L&C Magazine

Fall 2024

Featured Stories

  • current, Fall-2024, Feature

    Advantage: Lewis & Clark

    The first phase of Lewis & Clark’s strategic planning effort sets the stage for institutional distinction. The new process is iterative and dynamic— responsive to a world that won’t stand still.

  • Fall-2024, Feature

    What’s Next?

    As beloved professors and staff retire, their impact on the Lewis & Clark community will be felt for generations.

  • current, Fall-2024, Feature

    Data Processors

    In a cross-school collaboration, Professors Greta Binford and Liza Finkel prepare middle and high school teachers to weave real-world data science into their environmental curricula.

Message from the President

Fall-2024, President's Letter

Preparing for the Future

This fall marks my 32nd in higher education. It is clearer to me than ever before why colleges and universities are often at the center of the public conversation around important topics of national interest.

On Palatine Hill

Leadership and Support

Fall-2024, leadership

Day of Champions A Success

On this year’s Day of Champions, the L&C community raised more than $284,000 for athletics programming and sports teams.

Fall-2024, leadership

Major Gifts and Pledges

Lewis & Clark thanks its generous donors for these recent major gifts and pledges.

Fall-2024, leadership

Ransom Overseas Scholarship Makes Its First Award

The Lewis & Clark Off-Campus and Overseas Study Program is one of Lewis & Clark’s signature programs, giving students a global perspective in an increasingly complex world. 

Fall-2024, leadership

Your Passion, Your Legacy: New Ambassador Opportunities

Lewis & Clark is offering you a new way to make an impact: Ambassador Opportunities.

Fall-2024, leadership

Graduate School Wins $50,000 Grant for Hybrid Rural School Psychology Program

The School Psychology program at the Lewis & Clark College Graduate School of Education and Counseling has received a grant of $50,000 from the Roundhouse Foundation.

Fall-2024, leadership

Endowed Fund Honors Former Women’s Coach

When Title IX became law in 1972, the women’s sports programs began to blossom. Under Hunter’s leadership,the women’s competitive volleyball and basketball teams got their start.

Alumni News

Profiles

Bookshelf

  • Unleash Your Goddess Voice: Build Your Resilience to Speak Up, Sing Out, and Spread Your Message

    Sara Flores BA ’06 helps empathic women embody confident public speaking and unapologetic self-expression even if their voices have been dismissed, devalued, or disrespected in the past. Combining engaging personal stories, powerful practices, and client examples from her 16 years as a voice coach, she helps readers overcome habits of people-pleasing so they can spread their soulful message with ease.Creative Voice Publishing, 2024. 342 pages.

  • As the Sky Begins to Change

    Kim Stafford, professor emeritus and founding director of the Northwest Writing Institute, gathers poems that “sing with empathy, humor, witness, and story.” The book’s poems have been set to music, quoted in the New York Times, posted online in the Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day series, and shared in a myriad of other ways in order to engage with a world “thirsting for the oxygen of healing song.” Red Hen Press, 2024. 136 pages.

  • Come On, Baby, Just Rock, Rock, Rock! The Inspired Life and Enduring Legacy of Ritchie Valens

    Donald “Corey” Long BA ’02 pens a biography of Ritchie Valens, the young singer and songwriter of the 1950s who influenced generations of musicians during a career that lasted just nine months due to his untimely death on “the day the music died.” The book includes a foreword written by Ritchie’s sister, Connie Valens. Self-published, 2024. 251 pages.

  • Honest Hawai‘i Travel Advice: The S#!T Locals Wish You Knew Before Traveling to Hawai‘i

    Jantzen Shinmoto BA ’18, MAT ’19 offers a book that goes hand in hand with other travel guides to show a deeper, more intimate level of Hawai‘i—not just places to go and food to eat. If you are planning to visit, move to, or vacation in Hawai‘i and you want to get an inside, honest perspective on how to respect all Hawai‘i has to offer, then this book is for you!
    Self-published, 2024. 62 pages.

  • Reader, I

    Corey Van Landingham BA ’08 pens her third collection of poetry. Inspired by Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, the book follows the first year of a marriage, inviting the reader in as a confidant while adhering to, but also subverting, traditional expectations of marriage. Van Landingham is a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, as well as a Wallace Stegner Fellowship from Stanford University. Sarabande Books, 2024. 100 pages.

  • The End of Everything and Everything That Comes After That

    Nick Lantz BA ’03 mixes sincerity with irony and lyric with vernacular in a series of poems that brilliantly captures the disruption and disorder of our lives during the COVID-19 pandemic.
    University of Wisconsin Press, 2024. 116 pages.

  • To Walk the North Direction

    Ciel Downing BA ’98, MA ’00 offers a volume of poems that focuses on redemption, healing, and celebration, depicting a life of wild pendulum swings, hard living, and grand joys. Moonpath Press, 2024. 114 pages.

  • Journey to the Sacred: A Pilgrimage to the Hallowed Mountains of China and the American Northwest

    Jacob Rawson BA ’05 studied overseas in Beijing during his junior year, an experience that immersed him in the rich tapestry of Chinese culture and language and helped set the stage for his future endeavors as well as this book. Combining rigorous research with vivid personal narrative, Rawson explores the connection between physical journeys and spiritual discovery, bridging the majestic landscapes of China with those of the American Northwest.
    Jain Publishing Company, 2024. 163 pages.

  • Somewhere, in Front of My Name

    Prosser Stirling CAS ’77 offers a vibrant array of poems blending vivid imagery and precise language. This debut collection explores profound connections and life’s elusive moments with lyrical mastery.Saint Julian Press, 2024. 98 pages.

  • Bright Eyes: Surviving Our Monsters and Learning to Live Without Them

    Bridey Thelen-Heidel BA ’94 pens an astonishing narrative of a young girl raised to be both her mother’s protector and punching bag. For fans of I’m Glad My Mom Died and The Glass Castle, Bridey’s story highlights the indomitable spirit of a young girl who grew into a woman who dared to break the cycle of abuse. She Writes Press, 2024. 296 pages.

  • Radical Empathy

    Robin Romm, a creative writing instructor, offers a new collection of short stories that “revels in the mess behind the slick veneer of modern life.” Disquieting, original, and strangely reassuring, these 10 new stories make quick work of the easy truths and thoughtless salvos that keep us from seeing the wildness of our irreducible lives. The first story in the collection, “Marital Problems,” won a 2024 O. Henry Prize for Short Fiction and appears in The Best Short Stories 2024: The O. Henry Prize Anthology. Four Way Books, 2024. 189 pages.

  • Benjamin Banneker and Us: Eleven Generations of an American Family

    Rachel Jamison Webster BA ’97 draws on oral history and conversations with her DNA cousins to imagine the lives of their shared ancestors across 11 generations, among them 18th-century Black mathematician, writer, and astronomer Benjamin Banneker. Holt Paperbacks, 2024. 384 pages.

In Memoriam

Fall-2024, In Memoriam

In Memoriam, Fall 2024

The fall 2024 edition of In Memoriam includes submissions from January 30, 2024, through August 31, 2024.

Galleries

BIG PICTURE: Frank Manor House, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, received a glow up for the holiday season last wint...
BIG PICTURE: Frank Manor House, which is on the National Register of Historic Places, received a “glow up” for the holiday season last winter. Part of the original Fir Acres estate, the iconic building has welcomed generations of students, alumni, and friends of the institution since 1942. Suhail Akram BA ’24