L&C Magazine

Spring 2024

Featured Stories

Message from the President

President's Letter, Spring-2024
Robin Holmes-Sullivan

Dialogue Across Differences

No matter the issue, colleges and universities must always be places that welcome an open exchange of ideas.

On Palatine Hill

Leadership and Support

alumni news, leadership, Spring-2024

Giving for Impact

Student Life Enrichment Endowment and Teacher Pathways Annual Scholarship.

leadership, Spring-2024

Day of Giving Surpasses Goals

On March 13, our community came together to celebrate all things Lewis & Clark on our ninth annual Day of Giving.

leadership, Spring-2024

Building Leaders Through Student Life Programming

For many Lewis & Clark students, the leadership opportunities made available through the Division of Student Life help launch their future success.

leadership, Spring-2024

Major Gifts and Pledges

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

leadership, Spring-2024
Jean-Phillippe Giordine

Murdock Grant Helps Attract Science Faculty

In fall 2023, Lewis & Clark welcomed three new tenure-track faculty in biology, chemistry, and physics.

leadership, Spring-2024

Creating a Pipeline of Future Teachers

Lewis & Clark’s College of Arts and Sciences and its Graduate School of Education and Counseling are collaborating on the Teacher Pathways program.

Alumni News

Profiles

Bookshelf

  • Word Carvings: Poems

    Jeffrey Ormont JD ’79 employs a medley of inventive poetic styles and structures that offer fresh insights into meaning, nature, love, and hope. His verse explores the perplexities of life and seeks to open portals for making peace with mortality and the challenging human condition. Poetry Publishing House, 2023. 138 pages.

  • Black Wing

    David Campiche BA ’71 pens his first novel, which follows fugitive brothers Dan and André as they evade the law through the mountains of British Columbia during the winter of 1896. Over the course of their cat-and-mouse chase, they must navigate cultural collisions as they encounter Indigenous peoples. Campiche’s thriller is grounded in meticulous research and lyrical prose. FriesenPress, 2023. 420 pages.

  • The End of Good Intentions

    David Borofka BA ’76 authors a novel about a Christian college in transition, from its midcentury Presbyterian origins to a more strident and politicized Evangelicalism. The novel moves back and forth through the turbulence of recent American history, examining the gap between desire and emptiness, conviction and extremism. Fomite, 2023. 460 pages.

  • R.U.R. and the Vision of Artificial Life

    Štepán Šimek, professor of theatre, offers a new translation of Karel Capek’s play R.U.R.—which famously coined the term “robot”—and a collection of essays reflecting on the play’s legacy from scientists and scholars who work in artificial life and robotics. The book is edited by Jitka Cejková. MIT Press, 2024. 312 pages.

  • The Blaxploitation Horror Film: Adaptation, Appropriation, and the Gothic

    Jamil Mustafa BA ’87 argues that Blaxploitation horror films reinvent the archetypes of Gothic fiction and film not to exploit Black audiences, but to meet their needs. University of Wales Press, 2023. 272 pages.

  • My Life After Loss: A Resource for Gay Men Moving Forward 

    Ray Smythe MAT ’75, after losing his partner of 49 years, wrote this book to help other gay men move forward after loss. His book provides “lifelines of insights to help gay men move ahead into the future with confidence, strength, and hope.” Self-published, 2023. 99 pages

  • A Wall Is Just a Wall: The Permeability of the Prison in the Twentieth-Century United States

    Reiko Hillyer, associate professor of history, traces the decline of practices that used to connect incarcerated people more regularly to the free world, drawing upon her work teaching in the Inside-Out program. Duke University Press, 2024. 368 pages.

  • Night Mother: A Personal and Cultural History of The Exorcist

    Marlena Williams BA ’15 explores the legacy of the 1973 horror classic film The Exorcist and its impact on her life as well as on American culture. Mad Creek Books, 2023. 240 pages.

  • Edges of Noir: Extreme Filmmaking in the 1960s

    Michael Mirabile, assistant professor with term of English, discusses how late noir films of the 1960s—whether focusing on nuclear destruction, mind control, or surveillance—vividly portray the collective fears from the time. Berghahn Books, 2024. 280 pages.

  • Crack-Up Capitalism: Market Radicals and the Dream of a World Without Democracy

    Quinn Slobodian BA ’00 authors this analysis of economic history that traces the lines of economic global power in the modern era. His work paints a frightening image of the potential future of capitalism. Metropolitan Books, 2023. 352 pages.

  • The Eclipse

    Mark Dahl, director of Watzek Library, pens a modern noir story involving a single dad’s infatuation with a glamorous divorcée that draws him into a love triangle and a dangerous deal with foreign investors for a coveted vineyard property in the Columbia River Gorge. Self-published, 2023. 304 pages.

  • An Unexpected Ally: A Greek Tale of Love, Revenge, and Redemption

    Sophia Kouidou Giles BA ’68 offers a retelling of ancient Greek myth in which Circe seeks a new lover, amphibian Glaucus, after Odysseus’ departure from the island of Aeaea. But in a twist of fortune, mortal Skylla complicates her plans, leading to an adventure threaded with friendship, jealousy, revenge, and redemption, as well as divine interventions, shape-shifting, and magic. She Writes Press, 2023. 192 pages.

  • Building Representative Community Archives: Inclusive Strategies in Practice

    Hannah Crummé, head of special collections and college archives, edits a book that examines continuing efforts in archives across the U.S. to build inclusive records that better represent the disparate histories of this country. The book outlines a way forward that will help special collections librarians as they design projects in the future. ALA Editions, 2024. 288 pages.

  • The Formations: A Natural Mystery 

    Kate Baldwin BA ’05 writes and illustrates a murder mystery with a biological puzzle. The novella is illustrated with news posts and natural history clues for the reader to unravel. Streamwood Press, 2023. 225 pages.

  • Everything Is True, but Not Necessarily Factual

    Welton Rotz BA ’63 pens this collection of stories drawing from his early life on a Kansas wheat farm, his years living in the Philippines, and his studies in theology and psychotherapy. Covering stories that range from deep joy to intense loss, this book takes readers on a unique trip through Rotz’s mind. TC Publishing, 2022. 248 pages.

In Memoriam

In Memoriam, Spring-2024

In Memoriam, Spring 2024

Alumni of Lewis & Clark Remembered

Galleries

   A Home Run for Student-Athletes     Lewis & Clark's softball team has enjoyed an outstanding season, winning the most games i...

A Home Run for Student-Athletes

Lewis & Clark’s softball team has enjoyed an outstanding season, winning the most games in program history (24 and counting). They’ll soon be headed to the Northwest Conference Tournament for only the second time on record.

On April 20, Lewis & Clark celebrated the reopening of Huston Sports Complex and the dedication of Jerry Gatto Field. The softball team—alongside the baseball team—inaugurated the new space with a doubleheader in front of cheering fans.

Jerry Gatto was the most successful baseball coach in L&C history, winning three Northwest Conference championships in the 1980s. Members of the Gatto family were on hand for the ceremony.

Nina Johnson