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V12 #1 November 1990 - Archives - The Evergreen State College

V12 #1 November 1990 - Archives - The Evergreen State College

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<strong>The</strong> <strong>Evergreen</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

INTO THE<br />

WOODS


Who's New?<br />

GEONE'<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong>'s new admissions policy works as<br />

jlanned, and the first class of freshmen and transfer<br />

students admitted following the guidelines of the<br />

policy are on campus this quarter.<br />

A major focus of the new policy is to ensure<br />

that more people of color and other underrepresented<br />

populations who apply will be admitted, and,<br />

"essentially, more people of color are being admitted<br />

to the college," says Doug Scrima, assistant to<br />

the dean of Enrollment Services for Admissions.<br />

Established to meet the state's Higher Educa-<br />

|ion Coordinating Board, guidelines, <strong>Evergreen</strong>'s<br />

admission policy uses GPA and standardized test<br />

scores to select freshmen. From there.,, diveffjty<br />

becomes a factor. <strong>The</strong> policy also discards ||e<br />

rfjjling admission process that forcedsjvergpen to<br />

clo;se its doors to applicants Unless they applied a<br />

year before they planned to attend. Now, March 1 is<br />

die-annual deadline to apply. :,: il|i><br />

Statistics give a good idea of how the:poiil|fe<br />

works to encourage*! fie enrollment of people of "'<br />

color,! students aged 25 and older, Vietnaiil veterans*!<br />

{he sensb%iand physically challenged, and first generation<br />

college students. Historical data below :'-:'.<br />

shows the policy's effect on enrollments of people of,<br />

color.<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong>'s overall program of recraitpBfit and<br />

•the nesg: admissions policy are credited with ,<br />

increased enroHment/fjom these populations. ,<br />

"We are certainly putting ourselves out front ii<br />

higher education by .saying we want a diverse .:<br />

student body and hacking it up with such a policy,'<br />

sai Arhaldo Rodnguex, (lean of Enrollment.<br />

Services. "We don't admit a student because she's a<br />

student of color, we admit her because she is<br />

qualified and because her presence will enrich the:<br />

:colle|e community. <strong>The</strong> sunn: goes for older A-g<br />

students, Vietnam: veterans, physically and sensory<br />

ehalicnged, and first generation college students."<br />

II People of Color Who .,;:.'.<br />

Applied for Pall Quarter Ad<br />

1989<br />

296'<br />

<strong>1990</strong><br />

394 :<br />

4<br />

o o<br />

applicants<br />

were<br />

admitted)<br />

Puree Named<br />

Interim<br />

President<br />

:<br />

THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong>'s Board of<br />

Trustees selected T. L.<br />

"Les" Puree as interim<br />

president during their<br />

October 10 meeting.<br />

Puree, who served as<br />

acting president since<br />

September 6, thanked the<br />

trustees for their support<br />

and said, "I would like<br />

to say to my colleagues<br />

that I understand the<br />

hard work we have to<br />

do. Much of my energy<br />

and time will be spent<br />

working with faculty,<br />

students, staff and<br />

trustees to meet the<br />

challenges ahead."<br />

SI <strong>The</strong> board's appointment<br />

followed a<br />

of intense<br />

.ultation. <strong>The</strong><br />

tuliees solicited written as well as verbal recommendations from students, staff<br />

ajid'iaculty. Others considered for the position were: Faculty Members Rudy<br />

and Charles McCann, Academic Dean Carolyn Dobbs and former Vice<br />

President Ken Winkley.<br />

<strong>The</strong> search for a permanent president, which trustees say will begin after<br />

extefi|ive consultation with staff and faculty, might take as long as 18 months to<br />

pvojiears.<br />

Puree came to <strong>Evergreen</strong> on March 8, 1988 as vice president for <strong>College</strong><br />

Advancement. One of his most notable accomplishments in that time has been<br />

the. successful launching of the campaign to establish the Senator Daniel J. Evans<br />

Glair, <strong>Evergreen</strong>'s first endowed chair. In addition to directing the wotk of<br />

Development, Conference Services, Alumni Affairs and Information Services,<br />

P»ce has also been an active participant in the Strategic Planning process and<br />

other institutional activities.<br />

II Puree's first contact with the college came in 1972 when he worked with<br />

former Faculty Members Willi Unsoeld and LeRoi Smith. Puree, then a counsel-<br />

||ig psychologist at Washington <strong>State</strong> University, facilitated an evaluation<br />

|>rocess for Unsoeld's and Smith's first <strong>Evergreen</strong> academic program. "I was<br />

"deeply impressed with the college and its mission, and that impression always<br />

stayed with me."<br />

Before coming to <strong>Evergreen</strong>, Puree served as the special assistant to the<br />

president and director of Research Park and Economic Developm A at Idaho<br />

<strong>State</strong> University. He also directed the Department of Health and^pMre for the<br />

state of Idaho, where he was responsible for a $200 million annijf|||udget and a<br />

statewide staff of 2,400. ;.;/'"<br />

Did Bureaucracy Kill the Pharaohs?<br />

Faculty Member Mark Papworth spent April and June in Egypt's Valley of the<br />

Kings, where he helped excavate his archeological dig from an international<br />

media scandal involving government bureaucrats.<br />

"I will put the Egyptian bureaucracy up against any two bureaucracies in<br />

the world, including China's, Russia's and the CIA, and Egypt will bury them,*'<br />

says Papworth. :«;: !<br />

Although there's no proof bureaucracy played a role in the decline of the<br />

Pharaohs, Egyptian bureaucracy dates back much farther than the 3,


GEONEW<br />

Greeners Export Environmentalism to U.S.S.R.<br />

by Mike Wark<br />

<strong>The</strong> Volga River, a geographical landmark that cuts across the<br />

Soviet Union, is not really a river. Instead, the Volga is a series of<br />

reservoirs behind seven major dams that are compounding problems<br />

with pollution.<br />

Faculty Member Tom Rainey led a group of faculty and students<br />

to study two Soviet nature preserves on the Volga this<br />

summer. <strong>The</strong>y found that protected areas on the Volga aren't<br />

immune to upriver pollution. However, the Soviet word for nature<br />

preserve means "Forbidden Area," and generally, that description<br />

is accurate.<br />

"<strong>The</strong>re is no hunting and no economic exploitation of forest<br />

lands. <strong>The</strong>y are protected — nature in the raw," says Rainey. "<strong>The</strong><br />

preserves are designed to be ecological models for study, and one<br />

preserve is found in each vegetational zone, or major bioregion,<br />

across the Soviet Union."<br />

Rainey, Faculty Members Oscar Soule and Dave Milne and 10<br />

students were the first Americans ever to set foot on a Soviet nature<br />

preserve to study the environment, according to their host, Marat<br />

Khabibullov of Kazan <strong>State</strong> University. Not even Soviet tourists are<br />

allowed into the areas. <strong>The</strong>y are, literally, forbidden areas, except<br />

for study.<br />

However, a major threat to the preserves are the "marauding<br />

Soviet economic ministries," operating out of Moscow with little<br />

control from the center, says Rainey. Worse than American<br />

corporations that are checked by protectionist forces, the Soviet<br />

ministries have little to stop them when they set sights on exploiting<br />

minerals or forest lands. If they want something in the preserves,<br />

they'll go and get it, ignoring local laws, or paying fines that<br />

are minimal. Those in Moscow, far away, care little about the environment.<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Evergreen</strong> contingent was ferried between two preserves<br />

on a boat called OM73, or "OM sweet OM," which also served as<br />

a lecture hall. <strong>The</strong> group identified the flora and fauna, and looked<br />

at cultural assumptions and attitudes which shape peoples' view of<br />

the environment.<br />

"From the preserves, we went to nearby areas that were<br />

seriously damaged by industrial pollution, farming and improper<br />

forest practices," says Rainey.<br />

Cities still have improper treatment of human waste, which often<br />

isn't treated before being dumped into the Volga. Fish suffer<br />

from many diseases typical of a stressed situation.<br />

THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong> welcomes new Trustees Christina Meserve '71 and John Terrey.<br />

Meserve, an Olympia lawyer specializing in family law, is a member of<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong>'s first four-year graduating class. She's served as an Alumni<br />

Association president and member of the college's Foundation Board of<br />

Governors. Terrey, a Seattle resident, has served as director for the <strong>State</strong> Board<br />

of Education for Community <strong>College</strong>, and executive assistant to the president<br />

and dean of Administration at Central "Washington University. He also taught at<br />

Tacoma Community <strong>College</strong> and was a high school English teacher for 75<br />

years. Meserve and Terrey replace former Trustees Kay Boyd '76, who resigned<br />

on October 1, and Richard Page whose term expired this fall.<br />

Rainey's work didn't stop there. In late August he went<br />

back, not to the Volga, but to Lake Baikal, a major focus of his<br />

academic study and personal affection.<br />

With a group of 24 American and 28 Soviet scientists, the<br />

joint-U.S./U.S.S.R. delegation headed for Northeastern Siberia<br />

for the world's largest lake: 365 miles long, 56 miles across at its<br />

widest point, Baikal holds 20 percent of the globe's fresh water.<br />

It is 1.5 miles to bottom at its deepest point. Baikal supports<br />

1200 species found nowhere else, including a fresh water seal.<br />

Of 365 rivers that flow in, only the Angara flows out.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> lake is celebrated locally and in Russian legend as a<br />

symbol of purity in a corrupt world," says Rainey.<br />

<strong>The</strong> groups' destination was Severobaikalsk, a town created<br />

15 years ago by railroads. Two cellulose mills at the southern<br />

end of the lake threaten to destroy Lake Baikal.<br />

"<strong>The</strong> Railroad to Severobaikalsk was to be one of the great<br />

projects of the century for the Soviets, touted as a second trans-<br />

Siberian railroad designed to open Northeastern Siberia to<br />

economic exploitation of timber and minerals," says Rainey.<br />

<strong>The</strong> scientists performed field studies and reached a<br />

common conclusion that the lake was threatened. <strong>The</strong>y drew up<br />

300 recommendations to correct the situation. One major initiative<br />

was to promote "environmentally safe" industry like<br />

tourism.<br />

<strong>The</strong> group returned to Moscow to much media attention<br />

from Pravda and Izvestia, who called the group "Ekspertiza 90."<br />

Both papers reviewed the scientists' findings favorably, recommending<br />

they be adopted. A week later, the Supreme Soviet<br />

passed a resolution in support of the group's findings.<br />

With environmental measures being taken by both national<br />

and local governments, Rainey hopes that Lake Baikal's delicate<br />

environment will survive, but he's not resting on his hope.<br />

"Baikal Watch" is the name of the organization Rainey<br />

began. As co-chair, he plans to inform the American public of<br />

environmental threats to a world-class treasure, and raise money<br />

to start sending scientists to help Soviets understand and protect<br />

the lake. Rainey is also American co-chair of the Baikal Fund,<br />

with Soviet counterpart Andrei Kapitsa, a professor of geography<br />

at the prestigious Moscow <strong>State</strong> University. <strong>The</strong>ir purpose is<br />

to continue joint U.S./U.S.S.R. study and preservation efforts.<br />

Rainey now counts 11 trips to the Soviet Union, three to<br />

Lake Biakal.<br />

"This was quite the most extraordinary summer I've ever<br />

spent," he says.<br />

I<br />

THE FATE OF<br />

ANCIENT FORESTS<br />

IS THE GUT ISSUE OF THE NORTHWEST.<br />

Millions of acres of forests and<br />

thousands of jobs hang in the balance.<br />

It's easy when dealing with such<br />

large numbers to see people as abstract<br />

masses, rather than as individuals.<br />

Among the people affected by this<br />

environmental and economic crisis are<br />

a great number of <strong>Evergreen</strong>ers<br />

whose lives and passions are deeply<br />

invested in the health of timber<br />

and forests. In hopes of personalizing<br />

the issue, the ReView offers a<br />

profile of three such people orpthe<br />

following pages.<br />

FALL 199O


I<br />

BOTANIST<br />

by Keith Eisner '80<br />

Let's start small. Consider 3.5 million board feet. That's the<br />

estimated amount of timber that would be removed from the sale of<br />

100 or so acres of old growth forest in Washington's Mt. Baker-<br />

Snoqualmie National Forest.<br />

Three-and-a-half million of anything is tough to conceive.<br />

But let's put it this way: 3.5 million board feet would cover every<br />

inch of <strong>Evergreen</strong>'s Red Square (from CAB to Lecture Hall,<br />

Clocktower to knoll) to a height of over 15 feet. It's enough lumber<br />

to frame at least 270 three-bedroom houses. Stumpage value for that<br />

amount rings in at about $1,500,000. Add several million more<br />

dollars generated in processing, truckers' wages, millwork, retail<br />

sales and other support industries. Anyway you cut it, it's a lot of<br />

lumber packing a huge economic wallop that affects hundreds if not<br />

thousands of lives.<br />

Yet 3.5 million board feet is only a fourth of the amount of<br />

timber that the Darrington District is required to sell this year. <strong>The</strong><br />

Darrington District, 60 miles northeast of Seattle, is only one of five<br />

districts in the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest which as a<br />

whole is mandated to sell 45 million board feet of timber this year.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Mt. Baker Forest is one of six national forests in Oregon and<br />

Washington. Altogether nearly 4 billion board feet of old growth<br />

timber on federal lands is slated to be cut in Oregon and Washington<br />

next year.<br />

Consider now the Botrychium montanum, also known as<br />

the grape fern or moonwart. "It looks like something Bart Simpson<br />

would draw," says Forest Service botanist Laura Potash '78. She<br />

sketches a bony, angular-looking stalk, a warty thing one could well<br />

imagine growing on the moon. <strong>The</strong> particular specimens Potash<br />

found were one-half-inch tall. A hundred would fit in the palm of<br />

your hand, and a child's breath would blow them away.<br />

Puny and abstract as the moonwart, bog orchid, sedges and<br />

other such plants may seem against the million dollar stacks of<br />

lumber, they are of great importance to the U.S. Forest Service<br />

which recently hired Potash to develop a system of study, identification<br />

and inventory for the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest.<br />

She is the first federal botanist hired for that area.<br />

Before anyone—logger or Earth Firster!—raises fears or<br />

hopes about a botanist sidetracking a timber sale, Potash is quick<br />

and emphatic about her impartiality. "I wouldn't last two seconds in<br />

the Forest Service if I acted in a manner to favor one side or the<br />

other of the old growth issue. I don't have the authority to say this<br />

should or shouldn't be cut.<br />

My job is to say this is the plantlife that exists in a certain<br />

area. This is what those plants need to survive."<br />

THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

continued on page 14


•Illl<br />

ACTIVIST<br />

by Ray Kelleher '88<br />

Walk into the Olympia office of the National Audubon Society and<br />

the first thing you notice is how hectic an operation it is these days.<br />

Reports and stacks of data fill the reception area chairs. A fax<br />

machine pours a stream of paper into a widening pool on the floor.<br />

Staff members swoop in and out of offices, jumping from telephone<br />

to computer terminal and back to the phone. <strong>The</strong>re are no visible<br />

signs of hierarchy: no receptionist chained to an eight-line phone, no<br />

closed, name-plated door at the end of the hall, and no neckties.<br />

Everybody seems to be doing everything.<br />

Another thing that's missing is the tension you might expect to<br />

find at this level of controlled chaos. When you look into the faces<br />

here you see enthusiasm, you get the feeling this place is on a roll.<br />

In fact, the whole environmental movement is on a roll these<br />

days. Issues of conservation that would have had trouble making the<br />

inside pages of the Sunday paper 10 years ago are front-page news<br />

today. <strong>The</strong> major story in the Pacific Northwest for the past two<br />

years has been the spotted owl controversy. Waste reduction and<br />

preservation of habitat are vital issues in every community. Being<br />

Good to the Earth has even become a popular advertising hook.<br />

America is thinking Green.<br />

For Argon Steel '86, Washington <strong>State</strong> coordinator for the<br />

Audubon Society, this is no time to be complacent. "We're like ants<br />

compared to the forces we're up against," he said, referring to big<br />

business interests and timber lobbyists. A recent proposal by the<br />

Bush administration to implement a spotted owl plan that would<br />

reduce next year's timber harvest by only 20% seems to bear him<br />

out. In any case, Steel is giving no quarter in the fight to save what<br />

little ancient forest remains.<br />

Steel's primary organizing tool is the Adopt A Forest Program<br />

which enlists volunteers to work directly with the National Forest<br />

Service monitoring sales proposals and logging practices in national<br />

forests near their homes. Steel maintains there's a contrived myth<br />

that the conservationists are all in the cities. "We have Adopt A<br />

Forest representatives in every Forest Service district in Western<br />

Washington." he says. "If I've been smart, it's in knowing that I<br />

needed to work with the people who live out there. That's why it's<br />

working."<br />

<strong>The</strong> largest room at the Audubon Society is used for cataloging<br />

and updating maps. <strong>The</strong> map room bears an unmistakable resemblance<br />

to a World War II Operations Bunker. Maps hang from the<br />

walls. A large conference table is covered with maps of different<br />

forest districts. Each map has two or three transparent overlays<br />

defining various tree communites and showing the changes that<br />

occur with harvests. Steel pulls an especially large map of the<br />

continued on page 15<br />

FALL <strong>1990</strong>


LOGGER<br />

By Keith Eisner<br />

"So then what happened?" asks the man.<br />

<strong>The</strong> boy pauses. It's just after seven in the morning. We're in<br />

his father's pickup on the way to Trevor's before-school daycare.<br />

"Remember Saturn had a prophecy..." the man prompts.<br />

"Oh, yeah," the boy goes on excitedly, "he heard that one of<br />

his kids would kill him -no, wait -not kill him, but overthrow him.<br />

So he eats them as soon as they're born. Except when Jupiter was<br />

born, they dressed up a rock like a baby and gave that to Saturn to<br />

eat. <strong>The</strong>n Jupiter chased his father and made him throw up his<br />

brothers-Pluto and Neptune."<br />

Trevor turns to me and says proudly, "Dad and I read about<br />

'em last night."<br />

This conversation is not an exchange one would associate with<br />

the popular, media-generated image of a logger. But Doug Roberts,<br />

who graduated from <strong>Evergreen</strong> in 1979, is not your typical logger.<br />

He says, for example, "It's more and more difficult for the<br />

forestry industry to make a legitimate argument for cutting old<br />

growth forests."<br />

Most importantly, what sets Roberts off from many loggers is<br />

his steadfast confidence in 'the face of a dwindling timber supply.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Big Shakeout—he talks about it in the same capital letters that<br />

Californians talk about the eventual Big One—"will ultimately be<br />

good for the industry. We'll learn to be more efficient, less wasteful,<br />

more creative."<br />

Roberts does not look like someone who's spent most of his<br />

working life in the woods. His serious, thoughtful face and thick,<br />

dark-framed glasses are more suggestive of a professor of history or<br />

mathematics. But you see the workman in him when he moves,<br />

striding with a surefooted, rolling gait, swinging in or out of the<br />

pickup with an efficiency of movement.<br />

His optimism isn't based on wishful thinking, but on over 20<br />

years of good times and bad in the logging business. "<strong>The</strong> industry<br />

has been cyclical for years," he says after we drop off his son, "but<br />

nothing since the Depression hit logging as hard as the slump of the<br />

early 80s."<br />

Ironically, it was during that slump that the company Roberts<br />

works for was founded. "Production had to be doubled," he says,<br />

"because the price was halved. People who remained had to be<br />

ambitious, resourceful."<br />

THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

continued on page 16


BOTANIST<br />

continued from page 8<br />

Although it is within the<br />

realm of possibility that a<br />

timber sale could be delayed or<br />

cancelled because of a plant,<br />

Potash hastens to point out<br />

that most forestry issues are<br />

not black-and-white, cut-ordon't-cut<br />

situations.<br />

"Say we find moonwarts,"<br />

she says, "or any other<br />

sensitive or endangered species<br />

on a proposed timber site. It's<br />

not a matter of 'Well there's a<br />

moonwart, so no sale.' <strong>The</strong><br />

first thing we do is determine<br />

the requirements for the<br />

species, then write about<br />

impacts: how changes in the<br />

soil, hydrology and light<br />

conditions will affect the plant.<br />

"<strong>The</strong>n we try to work<br />

with timber crews, engineers<br />

and other people in the Forest<br />

Service. For example, perhaps<br />

the road crew could change the<br />

spacing between culverts to<br />

lessen changes in the hydrology,<br />

or maybe the species can<br />

withstand flooding if a certain<br />

amount of the canopy is left<br />

intact or maybe..."<br />

Two million acres is another<br />

tough concept to grasp. Think<br />

of it this way: imagine covering<br />

the <strong>Evergreen</strong> campus on foot,<br />

from soccer fields to Organic<br />

Farm, from bus loop to<br />

Geoduck Beach, not missing a<br />

square foot. Now imagine<br />

2,000 <strong>Evergreen</strong>s, laid out<br />

together with no easy trails,<br />

mown lawns or predominantly<br />

gentle terrain. Imagine miles of<br />

devil's club, wetlands, tall<br />

timber, rivers, boulders,<br />

wilderness and clear cut.<br />

Those 2 million acres are<br />

Potash's venue, a roughly 30mile-wide<br />

corridor of forest in<br />

central Washington, extending<br />

from the Mt. Rainier area to<br />

the Canadian border. Of<br />

course, no human or conceiva-<br />

bly workable group of humans<br />

could cover that area in depth<br />

in a lifetime. What it will take<br />

to produce a reasonable profile<br />

of plantlife in the forest is<br />

nothing less than first-rate<br />

thinking, planning and<br />

teamwork.<br />

And there's the rub.<br />

Nothing manmade is as<br />

complex and mystifying as the<br />

biodiversity of an old growth<br />

forest. But the machinery of<br />

bureacracy conies close.<br />

Forestry issues involve huge,<br />

interlocking, interrelated<br />

government entities: Congress,<br />

the USD A, the Forest Service,<br />

Fish and Wildlife, Department<br />

of Natural Resources and state<br />

safety inspectors just to name a<br />

few. Bear in mind that each<br />

agency consists of hundreds of<br />

people in sub-agencies often on<br />

the ready to fight for turf,<br />

authority and jurisdiction.<br />

Throw in lawyers, media, and<br />

advocacy groups from timber<br />

and environmental camps and<br />

you have a minefield of<br />

personal and political crosspurposes.<br />

Daunting?<br />

"This is the job," says<br />

Potash, "that I've always<br />

wanted." Her enthusiasm for<br />

the task is genuine and<br />

infectious. At her desk and in<br />

the woods itself, she emanates<br />

a zest for discovery and making<br />

things work.<br />

Her desk in Seattle is a<br />

testament to the double life of<br />

field botanist and administrator:<br />

word processing manual;<br />

phone and rolodex; a thick-asa-Bible<br />

volume entitled Final<br />

Environmental Impact<br />

<strong>State</strong>ment; a plastic-coated field<br />

guide to flora of the Pacific<br />

Northwest; a memo typed<br />

military-style (ALL CAPS) from<br />

a forest ranger; an organization<br />

chart; a metric ruler; two sizes<br />

of tweezers; a magnifying glass,<br />

and two ziplock plastic bags<br />

containing green and swampylooking<br />

plants.<br />

14 THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

"Those are sedges," she<br />

says, "It's odd to sit here at a<br />

desk, under florescent lights<br />

and examine plants. It's a lot<br />

harder identifying things in the<br />

field. You can't pick the<br />

sensitive or endangered plants.<br />

Usually I'm squatting down in<br />

the rain, crawling under devil's<br />

club to look at them."<br />

<strong>The</strong> phone rings and she<br />

engages in a lively conversation<br />

about swamp gentians. "It's a<br />

sexy project," she says, "People<br />

love bogs. I'd like to do it<br />

myself."<br />

She's talking with a Forest<br />

Service employee responsible<br />

for the rare plants program at<br />

the North Bend station. He and<br />

Potash are discussing the pros<br />

and cons of recruiting members<br />

of private conservation groups<br />

to volunteer for the enormous<br />

task of plant study in the<br />

national forests.<br />

"On the other hand," she<br />

says, "you don't want to take a<br />

lot of people out there. It's a<br />

delicate situation, socially and<br />

ecologically."<br />

After the call Potash<br />

explains it's a new ballgame<br />

with plants in the Forest<br />

Service. Some districts are very<br />

interested, others don't have<br />

the time, and some just don't<br />

want to be bothered. Creating<br />

a network of people who care<br />

about rare plants and have the<br />

expertise to identify them is<br />

one of Potash's top priorities.<br />

"Hopefully we'll train timber<br />

cruisers and other Forest<br />

Service people to be on the<br />

lookout for rare species."<br />

<strong>The</strong> image is captivating:<br />

everyone from engineers and<br />

surveyors to roadbuilders and<br />

loggers paying as much<br />

attention to what's on the<br />

ground as to the 400-year-old<br />

giants towering over them.<br />

Potash's first fieldwork<br />

took place over 14 years ago as<br />

an <strong>Evergreen</strong> student when she<br />

studied at the Malheur Bird<br />

Observatory in Oregon and<br />

observed elephant seals at the<br />

Point Reyes Observatory in<br />

California. Last year she<br />

earned a masters degree in<br />

ecosystems analysis from the<br />

University of Washington,<br />

writing her thesis on "Sprouting<br />

of Red Heather in Response<br />

to Fire."<br />

I wondered why someone<br />

so active would chose to<br />

specialize in botany rather than<br />

wildlife. One of the reasons is<br />

simple. <strong>The</strong> reality of wildlife<br />

research means hours of sitting<br />

motionless in observation<br />

blinds. She also loves the<br />

intellectual challenge of keying<br />

a plant: "You become aware of<br />

the evolutionary relationships<br />

between organisms."<br />

Three days after visiting her<br />

office, I accompany Potash to a<br />

stand of old growth timber, the<br />

Darrington sale referred to<br />

earlier in this story. We are<br />

members of a party of 15<br />

who'll review the proposed<br />

timber site. <strong>The</strong>re's a silviculturist,<br />

an Audubon Society<br />

member, a member of the<br />

Nature Conservancy, a wildlife<br />

biologist, fisheries biologist, an<br />

hydrologist, a timber management<br />

officer, foresters and the<br />

district ranger. <strong>The</strong>re's also a<br />

representative for the Tulalip<br />

tribe whose interest is the<br />

shrinking area of natural forest<br />

suitable for ceremonial<br />

purposes.<br />

<strong>The</strong> hike is a traveling<br />

seminar. <strong>The</strong> group strings out<br />

into little ad hoc discussion<br />

groups of twos and threes, with<br />

topics ranging from the<br />

abstraction of policies,<br />

agencies, theories and politics<br />

to the here-and-now of this<br />

Douglas Fir, this Western<br />

Hemlock. Every now and then<br />

with no formal notice or<br />

apparent organization, the<br />

entire group gathers to discuss<br />

the implications of the sale. We<br />

stand quiet for awhile, blinking<br />

at the trees above us until<br />

someone starts to speak.<br />

I Most of the talk is over my<br />

head: windthrow, blowdown,<br />

corridors, sunscald, storage,<br />

recharge, canopy intersection,<br />

fragmentation, overstory,<br />

understory, exploding growth,<br />

edge. I am reminded of the<br />

saying that Eskimos have over<br />

100 words for ice and snow.<br />

Likewise, those of us on the<br />

periphery of forests think<br />

generally in two words, "big"<br />

and "trees," while people like<br />

Potash and her co-workers<br />

have developed a whole lexicon<br />

to deal with the complexity of<br />

forest life.<br />

One phrase that continually<br />

surfaces is "New Perspectives."<br />

It's the new thinking<br />

that recognizes a forest as a<br />

complex, biological community<br />

rather than just a woodlot.<br />

Recognizing the biodiversity of<br />

a forest is one thing. Removing<br />

400-year-old, twenty-ton trees<br />

and recreating that diversity of<br />

life is something else again.<br />

It's all new territory. What<br />

trees and how many do we<br />

leave standing? Should we cut<br />

lots of little sections or several<br />

huge stands? What actually<br />

lives here now? What'll happen<br />

in 80, 100, 300 years? Will we<br />

have recreated a forest or a<br />

treelot? No one knows for<br />

sure. It's like giving a pocket<br />

watch to a five-year old and<br />

asking her to take it apart and<br />

put it together again.<br />

But there's hope in<br />

knowledge. A year ago there<br />

was no botanist for this forest.<br />

Now she's up ahead with a 10pound<br />

field guide tucked into<br />

the back pouch of her rain<br />

parka. It's also safe to say that<br />

a few years ago there probably<br />

wouldn't have been an<br />

hydrologist, a biologist, an<br />

environmentalist, a journalist<br />

or a tribal representative<br />

present on this survey.<br />

<strong>The</strong>re's hope, too, in<br />

communication. A fair amount<br />

of networking takes place on<br />

the hike: Potash and the<br />

hydrologist discuss what<br />

constitutes wetlands; the<br />

wildlife specialist discusses<br />

shade and seedling growth with<br />

the silviculturist; a timber<br />

cruiser and an environmentalist<br />

discuss the effects of blowdown<br />

on the edge of the proposed<br />

cut. Every exchange of<br />

knowledge and resources<br />

contributes a tiny piece to the<br />

puzzle of a forest.<br />

Later, I ask Potash about her<br />

piece of the puzzle. We're<br />

driving back to Seattle and I<br />

drop my Greener Environmentalist<br />

Chic and play the devil's<br />

advocate: "Okay, really, Laura,<br />

job responsibilities and correct<br />

politics aside, why all this fuss<br />

about moonwarts and other<br />

weeds?"<br />

Her response is calm but<br />

impassioned: "We don't know<br />

the long-term effects of our<br />

actions. It's presumptuous to<br />

assume we do. Take the fungus<br />

they've discovered on the roots<br />

of trees. <strong>The</strong>y've found out that<br />

that fungus helps trees grow.<br />

"Who knows? Maybe the<br />

moonwart could be a cure for<br />

AIDS or cancer. Not protecting<br />

it would be like burning the<br />

pages of a book before you've<br />

read it."<br />

She pauses as we enter the<br />

city. "Even if moonwarts are of<br />

absolutely no use to humans,<br />

we don't have the right to<br />

destroy any species or to allow<br />

them to be destroyed."<br />

In these hard times, it<br />

takes more than compassion to<br />

do the right thing for our<br />

forests. It takes knowledge<br />

about all life-great and<br />

microscopic. What Potash and<br />

her co-workers are giving us is<br />

as precious as water.<br />

ACTIVIST<br />

continued from page 11<br />

Olympic Peninsula from the<br />

bottom of the pile and starts<br />

flipping through orange and<br />

green overlays. Numbered tags<br />

scattered across the map<br />

indicate the known locations of<br />

spotted owls. <strong>The</strong> wealth of<br />

biological data contained in<br />

these maps is impressive.<br />

While working on a World<br />

Wildlife Fund project in the<br />

Amazon rain forest, Steel<br />

became acquainted with the<br />

concept of island biogeography:<br />

the study of changes in<br />

animal and plant populations<br />

that occur when large tracts of<br />

habitat are broken into isolated<br />

patches by natural or human<br />

activity. This is essentially what<br />

is happening in the Northwest<br />

and is at the core of the fight<br />

over how much old growth<br />

forest needs to be preserved.<br />

"Before the days of the<br />

spotted owl, conservation was<br />

a recreational issue. <strong>The</strong> 'Name<br />

it and Save it' philosophy<br />

guided legislation," he explains,<br />

referring to the point of<br />

view that it was easier to get<br />

Congress to save pretty places<br />

than to preserve animal<br />

habitat. "<strong>The</strong> ancient forests<br />

used to be thought of as<br />

biological deserts," he says,<br />

pointing out the dwindling<br />

islands of green on the map<br />

overlay. "As we learned more<br />

about their diversity of life it<br />

became evident that we needed<br />

to shift from thinking about<br />

landscapes to thinking about<br />

whole ecosystems. At last we're<br />

recognizing the importance of<br />

forests as biological areas."<br />

After jobs with the Forest<br />

Service and the Washington<br />

<strong>State</strong> Department of Wildlife,<br />

<strong>The</strong> Audubon Society put Steel<br />

to work organizing the map<br />

library. It didn't take them long<br />

to recognize his skill for<br />

organizing people. "I was in<br />

the right place at the right<br />

time," he says. He believes the<br />

Audubon Society was one of<br />

the first national organizations<br />

to shift its emphasis to "deep<br />

ecology." This required a reevaluation<br />

of what was<br />

politically possible for the<br />

FALL <strong>1990</strong><br />

movement. It meant education<br />

and involving a much larger<br />

part of the population.<br />

Steel sees Washington<br />

state as particularly fertile<br />

ground for political action.<br />

"This is the best lab in the<br />

country right now to see if<br />

people can live in a healthy<br />

environment. We still have a<br />

few areas that are virtually the<br />

same as they were before the<br />

arrival of white men. At the<br />

same time we have a public<br />

that's concerned about<br />

environmental issues. <strong>The</strong><br />

combination of both factors is<br />

something unique in the<br />

U.S. I believe that if we can't<br />

practice wise forestry in the<br />

Pacific Northwest, we can't do<br />

it anywhere."<br />

<strong>The</strong> term "grass roots"<br />

keeps coming up when you<br />

talk to Argon Steel. For him,<br />

environmentalism is a populist<br />

movement. He sees danger in<br />

the tendency to focus on<br />

lobbying in Washington D.C.<br />

at the expense of working in<br />

the community. "<strong>The</strong> next big<br />

issue for environmental groups<br />

is how to integrate youth and<br />

minorities into the movement,"<br />

he said. "I'm hoping<br />

this campaign will recognize<br />

that minorities have their own<br />

agendas, and the environmental<br />

movement has room<br />

for those agendas. I'd like to<br />

look beyond saving your local<br />

marsh and look at the larger<br />

issues that surround people."<br />

For Steel these larger<br />

issues are economic. "In the<br />

near future we are going to see<br />

more confrontations between<br />

economic interests and<br />

endangered species." He<br />

doesn't believe it's going to be<br />

possible to legislate environmentalism<br />

without making<br />

fundamental changes. "I'm a<br />

little more radical than some<br />

of my fellow environmentalists,"<br />

he admits with a vaguely<br />

dangerous smile.<br />

"Let me tell you what my<br />

priorities are. My first<br />

allegiance is to the environment.<br />

My second is to the<br />

continued on next page<br />

15


grass roots, the community.<br />

And my third is to my organization."<br />

Steel is aware that<br />

protecting endangered species<br />

means making economic<br />

choices that are going to hurt<br />

people. When asked if he finds<br />

it uncomfortable to live and<br />

work in a community so<br />

polarized over the forest issue,<br />

his reply is unhesitating. "I<br />

never apologize," he says. "I'd<br />

rather deal with hostility than<br />

apathy any day."<br />

He empathizes deeply with<br />

those who are caught in the<br />

middle. At the same time he<br />

believes that environmental<br />

degradation has gone too far<br />

for painless solutions. "We<br />

can't compromise life. Extinction<br />

is the bottom line. <strong>The</strong><br />

burden of proof in this<br />

discussion has always been on<br />

the environment and now that<br />

has to change."<br />

<strong>The</strong> people that Argon<br />

Steel has no empathy for are<br />

cynics. "We're on a campaign<br />

that's winning and I will not<br />

tolerate pessimism. I mean,<br />

what's the point? People need<br />

to be empowered. You need to<br />

point out solutions or there's<br />

no use for you," he says.<br />

"No one would do this<br />

work for the money. <strong>The</strong> thing<br />

that makes this winnable is<br />

passion, and that passion<br />

includes all your sadness and<br />

anger as well as your love. It<br />

can be hard. You can get<br />

sucked into this work body and<br />

soul and it will suck you dry,<br />

but you've got to maintain<br />

your idealism. Like I said,<br />

we're winning."<br />

LOGGER<br />

continued from page 12<br />

Roberts performs two<br />

kinds of work. Mostly, he's a<br />

troubleshooter, dealing with<br />

permits, public agencies,<br />

insurance companies, banks,<br />

etc. but he also fills in as a<br />

loader and operator of<br />

construction equipment when<br />

needed.<br />

His days as a loader begin<br />

at 4:30 a.m., he's out on the<br />

site, loading trucks by 5:30.<br />

"We did away with a lot of<br />

luxuries during the early 80s<br />

crunch," he says. "Like the 8hour<br />

day with coffee breaks<br />

and a long lunch hour. Now<br />

it's 10-11 hours: eat your lunch<br />

in the cab; got to go? you do it<br />

off the running board-keep the<br />

engine running, hop back in<br />

and keep loading."<br />

Fortunately, today, a<br />

dazzling morning in late<br />

September, is a troubleshooting<br />

day. We'll have plenty of time<br />

to talk as we travel down<br />

Highway 8 between stops in<br />

and around Montesano,<br />

Aberdeen and Hoquiam.<br />

<strong>The</strong> company that Roberts<br />

works for employs about 50<br />

people -more or less, depending<br />

on the availability of work.<br />

Diversity, he says, is the key to<br />

survival. Several years ago 90%<br />

of the company's revenue came<br />

from logging; now it's around<br />

60%. <strong>The</strong> rest of the revenue<br />

comes from construction and<br />

road building, land development<br />

and two logging supply<br />

stores. On the way to the<br />

office, located about 20 miles<br />

west of <strong>Evergreen</strong>, Roberts<br />

elaborates on the theme of<br />

diversity:<br />

"Two years ago we sold<br />

off most of our heavy equipment.<br />

We made the decision<br />

that it wasn't feasible for us to<br />

log at the level of intensity it<br />

takes to cut on federal lands. If<br />

we have economic options,<br />

such as developing real estate,<br />

we don't need to log old<br />

growth to-<br />

"Hey, there you go," he<br />

says, interrupting himself and<br />

pointing to a hillside, "that's<br />

what I was talking about<br />

before."<br />

All I see are trees: dark fir<br />

on the ridge and upper slopes;<br />

alder and other leafy trees<br />

below. But what Roberts sees is<br />

an unmanaged forest. "See how<br />

the firs peter out and there's all<br />

those junk trees below? Well,<br />

that's because after they cut it,<br />

they didn't reseed, but let it<br />

happen on its own. A certain<br />

amount of alder is desirable,<br />

but not that much."<br />

I begin to ask more about<br />

this but we're interrupted by<br />

the phone. It's a call from the<br />

office, advising Roberts to<br />

make sure the local fire<br />

department has been notified of<br />

a burn that the company will<br />

be conducting on a site near<br />

Montesano. "People see<br />

smoke," explains Roberts, "call<br />

the fire department, and then<br />

there's hell to pay if they come<br />

roaring out with their trucks<br />

and find out it's a controlled<br />

burn that we forgot to tell them<br />

about.<br />

"So much of this job is<br />

p.r.," he says. "That thing," he<br />

adds, pointing to the cellular<br />

phone, "is as much a tool of<br />

logging these days as a chain<br />

saw."<br />

Most of Roberts' logging<br />

career has not been spent on<br />

the phone. He got his first job<br />

as a chokesetter when he was<br />

18. <strong>The</strong>n he was a "whistle<br />

punk," using an electronic<br />

whistle to signal the engineer<br />

who operates the machinery<br />

that hauls the logs to the<br />

landing. He worked for his<br />

uncles in the summer while he<br />

went to school, then set<br />

chokers, blew whistle and<br />

loaded for big companies and<br />

gypos alike. He also worked<br />

for a time at Camp Grisdale,<br />

the state's last logging camp (it<br />

closed in 1985).<br />

"I've had to make an<br />

adjustment in transitioning<br />

from the production end of this<br />

business to what I do now. I<br />

mean when you're on a site,<br />

you know you're working<br />

hard. But I tell myself that<br />

what I'm doing now is just as<br />

important as loading or setting<br />

chokers.<br />

As I was saying the other<br />

day to John, the guy I was just<br />

on the phone with, most of us<br />

don't necessarily get a rush out<br />

of doing routine logging jobs<br />

anymore. We like the situations<br />

where we have to solve<br />

problems. Like you," he says,<br />

nodding toward my notebook,<br />

"You live for getting out of the<br />

office and solving the problem<br />

of how to write down what<br />

you're seeing."<br />

He's right and what I'm<br />

seeing now is a different<br />

Highway 8 than I'm used to.<br />

For years it's just been the road<br />

to the ocean. To Roberts, it's<br />

neighborhood. <strong>The</strong>re's a cut<br />

that his brother worked on,<br />

here's a job he worked on, and<br />

a piece that his uncles logged<br />

six years ago- "Hey, look how<br />

well the trees are coming back.<br />

See last year's growth, the<br />

distance between the highest<br />

spikes and the top? About a<br />

foot! That's a good reprod<br />

job." <strong>The</strong> object of his admiration<br />

is a dense stand of six- to<br />

eight-foot tall firs.<br />

His enthusiasm diminishes,<br />

however, as we round a curve.<br />

Dead ahead is a great, ugly hill.<br />

It's being clear cut and stands<br />

out from the green hills around<br />

it like a scab. Roberts pulls<br />

over to the side of the road. It's<br />

not the clear cut he minds (all<br />

along, he's been showing me<br />

stands of timber grown from<br />

clear cuts), but the way it's<br />

being done. "See those dark<br />

lines up there? Those are<br />

furrows. <strong>The</strong>y're caused by<br />

dragging the logs to the tower.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y don't have a suspension<br />

system so the logs tear up the<br />

soil, causes erosion and makes<br />

it hard to replant. That's the<br />

kind of crap that makes us all<br />

feel bad about logging."<br />

r A few miles later, we take a<br />

two-track into the woods<br />

outside of Montesano. <strong>The</strong> first<br />

thing I hear as I step out of the<br />

truck is the high, sharp pipings<br />

of the tower whistle. <strong>The</strong> tower<br />

is the mechanism that cables<br />

the logs off the cut and up to<br />

the landing area. <strong>The</strong> whistle<br />

communicates between the<br />

crew on the ground and the<br />

operator.<br />

We walk up a short rise<br />

and look down on the loading<br />

operation. On a small hilltop<br />

there's a log truck half-full of<br />

logs, a bright yellow loader (a<br />

sort of forklift with jaws) and a<br />

fifty-foot steel tower. Cables<br />

run out from the top of the<br />

tower across a valley to a<br />

cutting site on the other side of<br />

the next hill.<br />

Two men are on the<br />

ground, limbing logs and<br />

coiling wire. <strong>The</strong>y're dressed in<br />

boots, pants with the cuffs torn<br />

off (so the cloth, if snagged,<br />

will tear rather than hold)<br />

wide-brimmed hardhats and<br />

red suspenders. (Everybody,<br />

including Roberts, wears red<br />

suspenders).<br />

"Those guys are in what<br />

we call 'the F...ing Bight,'" says<br />

Roberts, referring to the<br />

narrow, dangerous corridor<br />

between tower, logs, loader,<br />

truck and cable. "Something<br />

goes wrong in there, there's not<br />

a lot of room to get out of the<br />

way."<br />

One of the men in the<br />

bight waves and walks up the<br />

hill to us. Roberts introduces<br />

me to his brother -a muscular,<br />

younger version of himself.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y don't say much -a few<br />

words about Grandma and<br />

when this job will end. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

stand by an ancient stump, one<br />

that was hand-notched and cut<br />

over 100 years ago (this current<br />

cut is harvesting third growth<br />

timber). <strong>The</strong> brother's stubbled<br />

face is dark from the sun; so<br />

much darker and healthierlooking<br />

than the recreational<br />

tans that I'm used to seeing in<br />

the office. He gives me a wide<br />

grin, shakes my hand, and<br />

bounds down the hill. I catch<br />

myself wondering, and not for<br />

the first time, whether it's a<br />

better life out here in the<br />

woods.<br />

"Hey, don't forget," says<br />

Roberts, reading my mind,<br />

"that we're seeing them on a<br />

good day. I mean, more often<br />

than not, we're talking cold,<br />

rainy days; dangerous, slippery<br />

logs, and being clammy right<br />

down to your underwear."<br />

<strong>The</strong> whistle blows, the<br />

cable tightens and over the rise<br />

of the far hill comes a canvas<br />

cradle of three two-ton logs.<br />

Roberts says some technical<br />

things, pointing out the<br />

suspension system that keeps<br />

the logs from furrowing the<br />

soil. But I'm not really listening.<br />

Routine as it may be, there<br />

is something breathtaking<br />

about the logs appearing over<br />

the crest of the hill; not unlike<br />

the moment when you first see<br />

a hooked trout breaking the<br />

water. It's also like the first trip<br />

to a dairy farm when you<br />

realize that milk doesn't just<br />

come from a carton at Safeway,<br />

and beyond that, that it just<br />

doesn't come from a cow (or a<br />

forest) but through immense<br />

human effort.<br />

Later in the day we drive down<br />

the streets of Montesano, a<br />

town of about 2000. It's three<br />

in the afternoon, hot as<br />

midsummer and quiet: people<br />

are still at work, children at<br />

school. <strong>The</strong> houses are older<br />

and well-kept; there's little<br />

development, no condos in<br />

sight. <strong>The</strong>re are also fewer of<br />

the lime-green, stenciled signs<br />

that we saw everywhere in<br />

Aberdeen:<br />

"THIS FAMILY<br />

SUPPORTED BY<br />

TIMBER DOLLARS."<br />

But that doesn't mean that<br />

"timber" isn't here: it's a<br />

universal thread through all of<br />

Roberts' memories. He points<br />

out the streets where his uncles<br />

live, only a block apart. <strong>The</strong>y<br />

logged. Uncle Ken, in his 70s,<br />

still has a shop where he works<br />

on logging equipment. We<br />

drive past the house where his<br />

family once lived. His father<br />

drove a logging truck. House<br />

after familiar house contains or<br />

once contained a family he<br />

knew, a family in which<br />

members of two, three, and<br />

sometimes four generations<br />

harvested lumber.<br />

He points out timber<br />

mansions and says, "<strong>The</strong>se<br />

'mansions,' (though they're not<br />

really that big) are on the same<br />

street with everybody else's<br />

houses. <strong>The</strong>y didn't take the<br />

money and run or shut<br />

themselves off from the rest of<br />

the town."<br />

Roberts, who now lives in<br />

Olympia, says "Monty" hasn't<br />

changed much. He recites the<br />

names of the stores that he<br />

knew as a kid. Most are still<br />

there. We drive by a gleaming,<br />

block-long fire station.<br />

"That's timber money," he<br />

says, "<strong>The</strong> money to build that<br />

station was donated by a<br />

retired logger. See, you can't<br />

cut that cord. Timber is a part<br />

of this town, part of our<br />

history. It'd be like saying let's<br />

have southern France without<br />

wine growers."<br />

Roberts, himself, comes from a<br />

four-generation logging family.<br />

His great-grandfather moved to<br />

the Northwest in the 1880s and<br />

cleared the land. His sons,<br />

grandsons and great grandsons<br />

worked as loggers, millworkers<br />

or hauled logs to the mills.<br />

Roberts' 93-year-old<br />

grandmother, a bright, sharp<br />

woman who still lives in<br />

Montesano, remembers the<br />

backbreaking work of former<br />

days: "Gee, it was so bard to<br />

clear the land," and you can<br />

sense from her words the<br />

massive forests looming before<br />

the homesteaders and their<br />

puny saws and axes. Who<br />

among them would've guessed<br />

that the day would come when<br />

such forests would ever be in<br />

danger?<br />

As we leave Montesano,<br />

Doug muses: "<strong>The</strong> curious<br />

thing is that I don't represent<br />

the typical logger, but my<br />

background is so typical, so<br />

intricately webbed with<br />

timber."<br />

I ask if he's ever thought<br />

of doing something else. "Sure,<br />

I've got a college education.<br />

I've got skills. I could do a lot<br />

of things, but it's tough to<br />

explain. <strong>The</strong>re's a certain feel, a<br />

certain smell. It's a way I<br />

ground myself..."<br />

I mention that such<br />

sentiments on the part of<br />

loggers rarely get transmitted in<br />

the media. He laughs and says,<br />

"You know most environmentalists<br />

have never seen a logger.<br />

Loggers are environmentalists.<br />

We spend 10 times more time<br />

in the wilderness than they<br />

do."<br />

We drive for awhile in<br />

silence, while Doug searches<br />

for the right words: "I mean<br />

you can't help but be mesmerized<br />

by the sight of snow<br />

crystals on the pines when<br />

you're going to work at dawn.<br />

We're farmers, really. You<br />

know the media depiction of<br />

farmers—down on their knees<br />

with their hands in the dirt?<br />

Well, we're farmers, too. We're<br />

close to the earth."<br />

16 THE EVERGREEN REVIEW FALL <strong>1990</strong> 17


ALUMNEWS<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>1990</strong>-91 Alumni Association Board. Pictured on the left from<br />

top to bottom are: Tom Williams '90, Cheryl Larson '83, Marion<br />

Vimont '83, Jon Martin '86, Steve Salmi '89 and Clif Cox '83.<br />

Pictured on the right hand side of the stairway are Daniel Maker<br />

'87, Jimmy Mateson '84, Susan Slate '75, Jon "Eppo" Epstein '81,<br />

and Doug Riddels '85. Not pictured: Casey Bakker '81, Vickie<br />

Brennan '89, Elaine Cubbins '88, Mary Craven '88, Tom freeman<br />

'90, Diana Robishaw '90, Janine Rogers '87, Andy Stewart '84<br />

and Dee Dee Suter '89.<br />

Keep that <strong>Evergreen</strong> Spirit Alive:<br />

Join the AlumniAction network!<br />

I want to do my part to help launch an effective communication<br />

network for <strong>Evergreen</strong> alumni. Sign me<br />

up as a charter subscriber to the AlumniAction<br />

network, which entitles me to four issues of our new<br />

magazine Mud Bay Quarterly and a series of<br />

AlumniAction bulletins sent whenever fast-breaking<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong> news begs for an alumni perspective.<br />

D Enclosed is $25. Ill<br />

D I can't afford that, so here's $<br />

Name :<br />

Address<br />

City <strong>State</strong><br />

Zip<br />

Phone<br />

Make checks payable to TESC Alumni Association<br />

and send to LH10, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Evergreen</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong>,<br />

Olympia, WA 98505.<br />

Notes from the President<br />

By Steve Salmi '89, Alumni Association President<br />

One of <strong>Evergreen</strong>'s most important innovations is its attempt to create a true<br />

learning community. That approach contrasts markedly with most traditional<br />

universities, which seem content to function as thinly disguised degree factories.<br />

To a laudable degree, <strong>Evergreen</strong> has lived up to its ambitious mission. But<br />

there is one crucial area where our college fails just as miserably as any other—<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong> continues to encourage the ghettoization of succeeding generations of<br />

students.<br />

That manifests itself most obviously in the relative isolation of alumni.<br />

True, like virtually every other college, we TESC alumni are sent impassioned<br />

fundraising appeals. True, we are invited to mingle with the rest of the <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

community at events such as Super Saturday. And true, <strong>Evergreen</strong>, like<br />

other colleges, gives us the chance to find out what our former student colleagues<br />

are doing in an Alumni Notes section of the ReView.<br />

It doesn't take a whole lot of imagination, however, to realize that much<br />

more could be done. Indeed, not a year has passed without the Alumni Association<br />

dreaming up yet another innovative project that could build bridges between<br />

alumni and the college.<br />

Yet after a decade of existence, what does the Alumni Association really<br />

have to show for its efforts beside a handful of receptions and a few tons of<br />

barbecued chicken sold at Super Saturday? Many of our most significant ideas<br />

sit like abandoned cars rusting at the side of a deserted highway:<br />

•A volunteer network that plugs alumni into worthy campus projects, i.e.,<br />

acting as mentors for fledgling student programs;<br />

•An international travel/work survival kit;<br />

•Summer seminars targeted for alumni;<br />

•A national computer network that allows alumni to communicate with each<br />

other as well as with <strong>Evergreen</strong> faculty and students, and<br />

•A WashPIRG-style political-action arm that plays an effective role in helping<br />

shape <strong>Evergreen</strong>'s future.<br />

We have many excuses for our failures, not the least of which is a lack of<br />

resources provided to alumni activities by the college. But even that isn't a very<br />

good excuse. If we learned anything at <strong>Evergreen</strong>, it is that you get out of this<br />

college what you put in. If we have not managed to convince administrators<br />

that, say, a summer seminar series for alumni deserves a slice of the funding pie,<br />

this is as much because of our own lack of savvy and follow-through as it is the<br />

indifference of a campus bureaucracy too busy dealing with seemingly more<br />

pressing issues.<br />

This year we're taking these lessons very seriously as we redouble our<br />

efforts to build an organization—nay, a movement—that plays a vital role in<br />

breaking down the ghettoization between alumni and the rest of the <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

community. <strong>The</strong> most visible example of that is the recent introdution of an<br />

alumni magazine called Mud Bay Quarterly.<br />

But we are also attempting to move forward in less visible ways. In a major<br />

break with the past, our board is now meeting monthly rather than quarterly so<br />

we can track fast-breaking <strong>Evergreen</strong> policy debates and more quickly lay the<br />

groundwork for a handful of service projects that you will be hearing about in<br />

coming months.<br />

Although our immediate objectives may seem modest, our mission remains<br />

lofty: to bring about the day when graduating isn't the end of one's intimate involvement<br />

with the "<strong>Evergreen</strong> community," but the beginning of a lifelong<br />

learning odyssey enriched by strong ties with fellow alumni, faculty and current<br />

students.<br />

In giving earthly roots to that vision, alumni can play a crucial role in<br />

keeping the spirit of <strong>Evergreen</strong> vibrant in the decades to come. If this sounds<br />

exciting to you, please show your support by joining our AlumniAction information<br />

network and participating in Association activities that strike your<br />

fancy.<br />

by Eppo '75, Alumni Association First Vice President<br />

I came to Olympia in 1975 to attend <strong>Evergreen</strong>. In the early days I<br />

remember walking around the downtown area and having people<br />

yell Greener in a not-too-friendly way as they drove by. <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

has always been surrounded by controversy. I remember eastern<br />

Washington legislators presenting bills to close the college every<br />

year. I still have my historic "Evergrowing <strong>State</strong> Crisis" T-shirt<br />

although it is old and threadbare. When the college decided to have<br />

the first Super Saturday, those of us in the "Country Music"<br />

program were sent out on a flatbed truck performing bluegrass<br />

music, trying to attract people to the event. At Capital High School<br />

they threw rocks at us and we quickly departed.<br />

It was not until Dan Evans became the second president of the<br />

college that things began to change. All of a sudden articles appeared<br />

in the New York Times, U.S. News & World Report and<br />

other publications calling <strong>Evergreen</strong> the "hidden gem" of higher<br />

education. I was insulted, however, when a group calling itself<br />

"Greeners for Evans" organized to support his bid for the U.S.<br />

Senate. In those days I believed the real Greeners should have been<br />

supporting Mike Lowry for that Senate seat.<br />

In retrospect, Dan Evans did a lot of good things for the college.<br />

He helped get all that national recognition which shut up some<br />

legislators at the capitol. He convinced local school officials that <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

was an okay place to attend college, and he made local<br />

business people aware that Greeners brought millions of dollars into<br />

Thurston County by purchasing food, clothing, gasoline and<br />

opening bank accounts.<br />

Things started to look a lot better for Greeners during the last<br />

decade. <strong>The</strong> Olympian actually announced our concerts, an <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

degree became an asset when applying for a state job, and<br />

people stopped yelling Greener when I walked around downtown.<br />

Many conservative Olympia residents would be disturbed to<br />

find out that a large percentage of the legislative staff, the Department<br />

of Ecology, and the Energy Office are <strong>Evergreen</strong> alumni. <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

was definitely moving up in the world and then we ran into<br />

the recent year-and-a-half controversy regarding the presidency that<br />

hopefully has ended with the resignation of Joe Olander and Board<br />

of Trustee Chair Kay Boyd.<br />

This year <strong>Evergreen</strong> has lost more administrative staff than at<br />

any time I can remember. Morale seems to be at an all-time low.<br />

Perhaps so many people leaving this year is only a coincidence,<br />

perhaps not. For my part, I feel that alumni need to assist in the<br />

process of rebuilding what has been torn apart. <strong>The</strong>re is more<br />

factionalization at <strong>Evergreen</strong> now then ever before. <strong>The</strong>re is a<br />

danger of <strong>Evergreen</strong> becoming another Beruit with faction fighting<br />

faction for power and control. In this scenerio, everyone loses. I am<br />

interested in seeing an end to the fighting and the beginning of the<br />

healing process. In order for this to happen there needs to be frank<br />

and open discussion. <strong>The</strong>re needs to be collaboration and communication<br />

among faculty, administration, staff, students and the Board<br />

of Trustees. <strong>The</strong>re needs to be leadership that values honesty and<br />

integrity. Honesty and integrity seemed to be absent during the last<br />

five years and the institution has suffered immeasurably. We need<br />

leaders like Charles McCann or Dan Evans who can let the institution<br />

run itself. We need a leader who realizes what a "hidden gem"<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong> already is. We need a leader who will work to strengthen<br />

the college, not someone who wants to force their personal agenda<br />

to advance their career. We need someone with integrity, and regretfully,<br />

this quality seems to be harder and harder to find in America.<br />

UMNEWS<br />

Mud Bay Quarterly<br />

isn't just another college magazine-it's a robust conversation. <strong>The</strong><br />

Alumni Association specifically designed its new publication to<br />

encourage wide-ranging dialogue between alumni and the rest of<br />

the <strong>Evergreen</strong> community.<br />

You are invited to join in that conversation. Here are a few<br />

ways to do so:<br />

Reinventing <strong>Evergreen</strong>-a call for ideas. Let's pretend that the<br />

Legislature is so impressed with the farsightedness of <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

that it allocates money for the creation of a new "experimental<br />

college" that will represent state-of-the-art thinking when it<br />

opens in the year 2000. What, in your view, would such a college<br />

be like? What are some of the lessons learned at <strong>Evergreen</strong> that<br />

should and shouldn't be applied in creating this brave new institution?<br />

Heart-to-heart correspondence. <strong>The</strong> ReView will continue to<br />

be the place to print snippets trumpeting your new job, kid or<br />

BMW. Mud Bay Quarterly, however, is the place to write lengthy<br />

open letters that share your life experiences. Anything goes, from<br />

slice-of-life reflections on the frustrations of grad school to an account<br />

of a hair-raising trip up the Amazon.<br />

Sage advice. Think of all the things you wish you had known<br />

when you first came to <strong>Evergreen</strong> but didn't learn until your third<br />

or fourth year. Now think of all those current students who could<br />

benefit from your advice. Again, anything goes.<br />

Book reviews/research. Okay, so you're pretty exicted about<br />

a book you recently read or research you've completed. You<br />

think your former classmates and professors would love to see<br />

how your thinking has evolved. Mud Bay Quarterly would, too.<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong> Tales. It's time to put down on paper the myriad<br />

myths and legends of <strong>Evergreen</strong>. Tell us your tales, real or<br />

imagined, that exemplify the "<strong>Evergreen</strong> experience" as you and<br />

your colleagues knew it.<br />

Eclectic art. Answer the question, "What do Greener artists<br />

do after they graduate?" by exploring the frontiers of black ink<br />

on newsprint.<br />

News and opinion. We're always looking for more people<br />

with reporting skills who can keep our readers abreast of issues<br />

of importance to the <strong>Evergreen</strong> community. We're also enthusiastic<br />

about printing scintillating polemics.<br />

For details on submitting material to the<br />

Mud Bay Quarterly, call or write us at the Office of Alumni<br />

Relations, LH 10, <strong>The</strong> <strong>Evergreen</strong> <strong>State</strong><br />

<strong>College</strong>, Olympia, WA 98505 (206) 866-6000, ext. 6190.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Holiday Season is Coming...<br />

Order Your<br />

Art Cards<br />

Now!<br />

8 cards for $7.50<br />

16 cards for $13.00<br />

\n <strong>Evergreen</strong> Fossil Speaks Out<br />

18 THE EVERGREEN REVIEW FALL <strong>1990</strong> 19


ALUMNEWS<br />

Shared Site" is "Outta Sight!"<br />

by Mike Wark<br />

Televised images are big money in international sports, where issues of gender, diversity and art are usually<br />

overwhelmed by the hype of gold medals, upsets, steroid controversies and patriotic fervor.<br />

Unless you're an <strong>Evergreen</strong>er.<br />

Amidst the competition of this summer's Goodwill Games in Seattle, a crew of alumni and faculty<br />

captured images and sounds surrounding the athletic events, and put them on display within a sculptural<br />

installation in the heart of downtown Seattle. <strong>The</strong> project was called "Shared Site," and it ran the duration<br />

of the Goodwill Games.<br />

<strong>The</strong> group's camera crew wasn't shooting for Neilson ratings.<br />

"We wanted to capture the cultural scope of the international event. <strong>The</strong> installation redefines media<br />

coverage and the cultural context of the Goodwill Games phenomenon," says Sally Cloninger, faculty member<br />

and a co-producer of the videos featured in "Shared Site." <strong>The</strong> production was an entree like nothing<br />

else in the popular Goodwill Arts Festival.<br />

<strong>The</strong> crew didn't have to bargain for shooting rights worth big bucks to mainstream media. Turner<br />

Broadcasting, owner of the Goodwill Games,<br />

let the "Shared Site" camera crews go wherever<br />

they liked. <strong>The</strong>y didn't have to capture<br />

the play-by-play-their job was harder. <strong>The</strong><br />

crew captured yards of footage and, every few<br />

days, created a new 8 to 14 minute-long<br />

artistic video, complete with original soundtrack,<br />

that wove together themes of diversity,<br />

gender, racism, media, ritual and more. <strong>The</strong><br />

videos provided a different perspective on the<br />

Goodwill Games.<br />

"Shared Site" was a circular installation<br />

built smack in the center of the main-floor<br />

atrium of Rainier Square, a ritzy, multi-level<br />

shopping center in Seattle.<br />

<strong>The</strong> crew worked night and day in a small<br />

Hundreds of people,<br />

including this group of<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong>ers, toured the<br />

Goodwill Games from<br />

an anthropological,<br />

artistic and political<br />

angle this summer<br />

through "Shared Site,"<br />

a sculptural/video<br />

installation at Seattle's<br />

Rainier Square.<br />

apartment to make five tapes in 17 days. Out<br />

of their window, they could see Seattle's Space Needle in the distance, draped<br />

with a giant Goodwill Games gold medal.<br />

Cloninger and Lisa Farnham '84 co-produced the video tapes, working<br />

closely with Faculty Member Peter Randlette who built complex soundtracks<br />

with recorded voice and original music. Beliz Brother created the installation.<br />

Krista Paulson '90 logged tapes, shot Super-8 film and provided support. Some<br />

personal observations:<br />

Inside the installation, the screens surround you with a pure, watery blue<br />

that frames a muscular calf at the instant the diver's knees slide underwater in<br />

slow motion. <strong>The</strong> striking beauty of a woman's face is replaced by a wild man<br />

emerging from smoke, his muscular, dark-complected torso and face move<br />

across the screen. <strong>The</strong> woman is a diver, the man a performer from Circus<br />

DeSole, but they aren't identified beyond the obvious symbolism of the video's<br />

theme: "Beauty and the Beast."<br />

"Almost 80 to 90 percent of the audience watch the whole thing," says<br />

Peter Randeltte, who has observed viewers throughout the event. "People come<br />

through, stop, look and say, 'wow,' then watch the whole thing. You really have<br />

to watch several times to catch all the themes, to see all the subtle detail<br />

captured in the photography, and to see what messages are tied together with<br />

the progression of images."<br />

...<strong>The</strong> screens fill with a man's face framed in Bo Derek braids. He's a<br />

musician from "Gorky Park," the Soviet rock band. He says "Politicians kept<br />

the world in fear. <strong>The</strong> most important thing we discovered was that people here<br />

were the same as we are." Flash to images of athletes. A voice says, "Sports are<br />

one of the last bastions of racism, sexism, corruption. It may not be the last one,<br />

but it's really working well there."<br />

Slow motion, pool-side, you see overwhelming joy on a young swimmer's<br />

face as she hugs her coach before cameras part to let her by. Ronald Reagan's<br />

face fills the screen, music rises and fighter jets fly over the stadium.<br />

THE EV£RCR£EH REVIEW<br />

3THZ<br />

ALUMNOTES<br />

CLASS OF 1973<br />

Rick Hartley, Olympia, WA,<br />

and brother Jim '85 have built<br />

their custom jewelery business<br />

over 23 years, beginning in<br />

their parents' garage and recently<br />

opening a store in<br />

Olympia. Rick Hartley helped<br />

begin a jewelery lab at<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong> as an undergraduate.<br />

His wife Linda Hartley<br />

graduated in business in 1987.<br />

CLASS OF 1974<br />

Joseph Ochoa, Salem, OR, has<br />

accepted a position with the<br />

Oregon Department of Justice<br />

in the Trial Division's Corrections<br />

Litigation Unit. He was<br />

also recently appointed<br />

chairperson of the<br />

department's Affirmative<br />

Action Committee.<br />

CLASS OF 1975<br />

Susan Herring, Olympia, WA,<br />

married Dave Kempher, a UC-<br />

Santa Barbara grad employed<br />

by Congresswoman Jolene<br />

Unsoeld. Herring works for<br />

the Department of Social and<br />

Health Services.<br />

Ken Moser, Puget Sound, WA,<br />

has been appointed the first<br />

SoundKeeper. <strong>The</strong> Sound-<br />

Keeper will help guard against<br />

pollution, abuse of resources,<br />

and blatant lawlessness, as well<br />

as educate the public about<br />

ecological problems and<br />

possible improvements. <strong>The</strong><br />

SoundKeeper positon is<br />

modelled after the Hudson<br />

Riverkeeper program in New<br />

York, a non-bureaucratic<br />

alternative for setting and<br />

maintaining environmental<br />

policy. Moser, a licensed skipper,<br />

helped establish the<br />

Wooden Boat Foundation, the<br />

Port Townsend Wooden Boat<br />

Festival, and the Center for<br />

Wooden Boats on Lake Union.<br />

CLASS OF 1976<br />

Merideth Taylor, St. Louis,<br />

MO, was appointed associate<br />

professor of theater and dance<br />

at Webster University. Taylor<br />

joined the faculty in 1986 after<br />

completing her M.F.A. at<br />

Southern Illinois University.<br />

CLASS OF 1977<br />

Nancy Bernard Wicker, Irving,<br />

TX, works for Delta Airlines<br />

near Dallas. She would like to<br />

hear any news from other '77<br />

graduates. Her address is<br />

available through the Alumni<br />

Office.<br />

Michael Corrigan, Birmingham,<br />

AL, is president of<br />

Protective Financial Corporation<br />

in Birmingham. <strong>The</strong> onetime<br />

author of the satirical<br />

"Conservative Backlash"<br />

column in the CPJ, admits that<br />

the okra, grits, high humidity<br />

and the Stars and Bars of Alabama<br />

make him long for the<br />

cool rain and hot debates of<br />

<strong>Evergreen</strong>.<br />

CLASS OF 1978<br />

Laura Millin, Missoula, MT,<br />

was recently appointed director<br />

of the Missoula Museum of the<br />

Arts in July, <strong>1990</strong>. Millin first<br />

served as interim director for<br />

the museum in early <strong>1990</strong>,<br />

after moving from Seattle<br />

where she was a partner in a<br />

contemporary art bookstore.<br />

Fred Nollan, Seattle, WA, won<br />

the grand prize at the Pacific<br />

Northwest Writers conference<br />

for his screen play "Armadillo<br />

Sonata." <strong>The</strong> screenplay<br />

started out as a piece performed<br />

by the Empty Space<br />

<strong>The</strong>ater in Seattle. "Armadillo<br />

Sonata" examines the<br />

important issues of a<br />

Northwest logging family.<br />

G. Michael Dolan, Onalaska,<br />

WA, the owner of Burnt Ridge<br />

Orchards in Onalaska, married<br />

Carolyn Cerling this June.<br />

CLASS OF 1979<br />

Judith Cohen, address<br />

unknown, is a professional<br />

pianist. She performed at the<br />

Governor's Chamber Music<br />

Festival in Olympia this June.<br />

Cohen has won international<br />

honors for her performances.<br />

Lynda Barry, Washington,<br />

received a Governor's Writers<br />

Award for <strong>The</strong> Good Times<br />

are Killing Me, a novel about a<br />

girl coming of age in a family<br />

struggling to stay together.<br />

Barry is also known for her<br />

cartoons about life's joys/<br />

maladies including a monthly<br />

strip in Esquire called "Modern<br />

Romance." Her first<br />

cartoons were featured in early<br />

editions of the CPJ.<br />

Dana Squires and John Foster,<br />

Otis Orchards and Olympia,<br />

WA, gave a lecture on their experiences<br />

as Peace Corps volunteers<br />

in the Solomon Islands.<br />

<strong>The</strong>y previously served two<br />

years in Senegal.<br />

Paul Stamets, Kamilche Point,<br />

WA, has gained a reputation as<br />

a "mushroom mogul."<br />

Stamets and his wife Cruz not<br />

only raise exotic mushrooms,<br />

but write instruction books<br />

about how to grow them, and<br />

send out mail-order garden<br />

kits. For information about<br />

starting a morrel or chantrelle<br />

farm, write Fungi Perfect!, P.O.<br />

Box 7634, Olympia, 98507.<br />

CLASS OF 1981<br />

Lenny Brennan, Starkville, MS,<br />

accepted a position on the<br />

faculty in the Department of<br />

Wildlife and Fisheries at<br />

Mississippi <strong>State</strong> University.<br />

He completed his Ph.D. in<br />

wildlife ecology at the<br />

University of California,<br />

Berkeley in <strong>November</strong> 1989.<br />

CLASS OF 1982<br />

Teresa Pruden, Starkville, MS,<br />

has been teaching third and<br />

fourth grades in Mendocino<br />

County, California for the last<br />

six years, and recently moved<br />

to Mississippi to join '81 grad<br />

Lenny Brennan.<br />

Elizabeth Winter, La Jolla, CA,<br />

is the recipient of an NSF<br />

Predoctora! Fellowship, which<br />

she will apply toward her<br />

studies in Oceanography at<br />

Scripps Institute, UC San<br />

Diego.<br />

David Lee Geist, Friday<br />

Harbor, WA, married Kathleen<br />

Lee and opened a fine foods<br />

restaurant called "Cafe<br />

Bissett." <strong>The</strong>y are also<br />

building their own house.<br />

Faith Hagenhofer, Yelm, WA,<br />

and a two-person staff run the<br />

Yelm Library. She also coordinates<br />

reading programs in<br />

Tenino, Bucoda and Rainier.<br />

CLASS OF 1983<br />

Doug Bennett, Los Angeles,<br />

CA, is "<strong>The</strong> Paper Man," a<br />

delivery service for auto body<br />

shops. Bennett reports that<br />

he's the largest independent<br />

supplier of window tape and<br />

masking material in the city<br />

and is ready with at least three<br />

alternatives to any traffic jam<br />

in L.A. He's also set to publish<br />

his second book of poetry, as<br />

yet untitled. His first volume<br />

of verse is titled "On <strong>The</strong> Treetops."<br />

CLASS OF 1984<br />

Darcy Fox, Seattle, WA,<br />

celebrates the completion of<br />

her first year in private practice<br />

this summer. Her chiropractic<br />

clinic is located near the<br />

University District in<br />

Wedgwood.<br />

Joan Flowerbird, Wenatchee,<br />

WA, was sworn in as a new attorney<br />

in the Chelan County<br />

Superior Court. She graduated<br />

from the University of Puget<br />

Sound Law School in 1989.<br />

Flowerbird, mother of three, is<br />

also a grandmother.<br />

Rex Fletcher, Olympia, WA,<br />

received his M.D. from the<br />

University of Washington. He<br />

won the Ellen Griep award for<br />

balancing the academic<br />

demands of medicine with<br />

excellence in other areas of life.<br />

Fletcher plans to conduct his<br />

residency at the University of<br />

Oklahoma.<br />

CLASS OF 1986<br />

Kathryn Ann Campbell,<br />

Beaverton, OR, is a child<br />

treatment specialist for Youth<br />

Adventures in Clackamas.<br />

Richard Maywald, Olympia,<br />

WA, earned his M.A. in<br />

Psychology from Antioch<br />

University in Seattle this June.<br />

Maywald is a chemical<br />

dependency counselor at St.<br />

Peter's Hospital.<br />

CLASS OF 1987<br />

Haidee O'Shaughnessy, Seattle,<br />

WA, earned her M.A. in Whole<br />

Systems Design from Antioch<br />

University in Seattle this June.<br />

O'Shaughnessy is currently<br />

employed as a parent education<br />

coordinator for Together Communities<br />

for Drug Free Youth.<br />

Rhyannon (Ren) Lallatin,<br />

Seattle, WA, is on the road,<br />

walking across America to help<br />

victims of child abuse. She<br />

started a newsletter called<br />

"When Child Abuse Ceases"<br />

and writes from different locations<br />

along her trek. She<br />

attends support groups, gives<br />

presentations to foster parents<br />

of abused children, and<br />

educates parents about Post<br />

Traumatic Stress Disorder<br />

(PTSD) which many abused<br />

children suffer. She hopes to<br />

start a rippling effect. "If I can<br />

help one person, then I've<br />

made a difference" she says,<br />

"Even if that one person is me.<br />

If you heal yourself, you help<br />

heal the world."<br />

Celine Davis, Salem, OR,<br />

graduated last spring from<br />

Willamette University's <strong>College</strong><br />

of Law in Salem.<br />

Hal Longan, Yelm, WA, also<br />

graduated last spring from<br />

Willamette University's <strong>College</strong><br />

of Law.<br />

Jean Ketcham Fitzgerald,<br />

Vancouver, WA, is working<br />

toward her doctorate in<br />

Postsecondary Education Leadership<br />

at Portland <strong>State</strong><br />

University. She was also<br />

appointed registrar at Warner<br />

Pacific <strong>College</strong> in Portland, and<br />

serves as an adoption caseworker<br />

for Hope Services as<br />

part of the Special Needs<br />

Adoption Coalitions of Oregon<br />

and Washington.<br />

Rhys Roth, Olympia, WA,<br />

works for the Thurston County<br />

Environmental Health agency<br />

in "Garbage Vice, chasing<br />

down illegal dumpers." Away<br />

from work, he's a member of<br />

"No Sweat," a volunteer group<br />

working against the greenhouse<br />

effect. Currently, the group is<br />

concentrating on recycling.<br />

Efforts include persuading state<br />

agencies to switch to recycled<br />

paper and successfully<br />

persuading the Olympian to<br />

switch to recycled paper in two<br />

of its sections.<br />

Alice Long, New Chatham,<br />

MA, will spend a year teaching<br />

English in Thailand through<br />

WorldTeach, a private nonprofit<br />

organization based at<br />

Harvard University.<br />

CLASS OF 1988<br />

Tracy Guerin, Olympia, WA,<br />

who works for the Department<br />

of Health, married Ramsey<br />

Radwan in July <strong>1990</strong>.<br />

Renee Sheets and Gary<br />

Fredrick Johnson '89, Buffalo,<br />

NY, were married in June<br />

<strong>1990</strong>. Johnson is currently a<br />

graduate student at the <strong>State</strong> of<br />

New York University.<br />

Stacy Arlin Smith, Tumwater,<br />

WA, married Linda Hoey of<br />

Olympia. Smith works for the<br />

Employment Security<br />

Department.<br />

CLASS OF 1989<br />

Tim Russell, Justin Pollock,<br />

'90, and current student Zack<br />

Poiter trekked through Thailand<br />

this summer. Pollock and<br />

Russell returned to Boston for<br />

a bike trip across the U.S. while<br />

Poiter continued on to<br />

Indonesia.<br />

Mary Ellen Loibl, Seattle, WA,<br />

married John Hartman of<br />

Auburn in June 1989.<br />

Paul Metzler and Darcy<br />

Jennings, '90, Eugene, OR, tied<br />

the knot in June <strong>1990</strong>. Metzler<br />

is working for Advanced<br />

Laboratory Systems.<br />

FALL <strong>1990</strong><br />

LUMNEWS<br />

CLASS OF 199O<br />

Christopher Raymond<br />

Cognasso and <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

student Kathy Laman,<br />

Olympia, WA, were married<br />

this June. Cognasso is<br />

employed by the state<br />

Department of Health, and<br />

Laman works for Heritage<br />

Bank.<br />

James Waugh, Olympia, WA,<br />

along with Biola University<br />

student John L. Paget,<br />

produced a video about the<br />

Olympia Police Department for<br />

TCTV. <strong>The</strong>ir version of<br />

"Cops" aims to show viewers<br />

the professional and human<br />

side of police officers. Waugh<br />

is now a graduate student at<br />

Regent University in Virginia.<br />

Katy "Heidi" Andress,<br />

Eliensburg, WA, serves as a<br />

technician for the Laughing<br />

Horse Summer <strong>The</strong>atre. <strong>The</strong><br />

<strong>1990</strong> theatre series included<br />

"House of the Blue Leaves"<br />

and "A Woman in Mind."<br />

Don Brush, Shelton, WA, was<br />

hired as a planner by Mason<br />

County. Brush's position began<br />

as an undergraduate internship<br />

while he was pursuing an<br />

environmental studies degree.<br />

He's currently working on<br />

regulation of shoreline<br />

development in Mason County.<br />

Alumni<br />

Directory<br />

Coming Your Way<br />

If you're reading this, we must<br />

have a current address for you,<br />

and if we have a current address<br />

for you, you should have<br />

received an important Alumni<br />

Directory Questionnaire. This<br />

questionnaire is being sent to<br />

give every alum the opportunity<br />

to be accurately listed in the<br />

upcoming Alumni Directory.<br />

Please be sure to complete and<br />

return your directory questionnaire<br />

as soon as possible.<br />

Once received, your information<br />

will be edited and processed by<br />

our publisher, Harris Publishing<br />

Company, Inc. Over 8,000 of<br />

our alums will be included in<br />

this impressive new directory.<br />

If you don't return your questionnaire<br />

there is a possibility<br />

you may be omitted. So watch<br />

for your questionnaire and<br />

return it promptly.


<strong>The</strong> following excerpt is from<br />

"Soundings" which appears in this<br />

fall's issue of "North Dakota<br />

Quarterly." <strong>The</strong> author lives, writes,<br />

works and watches whales in Sitka,<br />

Alaska.<br />

SOUNDINGS<br />

By Carolyn Servid '75<br />

It is seven o'clock on a<br />

summer morning. <strong>The</strong><br />

sun has been up for<br />

hours and my eyes have<br />

to adjust to daylight as I<br />

reach over to turn off the<br />

alarm. No sooner does<br />

the ringing stop than I<br />

hear the explosion. My<br />

mind flips through the<br />

possibilities and in<br />

seconds I know it is whales. I am instantly at the window, watching<br />

three dark hulks sinking below the water's surface. <strong>The</strong>y are<br />

closer to shore than I have ever seen them, just beyond some rocks<br />

that are fifty yards from the beach. <strong>The</strong> moment my eyes lose them<br />

to the water, I find my way downstairs to the porch outside.<br />

<strong>The</strong> water is a sheet of glass, mirroring the light of the<br />

morning. <strong>The</strong> air is cool. If there are sounds, I don't hear them.<br />

My attention is fixed on that spot just beyond the rocks. <strong>The</strong><br />

conditions are perfect for watching what I know is to come. I<br />

stand silent, arms crossed for a bit of warmth, determined to be a<br />

witness. I don't have to wait more than a few minutes before the<br />

bubbles begin to ripple to the surface. <strong>The</strong>y move clockwise in an<br />

arc away from shore, then back toward the point where they<br />

began. <strong>The</strong> circle completes itself and in seconds the water<br />

explodes in what appears to be mass confusion: the gaping<br />

mouths, warty heads, thrashing flippers and spouting blowholes of<br />

three 40-foot whales. A rush of noise echoes through the bay.<br />

What I am witnessing is not confusion at all but the final<br />

movement of an intricate dance humpback whales sometimes<br />

engage in when they feed. <strong>The</strong> technique is called bubble net<br />

feeding. Diagrams show a whale diving underneath a school of<br />

krill or small fish, then blowing bubbles as it swims gradually<br />

upward in a spiral. <strong>The</strong> rising bubbles form a cylindrical net<br />

around the krill or fish, effectively herding them into a confined<br />

area. <strong>The</strong> whale then lunges to the surface inside the circumference<br />

of that cylinder, mouth open, engulfing anything in its way. <strong>The</strong>se<br />

are not toothed whales; instead, they have long tapered plates of<br />

baleen hanging from their top jaws, arranged like teeth on a comb.<br />

<strong>The</strong> baleen is pliable when wet and frayed along one edge. <strong>The</strong><br />

hundreds of plates along each side of the mouth act like a sieve,<br />

trapping food and letting water pour back out. As the whales<br />

swallow their catch, they loll about at the surface for a few<br />

moments as though relishing the enormous bite. <strong>The</strong>n comes the<br />

series of spouts and arching backs which precede the deep dive<br />

that begins the process again.<br />

<strong>The</strong> long fluid motion of this act of eating performed by<br />

a single whale is one I can visualize. What is intriguing is how and<br />

why whales take part in the process together. What relationship<br />

do they have to each other? Is this group feeding activity a cooperative<br />

effort? If so, how do the whales delegate roles in the performance?<br />

Which whale or whales blow the bubbles? How do<br />

they position themselves to get the completed motion, the timing<br />

just right? <strong>The</strong> questions surface like so many bubbles of the unknown,<br />

trapping me in the realm of the human. I can only marvel<br />

at the elegant form given to such a fundamental act of living, at its<br />

precision and efficacy, at the intelligence that conceived it.<br />

x- x- * * a-<br />

On a mild June afternoon, I set out in an aluminum<br />

canoe to try and catch up with a lone humpback whale. This<br />

canoe has been modified for rowing, a miniscule advantage in the<br />

effort to keep up with this powerful swimmer. <strong>The</strong> whale has<br />

been bubble net feeding, grazing widely throughout the bay. I<br />

pursue it out of a simple desire for closeness. I want nothing<br />

between us but air and water and the bottom of my boat. I want<br />

the noise of its sharp breaths fresh in my ears. I want to see the<br />

specific blackness of its skin, watch the water pour off its flukes as<br />

they rise. I want a true sense of its size. Without binoculars, I<br />

want to discern the swell of its blowhole, note the pattern of<br />

white markings on the underside of its tail when it dives. I want to<br />

make out the ring of bubbles that will mark its presence, hold my<br />

breath while I wait for the whale to reappear.<br />

<strong>The</strong> day is calm, the conditions just right for rowing. I<br />

head toward the vicinity where the whale last surfaced, having no<br />

clue where it might come up again. Nearing some islands half a<br />

mile from shore, I pause to adjust the oars. As soon as I stop<br />

rowing, my attention is alerted to a resonant tone permeating the<br />

whole area around me. It is like the ringing of crystal, a pure<br />

single note vibrating in my ears. I glance about quickly, trying to<br />

discern where it is coming from. Turning to look behind me, I<br />

notice the curving line of bubbles marking the water's surface<br />

several hundred feet away. As the bubbles move in a circle, the<br />

ringing continues. I barely have time to make a connection<br />

between the two when the circle of bubbles is completed and the<br />

ringing stops. I am stunned. Not only do these whales feed with a<br />

fourish of form, but they add music to this performance! I am so<br />

taken by the idea that the whale's lunge to the surface startles me.<br />

I can only stare as it lounges about, swallowing its mouthful of<br />

food. <strong>The</strong> questions begin to flood my mind while the whale<br />

rights itself, blows a few sharp breaths, and sounds with a show<br />

of flukes.<br />

Once I am free to move again, I ease back into the<br />

rhythm of rowing and head in the same direction the whale<br />

seemed to be going when it went down. With each stroke of the<br />

oars, my imagination pulls at the truth about the whale's song.<br />

Why and how? Why didn't I hear it from the porch that morning?<br />

Having no answers only fuels my urge to encounter the whale<br />

completely and directly. I want a constant reminder that this<br />

whale is an integral part of the world.<br />

I have rowed some distance now and have seen no sign<br />

of the whale. Any assumption about where it might surface would<br />

simply be a guess. I stop rowing. I drift and wait. I am in the<br />

middle of a wide channel, a mile from either shore. <strong>The</strong> canoe<br />

seems especially small in this expanse of water, but there is no<br />

wind; swells from the ocean beyond are small and gradual. <strong>The</strong><br />

freedom of wide open air is welcome and I feel safe. I scan the<br />

distance of this watery stretch for signs of the whale. <strong>The</strong>re are<br />

none. I notice some larger boats a long way off and think perhaps<br />

the whale is theirs to watch now. But then the ringing begins. It<br />

seems to be coming directly up through the bottom of the canoe.<br />

My eyes dart around the immediate area and find the bubble ring<br />

THE EVERGREEN REVIEW FALL <strong>1990</strong><br />

forming on the starboard side, only 30 feet away. My mind races<br />

through the possibilities: quickly get out of the way or stay put. I<br />

am fairly confident the whale won't come up underneath me, but<br />

its lunge to the surface could generate waves that would catch the<br />

canoe sideways. I have a life vest on, but there is no floatation in<br />

the canoe and no boat close by to pluck me out of the water. I<br />

know how cold the water is, but I may never have a chance to be<br />

this close to a whale again.<br />

I stay. <strong>The</strong> whale's song fills me. My heart pounds out its<br />

own rhythmic accompaniment and I am not afraid. I watch the<br />

circle of bubbles define itself. In its center the water boils with fish,<br />

their silver backs flashing in the light. <strong>The</strong>y are driven into a frenzy<br />

by their ringing captivity. <strong>The</strong> bubbles complete the circle, the<br />

ringing stops, and in a matter of moments I am looking directly<br />

into the enormous mouth of the whale, pink and fleshy and<br />

spotted with gray. <strong>The</strong> dark tunnel of its throat extends into the<br />

water. Its accordion jaw balloons out to hold everything it took in<br />

on its way up, and water begins to pour out through its baleen<br />

plates. <strong>The</strong> slap of a warty flipper keeps it at the surface where it<br />

rolls about lazily. If it is aware of my presence, it is unconcerned<br />

and matter-of-factly goes about its routine. I watch it blow and<br />

surface twice, see and hear the air burst from its blowhole, run my<br />

eyes over its back gleaming in summer light. It blows a third time,<br />

arches its body sharply and raises its flukes in the grand motion of<br />

the deep dive. White underneath, bordered in black, they slide<br />

silently into the water.<br />

I sit a moment then reach forward with the oars and<br />

realize my whole body is trembling. <strong>The</strong> day has been filled. I<br />

steady myself with each stroke and head home.


• ~Z^^ ^^^^^^^^T^^*^^^^~^^^^^~" I<br />

iHHBHHHHHftBBHHRHBI<br />

H! GEODUCK l^l<br />

• SALUTE •<br />

OBM*"""]<br />

People, businesses and organizations who gave to the <strong>Evergreen</strong><br />

Fund, July 1, 1989-June 30, <strong>1990</strong>.<br />

CORPORATIONS & FOUNDATIONS<br />

3M Medical-Surgical Division<br />

Aetna Life & Casualty<br />

Foundation<br />

Apple Computer, Inc.<br />

Apple Higher Education<br />

Archibald Sisters<br />

Asterisk & Cheese Library<br />

Ara Services<br />

A.T. & T. Information<br />

Systems<br />

Audio Northwest<br />

Blue Heron Bakery<br />

Boise Cascade<br />

W. Tacoma Mill<br />

Browser's Book Shop<br />

Burlington Northern<br />

Foundation<br />

Certified Aerospace, Inc.<br />

Chattery Down<br />

Cigna Foundation<br />

Connecticut Savings Bank<br />

Coordination Council for<br />

North American Affairs<br />

Copies Now<br />

CSA/LMN<br />

David Brownwood<br />

Charitable Trust<br />

Deluxe Corp. Foundation<br />

Overton & Katharine<br />

Dennis Foundation<br />

Digital Equipment Corp.<br />

Earth Magic<br />

Egl Company, Inc.<br />

Exxon Education Foundation<br />

First Bank System Foundation<br />

FMC Foundation<br />

Friends of Grass Lake<br />

General Electric Foundation<br />

Going Places-<strong>The</strong> Travel Store<br />

Golden Turtle Press<br />

GTE Foundation<br />

Habits By Janee<br />

Helen Martha Schiff<br />

Foundation<br />

Hewlett Packard Co.<br />

Honeywell Foundation<br />

Illinois Bell<br />

Intel Corporation<br />

International Business<br />

Machine<br />

Irving A. Lassen Foundation<br />

Jamestown Klallam Tribe<br />

Jin Jor<br />

K & T Distributing<br />

Kiwanis Club of Olympia<br />

Laird Norton Foundation<br />

Lakewood Music Center, Inc.<br />

Lamb-Grays Harbor Co.<br />

Martin Marietta<br />

Corporation Foundation<br />

Microsoft Corp.<br />

Motoda Foundation<br />

Native American Art<br />

Northwestern Mutual Life<br />

Olympia Food Co-op<br />

Olympia Frame Makers<br />

Olympia Pottery & Art Supply<br />

Pacific Coca-Cola Bottling Co.<br />

Pacific Communications, Inc.<br />

Partnership for Democracy<br />

Pietro's Pizza<br />

POSSCA, Inc.<br />

Principal Life Insurance Co.<br />

Puget Sound Power & Light<br />

Purely Physical<br />

Radiance Herbs & Massage<br />

Rainy Day Records<br />

Raven Maps & Images<br />

Reader's Digest Foundation<br />

Riverside Scientific<br />

Saul & Dayee Haas<br />

Foundation<br />

Security Pacific Bank-Wash.<br />

Shearson Lehman Hutton<br />

Shell Oil Co.<br />

Simpson Timber Co.<br />

Smithfield Cafe<br />

Sparrowhawk Co.<br />

<strong>State</strong> Farm<br />

Companies Foundation<br />

Sundstrand Corp/Foundation<br />

Tacoma Urban League, Inc.<br />

Talcott Enterprises, Inc.<br />

Tektronix, Inc.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Baxter Foundation<br />

<strong>The</strong> Boeing Co.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Coot Company<br />

<strong>The</strong> Foster Co.<br />

<strong>The</strong> General Foods Fund, Inc.<br />

<strong>The</strong> Maytag Co. Foundation<br />

<strong>The</strong> Merck Co. Foundation<br />

<strong>The</strong> Millipore Foundation<br />

<strong>The</strong> Mountaineers<br />

<strong>The</strong> Ottinger Foundation<br />

<strong>The</strong> Pride Foundation<br />

<strong>The</strong> Seattle Foundation<br />

<strong>The</strong> Seattle Times<br />

<strong>The</strong> Washington Post Co.<br />

Thousand Cranes Futons<br />

Town Tubs<br />

Tumwater Printing<br />

U.S. West Foundation<br />

USX Foundation, Inc.<br />

Uwajimaya<br />

Vedder Foundation<br />

Washington Commission<br />

for the Humanities<br />

Washington <strong>State</strong><br />

Arts Commission<br />

Washington <strong>State</strong> Board<br />

of Health<br />

Western <strong>State</strong>s Arts Federation<br />

TUT7 Irlh rKr-MJDriJN t)T> T7CTTM7XTT'C 1 o L>LUr> f1! 1 TTJ<br />

$1 , 000 or more<br />

Anne & John Aram<br />

Casey & Katie Bakker<br />

Carolyn Bassett<br />

24 THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

Leonard Berger, M.D.<br />

^/eslev & Marie Berslund<br />

Katherine Bullitt<br />

Edward Cazier, Jr.<br />

Consulate Genera! Of Japan<br />

Joseph Albert Dear<br />

Overton Dennis, Jr.<br />

James Dinerman<br />

Robert Eggert<br />

Dr. Victor Eisner<br />

Diane Ellison<br />

Margaret Enderlein<br />

Estate of Janet Holmes<br />

Daniel & Nancy Evans<br />

Kenneth & Margaret Fisher<br />

Herbert & Carol Fuller<br />

William Gates III<br />

Ann Dear Gavell<br />

Herb & Barbara Gelman<br />

H. Warren &<br />

Gerry Ghormley<br />

Jay & Carol Gilmour<br />

George & Lila Girvm<br />

Fred & Dorothy Haley<br />

John William Hennessey III<br />

Edie Ingersoll<br />

COOPER<br />

POINT CLUB<br />

$5004999<br />

Elizabeth Baiderston-Ttee<br />

Debra Dishberger<br />

Carole & Bill Ellison<br />

W. H. Fuller<br />

William & Mary Gates<br />

Thomas Ghormley<br />

Haivor Halvorson<br />

Raymond Haman<br />

Sara Jane Johnson<br />

Mattie & Henry Kirk<br />

Charles & Miriam Matthews<br />

Christina Ann Meserve<br />

Thomas Puree &<br />

Jane Sherman<br />

Virginia Schmidt<br />

Gerald & Patsi Scofield<br />

Amigo & Mildred Soriano<br />

Jess Spielholz<br />

Helene Van Buren<br />

Stewart & Eva White<br />

Hal & Helen Wolf<br />

Helen B. & John W. Jarman<br />

Steve & Terry Kelso<br />

John Koons<br />

Kathleen & Gene Krattli<br />

Kim Kaufman Malm<br />

Charles & Barbara McCann<br />

William & Nancy McGregor<br />

Raymond & Jeanne Meredith<br />

James Frederick Moore<br />

Richard Page<br />

Dennis & Joan Peterson<br />

Michael Vance Rainwater<br />

Alex & Susanne Rosenkrantz<br />

Lisa Schoening<br />

Sam & Norma Ruth Scimeca<br />

Shearson Lehman Hutton<br />

Samuel & Althea Stroum<br />

Philip & Phyllis<br />

Lampher Swain<br />

Roberta Tidland<br />

Mark David Vestrich<br />

Vincent Trust<br />

William Grady Ward<br />

Allan & Melvin Weinstein<br />

Ginnie Weyerhaeuser<br />

TOWER CLUB<br />

$250-$499<br />

Stephen Brozovich<br />

Craig Dwight Chance<br />

Rita Cooper<br />

Elisha Dyer, Jr.<br />

Frederic & Linda Engstrom<br />

Samuel Graham Farmer<br />

James & Virginia Frost<br />

Harry & Rosemary Gregg<br />

Patricia Griffith<br />

I. Frank Hartman, M.D.<br />

Jean & John Hennessey, Jr.<br />

Mark & Marilyn Hoehne<br />

John & Mary Cay Johnson<br />

Lisa Anne Johnson<br />

Anton & Neva Kuskak<br />

Isabelle Lamb<br />

Daniel Leahy<br />

Walter Lohr, Jr.<br />

Jean MacGregor<br />

Hal & Roberta McClary<br />

D. Peter £c Shirlee Meador<br />

Wesley Miles Norman<br />

Leslie Woodruff Owen<br />

Russell Edward Paulsrude<br />

Ruth Reed<br />

Denise & Aubrey Robertson<br />

Mr. & Mrs. A. E. Saunders<br />

Terry Setter<br />

Bruno & Inge Strauss<br />

Masao Sugiyama<br />

EVERGREEN<br />

100 CLUB<br />

5100-5249<br />

Steven & Rose Alfred<br />

Durwood & Dorys Alkire<br />

Clifford & Charlotte Alterman<br />

Isabel Andersen<br />

Myron Anderson<br />

Richard & Barbara Anderson<br />

Thomas Armstrong<br />

William & Helen Aron<br />

Christopher Baggott<br />

Christina Koons Baker<br />

Scott Baker<br />

Esther Barclay<br />

Richard & Dolores Bellon<br />

Margaret Birnbaum<br />

Nicholas Blattner<br />

Renee Couchee Blattner<br />

Fowler & Norma Blauvelt<br />

Neil Magnuson Bogue<br />

Jeanne Bonynge<br />

Mr. & Mrs. William Bowen<br />

Jerry & Carol Bowers<br />

Kathleen &i Douglas Brewer<br />

J. David & Kathleen Bristow<br />

Keith & Deborah Brown<br />

David & Suzanne Browneil<br />

Nathan & Irene Buitenkant<br />

Douglas James Canning<br />

Lucille Marie Carlson<br />

Linda Carpenter<br />

Lawton Case<br />

Claudia Maria Chotzen<br />

Kent Gregory Christman<br />

Irene Christy<br />

Janet Grace Cleveland<br />

Kenneth Lee Coffin<br />

Winifred & Jack Colwill, M.D.<br />

Errol & Cissy Copilevitz<br />

David Francis Cordier<br />

Nancy Ann Cress<br />

Barbara & J. L. Crow<br />

David Cryan<br />

Albert & Charlotte Dangler<br />

Joe 6c Garnett Davis<br />

David De Feyter<br />

Ida Dightman<br />

Stephen & Lucienne Dimitroff<br />

Kathy Ailene Dockins<br />

Wilbur Downs, M.D.<br />

Susan Dubuisson<br />

Roland Durst<br />

Dr. Clifford & Carol Eckman<br />

Keith Eisner<br />

Heidi Grace Engle<br />

John & Marilyn<br />

Erickson, M.D.<br />

Duane Carl & Nada June Estes<br />

Robert 8c Pamela Faro<br />

Joe Feddersen<br />

Mary Feldman<br />

William Sf Rita Ferguson<br />

Susan Fiksdal<br />

Don Fincke<br />

Patricia Ford<br />

Russell Fox<br />

Paul & Genevieve Frankenburg<br />

John & Rebecca Gallagher<br />

Kathleen Garcia<br />

Clark Gardner<br />

Wyatt Gilkie<br />

Paul & Ellen Goff, M.D.<br />

H. Waldo & Shirley Goglin<br />

Julie Anne Grant<br />

Robert & Rose Green<br />

James & Susan Haley<br />

John Joseph Harrington<br />

Marilyn Soriano Harris<br />

Ray & Christine Hayworth<br />

Wanda Hedrick<br />

Ralph Hein<br />

Robert & Dorothy Hennen<br />

Bettie Shields Hissong<br />

Jennifer April Jaech<br />

Christopher Jennings<br />

Jim & Nancy Johnson<br />

Henry Judd<br />

David & Margaret Keller<br />

Laurence & Darlene Kerwin<br />

Barbara Ann Keyt<br />

Raymond & Eula Kirby<br />

Thomas Hugh Kirschner<br />

Paul & Nancy Klotz<br />

Daniel Brandon Koch<br />

Mitsuhiro & Lilly Kodama<br />

Robert Sc Jean Hiatt Kramer<br />

Mark Kuntz<br />

Gilbert & Mary Kurtz<br />

Burton & Dale Kushner<br />

Lyda Ebert Kuth<br />

Thomas & Evelyn Lajiness<br />

Joseph Lalonde<br />

James David Lang<br />

Russell & Raven Lidman<br />

James 8c Helen Linger<br />

Gene Roy & Carol Little<br />

Jennifer Lord<br />

Alicia MacArthur<br />

James & Nancy MacWhinney<br />

Rona & Harvey Malofsky<br />

Rudy & Gail Martin<br />

William Martin<br />

Mark Matthies<br />

Robert McChesney<br />

Lawrence Charles McDonald<br />

James & Jacqueline McFerran<br />

William & Margaret<br />

McLaughlin<br />

W. Roy & Ellen Mellen<br />

Carol Minugh<br />

John Moore III<br />

Connel & June Murray<br />

John Murray<br />

Robert & Mary Neill<br />

James & Katherine Nelson<br />

Roderick John Newton<br />

Charles Malcolm Nishida<br />

Joseph & Sheryl Olander<br />

Peter & Mary Ellen Onno<br />

Bruce Daniel Ostermann<br />

H. Martyn & Candace Owen<br />

Thomas & Angela Owens<br />

Hamilton & Muriel Page<br />

Derek & Nancy Parker<br />

Victoria Yeager Patton<br />

Christine Peck<br />

James & Connie Pemble<br />

Lawrence & Cathleen Peters<br />

James & Pam Phillips<br />

Thurman & Laura Poston, Jr.<br />

Wallace Quistorff<br />

Mary Randall<br />

Doug & Sandra Rasmussen<br />

Max Ratzer<br />

Maryan Reynolds<br />

Dennis John Roda<br />

Arnaldo & Lucia Rodriguez<br />

Irwin & Zelda Rose<br />

Philip & Marianne Ross<br />

Nancy Rowell<br />

David & Joanne Rudo<br />

Barry & Evette Saines<br />

Irwin & Marion Saltzman<br />

Oscar & Lois Sandberg<br />

Betty Kay Schaefer<br />

Richard Thomas Scheffel<br />

Brenda & Scott Schenck<br />

Lester & Harriet Servid<br />

George & Clara Shinn<br />

C. F. & Katherine Shoemaker<br />

Gillian Ann Siegrist<br />

Mickey & Sheila Simonson<br />

Robert Hamilton Sims<br />

Maxine Sitts<br />

Richard Noel Skadan<br />

Niels & Diane Skov<br />

Stephen & Maria Smith<br />

Arnold & Eileen Souder, Jr.<br />

Shirley Speidel<br />

William & Carolyn Staley<br />

Daniel Lewis Stein<br />

Larry Stenberg<br />

Richard & Patsy Swindler<br />

Thomas Sykes<br />

Jessie & B. J. Tetlow<br />

Stephen Douglas Thomas<br />

Joann Thompson<br />

Kenneth & Joan Thompson<br />

Nancy Marie Thompson<br />

Olga Thompson<br />

Robert Byrd Thompson<br />

Valerie Jean Thorson<br />

Eleanor Townsend<br />

Jeanne Shappell Tribe<br />

John Turner<br />

Leslie & Devora Turner<br />

Uta Ford Family<br />

Mark & Wendy Visconty<br />

Donald Vollmer W<br />

Scott Wall<br />

George & Joan Wallace<br />

Kenneth Wallace<br />

Renee Wallis<br />

Marilyn Ward<br />

Robert & Louisa Wells<br />

Edward Paul &<br />

Marilyn White, Jr.<br />

Thomas & Judith Willging<br />

Darlene Williams<br />

Darrell & Barbara Williams<br />

Michael Stanton Witz<br />

Tony & Judy Wolff<br />

Benjamin & Ruth Woo<br />

Karen Wynkoop<br />

Kathy Jean Ybarra<br />

Hanley 8c Susan Yorke<br />

James & Julie Zanner<br />

ALUMNI<br />

A<br />

Walter Acuna<br />

Stephen Agnew<br />

Michael Ahern<br />

Bradley Aiken<br />

Kenneth Albert<br />

Douglas Albertson<br />

Sarah Albertus<br />

Paula Aldrich<br />

Sara Algots<br />

Edward Alkire<br />

Colleen Allen<br />

Megan Allen<br />

Donna Alora<br />

Ronald Alpert<br />

Fernando Altschul<br />

David Anderson<br />

Katy Anderson<br />

Linda Anderson<br />

Richard Anderson<br />

Thomas Anderson<br />

Marcia Andrews<br />

Thomas Ansart<br />

Carolyn Ansell<br />

Simon Ansel!<br />

Thomas Anson<br />

Allan Anttila<br />

Laura Arnow<br />

Janet Atkins<br />

Lucv Auster<br />

B<br />

Christopher Baggott<br />

Edlamae Baird<br />

Richard Baker<br />

Scott Baker<br />

Stephen Mallet-Prevost Balch<br />

Joyce Banaka<br />

Joyce Barker<br />

Debora Barkus<br />

William Barmore<br />

Aisha Barnes<br />

Michael Barnes<br />

Sherri Barrett<br />

Michael Barren<br />

Craig Bartlett<br />

Colette Beatty<br />

Annamarie Beckmann<br />

Patricia Bedinger<br />

Deborah Behnfield<br />

Janet Behrenhoff<br />

Jane Bell<br />

Richard Bender<br />

Scott Benedict<br />

Gregg Bennett<br />

Sara Bennett<br />

Russell Joel Bennett-Gumming<br />

Mary Bensen<br />

Janet Bent<br />

Michael Bergstrom<br />

Steven Bertran<br />

Carolyn Bevan<br />

Martin Biedermann<br />

Susan Billedeaux<br />

Terry Billedeaux<br />

Donald Bird<br />

Susan Bird<br />

Margaret Birnbaum<br />

Mary Bittinger<br />

Bernard Blackburn<br />

Juiie Blanchard<br />

Nicholas Blattner<br />

Renee Blattner<br />

Mary Bley<br />

William Blodgett<br />

Joseph Blum<br />

Phil Boawn<br />

Betsy Bogardus-Gallagher<br />

Michael Boggess<br />

David Boggs<br />

Neil Bogue<br />

Janice Bomgardner<br />

Jill Boniske<br />

Gregory Booth<br />

Thomas Booze<br />

Gretchen Borck<br />

Ronald Bowitz<br />

Jerry Boydston<br />

Carol Bradford<br />

Barbara Branstetter<br />

James Brauneis<br />

Marjorie Brazier<br />

Daniel Bretzke<br />

Tikva Breuer<br />

Steven Brewster<br />

Hugh Bridgeford<br />

Stephen Briggs<br />

Karen Brisley-Bown<br />

Michael Bristow<br />

Neal Broida<br />

Carmi Brooks<br />

Melissa Brooks<br />

Angela Brown<br />

Beverly Brown<br />

Janie Brown<br />

Louise Brown<br />

James Brunner<br />

Thomas Bucchiere<br />

Nelsa Buckingham<br />

John Burbank<br />

Mary Burg<br />

Barrett Burr<br />

Alan Burrer<br />

Lynn Busacca<br />

Marjorie Butler<br />

Nancy Butler<br />

C<br />

Lynda Caine<br />

Susan Calhoun<br />

Jeanne Camelio<br />

Charles Campbell<br />

Sharon Campbell<br />

Douglas Canning<br />

Gary Cantreil<br />

Lucille Carlson<br />

Donald Case<br />

Lawton Case<br />

Craig Chance<br />

Jerry Chapman<br />

Nathan Chess<br />

Andrew Chitty<br />

Cynthia Choo<br />

Benjamin Chotzen<br />

Claudia Chotzen<br />

Erik Christiansen<br />

Kent Christman<br />

Irene Christy<br />

David Clarkson<br />

Janet Cleveland<br />

Melva Coates<br />

Elizabeth Coe<br />

Kenneth Coffin<br />

Bruce Cohee<br />

Andrea Coker<br />

Craig Collins<br />

Carey Concannon<br />

Carolyn Conner<br />

Cathy Conner<br />

Nancy Connolly<br />

Keith Considine<br />

Joan Cook<br />

David Cordier<br />

Ginna Correa<br />

Stuart Corsa<br />

Clifford Cotey<br />

FALL 199O<br />

Carmela Courtney<br />

Teresea Crabtree<br />

Kenneth Ctawbuck<br />

Mananna Crawford<br />

Clayton Creager<br />

Nancy Cress<br />

Deborah Creveling<br />

Andrew Cripe<br />

William Croft<br />

Lindsley Cross<br />

Calvin Crowley<br />

Jonathan Cruz<br />

Nancy Cruz<br />

Scott Cubberly<br />

Roberta Curfman<br />

David Current<br />

D<br />

Bruce Daily<br />

Barbara Damron<br />

Kurt Danison<br />

Hal Darst<br />

Robert Dash<br />

Charles Davis<br />

Janet Davis<br />

Joy Davis<br />

Susan Davis<br />

Dorothy DeMatteo<br />

Jana Dean<br />

William Dean<br />

Joseph Dear<br />

Linda Delorme<br />

Michael Denoyer<br />

Roxanne Denoyer<br />

Donald Denton<br />

Patricia DesChene<br />

Janet Detering<br />

Mary Devlin<br />

Christina Deweese<br />

Dona Dezube<br />

David DiDomenico<br />

Guy Diamond<br />

Michael Diamond<br />

George Dickison IV<br />

Brenda Dickison<br />

Laurie Dieterich<br />

Ida Dightman<br />

Danylla Dimitroff<br />

Sheila Dinwiddie<br />

Debra Dishberger<br />

Larry Dobberstein<br />

Carmen Doerge<br />

Kathleen Doherty<br />

Margaret Donaldson<br />

Lisa Donally<br />

Edwina Dorsey<br />

Elaine Doyle<br />

Janet Drew<br />

Karen Drumheller<br />

Susan Drumheller<br />

James Duncan<br />

Christopher Dupre<br />

Mark Duxbury<br />

E<br />

Caroline Early<br />

Carmen Eastman<br />

Anthony Eckert<br />

James Ehret<br />

Jodene Eikenberry<br />

Eric Einspruch<br />

Keith Eisner<br />

Carol Ellick<br />

Judith Elliott<br />

Steven Engel<br />

Karen England<br />

Scott Englander<br />

Heidi Engle<br />

Tamara English<br />

25


F<br />

Gregory Falken<br />

Christiane Fara-Skalecki<br />

Daniel Farber<br />

Samuel Farmer<br />

Dale Favier<br />

David Fehsenfeld<br />

Katherine Fehsenfeld<br />

Florence Feldman<br />

Richard Ferguson<br />

Kent Ferris<br />

William Ferris<br />

Jane Field<br />

Thomas Findlay<br />

Kimberly Finger<br />

Mike Finger<br />

Lisa Fisher<br />

Per Even Tor Fjelstad<br />

Jennifer Flynn<br />

Kristi Fog<br />

Jeffrey Foster<br />

John Foster<br />

Laurie Frankel<br />

Julie Frederick<br />

Thomas Freeman<br />

Michael French<br />

Elizabeth Frey<br />

Steven Friddle<br />

Peter Friedman<br />

Jan Frost<br />

Joseph Fuller<br />

Richard Furman<br />

G<br />

John Gaasland<br />

Roger Gaines<br />

Edward Gales<br />

Jonathan Gallant<br />

Patricia Gallup<br />

Johanna Gangemi<br />

Benjamin George<br />

Gabrielle Geraghty<br />

Vel Gerth<br />

Thomas Ghormley<br />

Christopher Gibson<br />

Harry Gibson<br />

Jim Gilfix<br />

Wyatt Gilkie<br />

Jimi Gillespie<br />

Carolyn Gilmore-Judd<br />

Dorothy Gist<br />

Marian Glossner<br />

Barbara Glover<br />

Laura Goff<br />

Ronald Gold<br />

Robert Golden<br />

Roger Goldingay<br />

Charlene Goldstein<br />

Cheyenne Goodman<br />

David Goodward<br />

Margare Goodward<br />

Michael Gordon<br />

Carol Goss<br />

Janet Gould-Nolan<br />

Barbara Graf<br />

Julie Grant<br />

Donovan Gray<br />

Duncan Green<br />

Ellen Green<br />

Elisabeth Greene<br />

Joan Gregory<br />

Robert Gregory<br />

Matthew Groening<br />

Teresa Grove<br />

Jean Gruye<br />

Martina Guilfoil<br />

H<br />

Jean Haakenson<br />

Thomas Hagen<br />

Barbara Haggerty<br />

Gwen Hall<br />

Richard Hall<br />

Jon Halper<br />

Michael Halperin<br />

Christopher Halsell<br />

Allison Halstead<br />

Nowlin Haltom<br />

Roland Hamel<br />

Douglas Hamilton<br />

Claudia Hampton<br />

Michele Hankins<br />

Karen Hansen<br />

Mark Hansen<br />

Michael Hansen<br />

Jennifer Hanson<br />

Kimberiy Hanson<br />

Jeff Hardesty<br />

Barbara Harmala<br />

Andrew Harper<br />

John Harrington<br />

Marilyn Harris<br />

Mary Hart<br />

Shaine Hart<br />

James Hartley<br />

Leslie Harvill<br />

Carla Hasegawa-Ahrendt<br />

Thomas Hatch<br />

Donald Hayashi<br />

Stephen Haykin<br />

Wanda Hedrick<br />

Sue Heflm<br />

Roger Heine<br />

Dennis Heinekin<br />

Ellen Henderson<br />

Scott Henderson<br />

John Hennessey III<br />

Catherine Hennings<br />

Timothy Hennings<br />

Charles Henry<br />

Randel Herd<br />

James Hester<br />

Joseph Hogan<br />

Christine Hoggatt<br />

Lisa Holliday<br />

Paul Holt<br />

Diana Holz<br />

Fern Honore<br />

Cynthia Hope<br />

Katherine Hopkins<br />

Michael Horgan<br />

Susan Horowitz<br />

Esther Howard<br />

Sidney Hsu<br />

Jean Hudson<br />

Marjorie Hudson<br />

Sabra Hull<br />

Peter Humleker<br />

Sherry Hunt<br />

Elizabeth Hunter<br />

Amy Hunter<br />

Martha Hunting<br />

Karen Huntsberger<br />

Gregory Hutcheson<br />

Judy Hyslop<br />

I<br />

Brandith Irwin<br />

Gregory Irwin<br />

John Irwin<br />

Joseph Iski<br />

Robert lyall<br />

J<br />

Jennifer Jaech<br />

Helen Jaeger<br />

Randolph Jaffe<br />

Debra Janison<br />

Dorothy Jaskar<br />

Shepherd Jenks<br />

Lawrence Jensen<br />

Daniel Jetter<br />

Joan Jevne<br />

Herbert Jewell<br />

Bernard Johansen<br />

THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

Brenda Johnson<br />

Daniel Johnson<br />

Daniel Johnson<br />

Dora Johnson<br />

Lisa Johnson<br />

Craig Jones<br />

Crystal Jones<br />

Gregory Jones<br />

Hillin Jones<br />

James Jones<br />

Laurie Jones<br />

Leslie Jones<br />

Richard Jones<br />

Kathryn Joost<br />

Christopher Jordan<br />

Marcia Jordan<br />

Joseph Joy<br />

Maureen Juhola<br />

Eduard Jurkovskis<br />

K<br />

Kendra Kambak<br />

Paul Kaminski<br />

John Kane<br />

Alan Karganilla<br />

Kinley Karlsen<br />

Scott Kauffman<br />

Toy Kay<br />

Raymond Kelleher<br />

Evelyn Kelly<br />

Mary Kelsoe<br />

Manosothy Ken<br />

Barbara Kendziorek<br />

Mark Kendziorek<br />

Eleanore Kenny<br />

Phyllis Kenworthy<br />

John Kersting<br />

Barbara Keyt<br />

Ralph Kile<br />

Amanda Kincaid-Kass<br />

Quentin King<br />

Thomas Kirschner<br />

Ellen Kissman<br />

Valerie Kitchen<br />

Annette Klapstein<br />

Peggy Knapp<br />

Julie Knott<br />

Elizabeth Knox<br />

Kathryn Knutson<br />

Kari Knutson-Bradae<br />

Daniel Koch<br />

Jon Koeze<br />

Alan Kohl<br />

Daniel Koos<br />

Christina Koons-Baker<br />

Stephen Kopp<br />

Deborah Kosman<br />

Gretchen Kottke<br />

Cynthia Kouris-Wilkerson<br />

Alan Krieger<br />

Lester Krupp<br />

Kathleen Krzastek<br />

Mark Kuntz<br />

Lyda Kuth<br />

Susan Kuzenski<br />

L<br />

Susan Lacina<br />

Bruce Ladenheim<br />

Ellen Ladenheim<br />

Barbara Laforge<br />

Paul Lambert<br />

Tanna Lambert<br />

Philip Landale<br />

Dorothy Landeen<br />

James Lang<br />

Margo Lauritzen<br />

Virginia Lawior<br />

Geraldine Lawrence<br />

Peter Lawson<br />

Norbert Lazar<br />

Raymond Lee<br />

Janice Leinwebber<br />

Mike Lempriere<br />

Kristina Lenke<br />

Jerry Lenz<br />

Debra Leslie<br />

Marcia Levenson<br />

Norman Levy<br />

James Lewicki<br />

David Lewis<br />

Paul Lewis<br />

Patrick Libbey<br />

Sandy Libbey<br />

Rebecca Liebman<br />

David Lifton<br />

Judy Lindlauf<br />

Timothy Linger<br />

Catherine Loftus<br />

Jennifer Lord<br />

Jenifer Louden<br />

Bette Low<br />

Douglas Luckerman<br />

Thomas Lufkin<br />

Marilyn Lund<br />

Nancy Luster<br />

James Lux<br />

Leslie Lynam<br />

Jeffery Lyons<br />

Linda Lyons<br />

M<br />

Carol MacCracken<br />

Dori MacDonald<br />

Pamela MacEwan<br />

Mary MacKenzie<br />

Andrew MacLeod<br />

Elizabeth MacWhinney<br />

Alan Mador<br />

William Mahan<br />

William Mahler<br />

Nikki Majkut<br />

Patrick Maley<br />

Kim Kaunnan-Malin<br />

Donna Manders<br />

Duncan Mann<br />

Grace Manzie-Werner<br />

Sally Marquis<br />

Tracy Marsailes<br />

Kathy Marshall<br />

Allison Martin<br />

Barry Martin<br />

Georgia Martin<br />

Stuart Martin<br />

Joann Mason<br />

Richard Matchette<br />

Wendy Matthews<br />

Larry Mauksch<br />

Martha McCartney<br />

Duane McDermond, Jr.<br />

Catherine McDonald<br />

Sandra McDonald<br />

Lee McGarity<br />

Bruce McGaw<br />

Anita Mclntosh<br />

Bobbie Mclntosh<br />

Vaughn McLeod<br />

Edward McQuarrie<br />

Susan McRae<br />

Lynn McCaffray<br />

Keith McCandless<br />

Mary McCann<br />

Robert McChesney<br />

Deed McCollum<br />

Andrew McCormick<br />

Martha McCoy<br />

Tamara McCracken<br />

Lawrence McDonald<br />

Lee McDonald<br />

Amy McFarlan<br />

Paul McKee<br />

Michael McKenzie<br />

Linda McLain<br />

John McLaren<br />

Gerald McLaughlin<br />

Thomas McLaughlin<br />

Thomas McLaughlin<br />

Deborah McClellan<br />

Brent McManigal<br />

John McNally<br />

Luann McVey<br />

Corey Meador<br />

Patricia Meessen<br />

Michael Mehaffy<br />

Lee Meister<br />

John Mellen<br />

Mark Meredith<br />

Matthew Mero<br />

Christina Meserve<br />

Robert Messer<br />

Consuela Metzger<br />

Janet Meurs<br />

David Mevorach<br />

Christopher Michaels<br />

Jules Michel<br />

Sandra Milano<br />

Elizabeth Miller<br />

Norma Miller<br />

Steven Miller<br />

Michael Mills<br />

Ralph Minor<br />

Martha Mistretta<br />

Mary Moen<br />

Christopher Mondau<br />

Mercedes Monte<br />

Laurie Montero<br />

Sharon Moody<br />

Angela Moore<br />

Charles Moore<br />

James Moore<br />

Martha Moore<br />

Todd Moore<br />

Jonathan Morris<br />

Patrick Morris<br />

Roland Morris<br />

Judith Morrison<br />

Shelley Morse<br />

Diane Morton<br />

Jeremy Moser<br />

Sarah Moser<br />

Judith Mosier<br />

Claire Mount<br />

Alan Mountjoy-Venning<br />

Jane Mountjoy-Venning<br />

Susan Moyer<br />

Gary Mozel<br />

David Mozer<br />

Timothy Mulcahey<br />

Madeline Mullen<br />

Dennis Mullikin<br />

Peter Mullineaux<br />

Roxann Mulvey<br />

Marcianne Munson<br />

Linda Murphy<br />

Velina Murray<br />

Nancy Musgrove<br />

N<br />

Deborah Nagusky<br />

Elaine Naylor<br />

Mary Neal<br />

Jennifer Neilson<br />

Pamela Neimeth<br />

Welton Nekota<br />

Cara Nelson<br />

Marjorie Nelson<br />

Jane Neuharth<br />

Polly Newcomb<br />

Annette Newman<br />

Ronald Newsome<br />

Roderick Newton<br />

Rebecca Nichols<br />

Emory Niles III<br />

Charles Nishida<br />

Mark Noble<br />

Wesley Norman<br />

Rebecca Northway<br />

James Norton<br />

Richard Nuckolls<br />

Roberta Nugent<br />

O<br />

Patti O'Brien<br />

Richard O'Brien<br />

Bridget O'Connell<br />

Marc O'Connor<br />

Susan O'Grady<br />

Joseph Ochoa<br />

Clifford Olin<br />

Gregory Olson<br />

Charlotte Olson-Alkire<br />

Christina Orange<br />

Lorraine Osborn<br />

Arlee Osborne<br />

Marian Osborne<br />

Gail Osheroff<br />

Bruce Ostermann<br />

Leslie Owen<br />

P<br />

Jennifer Page<br />

Leonard Pagliaro<br />

Kitty Parker<br />

Melissa Parker<br />

David Parrish<br />

Victoria Patton<br />

Russell Paulsrude<br />

David Pavelchek<br />

Raymond Pavelko<br />

Bruce Pavitt<br />

Maris Peach<br />

Christine Peck<br />

Millicent Peha<br />

Rodd Pemble<br />

Paul Perry<br />

Karen Petersen<br />

Mary Petersen<br />

Abbo Peterson<br />

Christina Peterson<br />

Jack Peterson<br />

Thomas Peterson<br />

Vicki Phelps<br />

Richard Philips<br />

Anne Phillips<br />

Kevin Phillips<br />

Molly Phillips<br />

Scott Phipps<br />

Martha Pierce<br />

Priscilla Pierce<br />

Steven Pinard<br />

Elizabeth Pinder<br />

Carol Pinegar<br />

Curtis Piper<br />

Mariel Plaeger-Brockway<br />

Roy Plaeger-Brockway<br />

Steven Pointer<br />

Bradley Pokorny<br />

Noah Poritz<br />

Laura Potash<br />

Nina Powell<br />

Nicholas Prebezac<br />

Judith Prest<br />

Roger Price<br />

Janet Purkiss<br />

R<br />

Stephen Rabow<br />

Michael Rainwater<br />

Teri Ramsauer<br />

Mary Randall<br />

Victoria Randlett<br />

Monica Rands<br />

Scott Rapp<br />

Kay Rawlings<br />

Emily Ray<br />

Russell Rayburn<br />

Julie Reed<br />

Nathan Reed<br />

Ruth Reed<br />

Garth Reeves<br />

Joan Reynolds<br />

Kathron Richards<br />

Robert Richerson<br />

Avriel Rideau<br />

John Ridgway<br />

April Rieck<br />

Lisa Rigney<br />

Moyne Riley<br />

Robert Riopelle<br />

Patricia Ritter<br />

Harvey Roberts<br />

Maureen Roberts<br />

Tamara Roberts<br />

Tyler Robinson<br />

Diana Robishaw<br />

Dennis Roda<br />

Barbara Roder<br />

Gareth Rohde<br />

Sarah Rolph<br />

Leslie Romer<br />

Pearl Rose<br />

Ellie Rosenthal<br />

Gary Rossman<br />

Nancy Rowell<br />

Diane Royal<br />

Robert Rudine<br />

Marie Russo<br />

Rosemary Ruth<br />

Anson Rutherford-Olds<br />

Barbara Ryan<br />

James Rymsza<br />

S<br />

Albin Saari<br />

Alice Salinero<br />

Scott Salzer<br />

Terrese Salzer<br />

Jane Sameth<br />

Robert Sandelin<br />

Vivian Sanders<br />

Anne Schaefer<br />

John Schaeffer<br />

Lillian Schauer<br />

Richard Scheffer<br />

Kimberly Schnittger<br />

Beth Schoenberg<br />

Susan Schoos<br />

Timothy Schoth<br />

Steven Schreurs<br />

Mary Schroeder<br />

Douglas Schuler<br />

Eliza Schulte<br />

James Schultz<br />

Tad Schutt<br />

Mark Scott<br />

Susan Scott<br />

Kathy Scovel-Rodrique<br />

James Seekins<br />

James Sevier<br />

Thomas Shackle<br />

Laurie Shannon<br />

Robert Shannon<br />

Amy Shapiro<br />

Edward Sharp<br />

Marjorie Shavlik<br />

Robert Shephard<br />

James Shiflett<br />

Deborah Shulke<br />

Robert Shumate<br />

Eric Shutt<br />

Andrea Siani<br />

Sergio Siani<br />

Richard Siddoway<br />

Maria Siegler<br />

Gillian Siegrist<br />

Lisa Sieracki<br />

Mikael Sikora<br />

Janet Silliman<br />

Christiane Silverthorne<br />

Margaret Simms<br />

Wendy Simms-Rudolph<br />

Janet Simons<br />

Richard Simonson<br />

Robert Sims<br />

Thomas Sims<br />

Richard Skadan<br />

Jack Slagle<br />

Roo Slagle<br />

Paul Slate<br />

Susan Slate<br />

Don Smith<br />

Gary Smith<br />

Michael Smith<br />

Nancy Smith<br />

Pat Smith<br />

Sharon Smith<br />

Victoria Smith<br />

Willene Smith<br />

Susan Snyder<br />

Patricia Soderberg<br />

Susan Southwick<br />

Danny Spearman<br />

Peter Speer<br />

Shirley Speidel<br />

Arthur Spies<br />

Donald Sprague<br />

Wendy Squires<br />

Loy Stafinbil<br />

Annette Standifur-Metz<br />

Pamela Stasivk<br />

Carla Stehr<br />

Daniel Stein<br />

Emily Stein<br />

Janet Stein<br />

Claudia Steinkoenig<br />

Charles Stephens<br />

Jonathan Stephens<br />

Terry Sterley<br />

David Stevenson<br />

Kristin Stewart<br />

Diana Stobart<br />

John Stocks<br />

Anne Stone<br />

Janet Stonington<br />

Jeffery Strauss<br />

Conni Strope<br />

Linda Sullivan<br />

Mark Sullivan<br />

Craig Swanson<br />

Sky Sue Ann Swanson<br />

T<br />

Helen Talkington<br />

Evetree Tallman<br />

Gail Tanaka<br />

Sandra Tarzan<br />

Stephen Tarzan<br />

Marcus Teeters<br />

Kathleen <strong>The</strong>oe<br />

Stephen Thomas<br />

Nancy Thompson<br />

Storme Thompson<br />

Leslie Thorpe<br />

Valerie Thorson<br />

Kris Thorsos<br />

Roberta Tidland<br />

Claire Tinkerhess<br />

Paul Tinkerhess<br />

Charlotte Todd-Kerr<br />

Jamie Tolfree<br />

Amy Tolk<br />

William Tomlinson<br />

Joshua Touster<br />

Paul Traub<br />

Jeff Traugott<br />

Jeanne Tribe<br />

Nancy Tsakos<br />

Glenn Tucker<br />

Barbara Turner<br />

U<br />

Toshiaki Udo<br />

Jody Underwood<br />

Peggy Ushakoff<br />

V<br />

Christina Valadez<br />

Mitzi Van DeWege<br />

Laura VanDilla<br />

Jeanne Vanderiet<br />

Joel Vanetta<br />

Martine Vanpee<br />

Andrea Varcalli<br />

Lewis Vaughan<br />

Richard Veach<br />

Bruce Vecchitto<br />

Gerald Vermeire<br />

Kathleen Vermeire<br />

Mark Vestrich<br />

Gay Vogt<br />

Richard Vogt<br />

Diane Vosick<br />

W<br />

William Wake<br />

Warren Waldorf<br />

Petrina Walker<br />

Kate Wall<br />

James Waller<br />

Renee Wallis<br />

Linda Walsh<br />

Marilyn Ward<br />

William Ward<br />

Gregory Ware<br />

Janet Ware<br />

Carole Warner<br />

Norman Warner<br />

Nancy Warshaw<br />

Andrew Wasserman<br />

Terry Watness<br />

Nanci Watson<br />

Kathleen Waugh<br />

Bruce Weilepp<br />

Karen Weingarth<br />

Lynda Weinman<br />

Lucille Wellander<br />

Sheri Wertheimer<br />

Martha West<br />

Joyce Weston<br />

Margaret Wharton<br />

Donald Whiting<br />

Marie Wick<br />

Robin Wiggan<br />

Frances Wilk<br />

Ronald Wilkinson<br />

Edward Willert<br />

Darlene Williams<br />

David Williams<br />

Donna Williams<br />

Elizabeth Williams<br />

Patrick Williams<br />

Hazel Willmarth<br />

Marcella Wing<br />

Jane Wingfield<br />

Michael Witz<br />

Margaret Wolcott<br />

Philip Wolcott<br />

Carl Wolfhagen<br />

Sanford Wolgel<br />

Nina Wolsk<br />

George Wood<br />

Janice Wood<br />

John Wood<br />

Annette Woolsey<br />

<strong>The</strong>resa Wright<br />

Kristopher Wudtke<br />

Karen Wynkoop<br />

Forrest Wynne<br />

Y<br />

Kathy Ybarra<br />

Evelyn Yellowbird<br />

William Young<br />

Z<br />

Thomas Zahn<br />

Vicki Zarrell<br />

Anne Zellinger<br />

Dolores Zschomler<br />

FALl <strong>1990</strong><br />

PARENTS<br />

David & Ilene Adams<br />

Eugene & Marilynn<br />

Alexander<br />

Steven & Rose Alfred<br />

Durwood & Dorys Alkire<br />

Grace Allen<br />

Steven & Leanne Allen<br />

Clifford & Charlotte<br />

Alterman<br />

Robert & Joan Ames<br />

Ruth & Morton Amster<br />

Kenneth Andersen<br />

Myron Anderson<br />

Penelope Anderson<br />

Richard & Barbara Anderson<br />

Richard & Susan Anderson<br />

Stephen & Sandra Anderson<br />

John & Jewel Andrew<br />

Terry & Lynnda Anthony<br />

Anne & John Aram<br />

Thomas Armstrong<br />

William & Helen Aron<br />

Kenneth & Susan Atwell<br />

Fred & Donna Austin<br />

B<br />

Agnes Badgley<br />

James & Phyllis Baerveldt<br />

Franklin & Mary Balch<br />

Elizabeth Balderston-Ttee<br />

Christopher & Linda Ball<br />

Esther Barclay<br />

Mary & Joseph Bartek<br />

Carolyn Bassett<br />

Arthur & Kay Batt<br />

Duane Beck<br />

Robert Pike & Nancy Becker<br />

David Bennett<br />

Dery & Barbara Bennett<br />

James & Mrs James Bennett<br />

William Benoist, Jr.<br />

Joanne Berg<br />

Leonard Berger, M.D.<br />

Abraham Bergman, M.D.<br />

Arthur Berlin<br />

Ronald & Kay Bland<br />

Fowler & Norma Blauvelt<br />

Larry & Mary Boatwright<br />

Frank & Lynne Bocarde<br />

Gerald & Sally Bodine<br />

Jeanne Bonynge<br />

Larry & Deanna Book<br />

Mr. & Mrs. William Bowen<br />

Jerry & Carol Bowers<br />

Robert & Beverly Bowers<br />

Rebecca & Robert Bown<br />

Robert Boyer<br />

Rod & Paula Braaten<br />

Patricia Brady<br />

Mary Brandt<br />

Stanley & Aviva Breen<br />

David & Kathleen Bristow<br />

George & Dorothy<br />

Broadmerkel<br />

Keith & Deborah Brown<br />

Leland & Barbara Brown<br />

David & Suzanne Brownell<br />

Stephen Brozovich<br />

Bill & Mary Brumsickle<br />

Wilma Bucci<br />

Ernest & Dianne Buchanan<br />

Nathan & Irene Buitenkant<br />

Beth & Truman Bullard<br />

William & Victoria Burch<br />

Elizabeth Olmsted Burchall<br />

F. & Lucille Burgio<br />

27


Judy Burnett<br />

John Burton<br />

Arthur & June Busch<br />

Brian & Danielle Butz<br />

Eleanor Butz<br />

Bill Bylte<br />

C<br />

Paul Camelio<br />

James & Lila Cammack<br />

Ellen & Charles Campbell<br />

Charles Campbell<br />

Marilyn Canaris<br />

Mr. & Mrs. James Carey<br />

George & Anita Games<br />

Linda Carpenter<br />

John & Margaret Carr<br />

Patrick & Marjorie Carr<br />

Wayne & Audrey Cassatt, Jr.<br />

Johnny & Carol Castelletto<br />

John & Florence Cavcey<br />

Edward Cazier, Jr.<br />

Rebecca Chaitin<br />

Matthew & Susan Chamlin<br />

Drs. Richard & Donna Childs<br />

Carol Chirman<br />

Horace Christensen<br />

David & Betty Christiansen<br />

Eionel & Mary Christopherson<br />

Mary Allen Clark<br />

Raymond & Alice Clark<br />

F. & Diane Clayton<br />

Gary & Mary Cleasby<br />

Liane Clorfene<br />

Joan & Frank Cohee<br />

Frederick & Jessie Cohen<br />

Ellis & Colleen Collins<br />

Jose & Marilyn Colon<br />

Winifred & Jack Colwill, M.D.<br />

Ward & Helen Combs<br />

William & June Comcowich<br />

Eugene Connolly<br />

Harry & Patricia Cook<br />

Michael & Linda Cook<br />

Errol & Cissy Copilevitz<br />

Leona Corsa<br />

Henry Corwin<br />

Joseph & Charlotte Cotter<br />

John & Elain Covert<br />

Mr. & Mrs. Charles Cox<br />

Stanley & Rosemary Crawford<br />

Charles & Linda Cretin<br />

Thomas Croley<br />

Richmond Cross<br />

Robert & Linda Crothers<br />

Barbara & J. Crow<br />

David Cryan<br />

Gordon & Sheila Currie<br />

D<br />

Benson & Mary Daitz<br />

Roy & Mary Damonte<br />

Dr. & Mrs. Carroll Damron<br />

Albert & Charlotte Dangler<br />

David brownwood<br />

Charitable Foundation<br />

Harry & Alice Davidson<br />

Marilyn & John Davis III<br />

Albert & D. Davis<br />

Dorothy Davis<br />

Robert Danielson Davis<br />

Ronald & Margaret Davis<br />

Ryley & Nancy Dawson<br />

Joan DeGroot<br />

Robert & Genevieve DeWeese<br />

Scott & Sandra Dean<br />

Diana Degroot<br />

Americo & Janice DelCalzo<br />

George & Mona Delavan<br />

George & Joanne Delyani<br />

Charles & Mary Dethier<br />

Pete & Elsie Devries<br />

R. & Idalice Dickinson<br />

James Dinerman<br />

David & Stephanie Dodson<br />

George & Mary Dolan<br />

James & Barbara Dolliver<br />

Richard & Norma Dominguez<br />

John & Kathleen Donald<br />

Patricia Douglas<br />

Arthur & Marion Downey<br />

Wilbur Downs, M.D.<br />

Gail Drillings<br />

James & Judith Drummond<br />

Rita Dubrow<br />

James & Rachel Dudek<br />

Richard & Mary Dunlap<br />

Michael & Carolyn Dunn<br />

Elisha Dyer, Jr.<br />

Dale & Edith Dzubay<br />

E<br />

Alfred & Ingrid Eckersberg<br />

Dr. Clifford & Carol Eckman<br />

Karl & Nancy Eikeberg<br />

Jan Eisenhardt<br />

Linda &c Eisenstein<br />

Dr. Victor Eisner<br />

Katherine Ellegood<br />

Joell Ellis<br />

Diane Ellison<br />

Lewis Elwood<br />

Margaret Enderlein<br />

Gordon & Blossom Engen<br />

Frederic & Linda Engstrom<br />

Donald & Susan Enright<br />

Frank Erickson<br />

Ronald & Anne Espedal<br />

Jane Espy<br />

Duane & Nada June Estes<br />

John & Gloria Evans<br />

F<br />

Robert & Gerry Faley<br />

Ruth Farber<br />

Thomas & Marjorie Farreil<br />

Peter & Sandra Farrow<br />

Mr. & Mrs. W. Fawcett<br />

Mary Feldman<br />

William & Rita Ferguson<br />

Norman & Barbara Ferry<br />

Don Fincke<br />

Charles 8c Janet Findley<br />

Myron Elka Fink<br />

Louis Fiset<br />

John & J. Fletcher<br />

William & Adele Fletcher<br />

Gladys & Billy Fogg<br />

Charles & Charlene Foil<br />

Marie Forbes<br />

Donald & Susan Forsling<br />

Branislava Foster<br />

Paul & Genevieve Frankenburg<br />

Ralph & Mary Franklin<br />

Karen & Timothy<br />

Malone Fraser<br />

Pamela Free<br />

Alan & Kathleen Freeman<br />

Donald & Lizabeth Freeman<br />

Norma Fried<br />

August & Jeanne Fromuth<br />

Miram Frost<br />

28 THE EVERGREEN REVIEW<br />

Herbert & Carol Fuller<br />

W. Fuller<br />

Wanda Fullner<br />

Jean Fulton<br />

Anne Futterman<br />

G<br />

Ann & Lee Gagnon<br />

Michael & Martha Galvin<br />

Francisco & Maria Garcia<br />

Clark Gardner<br />

Gloria Lewis Garling<br />

Bernard Constance Games<br />

Robert & Sandra Gates<br />

Ann Dear Gavell<br />

Jean Gaznier<br />

Keith & Sara Gehr<br />

Barbara Geller<br />

Herb & Barbara Gelman<br />

Alice Gendell<br />

Nancy Germain<br />

Warren & Gerry Ghormley<br />

Dorathy Gibson<br />

Patrick Gibson<br />

Daniel & Marjorie Gilkes<br />

Gordon & Doris Gilman<br />

John & Carolyn Giovanini<br />

George & Lila Girvin<br />

Myrna Glist<br />

Paul & Ellen Goff, M.D.<br />

Waldo & Shirley Goglin<br />

Linda Goldberg<br />

Ruth & Robert Goldman<br />

Raymond &<br />

Jill-Anna Goodness<br />

Arthur & Ann Gorai<br />

Dorothy Gordon<br />

John & Adele Gorham<br />

Sylvia Gorsline<br />

Dorothy Graeff<br />

Jeff & Debbie Graham<br />

Patricia Grazier<br />

Jesse & Nancy Green<br />

Robert & Rose Green<br />

Alfred & Adele Greenberg<br />

Sanford & Inez Greenberg<br />

Harry & Rosemary Gregg<br />

Glen Greisz<br />

Dororthy Griffin<br />

Lawrence &C Margie Griffin<br />

James & Sandra Griffith<br />

Patricia Griffith<br />

William & Joyce Grogan<br />

James Grutz<br />

Berneil & Kathy Guthmiller<br />

H<br />

Joseph & Julianne Haefeli<br />

Jamie & Sharen Hafner<br />

John Hainje<br />

Howard & Virginia Hale<br />

James 8c Susan Haley<br />

Ben & Carol Hall<br />

Ronald & Barbara Hammond<br />

Thurston & Carolyn Handley<br />

Marie Hannigan<br />

Carol Hannum<br />

James & Linda Hansen, Jr.<br />

Ernest Harburg<br />

Joseph Harris<br />

Robert & Joanne Harris<br />

Frank Hartman, M.D.<br />

Mr. & Mrs. James Haseltine<br />

Donald & Ila Haskard<br />

Ray & Christine Hayworth<br />

Gloria Healy<br />

John &c Anita Hayes Heimel<br />

Ralph Hein<br />

Dale & Jane Heisinger<br />

Reuben & Mary Held<br />

John & Merelene Helpenstell<br />

Charles & Myrna Helser<br />

Laurie & James Hendricks<br />

Robert & Dorothy Hennen<br />

Jean & John Hennessey, Jr.<br />

Joseph Hennessey<br />

Karen Herold<br />

John 8c Jackie Herum<br />

Richard & Judith High<br />

Hashem & Frances Hilal<br />

Clark & Cynthia Hilden<br />

Charles & Helen Hill, Jr.<br />

Earl Hill, Jr.<br />

Richard & Joan Hill<br />

Robert & Dagmara Hill<br />

David & Patty Hillwick<br />

Anne Hinton<br />

Elizabeth Hirshman<br />

Joseph & Lois Hogan<br />

Owen & Mary Ellen Hogle<br />

Leonard & Eloise Holden<br />

David & Sarah Hollier<br />

Ferenc & Betty Holonics<br />

Martin & Mary Holt<br />

Donald & Pamela Hopps<br />

Richard & Christine Homer<br />

Jacob & Leah Horowitz<br />

Gordon Hough<br />

Daggett Howard<br />

Darrell & Millicent Hull<br />

William & Marion Hunt<br />

Francis & Wilhelmina<br />

Hunter, Jr.<br />

I<br />

James & Ona Mae Ihrig<br />

Mary & Joseph Iski<br />

J Patrick & Becca Jackson<br />

David & Rose Jacobs<br />

Todd & Frances Jacobs<br />

Jacob & Sarah Jacobson<br />

Floyd & Grace Japhet<br />

Helen & John Jarman<br />

Jacqueline & Dean Jendsen<br />

William & Paula John<br />

David & Margaretta Johnson<br />

John & Mary Cay Johnson<br />

Sara Jane Johnson<br />

Ruth Jokinen<br />

Gilbert Betty Jones<br />

Harold & Wanda Jones<br />

Jo Anne Jones<br />

Sherril Hillis Jones<br />

Henry Judd<br />

Tom & Helen Juris<br />

K<br />

H. J. & Margaret Kaltenthaler<br />

William & Lucille Karr<br />

Mildred Katz<br />

James & Marilyn Kavanaugh<br />

Susan Keith<br />

Thomas & Gretchen Keleher<br />

David & Margaret Keller<br />

Steve & Terry Kelso<br />

Lucille Kempf<br />

William & Eloise Kennedy<br />

Fay & John Keogh, Jr..<br />

Inez Kertson<br />

Laurence & Darlene Kerwin<br />

Veselin & Lydia W. Kesich<br />

George & Gertrude Key<br />

W. J. & Wilma Kidwell<br />

Young H Kim<br />

Jerry & Dona King<br />

Betty Kinnaman<br />

Raymond & Eula Kirby<br />

Arthur & Melva Kirkbride<br />

Joan Kirshner<br />

Norman & Harriet Klein<br />

Paul & Nancy Klotz<br />

Nancy Knauer<br />

Lowell & Shirley Knutson<br />

Wayne & Louise Knutson<br />

Charles Koch<br />

Ayako & Joseph Koczur, Sr.<br />

Mitsuhiro & Lilly Y. Kodama<br />

John Koons<br />

J. Walter & Audrey Kosman<br />

Robert & Jean Hiatt Kramer<br />

Nava & Elbart Krieger<br />

Ron Kriekenbeck<br />

Ronald Krumm<br />

Gilbert & Mary Kurtz<br />

Burton & Dale Kushner<br />

David & Janice Kutz<br />

L<br />

Edie Pascoe Lackland<br />

James & Barbara Ladd<br />

Thomas & Evelyn Lajiness<br />

Robert & Charl Lally<br />

Joseph Lalonde<br />

Susan Lamoreaux<br />

Francis & Marcia Langston<br />

Jerry & Geraldine Larrance<br />

Helene Lattimore<br />

J. Kathleen Learned<br />

B. J. & Christa Leathers<br />

Ivan Jane Leech<br />

Doris Leggett<br />

Anthony Lenzer<br />

Louis & Joan Lepry<br />

Otto & Elizabeth Lerbinger<br />

Norman & Louise Levy<br />

Leroy & Carolyn Lewis<br />

Stanley & Inez Liben<br />

Larry & Pamela Liester<br />

Charles & Mary Lindholm<br />

Judith Lindsay<br />

James & Helen C. Linger<br />

William Lipe<br />

Eugene & Pearl Lipner<br />

William & Marian Little<br />

Daniel & Colleen Lo<br />

Samuel & Ruthann Lockwood<br />

Herbert 6c Ellen Loewenthal<br />

Robert Loftfield<br />

John Evelyn Loftus<br />

Walter Lohr, Jr.<br />

C. London<br />

Joseph & Virginia Longan<br />

Lois Lorimer<br />

Susan Lowney<br />

Robert & Norma Lucas<br />

Ernest & Paula Luders<br />

Harlan Lutz<br />

John & Edna Lyons<br />

M<br />

Alicia Mac Arthur<br />

Carolyn & Steven Mackey<br />

James & Nancy MacWhinney<br />

Mary & John Maffeo<br />

Robert & Roberta Mahler<br />

James & Carol Major<br />

Martin & Marsha Malkin<br />

Rona & Harvey Malofsky<br />

Emily & Leonard Mandelbaum<br />

Irwin Manning<br />

A. E. 6c Nancy Manseth<br />

Charles Margolis<br />

Clyde Patricia Matteson<br />

Sherry Matteucci<br />

Charles Miriam Matthews<br />

Mr. & Mrs. Richard May, Jr.<br />

<strong>The</strong>odore & Mary McConnell<br />

Lynette McCoy<br />

Anita Louise Mclntosh<br />

Bobbie Mclntosh<br />

Floyd & Kathleen McManus<br />

Bruce Alice McCain<br />

Ian & Doris McCallum<br />

Charles, Jr. & Barbara McCann<br />

Faye McClain<br />

Beale & Dana McCulloch<br />

James & Jacqueline McFerran<br />

Seamus & Ann McGrady<br />

Mr. & Mrs. Edward McGrath<br />

Donald & Hilda McLaren<br />

William & Margaret<br />

McLaughlin<br />

Jack & Carol McPherson<br />

D. Peter & Shirlee Meador<br />

Marilyn Meardon<br />

Catherine Meehan<br />

David & Joanne Mehus<br />

Gordon & Greta Meiklejohn<br />

William & Doris Meister<br />

Roy & Ellen Mellen<br />

Richard & June Meres<br />

John & Mary Merkel, Jr.<br />

Deena & Ray Mersky<br />

Frank & Bettimae Metheny<br />

Eva Metzger<br />

George & Margaret Meyers<br />

Franklin & Jean Michaels<br />

Daniel & Isabel Miller<br />

Howard & Catherine Miller<br />

Norman & Kathryn Miller<br />

Robert Miller<br />

Arnold & Ann Millhauser<br />

Glenn & Virginia Mills<br />

John & Katharine Mills<br />

Robert & Elizabeth Mills<br />

Roger & Chariot Mills<br />

James & Lenore Minstrell<br />

Henry & Eulia Mishima<br />

Abraham & Carole Mohr<br />

William Keith Montgomery<br />

Marvin Mooney<br />

John Moore III<br />

Leon & Marda Moore<br />

Robert Moore<br />

Thomas & Sharon Moore<br />

William & Joan Morgenstern<br />

Kenneth & Jean Moriyama<br />

Jeffrey Morse<br />

Lewis & Mabel Mosier<br />

Michael & Miriam Moss<br />

Margaret Moulton<br />

Harold & Susan Mozer<br />

John & Arne Munyan<br />

Frank & Carolyn Murphy<br />

Connel & June Murray<br />

John Murray<br />

Robert Musser<br />

Robert Myhr<br />

N<br />

Robert Nassau, M.D.<br />

James & Sarah Navarre<br />

Frances Neer<br />

John & Barbara Neff<br />

Robert & Mary Neill<br />

James & Katherine Nelson<br />

Leonard & Bonita C. Nelson<br />

Lester & Vita Nelson<br />

Betty Newell<br />

Doris & Marvin Newman<br />

James & Mieko Nhomi<br />

Chris & Helen Nicholson<br />

Dennis & Elizabeth Nicks, Sr.<br />

Walter & Celia Nicks<br />

Donald & Hilda Nicoll<br />

Richard & Mary Nolting<br />

Ivan & Merna Nordstrom<br />

Howard & Barbara Norris<br />

Amando & Ventura Nunez<br />

O<br />

Bernard & Jeanne O'Connor<br />

William & Helen O'Hara<br />

Jack &c Jeris Ockfen<br />

Jay Scott & Dorothy Odell<br />

Storrs & Shirley Olds<br />

Arne & Jo Ann Olson<br />

Warren & Maurine Olson<br />

Richard & Patricia Oltman<br />

Peter & Mary Ellen Onno<br />

John & Mary Orr<br />

Priscilla Osgood<br />

Gary & Carolyn Owen<br />

Martyn & Candace Owen<br />

Robert & Heidemarie Owren<br />

P<br />

William Page II<br />

Hamilton & Muriel Page<br />

Lloyd & Constance Painter<br />

John Ruby Park<br />

Lowell & Anna Park<br />

Derek & Nancy Parker<br />

Katrina & Parson<br />

Jean & Parsons<br />

Glenn & Leslie Paxton<br />

Judith Peabody<br />

Fridolf & Marilyn Pearson<br />

James Connie Pemble<br />

Shirlee Dillard Perkins<br />

Winnifred & Phillip Pertee<br />

Lawrence & Cathleen Peters<br />

Arthur & Idella Peterson<br />

Rosemary Peterson<br />

Glenn & Betty Pfaff<br />

Dr. & Mrs Harold Phelps<br />

James & Pam Phillips<br />

William Pierce<br />

Karen Johnson Pike<br />

Byron & Joanna Pinick<br />

Marvin & Susan Pinkis<br />

David & Mary Piper<br />

Jerry & Janet Pipes<br />

Paui & Rhea Plotnick<br />

Paul & Cecilia Plumer<br />

William & Lillian Poe<br />

Raymond & Marilyn Pollard<br />

Julius & Ruth Poritz<br />

Linda Post<br />

Thurman & Laura Poston, Jr.<br />

Ralph & Elaine Potter<br />

Joan Poultridge<br />

Joan Powers<br />

Edward & Anne<br />

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Q<br />

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R<br />

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Alex & Susanne Rosenkrantz<br />

Julia Rosmond<br />

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Mary Alice Sanguinetti<br />

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Brenda & Scott Schenck<br />

Norm Schenck<br />

Greg & Margaret Schirato<br />

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Jonathan Seib<br />

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Paul Smith<br />

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Mark Sopchak<br />

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Douglas Souliere<br />

John Earl Spencer<br />

Jess Spielholz<br />

Donald & Doris St. Louis<br />

David Stalloch<br />

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Samuel & Althea Stroum<br />

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K. L. Summerlin<br />

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Patrick Sutherland<br />

Philip & Phyllis Lampher Swain<br />

Christopher Synodis<br />

Susan Taggart<br />

Patrick Tassoni<br />

Peter & Virginia Taylor<br />

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L. O. Elizabeth Tucker<br />

Uta Ford Family<br />

Jan Vahness<br />

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Ann Vandeman<br />

Jacqueline Vandeman<br />

Jan Vanhess<br />

Joan Velikanje<br />

Vikki Verhulp<br />

Ronald & Dorothy Wade<br />

Christine & John Pierce Wagner<br />

James Waite, Jr.<br />

Pat Boutin Wald<br />

George Walker<br />

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Michael Wannenwetsch<br />

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Elizabeth Stirling Welch<br />

Stewart & Eva White<br />

Margaret Whyte<br />

Robert Wick<br />

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Mr. & Mrs. Jackson Williams<br />

Lynda Williamson<br />

Philip Windell<br />

Julie Wittrock<br />

Hal & Helen Wolf<br />

Marcia & Will Wolf<br />

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FRIENDS OF<br />

KAOS<br />

Bradley Aiken<br />

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Archibald Sisters<br />

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Charlene Renee' Ashmun<br />

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Donald & Joan Bantz<br />

Jeannette Barreca<br />

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Blue Heron Bakery<br />

Bruce Bolding<br />

Brad & Kathleen Bowles<br />

James Edward Brauneis<br />

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Kathleen & Douglas Brewer<br />

Karen Brisley-Bown<br />

Paula Brown<br />

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Marie Ann Celestre<br />

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Brad Clemmons<br />

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Carmela Kay Courtney<br />

Janelle Mae Crabb<br />

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Kathy Ailene Dockins<br />

John Christian Donald<br />

Lisa Eleanor Donally<br />

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Susan Dubuisson<br />

Elizabeth Eberle<br />

Nancy Anne Eberle<br />

Jesus & Socorro Echeverria<br />

Robert Eggert<br />

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Keith Eisner<br />

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Tamara Drum English<br />

Mark Edward Ensley<br />

Norma Epstein<br />

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Maria Esparza<br />

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Rene Fameli<br />

Robert And Pamela Faro<br />

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Thomas Findlay<br />

Chaplain Vernon & Ruby<br />

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John Foster<br />

Timothy James Foster<br />

Russell Fox<br />

Keith Robert Fredrikson<br />

Thomas Mitchell Freeman<br />

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Robert Golden<br />

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Duncan Stewart Green<br />

Jesse & Nancy Green<br />

Barbara Lynn Gross<br />

Frank Groundwater<br />

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Allison Marlene Halstead<br />

Scott Hansen<br />

Jean Hardy<br />

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James Wilfred Hartley III<br />

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Mary & Robert Henderson<br />

Mei-li Hennen<br />

Frank Henry<br />

Frances Lyn Hertz<br />

Thomas Me Kinley Hinds<br />

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Esther Sarah Howard<br />

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Douglas Hunter<br />

Richard Hunter<br />

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Gregory Alan Hutcheson<br />

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Julia Kelen<br />

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Gary King<br />

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Susan Jane Lacina<br />

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Mary Lake<br />

Maureen Lally<br />

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Robyn Lane<br />

Eric Larsen<br />

Jennifer & Delbert Larson<br />

Margo Suzanne Lauritzen<br />

Daniel Leahy<br />

Robin Lesher<br />

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Russell & Raven Lidman<br />

Ruth & Shay Lipow<br />

Leslie Anne Lynam<br />

James Lytle<br />

Helen Wagner Macan<br />

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Sara & Joseph Mailhot<br />

Patrick William Maley<br />

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John Marshall<br />

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Mark Matthies<br />

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Trey McGuire<br />

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R. J. McKenzie-Sullivan<br />

Sarah Meardon<br />

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Elizabeth Ann Miller<br />

Perry Miller<br />

Joel & Evelyn Montague<br />

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Charles & Melissa Morgan<br />

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Mark Heywood Noble<br />

Craig Oare<br />

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Kenneth & Marianne Partlow<br />

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Curtis Pavola<br />

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ill Phillips<br />

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i he <strong>Evergreen</strong> ReView<br />

Editor: Keith Eisner<br />

Writing: John Crosby,<br />

Keith Eisner, Jon Epstein,<br />

Ray Kelleher, Steve Salmi,<br />

Carolyn Servid, Andrea Swett,<br />

Mike Wark<br />

Design: Brad Clemmons,<br />

Shirley Greene,<br />

Marianne Kawaguchi<br />

Photography: Steve Davis,<br />

Kathleen Hanna, TESC Photo<br />

Services<br />

Other Help: Dale Baird,<br />

Patricia Barte, Mia Fragnoli,<br />

Helen Stoutnar, Yana<br />

Zalachozic<br />

Illustrations on pages 15-17,<br />

and 22-23 by Rockwell Kent<br />

'rom the 1930 Random House<br />

Edition of "Moby Dick "<br />

31


eview<br />

lllliH'ill'I'i'Jt.U.ilMii.L.!<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Evergreen</strong> Review<br />

<strong>November</strong>, <strong>1990</strong>; Volume 12, Number 1<br />

Published by Information Services<br />

<strong>The</strong> <strong>Evergreen</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>College</strong><br />

John Crosby, <strong>Evergreen</strong>'s hand bookbinder,<br />

is just what every bureaucracy needs.<br />

Finding one of his poems on love, physics,<br />

youth and just-about-everything-else in your<br />

in box is a sanity-saving break from memos<br />

and reports. This poem was written as an<br />

explanation of Heisenberg's law for<br />

Crosby's daughter.<br />

Nonprofit Org.<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

PAID<br />

Olympia, WA<br />

Permit No. 65

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