If you ever wanted to refer Evergreen to a friend, now it’s easier:
The Evergreen State College recently completed a new virtual tour of campus complete with 360 degree views, video footage, photographs, and a walking tour with a virtual guide.
The Evergreen State College recently completed a new virtual tour of campus complete with 360 degree views, video footage, photographs, and a walking tour with a virtual guide.
This Halloween the President’s Office was open to trick-or-treaters and a band full of monsters, animals, and mythical creatures visited:
The latest Evergreen Magazine is now available just in time for election season. The Fall 2012 magazine highlights various ways Evergreen alumni engage in the political process.
Evergreen students, faculty and alumni continually demonstrate extraordinary public engagement, driven by a sense of responsibility rooted in social justice.
This issue also features the colorful drawings of cartoonist, Drew Christie ’07.
Our friends at the Organic Farm pulled off a great event last weekend. Check it out!
Editor’s Note: Sandy Yannone, Director of Evergreen’s Writing Center provides the following guest blog post about the latest edition of Inkwell.
Each year, the Writing Center’s tutors in Olympia and Tacoma practice the writing process they encourage student writers to explore by writing, designing, and editing Inkwell: A Student Guide to Writing at Evergreen. Now in its seventh edition, Inkwell features eclectic essays, poems, and tidbits of wisdom regarding how writers can cultivate their voice. As 2012 Co-Editors David Imhoff and Madeleine Stephens write, “Inkwell is both the end and the beginning of collaboration. The fruits of our collective reflection live here, accommodated by hours and weeks of conversation and writing.” Distributed free each fall, Inkwell also has sparked its own writing festival. This year’s InkFest includes writers Giovanna Marcus ’01, Paul Whitney ’04, Marissa Luck ’10, and Shanda Zimmerman ’10.
What was your experience as a writer at Evergreen? Has it helped you in the alumni afterlife?
Editor’s Note: Nancy Koppelman ’88, Member of the Faculty provides this guest blog about a new program on campus.
The new faculty-led project called the Academic Statement Initiative begins during Orientation Week. New students meet in seminars to learn about Evergreen’s philosophy and think together about a common reading. This year’s book was Carlotta Walls LaNier’s A Mighty Long Way: My Journey to Justice at Little Rock Central High School.
The campus thought deeply about LaNier’s experiences as one of the “Little Rock Nine”—students who made the first brave step to integrate Arkansas’ public schools in 1957. During Convocation, Ms. LaNier urged us to appreciate the opportunity that a college education represents. During the school year, sustained faculty-led activities will help students nurture that appreciation, culminating in each graduate’s transcript-ready Academic Statement. This Initiative continues Evergreen’s history of innovation, and of trusting students to invent their own paths toward graduation.
Evergreen’s gym was packed; it was standing room only. The air buzzed with anticipation for the start of our All Campus Convocation. In the past convocations haven’t always been this well attended or dynamic. So what made the difference? Here are three keys to this year’s convocation success:
After brief opening remarks by President Les Purce and Provost Michael Zimmerman, LaNier opened her talk with a characterization of the Little Rock Nine’s fight for school integration. A struggle of state rights vs. federal authority, Arkansas governor vs. the President of the United States, 9 kids vs.an angry mob. And at the bottom of it all, a staunch determination to receive a fair and adequate education, marked a major shift in the struggle for desegregation.
At the end of this thought provoking and serious look at an important time in our history, Evergreen’s very own Marla Beth Elliott led the crowd in a round of Alma Mater and the Geoduck Fight Song. If you’re feeling rusty on the fight song, Randy Stilson ’77, the college’s much beloved archivist has posted an audio recording and sheet music on the college archives page.
This gallery contains 13 photos.
Photos by: Shauna Bittle. You can find more photos in Photoland’s Archives
A few weeks ago, there was a black bear sighted on campus. As with any safety issue, Police Services sent word of the animal’s presence via email to the campus community. It was an irresistibly delicious distraction. Here are some of the comments, cautions and reminiscences exchanged in honor of our distinguished guest:
Russ Fox :
In the late 1970’s and most of the 1980’s, there was a “summer resident” male black bear who used the TESC campus as his summer habitat. He was often seem browsing along the edge of the forest along the parkway between the campus entrance and Kaiser Road. In spring he meandered across lower Mud Bay from his winter habitat in the Black Hills across some of our lower Eld Inlet properties to his summer estate. In the fall, he retraced his trail back to the Black Hills. One year, he overturned and feasted on our neighbor’s bee hive. He never bothered our hives, although he also crossed our property to and from his winter and summer environments. It’s wonderful to hear that one of his (her?) offsrping is now once again enjoying our 1000 acre sanctuary.
Betty Kutter:
Thanks for this reminder of the “wild old days”, Russ — and then there was the time when Linda Kahan’s dogs treed cubs outside her house, just there by where Marshal jr high is now — a bit of excitement, but even that one ended peacefully …
Sylvie McGee:
I’m delighted to hear that the bear is perhaps using Evergreen’s campus as a comfortable sanctuary. Of course, I’m safely over here in Tumwater 😉
It might not be a bad idea for faculty to mention this to students, and to stress basic bear safety precautions, particularly about giving them a wide berth. For students from out of area, they may be unaware of how to co-exist safely and peacefully with bears, and the temptation to try to “get a closer look” or “get just one picture” can be powerful.
Rebecca Chamberlain:
Black bear attacks are extremely rare. They usually occur in the spring, when a mother is protecting her cubs. At this time of year, they are foraging for food, and fall salmon will be coming into the waterways. However, people might want to keep garbage cans closed, etc. Here’s a National Parks site, for those who want more information on backcountry bear safety. The same safety tips apply here, too. http://usparks.about.com/od/backcountry/a/Bear-Safety.htm
It’s thrilling to have a black bear back on the land. The original Lushootseed name, for area around the Fourth Avenue bridge, is bəsčətx̌ʷəd— the “place of the black bears.” The salmon came up through the portage, and black bears often congregated there. They were numerous in this area, not that long ago, and to have one back seems hopeful.
As Thoreau reminds us,
“In wildness is the preservation of the world.”
All the best in this beautiful fall season. To salmon, and bear, and “all our relations!”