main contentL&C Magazine
Cover Story
A Diabetes Advocate Has Her Day
Featured Stories
A Diabetes Advocate Has Her Day
The Return of the Salmon to Tryon Creek
Living The HybridLife
Illuminating Memory
Teaching in Translation
A growing number of educators face the challenge of teaching students whose first language is not English. How do they cope with the realities of today’s mixed-language classrooms?
President's Letter
Orange-and-Black as the New Green
On Palatine Hill
On a High Note
Finders Keepers in the Arctic
Serving Women in Nicaragua
Ratte Award Goes to McCartan
Achievement on a National Scale
Volk Leads Fund-Raising
Class of 2011: College of Arts and Sciences
Meet the New Board Chair
New to the Board
Special Ks
International Environmental Law Project Goes to The Hague
MySpace Winner @ L&C
Hope in a Time of Violence
Phi Beta Kappa Inductees
Alumni News
Albany Society Summer Barbecue
Alumni Board Elects Members
Profiles
Made of the Right Material
Investing in Paradise
Sustaining Nature
Bookshelf
Fighting for Paradise: A Military History of the Pacific Northwest
Kurt Nelson M.P.A ’98 traces the military history of the Pacific Northwest, from early Indian warfare through World War II.
Westholme Publishing, 2007. 320 pages.
The Moses Probe
Ted Magnuson MA ’03 authors a sci-fi adventure, complete with intergalactic space travel.
Mundania Press, 2006. 264 pages.
For What He Could Become
Jim Misko BA ’55 authors a novel about a man, half Irish and half Athabaskan Indian, who leaves his native village, fights in World War II, falls into alcoholism, but eventually finds love.
Northwest Ventures, 2006. 370 pages.
Bittersweet Canyon
Larry Cushing JD ’52 authors a novel about a ranching family in Central Oregon, including their struggles with the land, legal conflicts, gold mining, and romance.
Self-published, 2007. 334 pages.
How We Spent Our Time
Vern Rutsala, professor emeritus of English, offers poems that, according to one reviewer, are “conversational but endlessly skillful in the ways they keep the language vivid and fresh and surprising.”
University of Akron Press, 2006. 84 pages.
Mémoires de guerre d’un soldat américain (1918-1919): Le bon endroit
Lloyd Hulse, professor emeritus of Spanish, translates into French the journal his father kept as an American soldier in World War I. The Right Place, by Hugh C. Hulse, was published posthumously in La Grande in 1969. Though his father’s account had been widely read in Eastern Oregon, Lloyd Hulse believed the insightful, often amusing story deserved to be retold in France.
L’Harmattan, Paris, 2007. 274 pages.
Mr. Ambassador: Warrior for Peace
Edward Perkins CAS ’56, life trustee of Lewis & Clark College, pens a memoir of his experiences as a foreign service officer–focusing, in particular, on his role as the first black U.S. ambassador to South Africa in 1986, at the height of apartheid.
University of Oklahoma Press, 2006. 560 pages.
Chick Flick Road Kill: A Behind-the-Scenes Odyssey Into Movie-Made America
Alicia Rebensdorf BA ’97 offers a nonfiction story of a young woman’s travels to popular-culture landmarks in the United States. She describes the book as “part memoir, part travelogue, and part media commentary.”
Seal Press, 2007. 280 pages.
Fighting for Love in the Century of Extinction: How Passion and Politics Can Stop Global Warming
Eban Goodstein, professor of economics, authors a passionate plea for saving the environment and a pragmatic argument for the central role political activism must play if we are to stop global warming.
University of Vermont Press, 2007. 184 pages.
In Deepest Consequences
Scott Kauffman JD ’78 pens a novel about a fictional public defender, Calvin Samuels, who has a passion for sticking by the underdog. The book has been nominated for the Benjamin Franklin Literary Publishing Award in the category of best debut novel of 2006.
Medallion Press, 2006. 589 pages.
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