The Evergreen State College Review Vol. 7, Issue 1

Media

Part of The Evergreen State College Review Volume 7, Issue 1 (November 1985)

Title
The Evergreen State College Review Vol. 7, Issue 1
extracted text
What's new at Geoduck
It's a brand-new world every fall at
The Evergreen State College, and this
year is no exception. The college
welcomed another bumper crop of new
Geoducks this September, which
resulted in an all-time total headcount
high of 2,980 students (2,761 full-time
equivalent). On page 2, the ReView offers you a peek at the way these
newcomers are introduced to Evergreen, and, on page 4, an inside look at
what is becoming known around the
Pacific Northwest as the Geoducks'
new style of athletics. On this page are
two more* fresh features of campus life:
a bevy of new faculty members and a
new-look adminstration that has moved
some familiar faces into new places. All
of which gives Geoduck U. the feel of a
freshly-minted coin this fall, and gives
you a chance to catch up on what's new.

Evergreen
Welcomes
Diversify of New
Faculty Members
Add Soviet geography, the ritual??of
feasting, and vestibular compensation
in goldfish to Evergreen's rich diversity of faculty expertise. And don't
forget database theory, "Coyote in the
Classroom," or the "Impact of Future
Coal Use in California" when reviewing the background of the 22 faculty
members who are new, returning,
visiting or on exchange to Evergreen
this fall.
The college owes this large influx of
talent to a steadily increasing enrollment, a growing faculty exchange program and a need to replace regular
faculty who are on leave. Evergreen
faculty on exchange at other institutions are Bill Winden, who is teaching
at the University of Washington, and
Mark Levensky and Hiro Kawasaki,
who are teaching in a model interdisciplinary program at Seattle Central
Community College. Stephanie Coontz
will be at the Kobe University of Commerce next spring and summer.

Here then, are the new faces on
Evergreen's faculty this year:
Justino Balderrama teaches the "Health and
Human Services" program on the Vancouver
Campus, where he was a visiting faculty last year.
Degree: M.S.W., San Jose State University. He
has conducted extensive research projects on
ethnicity and social institutions.

Cesar

°avis

Romeo Cesar teaches in "Spanish Forms in
Life and Art" and 'Human Development." A
Fulbright Scholar from the Universidad Naeional
De La Patagonia in Argentina, Cesar is currently
studying the significance of feasting in South
American cultures.
Mike Davis returns to teach in "Society and
the Computer" after teaching as visiting faculty
in "Issues, Traditions and Change" last year. He
holds degrees from UCLA and the University of
Edinburgh, and is writing a book on Reoganism—
The History of Southern California.

Gilbert

Hill

Washburn

Martin

Olander Reorganizes
to Improve Services
In addition to the talented new people
on the faculty team this fall, Evergreen
has nearly completed an administrative
reorganization. Intended to improve internal operations and services to
students and the greater public, the
reorganization is based on a management study conducted last spring by a
Seattle consulting firm at the request
of Evergreen President Joe Olander.
Beginning in August, the realignment has streamlined the college's four
divisions into three: Academics, which
changed the least; Student Affairs,
which combines functions from the old
business division that affect the quality
of student life with other enrollment
and support functions; and Development and Administrative Services,
which is an innovative effort to unite
the functions of assets recruitment (or
fundraising, and community and alumni
relations) and assets management
(business affairs).
While Academic Vice President and
Provost Patrick Hill continues in that
capacity, two familiar faces have been
named vice presidents of the other
divisions. The new Vice President for
Student Affairs is Gail Martin,
formerly acting dean of student and
enrollment services, and the new Vice
President for Development and Administrative Services is Sue Washburn,
formerly director of college relations
and development.

Replacing Washburn as Director of
Development is John Gallagher, who
began working at Evergreen as
associate director in 1983. Former
Dean of Students Larry Stenberg has
assumed the new position of director of
community and alumni relations, while
former Alumni Coordinator Eleanor
Dornan has become a full-time
development officer.
One exciting feature of the Student
Affairs division brings together the
student services of Student Activities,
Career Development, Counseling and
Health Center, Upward Bound, KEYSpecial Services and the Third World
Coalition under the guidance of new
Dean of Student Development Ernest
"Stone" Thomas. Student Affairs has
also consolidated the offices of Admissions, Records (formerly the Registrar)
and Financial Aid under new Dean of
Enrollment Services Arnaldo
Rodriguez. His replacement as Director of Admissions is Christine Kerlin.
Alumni involved in the reorganization include Dornan '79; Steve Hunter
'79, who was appointed director of
research and planning; and Karen
Wynkoop '78, who was named assistant vice president for academic
budgeting and financial planning. In a
separate development, faculty member
Rita Pougiales '72, began a two-year
appointment as academic dean this fall.

Ingram Marshall teaches "Advanced Studies in
Electronic Music and Composition." Degree:
M.A., Electronic Music, Columbia University.
Nationally-recognized for his work in modern
music, he has worked with the San Francisco
Symphony and performed across the country.

Christopher Gilbert teaches in "Management
and the Public Interest." Degrees: B.S., Geological Sciences, University of Washington; M.B.A.,
University of Puget Sound. He has consulted for
Seattle Metro Transit and capital improvement
projects in the Northwest and Alaska.
Tom Grissom teaches in "Society and the Computer." Degrees: M.S., Physics, University of
Mississippi; Ph.D., Physics, University of Tennessee. He has published a book of poetry: Other
Truths, Golden Quill Press.
Phyllis Haas, a faculty member on exchange
from Seattle Central Community College, teaches
in "Human Health and Behavior." She holds a
degree in psychology from the University of
Michigan and wrote Washington state's
Guidelines for Child Development Laboratories.
Bob Harmon is on exchange from Seattle
University and teaching in the "War" program.
Degree: M.A., Social Science, University of
Washington. He co-authored the American
Dream, which is about the Declaration of
Independence.
James Harnish is on exchange from North
Seattle Community College arid teaches in "Great
Books." Degree: M.A., Russian and Soviet
History, Seattle University. He wrote and
directed a program to promote reading, writing
and critical thinking across the curriculum.
Harry Harrison, an M.D. and neo-natal
specialist from Alaska, is a visiting resource
faculty member teaching in "Human Health and
Behavior."

Ott

Paul Mott teaches in "Management and the
Public Interest." Degrees: M.A., Political Science,
University of Michigan; Ph.D., Sociology, University of Michigan. His most recent publication is
The Federal Response to Domestic Violence.
Sandy Osawa, a visiting faculty member last
year, returns to teach "Advanced Studies in
Film." A graduate of Lewis and Clark College,
she is a member of the Makah Tribe and has produced a ten-part program on Native Americans
for NBC-TV.
Janet Ott teaches in "Molecule to Organism."
Degree: Ph.D., Biology, University of Southern
California. She has conducted research on
alcoholism and aging, and published studies on
her experiments with ataxia in goldfish.
Ruth Palmerlee is rotating into the faculty
from her staff position as costumer. She teaches
in "The Power of Theatre." Degree: M.A.,
Costume Design, University of Oregon. She has
received rave reviews for her original costumes in
Evergreen productions such as "Othello" and
"The Devil and Daniel Webster."
Yvonne Peterson, a visiting faculty last year,
teaches in 'Multicultural Learning Environments." Degrees: B.A.s in Elementally Education
and Ethnic Studies, Western Washington University; M.A., Political Science, University of
Arizona. She has written studies and resource
guides on Native American curriculum in public
schools.
SSSSMS

Tafoya

•_

Tsutsums

Knapp

Lambertz

Helena Knapp, a returning faculty member,
teaches in "Human Development." Degrees: B.A.,
History, Oxford University; M.A., Communications, University of Pennsyvania. She is an active
member of the Nuclear Weapons Freeze
Campaign.
Jaime Kooser teaches in the Graduate Program
in Environmental and Energy Studies. Degrees:
M.A. and Ph.D., Geography, University of California. She's published many studies of energy use in
the west.
Jan Lambertz is rotating into the faculty from
her staff position as director of Recreation and
Athletics. She teaches in "Human Health and
Behavior." Degree: M.A., Education, University
of Denver.
Flora Leisenrinj?, a visiting faculty, teaches in
"Human Health and Behavior." Degrees: A.D.,
Education, University of London; B.A., Post-*"
graduate Certification in Secondary Education,^
University of British Columbia. She has conducted numerous workshops on nutrition.

Yukiko Rikiso, a faculty member on exchange
from Kobe University of Commerce in Japan,
teaches in "Data to Information." He holds a
Ph.D. in communications engineering from Osaka
University and has taught data base theory and
management information systems.
Terry Tafoya teaches in "Human Health and
Behavior." Degrees: M.Ed., Higher Education,
University of Washington; M.C., Communications,
University of Washington; Ph.D., Educational
Psychology, University of Washington. Tafoya,
who speaks Tiwa, Sahaptin and Spanish, has written extensively on bilingual education and
American Indian oral traditions.
Setsuko Tsutsumi teaches in the "Japan and
the West" program. Deg. es: B.A., Psychology,
Wadeda University (Tokyo/ M.A., English,
Michigan State University; Ph.D. Candidate,
Comparative Literature, University of Washington. Tsutsumi's latest work is "The Past as
Literary Motif: Reflections on Japanese and
American Literature."
Also scheduled to visit Evergreen this year is
Fulbright Scholar Victor Panchenko from the
Soviet Union, who teaches political economy at
^Rostov State University in the U.S.S.R.

hildhoocfei
The Beginning of Evergreen
by Mark E. Clemens,
Director of Information Services

A Foundation Scholar for the 1985-86

For Anthea Lawrence of Albuquerque,
New Mexico, things started to get better in an airplane over Denver.
Only a few hours before, Lawrence
and her mother had parted in tears at
the airport in Albuquerque and Anthea
had boarded a jet for a Saturday flight
to Seattle. Prom there she was going
to find her way to Olympia and then—
although she didn't know how—to The
Evergreen State College, the place she
had chosen for her college career.
On the first leg of her journey, the
pangs of leaving home mixed with
thoughts about the future: What would
Evergreen be like? What kind of people were there? Had she made the
right choice for her education? In spite
of first-hand information about
academic life at Evergreen from faculty member Pete Sinclair, a long-time
family friend, Lawrence admits "I was
scared."
But, just after switching to another
flight in Denver, Lawrence brightened
when she overheard a nearby conversation between two young men.
"I knew they must be going to Evergreen," Lawrence remembers with a
smile, "because they were talking
about Childhood's End."
She had just read Arthur C. Clarke's
1953 science-fiction classic herself. For
the second year in a row, new students
in Core Programs had been invited to
read a book before their arrival on
campus. On Thursday of Orientation
Week they would have a chance to
discuss this year's selection,
Childhood's End, in a model seminar
that would give them their first
academic experience at Evergreen.
But Lawrence didn't wait, she introduced herself to the other soon-tobe students, Ned Irving of San Miguel
Allende, Mexico, and Richard
Thibedeau of Wendell, Massachusetts.
They exchanged their stories, hopes
and fears, and then started talking
about the book again. As their plane
slipped over the Continental Divide
and began a 1,000-mile glide into the
Pacific Northwest, they traded
thoughts about life on other planets,
the fate of mankind and the end of
Earth. It was their initial encounter
with an Evergreen fact of life: two's
company, three's a seminar.

honors last spring from Highlands High

Picture of a picture: getting your photo
taken for a student identification card
Is one of the first steps of entering
Evergreen.

year, Anthea Lawrence graduated with

School in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
She likes to write, read poetry, and
play the recorder, harp and viola. This
year shell divide her time between the
"Great Books" program, Akido and sailing, and finding fellow musicians to
play in a string quartet.

"Most freshman orientation sessions
try to stuff incoming students with information about what they can expect
to experience at their new college,"
says Academic Dean David Marr. Last
year he and Vice President for Student
Affairs Gail Martin worked to reverse
that process when they planned the
first model book seminar around The
Little Prince by Antoine de Saint
Exupery. "Our goal," he says, "was to
give students the experience of an
Evergreen seminar first and then
follow that up with information."
The results far exceeded Marr's
hopes and expectations, and he is back
again this year to kick off the Thursday morning seminar sessions for the
more than 400 incoming students,
faculty members and peer advisors
crowded into Library 4300. After a
three-day whirl of orientation activities, the students are ready to go.
Following Marr's introduction, they
spread out through the Library
building to form smaller groups.
Hazel Jo Reed, a faculty member in
writing and mathematics, and Tom
Grissom, a new faculty member in
physics, preside over one of the
seminars. At first, the 15 students are
shy, looking at their copies of
Childhood's End, their shoes, the
clock, back to their books. Reed and
Grissom ask the students to break into
pairs and talk for a while. There are
subterranean giggles, but when they
regroup, each student has something to
tell about her or his partner.

Scott from Trout Lake, Washington,
is of Danish stock, basically a quiet
person, fought forest fires this summer,
and took two carloads to move to Evergreen. He signed up for the Core Program, "The Making of Meaning." Jill is
from Minnesota, likes to work with
animals, and has worked at a yogurt
farm. She says she thinks Evergreen is
"a neat, noisy place." Jackie is from
Texas, registered for the Core Program, "Political Ecology," and is trying
to get over people's interest in her
accent.
"Where are you from?" Jackie says
they all ask.
"I know what you mean," says
Armando from San Antonio. He's interested in psychoanalysis, eats rattlesnakes and is an only child whom his
mom is sending to college Kelly is
from Colorado, skis and hang glides,
and hates flatland drivers on mountain
roads. There are laughs from the
flatlanders around the room, knowing
nods from others. Jim Youngblood is,
yes indeed, distantly related to Jack
Youngblood of the Los Angeles Rams.
Laurie is from Virginia and came to
Evergreen because it's one of the top
four schools in the environmental
sciences. Janine is a third-year transfer
student who also signed up for
"Political Ecology." Mike, from
Bellevue, Washington, likes to read and
appropriately will be in the Core Program, "Great Books." He likes music in
the heavy metal vein, but for some
reason he and his new roomie still get
along. Chris—Mike's roommate—is from
Hawthorne, a suburb of Los Angeles.
He has yet to figure out Mike's taste in
music.
"Come see us," Chris says, "in room
307A."

Planning on a degree before he pursues a music career, freshman Ned
Irving picked Evergreen because "it's
small, there're no fraternities or
sororities, and no grades." Despite
having lived In Spain, New York and
most recently, Mexico, he still found
coming to college scary: "It's the first
time away from home."

Graig, who is interested in music and
filmmaking, hails from Wenatchee.
Someone asks, "Where's that?"
Patti is from Colorado Springs and
signed up for the Core Program,
"Perspectives in American Culture."
She considers herself a "folkie."
Jennifer, from Stadium High School in
Tacoma, is another enrollee of
"Political Ecology," and looking for a
definite change from high school.
There's laughter and agreement. She
likes the Talking Heads, Led Zepplin
and Pete Seeger. Seated last around
the table is Dan, a sophomore transfer
who arrived Sunday from San Diego
and likes New Wave.
"It's very different here from
anything I'm used to," Dan says.
"There are so many different kinds of
people—punks, foreign exchange
students, granola-eaters, preppies, and
regular types like me." He smiles at
the laughter. "Basically I feel comfortable," he concludes "I've made two
good friends already."

"They didnt make us sit down and
learn the school song or meet the
mascot or anything like that," remarks
freshman Mike Holden. But, when
students were offered an open mike to
talk about their first seminar on
"Childhood's End," Holden says "It was
like, <Yeah, we're all Ducks!'"

"It's really fun, and hard," says
sophomore Karen Clifford of her new
role as a Peer Advisor. A Foundation
Scholar last year, Clifford is one of 12
Peer Advisors, who were chosen for
their ability to counsel and console
new students during the rigors of

In a room across the hall, Anthea, Ned
and Richard are all in the seminar led
by Eric Larson, faculty member in
anthropology. They have remained pals
throughout the week and, as it turns
out, Anthea and Richard were assigned
rooms on the same floor in A Dorm.
Ned visits often and they hang out in
the community kitchen where, the
night before, they baked a kind of
sponge bread seasoned with thyme.
Community kitchens, says Anthea, are
where "y°u can get to know
everybody."
Skillfully, Larson guides the group
through a two-hour examination of
Childhood's End and the related topics
it raises. They talk about the themes of
science and religion, character development and techniques of writing, parapsychology, the probability of peace on
earth, the possibility of intelligent life
elsewhere in the universe, the role of
authority, photography and Central
American politica
In the course of this first, one-time
seminar, Larson gives the students
several tips for succeeding in all
seminars while they're at Evergreen.
After a seminar, write out your notes
right away on what you learned; it will
be informative and useful when you
write your self-evaluation. Write down
the page numbers of key passages
when you're reading a book; you'll be
able to refer to and read those pages
quickly when you're in seminar. Then,
he says, "You'll be a hero."
After the seminar sessions, the
students and faculty members all
gather in Library 4300 for lunch and a
discussion of what they've learned
from their first encounter with each
other. Mike and Chris, the roommates
who were in the Grissom/Reed
seminar, dine with Graig from
Wenatchee.

registration and Orientation Week and
beyond.

Mike talks about when he first came
into his dorm room. Chris woke up and
helped him move in, and they set up
the stereo right away. Then they went
down to the Branch bookstore in A
Dorm, Mike says, and "We've been
kicking around together ever since."
Chris's first impression of Evergreen
came after he got lost on campus. "I
found people were really willing to
help, which is so different than L.A. I
thought, This must be one hell of a
place.'"
"It's interesting," says Mike. "There's
a real community spirit here, but also a
real great respect for the individual."
Mike was a debater in high school,
which he hated. "I never fit in," he
says. "I felt like this is a place where
I'd be accepted and not have to fit into
some fashion paradigm."
"Oh yeah," Chris says. "Same thing
with me."
To illustrate his point, Mike quotes
from Zen and the Art of Motorcycle
Maintenance: "Here it's the underlying form of the person, the mind of the
person that counts, not what you wear
or what you own."

As lunch nears an end, David Marr
invites students, faculty members, peer
advisors—anyone and everyone—to talk
about their experience in the morning's
model seminara One-by-one they walk
to the microphone at the front of the
room.
"I was very pleased," says Faculty
Member Charles Teske. "I was struck
by two things at our seminar. One,
there was a strangers-on-the-train
atmosphere. We didn't have to worry
about power relationships or whether
we were making a good first impression as contrasted to the anxiety you
feel entering a long-term relationship.
Secondly, I found out that there were
six or seven long discussions in the
dorm this weekend about Childhood's
End. That's the purpose of higher ed.
"At most other places you are competing with other people," Teske says.
"Here you collaborate with others and
compete with yourself."

A graduate last spring from Lincoln High School in southwest Portland, Beverly
Anderson (see cover) holds the floor on "Childhood's End" during her first book
seminar. Enrolled in the Core Program "Perspectives in American Culture" this
academic year, Anderson looks forward to studying public administration and
doing a related internship during her career at Evergreen.

Richard Thibedeau takes the microphone. "I'm psyched," he shouts. "I'm
glad to be here. I can't wait for the
next seminar."
Another student: "I found high
school a total bore, but seminars are an
idea free-for-all, except you respect the
people you're with. That's something I
haven't found in most discussions."
"I'm a returning dropout from 1953,"
says a woman. "The first day I came to
campus, I turned around and ran away
from campus. But I came back the next
day and went to school. I'm glad to be
here. I'm ready."
"I thought 'I do not want to do this,'"
admits the next student, "but I really
expressed my opinions. I usually get into major discussions about books with
friends at Denny's, but this is the first
time I've ever done it at school. I
thank the people who put this college
together. I'm so glad Evergreen's
here."
It sounds like the Geoduck Revival
Hour, but the fervor is genuine and the
testimonials go on. Finally, Charles
Teske takes the stage again.
"Last Sunday afternoon a group of
us got together here on campus and
stood in a circle," he says. "We were
the members of the original planning
faculty, and we were thinking back to
1970 when this Library building was
just a hole in the ground. It was funny,
we didn't drink anything, didn't eat
anything, just stood there thinking: fifteen years, it's fifteen years....
"I think this book was chosen for a
good reason," says Teske. "Just imagine
when you're at your 25th reunion for
the Class of 1990 and you'll be standing
around, wondering what to talk about,
and finally someone will say..." he
pauses, letting his audience picture
that gap in the conversation some 30
years hence, "... Hey, what about
Childhood's End?"

A LOOK AT
It's halftime and Arno Zoske's speech
to his team is much different than the
one he gave before the game.
Two hours earlier the Men's Soccer
Coach stood in front of the team, one
hand in his pocket, the other by his
side, and in a soft monotone repeated
the basics they all knew. "Use the
whole field. Prepare for the pasa
Create space and time. Don't be too
anxious to score. Play with your head
first and then your feet."
The 19 members of Evergreen's
men's soccer team sat quietly—tired
but ready—on the bleachers. They had
played two tournament games the day
before, and one that morning. Most
weren't looking at their coach, but nodding their heads in time to the rhythm
of his speech. A few slowly passed pebbles from one hand to the other.
Several in the front row performed the
pre-game ritual of athletes all over the
world: resting their elbows on their
knees, they thoughtfully spit between
their feet—waiting, waiting, waiting.
But now, at halftime, Evergreen
trails 1-0 and both of Zoske's hands are
out of his pockets. He gestures forcefully and his voice is different. It's not
louder, but more intense, more urgent,
like a whispered shout. The players
stand around him now. They rock from
foot to foot and several tap soccer balls
from instep to instep, but all of them
are watching Zoske.
He looks back at them and says what
he said earlier: "Don't take on the
whole team by yourself. Pass. Use the
whole field." The same words, but this
time they seem to go past the head and
into the bloodstream. The team punctuates Zoske's speech with shouts of
their own: "We can do it!," "Come on
you guys" and just simply, "Yeah!"
Zoske concludes: "You can outplay
them. They are more tired than you
are. They are running on their last
reserves. Pass them wide and keep
them running." He pauses and asks, "Is
it worth fighting for third place?" The
team yells its answer and runs out on
the field. It is important, though, to
look closely, because they are not rac-

BOOTING
BOOKING
EVERGREEN SOCCER

by Keith Eisner,
Information Specialist
ing out to "smash" the opponent, body
to body as you would in football, but to
intensify their own level of concentration and control.
But the University of Puget Sound
Loggers, ranked 20th in the nation by
NCAA, do not look to be more tired
than the Evergreen squad. Backed by
the psychological advantage of scoring
first, they seem more rested, making
crisper passes and more runs at the
goal. The Evergreen team stays with
them for the first 25 minutes of the
half. But it seems that UPS is a halfstep and then a full-step ahead of the
home team as one of their strikers
breaks free from the defenders and
races unmarked to the Evergreen goal.
Backup goalie Andy Hill tenses, studying the eyes and feet of his opponent,
and then dives at the ball, but it's by
him and into the net.
Now it's Evergreen that is running
on reserve while UPS controls the
game with wide and confident passes.
UPS scores another goal and then it's
over—3-0. The team gathers around
Zoske, who is subdued again, speaking
matter-of-factly and without blame
"We tried to do too much at once. You
played a good game. You hung in there
Forget about this game."

Geoduck goalies Tonya Estes and Doug Smith take off during keeper drills.

The athletes, looking tired to the
bone, nod their heads and seem to take
it in. Maybe they really will forget.
"Think about next time," Zoske says.
It's a sunny afternoon
after a rainy morning and the grass
smells sweet. All over the campus
playfields women and men are shouting
and kicking soccerballs. From late
August until school starts, the teams
practice twice a day, with every fourth
day off. When school begins, both
teams cut down to one two-hour practice a day. Practices consist of stretching, passing, trapping, heading,
shooting, defensive drills and tactics.
Many of the players also do 200 sit-ups
and 100 push-ups a day.
Over by the backstop, five players
are learning how to fall down all over
again with Goalie Coach Gretchen
Geeg (who worked with Seattle
Sounder star Jack Brand). Each player
takes a turn being in the middle of two
other players who are about 30 yards
apart, and who toss up or kick a soccer
ball for that player to catch or deflect.
They work on a keeper drill: diving
squarely on a ball kicked right at them.
The women's starting goalie, Freshman
Tonya Estes is concentrating on landing on her forearms with the ball
trapped safely under her chest. Teammate Pringl Miller rolls a hard
grounder at her and Estes dives and
stops it, but the action is jerky and the
ball bounces under her chin. "You're
falling on your knees first," says Geeg,
"try landing on your forearms."
Estes, an all-conference standout at
her Seattle high school, says "I know
what I'm supposed to do, but I feel like
it's going to suffocate me."
Geeg laughs. "If you do it right, I
guarantee you won't suffocate."
Geeg laughs. "If you do it right, I
guarantee you won't suffocate."
She tries again and Geeg says
"Better."
But it's not good enough yet. Estes
continues taking a shot from one teammate, getting up, rolling the ball back
and spinning around for the next shot.

She shakes her head when she feels it's
not quite right and nods when she feels
she's closer. The stops are becoming
less like falls arid more like dives.
Finally, the ball is hit hard at her and
she traps it, but her dive is so smooth
and sure that it doesn't seem as if she
"stopped" the ball at all. Rather, it's as
if the ball had meant to go and rest
perfectly between her arms. Estes
brushes back her hair, smiles and gets
up.
On another part of the field, the rest
of the women's team is scrimmaging
hard. A perennial cynic about practice
games, I look for the slackers but there
are none. They are all running hard,
fighting for the ball, bumping, sprinting, stopping to pass or to fake and
then running hard again. They are
thinking hard too, keeping up a steady
seminar with each other on "wall
passes," "angles," and "marking up."
On the sidelines the new Women's
Soccer Coach Jane Culliton (see profile) is watching her team intently
while talking to Coach Zoske. They're
discussing "checking off and when I
ask them what that means, they enthusiastically demonstrate it for me
Zoske tells me I have the ball. Culliton acts as a defender and Zoske as a
teammate. It's confusing but finally I
understand it's like a pick and roll in
basketball where you shake off a
defender by crossing paths with a
teammate, allowing an open pass for an
easy basket. "Yes," I say, "but how do I
know when my teammate's going to be
where I kick the ball?" Zoske laughs.
"That's the beauty of the game," says
Culliton, "developing that sixth sense."
The men's team jogs by on its way to
the track. Zoske catches up with them
and while they're running slow enough
to talk, he says, "Hey guys, we need
someone to make signs for this weekend's game" There's joking about how
much they get paid for sign-making,
and it makes me wonder about schools
where athletes never have to do their
own publicity. Zoske faces them, jogging backwards. "So," he asks, "who's
going to make some signs?"

'IF YOU WANT TO GROW
"AR-NO! AR-NO! AR-NO!" the team
shouts in unison. Their laughter is lost
as they round the curve of the track.
Suddenly, when they're in front of the
bleachers, they sprint at full-speed.
These are fartlecks, I find out,
Swedish for "play of speed," a grueling
combination of jogging, 440's and
sprints. It's a riveting sight—23 bodies
thundering by, pushing as hard as they
can. Their faces are red and wet with
sweat. Their arms are pumping and
they're breathing heavily. It doesn't
seem possible that they can expend
another ounce of energy, but on their
last pass they lift their heads and roar
triumphantly. Slowing to a jog, they do
one more lap and then stagger to the
drinking fountain.
Why do they work so hard?
"Communication," says Freshman
Erica Buchanan from Seattle. "There's
nothing like being out there for 90
minutes with ten other players and
learning to think and act together."
"It's creative," adds Sophomore
Pringl Miller, a transfer from the
University of Washington, "There are
so many options. You don't know what's
coming. In fact, I love the passing
game more than scoring. Once you play
together you know without talking
who's going to pass and where."
"It's the best game in the world,"
says Sophomore Tim Joyce, "the whole
world plays it."
"There's nothing in any other sport,"
adds his roommate Adam Kasper, a
graduate of Olympia's Capital High,
"like scoring a goal in soccer."
Former Geoduck booter Stan Jones,
who played three seasons for Evergreen after one year at another college,
stresses the conditioning. "By the time
school starts, if you've followed Arno's
program, you're in excellent physical
condition and you're raring to go with
your studies," he says. "I'm not saying
it's a snap to keep up with soccer and
school at the same time, but it really
makes you discipline your time
management."

YOU HAVE TO BREAK A

MENTAL AND PHYSICAL

SWEAT EVERY DAY OF

YOUR LIFE'
Buchanan agrees, "I do a lot better
when I'm in a sport," she says, "I get
out a lot of energy and it makes me
plan my time much better."
Miller draws a parallel between
lessons on the field and in the seminar.
"In both situations you're learning
about perception, about seeing through
other people's eyes. In the game and in
seminar you learn how to anticipate
what others are thinking and how to
work with them."
Why Soccer at Evergreen?
Jan Lambertz, director of Evergreen
Recreation and Athletics, maintains
that creativity abounds on the soccer
field. "Most people don't think of sport
as a particularly creative activity. But
that's because they're not the one on
the soccer field, whose mind is racing
with the beauty of the movement and
the exhilaration of all the things that
are happening.
"That may not have its greatest
creative effect on the soccer field," says
Lambertz who has rotated into the
faculty this year to teach in the
"Human Health and Behavior" program, "but the aftereffect of the
creative process enriches all other
aspects of their lives." Quoting Faculty
Member Guy Adams, she adds, "If you

want to grow and keep learning, you
have to break a mental and physical
sweat every day of your Me."
Communication, cooperation and versatility, says Lambertz, also make soccer an ideal sport for Evergreen.
Ritual and celebration, she adds, are
extremely important things which any
young institution will inevitably
develop. "We are doing sports very
much according to our value system.
Often our athletes will come away from
a game feeling as if they've had a
tremendously successful win when in
fact the score of the game says
otherwise."
For those of us
who grew up on double plays, touchdowns and slam dunks, soccer is a
sport that is not yet in our blood, but
requires studying.
The study is rewarding. In a recent
game, the Evergreen men's team trails
Pacific University, 1-0. The Geoducks
control the ball more than their opponents, but their drives end up either
out-of-bounds or as easy dribblers to
Pacific's goalie. As the minutes tick
away in the second hah", the groans and
sighs of disappointment coming from
the fans grows louder.
But then midfielder Darren England
lofts a chip shot over the defenders and
in perfect position for striker Tim
Joyce to make a run at the goal. A
defender is right with him, though, and
they look like one animal with two
heads and four wild legs. Somewhere
in all that mayhem is the ball and it
doesn't seem as they near the left side
of the goal that Joyce will have enough
time and control to stop and shoot. But
just when he is about to go past the
goal, Joyce passes deftly across the
mouth of the goal to a spot 30 yards
away where striker John Small
materializes to kick the ball home.
We cheer wildly not just for the goal,
but for the beauty of execution, for all
the sweating hours that made it possible. It is theory and concept made actual. It is also 1-1.

Culliton Comes
Home for
Coaching Debut
by Bob Reed,
Sports Information Intern
Evergreen's new Women's Soccer
Coach Jane Culliton radiates energy.
No matter what the time of day, she
always seems to have just come from a
sunrise swim—fresh and ready to run.
"It's exciting to be here," she says,
"exciting to build a good young team."
Culliton, 25, comes to her first college coaching position from coaching a
JV basketball team at North Thurston
High School in Lacey. ("The two
sports," she says, "are amazingly
similar") She's no stranger to
Evergreen's soccer fields, having
played here as a student until she
graduated in 1983.
Culliton, who focused on health
sciences and women's studies at
Evergreen, feels the school's environment is a healthy one for sports.
"There's nothing wrong with competition." she explains, "I think cooperation
and competition are linked together.
That's what Evergreen's all about."
When not coaching soccer, Culliton
enjoys gardening, rowing, basketball,
hiking and reading. "Jane really
epitomizes the whole person," says
Director of Recreation and Athletics
Jan Lambertz, "She really loves sports,
but her next best love is books."
Right now Culliton is infusing her
best thought and spirit into the
women's soccer team. "We're not competing with each other like I've felt on
other teams," says freshman striker
Erica Buchanan, "Jane's really fostered
an atmosphere where everybody cares
a lot about each other. It's fun!"

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AlumNews
-'• •*•

Newsletter
of the
Alumni
Association

Greener
Roots

H*V

HI

Editor's note: this is the first of a series
about the early development of
Evergreen "culture" by Elizabeth
Diffendal, faculty member in anthropology, who asked alums to share their
experiences during Evergreen's early
days. She plans to use the information
in a doctoral thesis, but offered to
share some of it with the ReView.

Married since 1974, Enid Newberg and Gary Lorentzen live in Seattle where she
works for the law firm of Skellenger, Ginsberg and Bender and he teaches
German and international relations at Edmonds High School. Newberg's
interests Include computers and dance, while Lorentzen is currently working on
a master's in Germanics at Portland State University. While Enid and Gary rollerskate for fun, he rolled to the 1984 Washington State Intermediate Dance Championship with partner Tami Glancey of Lynnwood. Newberg and Lorentzen have
two children, Brita, 10, and Eric, 8.

"We often called ourselves 'Rainbow
Warriors' in those early years of
1971-75.. .(and) romantically fancied
ourselves as modern America's 'noble
savages,' reincarnated to plant the
seeds for the return of a 'true' American consciousness and spirituality.
"Evergreen—the faculty, the students, the 'culture' and the experience—gave me historical perspective
and a tremendous appreciation for the
humanities and Humanity. I decided,
as a result, to become a teacher.
"I no longer have shoulder-length
hair and I haven't sat in on an
'extended' seminar since I left Evergreen. But I still try to adopt and
adapt what I learn to my life and life
style. I still think of myself as a Rainbow Warrior, albeit, a bit faded over
the years, all of which, I suppose, keeps
me a Greener at heart, and keeps the
'cultural' aspect of the experience
alive."
Gary Lorentzen,
Class of 1975

The
Evergreen
State
College

"A group of my friends heard of Evergreen and we went to Olympia to see
this new college. All that existed was a
large mudhole, a partly-finished library
and a few trailer-offices in a gravel
parking lot. We spoke with a couple of
people who were working on the initial
planning. I was enchanted.
"When Evergreen opened the next
fall, the first week of camping and the
next month of meeting at homes set a
pattern of interaction that did not
change for the three years I attended.
Immense energy was generated by
openness which allowed students to
delve deeply into all aspects of a question. The lifestyles of the students
became an experiential example of
what was being studied. Certain
houses and dorms even took on a personality that persisted in spite of
various students moving in and out.
"Evergreen left me with practical
skills and with a way of viewing the
world from the standpoint of the interrelationship of all things. While my
working partner in a downtown law
firm is part of the office book exchange
of the latest best sellers, I keep bringing back books from the library on
various religions, the feminine face of
God, human energy systems.. .and
then skittering to speculate on various
applications of computers."
Enid Newberg,
Class of 1974

Alum Notes
Class «f 1013
Glenn and Judith Cook Tucker, Danbury, CT,
have a second child, Daniel Cook Tucker, born
April 15, 1984.

Class of 1974
Enid D. Newberg, Seattle, WA. See story this
page.

Class of 197S
Gary D. Lorentzen, Seattle, WA. See story this
page.
James F. Moore, Arlington, MA, will be leaving
the research faculty at Harvard Business School
to manage a new company he and his friends have
founded to provide consulting services in information systems and education. Incorporated in
February, The Center for Expert Systems, Inc.
has an educational package for management
training called "situation analyst." In addition, he
will also be writing a textbook with Richard T.
Pascale of the Stanford Business School on
management strategy and implementation.
Gary Mozel, Seattle, WA, is a teacher in the
Seattle Academy of Arts and Sciences during the
winter months and a naturalist in Olympia during
the summer. He is also a freelance writer.
Diane (Dootson) Royal, Seattle, WA, is weaving
and selling at crafts fairs, fashion shows and is
part of the Seattle Designer Group. She reports
she enjoys being in her 30's, and is doing a lot of
work on a Mac-computer.
Bill Tomlinson, Portland, OR, is an RN in
Pediatrics/PICU in Portland at Bess Kaiser
Hospital.

Class of 1078
Felipe Q. Atalig, Saipan, Cm, has left a political
career after 12 years and is now owner of Casa de
Felipe, a motel/hotel.
Karen England, Seattle, WA, continues working
full time at the University Bookstore to support
her musical interests. She plays fiddle with the
Northwest's popular Cajun band "How's Bayou."
Karen Goldman, Philadelphia, PA, is more than
two-thirds through with Drexel University's
graduate program in science and technical communication. In June she will begin a six month
internship at IBM in Kingston, New York, where
she will assist with the writing and production of
computer manuals.
Timothy A. Gregg, Vancouver, WA, received his
Ph.D. in counseling psychology from the University of Texas at Austin, May, 1985.
Lynn and Jody Hornbrook, Spokane, WA, report
that a number of the alumni who attended Ever-

green between 1972-1976 will remember a wellloved golden retriever named Burr who roamed
the Evergreen campus. On April 6, 1985, at 13
years of age, he passed on.
Gordon Brent Ingram, Rome, Italy, is presently
enrolled at UC Berkeley in the Ph.D. program in
Environmental Planning. He is finishing his
dissertation and consulting with the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization and the
consultative group on Intern Agricultural
Research Secretariat—World Bank on conservation of the genetic resources of wild plants.
Judith Mosier, Seattle, WA, received her B.S.
cum laude in nursing from Seattle University.

Michael E. Corrigan, Beverly Hills, CA, has
been named president of Gibraltar Financial Corporation (GFC). Michael joins Gibraltar from
Great Northern Insured Annuity Corporation
(GNA) where he served as vice-president of institutional marketing. He was previously regional
manager for tax investments for Merrill Lynch
Pierce Fenner & Smith. Michael holds an MBA in
finance and an MA in economics from the University of Washington.
Jill Stewart, Los Angeles, CA, is covering
government and politics as a reporter for the
L. A. Times. She lives in Hollywood and does a
lot of traveling. She was awarded the Los Angeles
Press Club first prize for the best newswriting of
1984. The article that won top honors concerned
the county government's illegal denial of the free
health care of the poor and sick.
Margaret Stratton, Olympia, WA, has been hired
to work in Photo Services at Evergreen. She
returns to Olympia from Albuquerque, New
Mexico, where she recently received her M.F.A.
in photography and art history from the University of New Mexico. Stratton has worked for
Photography Northwest and Yuen Lui Studio in
Seattle, for Kim Jew Studio in Albuquerque, and
as a teaching assistant at UNM.
Carl Wolfhagen, Olympia, WA, is working as a
research investigator for DSHS. He is married to
Ellen Youdin Wolfhagen, an attorney. Their son,
Eli, had his first birthday in May.

Oawsof 107*
Martin and Carolyn Biedermann, live in
Tucson, AZ.
Charles W. Haviland, Spanaway, WA, announces
his June graduation from City University with an
MBA. In 1979, he formed Accuracy Unlimited, a
land surveying firm located in Spanaway and he
has taught land surveying courses at Fort
Steilacoom Community College. He is married to
Sherry Schaefer of Tacoma. Their son, Benjamin
James, is one year old.

Randall Henery, Grandview Heights, OH,
announced his graduation from Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine in June.
Nancy Luenn (Jones), Seattle, WA, will have her
third book, a young adult novel entitled Arctic
Unicorn, published by Atheneum Publishers in
the spring of 1986.
Christopher Meyers, New York City, is currently
working on a Ph.D. in clinical psychology at
Graduate Faculty of Political and Social Science,
New School for Social Research. He received an
M.A. in general psychology in June '83. He is
married and has a three and a half month old son,
Adrian.
John Pohl, Urbana, IL, is enjoying his new job at
the Champaign County Mental Health Center
where he is a therapist with a project aimed at
deflecting extremely troubled adolescents from
out-of-home placement and smoothing the return
home

Curtis Milton, Roseburg, OR, has taken a job
with the Roseburg News-Review as an assistant
news editor.
Jonathan Stevens, Cambridge, MA, received his
master's in civil engineering and computer
science from M.I.T. in August.
Geoff Young, Seattle, WA, President of the
Washington Natural Gag Company which produced comedy shows at Bloch's Comedy Laff Loft on
Queen Anne Hill, and Comedy East at R. Gyles
in Redmond. He founded the company in 1983
with his wife, Mary Schickling-Young ('80). Geoff
is also an accomplished stand-up comedian, and
won an award for the "most creative comedy
writer of 1984" in Seattle. His bookings have included Caesar's in Lake Tahoe, The Punchline in
San Francisco and The Comedy Underground in
Seattle.

John Beauchamp, Laurel, MD, began his own
company J & B Studios, where he frames and
sells his own photos.
Daniel Botkin, Wendell Depot, MA, has been
teaching at, and promoting, a fledgling alternative high school in New Salem, MA, for two
and a half years. The newly revived New Salem
Academy serves 25 students and offers a rigorous,
project-centered curriculum. In expanding to a
five-person teaching team, NSA recently hired
another Evergreen alum, Leslee Cassel '81.
Cynthia C. Goodwin, Tempe, AZ, is in her last
year of a master of social work program. She is
focusing on planning, administration and community development.

John Kriebel, Bethesda, MD, is planning a trip
around the world. He wants to visit as many
alums in Europe, Africa and Asia as he can, so
let's hear from you so we can give him your
address. He is working as an editor and publications coordinator in the Washington, D.C., area.
Paul R. Looper, Watkinsville, GA, just finished
his second year of law school at the University of
Georgia. He is working for the Legal Environmental Assistance Foundation of Atlanta on
energy conservation issues.
Anna Plummer, Burlington, VT, is happily living
and cooking like crazy in beautiful Vermont.
Mary Schickling-Young is vice president of the
Washington Natural Gag Company founded in
1983 by her husband, Geoff Young ('79) and
herself. She was voted "most promising new
comic" in Seattle and went on to win the 1984
Spokane International Stand-Up Comedy Competition, becoming only the second woman ever to
win a comedy competition.
Debra Williams, Seattle, WA, has been employed
in the cataloging department of King County
Library System for five years. She is attending
the Graduate School of Science at the University
of Washington on a part-time basis while working
full-time
Marissa Kaij Zwick, Evanston, IL, has been
selected for inclusion in the 1984 edition of
Outstanding Young Women of America. This
awards program seeks to recognize the talents,
abilities and successes of exceptional young
women throughout America between the ages of
21 and 36.

Philip Bennett, Syracuse, NY, is finishing his
master's in environmental chemistry at SUNY
Environmental Sciences and Forestry and starting a Ph.D. in geology at Syracuse.
Thomas and Dorey Whealan Buell, Charleston
WV. Tbm is assistant business/labor editor of the
Charleston Gazette and contributor to the The
New York Times on subjects including the United
Mine Workers and the chemical industry. Dorey is
manager of Waldenbooks in Charleston and has
had the top sales in her district.
Brian P. Johnson, Seattle, WA, is now enrolled in
the master of architecture program at the
University of Washington, and loves it.

Eric L. Einspruch, Miami, FL, received his
M.S.Ed. in community mental health counseling
in May. In addition to working at the University
of Miami Medical School's Phobia Clinic, he is also
working on his Ph.D. in educational research and
evaluation. He is also training in Shaolin Kung Fu
and Yang style Tai-Chi Chuan.

Unsoeid Fund
Reaches
Brings 'Em Back Summit
Hundreds of graduates returned to
campus June 8-9 for a weekend of nonstop fun beginning with the CoJlege's
7th annual Super Saturday.
N
A popular place for alums was their
very own Geoduck Lounge set up by
long-time Alumni Association Board
member, Mike Hall '74, next to the
beer garden.
Again, alumni barbecued chicken
proved to be a Super Saturday winner.
As the last piece of chicken was sold
shortly before 7 p.m., Alumni Association board member and "Chicken
Chair," Nancie Payne and her crew of
loyal alumni volunteers, were relieved
to be able to take a well-earned rest.
Over 300 alumni and friends rocked
out to The Ducks Saturday night in a
sell-out dance at the Olympia Ballroom. By Sunday, a few revelers made
it to graduation ceremonies and still
more to the mud race behind the Blue
Heron Bakery on Mud Bay Road. Late
in the day, many of the previous evening's dancers and the mud racers
joined with alumni, graduating seniors,
their parents and friends at the
meadow party on Driftwood Road for
still more dancing.
As one alum said, "Wow! What a
weekend!"

Susan Kerber, Lacey, WA has been employed for
the past three and a half years as special assistant to the executive director of Sound Home
Health Services of Thurston-Mason Counties. She
is in charge of public relations, fundraising,
development and community needs assessments.
Donald Nitchie, Greensboro, MD, just graduated
from Columbia University's MFA program in
poetry. While in New York he worked for the
Poetry Society of America and tutored school
dropouts.
Buddy L. Treadway, Kennewick, WA, is a project
manager at UNC Nuclear Company.
Virginia R. Treadway, Kennewick, WA, is a
presentations representative in the Communications Dept. of UNC Nuclear Co. She is nearing
completion of her master's in clinical psychology
from Eastern Washington University.
Jessica Treat, Mexico City, Mexico, is teaching
English and survived the earthquake okay.

Eric Barrett, Hollywood, CA, is working on the
soon-to-be-released science fiction/action film,
"The Last Frontier."
Celeste Burke, Annapolis, MD, has graduated
from St. John's College (Annapolis) and is completing her certification requirements to teach
math and science at the middle school level in the
state of Maryland.
Dan Gorham, Driggs, ID, is editor of the Teton
Valley News in Driggs.
W. Peter Miller, Hollywood, CA, married in 1983
and moved to Los Angeles in the summer of 1984.
He is working as the editor on his first feature
film, "The Last Frontier," a science-fiction action
film.
Emily Nitchie, Greensboro, MD, completed her
B.A. at the University of Iowa and has been a
reporter for the Martha's Vineyard Times for the
past year.
Ralph Potter and Elaine Clarke-Potter, Pepper
Pike, OH, were married September 8, 1985, in
New Haven, CT.

Peg G. McAdam, Lynn, MA, has been accepted
into Harvard University for a master's program
in counseling and consulting psychology.
Rena Shawver and Randy Oakes, Tacoma, WA,
were married, August 11, 1985 in Tacoma, WA.
Nancy K. Prosch, Olympia, WA, married John J.
Hacker, currently an Evergreen student, on July
27, 1985. She is employed by Robert Shay, M.D.,
while Hacker is employed by Dykman Painting.

The campaign to raise $100,000 to endow the Willi Unsoeid Seminar Program at Evergreen came to a very successful conclusion in August. With the
announcement on August 6 that over
$50,000 in gifts and pledges had been
received, the college immediately
qualified for two $25,000 challenge
grants, one from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the other
from the Bullitt Foundation of Seattle.
Nicholas Clinch, an old friend of
Unsoeld's and former national president of the Sierra Club, served as
chairman of the fundraising effort.
Commenting on the success of the
Unsoeid Fund campaign, Clinch noted:

"This Fund is immensely important
their lives. They will challenge and
for Evergreen. It memorializes a truly stretch the imagination.
The Unsoeid Committee recently anunique and talented man, a man who
nounced that Roger Fisher, a Williston
served as a model and an inspiration
for those who knew him. The Fund will Professor of Law in the Harvard
University School of Law, will be the
keep his memory and vision alive and
well. The success of this campaign also first Unsoeid Fellow. Fisher, also a
shows all of us who are friends of Ever- friend of Unsoeld's, is one of the
world's most widely respected
green just how important our support
is to the college. It shows all of us what authorities on negotiation. His work inis possible for Evergreen. On behalf of cludes numerous studies of international negotiation processes and laborthe Committee, I would like to again
management negotiations. Well known
thank all of the people who have
helped to make this program a reality." for his nation-wide bestseller, Getting
to Yes: Negotiating Agreement Without
Each year, the Seminar Fund will
Giving In, Fisher will bring a unique
bring one or more individuals to camand valuable perspective to Evergreen.
pus to participate in seminars, workDates for this first Unsoeid Seminar
shops, lectures and other activities.
program are currently being arranged,
The Unsoeid Fellows will be people
and will be announced in the Winter
who exemplify Willi's concern for the
edition of the Evergreen ReView.
quality of life. They will demonstrate
this concern in their writing, in their
activities, and in the way they lead

Don and Joy K. Dybeck
F. Duncan Eader
Bob and Betty Eisner
Pat Emerson
Anonymous (3)
Stan Engle
Jonathan J. Ach
John and Marilyn Erickson
Charles and Mary Lou Adams
Dan and Nancy Evans
Chuck Adams
Executive Con. Grp.
Will Ames
Marjory Farguhar
Cynthia and Theodore Anderson
Carl Faucett
Julian Ansel
Patrick amd Suzanne Feeney
Bill Arney
Rick Fernald
Barbara Babson and Bev Dobbin
Benjamin G. Ferris, Jr.
Charles and Nancy Bagley
Cindy Fey
Jeffrey D. Barton
F.R. Fierson
Robert and Gail Bates
Donald L. and Susan K. Fink
Judith Bayard
Don and Sue Finkel
Mrs. Charles Bean
Joseph C. Firey
Robert and Allison Belcher
Roger and Carrie Fisher
George I. Bell
Carol L. Fitch
A. B. Benfield
Robert M. Ford
Neil Bennett
Jo Frankfourth
Philip C. Bennett
Karen Fraser and Tim Malone
Martin Berger
The Freas Foundation, Inc.
Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Berry
R.W. French
Barbara Biebush
Ann Friedman and Tom Johnston
Robert and Betty Bigelow
Clifford Frost
Douglas Bingham
F.M. Fruyxell
Kay Bishoprick
Kurt and Virginia Galle
Eugene and Illiene Boawn
Norine Gerson
Lee and Betty Bomberger
Keith Gibson
Linda and & Lundin Bondurant
Leslie Gile
Dr. and Mrs. John Bonica
Sven and Shelby Gilje
L. and D. Gerstenberg Bookey
C.R. Gittings
Jane Boone
Lynne Givler
Joan N. Boothe
Helen Gleichman
Eunice C. Brandt
Peggy and Scott McGovern-Browri Neil Gleichman
Jocelyn Glidden
Linda Brownell
Rolf and Julie Goetze
Ed Boulton
Don Goodman and N. Rayburn
The Bowron-Schuberts
Gregory Goodman
Sam Bradley
Robert and Lloydine Graham
Mary Louise Breitenbach
Russell and Marcia Gregg
Dr. Bert Brown
Tim Gregg
Evelyn Browne
Margaret and Paul Gribskov
Carlos Buhler
Curtice and Bridget Griffin
Bullitt Foundation
G. Peter Grote
Thomas and Clara Butler
Elena M. Guilfoil
Tim and Nora Burke
Julia Gulden
Bartlett and Gladys Burns
Thomas and Jan Gunn
Irene Butts
Peter H. Hackett, M.D.
Robert C. Butts
Jeanne Hahn
Russell Cahfll
David Hambly
Ellen Bruckner Cain
Paul J. Hall
Carel Camerer
Mark T. Handley
Betty and Arnie Campbell
Nixon Handy and Paula Casey
Susan F. Campbell
Andrew Hanfman
Frances E. Carey
R. L. Hardison
H. Adams Carter
Lawrence Harms
Peter and Deborah Carter
A. Harper and K. Knutson
Chemgrate Corporation
Morgan Harris
John and Elizabeth Cherburg
Vincent and Frederick Hart
Chevron U.S.A., Inc.
Elizabeth Hawley
Yvon Chouinard
Denny and Paula Heck
Mr. and Mrs. J.L. Chrisman
Janet Heintzman
Theodore H. Church
and Andrew Lindsey
Bruce Corwin and Pam Clifton
Kenneth Henderson
Nicholas Clinch
Susan Herman
M. Clymer
James Hollandsworth
Diana and Mike Cohen
Charles and Jalien Hollister
James A. Colmon
Thomas Hornbein, M.D.
Paul and Thelma Conner
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Houston
Herbert and Gini Curl
Herb Hultgren
Thad and Joanne Curtz
Gov. James R Hunt
William and Sandra Cushman
Jasper Hunt
Jacqueline Daniels
Elmer Huntley
Dr. Fred T. Darvill Jr.
Molly K. lyall
John M. Davis
Gertrude F. Jacob
Linda Davis
Debra Janison
Joseph A. Dear
Brian Pelton Johnson
Thomas DeCarlo
Bruce Johnson and Paige Miller
Patricia DeLisa
Carolyn Jean Johnson
Robert and C. George Densmore
Carol Dickerson and M J. Layton Catherine A. Johnson
Ralph W. Johnson
Robert and Mary Dill
Ernie Jones
Jerry S. Dixon
Bill Kaltenthaler
Carolyn Dobbs and Russ Fox
Mary C. Keeney
Mr. and Mrs. John Dobbin
Ken and Kathleen Kennedy
Kathryn A. Dodge
Jim Kennett and Calen Bristow
Gayer Dominick
Keith and Mary King
Oskar Dorfmann
Lovern King
Sonam and Wanchuk Dorjee
Rob and Helena Knapp
John Dorrance
Carolyn Koehnline
Alan R. Drengson
Jill H. Koepke
Susan A. Dubisson
Chris Kopczynski
William W. Dunmire
Ronald Kotzsch
Robert Dunnagan
Lew and Carol Krakauer
Ed Dunster
Ada Keith Kramer
John Durrance

Unsoeid Seminar
Fund

Donna Kreiensieck
Paul and Jean Lafferty
Delmar N. Langbauer
Craig and Nancy Leman
Dick and Doris Leonard
Jim Lester
Laurita Leuthold
Mark Levensky
Meg Levine
Carsten and Christi Lien
Jeann and John Lohmann, Jr.
Layne Longfellow
Kenneth Luedeke
Stephen Lundin
Susan Marie Lux
Marguerite and Rob MacArthur
Walt Madden
Tom Maguire
Anne and Alan Mandel
Dawn J. Marshall
Elliot and Jean Marvel
Cole Mason
Pamela Matthews
and J.H. Schubert
Mr. and Mrs. WV. Graham
Matthews
Carol A. Maynard
Kimberly A. Maynard
Thorn C. and Patty McClintock
Tom A. McCrumm
M. Craig McKibben
Earle and Susan McNeil
Roger D. Mellem
Karen Merrill
Carl and Maurine Merryman
George and Amey
Messerschmidt
Dorothy Mierow
Lula A. Miller
Maynard M. Miller
Will Miller
Bob Moffit
C.M. and B.A. Molenaar
Dee and Colleen Molenaar
Christopher T. Moore
Richard and Romola Moore
Terns and Katrina Moore
Henry and Joan Moravec
Hope R. Morgan
Jim Morgan
Frances A. Mullen
Tom Mumford and Nancy Smith
Anne and Alan Mundel
Margaret Murie
Mary and Bob Murphy
Michael Nadel
Dr. Roderick Nash
Pam and Michael Nath
National Endowment for
the Humanities
Hal and Molly Sue Neace
Don J. and Jeanne C. Neff
Frances Nemtin
Louise Nett
R. Scott Newcomb
Donna Nickerson
Einar and Annie Nilsson
Faith and Tom Norris
John Nuveen & Co. Inc.
Malcolm and Marjorie Odell
Malcolm J. Odell, Jr.
The Rev. and Mrs. Warren Ost
Joseph F. and Joyce E. Palaia
Shirley Parkinson
Barbara S. Paulson
Louis Pearson
Barbara and William Perry
Thomas and Carol Petty
Paul Pfau
Nancy and Bob Pfeiffer
Mr. and Mrs. James Plant
Stephen C. Porter
Amy Poundstone
Jeremy Pratt
Grace A. Prest
Neil A. Pritz
Margaret Prouty, M.D.
David Putnam, Jr.
Alexander Pye
R.E.I., Inc.
Syd and Linda Piadinovsky
Julia D. Ragsdale
Fleet C. Ratleff
Barbara and Don Reid
Robert and Susan Rheault
Nita Rinehart
D. Roberts and J.W. Whittaker
Gil Roberts

Charles Robinson
Peter and Arija Robinson
Wm. T. and Katia Robins<m
Dan and Rita Robinson
Rich Rodger
Stephen H. Roper
Steve Ross
Gail Rothrock
G. James Rouch and C. Wayburn
M. and Dana I llo-Rutherford
Sandra Salstrom
Douglas Sayan
Shelby Scales and Joan Hansen
Laurie and K. Schaetzel-Hill
Stefan Schinzinger
Robert and Marsha Schoene
Mark C.W. Schroeder
John and Miriam Schubert
H. Frederick and Ellen Schug
Mark and Louise Sears
Henry and Joan Seasholes
Verne A. Seelye
f
George Senner
/
Carolyn Servid
Edward C. Sharp
'"^~
Shell Oil Co.
John Skillern
Joanna Skinner
Kirk H. Smith
Harold and Ruth Smock
Helen Sommers
Oscar and Barbara Soule
Sam Soule
Jess and Hanna Spielhholz
Mr. aand Mrs. Lyman Spitzer
David Sprague
Richard St. Onge, M.D.
Barbara Stebbins
Allen Steck
Pete Steilberg
James C. and Jean M. Stephens
Scott and Guri Stevenson
Thomas Stich
Susie Strasser
Michael Stratton
Theodore P. Streibert
Daniel and Ann Streissguth
Jeanne and John Strong-Ovetich
Kaye Sullivan
Bill and Louise Sumner
Jeffrey B. Sundberg
Patrick Sutherland
Bob Swanson
Timothy and Marilyn Takaro
Richard Talcott
Renwick and Virginia Taylor
Nancy Taylor
Daniel Taylor-Ide
Kevin L. Thomas
Daniel R. Tishman
David W. Towle
Dr. Edward J. Trione
Margaret C. Tunks
Rex Underwood
Jolene Unsoeid
Waldtraut Unsoeid
Lois Van Valkenbuorg
Dick and Jean Van Wagenen
William and Joanne Veatch
Peter and Page von Mertens
Ian Wade
Vic Walsh
William and Elizabeth Warren
Bryna Webber
Jeanette Weston
Joe and Verona Wheeler
Kyle Wienk and Mark Noble
Carlyn J. Wickman
Peter and Elizabeth Willauer
Evan R. and Choleann 0. Williams
Fran A. Williams
Charles C. Williamson
John and Perry Williamson
David and Doris Willis
Rachel D. Wolff
Ron and Melissa Woodbury
T. Evans and Ann Wyckoff
Burle Yolles
Ian Yolles
Ted Young
Rick Youst
Byron L. and Bemice L. Youtz
Gregory Youtz
Margaret and Wblcott P. Youtz
Albert L. Zesiger
Elizabeth Zima
T.C. Price Zimmerman
Irwin Zuckerman

1984-85 Best Ever For
Evergreen Fund Raising

Evergreen 100 Club (Gifts of $100-$249)

In 1984-85, for the fifth year in a
row, the value of gifts received by
The Evergreen State College
Foundation reached a record
high. Private support to the
college totaled $469,054, a 66%
increase over the 1983-84 level.
New records were achieved in all
gift categoriea
More people and organizations than
ever before made gifts to Evergreen.
Especially encouraging was the increase in gifts from Evergreen alumni.
About 10% of our alumni now support
the college with a contribution, up
dramatically from the 4% of five years
ago. The national average for colleges
and universities is about 15%, so
Evergreen is closing the gap.
Thanks in part to a special challenge
grant from several friends, the
Evergreen Annual Fund reached
$91,417, 30% above the pace-setting
1983-84 level. Gifts to the Annual Fund
are unrestricted, and are used for a
variety of purposes, including scholarships and special projects.

The amount received for designated
purposes ($156,639) was about 250%
above last year's level, while gifts of
equipment and supplies from
businesses and corporations also set a
record.
It is impossible to overestimate the
importance of private gifts to the college. For Evergreen, the support of
friends, parents, and alumni means the
difference between a merely good
education and a great education.
The Evergreen State College thanks
all of the people and organizations
listed here, the folks who help to make
Evergreen such a remarkable
experience.

President's Club
Cooper Point Club
(Gifts of $1,000 and above) (Gifts of $500-$999)

Tower Club
(Gifts of $250-$499)

Anonymous (2)
W.P. and Elizabeth Balderston
Wes and Marie Berglund
Gerald and Patricia Blakely
David 0. Brownwood
Katherine M. Bullitt
Jim Carlson
Henry and Dorothy Dixon
Wilbur G. Downs
John and Marilyn Erickson
Vicky D. Friend
Dr. and Mrs. Ulriche Fritzsche
Herbert and Carol Fuller
Bill and Claire Fuller
H. Warren and Gerry Ghormley
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Halvor Halvorson
Jim and Maurie Haseltine
Ira and Jean Hurlburt
John W. Johnson
Lewis and Joan Jones
John F. Koons
Gerald L. Lassen
Barbara B. MacPhail
George Mante
Dr. and Mrs. C.S. Matthews
Charles and Barbara McCann
Raymond and Jeanne Meredith
Bob and Carol Olson
Dennis and Joan Peterson
Rainier Bank
Fleet C. Ratliff
Robert and Letitia Reeves
William B. Reilly, III
Saga, Inc.
Jonathan S. Scheuer
Virginia Schmidt
Peter Schoening
Orin and Janet Smith
Bruce and Mary Stevenson
Tektronix, Inc.
Joan and Mort Thomas
Ibtem Ocean Trailer
Express, Inc.
Sid and Pat Matheny-White
Walter and Marie Williams
Gary and Sandra Worrell

Clifford and Charlotte Alterman
Martin Berger
Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Berry
Nick and
Renee Couchee-Blattner
Joan Boothe
William and
Mary Elizabeth Bowen
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Childs
Robert Cole
Ritannette Cooper
Michael Coplen
D. A. and Patricia Delisa
Ann Dear Gavell
Fred Goldberg
Patricia W. Griffith
John Hennessey
Jasper Stewart Hunt, Jr.
Japanese-American
Citizens League
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Litzinger
Don and Jeanne Neff
Wesley Norman
Barbara and David W. Paulsen
Nancy and Bob Pfeiffer
Thurman and Laura Poston
Rita R. Robison
Gayle Rothrock
Warren and Virginia Simms
Gordon and Sallie Sylliaasen
Susan Washburn
Evan and Chloe Ann Williams
David and Doris Willis
Burle Yolles

Edward and Yvonne Cozier
Yvon Chouinard
Nicholas B. Clinch
James Dinerman
Dan and Nancy Evans
Bill Grinstein
Ralph W. Johnson
Roger D. Mellem
Christina Meserve
James and Peggy Peeler
G. James and
Cynthia Wayburn-Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Spitzer, Jr.
B^red Thunberg
Helene Van Buren
David E. Wagoner
T. Evans Wyckoff

Charles and Mary Lou Adams
Durwood and Dorys Alkire
Edward Alkire and
Charlotte Olson-Alkire
Walker Allen
Bobby Altman
Jamie Anderson
Sandra and Stephen Anderson
Anne Appleby
Charles and Nancy Bagley
Eliot Bartlett
Jeffrey Barton
Carolyn Bassett
Joan Battuello
Judith Bayard
Robert and Nancy Becker
George Bell
James Bennett
Neil Bennett
Alan and Carol Bensman
Richard Bever
Claudia Beyer
Mary Alice Billings
Mary Bley
Linda Bondurant and
Steve Lundin
Jack Bozarth
Herbert and Shirley Bridge
J. Henry and Barbara Brockhaus
Bert and Anna Brown
Bartlett and Gladys Burns
Robert Butts
Russ Cahill
Norman Calvo
H. Adams and Ann Carter
Mr. and Mrs. John Carver
Lawton Case
Donald and Malpina Chan
Elaine Childs-Gowell
Richard and Donna Childs
J.L. and Isobel Chrisman
Mr. and Mrs. Atlee Clapp
Kenneth Coffin
Winifred and Jack Colwill
Mr. and Mrs. John Conroy, Sr.
Barbara Cooley
Michael Corrigan
John and Mary Frances Couch
Larry Couch
Norman and Ann Cover
Susan Graver
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Crawford
Nancy Cress
Debbie Creveling and
Don Whiting
Frank W. Cubbon, Jr.
Albert and Charlotte Dangler
Terry Denny
Goerge and Susan Dimitroff
Stephen and Lucienne Dimitroff
Eleanor Dornan
William and Judith Driscoll
William Eckert
Pat Emerson
William Eshbaugh, III
Duane and Nada Estes
George E. Fairclough
Marjory Farquhar
Mary K. Feldman
Robert Fellows
Richard Fernald
Susan and Donald Finkel
Robert Louis Foster
James and Georgia Fowler
Carolyn Dobbs and Russell Fox
John F. Gallagher
William N. Gates
Ann Dear Gavell
George and Ellen Ghilarducci
Don and Marguerite Gibbs
Svein and Shelby Gilje
Richard F. Gilpin
Sally Giovine-Kerr
George and Lila Girvin
Neil Gleichman
Peter Gradjansky
Julie Grant
Mrs. Betty Gray
Harry and Rosemary Gregg
Julia Gulden
Paul J. Hall
Andrew and Dara Hanfman
Joan Hanson and Shelby Scates
Barbara Harmala
Vincent S. Hart, Jr.
Frederick M. Hart
Elizabeth Hawley
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Haynes
Scott Henderson and
Nina Wolsk
John Hennessey, III
John and Jean Hennessey
Christina and Joseph Hennessey
Joy Hilliard
Mark and Marilyn Hoehne
Bruce and Wilma Holbrook
Charles and Jalien Hollister
Thomas F. Hornbein
Walter and Teddy Howe
Sherman Huffine
Willard Humphreys
Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr.
Ernest and Ruth Hurwitz
Mary Huston
Frederick and Mae Hutchison
Jacob and Sarah Jacobson
Debra Louise Janison
Bruce Johnson and Paige Miller
Carolyn Johnson
Catherine Johnson
Sara Johnson
Gilbert and Betty Jones
Henry C. Judd
Samuel X. Kaplan
Kim Kaufman
Eleanore Kenny
Raymond and Eula Kirby
Daniel Koch

Christina Koons
Lewis and Carol Krakauer
George and Isabelle Lamb
Janice Lambertz
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Lauer
Craig and Nancy Leman
Jim Lester
Cristi Painter Lien
Drennan Lindsay
Ruth Ann Lord
Lars and Nancy Lorentzen
R.W. and Norma Lucas
Susan Marie Lux
John Lyons
James and Nancy MacWhinney
Mary and John Maffeo
Rona and Harvey Malofsky
Hal and Roberta McClary
James and Kathleen McDowell
James and Jacqueline McFerran
John R. McLane, Jr.
Mr. and Mrs. David McLean
D. Peter and Shirlee Meador
Carson Miller and
Jack Van Valkenburgh
Lula Miller
Maynard M. Miller
Pamela A. Miller
Doris Moffett
James Moore
Prof, and Mrs. Tal Morash
Edwin C. Mueller
John Murray
Melissa Naso-Kaplan
Scott Newcomb
Charles Nishida
Wesley Norman
Col. and Mrs. William O'Neill
Richard and Patricia Oltman
Daniel and Harriet Ostermann
Martyn and Candace Owen
William H. Page, II
Hamilton and Muriel Page
Panorama City Supper Club
Mr. and Mrs. Stuyvesant Pell
Dennis and Regina Peters
Gary and Rosemary Peterson
Thomas and Carol Petty
George K. Pickett
Robert J. Preble
Frank and Jeanne Pritchard
Neil Pritz
Wallace W. Quistorff
Marvin and Mary-Lynne Reiner
Mary Jane Resch
Maryan Reynolds
Gilbert Roberts
Peter and Arija Robinson
William and Katia Robinson
Eugene and Carole Roecks
Stephen H. Roper
Irwin and Zelda Rose
Marianne and Philip Ross
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Saltzman
Oscar and Lois Sandberg
John and Joan Schick
John and Miriam Schubert
Henry C. Seasholes
Emily Sherwood
George and Clara Shinn
Gillian Ann Siegrist
Chester Silva
James and Susan Sink
Maxine K. Sitts
John Skillern
Sarah and Al Skinner
Carolyn W. Smith
Kirk H. Smith
Ronald Smoire
Amigo and Mildred Soriano
Mark Souder
Samuel D. Soule
South Sound Maritime Society
South Sound Sailing Society
Mr. and Mrs. William Staley, Jr.
Herbert and Paulina Stark
Pete Steilberg
Nancy Gray Stevens and
Charles Davis
H. D. and Joan Stiggelbout
Carl E. Stracener
Susan M. Strasser
Philip and Doris Swain
John and Dorothy Swanberg
Richard Talcott
Margaret Thompson
Fred Thunberg
Danny Tishman
Jane Townsend
Jacqueline W. Trimble
Dr. Edward Trione
William Turnage
Leslie and Devora Turner
Jolene Unsoeld
R.W. and J.F. Van Wagenen
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Weeks
Pearl Vincent
Thekla Von Hagke
Ronald and Peggy Wade
George and Joan Wallace
Marilyn Ward
Neil and Mary Waterman
Zelda Jane Waxenberg
Janet Welch
Robert and Louisa L Wells, Jr.
Paul and Marilyn White, Jr.
James Whittaker and
Diane Roberts
Arthur and Gertrude Wolcott
Betty Lou Wolf
Janice Wood
Ronald and Melissa Woodbury
Thomas and Carol Yamamoto
Ian James Yolles
Albert L. Zesiger
John and Dorothy Zimicki
Arline and Martin Zwerin

Alumni Donors
Mabel Whitney Adkins
Stephen Agnew
Edward Alkire
Colleen Allen
Vivian Anderson Ames
Jamie K. Andersen
Catherine Ann Anderson
Linda Ann Anderson
Kari Andrikopoulos
Allan Anttila
Anne Appleby
Richard Atkins, Jr.
Anne Avery
Spencer Bahner
George Baitinger, III
Tim J. Ball
James Ballard
Kenneth Balsley
Debora Barkus
Aisha Barnes
Craig Bartlett
Susan Bartlett
Jeff Barton
Louise Batson
Joan Battuello
Brad Baugher
Samuel Bauman
Janet Bays
Annamarie Beckmann
Bruce Bedinger
Patricia Bedinger
Scott F. Benedict
James Bennett
Neil Bennett
Philip Bennett
Janet Bent
Colleen Bergland
Mary Bergstrom
Linda Berlin
Linda Bestwick
Richard Bestwick
Richard Bever
Lauren Biddle
Martin Biedermann
Terry Billedeaux
Carla Black
Shellie Black
Mike Blackaller
Julie Blanchard
Nicholas Blattner
Renee Couchee Blattner
Mary Bley
David A. Boggs
Neil Bogue
Mary Frances Bond
Terry F. Bonynge
Linda Bookey
Gregory Booth
Marjorie Bowron
Jack Bozarth
William Bradshaw
John Brandon
Rober Brandt
Marjorie Brazier
Leonard Brennan
Barbara Brown
Margery Brown
Linda Brownell
James Brunner
Nelsa Buckingham
Kathie Ann Budd
Thomas C. Buell, Jr.
Priscilla A. Bull
Phillip Bunker
John Burbank
K. Burnell
Alan Burrer
Lynn Busacca
Robert Butts
Fiona Buzzard
Ellen Cain
Carol Camerer
Sharon Campbell
Susan Campbell
John A. Canaris
Michael Canfield
Douglas Canning
Vicki Caparoon
Drew Carey
Donald Case
Lawton Case
Angie M Chambers
Craig Chance
Jerry Chapman
Joanna Charnas
Claudia Chotzen
Dianne G. Christensen
Irene Christy
James Chromey
William Cleland
Janet Cleveland
Dona Cloud
Kenneth Coffin
Daniel Cohen
Susan E. Cohen
Lawrence Cole
David Combs
Kathy Combs
Cathy Conner
Joan Conrad
Cynthia Cooper
Ronald Cooper
William Cooper
Carol Cordy

Parent Donors
Michael Corrigan
Clifford Cotey
Dennis Cotter
Larry Couch
Robert Crawford
Clayton Creager
Nancy Cress
Deborah Creveling
Gilmore Crosby
Lindsley Cross
Scott Cubberly
Doris Culliton
Kathleen D'Acci
Darron Dahle
Matthew Dahlgreen
Andrew Daly
Jacqueline Davie
Charles Davis
William Dean
Joe Dear
Linda Delorme
Robert Denison
Michael Denoyer
Robert Densmore
Fortunate Deo Campo
Patricia Des Chene
Robert Deshaye
Janet Detering
Dona Dezube
Michael K. Diamond
Harold Dick
Justin Dick
Carole Dickerson
Dorothy Dieckman
Laurie Dieterich
Patricia Dillingham
Peter Dolliver
Eleanor Dornan
Michael F. Doyle
Linn Dreger
Karen Drumheller
Paul Drumheller
James Duncan
Edward Dunster
Joy K. Dybeck
Francis Eader
Lance Earnest
Nancy Edwards
Adolph Ehresmann
James Ehret
Janet Eidsmoe-Ward
Eric Einspruch
Keith Eisner
Judith Elliott
Rose Ann Elway
Karen England
Sally J. Ensing
Marilyn Erickson
Richard Ernst, Jr.
Susan Fallin
Dale Favier
Carl Fawcett
Susan F. Feiner
Robert Fellows
Richard Fernald
William Ferris
Margaret Files
Jane Fisher
Leslie Fisher
Russell Flemming
Gary A. Floyd
Kristi M. Fog
Robert Foster
Julie Frederick
Cheryl D. Fredrickson
Joann Freimund
Bradford Furlong
Roger Gaines
Alyson Elizabeth Garland
Cheryl A. Garratt
Teryl George
Gabrielle Woolf Geraghty
Kathleen D. Gerrald
David Gerstenberger
Patricia Gibbs
Carolyn Gilmore
Sally L. Giovine-Kerr
Lynne Givler
Neil Gleichman
Linda Goff
Ronald Gold
Karen Goldman
Cynthia Goodwin
Thomas Gorski
Mark P. Gottlieb
Barbara Jean Graf
Kathy Graham
Kathleen Granger
Julie Grant
Jerry Graser
Timothy Gregg
Teresa Grove
Jean Gruye
Elena Guilfoil
Julia G. Gulden
Jean Haakenson
Thomas Hagen
James Hale
Deborah Hall
Michael Hall
Jon Halper
Suzanne Hamaker
Claudia Hampton
Mark Handley
Martha Helen Hannigan
Peter Hansell
Mark Hansen
Jill Harding
Barbara Harmala
Andrew Harper

Pamela Harris
Charles Hart, III
Mary Ann Hart
Shaine Hart
Ursula Harvey
Leslie Young Harvill
Carla Hasegawa
David Hazel
Dennis Heck
Wanda Hedrick
Charles Heffernan
Sue Ellen Heflin
Roger Heine
Kathleen Helfrich
Cecile Henault
Scott Henderson
Randall Henery
John Hennessey, III
Catherine Hennings
Timothy Hennings
R. Michael Henry
Beverly Hermanson
Susan Herring
James Hester
Kathryn Hinsch
Robert Hoelzer
Carolyn Hoffman
David Holmberg
Christine Holz
Michael S. Horgan
Susan Horowitz
Bruce Horton
David P. Howat
Jasper Hunt, Jr.
Amy Beth Hunter
Richard Hunter
Dana Illo
Gregory Irwin
John Irwin
Wayne Iverson
Helen Jaeger
Julie Jakubovic
Carrie Janes
Debra Janison
Joanne Jirovec
Brian Johnson
Carolyn Johnson
Catherine Johnson
Dora Johnson
Katherine Johnson
Kristen J. Johnson
Lynn Johnson
John Paul Jones, III
Crystal Jones
David Jones
Ernest Jones
Gregory Jones
Jeanne Jones
Laurie Jones
Eleanor Joseph
David Judd
Kirby Juhola
Maureen Juhola
Eduard Jurkovskis
Verne Justice
William Kaltenthaler
David Kaplan
Kim Kaufman
Toy Kay
Harold Keating
Rita Keating
Elizabeth Keeney
James Kennett
Eleanore Kenny
John Keogh, III
Susan Kerber
Barbara Keyt
Ralph Kile
Eric Kjesbu
Mary Knecht
Kathryn Knutson
Flow Lee Kobernick
Elizabeth Koch-Greene
Daniel Koch
Joseph Koczur, Jr.
Carolyn Koehnline
Alan Kohl
Margaret Koler
Christina Koons
Stephen Kopp
Rebecca Krall
Neill Kramer
Donna K. Kreiensieck
Alan Krieger
Lyda Kuth
Michelle Lagory
Paul Lambert
Tanna Lambert
Dorothy Landeen
Geraldine Lawrence
Peter Lawson
Kevin Leavitt
Wendy C. Lebow
Paul Ledbetter
Alan Lehman
Jerry Lenz
Erik Leroy
Marcia Levenson
Meg Levine
Norman Levy
Chad T. Lewis
Rebecca Liebman
Cristi Lien
Judy Lindlauf
Andrew Lindsay
Janet Lindsay
Kenneth Linkhart
David Logan
Gregory Logan
Dennis Longnecker
Paul Looper
Ruth Ann Lord
Gary Lorentzen
Gabriel Loveless
Marilyn Lupinacci
John Lyons

Carol Sue MacCracken
Dori MacDonald
Pamela MacEwan
Andrew MacLeod
Donna Manders
Glenn Mankus
Gary Marcus
Arietta Maria
Tracy Marsailes
Stan B. Marshburn
Wendy Matthews
Larry Mauksch
Roger Max
Carol Maynard
Kimberly Maynard
Peg G. McAdam
Peter McCann
Martha McCartney
Susctte McCann
Martha McCoy
Tamara McCracken
Lawrence McDonald
Charles McEwan
Amy McFarlan
Linda McLain
Gerald McLaughlin
Thomas J. McLaughlin
Rodney McLean
Charlene McQuarrie
James Mead
Roger Mellem
Mark Meredith
Dorothy Meriwether
Christina Meserve
Christopher Meyers
Sandra Milano
Carson Miller
Pamela Miller
David Millhauser
Michael Mills
Curtis Milton
Martha Mistretta
Mike Mobley
Christopher Mondau
Laurie Montero
Sharon Moody
James Moore
Martha Moore
Monica Moore
Todd Moore
Carol Moorehead
Maxinne Morris
Roland Morris
Diane Morton
Allen Moser
Susan Moser
Susan Moyer
Timothy Mulcahey
Peter Mullineaux
Linda Murphy
Velina Murray
Nancy Musgrove
Deborah Nagusky
Melissa Naso-Kaplan
Pamela Fair Nath
Rachel Nathanson
Bridgette Nevins
Enid Newberg
Scott Newcomb
Donna Nickerson
Charles Nishida
Mark Noble
Wesley Norman
Rebecca Northway
Gary Norton
Harold Norwood
Marc O'Connor
John Oldham
Charlotte Olson-Alkire
Leslie Oren
Arlee Osborne
Virginia Ourso
Leslie Owen
Jennifer Page
Leonard Pagliaro
Anthony Pantley
Melissa Parker
Victoria Patten
Raymond Pavelko
Timothy Pearce
Johanna Pemble
Rodd Pemble
Mary Petersen
Abbo Peterson
Anne Pflug
Vicki Sue Phelps
Richard Philips
Kevin Phillips
Molly Phillips
George Pickett
Steven Pinard
Carol Pinegar
Marie! Plaeger-Brockway
Roy W. Plaeger-Brockway
Richard Poff
John Pohl
Amy Poundstone
Mary-Ellen Prather
Anne Prescott
Judith Prest
Daniel Preston
Katherine Preston
Mary Lynn Prevost
Michael Price
Neil Fritz
Teresa Pruden
David Putnam, Jr.
Colette Queener
Larry Ralphs
Gloria Ramberg
Mary Randall
Emily Ray
Gregory Renault
Sandra Revesz
Jean Reynolds
Nancy Rice
William Rice
Kenneth Ritland
Rita Robison
Barbara Roder

Joyce Rodriguez-Deshaye
Leslie Romer
Pearl Rose
Gary Rossman
William Rotecki
Barbara Roy
Diane Royal
Robert Rudine
Frank Russell
Marie Russo
Mark Rutherford
Albin Saari
Scott Salzer
Terrese Salzer
Antonio Santoy
John Schaeffer
Laurie Schaetzel-Hill
Lillian Schauer
Jonathan Scheuer
Stefan Schinzinger
Robert Schmidt
Janet M. Schmitt
Susan Schoos
Timothy Schoth
Mary s'chroeder
George M. Schunk
Anna Scoble
Douglas Scrima
Ingrid Scrima
James Seeking
Joel Seidel
Michaele Sein-Ryan
Geoffrey Seland
Carolyn Servid
Thomas Shackle
Robert Shannon
Edward Sharp
Marjorie Shavlik
Eve A. Shaw
Suzanne Shaw
James Shiflett
Andrea Shore
Stan R. Shore
Deborah Shulke
Andrea Siani
Sergio Siani
Gerard Sidorowicz
Gillian Siegrist
Lisa Sieracki
Janet Silliman
Christiane Silverthorne
Richard Simonson, Jr.
Richard Skadan
Laura Skillings
Joanna Skinner
Sandia Slaby
Jack Slagle
Richard Slansky
Dwayne Slate
Susan Slate
Carolyn Smith
Clinton Smith
Joyce Smith
Nancy V. A. Smith
Victoria Smith
Ronald Smoire
David Smullin
Margaret Snyder
Ellen Sogge
Marianna Sokol
Katherine Sokolik
Mark Souder
Mary Jane Speelman
Elizabeth Springer
Loy Slafinbil
Carla Stehr
Janet Stein
Carol Steiner
Jeffrey Steinhardt
Cheryl Stephani
Jonathan Stephens
Mark Stevens
Nancy Gray Stevens
William Stevens
David Stevenson
Scott Stevenson
Sandra Stewart-Streeter
Jill Stewart
Margo F. Stewart
Warren Randolph Stilson
Sarah Stockwell
Daphne Fisher Smith Stone
Janet Stonington
Steve Strasen
Jeffrey Streeter
John Strong-Cvetich, III

Conni Strops
Marilynn Sturdevant
Chris Sullivan
Kaye Sullivan
Jeffrey Sundberg
Laura Suslick
Craig Swanson
Nancy Swenholt
Helen Talkington
Sandra Ann Tarzan
Stephen Tarzan
Richard Thacker
Kathleen Theoe
Kevin Thomas
Margaret Thompson
Storme Thompson
David Thomson
Valerie Thereon
Kris Thorsos
Danny Tishman
Jamie Tolfree
William Tomlinson
Buddy Treadway
Virginia Treadway
Jeanne Tribe
Glenn Tucker
Anne E. Turner
Barbara Turner
Margaret Valenti
Jack Van Valkenburgh
Doris M. Vandenberg
John Vasquez
Richard Veach
Gerald Vermeire
Kathleen Vermeire
Pearl D. Vincent
David Vineberg
Gay Vogt
Richard Vogt
Thekla Von Hagke
Diane Vosick
Jan Wagner
Petrina Walker
Linda N. Walsh
Marilyn Ward
William Grady Ward
Janet Ware
Carole Warner
Andrew Wasserman
Frank Wastradowski
Kathleen Waugh
Zelda Waxenberg
Lynda Weinman
Gerald Weishaar
Chere M. Weiss
Sheri Kay Wertheimer
Martha Lee West
Margaret Wharton
Sharon Wheeler
Donald Whiting
Kyle Wienk
Marta Wilder
Patricia Wilkins
Ronald Wilkinson
Richard Williams, Jr.
Charles Williams
Debbie Williams
Fran Williams
Patrick Williams
Charles Williamson
Betty Lou Wolf
Carl Wolfhagen
Nina Wolsk
Paula Wong
Carla Wood
George Wood
Janice Wood
Annette Woolsey
Theresa Wright
Karen Wynkoop
Elizabeth Wyruchowski
Janet Yoder
Ian Yolles
Mary Youngman
Erickson D. Youst
Arbin Y. Yu
Marjorie Yung
Elizabeth Zima
Irwin Zuckerman

Local Alums Help at Lakefair
The Alumni Association's barbecue had hardly
cooled from Super Saturday before it was reheated for Olympia's Capital Lakefair in mid-July.
The annual carnival and food fair has been a
tremendously successful fundraising event for the
Association. Proceeds help Evergreen's Admissions Office with recruitment, provide a free
lunch for prospective students from out of town,
partially finance the Alumni Association Board's
annual retreat, and enable board members to host
social activities for alumni.
Nancy Payne, who coordinated the five-day
effort, expressed her gratitude for every one of
the 95 able alumni volunteers. These indispensable people were John Loyle '74, Gary Floyd
'82, Michael Shohan, Mike Hal! '74, Steven
Miller '81, Scott Baker '77, Brian Murphy '75,
John Walsh '78, Linda Wynne '83, Richard
Lester '82, Patricia Spears '83, Larry Beye '78,
Ursula Harvey '84, Pat Seaton '78, Janice Wood
'76, Kate Lasell '82, Christina Koons '81, Bob
Shirley '83, and friend of the alumni, Chris
Blahm.

David and Ilene Adams
Durwood and Dorys Alkire
Walker Allen
Clifford and Charlotte Alterman
Bobby Altman
Donald and Ludonna Anderson
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Anderson
Sandra and Stephen Anderson
John E. Andrew
Calvin and Edna Issaac Anthon
Fred and Shirley Antrobus
Carl and Sheila Arendt
Marilee Armstrong
Tom Armstrong
Anthony and Ruth Arnold
William and Shirley Ashby
Elaine L. Babcock
Martha B. Bailey
Franklin and Mary Balch
W.P. and Elizabeth Balderston
Justin and Shirley Barber
Esther R. Barclay
Daniel and Geraldine Baris
John and Mary C. Barkal
Stuart and Sue Barrett
Mary and Joseph Bartek
Eliot F. Bartlett
Paul and Betty Bartmess, Jr.
Margaret Baso
George T. Bauer
Mrs. Charles Bean
Duane W. Beck
Robert and Nancy Becker
Julia Becker
Hugh G. Beebe
Glen and Mabel Benedict
Barbara and Dery Bennett
William Benoist
Alan and Carol Bensman
Helen B. Bereiter
Dr. and Mrs. Knute Berger
Edith M. Berman
Mel and Mary Bill
Mary Alice Billings
Marguerite Bishop
Gerald and Patricia Blakley
Virgil and Maxine Blaser
Eugene and Illiene Boawn
Gerald and Sally Bodine
Egon Bodtker
Barbara Boeke-Whitney
Dr. and Mrs. John Bonica
David and Joanne Bonsteel
Jeanne R. Bonynge
Jack and Francis Bookey
Al and Thelma Booze
Lois L. Born
William and Laurie Boston
Jean F. Boulton
Patrick Bowen
William and
Mary Elizabeth Bowen
John and Sarah Brady
John and Alice Braun
Gerri and William Brauneis
Annie B. Braxton
David and Deborah Breton
Douglas and
Catherine Bridgeford
John and Kathleen Bristow
J. Henry and
Barbara Brockhaus
Rodney and Lois Mae Brown
Jack and Judith Brown
John and Carol Brown
Leland and Barbara Brown
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Brown
Richard G. Brown
David 0. Brownwood
Ruth Pitzen and Fred Brune
Beth and Truman Bullard
Alan and Ann Bunker
John and Helen Burbank
John Burton
Eleanor W. Butz
James and Lila Cammack
C.F. and Ellen Campbell, Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Colin Campbell
Baylor Capers
Glen and Jean Carey
Vernon and
Jeanette Carstensen
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Carver
Esther M. Case
G.C. Casebolt
Yvonne and Edward Cazier
Rebecca and Peter Chaitain
Francis and Mary Chapman
James and Addis Chapman
Clinton Childs, Jr.
Elaine Childs-Gowell
Richard and Donna Childs
Joseph Chmielniak
David and Betty Christianson
J. Morris and Elinor Christ
Mr and Mrs Atlee F. Clapp
Raymond and Alice Clark
William D. Cleeves
Liane Clorfene
Edward Coffey
Frederick and Jessie Cohen
Ellis and Colleen Collins
Winifred and Jack Colwill
John Comfort
Eugene and
Jeanne Commerford
Douglas Connah
Charles and Inge Connaway
Mr. and Mrs. John Conroy
Mr. and "Mrs. Loren Cooke
Leona Corsa
Henry R. Corwin
John and Mary Frances Couch
Norman and Ann Cover
Susan Graver
Dr. and Mrs. Howard Crawford
Marion Creveling
Edward Crosby
Richmond Cross
Barbara Crow

Frank W. Cubbon
Daniel and Julie Cushman
Felix and Grace Czaja
Erika D. D'Albert
Roy and Mary Damone
Carroll Damron
Albert and Charlotte Dangler
George Dantona
Alice and Harry Davidson
John and Marilyn Davis
Dorothy Davis
Robert Davis
Sylvia Davis
John and June Dawson
Mary C. De Rocher
Robert and Gennie De Weese
Ruth and Harold Deery
Charles Demarest
Terry Denny
Jarvis Depkin
Charles Dethier
Pete and Elsie Devries
Annaweiss Dezube
R.H. and Idalice Dickinson
D.H. Dillard
Nancy Dillman
James Dinerman
Dorothy and Henry Dixon
Kendall Doble
George and Mary Dolan
James and Barbara Dolliver
Clayton and Helen Douglass
Wilbur G. Downs
Charles C. Dragul
William and Judith Driscoll
Rita Dubrow
James and Rachel Dudek
Murray Duncan
Alfred and Ingrid Eckersberg
William and Ruth Eckert
Evelyn and
William Ehrmantraut
Warren and Evelyn Eikenberry
Robert and Barbara Eiseman
Alden and Marian Elberson
Lawrence R. Ellick
Mary D. Ellis
Lewis Elwood
Pat Emerson
Charles and Merrie Emmons
Stanley R. Engle
Charles and Marjorie Ennis
Francine and Lew Epstein
William Eshbaugh
Duane and Nada Estes
Richard and Bernice Everson
Clayton Fairo
Robert L. Fallow
David S. Fankushen
Leon and Donna Farnham
Sheldon and Helen Fair
W. F. Faucett
Winifred L. Feise
A. Daniel and Jessica Feldman
Mary Feldman
Robert and Patricia Ferreira
Myron and Elka Fink
Albert E. Finn
Joseph and Caroline Fischman
Genevieve Fisher-Frankenburg
Carol L. Fitch
Charles and Mitzi Fletcher
John and J.B. Fletcher
Doyle and Rhudene Floyd
Gladys and Billy Fogg
Herman and M'Liss Fowler
Dixie and Joseph Fram
Patricia Frank
Ralph and Mary Franklin
Marion L. Frantz
Karen Fraser and
Timothy Malone
August and Jeanne Fromuth
Herbert and Carol Fuller
W.H. and Claire Fuller
Jean M. Fulton
Anne Futtennan
John and Betty Gallagher
Thomas and Vivian Gallagher
Michael Galvin
Gloria and Lewis Garling
Roland and G.A. Gary
Alfred Gass
Marshal] and Beverly Gates
William N. Gates
Ann Dear Gavell
Keith and Sara Gehr
Mary G. Gentry
Dudley and Catherine George
Ruth Gerecht
Mrs. Norine Gerson
Warren and Gerry Ghormley
Jean Gibson
Keith and Dorothy Gibson
Marilyn Gillette
Richard F. Gilpin
George and Lila Girvin
Mark C. Glad
Philip and Elizabeth Glaessner
Richard and Virginia Glanzman
Earl T. Glauert
Helen Gleichman
Linda Patrice Goff
Marvin and Muriel Goldman
Ruth and Robert Goldman
John and Therese Goodrich
Dorothy A. Gordon
John and Adele Gorham
Dorothy Graeff
Jeff and Debbie Graham
Josef and Stephany Gray
Mrs. Betty W. Gray
Michael and Anna Graziano
Robert and Rose Green
Inez and Sanford Greenberg
Harry and Rosemary Gregg
Margaret and Paul Gribskov
Patricia W. Griffith
Raul and Claire Grinberg
Jerry and Jane Gross

-

Parent Donors continued
Dale and Susan Groves
William and Bertha Groves
David and Lois Gruber
Sam and Shirley Guddal
John and Nancy Gudyka
Irene Me Mahill Gustafson
Elizabeth C. Guthe
James M. Guthe
Louis W. Hagener
Fred and Marjorie Hahn
Dale 0. Hall
Edward and Christine Hall
Robert and Dorothy Hall
George and Maxine Hallerman
Gerald L. Hammond
Carolyn and Thurston Handley
Robert and Clarice Hansbrough
Carol and R. L. Hardison
William E. Harlan
Robert E. Harris
Sharon Harris
Gordon Harrower
Rose Harvey
James and Ruth Hasegawa
Al Haslebacher
Carol Haviland
Dr. and Mrs. Robert Haynes
Mark and Jane Heald
James and Gertrude Hebert
John and Anita Hayes Heimel
Ralph Hein
Jane K. Hence
John and Elizabeth Henchman
Sherwood and
Kathleen Henderson
John and Jean Hennessey
Christina and Joseph Hennessey
Roy and April Herbert
Richard K. Hill
Bruce and Wilma Holbrook
Leonard and Eloise Holden
Carson and
Dorothea Hollingsworth
Franc Holonics
Thomas F. Hornbein
Jacob and Leah Horowitz
Carol Hosford
Wendell and Wilma Howard
Joseph and Virginia Howell
Inez Hoyt
Francis and Wilhelmina Hunter
Ira and Jean Hurburt
Ernest and Ruth Hurwitz
Frederick and Mae Hutchison
John and Margaret Irwin
Wayne Stanley Iverson
Molly lyall
Mr. and Mrs. C.E. Jackson
David and Rose Jacobs
Jacob and Sarah Jacobson
Frank and Doris Jaeoby
Victor A. Jatczak
John W. Johnson
Sara Jane Johnson
William and Margaret Johnson
Gilbert and Betty Jones
Harold M. Jones
Joann and Milton Jones
Henry C. Judd
Ludlow and Norma Kaeser
Hiroshi Kaku
H.J. and Margaret Kaltenthaler
Russell P. Kaniuka
Samuel X. Kaplan
John Karganilla
Vicki and Barry Karlin
Ole and Dorothy Karlsen
William and Lucille Karr
Irene and Arthur Kassens
Mildred Katz
Mrs. Barnaby C. Keeney
Charles M. Kelley
Frank and Evelyn Kelley
Inez R. Kertson
Lawrence and Darlene Kerwin
Veselin and Lydia Kesich
Charles and Jane Keyes
W.J. and Wilma Kidwell
Jerry and Dona King
Raymond and Eula Kirby
Joan Kirshner
Donna and William Kiskaddon
Alan L. Kistler
James Kittrick
Mr. and Mrs. Josef Klein
Norman J. Klein
Lowell and Shirley Knutsen
Gerald and Claudia Knutson
Wayne E. Knutzen
Charles Koch
Joseph and Ayako Koczur
John F. Koons
Engelbert and Angela Kopp
J. Walter and Audrey Kosman
Z.W and Patricia Kowalewski
Joseph and Greta Kramer
Elbart and Nava Krieger
Donald R. Kuehl
Robert E. Lane
Florence and S.E. Lasswell
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Latimer
Helene F. Lattimore
Dr. and Mrs. Paul Lauer
Mary Dudley Leaphart
J. Kathleen Learned
Brian and Shirley Lempriere
Melinda and Gunter Leonhardt
Otto and Elizabeth Lerbinger
Donald Lerner
Norman and Louise Levy
Stanley Liben
Richard and Irene Lichtenstadte
Drennan Lindsay
Eugene and Pearl Lipner
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Litzinger
Jackie Livesay
Lawrence A. Loeb
Herbert and Ellen Loewenthal
Robert B. Loftfield
John and Evelyn Loftus

Friends
Lars and Nancy Lorentson
R.W. and Norma Lucas
Philip Luckerman
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Luders
Edwin and Estelle Lustbader
Joy and Bill Lutes
Edna and John E. Lyons
William and Jo Ann Lysak
William and Phyllis MacFarland
Paschal Macivor
Vincent and Opal Mack
Carolyn and Steven Mackey
James and Nancy MacWhinney
Mary and John Maffeo
Kevin and Joan Maguire
Josepha Mains
Rona and Harvey Malofsky
Thomas and Mary Lou Malone
William and Lavonne Maltby
Emily and Leonard Mandelbaum
Barbara and Elliot Marple
Ada Marson
Ralph and Frances Martin
Ward S. Mason
Clyde and Pat Matteson
Charles and Miriam Matthews
Joyce L. Maul
Charles and Barbara McCann
Allan T. McAdam
Ian S. Me Callum
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald McCarthy
Beale and Dana McCulloch
David W. McDonald
David and Judy McFarlan
James and Jacqueline McFerran
Mr. and Mrs. Edward McGrath
Robert and Joan Mcllwain
Forrest E. Mclntosh
John R. McLane
William and
Margaret McLaughlin
Donald A. McLean
Mr. and Mrs. David McLean
Georgia R. McManigal
Andrew and Anne McThenia
Peter and Shirlee Meador
Marilyn Meardon
Gordon and Greta Meiklejohn
Roy and Ellen Mellen
Ray and Barbara Merriwether
David and Joan Metheny
Eva C. Metzger
Edee and Jack Mezirow
Franklin and Jean Michaels
Thomas and Shirley Mikel
Stanley and Elouise Millar
Daniel and Isabel Miller
James and Florence Miller
Norman and Kathryn Miller
Robert G. Miller
Arnold and Ann Millhauser
Glenn Mills
John and Katharine Mills
Roger and Chariot Mills
Henry and Eulie Mishima
Barbara and Mike Mitchell
Doris T. Moffett
Alfred and Isabel Moore
Ann and Larry Moreland
William and Joan Morgenstern
John and Roswitha Morrison
Lewis and Mabel Mosier
Margaret C. Moulton
Rufus and Rita Moulton
Harold and Susan Mozer
Carol L. Muecke
Edwin C. Mueller
Orville and Caroline Murphy
Robert and Mary Murphy
John Murray
Robert Murvihill
Doris and Frank Naglich
Joseph J. Napolitan
Elizabeth L. Narver
Jerome and Eleanor Neal
William and Magdaline Nearn
John and Barbara Neff
Leonard and Bonita Nelson
Margery E. Nelson
Betty A. Newell
Mary J. Nichols
Barbara M. Nickerson
Donald and Hilda Nicoll
Mary E. Nolting
Mr. and Mrs. John Norton
Robert and Johanna Norton
Zelda and Meryon Nudelman
Allen and Harriet Oakley
Eldon Obrecht
Robert C. Olding
Storrs and Shirley Olds
Tom and Joyce Olin
Arne and Jo Ann Olson
Warren and Maurine Olson
Richard and Patricia Oltman
Peter and Miriam Orleans
Martin and Catherine Ormond
John and Mary Orr
Vincent and Josephine Ortiz
Barbara Osborne
Daniel and Harriet Ostermann
Rick and Irene Overath
H. Martyn and Candace Owen
William R. Pace
William H. Page
Hamilton and Muriel Page
Richard and Elisabeth Paige
June C. Parker
Elizabeth B. Parks
Lawrence and Linda Paros
Judith E. Peabody
Fridolf and Marilyn Pearson
R. M. and Vera Pedersen
James and Peggy Peeler
Stuyvesant B. Pell
James and Connie Pemble
Glenn Percival
Shirlee and James Perkins
Gayle and Mervyn Perry
Dennis and Regina Peters

Robert and Mollie Peters
Arthur and Idella Peterson
Carl and Catherine Peterson
Gary and Rosemary Peterson
Nancy and Bob Pfeiffer
Harold and Nancy Phelps
Judith and Stephen Pierce
Byron and Joanna Pinick
Curtis and Nancy Piper
William and Lillian Poe
Julius and Ruth Poritz
Thurman and Laura Poston
Ralph and Elaine Potter
Grace A. Prest
Paul and Mary Pruitt
Gerald and Anna Marie Pyle
Paul and Johanna Quam
Robert and
Ruthe Lyons Ramirez
Leland and Betty Ramsey
Dr. and Mrs. Mark Randall
Irving and Shirley Rappaport
Ranee D. Ratliff
Robert and Virginia Ray
Howard and Verna Reagan
Mr. and Mrs. William Reams
Robert and Letitia Reeves
Carroll C. Reid
Paul and Jane Reid
William B. Reilly
Mary-Lynn Meyer Rein
David and Dorothea Reinthal
Donald and Janice Reish
Mary Jane Resch
Wayne and Beatrice Rial
Leah R. Rice
Carolyn and Jerry Richard
Albert Richards
Robert and Virginia Richardson
Wyman and Clara Richardson
Mr. and Mrs. Anton Riess
Bernard and
Myrna Childs Rivkin
Rose Marie Roach
Harley Robb
Gilbert Roberts
Bernard and Sharon Robertson
Joyce W. Robertson
Angela and Ryland Robinson
Donald and Margaret Robinson
Robert E. Rockwell
Richard M. Rodrigues
Eugene and Carole Roecks
John C. Roeder
Kermit and Barbara Rohde
Irwin and Zelda Rose
Marianne and Philip Ross
Michael and Dona Rothwell
Marjorie Rowe
Lawrence and Ivern Rubida
Thomas Ruther
Pat and Virginia Sainsbury
Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Saltzman
James and Evelyn Salzer
Oscar and Lois Sandberg
Lester and Valri Sandoe
Robert and Lucy Sato
Doris and Richard Saunders
Gordon and Pamela Savatsky
George and Charlotte Sawtell
Mr. and Mrs. David Scales
John and Marilyn Scanlon
William and Annette Schaefer
Brian and Linda Scheffer
John and Joan Schick
Marg and Gerry Schiele
Lillian G. Schiendelman
Robert and Shirley Schlorff
Calvin and Alice Muir Schmitt
John and Miriam Schubert
Frederick and Ellen Schug
Lauren L. Schwisow
Donna D. Scott
Robert and Joy Scott
William and Mary Jane Scurlock
Henry C. Seasholes
Marvin and Carol Seemann
Milton and Betty Seidman
Lester and Harriet Servid
William and Lynn Seymour
David and Sarah Shames
Edward C. Sharp
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Shaudis
Jack and Wenonah Shaw
R. David Shaw
Albert B. and Ethel Shepard
Charles and Dorothy Shephard
George and Clara Shinn
Ricklef and Jean Shirk
Edward Shore
Stuart and Frances Shumway
Robert and Mary Ann Siddoway
Paul and Harriet Siegler
Gillian Ann Siegrist
John and Marilyn Siemens
Gerald and Sally Sieracki
Chester A. Silva
Warren and Virginia Simms
James and Susan Sink
Maxine K. Sitts
Linda Skinner
Sarah and Al Skinner
Alice Copp Smith
J. Rockwell and Shirley Smith
Vaughn Smith
Harold P. Soderberg
Norman F. Sohl
Robert and Helen Solinger
John and Bodil Sorenson
Amigo and Mildred Soriano
Raymond and Theodora Speer
Frank J. Spitalny
Marion Stahl
Daniel C. Stahly
Mr. and Mrs. William Staley
Philip and Elaine Stalheim
Herbert and Paulina Stark
Paul Stefanik
James and Jean Stephens
Stephen W. Stephens

Jesse and Mildred Stice
Robert A. Stierhoff
Richard and Virginia Stockwell
Walter and Anita Stolov
Oliver and Catherine Stonington
Carl E. Stracener
Bruno and Inge Strauss
Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Stueve
Warren and Norma Styner
William and Charlene Suessman
Cecelia A. Swaab
John and Dorothy Swanberg
Elizabeth W. Swift
Gordon and Sallie Sylliaasen
Irene Taddiken
Verne and Ruth Tanner
Joseph and Sylvia Taylor
Inge Theisen-Rufer
Stanley M. Thomas
Virginia L. Thome
Givens and Barbara Thornton
Donald and Edna Tinney
Jane Townsend
Samuel and Julie-Ann Traub
Robert and Mary Lou Treat
Parker and Helen Trefethen
Carl and Priscilla Triebs
Forrest and Dorothy Tucker
Leslie and Devora Turner
Arnold Turtz
Jolene Unsoeld
Paul Vadopalas
Helene Van Buren
W.A. and Virginia Van Camp
Wilber F. Van Pelt
Robert and Marilyn Van Steelant
Wade and Shirley Vaughn
Gunars and leva Veveris
William and Penny Vincent
Jack and
Elizabeth Von Mettenheim
John and Jane Vosick
Ronald and Peggy Wade
William C. Wadland
Phyllis L. Walfish
Richard W. Walkup
George and Joan Wallace
Edgar D. Ware
David and Penelope Warren
Hanna M. Warren
John E. Wason
Neil and Mary Waterman
Judy M. Weightman
Ursel Weinman
Jo Anne Jones Welch
Robert and Louisa Wells
Estelle A. Wertheimer
Roy Wessel
Robert and Lucille Whisler
Paul and Marilyn White
Robert and Elizabeth Whiteside
Harry and Margaret Wicklund
Carlyn J. Wickman
Kale and Helen Williams
Sarah and Loren Williams
David Williams
Ethel J. Williams
Janet and Joseph Williamson
William and Jeanette Willis
Laverne K. Wilson
Kenneth M. Winkley
Donald and Shirley Winnie
Charles and Jane Wisseman
Richard E. Wojt
Arthur and Gertrude Wolcott
James and Nancy Wolcott
David and Libby Wolf
Herman and Jacqueline Wolfson
Kar-Ellen Wollam
Christopher and Margaret Wright
Jo Ann Wright
Mary Lou Wright
E. P. Wyruchowski
Thomas and Carol Yamamoto
Burle Yolles
Violet V. York
Frank and Marilyn Youngman
Byron and Bernice Youtz
John and Dorothy Zimicki
Charles T. Zook
Arline and Martin Zwerin
Sidney and Rosemary Zwick

Jonathon Ach
Charles and Mary Lou Adams
Chuck Adams
Wendell and Caroline Allen
Alpine Dry Cleaning
William and Deborah Arney
Robert and Jackie Ashton
Eleanor Aspinwall
The Asterisk and
Cheese Library
Barbara Babson and
Bev Dobbins
Charles and Nancy Bagley
Steven Barnes
Carolyn Bassett
Judith Bayard
Marcheta Bean
Allison and Robert Belcher
George I. Bell
Mary Ellen Benson
Carolyn Bentler
Martin Berger
Steven and Sandra Berglund
Wesley and Marie Berglund
Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Berry
Claudia Beyer
Barbara Ann Biebush
Robert and Betty Bigelow
Mrs. Lillian Bilesky
Douglas K. Bingham
Kay Bishoprick
Jeff Blakley
Mrs. Lucille Blakley
Paul and Dorothy Blakley
Nat Blankenship
Elizabeth and Stewart Bledsoe
Lee and Betty Bomberger
Linda Bondurant and
Steve Lundin
Dr. and Mrs. John Bonica
The Book Mark
Jane W. Boone
Joan Boothe
George and Sharon Bowen
Eunice C. Brandt
Gundrun Brask
Mary Louise Breitenbach
James D. Bremner
Herbert and Shirley Bridge
Betty M. Brinkman
Bert and Anna Brown
Margaret H. Brown
Evelyn Browne
Carlos P. Buhler
Irene M. Buitenkant
Noni Buitenkant
Katherine Bullitt
Timothy and Nora Burke
Bartlett and Gladys Burns
Stephen and Paula Butchko
Irene Butts
Gayle Rothrock
Russ Cahill
Norman Calvo
Ezra and Elizabeth Campbell
Canadian Consulate General
Mr. and Mrs. James Carey
Mr. Rob Carl
Mrs. Rose Carl
Jim Carlson
H. Adams and Ann Carter
Donald and Malpina Chan
Mrs. Emil Charlet
John and Elizabeth Cherberg
Herbert Childers
Yvon Chouinard
J.L. and Isobel Chrisman
Nels M. Christiansen
Helen M. Christopher
Arthur and Velma Clark
Isabelle and Elmer Clausen
Robert and Margaret Clifford
Nicholas Clinch
Mabel M. Clymer
Michael J. and Diana Cohen
Robert Cole
Jon and Nina Collier
James A. Colmon
Paul and Thelma Conner
Consulate General Of Japan
Suzanne Conte
Barbara Cooley
Ritannette Cooper
Michael Coplen
Cork'n Crock
Herbert and Gini Curl
David Current
William and Samora Cushman
Jacqueline and Henry Daniels
Dr. Fred T. Darvell, Jr.
Mrs. Kathryn Davies
John M. Davis
Thomas De Carlo
Patricia C. Delisa
George and Susan Dimitroff
Stephen and Lucienne Dimitroff
Kathryn A. Dodge
Oskar Dorfmann
Wangchuk and Sonam Dorjee
Dorothy Doyle
Alan R. Drengson
Susan A. Dubuisson
William Dunmire
Robert Dunnagan
Earth Magic
Bob and Betty Eisner
Jack Elzinga
Emmanuel Lutheran
Church Women
Verene Ericcson
Daniel and Nancy Evans
George Fairclough
Marjory Farquhar
Patrick and Suzanne Feeney
Fred and Lois Fenske
Cindy and Jacob Fey
Jane Field
Susan and Donald Finkel
Joseph Firey
Richard and Cecil Fisch

Robert and Helen Fisher
Robert M. Ford
James and Georgia Fowler
Carolyn Dobb and Russell Fox
Karen Fraser and Timothy Malone
Earl and Marie Freitag
Ann Friedman
Vicky Draham Friend
Dr. and Mrs. Ulrich Fritzsche
Clifford and Deloyce Frost
F.M. Fryxell
Herbert and Carol Fuller
Ruth R. Furman
George and Betty Gaetke
John F. Gallagher
Patricia Gallagher
Kurt and Virginia Galle
Volney Gaudette
Gelman, Couture and Pate
Herb Gelman
George and Ellen Ghilarducci
Don and Marguerite Gibbs
Svein and Shelby Gilje
Jocelyn C. Glidden
Brent Goeres
Alan and Eva Goldberg
Fred Goldberg
Donald Goodman and
Natala Reyborn
Pauline and Thomas Gordon
Jane Stevens Gore
Peter Gradjansky
Eleanor E. Graham
Robert and Lloydine Graham
William and Barbara Graham
Robin L. Gray-Stewart
Thomas and Patricia Green
William and Jean Greene
Ardith M. Greeny
Russell and Marcia Gregg
Chauncey and Marion Griffith
Bill Grinstein
Gladys E. Guilbert
Burton S. Guttman
Peter H. Hackett
Marvin and Frances Haden
Jeanne Hahn
Mr. and Mrs. Werner Hahne
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hall
Paul J. Hall
Robert P. Hall
D. K. Hailing
Halvor Halvorson
David Hambly
Mimi Hambrick
Andrew and Dara Hanfman
Joan E. Hansen
Maurice and Betty Harmon
Morgan Harris
Vincent S. Hart
Frederick M. Hart
Ann Lasko Harvill
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Haseltine
Mikiko Hatch-Amagai and
W. Hatch
Richard and Margaret Hatchard
George N. Havens
Elizabeth Hawley
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Heald
Peta Henderson
Susan Herman
Joy R. Hilliard
John T. Hitchcock
Mark and Marilyn Hoehne
Marcelle Hoey
Donald and Fay Holden
James Hollandsworth
Charles and Jalien Hollister
Mrs. Hopkins
Carol Horner
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hosmer
Dr. and Mrs. Charles Houston
Walter and Theodora Howe
Jean L. Hubbard
Sherman Huffine
Herb Hultgren
James L. Humphrey
Willard Humphreys
Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr.
Meg Hunt
Celia Hunter
Elmer C. Huntley
Judith A. Huntley
Juanita Blakley Hurst
Mary Huston
Gertrude Jacob
Nicholas and Geraldine Jacob
Japanese American
Citizens League
Gloria Jasper
Julian and Josephine Jenner
Steven Jervis
Art and Anita Johnson
Bruce Johnson
Harold Johnson
R.I. and Irene Johnson
Ralph W. Johnson
Tom A. Johnston
Dora Mae Jones
Lewis and Joan Jones
Kathleen and Kenneth Kennedy
Nancy Klinger
Robert and Helena Knapp
Lewis and Carol Krakauer
Wendy Krakauer and
Bill Costello
Ada Keith Kramer
Lowell and Katherine Kuehn
L & E Bottling Company, Inc.
Paul and Jean Lafferty
George and Isabelle Lamb
Janice Lambertz
Delmar Langbauer
Gerald Lloyd Lassen
Jean and Richard Lawrence
George Leago
Margaret and William Lear
Craig and Nancy Leman
Robert and Sandra Lentz

Corporations and Foundations
Doris and Richard Leonard
Jim Lester
Laurita E. Leuthold
Mark Levensky
Karen Lichtenstein
Dorothy Liechty
Jack A. Lindskog
Carol and Gene Roy Little
Layne Longfellow
Kenneth Luedeke
Lucretia Lupher
Susan Marie Lux
Barbara Mac Phail
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mackey
Tom Maguire
Theodore and Mae Mann
George Mante
Dawn J. Marshall
Gail and Rudolph Martin
Elliot and Jean Marvell
Miriam S. Mathes
WV. Graham and
Mary Ann Matthew
Sandra Mcquirk
Hal and Roberta McClary
Thomas and Patty McClintock
Thomas McCrumm
James and Kathleen McDowell
Scott McGovern
Craig McKibben
Carol D. McKinley
Earle and Susan McNeil
Ray and Jeanne Meredith
George and Amey Messerschmidt
Dorothy Mierow
Lula Miller
Maynard M. Miller
Paige R. Miller
Robert L. Miller
C.M. and B.A. Molenaar
Dee and Colleen Molenaar
Haruko and Lawrence Moniz
Christopher Moore
Prof, and Mrs. Tkl Morash
Henry Moravec
Hope Morgan
James Morgan
Eilene M. Morrison
Louise E. Morrison
Richard and Romola Morse
William and Carol Morton
Frank C. Motley
Frances A. Mullen
Lou Mullen
Ralph Munro
Margaret Murie
Michael Nadel
Roderick Nash
Hal and Molly Sue Neace
Don and Jeanne Neff
John and Barbara Neff
Raymond and Mary Nelson
Frances Nemtin
Robert and Karen Neubauer
Paul and Catherine Neuffer
Einar and Annie Nilsson
Faith and Thomas Norris
John Nuveen & Co., Inc.
Col. and Mrs, William O'Neill
Malcolm and Marjorie Odell
Katherine M. Oglesby
Joseph Olander
Janet and Timothy Oliver
Charles and Fae Olson
Robert and Carol Olson
Olympia Pottery and Art Supply
Rev. Dr. & Mrs. Warren Ost
Patricia Parfitt
Shirley Parkinson
Kenneth and Marianne Partlow
Barbara and David Paulsen
Robert Payne
Louis Pearson
John and Barbara Perkins
Barbara and William Perry
Susan Lane Perry
R.N. and Margaret Peters
Dennis and Joan Peterson
Thomas and Carol Petty
Paul R. Pfau
Stephen C. Porter
Possca, Inc.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Praetorius
Robert J. Preble
Andy and Noreen Pribnow
Frank and Jeanne Pritchard
Margaret Prouty
Alexandra Pye
Wallace W. Quistorff
Radiance Herbs and Massage
Syd and Linda Radinovsky
Mrs. Julia D. Ragsdale
Rainbow Restaurant
Rainy Day Records
Fleet C. Ratliff
The Red Bull Restaurant
Howard S. Reed
Sam and Margery Reed
Dorothy Reese
Marvin and Mary-Lynne Reiner
Maryan Reynolds
Ripple Construction Co., Inc.
William and Katia Robinson
Frederick Romero
Stephen H. Roper
Steve Ross
Gayle Rothrock
James Roush and
Cynthia Wayburn
Mary A. Russell
Sandra Salstrom
Douglas E. Sayan
Shelby Scates
Virginia Schmidt
Robert and Marsha Schoene
Richard and Janet Schwartz
Mark and Louise Sears
Verne A. Seeley
Seven Gables Restaurant

Emily Sherwood
Advanced Technology
International Telephone
Sam and Jo Anne Silverstein
Laboratories
and Telegraph
John Skillern
Aetna Life and Casualty
Inland Empire Veterinary
H.H. and Mary Skinner
Medicine Association
Foundation
Carolyn W. Smith
Intel Corporation
Allstate Insurance Company
Kirk H. Smith
American Express Foundation
International Business
Orin and Janet Smith
American Telephone and
Machines, Inc.
Orville and Clara Smith
Telegraph
John Nuveen and Company
Sherwood and Judith Smith
Armco Foundation
John Wiley and Sons, Inc.
Tom Mumford and Nancy Smith Ashland Oil Foundation
King County Arts Commission
Harold L. Smock
BankAmerica Foundation
Leo Burnett Company
Helen Sommers
Mercantile Safe Deposit
Boeing Company, Inc.
Samuel D. Soule
Boston Company, Inc.
and Trust Company
Oscar and Barbara Soule
Burlington Northern Foundation Metropolitan Life Foundation
South Sound Maritime Society
Canadian Consulate General
Northwest Area Foundation
South Sound Sailing Society
Chemgrate Corporation
Pacific Mountain Private
Jess and Hanna Spielholtz
Industry Council
Chevron U.S.A.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Spitzer
Pacific Northwest Bell
Chubb and Son, Inc.
Donald and Doris St Louis
Polaroid Corporation
Consulate General of Japan
Muriel J. Staley
Puget Sound Power and Light
Darigold Farms
Allen Steck
Dresser Foundation
Rainier National Bank
Equitable Life Assurance, Inc.
Reader's Digest Foundation
Pete Steilberg
Larry Stenberg
Recreational Equipment, Inc.
Exxon Education Foundation
Bruce and Mary Stevenson
Federated Department
Safeco Insurance Company
H.D. and Joan Stiggelbout
Saga Corporation
Stores Foundation
Susan M. Strasser
Sailing Foundation
Fellowship Foundation
Ann and Daniel Streissguth
Seattle Times Foundation
First Community Bank
Patrick D. Sutherland
Freas Foundation
Seattle Trust & Savings Bank
Sheldon Foundation
Philip and Doris Swain
Fujitsu Microelectronics, Inc.
Carlton and Richard Swearingen Dantona and Associates, Inc.
Shell Oil Company
Sperry Corporation Foundation
John and Jane Sylvester
Gelman, Couture and Pate
Richard Talcott
Sundstrand Corporation
General Electric Foundation
Daniel Taylor-Ide
Foundation
General Mills Foundation
Ken Renwick and Virginia Taylor General Telephone & Electronics Tektronix, Inc.
Nancy Taylor
United Pacific Insurance
Gould, Inc.
Marianna L. Tenney
Saul and Dayee Haas Foundation Vedder Foundation
Joan and Mort Thomas
Washington Mutual Savings Bank
Hewlett Packard, Inc.
Mr. and Mra Carlysle Thomas
Hospital Corporation of America Xerox Foundation
Jo Ann K. Thompson
Yenney's Music and Electronics
Elmer C. Huntley, Inc.
Fred Thunberg
Jerome King and C.L. Thurston
Paul and Dorothy Thurston
Glfts-ln-KInd
Totem Ocean Trailer Express
David W. Towle
Olympia Pottery and Art Supply
Town Tubs
Alpine Dry Cleaning
The Asterisk & Cheese Library Polaroid Corporation
Jean L. Towne
Mr. and Mra Henry Praetorius
Dale and Verna Tresner
The Book Mark
Radiance Herbs & Massage
Jacqueline Trimble
Cork 'n Crock
Rainbow Restaurant
David Current
Edward Trione
Rainy Day Records
Margaret Tunks
Darigold Farms
The Red Bull Restaurant
William Turnage
Earth Magic
Ripple Construction Co., Inc.
Rex Underwood
Dr. and Mrs. Ulrich Fritzsche
Saga Corporation
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Mrs. Waldtraut Unsoeld
Seven Gables Restaurant
Mr. and Mra Lawrence Hall
Urban Onion Restaurant
John and Jane Sylvester
Mr and Mra James Haseltine
David Vaillancourt
Tektronix, Inc.
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Heald
R.W. and J.F.C. Van Wagenen
Mr. and Mrs. Carlysle Thomas
Intel Corporation
William and Joann Veatch
Town Tubs
Ian Wade
Harold Johnson
Urban Onion Restaurant
George Leago
Sharon Wade
Hal Wolf
Mr. and Mra Bob Mackey
David Wagoner
Yenney's Music and Electronics
James and Helen Walker
George Mante
Harvey and Margie Wallace
Victor Walsh
Susan Washburn
Friends of the Evergreen Galleries
Alice Watts
Bryna Weber
Marcheta Bean
Kenneth and Marianne Partlow
Janet Welch
George and Sharon Bowen
John and Barbara Perkins
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Westrum
Gundrun Brask
Larry Ralphs
Joseph and Verona Wheeler
Stephen and Paula Butchko
Richard and Janet Schwartz
Sid and Pat Matheny White
Isabelle and Elmer Clausen
H.H. and Mary Skinner
J.W. Whittaker and
Marilyn Ruth Erickson
Sherwood and Judith Smith
Diane Roberts
Robert and Helen Fisher
Jess and Hanna Spielholtz
Darrell and Barbara William
Patricia Gallagher
Donald and Doris St Louis
Evan and Chloeann William
Brent Goeres
Kaye Sullivan
Walter B. Williams
Alan and Eva Goldberg
Jean L. Tbwne
David and Doris Willis
Jan L. Wagner
Gladys Guilbert
Hal Wolf
Mary Ann Hart
James and Helen Walker
Rachel D. Wolff
Mr. and Mrs. James Haseltine
Susan Washburn
Ronald and Melissa Woodbury
Carolyn Duniway Hoffman
Sid and Pat Matheny White
Gary Worrell
Julian and Josephine Jenner
Gary Worthington
Gary Worthington
Miriam S. Mathes
Keith and Anne Yandon
T. Evans Wyckoff
James and Kathleen McDowell
Byron and Bernice \butz
Keith and Anne Yandon
Haruko and Lawrence Moniz
Myrna Loy Zolyomi
Ted Young
Jerome and Eleanor Neal
William and Donna Zaugg
Albert L. Zesiger
T.C. Price Zimmerman
Myrna Loy Zolyomi

Friends of the Evergreen Library
Wendell and Caroline Allen
Alpine Dry Cleaning
Eleanor Aspinwall
The Asterisk and Cheese Library
Judith Bayard
Colleen Bergland
Jeff Blakley
Nat Blankenship
Elizabeth and Stewart Bledsoe
David and Joanne Bonsteel
The Book Mark
James D. Bremner
Betty M. Brinkman
Irene M. Buitenkant
Noni Buitenkant
Priscilla Bull
Canadian Consulate General
Jim Carlson
Herbert E. Childers
Susan E. Cohen
Robert Cole
Ellis and Colleen Collins
Consulate General Of Japan
Suzanne K. Conte
Ritannette Cooper
Cork 'n Crock
David Current
Darigold Farms
Goerge and Susan Dimitroff
Dorothy Doyle
Susan A. Dubuisson
Earth Magic
Adolph Ehresmann
Lewis Elwood
Jack Elzinga
Exxon Education Foundation

Fred and Lois Fenske
Robert and Helen Fisher
Dr. and Mrs. Ulrich Fritzsche
Herbert and Carol Fuller
Volney Gaudette
Herb Gelman
Alan and Eva Goldberg
Eleanor Graham
Thomas and Patricia Green
Chauncey and Marion Griffith
Mr. and Mrs. Werner Hahne
Fred and Dorothy Haley
Robert P. Hall
Buck and Betty Harmon
Mr. and Mrs. James Haseltine
Donald and Fay Holden
Carol Horner
James L. Humphrey
Meg Hunt
Mary M. Huston
Intel Corporation
Molly K. lyall
Japanese American
Citizens League
Gloria Jasper
Julian and Josephine Jenner
Harold Johnson
R.I. and Irene Johnson
Sara Jane Johnson
Dora Mae Jones
Charles M. Kelley
Charles and Jane Keyes
King County Arts Commission
John F. Koons
L & E Bottling Company, Inc.
Gerald L. Lassen

Jean and Richard Lawrence
George Leago
Karen Lichtenstein
Dorothy Liechty
R.W. and Norma Lucas
Lucretia B. Lupher
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Mackey
Theodore and Mae Mann
George Mante
Miriam S. Mathes
Charles J. and Barbara McCann
Sandra McQuirk
James and Kathleen McDowell
Robert and Joan Mcllwain
Carol D. McKinley
Robert L. Miller
Louise E. Morrison
Frank C. Motley
Barbara M. Nickerson
Katherine M. Oglesby
Joseph Olander
Olympia Pottery and Art Supply
Martin and Catherine Ormond
Pacific Mountain Private
Industry Council
Barbara and David Paulsen
Susan Perry
Polaroid Corporation
Possca, Inc.
Radiance Herbs and Massage
Rainbow Restaurant
Rainy Day Records
The Red Bull Restaurant
Robert and Letitia Reeves
Maryan Reynolds

Evergreen Foundation
Scholars Named
Forty-one members of the incoming class have been
selected as Evergreen Foundation Scholars and will
receive one full year of tuition for the 1985-86
academic year at Evergreen.
The scholarships are awarded on the basis of
students' superior academic achievement and contributions in the arts, athletics, community activities
and leadership.
Jeffrey Albertson
Richland H. S.
Richland, WA
Charissa Burrus
North Seattle C. C.
Seattle, WA
Jennifer Buttke
Lincoln H. S.
Portland, OR
Cindi Campbell
Summit K-12 School
Seattle, WA
John Carmichael
Western Washington U.
Bellingham, WA
Amy Crawford
New Orleans Academy
of Fine Arts
New Orleans, LA
Kathy Dockins
Foster H.S.
Seattle, WA
Dinah H. Dring
University of California
Santa Cruz, CA
Karen Fernandez
Holy Name Academy
Seattle, WA
Donald E. Flansburgh
Auburn H.S.
Auburn, WA
Joseph Follansbee
Seattle U.
Seattle, WA
Kim Hammon
Enumclaw H.S.
Enumclaw, WA
Shannon Hays
Columbia Basin C.C.
Pasco, WA
Suzanne Hierholzer
Grays Harbor C.C.
Aberdeen, WA
Charles Horner
Franklin H.S.
Seattle, WA
Daniel Johnson
Issaquah H.S.
Issaquah, WA
Jennifer Jones
Seattle Academy of Arts
and Sciences
Seattle, WA
Janet L. Karecki
LaSalle H.S.
Milwaukie, OR
Marina Kuran
Sacramento City College
Sacramento, CA
Rich A. Kurtzbein
Clark C.C.
Vancouver, WA

Anthea Lawrence
Highland H.S.
Albuquerque, NM
Phi Yen Thei Le
Tacoma C.C.
Tacoma, WA
Mark Levine
State U. of New York
Albany, NY
Charles Lynch II
Mountain View H.S.
Vancouver, WA
Michelle Mack
Rainier Beach H.S.
Seattle, WA
Lois Montgomery
South Puget Sound C.C.
Olympia, WA
Lawrence Norman
Summit K-12 H. S.
Seattle, WA
Thomas O'Donnell
Bellevue C.C.
Bellevue, WA
Justin Pollack
Glide H.S.
Glide, OR
Monica Rands
Rainier Beach H.S.
Seattle, WA
Biliary Renaissance
Seattle Central C.C.
Seattle, WA
Janet Rubert
Lower Columbia C.C.
Longview, WA
Karen Shrader
Mercer Island H.S.
Mercer Island, WA
Todd Michael Stanley
Foster H.S.
Seattle, WA
Paula Thurston
Puget Sound Institute
of Technology
Seattle, WA
Michael Tobin
Portland C.C.
Portland, OR
Kay Treakle
Tacoma C.C.
Tacoma, WA
Cindy Warm
Sammamish H.S.
Bellevue, WA
Christopher Wolfe
Peninsula College
Port Angeles, WA
Patricia S. Wright
Coronado H.S.
Colorado Springs, CO.

In addition to the high school graduates and two- and
four-year college transfers listed above, Sarah
Lorion of Olympia, Washington was also awarded a
Foundation Scholarship.

The Evergreen ReView
November, 1985; Volume 7, Number^ 1^_
Writing: Mark Clemens, Eleanor Dornan, Keith
Eisner, John Gallagher and Bob Reed, staff;
Elizabeth Diffendal, faculty; and Beth Fletcher,
student.
Photography: Tomas Black, Mark Clemens, Woody
Hirzel and Margaret Stratton, staff.
Typography and design: Brad Clemmons, Shirley
Greene and Marianne Kawaguchi, staff; Sam
Hendricks, student.



Nonprofit Org.
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Published by the Devt.
Library 3103, The Evergreen State
College, Olympia, Washington 98505.

College
Celebrates
Chicano and
Latino Culture
Evergreen celebrates Chicano and
Latino culture throughout this month
with a series of exhibits and presentations. Centerpiece of the festivities is
the "Chicano and Latino Artists in the
Pacific Northwest," an exhibit featuring works by nine Washington and
Idaho artists. On display are three
works by each artist in various media
including painting, photography,
sculpture, drawing and printmaking.
Complementing the works are
materials that include photographs of
artists in their working environments,
biographical information, and narratives on the history of Pacific
Chicano/Latino art and culture.

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The exhibit took three years to
research and develop, and was produced at Evergreen with Galleries Director Sid White serving as project director and curator. Working with White
during the research phase of the project, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, were Evergreen Faculty Librarian Pat MathenyWhite, University of Washington
scholar Erasmo Gamboa and Lauro
Flores, and Stanford humanitarian
Tomas Ybarro-Frausto. The exhibit
opened at Seattle's Museum of History
and Industry last October, then drew
large crowds during the first half of a
two-year tour through Washington,
Idaho, Oregon and Texas.
The exhibit opened at Evergreen on
November 1, El Dia de los Muertos
(The Day of The Dead), with a special
program co-hosted by the Hispanic
Arts Committee of Olympia and the
college. Dr. Tomas Ybarra-Frausto,
professor of Spanish and Portuguese at

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Stanford University, delivered a lecture on "Chicano Art and Culture." His
lecture was followed by local dancers
Cathy and Issac Shultz-Reyes, former
members of the Mexican National Folk
Ballet, who performed a dance
celebrating El Dia de los Muertos. The
reception included signing of a limitededition poster by artist Daniel Desiga.
Also in Gallery 2 through November
are works by award-winning Seattle
artist Rita Chavez, whose work was
recently selected for the Fiesta Partias
1985 Poster. Call Evergreen Galleries
at (206) 866-6000, ext. 6075 for details
on exhibits and Gallery hours.

Qeoducks, Arise
The ReView is combing the country for
Evergreen alums at labor in the visual
media industry. If there's a story there,
we'd like to feature it in an upcoming
edition.
Accordingly-motivated Geoducks in
photography, graphic design, film,
video, slide tape or any other phase of
the business should write us a letter
describing their work and the ways it
might be connected to their studies at
Evergreen. If possible, they should include a business card, logo and/or letterhead; a personal photo (b/w preferable); and a sample (or photo, b/w
preferable) of their work.
With enough information by
December 4, we'll print the feature
article in the Winter ReView; otherwise, shoot for February 28 and we'll
see you in the Spring.

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Leaving home is always hard, but looking forward to the new challenges of
college can be a time to share. Posing
for a moment at the Evergreen Family
Picnic are freshman Beverly Anderson
of Portland, Oregon, and her mother,
Ruth. For a fresh look at the first days
of college, turn to page 2.