Remembering Rachel Corrie – An important decade for all of us

Rachel Corrie

Editor’s note: On March 16th, the tenth anniversary of Rachel Corrie’s death, Craig & Cindy Corrie (Rachel’s parents) released the following video blog. You can visit the Rachel Corrie Foundation for Peace & Justice site to learn more.

March 16, 2013 marks the 10-year anniversary of our daughter, Rachel Corrie’s death.  We thank you all for the love and support you have sent us over the last 10 years, and we thank you for all the work you do on human rights.  Please view and share this video and act.  Join us at the Rachel Corrie Foundation for Peace and Justice in our call to action!

Puppet Master – Madison Cripps ’04

Madison Cripps ’04 claims he was unsatisfied with the isolation of his two artistic worlds — painting and drawing felt disparate from theater and dance — until he discovered puppetry, while working on a small farm in western Massachusetts.

Since then Madison has been perfecting his craft in a studio tucked away in the River Arts District of Asheville, North Carolina. With each performance Madison attempts to push the boundary of what the audience accepts as puppetry, and their comfort level. Once a puppet is fully created Madison begins to play. The puppet’s character comes from its movements. “I’m not really there. I’m just enabling something else to explore the world that they are in,” he notes.

Reflecting upon his experience at Evergreen, Madison shares, “It really opened me up to taking subjects that were seemingly different or unrelated and finding the commonality, and seeing how everything fits together,” he said. “That was also really influential.”

The Citizen Times of Asheville, North Carolina recently published an article highlighting the work of Madison Cripps. You can check out the video they made and read the full article here.

Why Gender Equality Stalled – Stephanie Coontz writes for New York Times

Stephanie Coontz, Faculty member. Photo by Tao Ruspoli

Last week, the New York Times released an Opinion piece by Stephanie Coontz, Why Gender Equality Stalled. If you’ve ever wondered why you’re working more than ever, but haven’t seen or felt the government pass any major initiatives to help you accommodate your family and work demands – Here’s a great place to start, Why Gender Equality Stalled.

The Grammar of Life at Evergreen

Lyda Kuth ’78

By Lyda Kuth ‘78

I had writers block that started in high school. I wasn’t a good test-taker either. When I was considering colleges, I was drawn to the idea of a school that was less traditional, without papers to be written and final exams to be taken. So, I enrolled at Evergreen in 1972. Once there I discovered that I really loved the idea of a seminar, and the rich exchange when ideas can evolve openly and without judgment.

But the writer’s block prevailed and how I dealt with it, along with my desire to express myself as a creative person, became part of the story of my first movie, a personal documentary, “Love and Other Anxieties.” I’ll be on campus for a public screening of it on February 26th.

By the end of sophomore year at TESC, I was floundering, in more than one way. To tell you how badly, I had an individual study in Etching and Drawing. I would go to an empty classroom, with rows of those half desks you can write on—in this case a bad orange. And I had assigned myself drawing a cauliflower, which I was then going to transfer to an etching. I spent almost an entire semester at this. It was really all I did, “Still Life of Cauliflower”, and so it was a bit awkward both for my faculty adviser and me at evaluation time. It was time to leave.

I was gone for three years and in that time I worked at, ironically enough, a university bookstore where I ordered textbooks for all the classes I knew I wasn’t capable of taking. But eventually I did return because I knew I wanted my undergraduate degree, and I was thinking of a possible career in publishing or maybe graduate school in library science. Something, anything, to do with books.

I returned determined to take the writer’s block head on, and I looked forward to once again being in a seminar setting. In my determination to return to school, I kind of forgot I’d be about six years older than anyone else, so this proved to be somewhat alienating. My good fortune was to have Leo Dougherty as my faculty person. Because of, or perhaps in spite of an inappropriate crush on him, I worked hard in his class. He took it upon himself to write a Lab that took you through the Strunk and White book, Elements of Style, and gave exercises to practice the rules of grammar. This was manna to me. I diligently went through the workbook and mastered those things I only vaguely knew about, such as when it’s appropriate to use a semi-colon, and where the hell does the period go when dealing with quotation marks in different contexts. Doing this didn’t solve the writer’s block but what little I did get out on paper was grammatically correct.

Making my first movie had similar elements of struggle. I went in to the project thinking I’d learn how to shoot, edit, and otherwise make a film entirely by myself. It took trying (with a little help from experienced friends) to see what aspects of making a film I wanted to master and what I could leave to my collaborators. But understanding the rules, or “grammar”, of cinema, and its tools, gave me the push I needed to get my first film made.

It’s funny, but one of my favorite shots in the film takes place at Evergreen, when I’m traveling down a misty road with tall evergreens that form a tunnel. It could only be in the Pacific Northwest. We were on our way to interview professor Stephanie Coontz to ask her and her students about how marriage has evolved through history. In the shot I say one of the more provocative things in the film, which I won’t give away here.  And the Evergreen students I interviewed were incredibly candid about their sex lives and what they expect from long-term relationships.

So, why do I return to TESC now? When you’ve reached your 50s, college life seems a ways back there. Yet many strands have connected me back to Evergreen, one of the most significant is spending the last several decades of my life married to a graduate from there, whom I didn’t meet until I came East. We share a memory of this place, and also have many jokes about our ridiculous lives back then that we each can relate to. But there is a deeper, more personal pull.

Even with writer’s block I think I understood that TESC was always going to be a place to explore, articulate, and communicate with other people those concepts that aren’t black and white, apparently obvious, or easily solved. That’s what happened in seminar, where I felt so at home. My time at TESC laid the groundwork for my willingness to explore the ambiguities of love, romance, and long-term attachment and, just as important, to say some things that most people keep hidden. That’s exactly what you’ll find in my film and I look forward to the conversation it will open up on campus.

Readers: Lyda will be on campus for a free screening of her film, ‘Love and Other Anxieties’ on 2/26/13

Joan McBride ’00 – will not run for reelection as mayor of Kirkland

Kirkland Mayor Joan McBride sits on her living room couch at her home in the Moss Bay neighborhood. McBride has spent more than a decade on the Kirkland City Council but will not seek reelection in the fall. Photo by Carrie Rodriguez

Joan McBride ’00, Mayor of Kirkland, announced she will not run for reelection. With over 21 years of public service she’s ready to retire.

“I am never going to quit Kirkland when it’s down, ever,’ said McBride of the past years. ‘Now, we have an amazing council … Leave when you’re batting well, leave when you’re at the top of the cake. Yes, we did it.’

McBride, 61, is most proud of the ethics policy and code of conduct that were enacted during her time as mayor.”

You can read the full article here.

Lyda Kuth ’78 presents documentary about love, marriage and taking creative risks

Filmmaker Lyda Kuth ’78 will present LOVE AND OTHER ANXIETIES on February 26 in Lecture Hall Three, at 6:30. The event is free.

From right to left: Kent ’74, Lily, Lyda ’80

(OLYMPIA, WA) Lyda Kuth and her husband Kent Christman were both born in Ohio and enrolled at The Evergreen State College in the first few years after opening in 1971. Nearly a decade later, they crossed paths in Boston and later married.  Their relationship, and the universal uncertainties of finding and staying in love, is the subject of Kuth’s first feature film, a personal documentary, “Love and Other Anxieties.” Kuth, a 1978 Evergreen graduate, will be on the campus on February 26, 2013 to meet students and faculty, present a public screening of her film and answer questions.  The screening is at 6:30 pm in Lecture Hall Three.  The event is free and open to the public.  Parking is $2. 

After two decades of giving grants to New England artists and filmmakers as the executive director of the LEF Foundation in Cambridge, MA, Kuth secretly contemplated making a film. She finally admitted this desire in her mid 50s, around the time her only daughter was preparing to go to college.

Love and Other Anxieties, movie poster

Kuth decided she wanted to talk with young people in her daughter’s generation about their expectations for marriage and long-term commitment. In one scene she travels to Evergreen and interviews professor Stephanie Coontz—an internationally recognized author and expert on the history and culture of marriage—and her students. These interviews helped launch and are part of “Love and Other Anxieties,” in which Kuth also turns the camera on her own “average” love story.

The Boston Globe’s film critic Ty Burr called “Love and Other Anxieties” “extraordinarily touching in its very ordinariness” and that it bears witness to “the ache we all have to keep love fresh.”

Kuth has appeared with the film at film festivals throughout the country and the film had its theatrical premiere in Brookline, MA in November. This event is the Pacific Northwest premiere.

Randy Engstrom ’99 and Andy Fife – Instigators in Seattle’s art scene

Randy Engstrom ’99 on the left and Andy Fife on the right – Photo from Seattletimes.com

The Seattle Times released an article earlier this week spotlighting two entrepreneurs reshaping Seattle’s art scene: Randy Engstrom ’99 and Andy Fife. As leaders in the local arts community they’re part of an emerging cultural shift, emphasizing their role as activists – challenging dated attitudes towards the art scene in Seattle. “They want art to do more than beautify and entertain — they want it to foster social change, lure kids away from gang involvement, create community and, perhaps most radically, figure out how to pay its own way. ” Click here to read the entire article.

 

Governor Names Maia Bellon ’91 Named Washington State Director of Ecology

Maiabellon.jpg

Maia Bellon, ’91 Washington’s new Director of the Department of Ecology

Governor Jay Inslee named Maia Bellon, ’91 as the new Director of the Department of Ecology. She has overseen the Department’s Water Resource Program since 2010.

The Seattle Times reports that Maia’s top priority will be the implementation of the Yakima River Basin Water, Jobs and Fish Bill. The legislation will launch a long-term plan for improving water supplies in central Washington’s agricultural Yakima River Basin.

Read the press release in the The Tacoma News Tribune.