The Evergreen State College Review Vol. 5, Issue 2

Media

Part of The Evergreen State College Review Volume 5, Issue 2

Title
The Evergreen State College Review Vol. 5, Issue 2
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,/ews stories in at least a dozen
Pacific Northwest dailies, editorials
offering support in half a dozen major
newspapers, and an immediate and
enthusiastic response by prospective
students to Evergreen admissions visits
promptly followed the announcement
Fall Quarter that Evergreen had been
voted the best regional liberal arts college in the West and Midwest.
Reported in the November 28 issue
of U.S. News and World Report, the findings were the result of a survey of
more than 1300 college and university
presidents throughout the nation who
were asked to identify the country's
highest quality undergraduate schools.
Evergreen, which was also listed as
one of the top three regional liberal
arts colleges in the nation, was by far
the youngest institution cited in the
survey, and one of only seven colleges
and universities mentioned from
throughout the Pacific Northwest.
Evergreen was also the only public
college to head one of the nine
categories determined by U.S. News.
Highlight of the article for many
Evergreeners was a quote from
Mildred Henry, president of New College of California in San Francisco.
She cited Evergreen as a college that
"has turned away from stuffing its
students with knowledge and from

Story by Judy McNickle,
Director of Information Services

sharpening their memories in order to
move toward facilitating the growth
and power of their minds."
Her quote was widely reported—
and it and the article prompted editorial comments from The Olympian in
the state capital to the Tri-City Herald
in southeast Washington, from the
Bremerton Sun on the Olympic Peninsula to Seattle's two daily newspapers.
First with congratulations and a
suggestion to legislators to take note of
the story was The Olympian, Evergreen's "home town" paper and a frequent editorial critic of the college.
"The latest poll indicates The
Evergreen State College is an important part of the state's higher education system," wrote The Olympian. "It
is time all legislators recognize that
the administration and student body
at TESC are fulfilling their responsibilities to the state and give them the
uninterrupted opportunities and
resources to continue to do so."
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer agreed,
noting that Evergreen "has received
some impressive new armament to

help ward off the slings and arrows,
and the wisecracks, that continue to
be directed at the four-year
university."
While the P.I. pointed out that
Evergreen's innovations have been the
sources of much of the criticisms it
has received, the editorial writer
opined, "It is precisely these innovations which are responsible for
Evergreen's consistently high standing
with the academic community, as the
new poll indicates."
The Seattle Times was equally supportive, offering, "Congratulations to
Evergreen, its students and faculty
and, of course, its just-resigned president, Senator Dan Evans." As a parting shot, the Times editorial urged
that "copies of the poll results [be
sent] to Evergreen's political critics."
Across the state, the Pasco,
Washington-based Tri-City Herald noted
that Evergreen "has dared to be different," and urged, "fair-minded
critics must now re-examine" their
opinions and "at least take another
look" at the college whose "innova-

.

tions have won praise consistently
from the academic community, and
from the students."
Prospective students also reacted to
the article. Admissions Director
Arnaldo Rodriguez noted that shortly
after the article appeared he and his
staff attended two national college fairs
in Seattle and Portland which attracted thousands of high school
juniors and seniors.
"We saw more than 1,000 students
at those two fairs," Rodriguez
reported. "They were literally standing in line to talk to us—a phenomenon we've never experienced before."
Rodriguez said many of the students
commented on the magazine article
which, he believed, "obviously encouraged them to explore the
possibilities of attending Evergreen."
Though it's still way too early to
predict final results of next fall's
enrollment, Rodriguez noted that the
number of students inquiring about
Evergreen has "already topped
4,000—which is more than 400 above
last year at the same time.
"If this trend continues—and if the
legislature provides the funds to accommodate this kind of growth—we
could have the biggest enrollment in
college history come September," the
admissions director concluded.

Geoducks Abroad
Have China Come To You

Travel To China

You can explore the fascinating legacy
of ancient China this spring without
leaving home, or the state of
Washington, anyway. The Evergreen
State College Foundation is offering
an opportunity to learn about China,
visit a remarkable exhibition of
Chinese artifacts, and help Evergreen's
scholarship fund—all at the same
time!

The Pacific Science Center in Seattle has made arrangements with the
People's Republic of China to bring
China: 7,000 Years of Discovery, termed
the "greatest exhibition of traditional
Chinese science and technology ever
to leave China," to the Pacific Northwest. The Seattle stop will be the
only West Coast appearance of this
fascinating event.

At the exhibit, you'll play a computer game that challenges you to
guess the meanings of Chinese
characters, sniff herbs and roots used
in Chinese medicine, and meet skilled
artisans who'll demonstrate everything
from silk broadloom weaving to the
art of papermaking.
The Foundation will provide
transportation to an exclusive evening
showing of the exhibit, host a buffet
dinner, "7,000 Years of Chinese
Cuisine," and present an in-depth introduction to the exhibit and Chinese
culture. Three different excursions will
be offered on the evenings of March
27, April 25, and May 23. Total cost
per person for everything offered
above is $60. Reservations are on a
first-come, first-served basis, and only
a limited number of tickets are
available.
Reservations may be made by mailing the date choice along with the fee
to China Exhibition, The Evergreen
State College Foundation, Library
3103, The Evergreen State College,
Olympia, WA 98505. For more information, call (206) 866-6000, ext. 6565.

"Introduction to China," a seventeenday tour of the People's Republic of
China led by Evergreen faculty
member Lovern King, will leave Seattle on June 20.
Open to the public, the tour will include visits to the cities of Beijing,
Xien, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Guilin,
and Guangzhou, as well as Hong
Kong and Tokyo, covering a vast
wealth of China's history and
landscape.
Students will participate in a pretrip seminar and readings as well as
readings, lectures and seminars during
the tour. They will also do a final
paper, project or presentation, and
teachers who take the tour will be expected to develop a unit-lesson plan
from their experiences.
"Introduction to China" is open to
anyone who is interested in the land
of China. The total tour costs $2389,
plus tuition, and can be taken for up
to eight quarter hour credits. Space is
limited, so early registration is
encouraged.
For more information, contact Dr.
King at Evergreen, (206) 866-6000,
ext. 6764, or King's Way Tours in
Seattle, (206) 488-0923.

The News from Peru

Youtzes Tour China

About Geoducks

Dr. Russell Lidman will be teaching
and serving as a curricular consultant
at the National Institute of Public Administration in Lima, Peru, on a
Fulbright Senior Lectureship until he
returns to Evergreen later this year.
Head of Evergreen's Master of Public
Administration Program before he
took leave, Lidman has been corresponding regularly with several
members of the faculty and staff at
Evergreen since he, his wife Raven,
and children, Shane and Hannah,
traveled to Latin America last
September. Here's an excerpt from a
letter to staff member Jeanne
Chandler and her husband, Ted Butchart '76 shortly after the Lidman's
arrived in Peru:
"The country is falling apart, but
that has been the case for years. It is
staggering with its foreign debt, inflation is 125-130%, and un- or
underemployment is 50-60%. Floods
in the north and drought in the south
complete the picture except for the addition of the suspension of civil rights.
Despite all this, we are having a very
interesting time sorting out what's going on and who's who. There are
something like 15-20 daily newspapers,
each with their own very distinct slant
on events. Job is going along well—
Peru is a wonderful and exciting time
in our lives."

Few Americans have had an opportunity to explore China separate from
organized, controlled tours, but
Evergreen faculty member (and
former provost) Dr. Byron Youtz and.
his wife Bernice had such a chance
last summer. That's because they were
guided by someone who knew the
ropes—their Chinese-speaking son
David, 23, who teaches English at a
technical college in the city of
Taiyuan.
The three Youtzes generally described a huge triangle on their six-week,
8,000-mile journey. Their trip began
in July in Beijing and swung far inland. Since they were so far off the
beaten path for Westerners, "we were
often the only non-Chinese aboard
public transportation or strolling down
the streets," says Bernice.
Her most vivid impression, she
added, was that "we never felt
threatened—the Chinese were so
friendly and. . .eager to practice their
English with us."

Trains and Bikes and
Planes...
Bustling cities and slumbering countrysides came to life for Evergreen
faculty members Dr. John Aikin and
Judith Bayard when they toured the
Soviet Union, the People's Republic of
China, and Japan last summer.
From their jumping-off point in
Helsinki in July, the two computer
scientists flew to Moscow to start their
eight-week odyssey. They explored
Moscow factories and city life and
then boarded a train for a seven-day
ride through such cities as Kiev,
Tashkent and Samarkand.
On August 12, they arrived in Beijing, where they joined a group of
other bicyclists from the United States
and England for a trip down the
Yangtze River to the East China Sea.
"There are nine million people in
Beijing," Aikin remembers, "and three
million bicycles."
Bayard and Aikin finished up with
a few days to relax in Japan, returning home shortly after Labor Day.

The list of names under each country
are Evergreen alumni and the cities
that they live in. If you're living, or
doing some extended traveling, outside
the U.S., let us know at Geoducks
Abroad, Library 3114, The Evergreen
State College, Olympia, WA 98505.
We'll update in the ReView as we hear
from more of you rambling
geoducks. . .
* Austria
Lynn Alice Daniels, Wien
* Bahrain
Barbara Al-Haffar, Manama
* Bangladesh
Shireen Huq, Dacca
* Belgium
'
Richard Naughton McGarvey, Brussels

* Belize
Ellen London, Belize City
* Brazil
Peter May, Sao Luis
*Canada
Bill Annett, Vancouver
Donna Lyn Baalbergen, Calgary
Darrell Chaddock, Ottawa
Diana Downsley, Burnaby
John B. Foster, Downsview
Steve Hamilton, Kamloops
Nancy Hewitt, Mallorytown
Gordon Ingram, Victoria
Victoria Klassen, Calgary
Wendy Mellor, Enderby
Afton Miller, Vancouver
Gregor Smith, Saskatoon
Bonnie Jo Stime, Goa
James Vining, Shawnigan Lake
*Ecuador
Neil Hiserote, Quito
* England
Linda Louise Breeden, and R. Douglas Bradley,
Cambridge
* Honduras
Christine Stickler, Tegucigalph


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GEODUCK SIGHTINGS
1984

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* Ireland
Edward Duvivier, County Sligo
Melanie Pitt, S. Glamorgan
* Israel
Anna Coggan, Jerusalem
Kameel Ameen Majdali, Jerusalem
* Italy
Lee Watson, Vicenza
*Japan
Masahiro Arimizu, Airpochiba
Bruce Jensen, Itsunomaya
David Keller, Migazaki
* James Medford, Miyazaki
Hugh Nicoll, Miyazaki
Celia Mari Zilka, Tokyo
* Kenya
Jennifer Knudsen and Erich Roe, Mombasa
*Lagos
Yvonne Roberson, Sum-Lure
* Mexico
Lisa Gardner-Flories, Celaya
Jessica Treat, Mexico City
* Morocco
Susan Beck, Azrou
*The Netherlands
Denice Delyra, Aalsmeer
Charles Kohlinger, Wassennar
Marcia Levenson, Oud Annerveen
* Norway
Karen Ann Richardson, Oslo
*The Phillipines
Donna Jean Nickerson, Mia
*Saudia Arabia
Mohammed Ali Ashour, Marrah
Jeffrey Irwin, Jeddah
* Scot land
William Clocksin, Edinburgh
Paul Fink, Ayrshire
Chris-Heinz Retzler, Edinburgh
* Switzerland
Leslie Kennedy, Basel
*West Germany
Christine Bell, Hamburg
-k\n Transit
Bob Dash—-Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, Bali,
Singapore, Malaysia, Alaska, China

MPeter May states in his letter, reprinted here,
anyone who's interested in more about Brazil is
welcome to write. Just in case you can't quite make
out his reproduced address, here it is again:
Peter May
Institute Estadual do Babacu
Rua do Sol 486, Centre
65.000— Sao Luis— Maranhao— Brazil
Dash '80 has been working his way around
the world ever since finishing his studies at
Evergreen. He's a hard man to catch up with, but
his mother, Evelyn Dash of Clifton Park, New
\fork, passes on this news about rambling Bob:
"Bob worked in Hawaii, New Zealand and
Australia, then traveled to Bali, Singapore and
Malaysia. . .He flew back to Alaska where he did
construction work all this past summer, and he is
now touring China. Incredible experiences, some
frightening. Keeping a thorough journal. Bob was
on Mt. Rainier with Willi Unsoeld's group when
Willi and Janie were buried in that tragic
avalanche. Willi, and his widow Jolene, helped convince Bob to "go for it!"
^•Jeffrey Irwln 75 is currently living in Jeddah,
Saudi Arabia, where he is employed by a subsidiary of Raytheon Corporation as an English instructor for Saudi Air Defense personnel. Not
bad — he's probably getting rich and catching a
good suntan at the same time!
^•Jessica Treat '81, after working in San Francisco
for a year following graduation, headed even further south. She's been living in Mexico City for
almost two years, teaching English as a Second
Language and writing fiction in her spare time. At
last word, Jessica had painted her apartment floor
gray and was excited about buying a new stove.
NiCOll '82, less than halfway through his
two-year appointment as an instructor of English as
a Second Language, is having the time of his life.
His new job is in the city of Miyazaki on Kyushu,
the southernmost island of Japan. So far his activities have included scuba diving, touring
temples, learning jazz saxaphone, and cooking and
eating Japanese food. Native to the state of Maine,
Nicoll's current residence puts him within 100
miles of where his grandparents served as Baptist
missionaries to Japan some 40 years ago.

»-Erich Roe and Jennifer Knudsen '81.
"Greetings from alumni Erich Roe and Jennifer
Knudsen," begins this breezy postcard from East
Africa and then goes on, describing these two
Geoducks abroad in the third-person: "He is
teaching history and literature (including Grapes of
Wrath and Fathers and Sons). She is teaching math
and English composition. They are working for the
Peace Corps at a Girls (boarding) High School just
outside of Mombasa on the exciting coast of
Kenya. Currently they are wondering how to explain Plato to their A-level students while watching
the moonlight on the Indian Ocean and the lizards
on the window screens." Sounds exciting enough.
»-Jetf Casebolt, beginning at Circle City, Alaska,
pedaled and paddled over 18,000 miles in two and
a half years to reach Tierra del Fuego at the
southernmost tip of South America. Inspired by
late faculty member Willi Unsoeld to "live life to
its fullest," Casebolt took a leave from Evergreen in
1980 to pursue his bicycle and kayak odyssey. Now
the Gig Harbor junior is back in school and giving
slide/talks about his trip. Photo (below) by Don
Goode.

A Little Traveling Music,
Sammy
Some of these Geoduck travelers have
put together slide/talk shows about
their experiences. If you're interested
in seeing and hearing about the
Youtz's trip to China, or Aikin and
Bayard's journey through the Soviet
Union, China and Japan, please call
Evergreen's Speakers Bureau, (206)
866-6000, ext. 6363. If you'd like to
learn more about student Jeff
Casebolt's bike and kayak ride from
Alaska to Argentina, you may contact
him at (206) 866-1305 or 4228 17th
Ave. NW, Olympia, WA 98502.

Unsoeld Seminar Fund:

>~

For the past five years, students, faculty, alums and former associates of
Willi Unsoeld sought an appropriate
living memorial to the famed mountaineer and founding faculty member
who died on the slopes of Mt. Rainier
in March of 1979.
Thanks to two $25,000 challenge
grants, The Evergreen Foundation is
halfway toward that goal: creation of
the Unsoeld Seminar Fund, which will
sponsor a series of annual activities
devoted to exploring issues of concern
to the late philosopher/teacher and
climber.
Last spring the Bullitt Foundation
in Seattle launched the fund-raising '
effort with award of the first $25,000
grant to establish the Unsoeld
Seminar. This December the National
Endowment for the Humanities
selected Evergreen as one of only 76
institutions in the country to receive
funds for "sustaining or developing
high quality humanities programs or
activities." That award has been earmarked for the Unsoeld Seminar.
Those grants, which must be
matched by an additional $50,000 in
private support, will help provide what
Evergreen Foundation Executive
Director Susan Washburn called "a
lasting memorial to this man who
touched the lives of nearly everyone
on campus—and of persons throughout the world in his triumphs as an
educator, a former Peace Corps official, a leader in environmental
studies, and as a mountaineer."

Willi Unsoeld Seminar Fund
The Evergreen State College
Foundation
Library 3103
Olympia, Washington 98505

Unsoeld first gained world-wide acclaim in 1963 when he and Tom
Hornbein became the first Americans
to ascend Mt. Everest via the West
Ridge, a feat that inspired then President John F. Kennedy to honor their
team at the White House.
Unsoeld went on to work for Kennedy's Peace Corps in Nepal, then
helped lead the national Outward
Bound organization before joining the
planning faculty at Washington's new
state college in Olympia in the fall of
1970.
His interest in education prompted
him to complete a doctorate in
philosophy and to explore the relationship between knowledge and
philosophy, along with investigations of
affective learning, experiential education, wilderness and ethics, nature and
culture, environmental awareness and
human behavior.
Unsoeld's approach to knowledge
was so intensive it prompted a friend
to describe Willi as "a man who has
lived much, thought much, learned
much—and is deeply on fire to tell
others about it. Which is to say that
Willi is a teacher of the very finest
kind."
His teaching at Evergreen was
charismatic, dedicated, and oft times
controversial. As his widow, Jolene
remembers, "Willi was fequently
called upon to stir up thinking and to
inspire people. A memorial to him,"
she says, "should do the same."
That's why the Foundation has
selected the Unsoeld Seminar Fund as
appropriate, explains Washburn.
"The seminar is the heart of
Evergreen's interdisciplinary curriculum, a place where group exploration, active participation, preparation,
analysis and collaboration are prized
and practiced activities," she says.
"We want the Unsoeld Seminar to
involve its participants, rather than in-

struct," she insists, "to be a process of
learning rather than a place."
The Unsoeld Seminar will encompass lectures, workshops, symposia,
colloquia, clinics, field experiences and
more.
"This will be a distinctive seminar,"
vows Washburn. "It will address areas
which were of interest to Willi—such
as wilderness and human values—and
that will involve guest participants
who'll share a unique combination of
expertise in their fields and personal
commitment toward improving the
quality of our lives."
The scope of the Unsoeld Seminar,
believes Washburn, "will potentially
be global—and we think Willi would
love it."
The key to creating that fund is
private donations totaling $50,000
within the next two years to match the
$50,000 in challenge grants.
"We've set a goal of $100,000," says
Washburn. "Once raised, that money
will be endowed by the Evergreen
Foundation to insure that the Seminar
exists in perpetuity. Conservatively invested, the endowment will generate
approximately $10,000 in yearly interest to support Seminar events."
Working to help raise the second
half of the fund is a committee of
distinguished individuals chaired by
Nicholas Clinch of Palo Alto, California, former president of the American
Alpine Club. Committee members
also include Jolene Unsoeld of Olympia, Tom Hornbein of Seattle, Pat
Emerson of Seattle, former Evergreen
president and now U.S. Senator Dan
Evans, and former Olympia attorney
and veteran climber Andy Harvard.
"With this committee—and the
grants we've already received—our
goal is clearly in sight," points out
Washburn. "To complete the challenge
of funding this memorial, donations
are being sought immediately from
alumni, parents and friends.
"We need your help," Washburn
says to ReView readers. "Remember,
we won't get either challenge grant
unless we raise the remaining $50,000.
Therefore, every dollar you give makes
possible a matching dollar.
The coupon below has been provided for those who are ready now to
help establish this living memorial to
Willi Unsoeld. For more information,
contact the Development Office, (206)
866-6000, ext. 6565.

D Gift: Enclosed is my/our contribution of $
.
Contributor(s)
D Pledge:
I/We will make a gift of $ _
Please send reminder(s) on

Address

D Parent
City

State

ZIP
D Friend

phone number

D Alum, Class of

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AlumNews

Newsletter
of the
Alumni
Association

Alumni
Association
Retreat
By Lisa Fleming,
Second Vice President

Association Board Members retreated
to Alderbrook Inn last November to
make plans for 1984 activities, form
committees, and, in their free time,
have some fun on Hood Canal.
Lofty goals were formulated, along
with some down-to-earth ideas on how
to achieve them. The major goals are
increasing Association membership,
creating and maintaining a strong
political action committee, increasing


* «

Class of 1973
Kent W. Ferris, Seattle, WA is currently president
of University Kiwanis.
Dwayne Slate, Olympia, WA, was elected to the
Olympia School Board this fall. He serves as staff
coordinator of the Washington Senate Education
Committee.

Class of 1974
Bill Adams, Salem, OR, graduated in 1982 from
Willamette University's Graduate School of
Management. He is currently a training analyst for
Oregon's Mental Health Division. He also serves
on Chemeketa Community College's Human Services Advisory Board. He is married and has two
children.
Donald Trlpp, Juneau, AK, is now manager of
Snettisham Salmon hatchery 30 miles south of
Juneau. He and his wife, Suzanne, have two little
girls, Jus, 2, and Alisa, 5. He would love to hear
from Mary Burg and other alums.

Class of 1975
Peter A. Dratch, Mosgiel, New Zealand, is on a
post-doctoral fellowship and will be working on the
genetics of North American elk and European red
deer (both introduced in New Zealand) as well as
the highly prolific New Zealand sheep breeds. Peter
completed his Ph.D. at the University of Edinburgh
in August, 1983.
Valerie Thorson, Seattle, WA, is within two
quarters of finishing the University of Washington's
MBA program. Winter and Spring Quarters,
Valerie will be publishing the MBA Association
newsletter, New Business.

Class of 1976
Netsa M. (Wallace) Buckingham, Port Angeles,
WA, had an article published in the October, 1983
issue of Madrono entitled "Additions to the Native
Vascular Flora of the Olympic Peninsula,
Washington," which reported an additional 114 new
native plants to the known flora of the peninsula.
Frankie Foster, Santa Monica, CA, has been
working for the past four years as director of
graphics and animation for Lasermedia, the largest
laser entertainment company in the 'world. Foster
reports his work has given him a chance to work
with such Hollywood figures as John Travolta and
Sylvester Stallone in "Staying Alive," with musicians Neil Diamond and Earth, Wind and Fire,
and with such major events as the 1981 presidential
inauguration and the 1980 Olympics. He's currently "gearing up" for the closing ceremonies at the
1984 Olympics in Los Angeles. Foster, a Bellevue,
WA, native, also reported he's had the chance to
hire three Evergreen graduates for Lasermedia:
Dave Worman, Michael Swoford, and Matt
Housley.
Lori Hyman (Diefenbacher), St. Louis, MO, is
director of Student Activities at Webster University
in St. Louis. Her husband, Ron, is a furniture
designer and craftsman.
James Lang, Portland, OR, is an attorney with
the public defender's agency in Portland. He was
married recently.
Greg Logan, Tacoma, WA, is working as a correctional officer at McNeil Island Correctional Facility
and taking graduate courses in public business administration at City University in Tacoma.

fundraising, developing a network
among grads, and increasing regional
alumni activities.
The idea of a political action committee was voted on favorably at last
October's Alumni Reunion. Following
up on this at the retreat, a separate
committee for political action was
formed. The Association had participated in legislative relations in the
past, but as alum Dick Bever pointed
out, "Political action is a year-long
activity."
As approved at the Reunion, $2 of
members' $10 yearly dues will go to
fund the PAC (with the approval of
the dues-paying member).
Another major topic during the
weekend was a proposed alumni
chapter in Tacoma. Alumni from the
Tacoma campus had met as a group
:

j

and asked about joining with the
Association. There was a flurry of
debate over "chapters," "clubs," and
"branches," and the lack of a precedent for any of these in the by-laws.
An ad hoc committee was formed to
hammer out details, and to meet with
Tacoma alumni with a proposal to be
brought up at the next board meeting.
Additional "old" business dealt with
Articles of Incorporation which would
designate the Alumni Association a
non-profit corporation under the laws
of the State of Washington. Board
member and attorney, Helen Wolff,
drafted the document which was approved by the college's Board of
Trustees in December.
After a hard day of business, board
members succumbed to the charms of
Alderbrook (each paid his or her own

The
Evergreen
State
College

expenses). Dinner, dancing, and walks
along the waterfront provided an
easier atmosphere for discussing life
after Evergreen.
Sunday morning brought more
business, and committee meetings. A
round of thanks to Barbara Graf,
Alumni Secretary, who drove some 40
miles to her home in Olympia and
back to bring, piping hot and ready to
enjoy, some forgotten breakfast items.
The biggest splash of the weekend
was made by an unnamed board officer who executed a beautiful dive into the swimming pool at midnight.
The only problem: the pool heating
system had been turned off for over
an hour and the water was icy cold.

;-. ••-

Robert Michael Messer, Yakima, WA, is married
and has five children, with another child expected
soon.
Kathleen Leigh Wigeland, Park Forest, IL, has a
one-year-old son, Jorde, and operates a photo
studio in her home.

Sue Ann Roberts, Watertown, MA, received her
M.Ed, in art and education from Lesley College in
Cambridge in 1981. She's been teaching the arts
and video in various programs, and freelancing in
video, audio and music.

Class of 1979

Class of 1977
Lynn Engles, Washington, B.C., has been named
commissioner for the Administration for Native
Americans, a federal appointment in which he will
oversee a staff of 50 and allocation of more than
$28 million to Native American programs
throughout the nation.
Alyson Garland, Seattle, WA, made a solo bicycle
trip in the Brittany and Loire regions of France
this September. In addition to working as a programmer at Washington Mutual Savings, Alyson
has been taking classes in marketing, improvisation
and choral singing, running in 10k races, and has
even tried skydiving.
John Hennessey, Roosevelt Island, NY, is
finishing a graduate program in computer science
at Dartmouth. He spends his spare time teaching
his Apple to play tricks on the Dartmouth com- ^
puter and helping map chromosome movements
with a computer in Dartmouth's biology
department.
Neal 2. Hurlburt, Boulder, CO, has received his
Ph.D. in astrophysics from the University of
Colorado,
Mark and Dana Illo-Rutherford, Cathedral Bluff,
AK, and their daughter, 2 /^-year-old Kat, live "a
subsistence-level lifestyle" on roadless wilderness accessible only by foot, canoe or plane, but they
manage to do a lot of traveling.
Lee Meister, Los Angeles, CA, has been admitted
to the Directors Guild of America as a first assistant director.
Leslie Owen, Olympia, has become director of
the Northwest Women's Law Center in Seattle, a
non-profit organization dedicated to securing equal
rights for women through education, referrals and
litigation. She formerly worked for three years as
director of the Washington Coalition of Sexual
Assault Programs based in Olympia.

Class of 1978
Jeff Jacoby, Westport, CT, opened a production
company—Living Sound—in 1980. He's been
working in motion picture production, radio production and other multi-media. Since moving to
Westport from Shelburne Falls, MA, Jeff reports
things are rolling and he's had a couple of nationally broadcast programs.
L.J. Pagliaro, Middletown, CT, is working on his
doctoral thesis on surface receptors of Tetrahymena at
Wesleyan University. The interest in microscopy he
gained at Evergreen continues to develop, and he's
now using computer/video applications to follow
receptor movement.
Randy P. Partridge, Skokie, IL, has attended a
Ph.D. program in learning disabilities at Northwestern University where he was recently hired
as part of a research team working on a NIH grant
to develop a new method for testing hearing in
school-age children, using computer-synthesized
speech.
Caroline Todd Ravines, New York, NY, expects
to receive her M.Ed, in 1984. She and her husband
are also expecting their first child this month. They
have been married five and a half years and are
very excited about "sharing" a child.

Charlene McQuarrie, Seattle, WA, received her
M.B.A. from the University of Washington last
spring and is working in the Seattle area.
Michael Price, Champaign, IL, entered medical
school last August. Now in his first year, he's working as a programmer/consultant, teaching
chemistry, and planning to enter the M,D./Ph.D.
program next year.
Kathleen Theoe, Puyallup, WA, is marketing
director at McChord Credit union where she will
serve a two-year term as vice-chairman. Kathi also
serves on the Washington State League's marketing
committee, is an active member of the Puget
Sound Credit Union Marketing Roundtable, and
has recently been appointed to the board of Financial Marketing Association.

Class of 1980
Scott F. Benedict, Denver, CO, is working at
Thomas Ricca Assoc., a food service, hotel and
laundry consulting firm in Denver. He is also involved with the Special Olympics of Colorado and
he refmishes furniture.
Richard D. Bever, Lacey, WA, was re-elected to a
second four-year term on the Lacey City Council
in November. In October, he was elected to the
Evergreen Alumni Association Board of Directors.
Pat Cole, Olympia, WA, is currently working as a
general contractor and builder of energy efficient
homes. Pat's business is called Sun's Touch, Inc.
Cynthia C. Goodwin, Tempe, AZ, is working
with pregnant teenagers and young mothers as a
counselor/activities coordinator. She is preparing
for graduate school in 1984 and training for a
triathlon.
David Gordon, Norwalk, CT, works full-time as
head engineer with Cable Vision, the Westport,
Connecticut-based cable television company.
Jeanne Jones, Olympia, WA, is teaching first
grade at Griffin School, and serving as vicepresident of the Griffin Education Association.
Mark Meredith, Bozeman, MT, is working parttime as an athletic trainer for Montana State
University while completing his master's degree in
sports medicine. In his thesis work, he is studying ,
Chomdromalacia Patella, a degenerative condition ^f
of the patella (knee cap) that's quite common in
athletes. He hopes to complete his graduate work
by June.
David Mazor, Pelham, MA, has taken a year's
leave as general manager of Theatre Manager's
Corp and is spending it lying on the beaches of
Brazil.
Jean Muller, Tumwater, WA, was elected to the
Tumwater City Council this fall.

Class of 1981
Karen L. Johnson, Olympia, WA, is working as
a business developer coordinator for Association
Engineers III and is active in Capital Lakefair,
Olympia's annual summer festival.

Class of 1982
Teresa Conner, Los Angeles, CA, has accepted a
new job as night assignment editor for Cable News
Network in Los Angeles after working with the investigative unit of that company in Washington,
D.C., for six months as an apprentice reporter and
field producer.
L. Elise Dieterich, Washington, D.C., is working
as a legislative assistant to Congressman Rod
Chandler from Washington's 8th District. After being accepted to law school at the University of
Washington, the University of Michigan, and Harvard, she has decided to postpone her formal
studies until next fall to take advantage of the
learning opportunities offered by her present job.
Eric L. Efnspruch, Coral Gables, FL, is about to
complete his M.S. in education at the University of
Miami. He also works with U.M.'s Department of
Psychiatry investigating the use of systemic interventions to treat phobias and test anxiety.
Jean Gruge, Tacoma, WA, is an on-call counselor
for the Tacoma Women's Shelter and is a social
services foster care worker.
Glenn M. Hudson, Toledo, WA, will receive his
M.S.W. from the University of Washington this
June after two years of study. He is working as a
counselor/therapist as part of an internship with
the Mental Health Center in Lacey, WA. He and
his wife, Jane, are expecting their fifth child in
May.
Jennifer E. Knauth, Norwalk, CT, is swamped
with work as a freelance graphic designer and
photographer for several large companies in the
area. She decided to postpone graduate school
since she's getting so much training and experience
out of working. She spends as much time as possible in Vermont "for the peace and quiet."
Barbara Levy, Rochester, NY, is working with her
father in freelance graphic arts and typesetting. She
is a member of Women's Action for Peace and a
participant in the Women's Encampment for a
Future of Peace and Justice. She works on the
publication of the Feminist Review of literature and
the arts, associated with Rochester's New Women's
Times.
Tracy A. Marsailes, Seattle, WA, is helping form
an association for all direct service staff who work
with people with developmental disabilities in a
residential setting. It is called "WRAPS"
(Washington Residential Association for Professional Staff) and is dedicated to helping make this
and future legislative sessions more aware of "DD"
issues. Tracy is also working for Creative Living
Services, a tenant support agency in Seattle.

Class of 1983
Storme L. Thompson, Olympia, WA, has been
hired as a probation counselor with the Thurston
County District Court.

Lost Alums
John Randolph Acker
John Shepard Adams
Vera Marie Adderley
Michael John Adkison
Saleh M. Ajlan
Gerald W. Bachmann
Diane Kathleen Bailey
Ann Baker
Guy Zachary Baker
Patrice Kay Cammack
Thomas A. Campbell
Michael John Carignan
Dawn Maurice Carosso
Nicholas Lawrence D'Alonzo
Kristi Maria Caniel
Robert A. Danneker
James Glenn Darkow
Aubrey Dawn
Francis Duncan Eader
Patricia E. Earl
Ann Marie Eissinger
Elena Francesca Engel
Patrick Sean Fahey
Sarah Marie Favret
Virginia F. Fay
Demarie Sue Fellows
Mary Stiles Kline '74, is receiving rave reviews
for her recently published book, Ferryboats: A Legend
on Puget Sound. Co-authored by Kline and George
A. Bayless, this monumental book tells an intriguing story of Puget Sound's ferryboats and the men
and women who operated them.
While at Evergreen, Kline concentrated her
studies on maritime history and museums. After
graduation, she was curator of Northwest Seaport's
fleet of historic ships, supervising restoration work,
education programs and research for more than
seven years. Mary and her family live in the Seattle area.

Patsy Dell Galbreath
Ruth Ellen Garrett
Beverly L. Garrick
Karen Ann Gatens
Charles Leon Hamrick
Carol Christine Hansen
Michael David Harding
Stefanie Ann Hare
Thomas Levan Hargis
Katie Lynn Ingebretson
Gordon Brent Ingram
Brandith Gail Irwin
Barbara Ann Jarvis
Peter Dennis Jekel
Lawrence J. Jensen
Laura J. Kalai
Michael Robert Karp
Janet Helen Kaufmann
Kyra Kester

Geoducks

Evergreen Part of
Their Hearts
As is the case at any college or university, Cupid is operative at Evergreen,
never missing a chance to play the
matchmaker between unsuspecting
students. Here's a sampling from
some of the couples who answered our
call for "Geoduck love stories." As you
read how they fell victim to Cupid's
arrows, remember to have a happy
Valentine's Day, 1984!
This will be the tenth anniversary of
the year Corinne (Simons) '77 and
Scott Eickstaedt '77 first met at
Evergreen. "We were introduced by
my cousin and former student who
lived with me at ASH Apartments,"
writes Corinne, now a preschool
teacher and the mother of two-and-ahalf year old Jacob. "We attended
Evergreen for four years, graduated
June, 1977, and had our wedding on
the following weekend, June 12, 1977."
Scott works in the retail business
now and the Eickstaedts have lived in
Bucoda, south of Olympia, since 1979.
Another couple who've been
6



together almost as long as the
Eickstaedts is Marian Osborne '78
and Peter Speer '78. As Peter tells it:
"We met at Evergreen in 1976 and
studied under Willi Unsoeld in the
first Outdoor Education program. We
fell in love in January, 1978, and
together moved to California to teach
for the Yosemite Institute. There must
have been something in the air down
there because we were married in
September of 1982 at Yosemite's
coastal campus in Marin County. . .We are true, blue Geoduck
Sweethearts forever!"
Marian and Pete now live in Seattle
where she teaches in the Shoreline
School District and he directs the Ski
Shool for the Swallows' Nest Outdoor
Store.
Even though Kathryn Hinsch '81
and Jeff Carey (former student) grew
up within 60 miles of each other, "it
took 2,000 miles and Evergreen to
bring us together," she says. They met
through friends at a potluck in 1979.
Kathryn, a political economy student,
was living in a group household, while
Jeff, who was studying to be a writer,
had little money and was living "in a
tent in the woods—during the winter."
They have been living together (in a
house near downtown Olympia) since
1980 and plan to be married later this
year.
"Jeff wants to take my last name instead of me taking his," Kathryn
relates, and says also, "Thanks for the
opportunity to share our 'Love Story.'"
Cupid had to work off-campus to
get Roy Plaeger '82 and Mariel
Brockway '74 together. Mariel was in
her first year of medical school at the
University of Washington and Roy
was finishing up his last quarter at
Evergreen with an internship at Seattle Mental Health Institute when they
met in 1981.
"I don't think we'd be together if it

wasn't for Evergreen," Roy recalls, as
oddly enough they were introduced by
another former Evergreener, who shall
remain unnamed (Cupid in disguise?).
Now they're known as the PlaegerBrockways and "all's going well,"
reports Mariel. "We are happily married and struggling through school
together. I'm doing clinical medicine
and enjoying it, and Roy made it
through the first quarter of graduate
school in public affairs at the University of Washington and learned how to
turn things in on time (versus
Evergreen time. . .)."
Cupid didn't have to work too long
or hard to match Jim Krupke "74 and
Maureen Fitzgerald-Krupke '77. As
Maureen tells it: "Jim and I met during our first week of classes at
Evergreen in the fall of 1972 and have
been together ever since. Our first
year was shared with construction
workers while ASH was being built,
drop-in parents, and the experience of
going to Evergreen early years when
the Midnight Sponge and other
legends were a reality. We moved to
Vancouver, Wa., in 1974 to work as
volunteers on a statewide VISTA project. We were married in Portland,
Oregon, in Washington Park, and
moved back to Olympia in 1976.
"Jim works as the treatment program manager at TAMARC, a local
alcoholism treatment center, and I
work both as a caseworker at DSHS
and as a planner at the Community
Action Council. Jim's taking courses
in preparation for Evergreen's MPA
program, and I'm in graduate school
at Pacific Lutheran in Marriage and
Family Therapy. We have two future
Greeners, Betsy, four, and Josh, two.
Nothing terribly exciting, but happy
and growing!"
Our last couple provides a story of
Geoduck love that's a real odyssey.
Katherine Johnson '79 and Randall

Evergreen Topic
of Alumnus'
Dissertation
William Henry Stevens III dropped
out of college in 1950 because he
couldn't get the "kind of education I
wanted." He spent the next 20 years
working in construction—as a
carpenter, contractor and building inspector. He finally "came back" to
education shortly after Evergreen
opened and completed his degree in
1974.
Now he's gone another big step forward and completed his doctorate in
philosophy at the University of
Washington. In the process he's written one of the most extensive studies
ever compiled on The Philosophical and
Political Origin of The Evergreen State College, a 356-page dissertation on "the
origin of an innovative public
undergraduate institution of higher
education within the political environment of the State of Washington during the late 1960s and 1970s."
In a recent interview Stevens said
he chose Evergreen as the topic for his
dissertation because he'd been involved
in efforts to implement some "innovative changes" in the public
schools during the 1960s and those
"just didn't materialize." But, he said,
"Evergreen has succeeded in creating
the kind of innovative approach we
talked about and that seemed a
remarkable thing to write about."
Copies of his dissertation are
available through the Evergreen
Library.

Henery '78 have spent more time
apart than together in the past three
years as they pursued degrees in their
respective fields of medicine.
It all started when "we met and fell
in love in Betty Kutter's Molecular
Biology Group Contract, Fall-Winter,
1976-77," Katherine remembers.
Randall moved in "after presenting
me with my very first Valentine's Day
rose. . .We were married near Mendocino on the California coast on
August 15, 1977."
Then things really got moving.
After graduating from Evergreen, the
couple moved to Pullman,
Washington, where Katherine became
the first Geoduck to go to school in
veterinary medicine at Washington
State University.
Meanwhile, Randall applied to the
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine in Athens,
Ohio. When he was accepted,
Katherine transferred to the vet school
at Ohio State University (where she
was also the first Geoduck to attend),
and the couple pulled up stakes and
moved to the Midwest.
Unfortunately, Ohio State is in Columbus, 80 miles away from Athens, so
for almost three years Katherine and
Randall spent only weekends together.
Last June, Katherine graduated with a
D.V.M. and, pausing only to say
"Goodbye, Columbus," moved to
Athens where she "actually lived with
[her] husband for his last two quarters
of med school classes!"
One last note from Randall and
Katherine: he's now entering his last
year and a half of school, which consists of making clinical rotations at a
hospital. The hospital, however, happens to be in Columbus, so Randall
and Katherine will be moving back.
Hello, Columbus! And Happy
Valentine's Day to Geoduck
Sweethearts wherever you are!

Evans Warmly
Roasted as
Presidential
Search Narrows
to Top 18

"Dan gets where he's going on mussel power,"
observes Evergreen's ubiquitous Geoduck, one of
the honored speakers at a January Evans Roast.
"He's not afraid to dig in or stick his neck out,
and like the rest of us king clams, he tends to
spout off on occasion."

Geoduck
Swimmers
Prepare for
Regionals—and
Beyond
February 16, 17, and 18 are important
dates in Evergreen sport history.
Those days mark the first NAIA Northwest Regional Swim Meet to be
hosted by the college.
"This is a class event," says
Evergreen Swim Coach Robbie
Johnson. "There will be over 400
athletes from 14 schools in attendance,
and spectators will have the opportunity to see at least three swimmers who
are very likely to compete in the
Olympics this summer."
Johnson lists four Evergreen standouts who are close to reaching
national-level competition times:
seniors Austin St. John and Rex Fletcher, junior Marybeth Berney and
sophomore Martha Grazier. Johnson
predicts that St. John, who was the
first Evergreen student to compete in
the NAIA Nationals three years ago,
will peak "right on schedule for this
year's Nationals in March."
The Regional preliminaries begin at
10 a.m. on the 16th, 17th, and 18th,
while finals begin at 7 p.m. Volunteers
are also needed to help run the meet.
Contact Johnson for any details on the
meet and Evergreen's swim team at
866-6000, ext. 6530.

Ironman" Style
Race Comes to
Evergreen
February 19

U.S. Senator Dan Evans returned to
campus January 16 for a two-part
farewell party. The former president
was feted at an afternoon ceremony on
campus, then honored—Evergreenstyle—at a formal banquet where he
became the main course.
The former three-term governor,
who resigned Evergreen's top job last
September to accept an appointment to
a Senate seat to which he was then
elected in November, was warmly
roasted by a roster of spike-tongued
speakers, including Supreme Court
Justice James Dolliver, Board of
Trustee Vice Chairman Herb Gelman,
Evergreen Foundation Board Member
Hal Wolf, and even the college mascot
(photo), who stressed the "strong
resemblance" between geoducks and
Evergreen's second president.
Rising to defend himself, Evans
called the dinner, hosted by the
Evergreen Foundation to raise money
for scholarships, "a turkey of a roast,"
but said he was delighted with one
award he received for being "U.S.
Senate Rookie of the \ear."
The Evergreen sailing team concluded
"At least I was delighted," he said,
one of their most exciting regattas ever
"until I realized I was the only rookie
January 14 and 15 by finishing second
in the Senate that year."
to the University of Oregon in the
Declaring he would "always be a
Windjammer Eliminations Regatta on
Greener," Evans then left to begin his
Budd Inlet.
new five-year term in Washington,
Evergreen senior Gordon Smith,
D.C., while on campus the Presidential sophomore Karen Erickson, juniors
Advisory Committee continued the
Rick Baldwin and Gary Cantrell and
search for his replacement.
alternate Ralph Naess, a sophomore,
By ReView press time, Committee
competed with sailors from four other
chairman Dr. Rudy Martin reported
schools in Washington and Oregon for
the group had narrowed the list of 100
the right to represent the Northwest in
applicants to 18. It is hoped a new
the national finals to be held in New
president can be named by April.
Orleans in March.
Saturday, the first day of the race,
featured 25-30 mph winds, a chill factor of 16 degrees, brilliant sunshine,
and an Evergreen lead at day's end.
Sunday, Evergreen and the University
of Oregon pulled away from Western
Washington, Oregon State, and Seattle
Universities.
The Regatta championship went
down to the final race, when Oregon's
first place finish gave them a winning
total of 16 points to the Geoduck's 19
(low score wins).
The Evergreen sailing team has
"improved immensely," says Coach
Lou Powers, noting a steady growth of
skills and confidence since last year's
Regatta. "We were in the race from
the beginning."
Powers expects to remain competitive in such upcoming events as
the Frostbite Open Invitational, hosted
by Evergreen on February 11; team
races at the University of Victoria,
February 18 and 19; and the Royal
Roads Invitational in Victoria,
February 25.

Geoducks Sail
Within Three
Points of
National
Competition

Pride of the Geoducks, Austin St. John heads down
the stretch.

Over a mile of swimming, 24 miles of
bicycling and 9.3 miles of running—
that's what competitors will face in
Evergreen's first annual Mud Bay
Triathlon. Sponsored by the Campus
Recreation Center on Sunday,
February 19, as a scholarship fundraiser, the all-day contest is expected
to draw over 100 athletes from the
Northwest, Canada and California.
Bill Sanderson, director of the
triathlon, points out that the 35.3 mile
race matches the same distance
covered by competitors in the U.S.
Triathlon Series. "Our triathlon," says
Sanderson, "will become an important
preparatory step for triathletes leading
to the world-class 129.2 mile Ironman
Triathlon held every August in
Hawaii.
"It's a grueling, exciting and very
prestigious competition that has increased tremendously in popularity
and scope in the last five years," adds
Sanderson.
Local triathlete standouts who will
participate are Dr. Bill Perm and
Louise Taylor, both of Olympia. Ms.
Taylor finished second in her division
in last year's Hawaiian Ironman
competition.
The Triathlon, which features six
age divisions for men and women,
carries a $25 entry fee payable by no
later than February 12. The public is
invited to view the event free of
charge. The action begins 7 a.m. on
Sunday and continu-s throughout the
day until 5 p^m. A ', p.m. Award Dinner at Olympia's Westwater Inn
follows the contest. Reservations for
the dinner, which costs $6, can be
made through the CRC, 866-6000,
ext. 6530.
Sanderson and the Rec Center are
also in need of volunteer timers and
messengers for the Triathlon, all of
whom will receive free Mud Bay
Triathlon T-shirts and a pass to the
Award Dinner.

-

a/erareen

Nonprofit Org.
U.S. Postage
PAID
Olympia, WA
Permit No. 65

review
Volume 5, Number 2
February, 1984

Published by the
Office of Development
The Evergreen State College
Olympia, Washington 98505

Address Correction Requested
Forwarding and Return
Postage Guaranteed

Calendar
February
11-26

"Siggraph '83," an international juried
exhibit of computer art and video
animation, including 55 art prints and
90 minutes of computer-animated
video, Gallery Two, Evans Library.

17

3-11

"We Never Forget: A Performance of
Laotian Refugee Stories," by Dr.
Dwight Conquergood of Northwestern
University, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications Building. . . free. . . Sponsored by grant from Washington
Commission for the Humanities.

"Portraits," a multi-media exhibit of
works in progress based on the concept of portrait by students working
with Evergreen faculty member Lynn
Patterson, Gallery Four, Evans Lib.

15
18-March 11

"Contemporary Music: Reflection of
Our Values," a discussion offered by
Evergreen visiting faculty musician
Stan Keen in Piece of My Mind
Series cosponsored by Evergreen,
12:10 p.m., First United Methodist
Church, Olympia . . . free . . .

24

16
Evergreen Expressions presents "Off
the Wall Players," one of Seattle's funniest and most opinionated comedy
groups, 8 p.m., Experimental Theater,
Communications Building. Tickets: $5
general, $4 students, senior citizens,
and Alumni Association members.

Patrick Hill, Evergreen academic vice
president and provost, shares his views
on "Education for the 1980s," noon,
Governor House Hotel, Olympia. . .
Sponsored by Evergreen College Community Organization. . . Reservations
required by 5 p.m., February 20, at
(206) 866-6000, ext. 6128. . .Buffet
luncheon. . .$7 to be paid at the door.

Evergreen graduate Candace Street
presents "Parasite Station," an artistic
installation accompanied by performances, Gallery Four, Evans Lib.

8
International Women's Day celebration presents New York actress/poet
Vinie Burrows in her one-woman
show as part of Evergreen Expressions
Series, 8 p.m., Recital Hall, Communications Building. Tickets: $4
general, $3 students, senior citizens
and Alumni Association members.
14

Robert Ritter, publisher of The Olympian, offers his views on "Our Daily
News: Shaping or Reflecting Our
Society," in Piece of My Mind series,
12:10 p.m., First United Methodist
Church, Olympia. . . free. . .
28

27

OFF THE WALL

PLAYERS

China Excursion, see page 2
29
"The Case for Private Higher Education," by Dr. John Ishii, president of
Saint Martin's College, in Piece of My
Mind Series, 12:10 p.m., First United
Methodist Church, Olympia. . .free. . .

"When Bad Things Happen to Good
People," discussed by Dr. Dave Suter,
associate professor of religious studies,
Saint Martin's College, in continuing
Piece of My Mind Series, 12:10 p.m.,
First United Methodist Church,
Olympia. . . free. . .
April
11

Evergreen Expressions presents C.T.
Chew and Bill Ritchie, award-winning
Northwest video artists, 8 p.m., Recital
Hall, Communications Building. . .
Tickets: $4 general, $3 students,
senior citizens, and Alumni Association members.

Evergreen Expressions Series presents
performance by "Kei Takei," 8 p.m.,
Experimental Theater, Communications Building. . .Tickets information
at (206) 866-6833.
25

China Excursion, see page 2.

review
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Also in this issue:
Geoducks Abroad
A Memorial for Willi
Greeners in Love
Goodbye to Dan