, Jacob said. Half of Lewin's assignment will
involve coordination of conferences hosted at Evergreen, a function previously directly
performed by Director of Auxiliary Services and Personnel John Moss, but recently
transferred by him to Housing. The rest of her duties will involve selecting, training,
and supervising six student employees to operate a housing resource center and establish
recreational, social, and educational programs for residents. Jacob says creation of the
two new positions will not only help consolidate housing administrative activities but
should give students better direct services.
JONES APPOINTED
Evergreen's Director of Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Rindy Jones has been
reappointed as a member of the State Advisory Council to the Employment Security Department
by Commissioner Norward J. Brooks. Jones, a representative from the public sector,
currently is chairwoman of the nine-member Advisory Council. In making the announcement,
Brooks said, "Ms. Jones has proven her ability to give our department the guidance and
leadership expected from the State Advisory Council. I am extremely pleased to announce
her acceptance of my appointment to another term."
* * * CAMPUS HAPPENINGS * * *
BUMBERSHOOT SPECIAL; Evergreen's Gig Commission is sponsoring a special bus which interested
persons may ride to attend Bumbershoot Arts Festival events at the Seattle Center. The
15-passenger bus will make round trips to Seattle on both August 23 and 30, leaving from
the circle at the head of the academic plaza at 11:00 a.m. each day and returning at 11:00
p.m. The cost is just one dollar.
*
* *
KAOS FM Radio is sponsoring another round of workshops August 27, 28 and 29. Hours are
1:00-5:00 p.m. each day. If interested visit the KAOS studios—304 Activities Building—
or dial 866-5267.
* * *
KAOS also announces openings for a Special Productions Director, Archive Librarian, and News
Director. Job descriptions available at the Office of Cooperative Education, Affirmative
Action Office, Information Center and at the KAOS studios.
A Governor's Affirmative Action Review Committee meets at Evergreen Tuesday (Aug. 26) from
9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon in Lecture Hall One. Robert Jeffrey, District Director of EEOC,
will be the featured speaker.
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HELLO:
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•August 18, 1975
A few weeks ago, as the 1974-75 academic year closed, we bid you "goodbye" for the summer.
However, something special has happened since then, something we think will be of interest
to you. So, we're back again with this extra edition.
...PART-TIME STUDIES PROGRAM EXPANDED...Expansion of part-time study opportunities for
persons from communities within commuting distance of Evergreen—particularly the OlympiaTumwater-Lacey area—has been announced by Academic Dean Lynn Patterson. Openings in at
least 30 of the college's academic programs—including 16 Modular Courses, seven teamtaught Coordinated Studies Programs, and seven Group Contracted Studies—will be available
to part-time students, starting with Fall Quarter, 1975, which begins September 29.
Several of the programs feature business and management studies, while others offer
instruction in writing, reading, linguistics, mathematics, science, and such general study
areas as political science, sociology, history, anthropology and arts.
"These programs are open to degree-seeking persons who may not be able to attend college
classes full-time or to those who just wish to undertake college-level academic work even
though not necessarily pursuing a bachelor's degree at this time," Patterson said. "Most
part-time students take one unit of Evergreen credit at a time—equivalent to four quarter
hours elsewhere—although those seeking degrees may take up to two units."
In an attempt to make Evergreen's programs more accessible to community residents,
college officials have scheduled many of the academic offerings for evening hours, have
begun arranging child care facilities both on and off campus for single parents, are
investigating the possibility of offering some of the programs off campus, and have launched
plans for a special part-time student registration period. Details on the specific times
and places for part-time student registration and locations of programs will be announced
in the near future, well ahead of the start of Fall Quarter. The demand for child care and
moving of some programs to off-campus locations will be mainly determined by the needs of
interested students, who will be surveyed as they inquire about programs. Once the exact
need is known, final arrangements will be made and details announced. Information will be
available through advertisements in local media, issued directly to part-time applicants
or may be obtained from the Evergreen Office of Admissions (866-6170). In addition, a
part-time studies catalog, listing available programs and offering prospective students
information on academic advising, counseling, and pursuit of degrees, will be printed and
available for distribution in early September throughout Evergreen's service area.
THE PROGRAMS
Modular Courses (specifically designed for part-time, students and easiest in which to enroll
because of flexible scheduling):
''/;„
From Homer to Hemingway (literary program)
From Yao to Mao: Chinese History in a Teacup
Life Drawing
The Play and Place of Poetry
Perspectives on Craftsmanship
Mathematics and Beginning Statistics
Politics of the American States
Writing
Anthropology
Accounting
Economic Problems, Technology and Business
Policy
Government Regulation of Business
Between the Covers: How to Find What You
Need in the Library
Cattle, Sheep and Goats
Mushrooms of the Pacific Northwest
Ajax Compact (special for women renewing
academic pursuits)
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Coordinated Studies (limited openings to part-time students with faculty approval):
Africa and the United States
Working in America
Health: Individual and Community
Ethics and Politics
The Good Earth
Self-Exploration Through Autobiography
The American Revolution
Group Contracted Studies (limited openings to part-time students with faculty approval):
Introduction to Microbiology
A Cultural and Social History of Art and Architecture in Greece, Rome, Medieval and
Renaissance Europe
Economic Cycles
Social History of Women
Rationalism, Idealism, and Empiricism
Chinese Philosophy, Religion and Society
Linguistics
Persons wishing additional information about programs and enrollment processes should
telephone Evergreen's Office of Admissions (866-6170). Those needing further advice should
telephone the Office of Academic Advising (866-6312). Contacts with individual faculty (
members for the various programs may be obtained after September 15 (their phone numbers
are available from Admissions).
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August 16-22, 1975
SPECIAL NOTE:
All library items must be returned or renewed by August ^2_. Library staff will
begin renewing items for Fall Quarter on August 18th (Monday). Media Loan equipment
is due on August 22.
Not much activity listed on campus for next week; in fact, just the one following item:
FRIDAY. AUGUST 22
Friday Night Film Series: "The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe," 7:00 and 9:30 p.m.,
Lecture Hall One. Admission...50c...
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August 15, 1975
PART-TIME STUDIES EXPANDED
Expansion of part-time study opportunities for persons from communities within
commuting distance of Evergreen has been announced by Academic Dean Lynn Patterson.
Openings in at least 30 of the college's academic programs—including 16 Modular Courses,
seven team-taught Coordinated Studies Programs and seven Group Contracted Studies—will
be available to part-time students, starting with Fall Quarter, 1975, which begins
September 29. Several of the programs feature business and management studies, while
others offer instruction in writing, reading, linguistics, mathematics, science, and such
general study areas as political science, sociology, history, anthropology, and arts.
"These programs are open to degree-seeking persons who may not be able to attend college
classes on a full-time basis or to those who just wish to undertake college-level academic
work even though not necessarily pursuing a bachelor's degree at this time," Patterson said.
In an attempt to make Evergreen's programs more accessible to community residents, college
officials have scheduled many of the academic offerings for evening hours, have begun
arranging child care facilities both on and off campus for single parents, are investigating
the possibility of offering some of the programs off campus, and have launched plans for
a special part-time student registration period. A part-time studies catalog, listing
available programs and offering prospective students information on academic advising,
counseling, and pursuit of degrees, will be printed and available for distribution in
early September throughout Evergreen's service area.
PARKING FEES REINSTATED
Students, staff, faculty, and campus visitors—with a few limited exceptions—will
have to pay for the privilege of parking at Evergreen, starting in Fall Quarter, following
an August 7 action by the Board of Trustees. Trustees voted to reinstate parking charges—
which had been removed in March, 1973—and assess fees of $25, $10 and $5, respectively,
for annual, quarterly and monthly permits, to be issued in the form of decals. Daily
tickets, costing 25 cents, will be issued from the campus parking booth. Exceptions
include students residing in college-owned housing, who may secure free permits for parking
in "F" Lot; contractor and construction employees who work on campus projects and park in
specially-designated areas; campus visitors who receive free permits in advance from
college officials; vendors conducting business with the college who secure free permits
from the Purchasing Office; and various governmental personnel on official business in
vehicles with tax-exempt licenses. Limited parking for handicapped persons also will be
available. In addition, staff members and students who participate in car pools may
purchase a single transferable permit, subject to the following: "Each vehicle owner within
the pool shall complete a 'parking permit application' and submit it to the cashier, but
only one vehicle displaying the car pool decal may park on campus on a given day unless a
daily permit is purchased." Parking permits may be purchased from the College Cashier.
Payment through payroll deduction will be available to college employees. Violators of
the parking regulations will be subject to vehicle impoundment procedures as specified in
rules adopted by the Trustees. Persons with questions about the parking program should
telephone the Security Office.
"GREAT WALL" TO FALL IN FALL
———
The "Great Wall," which has separated Evergreen student boarders from other diners irf
the College Activities Building cafeteria, will be removed prior to the start of Fall
Quarter. That's the result of a new food service plan outlined by Director of Auxiliary
Services John Moss to the college's Board of Trustees August 7. The new board plan doesn't
include lunches this year, just breakfast and dinner on five-day or seven-day arrangements,
according to student preference. Student Boarders who want lunch can purchase a luncheon
meal ticket—valued at $100 but reduced in price for those buying in volume—for $75; the
same ticket will be available to others for $85. All other lunch sales will be handled on
a cash basis, as now. With this plan in effect, there's no need to set aside special spaces
for boarders and the "wall" will fall.
Meanwhile, the Trustees approved a new contract, running from July, 1975 to July, 1978,
with SAGA, which has provided campus food services since 1972. The contract is similar to
the one it replaced but does contain an Affirmative action provision and plan and a new
set of financial arrangements for the college. Under the new contract, Evergreen will
receive four per cent of all gross sales on the first $220,000 of business, plus 50 per
cent of any net revenue over $27,000. The previous contract, while providing the college
income from food services, contained no profit-sharing clause.
In another Auxiliary Services item, Moss and Housing Director Ken Jacob outlined to
the Board a plan they hope will help boost student occupancy in the campus Residence Halls.
A key phase of the plan—proposed after Jacob and his staff conducted an extensive survey
of student views toward housing—involves a "Unit Lease." Students selecting this option
could either rent a bed in a unit and have roommates assigned to the unit—as has been the
practice—or lease the complete unit, then select their own roommates to share the costs.
Students leasing entire units would get a 20 per cent rate reduction if they entered a
nine-month agreement and 29 per cent for a 12-month contract. The plan, Jacob explained,
is commonly used in private housing operations. Jacob also outlined two steps being takei-_^
for the 1975-76 year, both in response to the student attitude survey. First, housing
officials will designate the top three floors of "A" Building and the top two floors of
"C" Building as "quiet areas," along with the five floors of "D" Building already so
labeled. Second, the size of the student managerial staff will be increased to help
maintain quiet and improve service in general.
FIRE CONTRACT REVISED; FACILITY EXPANSION SET
Evergreen's Board of Trustees has approved an expenditure of $10,000 to construct an
addition to the on-campus fire station which will include sleeping and bathroom facilities
for up to three female student firefighters. Action was taken in response to a request
from the McLane Fire District following addition of an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunities section to the fire protection contract between Evergreen and the district. The
new contract states that the fire district will select personnel on an equal opportunity
basis and agrees to include at least one non-white and at least two females in the student
firefighter program for the Fall of 1976.
In other August 7 action, the Board of Trustees:
approved Evergreen's participation with Washington State University, the University
of Washington, and Eastern, Western and Central Washington State Colleges in the new
Archaeological Research Center, headquartered at WSU.
endorsed a Disappearing Task Force's recommendation of means by which future campus
master planning should be accomplished. The DTF, chaired by Faculty Member Richard
Cellarius, recommended formation of a Master Planning Team composed five-to-seven of staff,
faculty, and students to review existing planning documents, develop alternatives, and make
final recommendations to the Trustees. The DTF called for release time for staff and
faculty to complete the work. On the recommendation of Vice Presidents Dean Clabaugh and
Ed Kormondy, the Board okayed the report except for—because of financial exigencies—the
release time proposal. Clabaugh and Kormondy will appoint the planning team. "It will
enlarge upon the DTF's outline proposal, and make it more detailed and specific, including
a more accurate projection of costs and schedule," the vice presidents said. "When the
team has completed its work (which should also include inquiries into alternate sources of
funds for master planning), we will then look again at the projected personnel and other
costs and time schedule, and propose financing in the 1976-77 budget and/or through outside
sources of funds."
and, set forward until the September llth, 10 a.m. meeting) proposed modifications
to the Evergreen human rights document, including a set of procedures for the hiring of
exempt administrative staff.
LIBRARY GRANT RECEIVED
The U.S. Office of Education, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, has
awarded a $3,918 grant to Evergreen for acquisition of new materials. Malcolm Stilson,
Evergreen's Head of Library Acquisition Services, says the grant will be used for purchasing
materials both ethnic and environmental/ecological studies. Materials allowed for purchase
under the grant include books, periodicals, documents, magnetic tapes, phonograph records,
and audiovisual materials, Stilson said.
BUMBERSHOOT CALLS
Two Evergreen faculty members, a staff photographer, and a former student have been
invited to participate in the Northwest Invitational Photography Exhibition co-sponsored
by the King County Arts Commission and the annual Bumbershoot Festival. The show will be
held in the Seattle Center Convention Center August 22 to September 1. Accepting
invitations to display their photographs were Evergreen faculty members Kirk Thompson and
Paul Sparks, staff member Ford Gilbreath, and graduate Chris Rauschenberg, now a resident
of Portland.
AFFIRMATIVE ACTION MEET SET
Equal Opportunities Officer Rindy Jones reports a Governor's Affirmative Action Review
Committee will meet from 9 a.m. to 12 noon August 26 in Evergreen's Lecture Hall One.
Featured speaker during the meeting will be Robert Jeffrey, District Director of the Equal
Employment Opportunities Commission.
CLABAUGH NAMED
Administrative Vice President Dean Clabaugh has been named chairman of the Washington
State Employees Insurance Board for the fiscal year 1975-76.
HOT WATER WARNING
Evergreen's Chief Engineer Tex Cornish reports that tunnel steam line maintenance
will result in a 48-hour interruption of service to all major college buildings from 5 p.m.
September 5 to 5 p.m. September 7. Affected buildings include the Library, Lecture Halls,
Laboratory Building, Lab Annex, Seminar Building, Recreation Center, Activities Building,
Residence Halls and Utilities Plant. While the work is under way, affected buildings will
have no hot water, heat, or steam-cooking facilities.
* * * * SPECIAL BULLETIN * * * *
SMITH NAMED SECURITY CHIEF
McDonald Smith, 58, a Security Officer at Evergreen since September, 1972, has been
appointed as the college's Security Chief, according to Dean of Student Development
Programs Larry Stenberg. The appointment is effective immediately. Smith will coordinate
all phases of campus security, conduct programs to increase the effectiveness of crime
prevention and security of persons and property, supervise the security staff, and operate
as liaison between Evergreen and various law enforcement agencies, Stenberg said. The new
Security Chief joined Evergreen after a 20-year career with the internal security
division of the U.S. military.