Newsletter_19790330.pdf

Media

Part of The Evergreen State College Newsletter (March 30, 1979)

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Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114

March 30, 1979

YOUTZ NAMED PROVOST. FACILITIES DIRECTOR SELECTED
Byron Youtz, acting provost and academic vice president since September, was named to
that position last week on a permanent basis by President Dan Evans. At the same time,
David Wallbom, currently director of plant operations at Bellevue Community College, was
selected to head the Office of Facilities by Administrative Vice President Dean Clabaugh.
Youtz, who came to Evergreen in 1970 to serve on its 19-member planning faculty,
was first appointed on a temporary basis to the top academic spot last fall following the
resignation fo Edward Kormondy, who will return to the college's teaching staff next
fall. A former academic dean at Evergreen and a faculty member in physics for the past
eight years, Youtz gained administrative experience as executive assistant to the
president and later as acting president of Reed College, and as academic vice president
for the State University of New York's College at Old Westbury.
Wallbom, who assumes his new post April 9, has directed Bellevue CC plant operations
for the past 12 years. A former Seattle Police detective, Wallbom attended Washington
State University and Seattle University where he studied police and health science and
he has the equivalent of a masters degree in those fields. He assumes the post formerly
.ield by Robert Strecker, who accepted a new job with the State Department of Transportation
in January.
SUMMER REGISTRATION OPEN
Registration for the most extensive program of summer studies ever offered by Evergreen
has officially begun and will continue through June 25, according to Summer Academic Dean
Barbara Smith. Up 50 percent in full and part-time offerings over last summer's
curriculum, this year's session opens special studies for teachers, artists, women and
ethnic minorities, as well as other summer students
39 separate programs in all.
An additional bonus for out-of-state students is the new summer tuition, approved by
Evergreen trustees earlier this year. Residents and non-residents alike will now pay the
same summer tuition at Evergreen
$83 for one unit, $123 for two units, and $206 for
three and four units of Evergreen credit.
Summer Session 1979 will offer two five week sessions, June 18-July 20 and July 23August 31, and one ten-week session from June 18-August 31. Students may register for
the summer offerings in three ways: by completing and mailing in a Special Student
Registration form (now available in the Summer Quarter catalog in the Registrar's Office);
by attending the Summer Quarter Academic Fair May 16; or by registering in person in the
Registrar's Office between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. weekdays through June 25.
PRAG SEEKS HELP OF CONSULTANT
The Public Relations Advisory Group, an eight-member committee chaired by Special
Assistant to the President Duke Kuehn, has begun interviewing marketing and public
relations consultants to help the college implement some 52 pages of recommendations
prepared last quarter by the Enrollment Design Disappearing Task Force.
With two meetings already under its belt, PRAG yesterday planned to hear a proposal
from Steve Tupper of Kraft-Smith, a Seattle consulting firm. His proposal will be
followed on April 4 by a presentation from Dick Harvey of Sound Marketing and on
April 12 by a third as yet unnamed marketing firm. Kuehn says PRAG hopes to select one

- 2firm by the middle of April so work on a variety of projects designed to build the college
enrollment can begin in time to impact Fall Quarter's count.
Purpose of PRAG, as recommended by the Enrollment DTF and approved by the Board of (
Trustees, is to evaluate public relations/marketing recommendations and proposals that
are generated from both within and outside the college "as to their appropriateness and
their feasibility for implementation," Kuehn says.
Members of the board include student Judy Hyslop, faculty member Burt Guttman, graphi cs
designer Rick Hess, information services director Judy Annis, coordinator of library media
services Susan Smith, admissions director Arnaldo Rodriguez, community member Janet Oliver
and Kuehn. In addition, a number of "resource persons" have been asked to help PRAG
with its activities.
Kuehn notes that all "PRAG meetings are open and anyone is welcome to attend."
"But," he cautions, "we've got a lot of work to do and we may have to ask visitors to hold
their comments until after the meetings and share them individually with group members
rather than trying to talk to PRAG as a whole."
The next PRAG meeting is set for Wednesday, April 4, from noon to 2 p.m. in
Library 1508.
KAOS SECURES NEW EQUIPMENT, PLANS REMODELING
KAOS is about to assert itself in Thurston County, according to outgoing station
manager Dave Rauh. The campus-community radio station, headquartered in the College
Activities Building, has just purchased a raft of new equipment which should enable the
FM station to "possibly double its listening audience" by "filling in the fading out"
and eliminating the sometimes fuzzy signals which occur in receivers located behind
pesky mountains in the area.
Rauh says the college has bought a 1.8-kilowatt transmitter, a new antenna and
transmission lines and a new console which he predicts will "improve the signal
dramatically, reduce fade out and give local listeners a much improved sound quality."
The new gear, which won't be installed until the Federal Communications Commission
formally grants approval for it, will be added to the station when a substantial remodeling
job is begun Summer Quarter. Rauh says KAOS staffers, working with the CAB II Design
Team, have plans which will provide "more practical studio and office space" and enable
the nearly all volunteer team of radio workers to do a more efficient job.
Rauh, station manager and worker at KAOS for the past 16 months, graduated Winter
Quarter and is about to hit the job search trail. He says station staffers planned to
interview candidates for his post this week and hope to have a new manager aboard within
the next two weeks. Though he plans to be employed by then, Rauh says he intends to
"be around" this summer to help KAOS organize a conference of the National Federation of
Community Broadcasters, scheduled on campus August 15 for some 300 persons. He's also
determined to see to completion the installation of the new equipment which, he says,
was purchased with the help of campus administrators Al Saari, Pete Steilberg, Dean
Clabaugh and Lynn Garner.
For more news of KAOS, turn in to 89.3 on your FM radio dial.
REGISTRATION FOR LEISURE ED CONTINUES
There's still time to register for more than 45 Leisure Education workshops offered
Spring Quarter at The Evergreen State College.
Registration for the sessions, which range from primitive pottery to tapestry
weaving, sport parachuting and racketball to wilderness exploration and Kung Fu, continues
weekdays through April 13 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Recreation Center Office at TESC.
The Spring Quarter sessions include nine workshops in the martial arts, seven in
movement, ten in sports and 19 others in a wide variety of arts, including calligraphy, \, je
The Leisure programs are offered to both Evergreen students and community members
for personal enrichment, not academic credit. Costs range from the free KAOS Community
Radio session to a $60 Hang Gliding course.

— 3 —

Complete details and a brochure describing costs and meeting times is available
through the Campus Recreation Center Office, 866-6530.

upcoming events
NEW GRASS REVIVAL PLAYS SATURDAY
Norman Blake and the New Grass Revival will appear live in twin concerts at Evergreen
tomorrow, March 31, at 7:30 and 10 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Communications Building.
Norman Blake has been called one of the best flat picking guitarists in the world.
Primarily a bluegrass player, Blake also performs other forms of music. He is a virtuoso
of the fiddle and mandolin, in addition to guitar.
The concert is a benefit for KAOS-FM community radio, headquartered on the Evergreen
campus and supported, in part, by student fees and community contributions.
Tickets to tomorrow's concert are $4 by advance sale, $5 at the door. Tickets are
on sale now at Budget Tapes and Records and Rainy Day Records in Olympia. For more
information call 866-5267.
CORNISH MUSICIANS PERFORM TUESDAY AT EIGHT
Four faculty musicians from the Cornish Institute of Allied Arts in Seattle will open
the Tuesdays at Eight Spring Quarter concert/lecture series April 3 at Evergreen. The
concert, set to begin at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Communications Building will
feature the Cornish String Quartet performing Mozart's Quartet in E Flat Major, K. 428,
Shostakovitch's Quartet No. 1, and Beethoven's Quartet in A Minor, Op. 132.
Described as one of Seattle's most successful resident ensembles, the Cornish String
vuartet was formed in 1976 and for the past two years has been affiliated with the
Cornish Institute. Members of the quartet include Martin Friedmann, violinist and head
of Cornish's Music Department. A well known soloist and chamber musician, Friedmann is
a graduate of Juilliard. Violinist Sandra Schwartz, formerly concert mistress of the
Northwest Chamber Orchestra, is founder of Musica Viva, a recently formed chamber music
society in Seattle. Violist Eileen Swanson currently serves as the principal violist of
the Northwest Chamber Orchestra, while cellist Bruce Bailey, a charter member of the Seattle
Cello Quartet, also performs with the Seattle Symphony.
Reservations for the Tuesdays at Eight concert April 3 may be made by calling
866-6128 weekdays during regular working hours. Tickets will be sold beginning at 7:30
p.m. at the door of the Communications Building for $2.50 general admission or $1.50
students.
STILSON'S SATIRE HIGHLIGHTS FRIDAY GONG SHOW
The first ten years in the life of Wintergreen College will be reviewed Friday, April 6,
when campus playwright and sometimes librarian Malcolm Stilson brings his cast of
"academic luminaries" (he actually calls them that) to the stage of the second-sort-ofannual Campus Talent (and Gong) Show. The festivities begin at 6 p.m. on the fourth
floor of the Library and feature crab, beer, music and the saga of Geoduck U.
Some 200 tickets remain on sale at the Cashier's office for a mere $6.50 on a strictly
first-come first-served basis. Plotters of this Friday Night Ptomaine Massacre advise
you to buy tickets "early in the morning before the students paying registration fees begin
to line up."
But before you do that, read more of the titillating tale of Stilson's story. He
alls it his "evaluation of Wintergreen College, with musical footnotes." His "scholarly
presentation" (no respect shown here for truth in advertising) will trace the evolution
of the college from its sodden beginnings in the North Warehouse of the Olumpus
Brewery through the early years of lean budgets and imaginative curriculum design
(coordinated cooking and self paced spelunking) to the mid years of legislative lamenting
and declining enrollments due to a lack of a sports program (coordinated swimming or

- 4-

self paced pacing) into the triumphant conclusion with the opening of a branch campus on
Das Kapital Mall. The musical footnotes Stilson warns, will be provided by "such academic,
luminaries" (again, the disregard for accuracy is alarming) as Les Eldridge, Phoebe
Hr,
Walker, Sally Cloninger, Lyjm Patterson, Pam Searles and their man with the dancing
fingers, the pianist/playwright himself.
Join us, fork, knife, and earplugs in hand.
NEW EXHIBITS OPEN MONDAY
Three new art exhibits will adorn Evergreen's galleries next week according to TESC
exhibits coordinator Sici White. The exhibits include historical studies of paintings by
"the masters", a variety of pieces completed by persons in the college's Leisure Education
Programs, and the creations of elementary school youngsters from the Olympia School
District.
Young artists from eight Olympia elementary schools will display their works in the
Fourth Floor Gallery of the Evans Library April 2-13, White says. Work has been selected
from pieces by children in Brown, Lincoln, Madison, McKinley, McLane, Pioneer, Roosevelt
and Rogers Elementary Schools. The Fourth Floor Gallery is now open weekends from 1 to
5 p.m.; weekdays from noon to 6 p.m., and Tuesdays from noon to 8 p.m., offering the public
a chance to view the free exhibit prior to the weekly Tuesdays at Eight productions.
Community and Evergreen artists will display their works April 4-8 in the Lecture
Hall Rotunda. The display, open from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. those five days, includes fine
woodworking, weaving, jewelry, oriental painting, photography, ceramics, quilt making,
silkscreen, and spinning and dyeing. All of the works have been created by instructors
and students who've either studied through the Leisure Education programs or used the
college's Recreational Arts Center Open Studios.
An unusual study of art history has led to a "constructive, educational exhibit" to
be displayed by Evergreen arts graduate Molly_ Forsythe in the Second Floor Gallery of
the Evans Library March 31 through April 13, White says. Forsythe, who has been studying
independently with Faculty Art Historian Kazuhiro Kawasaki, will display her drawings,
paintings, and research she's completed on works by Francesca, Botticelli, Rembrandt
and Ruebens.
"Not intended to be an exhibit of finished pieces," White says, the Forsythe show,
called "Elements of Painting: Historical Studies," offers an analysis of the composition,
line, chiaroscuro and color used by the masters and examined through copying and analysis.
"It's a show designed to display the process of artistic creation through study of the
masters," White explains.
The Second Floor Gallery, which is also free and open to the public, is open from
8 a.m. to 11 p.m. weekdays, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday and 1 to
9 p.m. Sunday.
White, an Evergreen faculty artist, says he will coordinate exhibits in both the
Second and Fourth Floor Library Galleries for the next five quarters. He's already
confirmed five more shows for the rest of this Spring Quarter.
AAU DIVING CHAMPIONSHIPS HERE NEXT WEEKEND
The Washington State Amateur Athletic Union-Age Group Spring Board Diving Championships will be held in the campus swimming pool April 7 and 8, according to Recreation and
Activities Director Pete Steilberg. Evergreen is hosting the event in conjunction with
the Tumwater Valley Pool and the AAU. The swimming pool will be closed to general use
that weekend, Steilberg adds, but admission to the event is free. Normal admission rates
for other Recreation Center users will remain in effect.
PERSONAL GROWTH SEMINAR SLATED
A Spring Quarter seminar on "Personal Growth" will be offered by Evergreen Counseling
Center Coordinator Richard Rowan and Tacoma Child Study and Guidance Clinic staffer
Larry O'Neil beginning Monday, April 9. The eight-week sessions will seek to help

- 5participants develop skills in assertiveness, self trust, human awareness, interpersonal
relations, self confidence and affiliation needs. The sessions will be offered every
Monday at 3 p.m., in Library 2204. Enrollment is free and limited to the first 35 persons
who sign up by April 7. Call 866-6151 for details.
WORKSHOP PLANNED FOR EVERGREEN PARENTS
"Values and Needs of the Evergreen Parent" will be explored in an all-day workshop
offered April 21 by the Counseling Center and Driftwood Day Care, according to Counselor
Richard Rowan. The session, set from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Library 3112, seeks to "clarify
both the needs and values of parenting experienced by college faculty, staff and students
who are parents," Rowan says. The day-long meeting will also strive to create a "parent
support group" for interested Evergreeners.
Leading the Saturday session will be Rowan; Bonnie Gillis, Driftwood Day Care
coordinator; and Candy Vogler, coordinator of child and family services for the Community
Mental Health Center.
Rowan says planners of the session "would appreciate advance reservations (at $3
each) by April 18, especially if parents want day care provided on April 21." Call 866-6220
for complete information on the workshop.
FOOD SERVICES PRICES RISE, SILyERWAgE_DIgAPPEARS_
Inflation has hit with a boom in campus food services, according to Housing and
Food Services Director Ken Jacob. Compounding the cost problems for Saga is the constant
disappearance of dishes and silverware from campus dining rooms. Both troubles will be
evident when you use Saga this quarter.
Prices for a number of food items, especially meat, fish, dairy products and produce
will be increasing, a reflection, Jacob says of the "incredible food cost hikes to Saga
in recent weeks." He points out the cost of ground beef has risen more than 47 percent,
chicken nearly 16 percent, french fries 11 percent, shrimp 21 percent, tomato juice
34 percent, carrots 72 percent, apples 24 percent, head lettuce 104 percent and a real
shocker
greenpeppers, 696 percent! He says the "increase in food prices will be
applied selectively to those items which are currently underpriced."
Jacob also notes concern for the more than $3,600 in dishes and silverware which
have disappeared from dining halls this year. The staff has placed signs around food
services "encouraging users not to take silverware and dishes, but it's done no good."
Suggestions offered to Jacob for solving the problem have included "chaining the silver
and dishes to tables and asking customers to x^ash them after they eat." But so far he's
found no acceptable solutions. If you have a better idea on how to reduce the
diminishing returns, call him at 866-6194 or drop him a line at the Housing Office,
Residence Hall A-322 and offer your views.
THE BARD COMES TO THE TUBE
Shakespeare would love it. Now everyone can become immersed in his plays. A couple
of things in this area make that possible. Not only is public television offering master
performances of the celebrated Elizabethan author's drama through April, but a special
course at Evergreen will make its timely appearance Spring Quarter, especially to coincide
with the British television productions.
Aptly titled, "Shakespeare's Plays" incorporates Henry VIII, Richard II, and
Measure for Measure, scheduled for April broadcast on channels 9 and 13, along with six
other Shakespearean works, for a quarter-long study which traces the transition of drama
from script to performance.
"Shakespeare's Plays" will be taught by Dr. Tom Maddox, an Evergreen alum who recently
completed his doctorate in literary studies from American University, Washington D.C.,
on Monday and Wednesday, 7-9 p.m., in Library 1508 at Evergreen, March 28 through June 8.
The one unit course is designed to allow the beginning as well as the long-standing
Shakespeare enthusiast an opportunity to enjoy and learn about the works of the sixteenth

- 6century writer. Students will view the three television performances, as well as encampus film showings of A Midsummer Night's Dream and King Lear. In addition, the class
will read aloud Henry IV (Parts I and II), The Twelfth Night, Winter's Tale, and The
Tempest, as well as participate in discussions and lectures during the quarter.
Enrollment for "Shakespeare's Plays" is open on a first-come, first-served basis.
Call Dr. Tom Maddox, 754-8339, or the Registrar, 866-6180, for more information about
"Shakespeare's Plays."
TELEVISION WRITING, NUTRITION OFFERED
A well-known Seattle television personality and a Bremerton public health and
nutrition expert will teach courses Spring Quarter at Evergreen. KING-TV newsman and
producer Hal Calbom, who holds a masters degree in English literature, will teach
"Writing for Film and Television" Tuesdays and Thursdays, 7-9 p.m., in Library 2509
March 29 through June 8.
The course, designed for any interested person, will explore various script formats
for television and film, including non-fiction production (documentary, educational and
public relations) as well as adaptations and original writing for theatrical production.
Students will complete weekly writing assignments, which will be critiqued during class
sessions.
Bremerton public health official Jean Densmore will teach "Introduction to Human
Nutrition" on Tuesday and Thursday, 7-9 p.m., Library 2504, March 29 through June 8.
This one unit course will cover a range of topics related to nutrition, including basic
human metabolism, discussion of current controversies, and some practical applications.
No previous scientific background is necessary to enroll.
Ms. Densmore holds a masters of science in nutrition and has experience working
in scientific as well as community aspects of her field.
Persons may enroll for either course weekdays through April 4 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. /
in the Registrar's office. Call 866-6180 for details.
NICHOLS; "OUR" CITIZEN OF THE YEAR
Dick Nichols, Evergreen's founding Director of Information Services, was named
Thurston County Citizen of the Year this week by a panel of local judges in a contest
sponsored by the North Thurston Kiwanis Club. Nichols, who left Evergreen two years ago
to assume the job as assistant to the superintendent of Tumwater School District, sported
"the only crew haircut on the educational acreage out there along Eld Inlet", according
to the Daily Olympian.
A champion joke teller, ardent supporter of the college for eight years, and devoted
sports caster, coach, and fan, Nichols has also been active in the Olympia-Area Chamber
of Commerce, served on the Morningside board of directors for 10 years, on Tumwater's
City Council for two terms and on nearly every other worthy cause in the county.
It was an honor well deserved and Evergreeners are proud to count him among 'em.
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
Faculty Member Jake Romero has been selected as a 1979 Summer Faculty Research
Participant at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois, where he will be associated with
Dr. C.C. Baker in Argonne's Applied Physics Division, conducting research in fusion
power. Faculty Member Leo Daugherty has written an article published in the current issue
of "Shakespeare Quarterly." His article, called "Sir John Davies and Shakespeare's
Sonnet 107" explains how two obscure 1599 poems by Davies serve to relate the Shakespeare
sonnet to a period in Queen Elizabeth's life. The journal is published by the Folger
Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C. Leo is currently coordinator of the Shakespeare
and the Age of Elizabeth program and has an edition of Shakespeare's Poems coming out
the first of next year, published by Cecil Woolf in London.
Faculty Member Greg Steinke has been awarded first prize in a national contest

— 7 —
sponsored by the School of Music at the University of Louisville, and has also been
selected for a national office of the American Society of University Composers. Steinke
won a $400 prize for his composition "Atavism for Oboe, Bassoon and Wind Ensemble," in
the composer's contest, and his work will be performed by the University of Louisville's
Wind Ensemble April 22. Last month Greg was also named editor of the American Society of
University Composers bi-annual national publication.
Across the nation in New York, Faculty Musician Donald Chan reports his Broadway
show, "Mary", opened March 1 to good reviews by the New Yorker, Variety and the New York
Times. Don is musical director for the play, first produced in 1921 by George Cohen with
words and music by Harback and Hirsch. He rewrote the music for singers and dancers.
He says this week the staff of the Kennedy Center is flying to New York to see "if the show
is viable for their little theater." He also notes that, "New York is very exciting
and a lot is happening." His work at Juilliard is "going well" and he is writing music
for a possible musical based on the life of Moliere. What shocks him about The Big Apple,
he says, is the price of housing
two-bedroom apartments sublet for between $500 and
$3000 a month!
Changes are taking place in a number of offices around campus. The Development
Office, which recently announced the appointment of Susan Washburn of Centenary College
as its new director, is temporarily headed by Bonnie (Hilts) Marie. Paul Roberts has
returned to his former duties as assistant for alumni activities and the Office of
Institutional Advancement and Research may be staffed on a one-quarter time basis this
spring by a faculty member while a search for a permanent director
gets underway.
Evergreen-South, the Vancouver campus, reports its director Lin Foa will be moving
to Kalamazoo, Michigan this summer. Faculty Member Ronna Loewen will take over duties
as coordinator of the Community Studies program next fall, and Faculty Member Gayle
Rothrock Boyle will coordinate a new Management and the Public Interest two-year program
which begins there in September. Faculty Member Virginia Darney will coordinate the
five-week Vancouver summer program in Community Studies. Outreach efforts in both
Vancouver and Port Angeles are being coordinated by Academic Dean Will Humphreys, in
addition to his on-campus responsibilities.
Former Academic Deans' secretary Eileen Humphrey has begun work as an assistant to
Duke Kuehn, named last month as Special Assistant to President Evans to implement
recommendations from the Enrollment Design Disappearing Task Force. Filling Eileen's
former slot will be Ellie Doman, formerly with Cooperative Education. Ellie is home
recovering from surgery but hopes to be back on the job by the end of April. In the
interim, Rhoby Cook is serving in Ellie's new post until she's back. Arlyn Crothers
of the Registrar's staff will assume Ellie's duties in Co-Op. Hal Keating, office
assistant in the Registrar's Office, will assume Arlyn's duties as registration supervisor.
A new employee, Judy Ehresmann, has already been hired to assume Hal's former duties. Whew!
Other changes in personnel include the hiring of Larry Ralphs as housing coordinator
and Charles Wadsworth as maintenance mechanic. Alan Aguilar of the motor pool has left
the campus, as has Benice Muller-Cody, a statistical typist in Institutional Research.
And, Teri Ramsauer has returned to her alma mater to begin a six-month job as a temporary
Financial Aid counselor.
Legislative Memo, volume V, no. 10
MASTER'S BILL PASSES SENATE
By Les Eldridge, Assistant to the President
In our last chapter, you will recall, we were anticipating a hearing in Senate
Ways and Means on our Senate Master's bill (Second Substitute Senate Bill 2610) and
attempting to add some Evergreen funding to the House version of the budget, House
Bill 236. On March 20, the Senate Ways and Means Committee removed the appropriation
from 2610 and placed it in the Senate version of the budget, contingent on passage of the
bill, and moved it out with a do pass recommendation to the Rules Committee. March 26,
the Rules Committee placed the bill on the second reading calendar, and March 28 the

- 8Senate passed the bill by a 45 to 2 vote and sent it to the house.
In the House Appropriations Committee on March 20 Representative Ron Keller, with
Representatives Scott Blair and Dennis Heck, offered three amendments adding $428,000
to Evergreen's operating budget. Although most amendments concerning higher education
add-ons failed in this committee, these three amendments passed in the 26-member committee
by votes of 20 or more. They provided $296,000 for the graduate program, contingent on
passage of the Master's Bill; $100,000 for student services and $32,000 for unemployment
compensation. On March 27, the House passed the operating budget to the Senate with
those additions for Evergreen intact. The operating budget contained salary increases
for faculty and staff as follows: Faculty and exempt staff would receive 5 percent raises
as of September 1, 1979, 5.6 percent October 1 9 1979, 6 percent October l s 1980;
Higher Education Personnel Board (classified) staff; 5 percent July 1, 1979, 9 percent
October 1, 1979, 6 percent October 1, 1980. The Senate position appears to include an
increase of 7 percent each July.
The Governor has signed House 226, the Reciprocity bill. This gives Vancouver
area residents the opportunity to pay in-state undergraduate tuition at Oregon community
colleges and at Portland State University and affords Oregon residents in counties in the
Portland area the same opportunity at Washington community colleges and the EvergreenVancouver program.
Second Substitute Senate Bill 2023, creating a personnel appeals board for both
Department of Personnel and Higher Education Personnel Boards, passed from the Senate to
the House March 26.

BUSY BODIES' BRIEF TWO-WEEK EVENTS CALENDAR
Because there are so many major events coming up in the next two weeks, the
Newsletter offers you the following filler:

"Contact With Japan Through Its Art History," a slide/talk by Faculty
Member Kazuhiro Kawasaki, 8 p.m...Recital Hall...$1...

April 17

Eclectic Union Theater of Seattle presents U.S. premiere of "Paper
Flowers," 8 p.m., Experimental Theater...$2.50 & $1.50...Reservations,
866-6128...

April 14

Songstress Linda Waterfall performs with Gone Johnson Band, 8 p.m.,
Second Floor Library Lobby...$3.50 & $3...

April 13

Bill Evans Dance Company of Seattle performs, 8 p.m., Experimental
Theater...$5 & $6...Reservations, 866-6128...

April 11

"Women in China and Cuba: A Comparison" presented in joint slide/talk
by Dr. Peta Henderson and Pat Larson, 8 p.m., Recital Hall...$l...

April 10

Faculty Member Carie Cable presents talk on "Doing Business with
Japan," noon, Arnold's Restaurant, 900 South Capitol Way...$4.20...
....sponsored by Evergreen College Community Organization....
Reservations, 866-6128...

April 10

Second-Sort-Of-Annual Gong-Show & Crab Feed, 6 p.m., Fourth Floor
Library...$6.50...

April 6

Cornish String Quartet performs, Recital Hall, 8 p.m...$2.50 & $1.50...

April 3