Newsletter_198004.pdf
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Part of The Evergreen State College Newsletter (April 1, 1980)
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...NIELSEN NAMED RUNNING COACH...Larry Nielsen, cross country running coach at Olympia High
School, has accepted a volunteer appointment to head a five-member coaching staff for the Evergreen men's and women's cross country teams, slated to begin competition next fall. Athletic
Director Pete Steilberg says Nielsen, a social studies and health teacher at Washington Middle
School, brings to his new post years of experience as head of the Olympia running squads, including the 1978-79 season when his women's team won the state championship.
Assisting Nielsen will be a four-member volunteer staff consisting of Joan Cullen, an officer
of the Olympia Rain Runners and a seasoned marathon competitor; Carol Guzy Harding, a founding
member of the Rain Runners who designed the point system Evergreen uses for its road run awards;
Dale Baird, a TESC computer analyst and member of the college's Running Club; and Steilberg.
I
I ...EVERGREEN GRAD WINS DANFORTH...David
Allan Neill, a Winter Quarter Evergreen graduate, has
been awarded a Danforth Graduate Fellowship and become the third alum to be so honored within the
past five years. Neill is among 100 fellowship winners from throughout the U.S. selected from
more than 1,900 applicants for the Danforth award, which funds tuition and fees for up to four
years of graduate study for those preparing to teach at the college level.
Now a part-time botany teacher in Evergreen's evening studies, Neill, 27, has already been
accepted into a graduate program in biology at Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri.
A former Peace Corps volunteer in Nicaragua, Neill transferred from Prescott College to Everen where he has spent the past five quarters completing his bachelor's degree and gaining an
increased understanding of the biological sciences.
One of the few Danforth winners from the natural sciences, Neill says he plans to complete
the majority of his doctoral work in South America, studying tropical botany, conducting field
research and teaching botany at the college level. A native of Corona, California, Neill and his
wife, Lynne, are presently employed as caretakers of Evergreen's Organic Farm.
...EXHIBITORS PREPARING FOR MAY HEALTH FAIR...Nearly three dozen exhibitors have already signed
up to participate in Evergreen's two-day Health Fair set May 13 and 14. Sponsored by Evergreen's Health Services, the event will feature 16 hours of free public lectures, films, demonstrations and exhibits designed to better acquaint area residents with local health care programs and facilities.
Highlighting the Health Fair will be lectures on homeopathic medicine by Dr. Dean Crothers
of Mount Vernon, a workshop on "careers in alternative health care»" a six-hour blood drive, a
2.7-mile "run for your life" road race, and a children's poster contest illustrating the theme,
"What does health mean to me?" Throughout the event, participants will be invited to enjoy free
use of the campus recreation center and to gain information from an array of exhibitors.
Details are available from Health Services, 866-6200.
•
...ACCESS CENTER SPONSORS MAY 3-4 RETREAT...A two-day weekend retreat featuring workshops and discussions for women considering returning to school and for those who have already enrolled in
higher education will be sponsored by Evergreen's ACCESS for Re-Entry Women Center May 3 and 4.
The retreat, set to begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Organic Farm, will feature presentations
on the problems faced by and the resources available to re-entry women, new ways of looking at
women's mental health, poetry for non-poets, and the health needs of women over 30.
Registration must be completed by 5 p.m. April 28 through the ACCESS Center, Library 3510,
L .,-6080.
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..."IMAGES IN MOTION" OPENS THURSDAY...A team of 30 student poets, dancers and musicians will
blend movement and poetry into a one-act production called "Images In Motion: Too Long Elves
and Haunted Maidens," opening Thursday, May 1 at Evergreen. The 90-minute show begins at 8
o'clock Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings in the Experimental Theater of the
Communications Building and traces the stages of human life from childhood's innocence through
disillusion, experience and acceptance.
The show is the work of students enrolled in a two-quarter academic program called "The
Dance of Metaphor" taught by faculty dancer Meg Hunt and communications professor Dr. Craig
Carlson, an oft-published poet. Comprised of entirely original student work, the thought-pro-/
voking production mixes light and playful moments with quiet, reflective times and concludes on
an optimistic note, offering hope for resolution of life's challenges.
"Images in Motion" is the ninth and final production of the 1979-80 Evergreen Expressions
performing arts series sponsored in part by POSSCA (Patrons of South Sound Cultural Arts). Tickets for this production may be purchased in advance at TESC Bookstore or reserved by calling
866-6070 weekdays. Tickets will be sold at the door of the Communications Building beginning
at 7 p.m. May 1-4.
Cost is $3 general admission, $1.50 students and senior citizens.
.SEATTLE OPERA PRESENTS PREVIEW TUESDAY AT EIGHT...Performers from the Seattle Opera will present a preview of their upcoming production "Tales of Hoffman" in an evening concert Tuesday,
April 29 at Evergreen. Presented as the annual "Spring Gala" sponsored by the Olympia Opera
Guild, the evening show begins at 8 o'clock in the Recital Hall and features scenes from the
19th century French opera written by Offenbach and based on the life and stories of E.T.A.
Hoffman, a romantic writer of that period.
Starring in the Tuesdays at Eight concert will be Seattle tenor Gary Jordan in the lead role
of Hoffman, soprano Mar\s as the doll, Olympia, and bass baritone Charles Pailthorp in
the role of Coppelius. Pianist Michael Mitchell of the Seattle Opera will introduce the performers, set the stage for each scene, and accompany the singers.
.- The "Spring Gala" performance carries an admission fee of $5 and includes a reception following the performance. Reservations may be made by calling 866-6128 weekdays. Tickets go on
sale at 7:30 p.m. April 29 at the door of the Communications Building.
... RECREATION CENTER HOURS ANNOUNCED...Open hours for use of Evergreen's Recreation Center and
swimming pool have recently been announced. The open schedule, effective through June 6, permits
public use of the facilities from 11 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. on weekdays, from noon to 8:30 p.m. on/
Saturdays and from 1 to 6:30 p.m. on Sundays. Per use fee per person is $1 on weekdays and '
Sundays and 50c on Saturdays. Senior citizens are invited to use the facility every day for 50CFor complete details on use of the Recreation Center, call 866-6530 weekdays.
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April 25, 1980
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Published by the Off ice of College Relations/ Library 3114
three students honored
NEILL WINS DANFORTH, EVERGREEN'S THIRD IN FIVE YEARS
David Allan Neill, a Winter Quarter Evergreen graduate, has been awarded a Danforth Graduate
Fellowship and become the third alum to be so honored within the past five years. Neill is !
among 100 fellowship winners from throughout the United States selected from more than 1,900
applicants for the Danforth award, which funds tuition and fees for up to four years of graduate
study for those preparing to teach at the college level.
Now a part-time botany teacher in Evergreen's evening studies, Neill, 27, has already been
accepted into a graduate program in biology at Washington University in Saint Louis, Missouri.
A former Peace Corps volunteer in Nicaragua, Neill transferred from Prescott College to Evergreen
where he has spent the past five quarters completing his bachelor's degree and gaining an increased understanding of the biological sciences.
"I spent three years in Nicaragua working on a project to establish a national herbarium,"
he says. "I discovered I definately needed to return to college to complete my degree and to
improve my basic skills in the natural sciences."
After Prescott College closed, Neill says "I deliberately sought a small, liberal arts
college which offered an interdisciplinary approach
Evergreen became my natural choice."
\e at TESC, Neill has completed course work in basic natural sciences, acquatic biology, biochemistry, genetics, and an advanced interdisciplinary study called "Comparative Environmental
Politics" which combined students from the biological and social sciences to explore the nature
of the present environmental crisis by studying its scientific, social, political and economic
aspects.
One of the few Danforth winners from the natural sciences, Neill says he plans to complete
the majority of his doctoral work in South America, studying tropical botany, conducting field
research, and teaching botany at the college level. A native of Corona, California, Neill and
his wife, Lynne, are presently employed as caretakers of Evergreen's Organic Farm.
CALDERON AWARDED $500 SCHOLARSHIP
Ruth Calderon, an Evergreen junior, has been awarded a $500 scholarship from the Foundation
for International Understanding Through Students, sponsored by the Seattle North Club of
Soroptimists International. Ms. Calderon, a native of Peru, transferred to Evergreen from
Tacoma Community College to complete her studies in public management. A graduate of the University of San Antonio-Abad in Cusco, Peru, the Evergreen student plans to return to her native
Peru to work for the government following her graduation next year.
Her scholarship for the 1980-81 academic vear will be acknowledged at a May 21 dinner in
Seattle, where Ms. Calderon will be honored by the Soroptimists 'Seattle North .Club.
DUSENBERRY SELECTED FOR NATIONAL CONFERENCE
Pam Dusenberry, a. Seattle Evergreen senior, is one of 20 journalism students from throughout
_
United States selected to receive a tuition scholarship from MECCA, the Media Evaluation
t^.iference on Commercial Activities. The award funds Dusenberry's attendance at an intensive
five-week summer institute conducted by MECCA at the University of Denver to provide potential
journalists with tools "useful in evaluating and understanding commercial enterprise and activities both in the United States and abroad."
Dusenberry, who has for the past six quarters served as an editor of the Cooper Point
•
-2Journal, says the summer session will be taught by professors from business, government, finance,
law and international affairs, as well as by a number of distinguished American journalists.
The Evergreen senior, who has also worked for Northwest Passage, a Seattle tri-weekly paper,
hopes to work for a Washington State daily or weekly newspaper following her graduation this
June.
ADAMS DIRECTING NATIONAL PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION CONFAB HERE
Educators from 22 states
including 11 east of the Mississippi
are among 59 represen
tatives scheduled to present professional papers to the third national conference on Teaching
Public Administration slated May 30-31 at Evergreen.
Evergreen Faculty Member Dr. Guy Adams, co-director of the college's new graduate program
in public administration, says the conference will feature major luncheon addresses by Dr.
Brewster Denny, dean of the University of Washington Graduate School of Public Affairs, and Dr.
H. George Frederickson, president of Eastern Washington University.
Set to begin at 9 a.m. May 30 with a welcoming address by President Dan Evans, the Evergreen conference is designed, says Dr. Adams "to promote an interchange of experience and ideas
centered around teaching issues in the field of public administration."
Registration is already underway for the conference, which will focus on informal, small
group working sessions that discuss papers on such topics as: the teaching of budgeting and
financial management, theory in public administration, criminal justice administration, organizational behavior and human resources development, public policy, quantitative methods, and
issues in curriculum design and development. Papers will also address various forms and uses of
experiential education and provide what Adams calls "several landscape views of public administration education."
Participants selected to present papers include: Evergreen faculty members Dr. Virginia
Ingersoll and Dr. Don Finkel, as well as their colleagues from such schools as: American, Drake,
Purdue, Jackson State, Florida State and Auburn Universities; the universities of Southern
California, Oregon, Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, and Delaware; and the University of Califoral
at Santa Cruz. Papers will also be presented by professionals from the National Institute of
Public Management, the U.S. Office of Personnel Management, and the University of Riyadh in
Saudi, Arabia.
The two-day conference is cosponsored by the Public Administration Theory Network, the
Department of Political Science at Boise State University, the Master's Programs in Public
Administration at Portland State University and at the University of Alaska-Juneau, the American
Society for Public Administration, and the Washington State Consortium on Public Affairs Education, which includes Eastern and Western Washington Universities, Pacific Lutheran and Seattle
Universities, and the University of Washington.
Details on the conference are available from Dr. Adams, Library 1414, TESC.
NIELSON NAMED HEAD OF CROSS COUNTRY COACHING TEAM
Larry Nielsen, cross country running coach at Olympia High School, has accepted a volunteer
appointment to head a five-member coaching team for the Evergreen men's and women's cross country
teams, slated to begin competition next fall.
Athletic Director Pete Steilberg says Nielsen, a social studies and health teacher at Washing
ton Middle School in Olympia, brings to his new post years of experience as head of the Olympia
running squads, including the 1978-79 season when his women's team won the state championship.
A graduate of Western Washington University, the new Evergreen coach is also "an excellent runner
himself," says Steilberg, who points out that Nielsen has twice set all-school records for his
participation.
Assisting Nielsen will be a four-member volunteer staff consisting of Joan Cullen, an off-^.er
of the Olympia Rain Runners and a seasoned marathon competitor; Carol Guzy Harding, a founding
member of the Rain Runners who designed the point system Evergreen uses for its road run awards;
Dale Baird, a TESC computer analyst and member of the college's Running Club; and Steilberg,
Together the volunteer coaching team will begin conducting turnouts this spring for men and
women, who will participate in at least eight meets next fall as part of schedules organized by
the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) and the Northwest College Women's
Sports Association. (NCWSA).
-3TRUSTEES REVIEW ATHLETIC PLAN. HEAR VANDELISM REPORT
I
Reports on Evergreen's intercollegiate athletic program and on vandalism in on-campus housing
dominated the April 17 meeting of the Board of Trustees. Athletic Director Pete Steilberg told
trustees that the fledgling intercollegiate sports program is off to "a good start" despite its
limited funding. Soccer and swimming programs have been successfully initiated this year and
Steilberg said cross country teams for men and women will begin competition next fall, under the
direction of a five-member volunteer coaching staff headed by Olympia High School's Larry Nielsen.
Housing Director Ken Jacob told trustees vandelism in campus residence halls has resulted
in an estimated $3,500 damages. But, he noted, the increased presence of staff and student
security officers, a number of residence hall meetings, and the eviction of six students suspected
of vandalism had helped reduce the amount of destruction occuring. He said only eight or ten
persons were actually responsible for the vandalism and most of them are no longer Evergreen
students.
In other action Thursday, trustees postponed discussion on proposed changes in the college's
sick leave policy for exempt administrators and faculty. That policy will be reconsidered at
their next meeting, set for Thursday, May 8, beginning at 10:30 a.m. in Library 3112.
NEWS BRIEFS
SEARCH FOR ASSISTANT DEAN BEGINS
Nominations for the two-year appointment of assistant academic dean are due in the office
of Provost Byron Youtz by 5 p.m. Monday, April 28. The post is currently held by Jeanne Hahn
ho returns to the faculty next fall.
Nominations
of oneself or others
should include, says Youtz, those persons with
"sufficient experience at Evergreen to understand our methods and procedures," who have demons
ted "ability to work hard and well with colleagues and to demand high standards of achievement
in oneself and others."
The appointment will be effective September 1, 1980 through August 31, 1982 and is non-renewable. Nominees will be asked to submit to Youtz by May 9 a current portfolio, along with a
personal statement on why the assistant deanship is attractive and what they hope to bring to
the position. A screening committee will then review nominees, and interviews for finalists will
be conducted during the week of May 19. Youtz hopes a final appointment will be made by the end
of May.
f
CPJ EDITOR, BUSINESS MANAGER POSTS OPEN
Applications are now being sought by the Publications Board for the positions of editor and
business manager of the Cooper Point Journal for the next four quarters. Typed applications for
both positions are due by 5 p.m. Thursday, May 22 in the President's Office (Library 3109) and
must include a statement of philosophy as well as a resume of applicant's qualifications. The
Publications Board will convene at 8:30 a.m. Friday, May 30 to conduct interviews for those two
positions.
The Publications Board has approved plans to publish five eight-page issues of the CPJ on
a biweekly basis during Summer Quarter. In addition, an orientation edition will be completed
by September 18.
COG IV VOLUNTEERS SOUGHT
President Dan Evans has issued a call to all Evergreeners interested in serving on the COG IV
Disappearing Task Force to evaluate Evergreen's governance system during the remainder of Spring
rter and throughout most of Fall Quarter. The evaluation will include a review of decision
.oig mechanisms, the Evergreen Council, the use of disappearing task forces, mediation and
adjudication, and of the social contract. DTP recommendations will be made to the president, who
will then offer his review and comments before forwarding the report to the Board of Trustees
for final consideration some time next year.
Persons interested in working on the COG IV. DTF have until 5 p.m. Tuesday, May 6 to volunteer
their service to the President's Office. Those who do so are reminded by Eivans that their
•
-4commitment will require regular attendance at meetings which will continue at least through
December.
ADMISSIONS CALLERS NEEDED
Admissions Director Arnaldo Rodriguez has invited Evergreeners to participate in the annual
Admissions Phoneathon to be conducted April 28-May 1 and May 5-8 from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Student
Services area of the Library. Rodriguez says the calls will attempt to contact all students who
have been admitted for the coming school year "to answer any last minute questions they may have
about the college" and to "encourage them to join us here next fall." Volunteers from last
year's phoneathon told Rodriguez the experience was "worthwhile and enjoyable," and many of the
currently enrolled students who received calls last year said they "really appreciated the
personal contact from the college."
If you can devote two hours to the effort some time in the next two weeks, call Rodriguez
and volunteer, 866-6170.
upcoming events
"IMAGES IN MOTION" OPENS THURSDAY
A team of 30 student poets, dancers and musicians will blend movement and poetry into a
one-act production called "Images In Motion: Too Long Elves and Haunted Maidens," opening Thursday, May 1, at Evergreen. The 90-minute, uninterrupted show begins at 8 o'clock Thursday,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings (May 1-4) in the Experimental Theater of Evergreen's Communications Building and traces the stages of human life from chiicffiocMl's innocence through disillusion
experience and acceptance.
The show is the work of students enrolled in a two-quarter academic program called "The
Dance of Metaphor" taught by faculty dancer Meg Hunt and communications professor Dr. Craig
Carlson, an oft-published poet. Comprised of entirely original student work, the thought-pro-wf
ing production mixes light and playful moments with quiet, reflective times, and concludes on a
optimistic note, one that offers hope for successful resolution of life's challenges.
"Images In Motion" is the ninth and final production of the 1979-80 Evergreen Expressions
erforming arts series sponsored in part by POSSCA (Patrons of South Sound Cultural Arts).
Tickets for the four performances may be purchased in advance at the Evergreen Bookstore or
reserved by calling 866-6070 weekdays during regular working hours. Tickets will also be sold
at the door of the Communications Building beginning at 7 p.m. May 1-4. Cost is $3 general
admission or $1.50 for students and senior citizens.
SEATTLE OPERA PREVIEWS LATEST SHOW TUESDAY
Performers from the Seattle Opera will present a preview of their upcoming production, 'Tales
Df Hoffman," in an evening concert Tuesday, April 29, at Evergreen. Presented as the annual
"Spring Gala" sponsored by the Olympia Opera Guild, the evening show begins at 8 o'clock in the
Recital Hall of the Communications Building and features scenes from the 19th century French
opera written by Offenbach and based on the life and stories of E.T.A. Hoffman, a romantic writer
f that period.
Starring in the Tuesdays at Eight concert will be Seattle tenor Gary Jordan in the lead role
f Hoffman, soprano Mary Hastings as the doll, Olympia, and bass baritone Charles Pailthorp, an
Evergreen faculty member who performs the role of Coppelius. Pianist Michael Mitchell of the
Seattle Opera will introduce the evening concert and set the stage for each of the scenes. He
will also accompany the singers in their Evergreen appearance and when the Seattle Opera presents
;s
the full production of "Tales of Hoffman" with a 14-member cast May 23 and 24 at the Broadway
Auditorium on the campus of Seattle Central Community College.
The "Spring Gala" performance by the Seattle Opera carries an admission fee of $5, and iiv
eludes a reception following the performance. Reservations may be made by calling Evergreen's
Office of College Relations, 866-6128. Tickets may be purchased beginning at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
it the door of the Communications Building.
The Tuesday at Eight series concludes May 6 with a slide/lecture by faculty member Dr.
lobert Gottlieb on his recent five-month visit to India.
E
INTERNSHIP "CAREER OPTIONS" WORKSHOP OFFERED WEDNESDAY
The Office of Cooperative Education and Career Planning and Placement will combine forces
nesday, April 30, to offer a workshop to teach students how to multiply their career options
by participating in the internship program. The afternoon session, set from 2 to 4 o'clock in
L 2205, will focus on internship development, resume writing, information interviewing, and the
role of faculty and field supervisors.
ACCESS TO HOST WEEKEND RETREAT
A two-day weekend retreat featuring workshops and discussions for women considering returning
to school and for those who have already enrolled in higher education will be sponsored by
Evergreen's ACCESS for Re-Entry Women Center May 3 and 4.
The retreat, set to begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at Evergreen's Organic Farmhouse, will feature
presentations by: Ingrid Fabbe-Bauer, an Evergreen senior, who will discuss the problems faced
by and the resources available to re-entry women; Cara Newoman, a feminist therapist from Seattle
who will examine new ways of looking at women's mental health; and Lovern King, an Evergreen
faculty member who will direct a "poetry workshop for non poets." In addition, a nutritionist
and Sandra Kalla, an Olympia women's health care specialist, will lead discussions on the needs
of women over 30.
Registration for the May 3-4 retreat must be completed by 5 p.m. April 28. Cost includes all
•
workshops, optimal overnight facilities, and meals catered by Olympia gourmet Anita Jackson,
who has prepared desserts for both the Gnu Deli and Cafe Intermezzo.
Interested women may register through Evergreen's ACCESS Center, which is open from 10 a.m.
• to 4 p.m. weekdays in room 3510 of the Library Building. Further information is available by
calling ACCESS, 866-6080.
EXHIBITORS PREPARING FOR MAY HEALTH FAIR
Nearly three dozen exhibitors have already signed up to participate in Evergreen's two-day
Health Fair set May 13 and 14. Sponsored by Evergreen's Health Services, the event will feature
16 hours of free public lectures, films, demonstrations and exhibits designed to better acquaint
area residents with local health care programs and facilities.
Highlighting the two-day Health Fair will be lectures on homeopathic medicine by Dr. Dean
Crothers of Mount Vernon, a workshop on "careers in alternative health care" conducted by
Evergreen's Office of Career Planning and Placement, a six-hour blood drive, a 2.7-mile "run for
your life" road race, and a children's poster contest illustrating the theme, "What does health
mean to me?"
Throughout the fair, participants will be invited to enjoy free use of the campus recreation
center, and to gain information from an array of exhibitors, including the Washington Lung
Association, Hearing Aid Society, Food Cooperative, American Diabetes Association, John Bastyr
College of Naturopathy, the Crisis Clinic, Olympia Women's Center for Health, Northwest Kidney
Foundation, Arthritis Foundation, and two dozen other local and state-wide health-related organizations .
Details on the Health Fair are available through Evergreen Health Services, 866-6200,
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
Trustee Wes Berglund of Aberdeen has been hospitalized in Washington, D.C. for a suspected
aneurysm. Berglund, who was in the nation's capitol to attend a meeting of the Association of
Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges, was stricken with a severe headache April 16 and
hospitalized immediately. He will be confined to bed for at least two more weeks in Georgetown
University Hospital.
Evergreen's first official retiree, William "Bill" Littooy, died April 21 in Saint Peter
.pital following a short illness. Littooy joined the Evergreen team in 1970 as a maintenance
mechanic and worked in campus residence halls, in equipment repair and, he told the Newsletter,
"did just about everything there was to be done." Honored at a retirement party in the spring
of 1976, Littooy said he "wouldn't have missed working at Evergreen for anything. It's been an
excellent job and an enlightening experience." Since his retirement, he and his wife Myrtle have
been settled in Tumwater, enjoying gardening and Bill's special hobby, baking exotic breads. He
is survived by his wife, three children and eight grandchildren. The family requests no flowers
for his memorial service today, but donations mav be made to the United Ostomv AssnriaMnn.
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April 21, 1980
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...SPRING ENROLLMENT SHOWS INCREASE...Early figures for Spring Quarter enrollment show an increase of more than 11 percent over last spring. Tentative figures show some 2,287 students
had completed registration by the tenth class day this quarter. That total includes 302 new
students in addition to 1,934 continuing full and part-time Evergreeners. Those figures compare to a total count of 2,042 last spring, which included 1,797 continuing students and 245
newcomers.
...FIRST GRADUATE CLASS CHOSEN...Forty-five persons have been admitted to the first graduate
program in public administration which begins next fall at Evergreen. Dr. Guy Adams, co-director of the new master's degree program, says the 45 were selected from among 100 applicants
and all have been notified of their acceptance and given 60 days in which to respond and submit
an enrollment deposit.
Of the 45 new graduate students, 24 are women, 21 are men. Fourteen are graduates of
Evergreen, including one person who completed his degree in the Vancouver Outreach program. Fiv
of the newly admitted students already hold advanced degrees, including one medical doctor,
two with master's degrees in library science, one with a master's in public health, and another
with a master's in urban and regional planning.
Twenty-two of the 45 new students are currently employed in federal, state or local governmental agencies.
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,.EARTH DAY PANEL TO EXPLORE ENVIRONMENTAL DECADE TUESDAY...President Dan Evans will participate in a discussion on the future of the nation's environmental movement Tuesday, April 22,
beginning at 12:15 p.m. on the second floor of the Library Building. The discussion commemorat
the tenth anniversary of Earth Day and a decade of environmental work dedicated to ecological
preservation, education and other individual and group efforts to save and preserve the earth.
Participating in the Tuesday afternoon presentation with Evans will be local environmentalist Flo Brodie of the Nisqually Delta Association, State Representative Mike Kriedler, and
faculty members Dr. Carolyn Dobbs, a planner; Dr. David Milne, a biologist, and Dr. Richard
Cellafius, a biophysicist and plant biologist who last week returned from a three-day national
conference on "The Environmental Decade" sponsored by the Conservation Foundation.
..."AN AMATEUR GOES TO CHINA" TUESDAY AT EIGHT...Since the age of seven, Seattle native Jacquelyn Trimble has dreamed of taking "the slow boat to China," a country whose art and culture
magnetically drew her throughout her years growing up near Seattle's port and attending classes
with hundreds of mainland Chinese students at the University of Washington. Last year, thanks
to the U.S.-China Peoples Friendship Association and a bequest from her late mother, the Evergreen library technician got her wish: three weeks spent exploring the land of her dreams.
Trimble will outline her travels in a slide/lecture called "An Amateur Goes to China" Tuesday, April 22, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of Evergreen's Communications Building.
Cautioning her audience that "I'm far from an expert on China," Trimble says she'll take "a
traditional travelog approach" to telling the tale of her trip from the nation's capitol city
of Peking to the huge territory of Manchuria, from Jilain City where the sight of American
visitors "literally stopped traffic" to Shenyang, Canton and Hong Kong.
Tickets for her talk go on sale at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the door of the Communications
Building for $1.
...GALLAGHER FEATURED IN ONE-MAN SHOW...Faculty artist David Gallagher opens a one-man show of
his sculpture and drawings Tuesday, April 22 in Gallery Four. Included in the three-week display, which remains on exhibit through May 9, will be drawings, wood and metal sculpture, and
two dozen photographs and models showing the development of sculptur
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THE OFF-CAMPUS NEWSLETTER
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
OLYMPIA, WA 98505
Non-Profit
Organization
U.S. POSTAGE
Olympia, Wa.
Permit No. 65
I The
Evergreen
StateL/oiiege^^ai
College
SJHB^ISjf&l'
stvergre
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^^i ^^i
Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114
April 18, 1980
SPRING QUARTER ENROLLMENT SHOWS 11 PERCENT INCREASE
Early figures for Spring Quarter enrollment show an increase of more than 11 percent over
last spring( Tentative figures show some 2,287 students had completed registration by the tenth
class day this quarter. That total includes 302 new students in addition to 1,934 continuing
full and part-time Evergreeners. Those figures compare to a total count of 2,042 last spring,
which included 1,797 continuing students and 245 newcomers.
'main events' not blitzes
COLLEGE TEAM BEGINS VISITS TO AREA COMMUNITY COLLEGES
The first two of five "main event" visits to community colleges by an Evergreen team of
faculty and administrators were held this week as part of a carefully planned series of information exchanges between Evergreen and the state's two-year schools.
Called "main event" visits this year, the trips take the place of the community college
"blitzes" which last year saw an Evergreen team of up to 50 faculty, staff and students devote
r °. full day each to major presentations at six two-year schools.
This year, the college's
V jrdinating Committee asked Library Associate Dean Dave Carnahan, Academic Dean Barbara Smith
and Admissions Counselor Christine Kerlin to arrange for a series of two visits to each of five
schools
Centralia, Shoreline, Fort Steilacoom, Tacoma, and Seattle Central Community Colleges,
The first visit to Centralia on Wednesday
exemplifies how all the other "main events"
will be staged. Evergreen Academic Deans Smith and Will Humphreys, Faculty Member Charles McCann,
Academic Advisor Larry Eickstaedt and Kerlin devoted their morning to meeting with their professional counterparts in Centralia for extensive talks designed to promote information sharing
between the two schools and explore ways both can better meet common needs. Then all the
Evergreen and Centralia "exchangers" met for lunch in the Twin Cities and discussed ways they
can continue to share information for their mutual benefit.
That visit will be followed on Monday by a team of Evergreen students and Kerlin, who will
stage an Evergreen Information Fair from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. and from 5:30 to 7 p.m. in the commun
ity college student center. The fair seeks to provide Lewis County residents with complete details on Evergreen's academic programs, transfer policies and student services.
The two Evergreen trips to Centralia will be followed on April 30 by a visit of Centralia
faculty and staff to Evergreen's Community College Day in Olympia.
This same pattern
two visits to the community college, followed by an invitation for
that school's staff and faculty to come to Evergreen
will be followed today and next Thursday
at Shoreline and throughout the next five weeks at Tacoma, May 9 and 13, Fort Steilacoom, May
14 and 20, and Seattle Central Community College on May 7 and 12.
The main event visits and the Information Fair Days have been planned to provide more
consistent contact with faculty and staff at the community colleges, explains Admissions Director
Arnaldo Rodriguez. "Last year Evergreen made one big splash on the campuses and really caught
the attention of those who happened to be on campus," he says. "This year, we wanted to estab1 '"h more steady contact with each school
visits that are carefully followed up at more than
c ^ level so that our presence is something those schools are constantly aware of, not just on
one day a year." Rodriguez says a similar plan is being developed for visits to key southwestern
Washington high schools for next fall and he hopes both types of programs will become a regular
part of the Evergreen admissions effort.
-2FIRSTGRADUATE CLASS CHOSEN
Forty-five persons have been admitted to the first graduate program in public administratio
which begins next fall at Evergreen. Dr. Guy Adams, co-director of the new master's degree
program, says the 45 were selected from among 100 applicants and all have been notified of tf "r
acceptance and given 60 days in which to respond and submit an enrollment deposit.
Of the 45 new graduate students, 24 are women, 21 are male. Fourteen are graduates of
Evergreen, including one person who completed his degree in the Vancouver Outreach program. Fiv
of the newly admitted students already hold advanced degrees, including one medical doctor, two
with master's degrees in library science, one with a master's in public health, and another with
a master's in urban and regional planning.
Twenty-two of the 45 new students are currently employed in federal, state or local governmental agencies, including six from the Department of Social and Health Services, three from
the Department of Ecology, two from the Department of Transportation, and, notes Adams, "one
from nearly every other state agency," as well as two from the City of Olympia and four from
county-related agencies.
The first graduate class also includes two alumni of the University of Washington and
graduates from the University of Chicago, Pennyslvania State University, Amberst, Mount Holyoke,
Reed and Mills Colleges, the University of Notre Dame, Saint Martin's College, the University
of Puget Sound, and the three regional state universities.
FACULTY HEAD FOR EARLY RETREAT
For the first time in Evergreen's history, faculty members will head off campus for a three
day curriculum planning retreat in early spring
three months ahead of what had become the
routine planning schedule. The retreat, to be held at Fort Warden State Park, begins next
Wednesday and continues through Friday noon.
Work on the 1981-82 curriculum got underway two weeks ago when faculty and students began
meeting within their interdisciplinary specialty areas. That work will provide the basis for
a rough draft faculty and deans will begin reviewing at 2 p.m. Wednesday, along with guidelii?
curriculum planners Barbara Smith and Jeanne Hahn have proposed for the new curriculum.
"This year," says Smith, "we must schedule some new programs to begin Winter and Spring
Quarters to accommodate new students enrolling during those periods." She has asked faculty,
especially those in large coordinated studies programs, to include plans to reduce the number
of teachers assigned to three-quarter programs to better prepare for predicted student attrition
She has suggested that coordinated studies programs which begin in fall with four-member faculty
teams prepare to phase down to three-member teams by spring.
Smith says the faculty also need to plan programs for part-time students, including halftime programs and possibly full-time programs with half-time options. In addition, she and the
deans have asked faculty to consider "special audience programs," like those designed for working students during evening hours. They have also asked faculty to carefully review next year's
curriculum and pinpoint "major tracks" for students and ways to build programs for 1981-82 that
are "reasonably compatible" with the 1980-81 offerings.
The new curriculum will be designed for 2,450 full-time equivalent students, some 150 FTE
higher than was planned for in the 1980-81 curriculum.
When faculty return to campus April 28, Smith hopes they'll have selected which programs
will be offered, set their enrollment levels, and identified program coordinators. By the first
of May the deans will post the curriculum "trial balloon" in several locations throughout the
campus. Reactions and suggestions from all interested Evergreeners will besought before May 14
Final program descriptions will be written by faculty and delivered to the deans by June 1, so
Smith can present the final, proof-read copy to the college editor by June 15.
The 1981-82 edition of the Catalog will be produced during Summer Quarter and available for
students by the first of October, nearly two months earlier than any previous edition.
DEAN FINALISTS' INTERVIEWS UNDERWAY
\s with t
this week and will continue through May 6, according to Academic Vice President and Provost
Byron Youtz.
Selected as finalists are Evergreen faculty economist Dr. Russ Lidman; Dr. Lynne Iglitzin,
-3-
associate director of undergraduate studies at the University of Washington; Dr. Peter Gold,
master of Rachel Carson College of Environmental Studies at the State University of New York
at Buffalo; Dr. John Perkins, associate professor in the Miami University School of Interdis"iplinary Studies in Oxford, Ohio; and Dr. Ed Williams, dean of Johnston Center at the Universit}
f Redlands in California.
The finalists were selected from among 120 candidates by the Senior Dean Screening Disappeai
ing Task Force to fill the post currently held by Academic Dean Barbara Smith. Smith, who has
been primarily responsible for academic budget supervision, support staff> teacher certification,
space allocation and Summer Quarter studies, will next fall assume responsibilities now held by
retiring Dean Will Humphreys, for faculty hiring, graduate school supervision, curriculum planning and possibly off-campus programs.
Interviews this week were conducted with Lidman. Next week Iglitzin will be on campus for
faculty interviews from 3:30-5 p.m. Monday in Library 3112 and for student and staff interviews
Tuesday, from noon to 1:30 p.m. in CAB 108. Gold will be interviewed by the faculty April 28
from 3:30-5 p.m. in Library 3112 and by students and staff April 29, from noon-l:30 p.m. in
CAB 108. Perkins comes to campus for interviews May 1, from 3:30-5 p.m. in Library 3112 with
faculty, and meets with staff and students from noon-l:30 p.m. May 2 in CAB 108. The final
candidate, Williams, will be interviewed by faculty May 5, from 3:30-5 p.m. in Library 3112 and
by students and staff May 6 from noon-l:30 p.m. in CAB 108.
Persons interested in participating in the interview process are encouraged to attend sessions with all five candidates and to prepare written comments for delivery to Assistant Academic
Dean Jeanne Hahn by 9 a.m. May 7.
CULBERTSON SAYS PEOPLE POWER 'A SUCCESS'
National Volunteer Week, designated April 20-26 to honor those who have contributed their
efforts to their local community, gave Evergreen's volunteer coordinator Sue Culbertson a chance
his week to reflect on her efforts to establish People Power, the college's infant Community
volunteer Service Program begun under her direction last fall,
"We've already had a successful year," remarks Culbertson. "We've been able to demonstrate
that Evergreen volunteers can enjoy rewarding, though unpaid, experiences helping those in the
community who most need it
and that this college does contribute to its neighbors in increasingly significant ways."
Culbertson says the Evergreen volunteer program "began slowly and cautiously," involving
hours of interviewing potential volunteer sponsors, updating lists and background data on the
types of placements needed, and explaining the new program to both Evergreen students and offcampus agencies.
Sponsored by the Office of Cooperative Education, People Power has placed more than two
dozen students in a variety of volunteer positions
ranging from those in Juvenile Rehabilitation at the Department of Social and Health Services to Friendly Visitors, a senior citizen outreach effort, to the public schools, where Evergreeners have worked with children on a one-to-one
basis. Volunteers from on and off campus have also contributed their help to the English As A
Second Language program, to local, non-partisan political campaigns, and even to the New Student
Check-In program conducted at Evergreen at the beginning of each quarter.
"We've found this to be a very satisfying effort for both volunteers and clients," Culbertso
adds, "it has given our students a chance to apply their skills^axplore career possibilities
and fulfill their own need to be of service to their community. At the same time, it has helped
local agencies better serve their clients and enriched the lives of all who participated.
Culbertson, an Evergreen junior who brought to her position as volunteer coordinator years
of experience contributing to school programs in the North Thurston District, says People Power
will continue recruiting and placing volunteers throughout Spring Quarter under her direction.
"There are literally hundreds of placements we could fill if we had the time and the volunteers,"
\e says.
She's available to discuss those placements with volunteers or agency representatives from
8 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays in room 1016 of Laboratory Building One.
upcoming events
EARTH DAY PANEL TO EXPLORE ENVIRONMENTAL DECADE TUESDAY
President Dan Evans will participate in a discussion on the future of the nation's environmental movement Tuesday, April 22, beginning at 12:15 p.m. on the second floor of the Librar{
Building. The discussion commemorates the tenth anniversary of Earth Day and a decade of enviro
mental work dedicated to ecological preservation, education, and other individual and group
efforts to "save and preserve the earth."
Participating in the Tuesday afternoon presentation with Evans will be local environmentali
Flo Brodie of the Nisqually Delta Association, State Representative Mike Kriedler and faculty
members Dr. Carolyn Dobbs, a planner; Dr. David Milne, a biologist, and Dr. Richard Cellarius, a
biophysicist and plant biologist who this week returned from a three-day national conference on
"The Environmental Decade" sponsored by the Conservation Foundation in Colorado.
TRIMBLE SHARES CHINA ADVENTURE TUESDAY
Since the age of seven, Seattle native Jacquelyn Trimble has dreamed of taking "the slow
boat to China," a country whose art and culture magnetically drew her throughout her years
growing up near Seattle's port and attending classes with hundreds of mainland Chinese students
at the University of Washington. Last year, thanks to the U.S.-China Peoples Friendship Associa
tion and a bequest from her late mother, the Evergreen library technician got her wish: three wee
spent exploring the land of her dreams.
Trimble will outline her travels in a slide/lecture called "An Amateur Goes to China,"
Tuesday, April 22, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of Evergreen's Communications Building.
Cautioning her audience that "I'm far from an expert on China," Trimble says she'll take
"a traditional travelog approach" to telling the tale of her trip from the nation's capitol
city of Peking to the huge territory of Manchuria, from Jilain City where the sight of American
visitors "literally stopped traffic" to Shenyang, Canton and Hong Kong.
With her slides, she'll offer impressions of the Chinese who, she says, "are not all a
serious as we view them." Despite living in what Trimble calls "frugal circumstances," the
Chinese "goof off like the rest of us
they enjoy cards and other games, take two and sometimes three-hour lunch breaks, and maintain an optimistic and hopeful view of the world, which
they believe is centered around China."
The China adventure began for the Evergreen Library technician and published science fictio
writer last May when she flew from Vancouver, British Columbia to Japan and on to Peking "where
we saw the typical tourist sights." Traveling with 20 other Americans in an organized tour led
by two women government-trained Chinese guides, Trimble visited the famous Forbidden City,
Tien-en-Men Square (the site of Mao Tse Tung's tomb), the great wall, the Summer Palace, the
Temple of Heaven, and the Ming tombs.
From there they flew northeast to the cold region of Manchuria, where they visited ChangChun, a major provincial capital, and took trips to the country's third most prestigious university and to a huge palace built by the Japanese and converted into a geological institute. From
Chang-Chun, Trimble's group traveled to "the Disneyland of China," a large amusement park in
Jilain City where they were the first American tourists seen since World War II. "Traffic
literally stopped when we were in public," she reports. While there they saw the nation's first
automobile factory and visited a movie studio. In Jilain City they journeyed to an agricultural
brigade staffed by Korean Chinese and toured hydroelectric projects and schools, and even watched a soccer game before leaving for Shenyang, the national rail center.
Between cities, the Americans traveled by train, except for long distances when air travel
was necessary, as it was when the troupe headed south to Canton, "a complete change of climate
and terrain," that boasted of lovely, tropical botanical gardens. From there they headed for a
brief stop in Hong Kong and returned home, relieved, says Trimble, "that the China I dreamed
was still there."
She invites all interested in vicariously traveling back to China to join her April 22 ar
8 p.m. in Evergreen's Recital Hall. Tickets go on sale at 7 p.m. Tuesday for $1 at the door^
of the Communications Building.
MICHELSEN HEADLINES SATURDAY JAZZ CONCERT
An evening of original jazz music, presented with a classical touch, will be staged
Saturday, April 26 when former student Jerry Michelsen returns to the Evergreen stage for a
premiere performance. Michelsen, an accomplished pianist, composer and producer, promises an
evening show featuring his own piano solos and performances by both a newly formed string quarte
and a "big band jazz group" Saturday night, beginning at 8 o'clock in the Recital Hall.
Now living and performing in Seattle, Michelsen came to Evergreen from Ann Arbor, Michigan
o study classical theory, composition and performance with faculty musician Dr. Robert Gottlieb
«rtio impressed on him "the influence of improvisation on classical music" and rekindled in him
"an urge to compose" that has dominated his life ever since. The young musician also studied
country music at Evergreen with faculty musician Dr. Tom Foote before going on to study at
Seattle's Cornish Institute, where he further developed his interest in composing and in producing his own works.
A former musical director for Olympia's Gnu Deli restaurant, Michelsen in recent months has
devoted his efforts entirely to the April 26 concert, polishing his own compositions and recruiting two new ensembles comprised of local musicians trained in the classics as well as in jazz.
The Saturday show begins with piano solos by Michelsen, followed by piano and drum duos
with Jim Doney and piano and vocal performances with student soprano Marilyn Carlton. The spotlight will then shift to the first appearance by a new string quartet, featuring Evergreen student Bill Johnston on cello, Cornish students Julian Smedley and Matthias Buck on violins, and
Seattle musician Joel Pembroke on viola.
The improvisational concert concludes with performances by a ten-member band featuring
Evergreen students Joe Halajian on alto saxophone and Bud Ruther on tuba, and members of Olympia'
popular "Obrador" band Manuel Pinson on tenor saxophone, Tom Russell on baritone saxophone, Steve
Luceno on bass, and Jim Doney on drums. Other "big band" members include: John Shepherd on
C-melody saxophone, Peter Bernstein on trombone, Robert Haywood on trumpet and drums, and Myra
Melford on piano. Also featured in the finale will be local flutist Sarah Engle, performing
Michelon's "Visions of Merlin" with strings, piano, drums and woodwinds.
Jointly produced by student Mark Chambers and Michelsen, the concert carries an admission
fee of $3. Tickets go on sale at 7 p.m. April 26 at the door of the Communications Building.
HAWAIIAN DANCES. EXOTIC FOODS CELEBRATE ASIAN WEEK SATURDAY
A cast of 30 dancers and musicians will stage an evening of Hawaiian, Tahitian, Samoan
and Maoria dances Saturday, April 26, when Evergreen's Asian Coalition celebrates "Asian Week"
as part of Asian-Pacific-American heritage activities slated throughout the country. Accompaniec
by live music members of the Hui-0-Hawaii dance troupe of Tacoma will begin performing at 7:30
p.m. in a nightclub atmosphere atop the fourth floor of the Evans Library Building.
Complementing the show, which features music ranging from traditional Hawaiian hula tunes
to modern pieces reflecting a jazz influence, will be serving of what student organizer Steve
Bader describes as "exotic Oriental hors d'oeuvres," half of which his group is having flown in
from Hawaii.
The evening show, which last year attracted persons from throughout the southern Puget
Sound area, concludes with a disco dance continuing until midnight.
Telephone reservations may be made by calling the Asian Coalition (866-6033 or 866-6034)
weekdays during regular working hours. Advance tickets are on sale now at the Evergreen Bookstore for $4 general admission or $2 for students of Evergreen and Olympia Technical Community
College. Tickets will also be sold April 26 at the door of room 4300 of the Evans Library.
'NEW MUSIC' CONCERT THURSDAY
Munuzik, a concert of new music featuring the talents of four Olympia musicians, begins at
8 p.m. Thursday, April 24 in the Recital Hall. The evening performance will feature original
materials and improvizations by the quartet, along with interpretations of compositions by contemporary British composers Robert Fripp, Robert Wyatt, Fred Frith and Chris Cutler.
Members of the quartet include a trio from Phoenix, Arizona who recently moved their band,
"Influence" to Washington State: Tim Parr, on guitar and "prepared guitar"; Tim Lyons on bass;
*>nd Warren Ashford, on drums, percussion and tabla. With them for Thursday's performance will
- Phillip Hertz, an Evergreen graduate who specializes in composition of electronic music and
dance and is a former member of the Olympia-based "Conch" band.
Also joining the band will be featured soloists Joe Halajian, a multi-reed player and student of Olympia's Bert Wilson; and Evergreen student Bill Johnston, who performs locally with
-6Ashford in the five-member band, Quintessence.
Admission to the April 24 concert is $1.50.
door of the Communications Building.
WOMEN'S DANCE SET FRIDAY
Tickets go on sale at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
("
Taped, "highly danceable" music by women composers and musicians will be featured in a
women's benefit dance scheduled Friday, April 25 from 8:30 p.m. to midnight on the first floor
lobby of the Library Building. Presented as a benefit for an Evergreen women's production
company called "Tides of Change," the dance will feature music by such artists as Linda Tillery,
Lilith, Mary Watkins, and Jade and Sarsaparilla.
Tickets to the dance will be available at the door of the library for $1.25. Baked goods
will also be on sale.
GALLAGHER'S ONE-MAN SHOW TO OPEN
Faculty artist David Gallagher opens a one-man show of his sculpture and drawings Tuesday,
April 22, in Gallery Four. Included in the three-week display, which remains on exhibit through
May 9, will be drawings, wood and metal sculpture, and two dozen photographs and models showing
the development of two sculptures Gallagher was commissioned by the Washington State Arts Commission to create for Green River Community College in Auburn and Prairie High School in Battle
Ground, Washington.
The free exhibit is open weekdays from noon to 6 p.m. and Saturdays and Sundays from 1 to
5 p.m. in room 4002 of the Library Building.
races, games, rapelling planned
COUNTY RECREATION DEPARTMENT JOINS SUPER SATURDAY SPONSORS
The Thurston County Parks and Recreation department has combined forces with Evergreen's
Super Saturday Committee to present a full slate of recreational and sports activities for t^
school's annual spring festival, scheduled June 1 on the central campus plaza.
County Recreation Supervisor Michael Welter says his organization views Super Saturday as
"a perfect opportunity for us to use our resources and abilities to cooperate with Evergreen in
providing an array of recreational activities for all residents in the county." Welter says he
and Evergreen Athletic Director Pete Steilberg have already enlisted commitments for a "celebrity
all-star softball fame" on June 7, pitting players from the Daily Olympian against the KGY Radio
all-stars. '.
Other events on tap at Evergreen include a stock bike program, offering a contest for
children on bicycles of all types, and a tandem bicycle race for adults to be staged in cooperation with the Capitol Bicycle Club. In addition, roller skating races will be open to skaters
of all ages, as will skateboard competition, whichlast year attracted dozens of daring wheel
riders from throughout southern Puget Sound.
Road runners will also have a chance to compete in 2.7-mile or 5.4-mile road contests, and
spectators will have a chance to enjoy afternoon rapelling demonstrations from the Library Clock
Tower, exhibition soccer games played by teams from the Southwest Washington Soccer Association,
and a number of other events not yet confirmed.
RECREATION CENTER ANNOUNCES SPRING ACTIVITIES
Tennis, racquetball, water polo, flag football, even sailing are all on the roster of.
activities sponsored this quarter by the Recreation Center. Already underway are co-ed
volleyball sessions on Sundays, beginning at 4 p.m. through May 18; open gym nights on Thursdays
from 6-9 p.m. at Jefferson Middle School; and women's gym nights on Wednesdays, also from 6-9 p.
at Jefferson.
Flag football games will be conducted for men and women on Saturdays beginning at 1U a.r
on May 3 through June 7. Water polo team competition begins April 21 at 8 p.m. and continued
through May 19. Water polo team rosters are due in the Recreation Office by Monday morning.
Also slated to begin Monday are racquetball and table tennis tournaments. Competitors are urged
to sign up for their ladder by the end of the day today.
To be scheduled later this quarter are a double elimination tennis tournament and a boat
club sailing workshop. Check with the Recreation Center, 866-6530, for complete details.
The Evergreen State College
April 14, 1980
Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114
...JIM & JESSE & THE VIRGINIA BOYS PLAY THURSDAY... Jim and Jesse and the Virginia Boys, a five-man
band renown for producing "the most beautiful sounds in bluegrass," comes to the stage at TESC
Thursday, April 17. Veterans of the "Grand Ole Oprey," countless national bluegrass festivals
and highly successful recording sessions, Jim and Jesse McReynolds perform with their three-member
backup team beginning at 8 p.m. Thursday on the second floor of the Evans Library.
The McReynolds Brothers, who first began pickin' and singin" in their Appalachian town of
Coeburn, Virginia in the mid-1940s, have for nearly four decades carried the country and bluegrass
tradition of family bands across the nation, earning a reputation for "fabulous harmony blends
and brilliant instrumental work."
Jim, the tall, handsome elder brother, blends his "superb, clear and beautiful tenor" voice
to "polished, penetrating cross-picked mandolin performances" by Jesse, who has become the "most
technically advanced bluegrass mandolin player in the country," according to bluegrass historian
Bob Artis. Backed by The Virginia Boys, a veteran musical team called "the smoothest and most
professional band in bluegrass," the brothers have straddled the musical fence between country and
bluegrass. Their Thursday night concert promises to reveal what historian Artis calls ''the tremendous gifts these two gentlemen from Virginia have brought to bluegrass." Tickets are on sale now
at $5 general admission or $3 for students and senior citizens from Yenney Music, Budget Tapes
and Records, Rainy Day Records and the Evergreen Bookstore.
.( AZZ QUINTET PERFORMS WEDNESDAY...Internationally acclaimed jazz quintet, Art Lande and Rubisa
Patrol perform in concert Wednesday, April 16, beginning at 8:30 p.m. in Evergreen's Recital Hall.
Presented by community radio station, KAOS, the quintet offers music that moves spontaneously from
original compositions to free improvisation and standard jazz tunes.
Lande, a piano master, combines talents with Mark Isham, who plays trumpet, fluegal horn,
saxophone and synthesizer; Bruce Williams, on saxophone, clarinet and flute; Bill Douglas on bass
and flute; and Kurt Wortman, on drums and percussion. The five enrich their performances with
a variety of duos, trios and solos. They also often add a taste of theater, poetry, mime and
vaudeville buffoonery to their evening shows.
Advance tickets to the Wednesday concert are on sale now for $5 at the Evergreen Bookstore,
Rainy Day Records, and Budget Tapes and Records in Olympia. Tickets will also be sold for $6
each beginning at 7:30 p.m. April 16 at the door of the Communications Building. KAOS radio subscribers may purchase advance or at-the-door tickets for $4.
...ALEXANDER TELLS OF "SOJOURN TO JAPAN" TUESDAY AT EIGHT...The Americanization of Japan, so often
referred to in this country, is reflected in styles of clothing and popular music and in the
abundance of television sets and automobiles. But, says Dr. Richard Alexander, an Evergreen
faculty member who recently returned from six months in that island nation, "the American influence
is a very superficial one
one that has not truly affected the heart of Japanese culture."
Dr. Alexander, who has spent years studying Japanese culture, will share reflections on his
"Sojourn to Japan" in a public lecture Tuesday, April 15, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall.
Sent to Japan as an exchange professor in English at Kobe university of Commerce, Alexander
says living in a typical Japanese neighborhood not frequented by other foreigners gave him clear
insight into the country which has absorbed his attention from afar for many years. "I had the
opportunity to get a genuine sense of the culture," he says. "I taught Japanese students, worked
cicely with Japanese professors and scrupulously avoided contact with other foreigners."
Dr. Alexander's Tuesdays at Eight talk, which will include slides of his visits to the Shinto
shrines, carries a $1 admission fee. His talk will be followed on April 22 with a presentation
called "An Amateur Goes to China," a slide/lecture presented by Evergreen library technician
Jaccie Trimble about her recent excursion to People's Republic of China.
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THE OFF-CAMPUS NEWSLEnER
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
OLYMPIA.WA98505
Organization
U.S. POSTAGE
Olympia, Wa.
Permit No 65
Evergreenoiaie
Stateounege^^ji
College
•"• •frJJEEJI''The
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Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114
April 11,
1980
five nights running
UNUSUAL ARRAY OF MUSICAL PERFORMANCES BOOKED THIS WEEK
Never before in Evergreen's history can anyone remember a musical week like the one that begins this Sunday. For five nights running concerts are scheduled offering everything from the
latest in jazz and acoustic music to classical guitarists. andVir.ginia-style bluegrass. Gig Commission Coordinator Mark Chambers, through whom production clearance reports for all campus events
must be cleared, just grins when he looks at the schedule. "Sure seems like there's something
there for everyone this week," he notes. "We've never had anything like it."
ACOUSTIC CONCERT SET SUNDAY
Launching the week Sunday night will be three Pacific Northwest ensembles, who will stage a
benefit concert of acoustic music at 7 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Communications Building.
The concert opens to the music of Amethyst Galleon, a duo comprised of Evergreen students Nancy
Curtis and Tom Berglund, who promise a variety of music ranging from contemporary folk to "neomedieval" instrumenfals and ballads. A newly formed group, Quintessence, then takes the stage to
present highly reviewed harpist Rita Sammon, an Evergreen alum, performing with students Mary
Miller on bass and mezzo bass, Bill Johnston on cello, Dan Dissault on guitar and flute, and
Warren Ashford on tabla and other percussion instruments.
Concluding the Sunday night concert will be a performance by Ebbanflo, a popular Maple Valley
twosome who feature a blend of classical, folk and jazz styles in original compositions for guitar,
voice and recorder. Tickets to the April 13 show go on sale at 6 p.m. Sunday at the door of the
Communications Building for $3.50 general admission or $2.50 for KAOS FM radio subscribers.
CLASSICAL GUITARISTS PERFORM MONDAY
Fresh from performances throughout Europe, Canada and the United States, Seattle classical
guitarists Steven Novacek and Gary Bissiri appear for one performance only Monday night, beginning
at 8 o'clock in the Recital Hall. Highlighting their performance with their own transcriptions of
classical works, Novacek and Bissiri offer what one Seattle critic calls "rare and special...
evocative and passionate" concerts which provide "an example of the way music can enhanced by
transcription." The two professionals, who own the Rosewood Guitar Company in Seattle and conduct
master classes throughout the King County area, have spent years together in intensive study with
prominent guitar virtuoso and recording artist Vincenzo Macalous, who labels their work "assertive
and exciting...impressive because of the scope and originality of their own transcriptions." Tickets for their concert go on sale at 7 p.m. Monday at the door of the Communications Building for
$3 general admission or $2 for students and senior citizens.
"CASH" OPENS TUESDAY
Music, dance and art will be featured in a 90-minute student production opening Tuesday night
in the Experimental Theater. Called "Cash: Collaborators for the Advancement of the Soul and
Heart," the production begins at 8 p.m. Tuesday and features original work written, directed and
produced by students Charles Tarzian, Jeffrey Morgan and Stephan Gallira. The show, which continues Wednesday and Thursday nights, represents a collaborative effort among students studying
performing and visual arts at Evergreen. Tickets go on sale at 7 p.m. April 15, 16 and 17 at the
door of the Communications Building for $3 general admission or $2 for students and senior citizens .
JAZZ CONCERT WEDNESDAY WITH LANDE AND RUBISA PATROL
Internationally acclaimed jazz quintet, Art Lande and Rubisa Patrol perform in concert Wednesday, beginning at 8:30 p.m. in the Recital Hall. Presented by campus radio KAOS FM the quintet
offers music that moves spontaneously from original compositions to free improvization and standard jazz tunes. The five-member band, headed by pianist Art Lande, has toured Europe three
times, drawing wide acclaim in nine countries at major festivals, concert halls, clubs and radio
stations.
Lande, piano master, combines talents with Mark Isham, who plays trumpet, fluegal horn, saxophone and synthesizer; Bruce Williams on saxophone, clarinet and flute; Bill Douglas on bass
and flute; and Kurt Wortman, on drums and percussion. The quintet^which draws from both the history of jazz and traditions in Oriental, Indian and Middle Eastern music for their repertoire,
enrich their concerts with a variety of duos, trios and solos. They also often add a taste of
theater, poetry, mime and vaudeville buffoonery to their productions.
/
Advance tickets are on sale now for $5 at the Bookstore. They will be sold for $6 beginning
at 7:30 p.m. April 16 at the door of the Communieations Building. KAOS radio subscribers may
purchase tickets for $4.
BLUEGRASS CONCERT TOPS WEEK.. WITH JIM & JESSE & THE VIRGINIA BOYS
The musical week concludes Thursday with a thigh-thumping concert featuring Jim and Jesse
and the Virginia Boys, a five-man band renown for producing "the most beautiful sounds in bluegrass." Veterans of the "Grand Ole Oprey," countless national bluegrass festivals and highly
successful recording sessions, Jim and Jesse McReynolds perform with their three-member backup
team beginning at 8 p.m. Thursday on the second floor of the Evans Library.
The McReynolds Brothers, who first began pickin' and singin' in their Appalachian town of
Coeburn, Virginia in the mid-1940s, have for nearly four decades carried the country and bluegrass tradition of family bands across the nation, earning a reputation for "fabulous harmony
blends and brilliant instrumental work."
Jim, the tall, handsome elder brother, blends his "superb, clear and beautiful tenor" voice
to "polished, penetrating cross-picked mandolin performances" by Jesse
who has become the "most
technically advanced bluegrass mandolin player in the country," according to bluegrass historian
Bob Artis. Backed by The Virginia Boys, a veteran musical team called "the smoothest and most
professional band in bluegrass," the brothers have straddled the musical fence between country
and bluegrass, producing records in each style on Columbia and Capitol labels.
Advance tickets are on sale now at $5 general admission or $3 for students and senior citizen
from Yenney Music, Budget Tapes and Records, Rainy Day Records and the Bookstore,
TRUSTEES CONVENE THURSDAY
The college Board of Trustees faces three public hearings, policy discussions on two majc{
issues, and some minor action items at the regular monthly meeting Thursday, beginning at 10:30
a.m. in Library 3112.
Public hearings are slated for 11 a.m. to consider approval of policies regarding exit inter
views, parking regulations and compensation for sick leave for exempt employees. Policy discussions will follow on development of intercollegiate athletic programs with Athletic Director Pete
Steilberg, and on utilization of the Communications Building and other campus facilities with
Acting Vice President for Business Rita Cooper.
Thursday's meeting is also expected to see action on revision of the internal campus sick
leave policy and on review of budget and housing rental rates. In addition, President Dan Evans
is expected to present reports on admission statistics, budget and other items of interest to the
five-member board.
SENIOR ARTIST NOMINATED FOR HUGO AWARD
Evergreen senior Victoria Poyser was notified last week of her nomination for a Hugo Award,
one of five worldwide, in the amateur artist category, which is for those who work in the science
fiction field but do not earn a full-time living from book and magazine illustration. Final
award winners in the art categories, as well as those for novels, stories, films and magazines,
will be announced August, 1980 at the 6,000-member world science fiction convention in Boston.
Poyser, a transfer student from Central, says, "Hugos are the 'Oscars' of the science
fiction field. Publishers love it when a book gets a Hugo because sales jump immediately. And
since science fiction represents about half the paperback publishing industry, the amounts involved can be substantial." "Of course," she laughs, "they don't pay as much attention to amateu
artists. But then, most winners of the professional artist Hugo also won in the amateur category
early in their careers," points out the determined mother of two small children.
/
Poyser entered Evergreen in the summer of 1976 and her individual contract with Marilyn
Frasca that quarter proved highly successful, she says. "Marilyn had me write fiction and
poetry to generate image ideas for paintings. I did that with 'Mirror into Ascarinda,' a small
watercolor which won a prize at a major show in Boston and sold for $460 at auction."
Poyser then went on leave after her first show in March 1978 to devote more time to art. She
exhibited at several dozen shows, did about 100 illustrations and won numerous awards, including
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England.
She returned to Evergreen this quarter 1980 to finish her degree. "I only lack 28 credits,"
she says. "And besides, for all its faults, Evergreen at is best can't be beat. I doubt if I
could go to school anywhere else and do what I'm doing now."
advance warning issued
"THIRSTY COUNTY" TOPIC OF "DAS KAPITAL MALL" MUSICAL (?) SLATED FOR SUPER SATURDAY
!
Evergreen's own special playwright, musical librarian Malcolm Stilson this week issued a
strong warning to all geoducks: plan now to avoid the main lobby of the Evans Library at 2 and
8 p.m. on Super Saturday June 7. Otherwise, warns Stilson, you'll be subjected to yet another
Stilson original: the story of Thirsty County and its towis of Olympus, Slumwater and Lazy as they
adjust to the influence of "Das Kapital Mall."
Billed as "a farce with music," thp show will be presented by what Stilson calls the "Geoduck
Readers and Singers (?) Theater" for two free performances guaranteed to give all residents of
Thirsty County a fresh look at their environs.
The play is the latest in a long run of Stilson productions which began with "The Founding
of Jolly College Where Learning Can Be Fun," produced in December of 1969. At least annually
since then, Stilson has applied his wit, his composer's pencil and his piano keyboard to such near
hits as "The Last Yippie," "The Computer Revolt," "Sir Lunchalot," "Malice in Blunderland,"
"Achilles the Heel" and "Cloud Koo-Koo U." Buried among that roster of Evergreen witticisms was
one very special musical production called "Mercer's Harem" staged in 1973* enrichrd with
truly memorable music, the play brought to the library stage the story of the Mercer Girls who
left the East Coast in the 1870s to travel 'round the horn and settle in Seattle where they hoped
to find husbands in what was then considered the wild wilderness of the Pacific Northwest. That
play is one of five serious musicals Stilson has created over the past several years and may yet
provide the vehicle for him to win fame and fortune.
"I'm always working on a musical comedy," explains Stilson. "Some day I'm gonna sell one
and retire to devote myself to my fourth career
as a successful composer and playwright."
Stilson joined the Evergreen team in September of 1969 as a library consultant. After
three months working in the "damp, moldy, dark and dingy" north warehouse of the Olympia Brewery,
sorting, selecting and cataloging Evergreen library materials, he was officially hired by Library
Dean Jim Holly in January of 1970 and has been here ever since, serving as both the "father figure''
of the campus library and as the college's resident musical playwright.
His latest production, which he estimates has absorbed about 30 minutes a day for the pasi18 to 24 months, promises his usually star-studded cast of Geoduck hams: Les Eldridge, Jaccie
Trimble, Oscar Soule, Phoebe Walker, Lynn Patterson, and Joe Rice. Others in
the Stilson
troupe will include at least Ruth Palmerlee, Richard Nesbitt and Sally Cloninger, with more
performers yet to be selected.
Mark June 7 on your calendars now for two reasons: to be sure you don't miss Super Saturday
and its host of events; and to be certain that you're fully prepared for Stilson's whimsical look
at Thirsty County and Das Kapitol Mall.
workshops, forums offered
SOLAR HOT WATER SESSION THIS WEEKEND
(
A workshop on the design, construction and installation of a solar hot water heating system
will be offered by Evergreen students from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. The session
begins Saturday morning with a lecture and theory presentation. Participants will then build
and install a flat-plate solar collector system on an Eastside home which has been prepared for
the installation. The group's goal is to produce solar-heated hot water by Sunday afternoon.
Workshop participants will gain a working knowledge of the flat-plate solar hot water system
and will learn most of the techniques necessary to install a similar system on their own homes.
Workshop leaders are Jerry Graser and Tim Ball, Evergreen students who have installed solar hot
water systems on a number of homes throughout the Pacific Northwest.
The $20 registration fee may be sent to Graser at 5323 Johnson Point Road, Olympia, Washington, 98506. For more information, or to preregister, contact Jerry Graser at 754-8523, or Tim
Ball at 491-7667.
COUNSELING BEGINS NEW SERIES OF WORKSHOPS
Registration for seven workshops and a series of mini-sessions is now underway in the
Counseling Center (Seminar Building 2109). Counselor Richard Rowan says his staff has designed
-4a series of seven mini-workshops which are free to Evergreen faculty, staff and students and
carry a $5 donation request for community members.
Each workshop "is based on the idea of being your own therapist by learning communications
skills and participating in discussion of personal issues," explains Rowan. The mini seris
begins Tuesday, April 15 and continues through May 27, with each session slated from 3 to 5 pi
Included on the agenda are workshops on: self observation and change, April 15; fear of success
and fear of failure, April 22; getting more from time spent in school, April 29; asserting self
caring, May 6; family issues: "I'm on my own now! Or am I?", May 13; "If I tell you that I'm
angry I'm afraid I'll hurt your feelings," May 20; and "human highs," May 27, which will conclude
the series with exploration on how to improve the quality of participants' lives.
Other workshops slated this spring by Counseling include: a Wednesday afternoon session on
procrastination which begins April 16 and continues through May 21; a therapy session for those
who want to work on personal concerns in a supportive group, offered Thursdays, from April 17 to
May 22; a movement awareness session taught Mondays beginning April 14 through May 19; a session
on "dreams are for the waking," which begins April 22 and continues on Tuesdays through May 27;
and a workshop combining massage and polarity on Thursdays,beginning April 24 through May 29,
In addition, two weekend workshops are slated: an intensive dream session beginning April
25 for three days; and an intensive polarity workshop slated to begin May 24 for two days.
Complete details on all these sessions are available from the Counseling Center, 866-6151.
ACCESS CENTER ANNOUNCES FORUMS
Evergreen's Access for Re-Entry Women Center will host a series of free open discussions this
spring designed for students and other women who are considering entering college after a long
interval outside the classroom. Tuesdays the Center will host "meet the faculty days" in Library
3510, each week introducing two members of the instructional team to participants. Thursdays a
slate of speakers will explore such topics as career planning, seminaring, and "after Evergreen at
40-plus," also in Library 3510. And, on Fridays, Access staff will conduct forums downtown in
Office Building Two (conference room H-19) to discuss issues that affect decisions about returning
to school and awarding of credit for life experience.
(
All the sessions are slated from noon to 1 p.m. and guests are encouraged to bring their
brown bags. For details, call the Access Center at 866-6080 or stop by Library 3510.
lectures announced
ALEXANDER SHARES 'REFLECTIONS ON JAPAN' TUESDAY
The Americanization of Japan, so often referred to in this country, is reflected in styles of
clothing and popular music and in the abundance of television sets and automobiles. But, says
Dr. Richard Alexander, an Evergreen faculty member who recently returned from six months in that
island nation, "the American influence is a very superficial one
one that has not truly affect
ed the heart of Japanese culture."
Dr. Alexander, who has spent years studying Japanese culture, will share reflections on his
"Sojourn in Japan" in a public lecture Tuesday, April 15, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall.
Sent to Japan as an exchange professor in English at Kobe University of Commerce, Alexander
says living in a typical Japanese neighborhood not frequented by other foreigners gave him clear
insight into the country which has absorbed his attention from afar for many years. "I had the
opportunity to get a genuine sense of the culture," he says. "I taught Japanese students, worked
closely with Japanese professors and scrupulously avoided contact with other foreigners."
MODERN, NON-WESTERN SOCIETY
What he found confirmed his own beliefs
that while Japan is a very modern society, "it is
not a western society." "The supposed Americanization of Japan," he says, "is very superficial.
The real culture
reflected by the way persons behave and by the attitudes and expectations?
they maintain
±s intensively Japanese, altered very little by American influences."
Alexander, a 6-foot 4-inch redhead, says while his appearance "drew constant comment" from
the Japanese, he found he was warmly welcomed everywhere and he was able to develop lasting friend
ships on his first visit there. He traveled extensively, both alone and with his two young sons,
frequently visiting the sites of Shinto shrines, the centuries old architectural tributes to
Japan's national folk religion. His travels gave him the chance to enjoy such traditional Japanes
I
- 5-
experiences as public bathing and sleeping on the floor
both of which he became addicted to.
He was also able to explore Japanese attitudes on everything from proper social interaction
("marked by obsessive concern for politeness and obligation") to the use of cars.
.
Alexander's exchange professorship, which ended in September, will be followed next fall by a
( dlar visit to Evergreen by Kobe University's Dr. Seichi Katayama, who will teach economics for
two quarters. Dr. Katayama's visit is in addition to the six-month stay of Dr. Hiroshi Yoshida.
now serving a visiting Fulbright lecturership on the Evergreen faculty.
Dr. Alexander's Tuesdays at Eight talk, which will include slides of his visits to the Shinto
shrines, carries a $1 admission fee. Tickets go on sale at 7:30 p.m. April 15 at the door of
the Communications Building.
VISITOR TO LECTURE ON "REDISCOVERING WOMEN" WEDNESDAY
Mary Elizabeth Murdock, director of one of the country's finest collections of primary sources
in women's history, literature and biographies, will discuss "Adventures in Rediscovering Women"
in a free public lecture Wednesday, April 16 at Evergreen. Ms. Murdock, who heads the Sophia Smiti
Collection at Smith College in North Hampton, Massachusetts will speak from 10 a.m. to noon in
room 3407 of the Library and will have available for public examination a variety of documents and
other works from the collection.
Her free public presentation is sponsored by "Literary Women," an Evergreen academic program
taught by faculty members Nancy Allen and Sandra Simon.
SEXUAL HARASSMENT INFORMATION SOUGHT
The National Advisory Council on Women's Educational Programs is conducting an on-going
project to examine ways in which the Federal government can and should assist in protecting students from being sexually harassed by faculty, staff or other employees of secondary and postsecondary education institutions. As part of that study, the Council is requesting information
from former and present victims about their experiences, and from any others who may have know1 ge of such harassment.
Responses need not provide any data which might identify the respondent, but should describe
the type of harassment involved, the institutional and academic setting in which the incident(s)
took place, any institutional or other action on the matter if the incident was reported, and the
eventual outcome. The Council hopes to conclude this phase of the project by May, 1980, and asks
that responses be submitted before then. The Evergreen Women's Center will compile a report with
the Council. Interested women are invited to contact the center if they would like to contribute
to the report. Stop by Library 3216 or call 866-6162.
RECREATIONAL ACTIVITES ABOUND
A full schedule of recreational sports activities will come to campus this spring, according
to Jan Lambertz, assistant director of recreation and athletic programs. She reports upcoming
activities will include volleyball, softball, water polo and flag football games; tennis, table
tennis, racketball and horseshoe pitching tournaments; plus open gym nights, just-for-fun swim
meets, distance runs and sailing workshops.
Lambertz says a full schedule of events will be off the presses by the first of the week and
available in the Recreation Center Office. She adds that already scheduled this quarter are the
"highly popular" open gym nights repeated Thursdays from 6 to 9 o'clock at Jefferson Middle School,
Women's open gym nights have also been planned for Wednesdays at Jefferson.
Lambertz in—"
vites women with "requests for planned activities" to contact her at 866-6530.
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
Faculty Biologist Al Wiedemann is coordinating a two-day meeting April 25 and 26 of the Wash[' :on Association of College Biology Teachers. The annual session, which will be held at the
Gwo-nwood Retreat Center in Lacey, will include presentations by faculty member Steve Herman on
"the tradition of natural history." In addition, conference attendees will conduct an afternoon
field trip to Evergreen's campus.
Wiedemann, never one to stand still, is also busy, serving as emcee for old-time couple dance
instruction. Classes scheduled April 13 and 27 offer instruction on waltz, schottische, polka,
- 6-
simple mixers, set dances and others beginning at 7 p.m. in the Olympia ballroom of the former
Olympian Hotel. The Evergreen professor's enthusiasm for that facility has led him and others
to organize a "grand opening and benefit" Saturday, April 19, beginning with a free open house from
noon to 5 p.m. and followed by a formal evening program from 7 o'clock to midnight. The ballrr' t,
formerly known as the Jade Room, was the scene of many dances, banquets and other activities iL
Olympia during its 60-year history. It closed in 1975 when the former Hotel Olympian was sold and
converted into an apartment building. Now the room has been "saved and converted" by a non-profit
corporation and will be made available for rental to a variety of local groups. Al urges Evergreeners to stop by for the open house, and stay for the evening program, which will feature performances of ethnic music and dance, and conclude with old-time couple dancing and international
folk dancing. For details, call 943-9803.
A pen and ink drawing by Evergreen student Marion Bricksen has been selected by the Graduation
Committee for use in 1980 and future commencement programs. Library media coordinator and
faculty member Susan Smith is serving as a member of the National Library Week State Committee,
which is promoting use of libraries next week as "America's greatest bargain." The committee.will
continue to work year around to better inform residents on library resources.
Staff changes are also in the news this week. New to the Evergreen team recently are:
Mary Huston-Miyamoto, assistant reference librarian and faculty member; Victor Moore, accounting
assistant' Steve Trotter, retail clerk in the Bookstore; Elizabeth Conrad, and Elsie Wagner, telephone operators in Facilities; Karen Rawnsley, accountant, Kort Jungel, half-time mail carrier;
Bonnie Loan, program assistant in academics, David Vineberg, custodian; and Daniel Lowe, accounting supervisor.
Resignations have been accepted from Karen Adams, mag tape typist operator in Word Processing
Cliff High, scientific stores attendant; LaVelle Zimmerman, accounting assistant in payroll;
Sandra Ginter, telephone services operator in Facilities,
Betty Jack, program assistant in
the Port Angeles campus, and Phyllis Kovaks, data entry operator and office assistant in Computer
Services.
Returning to Evergreen after an early retirement is Bea Rockwell, former head of payroll,
who has joined the staff as a temporary accountant. Two Evergreeners have been on medical
(
leave. Personnel representative Judy Johnson is still in St. Peter Hospital receiving treatment
for injuries suffered in an automobile accident last month. Though Judy's early prognosis looked
as though she'd be sent home within hours of the accident, doctors now indicate she may have a
much more extensive recovery. Pearl Vincent, secretary to Provost Byron Youtz, is home recovering
from inner ear surgery, and is expected back on the job within the next week or two.
ALUM RYALS REPORTS SHE'S "SOMEWHAT FAMOUS"
Evergreen graduate Sharon Ryals reports she's "not yet rich but has become somewhat famous."
She's been hired as the editor of The Briarpatch Review, a quarterly journal of the Briarpatch
network, an international association of friends in business dedicated to what it calls "right
livelihood " ("simple living and honest business"). Sharon is also special projects coordinator
and an editor for Woman's Choice, a monthly magazine designed to "advance and enhance a mode of
communication which is intuitive, circular, experiential, and inductive rather than linear, ration
al and deductive."
Sharon says her education at Evergreen, the Briarpatch Network and Woman's Choice have several things in common. "They all focus on the quality of our communication and learning processes.
It is not just the project we end up with that is important," she writes, "it is who we have become, how we think, and what we have learned along the way. There is an independence of spirit
in all three (organizations),a willingness to improvise and make your own way, as well as a sense
of community and a joy in openly sharing our knowledge and resources so we all get better at th^
art of living."
(
Wondering what she could report to her alma mater that would be impressive, Ryals asks,
"don't you think you can condense a line or two out of this letter that will make me look like
the typically impressive Evergreen Alumnus that I believe myself to be?" Indeed we can.
Evergreenstate
Statecollege^<ai
College
•^i s^sj-vDI lThe
nehvergreen
sn ^\l 7, 1980
Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114
...CIRQUE PRESENTS PORTLAND DANCE TROUPE APRIL 12...Six performers from Cirque bring their
brand new production to Evergreen Saturday, April 12 for one performance only, at 8 p.m., in the
Experimental Theater of the Communications Building. Formerly known as the Portland Dance
Theater, Cirque premiered "Pontpoint" last month in four Oregon weekend performances that attract
ed full houses and reviews which called the show "weird, wild, individualistic, powerful and
always interesting."
"Pontpoint" (the bridge between) features the choreography of Cirque founder and teacher
Jann McCauley, music by composer Gordon Mumma, and unusual set designs by Robert Reichers and
Peter West. Portland dancers Vincent Martinez, Bonnie Merrill, Hilarie Neely, Judy Patton and
Pat Wheeler Robinson join McCauley on stage to perform the four sections of "Pontpoint:" "Black
Cats and 7 Arrows," "Rain Dances," "Canole," and "The Cirque Waltz."
Their performance, reports one Portland critic, combines "strange background sounds, perhaps music, and a set or ropes, trapezes and nets with some fantastic dancing" that "may have
looked and sounded strange but was very well received by the audience."
Presented as part of the Evergreen Expressions performing arts series, the Cirque presentation has been made possible in part by grants from POSSCA (Patrons of South Sound Cultural
Arts), the National Endowment for the Arts, and others. Tickets may be reserved by calling
866-6070 weekdays during regular working hours. Tickets go on sale at 1 p.m. April 12 at the
door of the Communications Building for $4 general admission or $2.50 for students and senior
Citizens.
..TUESDAYS AT EIGHT OPENS WITH FIDDLER, CONCERTINIST APRIL 8...A champion fiddler and a master of a century-old concertina headline the first Tuesdays at Eight concert Spring Quarter on
April 8 at Evergreen. Fiddler Frank Ferrel, who has won awards for his musical mastery throughout the West Coast and Canada, comes to campus with his partner, Dr. Bertram Levy, a concertinist of unparalleled skill, to present an evening concert of reels, jigs, waltzes and other
traditional folk and country music favorites Tuesday, beginning at 8 o'clock in the Recital
Hall of Evergreen's Communications Building.
Two two Port Townsend musicians, who recently released their first album for Centrum Records, offer their interpretation of folk music, using what reviewers have described as a "well
designed, hand-crafted, chamber music approach. Appearing at Evergreen for the first time,
the two men launch a series of four April Tuesdays at Eight programs. Their performance,
which carries a $3 admission charge or a $2 fee for students and senior citizens, will be followed on April 15 by Dr. Richard Alexander's discussion on his recent six-month "Sojourn In
Japan."
...SUPER SATURDAY ENTERTAINERS, ARTISTS, VENDORS SOUGHT...More than three dozen professional,
amateur and student musical groups have already signed on to perform on one of four stages
offering eight hours of continuous entertainment at Super Saturday, the second annual spring
festival slated June 7 at The Evergreen State College. Cosponsored by the Olympia-Area and
Lacey Chambers of Commerce, the free, day-long festival has also attracted more than a dozen
artists and craftsmen who will demonstrate, exhibit and/or sell their creations on the central
campus plaza between 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. on Super Saturday. Food vendors, promising to provide
everything from a salmon barbecue to hot dogs, ethnic dishes to health foods, have also enlisted to sell their wares at the spring celebration which last year attracted more than 4,000
jrsons to the Evergreen campus.
With only nine weeks before Super Saturday dawns, there's still time for more entertainers,
musicians, artists and food vendors to register ToFThe"festival. Interested persons are invited to call the Office of College Relations (866-6128) for complete details on how to participate in Super Saturday, 1980.
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THE OFF-CAMPUS NEWSLETTER
THE EVERGREEN STATE COLLEGE
OLYMPIA, WA 98505
Non-Profit
Organization
U.S. POSTAGE
Olympia, Wa.
Permit No. 65
I The
Evergreen^iaie
Stateuonege^^
College
"^•njSl^f^j'
ne tvergreen
x:i ^^i
_ _ Published by the Office of College Relations/Library 3114
April 4, 1980
'real crunch' may come next year
STATE BUDGET CUTBACK HITS EQUIPMENT RESERVE
The Office of Financial Management last month ordered all state agencies to continue to
hold reserves at three percent of their operating budgets for the remaining four quarters of
the biennium. In a notice sent to all agency directors, OFM said Governor Ray had released the
three percent reserve for the first three quarters of the 1979-80 fiscal year. But, "the instability of the national economy, particularly inflation related factors, compel the use of
caution in future periods," according to OFM Director Lyle Jacobsen. "Consequently, the three
percent reserve for the last four quarters of the (1979-81) biennium will not be released for
expenditure at this time."
Jacobsen also warned agencies that "the severity of federal actions to stabilize national
economy may preclude the release of the remaining three percent reserve funds any time this
biennium."
Evergreen's Budget Officer Mike Bigelow says the impact of the OFM order "is less than it
might have been because we planned for just this type of action and had already set the money
aside." Bigelow says last fall college administrators elected to take the entire three percent
biennial budget reserve ($669,900) from the 1980-81 budget, to avoid impacting operating monies
por this year.
Of that $669,900, $299,900 was taken from 1980-81 operating funds and $372,000
«ras taken from the equipment replacement budget.
The new OFM order releases $334,950 for college use. Bigelow says from that the college
will place $299,900 back in operating funds for next year. The remainder
a modest $37,050
will be also available for purchase of new equipment. The other 3 percent, which OFM says
must remain in reserve, will all be taken from equipment reserves. "This move most lisappoints
:hose who were counting on new equipment purchases in the next several months," Bf.gelow notes.
"Computer Services, the Library, Facilities and Graphics were hoping to replace outdated equipment
as were several other units in the college. If OFM and the Governor decide later this
year to release those reserves, we might still be able to obtain some new equipment."
Bigelow says the real crunch will more likely be felt in the next biennium. "Next time
this kind of action will probably affect operating budgets and therefore have a more keenly felt
impact on college programs," he says. "But Evergreen is in a unique position compared to the
other state institutions, so the impact on us may not be as severe." Because Evergreen has been
ordered by the legislature to grow, Bigelow explains, "we should be in a better position than
those schools which are simply maintaining their current enrollment."
"Obviously," he adds, "we can't continue to grow if our budget shrinks. So we think our
budget may be protected by our mandate to double the enrollment over the next twobiennia."
MORE THAN 60 APPLYING FOR VP
More than 60 applications have already been submitted for the position of Vice President
for Business, a post vacated by the death of Dean Clabaugh February 9 and filled on an acting
basis by Rita Cooper. Applications for the post will be accepted until April 30, when a 12member committee will begin the screening process under Cooper's direction. The committee hopes
i finalist will be selected later this spring and assume the position by July 1.
WHOLE FOODS WEEK GENERATES CHANGES AT SAGA
No matter how you slice it, Evergreen's Whole Foods Service Week was a success. The fiveday test conducted in late February to see if customers would support an alternative food ser-
vice
one that avoided fried foods and carbonated beverages and reduced levels of sugar,
salt, fats and preservatives
attracted more consumers, sold more goods, gained higher ratings
and substantiated demands for continued alternatives to traditional, institutional food services,
according to Kristi Morrish, an Evergreen consultant hired to work with students and staff on
improving campus food service.
^K2;
Using the U.S. Dietary Goals as guidelines, Morrish and a Foods Advisory Group worked with
Saga Food Service manager Vonda Drogmund to revise recipes and menus and provide foods that were
of low fat, low sugar, low salt and high fiber content but retained consumer appeal.
"We produced a healthy, balanced menu using an intermediate approach between those of health
foods faddists and junk food addicts," says Morrish. "Responses we received throughout the week
were almost entirely positive and evaluations submitted afterward indicated strong support for
continuation of many of our new approaches."
Morrish says the success of Whole Foods Week can be measured in several ways: by the number
of customers, the amount of food sold, and the evaluations submitted. "Nearly 800 more persons
ate at Saga during Whole Foods Week than dined there the two weeks before or the week immediately
after our experiment," she says. "In fact, more customers ate there that week than at any other
time during all of Winter Quarter."
The experiment, says Morrish, represented a financial risk for Saga Foods, which was not abl
to predict the impact the changes might have at the cash register. "Customers spent an average
of $3.81 each during the week, an amount substantially higher than expended during any other
time this quarter," Morrish points out.
But, the real proof of success, she says, came from evaluation questionnaires returned the
week after the event. "We compared these comments with those gathered during a similar survey
during Fall Quarter," she explains. "In every single category, consumer satisfaction was far
higher." For example, the number of persons rating the nutritional quality of food services as
"good" rose from 17 percent Fall Quarter to 74 percent during Whole Foods Week. Those rating
the taste of foods as "good" rose more than 40 percent
from 16 percent in the fall to 57
percent after Whole Foods Week.
"Good" ratings in the five other major areas polled
price, convenience, service, variety
and atmosphere
were also all substantially higher following Whole Foods Week than they we/
in the fall, Morrish reports.
Results of the survey just finalized have led Housing and Food Services Director Ken Jacob
to extend Morrish's consultant contract through Spring Quarter so she can oversee permanent
implementation of successful changes and share information on the project with other institutional food operations.
"We want to work the successful recipes and menus into our regular four-week menu cycle in
Food Services," says Jacob. "We also want to add a variety of ethnic foods into the menu and to
organize and stage a major Third World Food Festival some time during Spring Quarter."
Among the changes Jacob and Morrish believe have or will soon become a permanent part of
the Evergreen foods operation are continuation of the extensive self service salad bar, avoidance of canned and processed foods, elimination of "old standbys" like jello salads that were
not popular, and continued introduction of new popular entrees, such as burritos, falafels and
crepes, which sold out on the days they were served.
Food Services will also continue to provide more vegetarian dishes, to serve more wholegrain breads and fresh bakery items, to substitute honey for sugar, and to offer more fresh, raw
fruits rather than desserts of high sugar content. The Snack Bar will continue to sell whole
baked potatoes and bean and cheese burritos, and to maintain popular, nutritional favorites like
hamburgers on whole-grain buns, natural apple cider and heated bagels.
In addition, herbal iced tea, natural fruit juices and other uncarbonated and caffeine-free
drinks will be sold along with the highly popular "smoothies," a banana-orange-yogart shake first
sold during the February experiment.
To better inform consumers of changes in the food operation, signs will be posted listing
ingredients for every food item and food alternative seminars will be offered for both customers
and staff.
Morrish says her work will continue beyond Spring Quarter, carried on by the-Food Serviq
Advisory Group, which will serve as a link between food services and consumers, and possibly fcj
a new student coordinator who will assume responsibilities she has carried as a facilitator
between food personnel and the advisory group.
— 3—
WERGREENERS URC
TO PARTICIPATE IN SUPER SATURDAY
More than three dozen professional, amateur and student musical groups have already signed
on to perform on one of four stages offering eight hours of continuous free entertainment at
jper Saturday, the second annual spring festival slated June 7 at Evergreen.
Cosponsored by the Olympia-Area and Lacey Chambers of Commerce, the free, day-long festival
has also attracted more than a dozen artists and craftsmen who will demonstrate, exhibit and/or
sell their creations on the central campus plaza between 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. on Super Saturday.
Food vendors, promising to provide everything from salmon barbeque to hot dogs, ethnic
dishes to health foods, have also enlisted to sell their wares at the spring celebration which
last year attracted more than 4,000 persons to campus.
But, committee members point out, only a few Evergreen student, faculty and staff groups
have registered to participate. "With only nine weeks before Super Saturday dawns, we earnestly
hope more Evergreeners will plan to take part," says committee cochairwoman Judy McNickle. "We'd
really like to see Evergreen performers on those stages, Evergreen artists displaying their
creations, and Evergreen chefs providing tasty tidbits."
"It's a chance to show the community the varied talents we possess on campus," McNickle
adds. "Those talents obviously include academic works that merit public display and we're counting on faculty and students to offer exhibits demonstrating the kinds of high quality instruction
al activities that go on here."
The committee urges all Greeners scheduling events for the end of the quarter to consider
"how best to complement, not compete with" plans for Super Saturday. "We estimate we'll attract
up to 10,000 folks here this time," adds cochairman Larry Stenberg. "If we all work together
scheduling our activities jointly and sharing publicity and organizational planning, we can
better guarantee everyone a good return on their efforts."
Persons interested in performing, showing their art works, selling foods or otherwise participating in Super Saturday are urged to contact the committee before April 15 through the Office
of College Relations (Library 3114). Those interested may also attend Super Saturday meetings
held every Friday from 3 to 4:30 or 5 p.m. in Library 3112.
upcoming events
CIRQUE PRESENTS PORTLAND DANCE TROUPE APRIL 12
Six performers from Cirque bring their brand new production of "Pontpoint" to Evergreen
Saturday, April 12 for one performance only, at 8 p.m. in the Experimental Theater of the
Communications Building. Formerly known as the Portland Dance Theater, Cirque premiered
"Pontpoint" last month in four Oregon weekend performances that attracted full houses and reviews
which called the show "weird, wild, individualistic, powerful and always interesting."
"Pontpoint" (the bridge between) features the choreography of Cirque founder and teacher
Jann McCauley, music by composer Gordon Mumma, and unusual set designs by Robert Reichers and
Peter West. Portland dancers Vincent Martinez, Bonnie Merrill, Hilarie Neely, Judy Patton and
Pat Wheeler Robinson join McCauley on stage to perform the four sections of "Pontpoint:" "Black
Cats and 7 Arrows," "Rain Dances," "Canole," and "The Cirque Waltz."
Their performance, reports one Portland critic, combines "strange background sounds, perhaps
music, and a set of ropes, trapezes and nets with some fantastic dancing" that "may have looked
and sounded strange but was very well received by the audience."
McCauley, called a "force in modern dance who must be seen to be appreciated," cofounded
the Portland Dance Theater in 1970 and reorganized the troupe last year as Cirque. Imagery for
her newest show has been derived, says McCauley, from two main sources, both of which are implied
in the name of the company: a cirque or steep-walled amphitheatric recess in a mountain; and
a circus. McCauley's choreography collects and arranges these images, drawing from traditions
of both dance and theater.
Set designs for "Pontpoint" also draw from the two meanings of Cirque and use rope ladders,
tent and the illusion of a net to define performance space. Each scene is changed through
-tnipulation of the set components: what appears to be a net in one scene becomes a tent in
another; a tent becomes the circus fat lady; rope ladders become a bridge.
Composer Mumma, who formerly served as a visiting faculty musician at Evergreen, currently
teaches at the University of California at Santa Cruz. Three of his pieces for "Pontpoint"
-4are original scores composed for Cirque. He composed the fourth, "Music for the Venezia Space
Theater," in 1964 for the 27th International Festival for Contemporary Music held in Italy. All
of his music employs a variety of ordinary sounds, including recordings from a train yard, a
handball court, and a brass band, plus electronic music and the sounds of such unusual instru
ments as the psalter and bandoneon. In some sections, music includes materials written by
McCauley and spoken by the performers.
Presented as part of the Evergreen Expressions performing arts series, the Cirque presentation has been made possible in part by grants from POSSCA (Patrons of South Sound Cultural Arts)
the National Endowment for the Arts, the Oregon Arts Commission, the Templeton Foundation and
Meryvn's. Tickets may be reserved by calling 866-6070 weekdays during regular working hours.
Tickets go on sale at 7 p.m. April 12 at the door of the Communications Building for $4 general
admission or $2.50 for students and senior citizens.
FIDDLER. CONCERTINIST OPEN TUESDAYS AT EIGHT
A champion fiddler and a master of a century-old concertina headline the first Tuesdays at
Eight concert Spring Quarter on April 8 at Evergreen. Fiddler Frank Ferrel, who has won awards
for his musical mastery throughout the West Coast and Canada, comes to campus with his partner,
Dr. Bertram Levy, a concertinist of unparalleled skill,to present an evening concert of reels,
jigs, waltzes and other traditional folk and country music favorites Tuesday, beginning at
8 o'clock in the Recital Hall of Evergreen's Communications Building.
The two Port Townsend musicians, who recently released their first album for Centrum Record
offer their interpretation of folk music, using what reviewers have described as a "well-designe
hand-crafted chamber music approach."
Ferrel, a 25-year-veteran of the music business, holds fiddler championships from Washington State, Western Regionals, Northwest Regionals and British Columbia competitions. His
mastery of the fiddle and bow has earned him a reputation as a "magical performer whose music
is smooth and lilting, capable of creating visions of green fields that fill the room."
Levy, a physician and part-time boat builder, wields his 100-year-old Anglo concertina /"' t
"charm and skill" that critics say is especially suited to not only his own compositions, wu .1
the two Peninsula residents perform, but to folk music from Canadian and New England traditions.
Appearing at Evergreen for the first time, the two men will open the Spring Quarter Tuesday
at Eight series. Their performance, which carries a $3 admission charge or a $2 fee for student
and senior citizens, will be followed on April 15 by Dr. Richard Alexander's discussion on his
recent six-month sojourn in Japan.
WSU WOODWIND QUINTET PERFORMS MONDAY
The Solstice Quintet, a faculty woodwind ensemble in residence at Washington State ,'Universit
combines talents with pianist Erik Barnes for an evening performance of classical music Monday,
April 7, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Recital Hall of the Communications Building.
The Evergreen performance is part of a week-long series of Solstice appearances in western
Washington the first part of April. The quintet's tour includes concerts and clinics at high
schools and colleges, and two other evening recitals: one Sunday, April 6, at the Eastshore
Unitarian Church in Bellevue; and a second on Tuesday, April 8, at the Seattle Concert Theater.
Highlighting all three evening appearances will be Erik Barnes' performance of a hauntingly
enigmatic sextet for piano written by Gordon Jacobs. Other works included in the evening programs are the light and comical "Quintette" by Jean Francaix and the "Blaser Quintet in E Flat,
Opus 88 No. 2" by Anton Beicha, a composer regarded as the father of the woodwind quintet.
Solstice Quintet members, all faculty at WSU, include flutist Frances Risbon, oboist
Barbara Cantlon, clarinetist James Schoepflin, bassonist John Reid, and hornist Verne Windham.
Tickets for their Evergreen appearance go on sale at 7 p.m. April 7 at the door of the
Communications Building and cost $3 general admission or $2 for students and senior citizen^
ART EXHIBITS IN GALLERIES TWO AND FOUR
Two new art exhibits open in Galleries Two and Four at Evergreen this month. University of
Washington instructors Paul Berger and Ron Carracher are featured artists, along with a number
of their graduate students, in a. photography display which opens tomorrow in Gallery Two. The
show continues through April 24 on the second floor of the Evans Library.
Drawings and ceramic creations by Evergreen faculty artist Paul Sparks will be featured
•vn a one-man show in Gallery Four opening Tuesday and continuing through April 20 on the fourth
.loor of the Evans Library.
Admission to both shows is free and open to the public.
WEDNESDAY ROAD RUNS SCHEDULED
Five Wednesday night fun runs have been slated Spring Quarter by the Evergreen Running
Club, according to Athletic Director Pete Steilberg. The events, which begin April 9 with a
5.4-mile road race, carry a 50-cent registration fee to defray the cost of awards and are open
to all area competitors. Each race begins promptly at 5:30 in front of the Evans Library and
each is preceded by a half-hour registration period.
Events scheduled this spring include:
April 9, 5.4-mile road run for men and women; April 23, 10,000-meter women only run; May 7,
4.2-mile flat pavement race for men and women; May 21, 7.3-mile road run for men and women; and
June 4, an open event to be announced.
Complete details on the Evergreen Running Club events are available through the Recreation
Center Office, 866-6530 weekdays during regular working hours.
FOUNDATION ALUMNI RELATIONS COMMITTEE MEETS FRIDAY
The first meeting of the joint Foundation-Alumni Relations Committee convenes on campus
Friday, April 11. The new six-member committee was established in January by the Evergreen
Foundation Board of Governors to explore mutual interests, concerns and objectives shared by the
Foundation and the Alumni Association.
Committee members include Foundation Board of Governors representatives George Kinnear of
Mercer Island, Joan Thomas of Seattle and Olympia, and Hal Wolf of Yelm; and Alumni representaives Bob Croeker, Joe Dear and Pat Foster, all of Olympia.
.EGISLATIVE MEMO VOLUME VI NO. 9
LEGISLATURE ADJOURNS WITHOUT PASSING SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET
By Les Eldridge, Assistant to the President
At midnight, March 13, the Legislature deadlocked on the budget, ostensibly over the question of 1%% faculty salary increases versus 1.8 million dollars for excess community college
enrollment. The supplemental budget, including items agreed upon by each house, was, therefore,
not considered, and was lost. Undisputed items previously approved by each house, and lost by
failure to pass the budget included: Evergreen's $416,000 roof repair appropriation, a $57,000
sundry claim for Evergreen court costs, and $108,000 for 50 additional students for the 1980-81
academic year. Also lost in office of Financial Management's belated claims section was a
several thousand dollar item for Evergreen.
This was the first year since 1973 that the Senate's version of the budget has not, to some
degree, prevailed over that of the House. Observers noted that, although the faculty salary
issue was the apparent reason for the deadlock, the question of political strength became perhaps more important than the issue itself. Both House caucuses, Republican and Democrat, refused
to budge from their position that faculty salary increases of 1%% (authorized but unfunded last
year) should be funded for this year. Co-speakers Bagnariol and Berentson refused to agree to
a Senate demand to remove faculty salaries and to insert in their place a 1.8 million dollar
appropriation for community college enrollment beyond contracted level. Senator Hubert Donahue,
Ways and Means Chairman, had vehemently opposed the House appropriation for faculty salaries.
A flurry of bills passed in the waning hours of the session placed many bills on the
yvernor's desk for her review after the Legislature had adjourned. After the Governor's
decisions have been made, I'll summarize the results of legislation pertaining to higher education in an April legislative memo.
-6BOOKEY AWARDED FIRST COOLEY SCHOLARSHIP
I
Linda Ruth Bookey, a Bellevue senior at Evergreen, has been selected to receive the first
Carleton Morris Cooley Scholarship for the 1980-81 academic year. The $500 scholarship is
awarded annually to "an academically outstanding senior in English-related studies who has be(
involved in student government."
Bookey graduated in the top three percent of her Bellevue High School class where she participated in Honor Society, the French Club, the school's remodeling committee and its Committee
for Alternative Learning Program. Since her enrollment at Evergreen in the fall of 1976, Bookey
has been involved in campus governance, serving on both the Sounding Board and the Evergreen
Council. In addition, she has worked with the Women's Center and the Women's Health Action
Group at Evergreen and participated as a member of an academic dean selection task force.
In addition to her academic studies in literature, history and women's studies, Bookey has
worked as a volunteer organizer and grant writer for Jefferson County Women's Resource Center
and as a member of the Feminist Writers' Guild. She hopes to pursue a career as a poet after her
graduation from Evergreen next year.
1
EVERGREENERS IN THE NEWS
Former Evergreen student Jack Fink died in an Alaska fishing accident on March 29. He and
three other crew members perished when their boat, the Capella, sank off Fox Island in the
Aleutians. A native of Ashland, Oregon, Jack worked as a student firefighter while attending
Evergreen.
Evergreen faculty scientist Dr. Jake Romero has been selected as a 1980 Summer Faculty
Research Participant at Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. During the summer assignment,
Dr. Romero will be associated with Dr. J.H. Norem in Argonne's Fusion Power Program, working on
the Argonne Plasma Engineering Experiment.
Development Director Susan Washburn has been named to the faculty of the annual CASE
(Council for the Advancement and Support of Education) Summer Institute on Educational Fund
Raising and Management at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire. Washburn has also bee/ •*
newly published in recent weeks. Her chapter on "Stalking the Corporate and Foundation DollcL ,
which outlines philosophies, methods and techniques for fund raising from the private sector, is
included in the Jossey-Bass Publishing Company's latest series on "New Directions for Institutional Advancement: Increasing Annual Giving."
Faculty economist Dr. Russ Lidman was a panelist at a national meeting of the Coalition of
American Public Employees in Washington, D.C. last week. The all-day conference focussed its
efforts on "limiting government in an era of inflation and recession." Dr. Lidman's panel
explored the topic "how to fight back."
Wedding bells rang last month for four long-time Evergreeners. Academic Dean Will Humphreys
married recent graduate Julie Grant on March 15. One week later Assistant to the President
Les Eldridge married Facilities Budget Coordinator Mary Kalihi.
Faculty Member Oscar Soule offers the following brief report under the "it's a small world"
category. He and one of his students, Carrie James, graduated from the same Saint Louis
(Clayton) high school
some 20 years apart. The two also attended the same elementary
school headed by the same (long-suffering) principal. Oscar's wife Barbara, also attended the
same Saint Louis high school (University City High) as Evergreen student Bill Kaltenthaler. You
never know what tidbits Oscar will have to share.
HERBICIDE SPRAYING SLATED
Facilities Director Dave Wallbom says his staff will apply the herbicide spray, Simizine,
along campus roadways to deter weed growth during the next few weeks. Wallbom says signs will
be posted identifying areas where Simizine will be applied. The action has been approved by
the campus Environmental Advisory Committee and Wallbom's office has available a map identifying
all areas to be sprayed.