BEGIN:VCALENDAR VERSION:2.0 PRODID:-//Lewis & Clark//NONSGML v1.0//EN X-WR-CALNAME:Lewis & Clark Events BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20090308T100000 RDATE:20090308T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20091101T090000 RDATE:20091101T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20100314T100000 RDATE:20100314T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20101107T090000 RDATE:20101107T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20110313T100000 RDATE:20110313T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20111106T090000 RDATE:20111106T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20120311T100000 RDATE:20120311T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20121104T090000 RDATE:20121104T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20130310T100000 RDATE:20130310T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20131103T090000 RDATE:20131103T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20140309T100000 RDATE:20140309T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20141102T090000 RDATE:20141102T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20150308T100000 RDATE:20150308T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20151101T090000 RDATE:20151101T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20160313T100000 RDATE:20160313T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20161106T090000 RDATE:20161106T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:DAYLIGHT TZNAME:PDT DTSTART:20170312T100000 RDATE:20170312T100000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0800 TZOFFSETTO:-0700 END:DAYLIGHT END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VTIMEZONE TZID:America/Los_Angeles BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:PST DTSTART:20171105T090000 RDATE:20171105T090000 TZOFFSETFROM:-0700 TZOFFSETTO:-0800 END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091013T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20091013T180000 LOCATION:Smith Hall - Albany Quadrangle SUMMARY:History Department Fall Gathering DESCRIPTION:Come join the History Department in celebrating a new year! A ll majors\, minors and friends of the department are invited to this annu al event. Food will be served X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
Dr. Eire is Professor of History and Re ligious Studies at Yale University\, where he has held the T. Lawrason Ri ggs Professorship since 2000. \; He specializes in the social\, intel lectual\, religious and cultural history of late medieval and early moder n Europe\, with a particular emphasis on the Protestant and Catholic Refo rmations\, the history of popular piety and the history of death. \; Dr. Eire earned his bachelor's degree from Loyola University in Chicago\, and two masters degrees and his doctorate from Yale University. \; P rior to returning to Yale in 1996\, Dr. Eire taught at St. John's Univers ity in Collegeville\, Minnesota and the University of Virginia. \; Du ring his distinguished career he has received fellowships from the Newber ry Library in Chicago\, the Whitney Humanities Center at Yale\, the Fulbr ight Foundation\, the Lilly Foundation and the National Endowment for the Humanities. \; He has been a member of the School of Historical Stud ies at Princeton's Center for Advanced Studies and he was recipient of th e National Book Award for non-fiction in 2003.
He has written sev eral books\, including\, War Against the Idols: The Reformation of Wo rship From Erasmus to Calvin (1986)\, From Madrid to Purgatory: The Art and Craft of Dying in Sixteenth Century Spain (1995)\, J ews\, Christians\, Muslims: A Comparative Introduction to Monotheistic Re ligions (1997)\, which he co-authored\, Waiting for Snow in Hava na: Confessions of a Cuban Boy (2003) and A Brief History of Ete rnity (2010). \; He has also written a score of articles in scho larly journals and many encyclopedia articles and book reviews.
T he Throckmorton lecture was established in 1963 to commemorate the life a nd work of Arthur L. Throckmorton\, a professor of history at Lewis &\ ; Clark College who died unexpectedly in 1962. \; Each year the serie s brings a distinguished historian to campus to lecture and to meet with faculty and students.
UID:20100222T233000Z-1176@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20100205T133041Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1176-47th-annual-throckmorton- lecture-dr-carlos-mn LAST-MODIFIED:20100205T213453Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/9387_carlos_eire.rev.1373936850.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1176 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/9387_carlos_eire.rev.1373936850.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Dr. Carlos M.N. Eire X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Dr. Carlos M. N. Eire will give a lecture titl ed "Flying Friars\, Hovering Witches: On the History of the Impossible in Early Modern Europe" for Lewis &\; Clark College's annual Throckmorto n lecture in history. \; This event\, which is free and open to the p ublic\, is scheduled for Monday\, February 22\, at 3:30 PM in the Council Chamber of Templeton Student Center.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:award|lecture END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100508T120000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20100508T140000 LOCATION:Miller 4th floor lobby SUMMARY:History Department Senior Reception DESCRIPTION:The History Department invites graduating seniors\, their fam ily and friends to a reception celebrating graduation. Light appetizers w ill be served. Please register if you plan to attend. We look forward to seeing you there. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The History Department invites graduati ng seniors\, their family and friends to a reception celebrating graduati on. Light appetizers will be served. Please register if you plan to atten d. We look forward to seeing you there.
UID:20100508T190000Z-1601@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20100427T105948Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/1601-history-department-senior -reception LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:1601 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Senior reception for History majors\, family and frie nds X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:commencement END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101002T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20101002T163000 LOCATION:Council Chamber of Templeton Student Center SUMMARY:48th Annual Thorckmorton Lecture DESCRIPTION:This year's 48th annual Arthur L. Throckmorton lecture will b e given by Dr. Robert Pamplin Jr. Professor of History Stephen Beckham.&# 160\; Educated at UCLA\, Professor Beckham is in his 42nd year of college teaching. \; He has taught at Lewis &\; Clark College since 1977. \;He has done pioneering research\, writing and teaching on the his tory of Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest\, the American West\, a nd the environment. Professor Beckham is a former "Oregon Professor of th e Year" and a recipient of the American Historical Association's Asher Di stinguished Teaching Award. \; Professor Beckham's talk "Adam Clar k Vroman\, 1856-1916" will address the challenges of historical research using photographic sources. His work on Vroman commenced forty years ago with 197 lantern slides and boxes of glass plate negatives. He has subseq uently found Vroman's travel diaries\, 1882\, 1894-1903\, hundreds of his letters that link him with a late nineteenth-century intellectual elite\ , and details about this photographer's life and labors. Vroman participa ted in Smithsonian expeditions to the Rio Grande pueblos and photographed Yosemite Valley and all the missions in California. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:This year's 48th annual Arth ur L. Throckmorton lecture will be given by Dr. Robert Pamplin Jr. Profes sor of History Stephen Beckham. \; Educated at UCLA\, Professor Beckh am is in his 42nd year of college teaching. \; He has taught at Lewis &\; Clark College since 1977. \;He has done pioneering research\ , writing and teaching on the history of Native Americans in the Pacific Northwest\, the American West\, and the environment. Professor Beckham is a former "Oregon Professor of the Year" and a recipient of the American Historical Association's Asher Distinguished Teaching Award.
 0\;
Professor Beckham's talk "Adam Clark Vroman\, 1856-1916" will
address the challenges of historical research using photographic sources
. His work on Vroman commenced forty years ago with 197 lantern slides an
d boxes of glass plate negatives. He has subsequently found Vroman's trav
el diaries\, 1882\, 1894-1903\, hundreds of his letters that link him wit
h a late nineteenth-century intellectual elite\, and details about this p
hotographer's life and labors. Vroman participated in Smithsonian expedit
ions to the Rio Grande pueblos and photographed Yosemite Valley and all t
he missions in California.
The Department of History invites you t o attend the presentations by students enrolled in the HIST 450 Seminar. Students have created posters that highlight their seminar topic and will be sharing their research with attendees.
Titles of Senior Thesi s Projects
Molly Donahue- "To the Sound of Trumpet s": The Evolution of Knights and the Medieval Crusading Ideal"
Paige McFeeley- "Leveling the Playing Field: The Introduction of Satch el Paige into the Major League Baseball Hall of Fame"
Linds ey Antos- "Serene Amid Alarms: Abraham Lincoln in Portland\, Ore gon's Memory\, 1866-1928
Jenny Schell- " Patriots and La Patria: Jose Marti and the Creation of Post-Revolutionary Cubania"
Allison Weith- "Possums\, Police\, and Politics: Racism and Law Enforcement in Portland\, Oregon 1981-1982"
Magda Rucinski- "Regional Food Fight: The Thanksgiving Holiday a nd Consuming Identity in Civil War America"
Sarah Burkhardt -Beckley- "'The Mysterious Death of Margaret Campbell': Nineteen th-Century Medicine and the Rhetorical Art of Redefining Abortion in Amer ica"
Owen Wuerker- "'My God\, What Have We Done?'" American Identity Crises in the Atomic Age
Susie Trexler- ""The Disappearance of the Front Porch from American Architectur e."
UID:20101208T230000Z-3767@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20101206T140727Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3767-history-seminar-poster-se ssion LAST-MODIFIED:20101208T175419Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:3767 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of History invites you to attend the p resentations by students enrolled in the HIST 450 Seminar. Students have created posters that highlight their seminar topic and will be sharing th eir research with attendees. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20110117 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20110118 LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center (various locations) SUMMARY:Going to the Mountaintop: King & the Civil Rights Movement UID:20110117T180000Z-5427@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110315T084818Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4098-going-to-the-mountaintop- king-the-civil-rights LAST-MODIFIED:20110315T154818Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/16096_martin-luther-king-jr-1965-selma-montgomery-march.rev.1373935 621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5427 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/16096_martin-luther-king-jr-1965-selma-montgomery-march. rev.1373935621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Dr. Martin Luther King\, Jr. \nMarch from Selm a to Montgomery. X-LIVEWHALE-ALL-DAY:1 X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Interactive\, multi-media\, and self-guided \;Walking Exhibit \;in Templeton Campus Center. \;Part of 0\;our annual observance and celebration of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr . holiday. \; END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110118T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110118T160000 LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center (various locations) SUMMARY:Going to the Mountaintop: King & the Civil Rights Movement UID:20110118T080000Z-5427@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110315T084818Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4098-going-to-the-mountaintop- king-the-civil-rights LAST-MODIFIED:20110315T154818Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/16096_martin-luther-king-jr-1965-selma-montgomery-march.rev.1373935 621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5427 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/16096_martin-luther-king-jr-1965-selma-montgomery-march. rev.1373935621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Dr. Martin Luther King\, Jr. \nMarch from Selm a to Montgomery. X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Interactive\, multi-media\, and self-guided \;Walking Exhibit \;in Templeton Campus Center. \;Part of 0\;our annual observance and celebration of the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr . holiday. \; END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110121T160000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110121T170000 LOCATION:Council Chamber (Templeton Campus Center) SUMMARY:Michele Norris: The Grace of Silence UID:20110122T000000Z-5435@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110315T084901Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/3825-michele-norris-the-grace- of-silence LAST-MODIFIED:20110315T154901Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/15845_norris_m-photo_high_res_headshot.jpeg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5435 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/15845_norris_m-photo_high_res_headshot.jpeg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Michele Norris\, Host of NPR's "All Things Cons idered" X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:As part the week's observance of the Dr. Martin Luthe r King Jr. holiday and the commencement of our Black History Month celebr ation\, the \;Office of Multicultural Affairs& #160\;invites you to hear Michele Norris\, Host of NPR's "All Things Cons idered" and author of the new memoir \;The Grace of Silence \ ;on January 21 at 4 p.m. in Council Chamber. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110222T160000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110222T170000 LOCATION:Council Chamber SUMMARY:Community Panel: Black Identity in a "Colorblind" Society DESCRIPTION:Students\, faculty and community panelists discuss the politi cs and social effects of racial identity\, and what challenges and opport unities exist with being "Black" in today's climate of race neutrality.&# 160\; Join us for the conversation! Refreshments will be served.  \ ; Our panelists include: \; Kim Cameron-Dominguez \; (LC Adju nct Faculty of CORE) Isaac Dixon \; (LC Associate Vice President &a mp\; Director of Human Resources) Mark Lewis \; (Office of Multnomah County\, The Bridge Builders) Naiomi Cameron \; \; (LC Assistan t Professor of Mathematics) Temesghen Habte \; (LC Student\, Philoso phy Major) Grace Uwagbae \; \; (LC Alumnus\, Public Advocate for Office of Mayor Sam Adams) \; \; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Students\, faculty and community paneli sts discuss the politics and social effects of racial identity\, and what challenges and opportunities exist with being "Black" in today's climate of race neutrality. \; Join us for the conversation!
Refresh ments will be served.
\;
Our panelists include:
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UID:20110223T000000Z-5434@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110315T084900Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4994-community-panel-black-ide ntity-in-a-colorblind LAST-MODIFIED:20240206T190706Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/17197_bhm_2011_image.rev.1373935621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5434 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/17197_bhm_2011_image.rev.1373935621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Student\, faculty and community panel discussion. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110223T160000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110223T170000 LOCATION:Watzek Library\, Room 245 SUMMARY:Rudolph P. Byrd\, PhD (LC '75): The Death of the Essential Blac k Subject: Marlon Riggs' "Black Is\, Black Ain't" DESCRIPTION:Rudolph P. Byrd\, PhD is an African American Studies schola r\, alumnus of Lewis &\; Clark\, and founding director of the James We ldon Johnson Institute for Advanced Interdisciplinary Studies (http://www .jamesweldonjohnson.emory.edu/) at Emory University. \; Dr. Byrd will explore the complexities of defining "blackness" in America through a sc holarly discussion of the groundbreaking Marlon Riggs film Black Is…Bla ck Aint. Join the community for a special closing reception\, immediatel y following Dr. Byrd's talk in the Frank Manor House.Rudolph P. Byrd In t he NewsChronicle of Higher Education | Feb. 6\, 2011Jean Toomer's Conflic ted Racial Identity (http://chronicle.com/article/Jean-Toomers-Conflicted /126184/?sid=at&\;utm_source=at&\;utm_medium=en)The New York Times | Dec. 26\, 2010Scholars Say Chronicler of Black Life Passed for White (h ttp://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/27/books/27cane.html)CNN | Nov. 9\, 2010Aut hor Ernest Gaines Comes Home to Where His Ancestors Were Enslaved (http:/ /edition.cnn.com/2010/US/11/09/ernest.gaines.cemetery/)The New York Times | Oct. 20\, 2010Writer Tends Land Where Ancestors Were Slaves (http://ww w.nytimes.com/2010/10/21/us/21gaines.html)CNN | July 30\, 2010 Song Re flects Racial Pride\, Never Intended as AnthemAtlanta Journal-Constitutio n | May 10\, 2010 Alice Walker's Changing World X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Rudolph P. Byrd\, PhD. is an African American Studies scholar\, alumnus of Lewis &\; Clark\, and founding director of the James Weldon Johnson Institute for Advanced Interdisc iplinary Studies at Emory University. \; Dr. Byrd will explore th e complexities of defining "blackness" in America through a scholarly dis cussion of the groundbreaking Marlon Riggs film Black Is…Black Aint .
Join the community for a special closing reception\, immed iately following Dr. Byrd's talk in the Frank Manor House.
Rudolph P. Byrd In the News
Immediately following Dr. Byrd's lec ture\, join the entire LC community to commemorate Black History Month\, and connect with friends\, new and well-established. Enjoy music and grea t food. \; Students\, faculty\, staff and alumni are encouraged to at tend.
UID:20110224T013000Z-5433@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110315T084900Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4996-black-history-month-closi ng-reception LAST-MODIFIED:20240206T190706Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/17197_bhm_2011_image.rev.1373935621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5433 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/17197_bhm_2011_image.rev.1373935621.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:African American Studies Expert from Emory University \, Rudolph P. Byrd (LC '75) as Special Guest. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110309T180000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110309T190000 LOCATION:Miller 105 SUMMARY:Heidi Durrow Reading: "The Girl Who Fell From The Sky" UID:20110310T020000Z-5428@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110315T084823Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/4998-heidi-durrow-reading-the- girl-who-fell-from-the LAST-MODIFIED:20110315T154823Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/17941_885326485_heididurrowcloseup2.rev.1373935624.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5428 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/17941_885326485_heididurrowcloseup2.rev.1373935624.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Novelist\, Heidi W. Durrow X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Author of "The Girl Who Fell From the Sky" comes to L ewis &\; Clark END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110407T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110407T170000 LOCATION:Miller 105 SUMMARY:Mexico's Revolution Then and Now DESCRIPTION:Talk by Mexican historian J. CockroftUS-Mexico Relations: Fai led States\, New Wars\, Resistance Sponsored by Latin American Studies\, Hispanic Studies\, History\, Political Science/ Economics. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Sponsored by Latin American Studies\, His panic Studies\, History\, Political Science/ Economics.
UID:20110407T223000Z-5716@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110331T114307Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5716-mexicos-revolution-then-a nd-now LAST-MODIFIED:20110331T184504Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/18549_cockroftonline.rev.1373936847.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5716 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/18549_cockroftonline.rev.1373936847.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Cockroftonline X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Talk by Mexican historian J. CockroftOn February 12\, 1942\, President Frank lin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 giving the War Relocation Au thority permission to intern over 100\,000 Issei and Nisei living on the Pacific Coast of the United States in concentration camps. \; Justifi ed on the grounds of shoring up national security after the bombing of Pe arl Harbor\, Executive Order 9066 was actually based on more than four de cades of anti-Japanese racial discrimination in the United States. \; In her lecture\, Professor Sarah Griffith will examine liberal Protestan t efforts to advocate racial equality and US-Japan relations beginning in the 1890s and continuing through World War II. \; Drawing on numerou s archives and from sources written by liberal Protestants and others\, P rofessor Griffith will consider the incentives behind liberal Protestant activism\, the means by which such activism was carried out\, and the con tradictions embedded within this movement.
\;
UID:20110411T223000Z-5722@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110331T152458Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5722-creating-the-kingdom-of-g od-in-the-pacific-liberal LAST-MODIFIED:20110406T184124Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/18557__japs_keep_moving_.rev.1373936847.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5722 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/18557__japs_keep_moving_.rev.1373936847.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Lecture by LC History Alum- Sarah Griffith. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:alumni|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110413T190000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110413T200000 LOCATION:Miller 104 SUMMARY:COINTELPRO 101- Documentary showing DESCRIPTION:COINTELPRO \;101 is a documentary that explores the secre t government assault on the liberation movements of the 60s and 70s. The FBI's counterintelligence program\, COINTELPRO\, \;used illegal surve lliance\, false imprisonment and even assassination to disrupt and destro y the Left. \;Claude Marks\, the director and former political prison er\, will be present to talk about his experience. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:COINTELPRO \;101 is a documentary t hat explores the secret government assault on the liberation movements of the 60s and 70s. The FBI's counterintelligence program\, COINTELPRO\, 60\;used illegal survelliance\, false imprisonment and even assassination to disrupt and destroy the Left. \;Claude Marks\, the director and f ormer political prisoner\, will be present to talk about his experience.< iframe src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/hRBm5eiBQIs" allowfullscreen="" width="420" frameborder="0" height="237">
UID:20110414T020000Z-5701@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20110330T094923Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/5701-cointelpro-101-documentar y-showing LAST-MODIFIED:20110330T170446Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/18497_cointelpro_card_hi_rez_cmyk.rev.1373936847.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:5701 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/18497_cointelpro_card_hi_rez_cmyk.rev.1373936847.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:COINTELPRO_card_hi_rez_cmyk X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:human rights|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110420T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20110420T163000 LOCATION:Watzek Foyer SUMMARY:History Seminar poster session DESCRIPTION:Students in HIST 450 with Professor Susan Glosser will be pre senting their research. Come by and talk with the students and have have some refreshments.Antonija Krizanac - Commerce of Light: The Transformati on of Academic and Cultural Exchange Between China and Europe\, 1500-1800 Mariah Shields - White Racism: A History of Minority ContainmentGeorge Al len- Suicide as resistance: Chinese "coolies" resistance in Cuba \;Ns ayi Matingou - "The Decay of the Nation": African Americans\, Chinese Imm igrants\, and American Anti-Miscegenation Rhetoric\, 1860-1905 \;Sara h Beck- Heroic China: Fresh American Perspectives through Soong Meiling&# 160\;and Henry Luce X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Students in HIST 450 with Professor Sus
an Glosser will be presenting their research. Come by and talk with the s
tudents and have have some refreshments.
Antonija Kriz
anac - Commerce of Light: The Transformation of Academic and
Cultural Exchange Between China and Europe\, 1500-1800
Mariah Shields - White Racism: A History of Minority Contai
nment
George Allen- Suicide as resistance:
Chinese "coolies" resistance in Cuba \;
Nsayi Mati
ngou - "The Decay of the Nation": African Americans\, Chines
e Immigrants\, and American Anti-Miscegenation Rhetoric\, 1860-1905&
#160\;
Sarah Beck- Heroic China: Fresh American
Perspectives through Soong Meiling \;and Henry Luce
For the 49th Annual Arthur L. Throckmor ton Memorial Lecture in History\, Mary Elizabeth Berry\, chair of the Dep artment of History and a Dean's Professor of East Asian History at the Un iversity of California\, Berkeley will give a talk entitled\, "Catechisms of Consumption for the Material Girl in Early Modern Japan." \; Japa n achieved a largely successful and deeply surprising conversion to a mar ket economy in the seventeenth century. \;Crucial to the change was the religion of profit\, which exhorted hard work\, smart work\, and ruth less frugality. This talk explores the "problem" of consumption (was it l egitimate? in what forms?) through the abundant advice manuals aimed at y oung women.
The Throckmorton lecture was established in 1963 to c ommemorate the life and work of Arthur L. Throckmorton\, a professor of h istory at Lewis &\; Clark who died unexpectedly in 1962. Each year the series brings a distinguished historian to campus to lecture and to meet with faculty and students.
\;
UID:20120227T233000Z-9186@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20120110T115318Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/9186-the-49th-annual-arthur-l- throckmorton-memorial LAST-MODIFIED:20120207T215432Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/27200_berry.rev.1373936848.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:9186 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/27200_berry.rev.1373936848.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Dr. Mary Elizabeth Berry X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of History is pleased to welcome Mary Elizabeth Berry\, chair of the Department of History and a Dean's Profess or of East Asian History at the University of California\, Berkeley as th e 2012 Arthur L. Throckmorton Memorial guest lecturer. \; The title o f Dr. Berry's talk is "Catechisms of Consumption for the Material Girl in Early Modern Japan." X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:lecture|open to the public|Portland END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120425T163000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20120425T173000 LOCATION:Watzek Library atrium GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:Spring 2012 History Poster Session DESCRIPTION:Wednesday\, April 25 4:30 pm\, Watzek Library atrium Join s tudents and faculty at the History Department poster session on Wednesday \, April 25 at 4:30 pm in the Watzek Library atrium. History majors curre ntly enrolled in Professor David Campion's seminar course\, History 450: The Victorians\, will be displaying their thesis posters. HIST 450: Semi nar: The Victorians This seminar focuses on the transformation of Britai n and its empire from the coronation of Queen Victoria in 1837 to her dea th in 1901. Readings and discussions will provide thematic emphasis on th e development of class society\, urbanization\, science and technology\, religious and intellectual history\, imperial expansion\, and biographica l study of key figures. The aim of the course is the completion of a majo r research paper. Learn more about the course here (http://www.lclark.ed u/%7Ecampion/hist450a/). X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Wednesday\, April 25
4:30 pm\, Watzek Library atrium
The students in Reiko Hillyer's senior seminar are presenting their final thesis projects in Watzek Library atri um. Come learn about what our seniors have been researching for the past semester. \; \;
Examples of thesis titles include: \; \;
"Repeating the Mistakes of History: How Urban Combat in H ue and Fallujah Differed From the way American Soldiers Fought in Vietnam and Iraq"
"Extracting Ethics from History: The Holocaust as Mora l Paradigm in United States Secondary Education"
"'No More of tha t Dignity Stuff:' The Zulu Mardi Gras Parade and the Civil Rights Movemen t\, 1960-1969"
"The Eviction of Bonus Expeditionary Force: Media Coverage and Fears of Communism in the Great Depression"
"'Where the men are men\, and the women are too': Gender Norms for Women in the K londike Gold Rush."
"The Tarnished Rose: Moral Panic and Sexualit y in Cold War Portland"
"The Portland Hotel: Murder\, Diamond The ft\, and Other Anxieties about Urban Living at the Turn of the Century."< /p>
\;
UID:20121212T233000Z-15090@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20121204T134333Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/15090-senior-thesis-poster-ses sion LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:15090 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come see the work of senior history majors as they pr esent their final thesis projects. Learn about topics ranging from Appala chian folk music to sex panics in Portland. Snacks will be provided.Join the History Department for its fir st ever Office Crawl! \; \;
After the Senior Thesis Poste r Session come meet professors and check out their offices while mingling and eating tasty field-themed snacks. \;Professors will be in costum e and you'll have the opportunity to get to know them and other majors or potential majors. \;
Think pub crawl but better!
UID:20121213T010000Z-15156@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20121212T111451Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/15156-history-office-crawl LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:15156 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Ever wanted to meet a History prof or see his /her office but haven't had the opportunity? Here's your chance! From 5:0 0-7:00pm \;join the History Department for its inaugural holiday offi ce crawl! END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130225T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130225T163000 LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center GEO:45.44918;-122.670969 SUMMARY:The 50th Annual Arthur L. Throckmorton Memorial Lecture DESCRIPTION:Improving the Human Race One Gene at a Time: The Curious Hist ory of Eugenics in the Twentieth Century \; The early twentieth ce ntury science of eugenics was a remarkable transnational phenomenon that influenced social and scientific policy across the political spectrum and in a bewildering variety of locations around the globe. \; The prosp ect of connecting biology and social policy proved seductive in many poli tical arenas\, and Dr. Levine's talk will offer a glimpse of some of thos e many settings. Eugenics speaks to questions of race\, class\, gender a nd sex\, evolution\, governance\, nationalism\, disability\, and the soci al implications of science. In the age of the human genome project\, stem cell research and new reproductive technologies\, the history of eugenic s has much to teach us about the relationship between scientific research \, technology\, and human ethical decision-making. Philippa Levine is th e Mary Helen Thompson Centennial Professor in the Humanities at the Unive rsity of Texas at Austin where she is also co-director of the university' s British Studies Program. \; Before coming to Texas in 2010 she was a member of the history faculty at the University of Southern California and the Florida State University and has also taught in her native Britai n and in Australia. Dr. Levine received her bachelor's and master's degr ee from King's College\, Cambridge\, and her doctorate from Oxford Univer sity. \; She specializes in the history of Modern Britain and the Bri tish Empire with a particular interest in science\, medicine and society and the intersections of race and gender. \; Among her many awards an d honors are a Guggenheim Fellowship (2007-8)\, a Resident Fellowship at the Bellagio Center\, Rockefeller Foundation (2002)\, and research grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Institut es of Health. \; She has also held various visiting fellowships in Au stralia\, Britain\, Ireland\, and Canada and is the immediate past presid ent of the North American Conference on British Studies. Dr. Levine has authored or edited the following books: The Ashgate Companion to Modern I mperial Histories (2012)\, The Oxford Handbook of the History of Eugenics (2010)\, Gender\, Labour\, War and Empire in Modern Britain. Essays on M odern Britain (2009)\, The British Empire\, Sunrise to Sunset\, (2007)\, Beyond Sovereignty: Britain\, Empire and Transnationalism\, 1860-1950 (20 07)\, Gender and Empire: Oxford History of the British Empire Companion S eries (2004)\, Prostitution\, Race and Politics: Policing Venereal Diseas e in the British Empire (2003)\, Women's Suffrage in the British Empire: Citizenship\, Nation and Race (2000)\, Feminist Lives in Victorian Englan d Private Roles and Public Commitment (1990)\, Victorian Feminism 1850-19 00\, (1987)\, The Amateur and the Professional: Historians\, Antiquarians and Archaeologists in Victorian England\, 1838-1886 (1986). The Throckm orton lecture was established in 1963 to commemorate the life and work of Arthur L. Throckmorton\, a professor of history at Lewis &\; Clark wh o died unexpectedly in 1962. Each year the series brings a distinguished historian to campus to lecture and to meet with faculty and students. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\;
The early twentieth century science of eugenics was a rem arkable transnational phenomenon that influenced social and scientific po licy across the political spectrum and in a bewildering variety of locati ons around the globe. \; The prospect of connecting biology and socia l policy proved seductive in many political arenas\, and Dr. Levine's tal k will offer a glimpse of some of those many settings.
Eugenics s
peaks to questions of race\, class\, gender and sex\, evolution\, governa
nce\, nationalism\, disability\, and the social implications of science.
In the age of the human genome project\, stem cell research and new repro
ductive technologies\, the history of eugenics has much to teach us about
the relationship between scientific research\, technology\, and human et
hical decision-making.
Philippa Levine is the Mary Helen Tho
mpson Centennial Professor in the Humanities at the University of Texas a
t Austin where she is also co-director of the university's British Studie
s Program. \; Before coming to Texas in 2010 she was a member of the
history faculty at the University of Southern California and the Florida
State University and has also taught in her native Britain and in Austral
ia.
Dr. Levine received her bachelor's and master's degree f
rom King's College\, Cambridge\, and her doctorate from Oxford University
. \; She specializes in the history of Modern Britain and the British
Empire with a particular interest in science\, medicine and society and
the intersections of race and gender. \; Among her many awards and ho
nors are a Guggenheim Fellowship (2007-8)\, a Resident Fellowship at the
Bellagio Center\, Rockefeller Foundation (2002)\, and research grants fro
m the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Institutes o
f Health. \; She has also held various visiting fellowships in Austra
lia\, Britain\, Ireland\, and Canada and is the immediate past president
of the North American Conference on British Studies.
Dr. Lev
ine has authored or edited the following books: The Ashgate Companion to
Modern Imperial Histories (2012)\, The Oxford Handbook of the History of
Eugenics (2010)\, Gender\, Labour\, War and Empire in Modern Britain. Ess
ays on Modern Britain (2009)\, The British Empire\, Sunrise to Sunset\, (
2007)\, Beyond Sovereignty: Britain\, Empire and Transnationalism\, 1860-
1950 (2007)\, Gender and Empire: Oxford History of the British Empire Com
panion Series (2004)\, Prostitution\, Race and Politics: Policing Venerea
l Disease in the British Empire (2003)\, Women's Suffrage in the British
Empire: Citizenship\, Nation and Race (2000)\, Feminist Lives in Victoria
n England Private Roles and Public Commitment (1990)\, Victorian Feminism
1850-1900\, (1987)\, The Amateur and the Professional: Historians\, Anti
quarians and Archaeologists in Victorian England\, 1838-1886 (1986).
The Throckmorton lecture was established in 1963 to commemorate
the life and work of Arthur L. Throckmorton\, a professor of history at L
ewis &\; Clark who died unexpectedly in 1962. Each year the series bri
ngs a distinguished historian to campus to lecture and to meet with facul
ty and students.
Please join the History department for a talk by Lewis &\; Clark Alum Craig Colbeck who will speak on the his tory of karate. \; Free and open to the public.
\;
Dr. Craig Colbeck
"Emptyin g the Tang Hand: Okinawan Identity in the Japanization of Karate"
\;
In the 1920s\, a foreign martial art arrived in Tokyo—karate. Only decades later it would be called definitively Japan ese around the world. The process by which karate became a "Japanese" mar tial art involved literally rewriting Okinawan history and even the very name "karate." The process also included the creation of new martial-arts practices and the incorporation of Zen philosophy into karate rhetoric. This presentation will describe how\, in their campaign to see karate est ablished in mainland Japan\, Okinawan practitioners made positive use of their islands' status as the purported ancestral homeland of Japanese cul ture even as they adapted to the modern standards of martial arts\, all t o combat prevailing stereotypes of Okinawan men as unmanly and uncultured .
UID:20130320T000000Z-15571@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20130130T092856Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/15571-emptying-the-tang-hand-o kinawan-identity-in-the CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20130318T214345Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:15571 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the History department for a talk by Lewi s &\; Clark Alum Craig Colbeck who will speak on the history of karate . \; Free and open to the public. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:alumni|humanities|lecture|multicultural|open to the publ ic|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130416T183000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20130416T210000 LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575 SUMMARY:Historical Project Runway DESCRIPTION:This is your chance to "Make it Work!" \; \; Teams will compete to create fashions inspired by historical time periods. Eac h team will have 5 minutes to shop and 45 minutes to complete their outfi t. Afterwards\, they will meet the judges and show their pieces. The winn ing team will receive a spread in Footnotes\, the annual history newslett er\, and a gift certificate for vintage shopping in Portland. \; T his is a fun event for anyone who loves Project Runway\, or enjoys creati ng clothes. We will have 6 teams of 3 competing. Please register your tea m by emailing fmurray@lclark.edu by April 14th. Spots will fill on a firs t come first serve basis and will be posted online. You DO NOT have to be a history major to participate. \; \; Good luck! And we will see you on the Runway. \; \; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:This is your chance to "Make it Work!"& #160\;
\;
Teams will compete to create fashions insp ired by historical time periods. Each team will have 5 minutes to shop an d 45 minutes to complete their outfit. Afterwards\, they will meet the ju dges and show their pieces. The winning team will receive a spread in Foo tnotes\, the annual history newsletter\, and a gift certificate for vinta ge shopping in Portland.
\;
This is a fun event for anyone who loves Project Runway\, or enjoys creating clothes. We will hav e 6 teams of 3 competing. Please register your team by emailing fmurray@l clark.edu by April 14th. Spots will fill on a first come first serve basi s and will be posted online. You DO NOT have to be a history major to par ticipate. \;
\;
Good luck! And we will see you o n the Runway. \;
\;
UID:20130417T013000Z-17372@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20130403T092555Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/17372-historical-project-runway LAST-MODIFIED:20130410T165941Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/34,0,335,301/35978_project-runway-tim-gunn-finds-superwom an.rev.1373936849.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:17372 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/34\,0\,335\,301/35978_project-runway-tim-gunn- finds-superwoman.rev.1373936849.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Do you have what it takes to make it in the fashion w orld? Are you historically inspired? Come strut your stuff and impress th e judges at the first ever Historical Project Runway! X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:arts|History|interdisciplinary|performance|student events END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131017T183000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131017T210000 LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575 SUMMARY:2nd Annual Historical Project Runway DESCRIPTION:Do you have what it takes to make it in the fashion world? Ar e you historically inspired? \; The History department is hosting the 2nd Annual Historical Project Runway\, Thursday\, October 17. Teams wil l compete to create fashions inspired by historical time periods. Each te am will have 5 minutes to shop and 45 minutes to complete their outfit. A fterwards\, they will meet the judges and show their pieces. \; This is a fun event for anyone who loves history\, Project Runway\, or enjoys creating clothes. Shopping and designing begins at 6:30pm. \; The act ual runway show itself begins at 8:00pm. To compete\, please email djime nez@lclark.edu. \; Teams consist of three members. \; Please incl ude a team name in your email! Good luck and we will see you on the Runw ay! \; Watch last year's event in the video below or click this li nk to watch it on YouTube: http://youtu.be/EdXCkZ8t8XU (http://youtu.be/E dXCkZ8t8XU) X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Do you have what it takes to make it in the fashion world? Are you historically inspired? \; The History dep artment is hosting the 2nd Annual Historical Project Runway\, Thursday\, October 17.
Teams will compete to create fashions inspired by his torical time periods. Each team will have 5 minutes to shop and 45 minute s to complete their outfit. Afterwards\, they will meet the judges and sh ow their pieces. \; This is a fun event for anyone who loves history\ , Project Runway\, or enjoys creating clothes. Shopping and designing beg ins at 6:30pm. \; The actual runway show itself begi ns at 8:00pm.
To compete\, please email djimenez@lclark.edu. \; Teams consist of three members. \; Please include a team name in your e mail!
Good luck and we will see you on the Runway!
 \ ;
Watch last year's event in the video below or click this link to watch it on YouTube: http://youtu.be/EdXCkZ8t8XU
UID:20131018T013000Z-20457@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20130918T110458Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/20457-2nd-annual-historical-pr oject-runway CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20131009T200953Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/24,0,168,144/41007_35978_project-runway-tim-gunn-finds-su perwoman_20a42fa370ebf178b092ca8c41dadaf5.rev.1379529504.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:20457 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/24\,0\,168\,144/41007_35978_project-runway-tim -gunn-finds-superwoman_20a42fa370ebf178b092ca8c41dadaf5.rev.1379529504.jp g X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Do you have what it takes to make it in the fashion w orld? Are you historically inspired? \; The History department is hos ting the 2nd Annual Historical Project Runway. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:humanities|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131023T184500 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131023T194500 LOCATION:Miller Hall GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Meet Your Major DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department on the fourth floor of Miller on October 23 at 6:45pm for Meet Your Major! \; Hear from faculty member s and current majors about what it means to study history at Lewis &\; Clark. \; Pizza will be provided\, so don't be late! \; To RS VP\, fill out the following Google Doc: https://docs.google.com/a/lclark. edu/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGdfWWViOTU5TzkwM05FYXVPZVgtWVE6MQ X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Join the History Department on the four th floor of Miller on October 23 at 6:45pm for Meet Your Major! \; He ar from faculty members and current majors about what it means to study h istory at Lewis &\; Clark. \; Pizza will be provided\, so don't be late!
\;
To RSVP\, fill out the following Google Do c: https://docs.google.com/a/lclark.edu/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dGdf WWViOTU5TzkwM05FYXVPZVgtWVE6MQ
UID:20131024T014500Z-20679@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20131002T110210Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/20679-meet-your-major LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/309,0,1341,1032/41351_the_world_map.rev.1380737162.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:20679 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/309\,0\,1341\,1032/41351_the_world_map.rev.138 0737162.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the History Department on the fourth floor of Mi ller on October 23 for Meet Your Major! \; Pizza will be provided. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:humanities|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131025T183000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131025T193000 LOCATION:Portland State University SUMMARY:A Year in Chengdu During China's Transition UID:20131026T013000Z-21263@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20131024T065851Z URL:http://www.pdx.edu/confucius-institute/event/year-chengdu-during-chin as-transition?delta=0 CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20131024T135851Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/36588_jane-hunter.rev.1373936850.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:21263 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/36588_jane-hunter.rev.1373936850.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Professor Jane Hunter X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Historians Jane Hunter and Joel Bernard spent 2012-20 13 living\, teaching and studying at Sichuan University in Chengdu. From their base in the university's Foreign Experts' Building\, they saw a lot of China during a pivotal year of political transition – speaking at t wo Communist Party schools\, observing an anti-Japanese demonstration\, t alking with ordinary Chinese\, and with undergraduates\, graduate student s\, and faculty in a dozen universities. They look forward to sharing the ir reflections – and pictures – of China during the first of Chinese President XI Jinping years. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131104T180000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131104T190000 SUMMARY:Remembering Mulugeta Seraw DESCRIPTION:"Remembering Mulugeta Seraw: Portland's Legacy of Racism and Combatting White Supremacy" \; Join the Oregon Encyclopedia and Or egon Humanities for this free event on Monday\, November 4\, 2013 at McMe namins Mission Theater. \; Doors open at 6pm\, presentation begins at 7pm. \; Minors are welcome only with a parent. \; "November 1 2th will mark the the 25th anniversary of the killing of Ethiopian immigr ant Mulugeta Seraw by white supremacist Kenneth Mieske. \; We'll exma ine racial history in Oregon\, honor Mulugeta and learn about his life\, and discuss how Portland citizens are combatting racial discrimination to day." \; Presentation by:Walidah Imarisha\, educator\, writer\, or ganizer\, and spoken word artist\, Portland State University. Panelist s:Elinor Langer\, journalist and author of A Hundred Little Hitlers: The Death of a Black Man\, The Trial of a White Racist\, and the Rise of the Neo-Nazi Movement in AmericaKelley Weigel\, Executive Director\, Western States Center \; For more information\, visit: http://www.mcmenami ns.com/events/109865-Remembering-Mulugeta-Seraw-Portlands-Legacy-of-Racis m-and-Combating-White-Supremacy X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:"Remembering Mulugeta Seraw: Portland's Legacy of Racism and Combatting White Supremacy"
\;
Join the Oregon Encyclopedia and Oregon Humanities for this free event on Monday\, November 4\, 2013 at McMenamins Mission Theater. \; Doors open at 6pm\, presenta tion begins at 7pm. \; Minors are welcome only with a parent.
\;
"November 12th will mark the the 25th anniversary of the killing of Ethiopian immigrant Mulugeta Seraw by white supremacist Kenne th Mieske. \; We'll exmaine racial history in Oregon\, honor Mulugeta and learn about his life\, and discuss how Portland citizens are combatt ing racial discrimination today."
\;
Presentation by :
Panelists:
\;
For more inf ormation\, visit: http://www.mcmenamins.com/events/109865-Remembering-Mul ugeta-Seraw-Portlands-Legacy-of-Racism-and-Combating-White-Supremacy
UID:20131105T020000Z-21153@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20131016T111642Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/21153-remembering-mulugeta-seraw LAST-MODIFIED:20131016T181642Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/0,26,380,406/41676_9837744-large.rev.1381946956.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:21153 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,26\,380\,406/41676_9837744-large.rev.138194 6956.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:"Portland's Legacy of Racism and Combatting White Sup remacy\," a talk and presentation on the killing of Mulugeta Seraw\, raci al history in Oregon\, and how Portland is combatting racial discriminati on today. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|humanities|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20131108 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20131109 LOCATION:Benson Hotel GEO:45.521847;-122.678414 SUMMARY:NORTH AMERICAN CONFERENCE ON BRITISH STUDIES 2013 ANNUAL MEETING DESCRIPTION:The North American Conference on British Studies meets annual ly\, normally in a joint meeting with one of the regional conferences\, a nd occurs over a weekend\, beginning on a Friday. \; For more informa tion on this event\, please click on the link. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The North American Conference on Britis h Studies meets annually\, normally in a joint meeting with one of the re gional conferences\, and occurs over a weekend\, beginning on a Friday.&# 160\; For more information on this event\, please click on the link.
UID:20131108T080000Z-20335@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20130913T104046Z URL:http://www.nacbs.org/conference LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/90,0,1113,1024/41353_uk-great-britain-flag.rev.1380737322 .jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:20335 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/90\,0\,1113\,1024/41353_uk-great-britain-flag. rev.1380737322.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-ALL-DAY:1 X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The North American Conference on British Studies (NAC BS) is a scholarly society dedicated to all aspects of the study of Briti sh civilization. \; The annual meeting of the NACBS will be held Nove mber 8-10\, 2013 at the Benson Hotel\, 309 SW Broadway\, Portland\, Orego n 97205. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131112T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131112T180000 LOCATION:Miller Center for the Humanities\, Room 414 GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Chinese Coolies\, Human Rights and the Limits of Liberal Freedom in an Age of Empire DESCRIPTION:Come join the History department for the first in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal present ation of the paper. \; The first workshop entitled\, "Chinese Coolie s\, Human Rights and the Limits of Liberal Freedom in an Age of Empire"\, will be presented by Professor Elliott Young. \; This paper explores the relationship between nineteenth century human rights ideas and imper ialism in the context of the debates surrounding the Chinese "coolie" tra de. \; Young argues that British and American liberal notions of free dom and natural rights served as the justification for interventions arou nd the globe. \; The paper focuses on a case of a mutiny in 1871 on a French ship\, the Nouvelle Penelope\, in which the Chinese coolies murde red the captain and crew. \; The British judge in Hong Kong exonerate d the leader of the mutiny arguing that murder was justified in the quest for liberty. \; Young shows how human rights discourse is not just a smokescreen for economic interests but lies at the very foundation of th e liberal imperial project. Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.ed u to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Come join the History department for th e first in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop . \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there wil l be no formal presentation of the paper. \;
The first worksh op entitled\, "Chinese Coolies\, Human Rights and the Limits of Liberal F reedom in an Age of Empire"\, will be presented by Professor Elliott Youn g. \; This paper explores the relationship between nineteenth century human rights ideas and imperialism in the context of the debates surroun ding the Chinese "coolie" trade. \; Young argues that British and Ame rican liberal notions of freedom and natural rights served as the justifi cation for interventions around the globe. \; The paper focuses on a case of a mutiny in 1871 on a French ship\, the Nouvelle Penelope\, in which the Chinese coolies murdered the captain and crew. \; Th e British judge in Hong Kong exonerated the leader of the mutiny arguing that murder was justified in the quest for liberty. \; Young shows ho w human rights discourse is not just a smokescreen for economic interests but lies at the very foundation of the liberal imperial project.
Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the p aper in advance of the workshop.
UID:20131113T010000Z-21965@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20131105T112944Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/21965-chinese-coolies-human-ri ghts-and-the-limits-of LAST-MODIFIED:20131105T195010Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:21965 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the History department for the first in a s eries of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participan ts will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Parti cipants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lcl ark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop.Join the History department in the Watz ek Library atrium at 4:30pm as the senior students from Professor Campion 's 20th Century Britain and Empire seminar present their thesis posters a nd research findings. \; Refreshments will be provided.
UID:20131212T003000Z-20373@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20130916T113939Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/20373-history-senior-seminar-p oster-session CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20131009T201019Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/291,0,1358,1067/41013_piccadilly_circus_london_england_19 00-1920.rev.1379530291.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:20373 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/291\,0\,1358\,1067/41013_piccadilly_circus_lon don_england_1900-1920.rev.1379530291.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the History department in the Watzek Library atr ium at 4:30pm as the senior students from Professor Campion's 20th Centur y Britain and Empire seminar present their thesis posters and research fi ndings. \; Refreshments will be provided. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:humanities|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131211T180000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20131211T190000 LOCATION:Miller Hall GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:2nd Annual History Office Crawl DESCRIPTION:Come see the Senior Thesis Poster session from 4:30-6:00 pm i n Watzek\, and then join the History Department for its second annual off ice crawl. \; Ever wanted to meet a History professor or see his/her office but haven't had the opportunity? Here's your chance! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Come see the Senior Thesis Poster sessi on from 4:30-6:00 pm in Watzek\, and then join the History Department for its second annual office crawl. \; Ever wanted to meet a History pro fessor or see his/her office but haven't had the opportunity? Here's your chance!
UID:20131212T020000Z-22347@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20131118T115116Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/22347-2nd-annual-history-offic e-crawl LAST-MODIFIED:20131118T202052Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:22347 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come see the Senior Thesis Poster session from 4:30-6 :00 pm in Watzek\, and then join the History Department for its second an nual office crawl. \; Ever wanted to meet a History professor or see his/her office but haven't had the opportunity? Here's your chance! END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140120T190000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140120T200000 LOCATION:Agnes Flanagan Chapel GEO:45.450821;-122.671419 SUMMARY:Dr. Martin Luther King\, Jr. Celebration UID:20140121T030000Z-23135@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20140121T094121Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/22990-dr-martin-luther-king-jr -celebration CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20140121T174121Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:23135 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-CONTACT-INFO:jchi@lclark.edu X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:MLK Jr. Week of Service kick-off celebration END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140217T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140217T180000 LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center GEO:45.44918;-122.670969 SUMMARY:51st Annual Arthur L. Throckmorton Memorial Lecture DESCRIPTION:The Lewis & Clark College History Department invites you to attend the 51st Annual Arthur L. Throckmorton Lecture by Greg Grandin"W ho Aint a Slave: \; Slavery in Fact and Melville's Fiction" \; 60\;Monday\, February 17\, 2013 5 p.m.
Council Chamber\, Templeton Cent er Lewis &\; Clark College Greg Grandin will discuss his new book\, The Empire of Necessity\, a true history of the events that inspired Herm an Melville's other masterpiece\, Benito Cereno. Toni Morrison called Gra ndin's new work\, \;The Empire of Necessity\, "compelling\, brilliant and necessary." Released in early 2014\, the book narrates the history o f a slave-ship revolt that inspired Herman Melville's other masterpiece\, Benito Cereno. Philip Gourevitch describes it as a "rare book in which t he drama of the action and the drama of ideas are equally measured\, a wo rk of history and of literary reflection that is as urgent as it is timel y." \; \; A professor of history at NYU and a member of the Am erican Academy of Arts and Sciences\, Grandin writes on US foreign policy \, Latin America\, genocide\, and human rights. \; He has published i n \;The New York Times\, \;Harper's\, \;The London Review of Books\, \;The Nation\, \;The Boston Review\, \;The Los Angele s Times\, \;and \;The American Historical Review. \; He has b een a frequent guest on \;Democracy Now! \;and has appeared on 60\;The Charlie Rose Show. \; Grandin also served as a consultant to the \;United Nations truth commission on Guatemala and has been the r ecipient of a number of prestigious fellowships\, including the John Simo n Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. \; \; \; Greg Grandin is the author of a number of prize-winning books\, including most recently& #160\;Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forgotten Jungle City \;(Metropolitan 2009). \; A finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in H istory\, as well as for the National Book Award and the National Book Cri tics Circle Award\, \;Fordlandia \;was picked by the \;New Yo rk Times\, New Yorker\, Boston Globe\, Chicago Tribune \;and NPR for their "best of" lists\, and Amazon.com named it the best history book of 2009. \; Grandin is also the author of \;Empire's Workshop: La tin America\, the United States\, and the Rise of the New Empire \;(M etropolitan 2005)\, \;The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America Durin g the Cold War \;(University of Chicago Press 2004)\, and \;Blood of Guatemala: A History of Race and Nation(Duke University Press\, 2000) \, \;which won the Latin American Studies Association's Bryce Wood Aw ard for the best book published on Latin America in any discipline. With Gil Joseph\, is edited \;A Century of Revolution\, also published by Duke University Press. \; Read Professor Grandin's recent opinion piece in the New York Times\, "Obama\, Melville and the Tea Party." \ ; http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/19/opinion/sunday/obama-melville-and-th e-tea-party.html \; We look forward to seeing you! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:  \;
Greg Grandin will discuss h is new book\, The Empire of Necessity\, a true history of the ev ents that inspired Herman Melville's other masterpiece\, Benito Cereno. T oni Morrison called Grandin's new work\, \;The Empire of Necessit y\, "compelling\, brilliant and necessary." Released in early 2014\, the book narrates the history of a slave-ship revolt that inspired Herma n Melville's other masterpiece\, Benito Cereno. Philip Gourevitc h describes it as a "rare book in which the drama of the action and the d rama of ideas are equally measured\, a work of history and of literary re flection that is as urgent as it is timely." \;
\;
A professor of history at NYU and a member of the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences\, Grandin writes on US foreign policy\, Latin America\,
genocide\, and human rights. \; He has published in \;The Ne
w York Times\, \;Harper's\, \;The London Review
of Books\, \;The Nation\, \;The Boston Review<
/em>\, \;The Los Angeles Times\, \;and \;
\;
Gr eg Grandin is the author of a number of prize-winning books\, including m ost recently \;Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford's Forg otten Jungle City \;(Metropolitan 2009). \; A finalist for t he Pulitzer Prize in History\, as well as for the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award\, \;Fordlandia \ ;was picked by the \;New York Times\, New Yorker\, Boston Globe\, Chicago Tribune \;and NPR for their "best of" lists\, and Amazo n.com named it the best history book of 2009.
\;
Gra ndin is also the author of \;Empire's Workshop: Latin America\, t he United States\, and the Rise of the New Empire \;(Metropolita n 2005)\, \;The Last Colonial Massacre: Latin America During the Cold War \;(University of Chicago Press 2004)\, and \;Bl ood of Guatemala: A History of Race and Nation(Duke University Press\, 20 00)\, \;which won the Latin American Studies Associatio n's Bryce Wood Award for the best book published on Latin America in any discipline. With Gil Joseph\, is edited \;A Century of Revolution \, also published by Duke University Press.
\;
Read Professor Grandin's recent opinion piece in the New York Times\, "Ob ama\, Melville and the Tea Party." \;
http://www.nytimes.com/ 2014/01/19/opinion/sunday/obama-melville-and-the-tea-party.html
& #160\;
We look forward to seeing you!
UID:20140218T010000Z-20372@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20130916T113407Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/20372-51st-annual-arthur-l-thr ockmorton-memorial-lecture CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20140121T221634Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/41006_greg_gandin.rev.1379528460.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:20372 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/41006_greg_gandin.rev.1379528460.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please save the date for the 51st Annual Arthur L. Th rockmorton Memorial Lecture. \; The 2013 guest lecturer will be Greg Grandin\, Professor of History at New York University. \; Greg Grandi n will discuss his new book\, The Empire of Necessity\, a true h istory of the events that inspired Herman Melville's other masterpiece\, Benito Cereno. The talk is entitled: "Who Aint a Slave: \; Slavery in Fact and Melville's Fiction." X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:humanities|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140320T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140320T163000 LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 207 GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Alum Joe Conway('02) to Discuss His Book About "Back-to-the-Lande rs" in Maine DESCRIPTION:Joe Conway '02 will discuss his experience as a writer\, his book and the movement he is documenting. \; \;Get Back\, Stay B ack: 2nd Generation Back-to-the-Landers in Maine is published by The Inst itute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art. Supported by a grant f rom the Maine Arts Commission\, the book is being released in conjunction with the larger Publication Studio project\, which originated in Portlan d\, Oregon and has since spread to eleven cities throughout North America and Europe. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Joe Conway '02 will discuss his experie nce as a writer\, his book and the movement he is documenting. \;
\;
Get Back\, Stay Back: 2nd Generation Back-to-the-L anders in Maine is published by The Institute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art. Supported by a grant from the Maine Arts Commissio n\, the book is being released in conjunction with the larger Publication Studio project\, which originated in Portland\, Oregon and has since spr ead to eleven cities throughout North America and Europe.
UID:20140320T223000Z-25594@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20140317T142024Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/25594-alum-joe-conway02-to-dis cuss-his-book-about CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20140319T162057Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/43,0,513,470/44680_joe_photo2.rev.1395246307.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:25594 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/43\,0\,513\,470/44680_joe_photo2.rev.139524630 7.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Joe Conway '02 will discuss his experience as a writer\, his book and the movement he is documenting. \; Get Ba ck\, Stay Back: 2nd Generation Back-to-the-Landers in Maine is publi shed by The Institute of Contemporary Art at Maine College of Art. Suppor ted by a grant from the Maine Arts Commission\, the book is being release d in conjunction with the larger Publication Studio project\, which origi nated in Portland\, Oregon and has since spread to eleven cities througho ut North America and Europe.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:alumni|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140417T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140417T180000 LOCATION:Miller 4th Floor Faculty Lounge SUMMARY:History Faculty Research Presentations DESCRIPTION:Come join the History department for the second in a series o f workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the papers prior to the workshop. \; Participant s will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal prese ntation of the papers. \; Susan Glosser will discuss her sabbatical research plans to trace the history and influence of the philanthropic or ganization United China Relief from its formation in 1941 to 1945. \; Reiko Hillyer will discuss her conference paper entitled\, "The Guardia n Angels: Law and Order and Citizen Policing in the Neoliberal City" expl ores the strange history of the Guardian Angels\, a grass-roots\, volunte er\, crime-fighting organization born in New York City during the era of fiscal crisis. On the one hand\, this group appears to be an heir to the freedom struggle\, emphasizing community control while being targeted by the police. On the other hand\, the Angels were at the forefront of the n eoconservative law and order tactics that characterized the gentrifying c ity. Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the papers in advance of the workshop. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Come join the History department for th e second in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the papers prior to the worksh op. \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there w ill be no formal presentation of the papers. \;
Susan Glosser will discuss her sabbatical research plans to trace the history and infl uence of the philanthropic organization United China Relief from its form ation in 1941 to 1945. \;
Reiko Hillyer will discuss her conf erence paper entitled\, "The Guardian Angels: Law and Order and Citizen P olicing in the Neoliberal City" explores the strange history of the Guard ian Angels\, a grass-roots\, volunteer\, crime-fighting organization born in New York City during the era of fiscal crisis. On the one hand\, this group appears to be an heir to the freedom struggle\, emphasizing commun ity control while being targeted by the police. On the other hand\, the A ngels were at the forefront of the neoconservative law and order tactics that characterized the gentrifying city.
Contact Debbie Richman a t drichman@lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the papers in advance of the w orkshop.
UID:20140418T000000Z-26254@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20140410T142301Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/26254-history-faculty-research -presentations LAST-MODIFIED:20140414T193149Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/45336_history_logo.rev.1397503823.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:26254 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/45336_history_logo.rev.1397503823.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Please join the History department for the sec ond in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the papers prior to the workshop.&# 160\; Participants will critique and discuss each paper\, but there will be no formal presentation of the papers. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the two papers in advance of th e workshop.\n
END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140501T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140501T183000 LOCATION:Watzek Library Atrium GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:History Senior Thesis Poster Session DESCRIPTION:Please join the History department to celebrate the hard work of senior history majors in Professor Elliott Young's seminar as they pr esent their final thesis projects. \; Refreshments will be provided. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join the History department to c elebrate the hard work of senior history majors in Professor Elliott Youn g's seminar as they present their final thesis projects. \; Refreshme nts will be provided.
UID:20140502T000000Z-25295@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20140305T134630Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/25295-history-senior-thesis-po ster-session CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/45942_dadik_thesis_poster.rev.1398723403.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:25295 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/45942_dadik_thesis_poster.rev.1398723403.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the History department to celebrate the h ard work of senior history majors in Professor Elliott Young's seminar as they present their final thesis projects. \; Refreshments will be pr ovided. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|presentation|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140501T183000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140501T193000 LOCATION:Miller Hall GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:History and English Office Crawl DESCRIPTION:Join the English &\; History Departments in a collaborativ e Fourth Floor Office Crawl in Miller on Thursday\, May 1 starting around 6:30 pm! \; Talk to professors\, eat delicious themed foods\, and en joy the company of fellow majors\, and non-majors. The Office Crawl\, fi rst started by the history department two years ago\, emphasizes a strong community within the humanities at Lewis &\; Clark\, both in and outs ide of the classroom setting. \; The idea is to communicate with Engl ish &\; History majors\, as well as non-majors\, professors\, and facu lty in an informal\, non-academic context. \; The Office Crawl will g ive you the opportunity to talk to professors about their fields of study \, their research\, their interests\, and really anything else that you m ight want to know about them. \;It is also an opportunity to talk t o other students who have a passion for English and/or History. Each pro fessor will start out in his/her office with foods and/or beverages withi n the theme of their studies and research\, so the diversity will be plen tiful! So come join us after the History Thesis poster session in the li brary for an evening of fun! If you have any questions or would like to get involved with the crawl (posters\, advertising\, etc.) then feel free to contact Nina Manno (senior history major) at nmanno@lclark.edu. All help/interest in encouraged\, don't be shy! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Join the English &\; History Departm ents in a collaborative Fourth Floor Office Crawl in Miller on Thursday\, May 1 starting around 6:30 pm! \; Talk to professors\, eat delicious themed foods\, and enjoy the company of fellow majors\, and non-majors.< /p>
The Office Crawl\, first started by the history department two ye
ars ago\, emphasizes a strong community within the humanities at Lewis &a
mp\; Clark\, both in and outside of the classroom setting. \; The ide
a is to communicate with English &\; History majors\, as well as non-m
ajors\, professors\, and faculty in an informal\, non-academic context.&#
160\; The Office Crawl will give you the opportunity to talk to professor
s about their fields of study\, their research\, their interests\, and re
ally anything else that you might want to know about them.
\;
It is also an opportunity to talk to other students who have a passion fo
r English and/or History.
Each professor will start out in his/he r office with foods and/or beverages within the theme of their studies an d research\, so the diversity will be plentiful!
So come join us after the History Thesis poster session in the library for an evening of fun!
If you have any questions or would like to get involved with the crawl (posters\, advertising\, etc.) then feel free to contact Nina Manno (senior history major) at nmanno@lclark.edu.
All help/inter est in encouraged\, don't be shy!
UID:20140502T013000Z-26141@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20140408T122928Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/26141-history-and-english-offi ce-crawl LAST-MODIFIED:20140409T201036Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/233,0,772,539/45182_miller.rev.1397071534.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:26141 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/233\,0\,772\,539/45182_miller.rev.1397071534.j pg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the English &\; History Departments in a coll aborative Fourth Floor Office Crawl in Miller! X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|open to the public END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140911T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20140911T190000 LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, Council Chambers GEO:45.44918;-122.670969 SUMMARY:Beyond Ferguson - Conversation and Action DESCRIPTION:The shooting of Michael Brown occurred on August 9\, 2014\, i n Ferguson\, Missouri. Brown\, an unarmed black man\, was shot to death b y a white police officer\, Darren Wilson. The disputed circumstances of t he shooting\, and \; resulting protests and civil unrest\, have cause d significant controversy in the United States. \; Please join Lew is &\; Clark Professor Reiko Hillyer\, S. Bobbin Singh\, JD\, Execut ive Director Oregon Justice Resource Center\, and community activists Gio vanni Blair McKenzie and Lakeitha Elliott for "Beyond Ferguson - Conversa tion and Action." \; Each panelist will share information\; then\, we will shift to community conversation about reactions and action steps we each can take. This event is free and open to the public. \; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The shooting of Michael Brown occurred on August 9\, 2014\, in Ferguson\, Missouri. Brown\, an unarmed black man \, was shot to death by a white police officer\, Darren Wilson. The dispu ted circumstances of the shooting\, and \; resulting protests and civ il unrest\, have caused significant controversy in the United States.
\;
Please join Lewis &\; Clark Professor Reiko Hilly er\, S. Bobbin Singh\, JD\, Executive Director Oregon Justice Resource Center\, and community activists Giovanni Blair McKenzie and Lakeitha Ell iott for "Beyond Ferguson - Conversation and Action." \; Each panelis t will share information\; then\, we will shift to community conversation about reactions and action steps we each can take. This event is free an d open to the public.
\;
UID:20140912T003000Z-28839@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20140904T113339Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/28427-beyond-ferguson-conversa tion-and-action CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20140904T183339Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/src_region/291,0,957,666/48641_in-photos-wednesdays-ferguson-protes ts-body-image-1408027837.rev.1409349677.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:28839 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/src_region/291\,0\,957\,666/48641_in-photos-wednesdays-f erguson-protests-body-image-1408027837.rev.1409349677.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Photo by VICE News/Alice Speri X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-CONTACT-INFO:Cathy Busha&# 160\; 503.768.7178 X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join Lewis &\; Clark Professor Reiko Hillye r\, S. Bobbin Singh\, JD\, Executive Director Oregon Justice Resource C enter\, and community activists Giovanni Blair McKenzie and Lakeitha Elli ott for "Beyond Ferguson - Conversation and Action." \; Each panelist will share information\; then\, we will shift to community conversation about reactions and action steps we each can take. This event is free and open to the public. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141002T184500 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141002T194500 LOCATION:J.R. Howard Hall 202 GEO:45.451619;-122.669391 SUMMARY:Protest\, Democracy\, and the Future of Hong Kong DESCRIPTION:As many of you are aware\, there are massive protests taking place in support of democracy in Hong Kong\, a former British colony that became a special administrative region of China in 1997. This is a devel opment of the greatest importance and a pivotal point that may determine the future of a major international financial center and one of the most open\, vibrant\, and cosmopolitan cities in the world. Join us for a con versation with some of the protesters in Hong Kong that will take place v ia Skype. Many of the protesters are university students and are taking t his action because they fear that their future in a free society is in je opardy. \; This event will take place at 6:45 p.m. on Thursday\, O ctober 2\, in Howard Hall\, room 202. \; Professor David Campion will give a brief background about the history and politics of Hong Kong and then the Skype call will start at 7 p.m. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:\;
Thi s event will take place at 6:45 p.m. on Thursday\, October 2\, in Howard Hall\, room 202. \; Professor David Campion will give a brief backgro und about the history and politics of Hong Kong and then the Skype call w ill start at 7 p.m.
UID:20141003T014500Z-30761@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141002T140916Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30761-protest-democracy-and-th e-future-of-hong-kong LAST-MODIFIED:20141002T211226Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/49409_140930-hong-kong-protest-jsw-153p_49c593591a541e53791788502bd2 89ec.rev.1412284302.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30761 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/49409_140930-hong-kong-protest-jsw-153p_49c593591a541e537 91788502bd289ec.rev.1412284302.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Skype call with some of the protestors in support of democracy in Hong Kong. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|international affairs|politics|skype END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141014T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141014T163000 LOCATION:Howard 102 GEO:45.448894;-122.669928 SUMMARY:Free Your Mind. Learn in Prison. DESCRIPTION:Are you interested in the criminal justice system? Do you th ink that education should be transformative? \; Come learn about&# 160\;History 337: Crime and Punishment in the U.S.\, Lewis and Clark's pr ison-exchange program\, to be held in the Columbia River Correctional Fac ility\, Spring\, 2015. Taught by Reiko Hillyer. Enrollment is limited an d upon approval of the instructor. If you cannot make the session but are interested in applying for the course\, please email Professor Hillyer a t \;rhillyer@lclark.edu (mailto:rhillyer@lclark.edu) \;ASAP. Appl ications are due on October 17. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Are you interested in the criminal just ice system?
Do you think that education should be transformative?
\;
Come learn about \;History 337: Crime an d Punishment in the U.S.\, Lewis and Clark's prison-exchange program \, to be held in the Columbia River Correctional Facility\, Spring\, 2015 . Taught by Reiko Hillyer.
Enrollment is limited and upon approva l of the instructor. If you cannot make the session but are interested in applying for the course\, please email Professor Hillyer at \;rhillyer@lclark.edu 60\;ASAP. Applications are due on October 17.
UID:20141014T223000Z-30847@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141006T152615Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30847-free-your-mind-learn-in- prison LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30847 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Are you interested in the criminal justice sys tem?\n
\n\n Do you think that education should be transformative?\ n
\n\n Come learn about \;History 337: Crime and Punishmen
t in the U.S.\, Lewis and Clark's prison-exchange program\, to be he
ld in the Columbia River Correctional Facility\, Spring\, 2015. Taught by
Reiko Hillyer.
\n
\n Enrollment is limited and upon approva
l of the instructor. If you cannot make the session but are interested in
applying for the course\, please email Professor Hillyer at \;rhillyer@lclark.edu
60\;ASAP. Applications are due on October 17.\n
The 4th Annual Oregon Archives Crawl wi
ll take place on Saturday\, October 18\, to celebrate Oregon Archives Mon
th. \; Visitors are welcome at the Portland Archives and Records Cent
er\, the Multnomah County Central Library\, and the Oregon Historical Soc
iety. \;At each location there will be a variety of activities to ch
oose from.
Participating organizations this year include the
Oregon Jewish Museum\, Oregon Health Sciences University Historical Coll
ections &\; Archives\, Willamette University Archives\, the Oregon Nik
kei Legacy Center\, Lewis &\; Clark College Archives &\; Special Co
llections\, the Oregon Black Pioneers\, Oregon State University Archives\
, Oregon Multicultural Archives\, Oregon Hops &\; Brewing Archives\, P
acific University Archives\, Portland State University Special Collection
s &\; University Archives\, Portland State University Architecture\, E
ngineering\, and Construction Archives.
This event is free a
nd open to the public. See the Portland City Auditor's website
for more details.
Padura is arguably the most important n ovelist to emerge in Cuba since the Revolution certainly the most importa nt that is alive and living in Cuba. He is best known for his detective n ovels\, one of the most important literary genres coming out of contempor ary Latin America. His works are mostly set in Havana and are unique in r evealing all the contradictions in post-Soviet\, contemporary Cuba societ y. Just as impressive are his three historical novels\, \;La Nove la de mi Vida \;(on the early 19th century Cuban poet Heredia)\, \;El Hombre que Amaba los Perros \;(on Trotsky and his assassin)\, and \;Hereje \;(centered on art and Jewish m igration to Cuba)\, all of which reflect on Cuba's past and present withi n a transnational context. Most of his detective novels are translated in to English\, as is his much-praised \;The Man who Loved Dogs
UID:20141031T220000Z-30961@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141014T104633Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30961-escribir-en-cuba-en-el-s iglo-xxi-writing-in-cuba CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20141030T182559Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/49770_foto_garrido1.rev.1413308513.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30961 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/49770_foto_garrido1.rev.1413308513.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Leonardo Padura. Autor. En su estudio en La Hab ana\, Cuba. X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for a lecture by renowned novelist Leo nardo Padura. The lecture will be given in Spanish with a simultaneous En glish interpretation. This event is sponsored by Lewis &\; Clark Colle ges' Departments of History\, Hispanic Studies\, Latin American Studies\, Latino and Iberian Studies Association (LALISA)\, and the NEH Arts and L ectures Fund. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:Hispanic Studies|History|Latin American Studies|literary arts|reading|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141105T190000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141105T200000 LOCATION:Agnes Flanagan Chapel GEO:45.450821;-122.671419 SUMMARY:93 Year Old Tuskegee Airman Lt Col Alex Jefferson to Speak at Lew is & Clark College DESCRIPTION:Lt. Col. Alexander Jefferson\, is a 93 year old retired US Ai r Force officer\, and one of the famous "Tuskegee Airmen"\, also known as the 332nd Fighter Group. He will be visiting Portland from his home in D etroit\, MI. During World War II\, Black Americans throughout the U.S. w ere subject to Jim Crow laws which legalized segregation and the American military was also segregated. President Truman signed an executive orde r ending segregation in the military in 1948 (3 years after the war's end ). Lt. Col. Jefferson's book\, "Red Tail Captured\, Red Tail Free: Memoi rs of a Tuskegee Airman and POW"\, is a personal memoir of those who serv ed America in World War II and after. \; \; Please join him at Le wis &\; Clark College as he shares his story. His maternal great-gran dfather William Jefferson White was born to a slave woman and a white sla ve owner in the 1830s. Jefferson's grandfather became a minister\, and i n 1867\, opened an all black ministry school for boys in Augusta\, Georgi a\, which today is known as Morehouse College In 1947 Jefferson received his teaching certificate from Wayne State University\, and began teachin g elementary school science for the Detroit Public School System. He rec eived his MA degree in education in 1954\, and was appointed \; ass istant principal in 1969. He retired in 1979 as an assistant principal\, after over 30 years service. (information retrieved from http://en.wikip edia.org/wiki/Alexander_Jefferson (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander _Jefferson)) Lt Col Alex Jefferson is one of the last touring \;Tusk egee Airmen. \; Please join us for this very special opportunity. 0\; He will speak from 7-8pm in the Chapel at Lewis &\; Clark College. \; A book-signing and reception will follow. The event is free and o pen to the public. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Lt. Col. Alexander Jefferson\, is a 93 year old retired US Air Force officer\, and one of the famous "Tuskegee A irmen"\, also known as the 332nd Fighter Group. He will be visiting Portl and from his home in Detroit\, MI.
During World War II\, Black Am
ericans throughout the U.S. were subject to Jim Crow laws which legalized
segregation and the American military was also segregated.
Presid
ent Truman signed an executive order ending segregation in the military i
n 1948 (3 years after the war's end).
Lt. Col. Jefferson's b
ook\, "Red Tail Captured\, Red Tail Free: Memoirs of a Tuskegee Airman an
d POW"\, is a personal memoir of those who served America in World War II
and after. \; \; Please join him at Lewis &\; Clark College a
s he shares his story.
His maternal great-grandfather Willia
m Jefferson White was born to a slave woman and a white slave owner in th
e 1830s.
Jefferson's grandfather became a minister\, and in 1867\
, opened an all black ministry school for boys in Augusta\, Georgia\, whi
ch today is known as Morehouse College
In 1947 Jefferson rec
eived his teaching certificate from Wayne State University\, and began te
aching elementary school science for the Detroit Public School System.
He received his MA degree in education in 1954\, and was appointed
\; assistant principal in 1969. He retired in 1979 as an assistant p
rincipal\, after over 30 years service.
(information retriev
ed from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Jefferson)
Lt Col Alex Jefferson is one of the last touring \;Tuskegee Airme
n. \; Please join us for this very special opportunity. \; He wil
l speak from 7-8pm in the Chapel at Lewis &\; Clark College. \; A
book-signing and reception will follow. The event is free and open to the
public.
\n Lt. Col. Alexander Jefferson\, is a 93 year ol
d retired US Air Force officer\, and one of the famous "Tuskegee Airmen"\
, also known as the 332nd Fighter Group. During World War II\, Black Amer
icans throughout the U.S. were subject to Jim Crow laws which legalized s
egregation and the American military was also segregated. President Truma
n signed an executive order ending segregation in the military in 1948 (3
years after the war's end). Lt. Col. Jefferson's book\, "Red Tail Captur
ed\, Red Tail Free: Memoirs of a Tuskegee Airman and POW"\, is a personal
memoir of those who served America in World War II and after. \;
\n
\n Please join us for this very special opportunity. Lt Col
Alexander Jefferson will speak from 7-8pm in the Chapel at Lewis &\; C
lark College. \; A book-signing and reception will follow. The event
is free and open to the public.\n
In his sweeping work\, \;Ali en Nation\, \;Elliott Young traces the pivotal century of Chi nese migration to the Americas\, beginning with the 1840s at the start of the "coolie" trade and ending during World War II. The Chinese came as l aborers\, streaming across borders legally and illegally and working jobs few others wanted\, from constructing railroads in California to harvest ing sugar cane in Cuba. Though nations were built in part from their labo r\, Young argues that they were the first group of migrants to bear the s tigma of being "alien." Being neither black nor white and existing outsid e of the nineteenth century Western norms of sexuality and gender\, the C hinese were viewed as permanent outsiders\, culturally and legally. It wa s their presence that hastened the creation of immigration bureaucracies charged with capture\, imprisonment\, and deportation.
This book is the first transnational history of Chinese migration to the Americas. By focusing on the fluidity and complexity of border crossings throughout the Western Hemisphere\, Young shows us how Chinese migrants constructed alternative communities and identities through these transnational pathw ays.
\;
UID:20141116T013000Z-30964@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141014T105842Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30964-book-launch-with-profess or-elliott-young LAST-MODIFIED:20141111T162425Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/49771_51ahl2cp8vl_sl500_aa300_.rev.1413309398.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30964 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/49771_51ahl2cp8vl_sl500_aa300_.rev.1413309398.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join Professor of History Elliott Young for th e launch of his new book \;Alien Nation: Chinese \;Migration in the Americas from the Coolie Era through World War II. \;This event is off-ca mpus and open to the public. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty|History|literary arts|off campus|send-to-undergr aduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141117T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141117T180000 LOCATION:Miller Hall GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:History Faculty Colloquium: Research Presentations by David Galat y and Khalil Johnson DESCRIPTION:Come join the History department for the first in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal present ation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Come join the History department for th e first in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop . \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there wil l be no formal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman a t drichman@lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the wo rkshop.
UID:20141118T010000Z-31055@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141020T100724Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/31055-history-faculty-colloqui um-research-presentations LAST-MODIFIED:20141117T230122Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:31055 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the History department for the first in a s eries of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participan ts will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Parti cipants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lcl ark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty|History|research|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141204T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141204T183000 LOCATION:Watzek Library Atrium SUMMARY:US History Seminar Poster Session DESCRIPTION:Please join the students in Prof. Jane Hunter's US history re search seminar as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session in the Watzek Library atrium. \; The research seminar is the capstone course of the history major. \; Student theses involve in-d epth primary source research\, mastery of historical literature on a chos en subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorously rese arched thesis that advances historical scholarship. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join the students in Prof. Jane Hunter's US history research seminar as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session in the Watzek Library atrium. \; The r esearch seminar is the capstone course of the history major. \; Stude nt theses involve in-depth primary source research\, mastery of historica l literature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and p eer review. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an origin al and rigorously researched thesis that advances historical scholarship.
UID:20141205T010000Z-31733@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141117T145816Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/31733-us-history-seminar-poste r-session CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/0,40,188,228/50363_from_the_depths.rev.1416337072.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:31733 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,40\,188\,228/50363_from_the_depths.rev.1416 337072.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the students in Prof. Jane Hunter's US hi story research seminar as they present their theses at the end-of-semeste r poster session in the Watzek Library atrium. \; The research semina r is the capstone course of the history major. \; Student theses invo lve in-depth primary source research\, mastery of historical literature o n a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. 60\; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorou sly researched thesis that advances historical scholarship. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|open to the public|research|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141204T183000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141204T193000 LOCATION:Miller Hall\, 4th floor faculty offices GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:3rd Annual History Office Crawl DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department in its 3rd Annual Fourth Floor Of fice Crawl in Miller on Thursday\, December 4 immediately following the S enior Thesis Poster Session! \; Talk to professors\, eat delicious th emed foods\, and enjoy the company of fellow majors\, and non-majors. Th e Office Crawl\, first started by the history department two years ago\, emphasizes a strong community within the humanities at Lewis &\; Clark \, both in and outside of the classroom setting. \; The idea is to co mmunicate with English &\; History majors\, as well as non-majors\, pr ofessors\, and faculty in an informal\, non-academic context. \; The Office Crawl will give you the opportunity to talk to professors about th eir fields of study\, their research\, their interests\, and really anyth ing else that you might want to know about them. \;It is also an op portunity to talk to other students who have a passion for English and/or History. Each professor will start out in his/her office with foods and /or beverages within the theme of their studies and research\, so the div ersity will be plentiful! So come join us after the History Thesis poste r session in the library for an evening of fun! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Join the History Department in its 3rd Annual Fourth Floor Office Crawl in Miller on Thursday\, December 4 immed iately following the Senior Thesis Poster Session! \; Talk to profess ors\, eat delicious themed foods\, and enjoy the company of fellow majors \, and non-majors.
The Office Crawl\, first started by the histor
y department two years ago\, emphasizes a strong community within the hum
anities at Lewis &\; Clark\, both in and outside of the classroom sett
ing. \; The idea is to communicate with English &\; History majors
\, as well as non-majors\, professors\, and faculty in an informal\, non-
academic context. \; The Office Crawl will give you the opportunity t
o talk to professors about their fields of study\, their research\, their
interests\, and really anything else that you might want to know about t
hem.
\;It is also an opportunity to talk to other students wh
o have a passion for English and/or History.
Each professor will start out in his/her office with foods and/or beverages within the theme of their studies and research\, so the diversity will be plentiful!
So come join us after the History Thesis poster session in the library for an evening of fun!
UID:20141205T023000Z-32034@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141202T093047Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/32034-3rd-annual-history-offic e-crawl LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:32034 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Join the History Department for its 3rd Annual Office Crawl! \; \;\n
\n\n After the Senior Thesis Poster Session come meet professors and check out their offices while mingling and eating tasty field-themed snacks. \;Professors will be in costume and you'll have the opportunity to get to know them and other majors or potential majors. \;\n
\n\n Think pub crawl but better!\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141215T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20141215T180000 LOCATION:Miller Hall GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:History Faculty Colloquium: Research Presentations by Andrew Bern stein and David Galaty DESCRIPTION:Come join the History department for the second in a series o f workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the papers prior to the workshop. \; Participant s will critique and discuss the papers\, but there will be no formal pres entation of the papers. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark. edu to acquire a copy of the papers in advance of the workshop. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Come join the History department for th e second in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be expected to read the papers prior to the worksh op. \; Participants will critique and discuss the papers\, but there will be no formal presentation of the papers. \; Contact Debbie Richm an at drichman@lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the papers in advance of t he workshop.
UID:20141216T010000Z-31056@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141020T100921Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/31056-history-faculty-colloqui um-research-presentations LAST-MODIFIED:20141118T190206Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/0,0,100,100/50364_30744_history_logo.rev.1416337317.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:31056 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,0\,100\,100/50364_30744_history_logo.rev.14 16337317.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the History department for the second in a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participa nts will be expected to read the papers prior to the workshop. \; Par ticipants will critique and discuss the papers\, but there will be no for mal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@ lclark.edu to acquire a copy of the papers in advance of the workshop. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150122T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150122T163000 LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 102 GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Deportation\, Coercive Mobility\, and the Statecraft of American Migration: Roots and Routes of State Capacity\, 1914—1941 DESCRIPTION:"Deportation\, coercive mobility\, and \;the statecraft o f American migration: \;Roots and Routes of State Capacity\, 1914— 1941" \;Ethan Blue\, University of Western \;Australia \; The United States currently has one \;of the most intricate deporta tion regimes in the history of the \;world\, and deports \;some 4 00\,000 people per year. \; \;It is a bipartisan political effort \, with \;widespread support among Democrats and Republicans \;al ike. \; This paper \;examines the \;emergence of American mass deportation in the early 20th \;century\, and \;the evolutio n of state capacities \;for removal as an economic and eugenic \; state project. \; \;It pays particular \;attention to the his tory of "deportation special" \;trains. These reconfigured \;rail road cars made constant circuits through the nation\, gathering so-called \;"undesirable aliens" \;disdained for their poverty\, political radicalism\, \;criminal conviction\, or insanity\, for delivery to b orders and ports for \;exile. \; \;First \;developed to e nsure the \;efficient expulsion of post-Exclusion Chinese\, \;the \;trains were liminal legal spaces\, and the lecture \;assesses the deportees' \;journey as a cultural process in which national terr itory\, sovereignty\, and community—three \;defining features of mo dern nationhood—were created and contested. \;Staffed \;by whit e guards and African American or Filipino porters\, \;these mobile ca rceral \;spaces stratified national and international hierarchies\, a nd enforced local \;and federal state agents' \;definitions of th e proper racial\, behavioural\, and \;political contours of the natio n. \; \;As the \;trains collected and removed those \;dee med "undesirable\," they traced the \;underside of American citizensh ip and limned the foundations of the modern state. Ethan Blue is Senio r Lecturer in History at the University of Western Australia. \;He r eceived a PhD from the University of Texas at Austin in 2004\, and is the author of \;Doing Time in the Depression: \;Everyday Life in Te xas and California Prisons \;(New York University Press\, 2012) \ ;and co-author of Engineering and War: Militarism\, Ethics\, Institutions \, Alternatives (Morgan and Claypool\, 2013/2014). \;His work has ap peared in Pacific Historical Review\, Radical History Review\, Journal of Social History\, and Bad Subjects. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:"Deportation\, coercive mobility\
, and \;the statecraft of American migration: \;Roots and Routes
of State Capacity\, 1914—1941"
\;
Ethan Blue\, University of Weste
rn \;Australia
\;
The United State
s currently has one \;of the most intricate deportation regimes in th
e history of the \;world\, and deports \;some 400\,000 people per
year. \; \;It is a bipartisan political effort\, with \;wide
spread support among Democrats and Republicans \;alike.
 \
;
This paper \;examines the \;emergence of American mass d
eportation in the early 20th \;century\, and \;the evolution of s
tate capacities \;for removal as an economic and eugenic \;state
project. \; \;It pays particular \;attention to the history o
f "deportation special" \;trains. These reconfigured \;railroad c
ars made constant circuits through the nation\, gathering so-called \
;"undesirable aliens" \;disdained for their poverty\, political radic
alism\, \;criminal conviction\, or insanity\, for delivery to borders
and ports for \;exile. \; \;First \;developed to ensure
the \;efficient expulsion of post-Exclusion Chinese\, \;the \
;trains were liminal legal spaces\, and the lecture \;assesses the de
portees' \;journey as a cultural process in which national territory\
, sovereignty\, and community—three \;defining features of modern n
ationhood—were created and contested. \;Staffed \;by white guar
ds and African American or Filipino porters\, \;these mobile carceral
\;spaces stratified national and international hierarchies\, and enf
orced local \;and federal state agents' \;definitions of the prop
er racial\, behavioural\, and \;political contours of the nation.
0\; \;As the \;trains collected and removed those \;deemed "u
ndesirable\," they traced the \;underside of American citizenship and
limned the foundations of the modern state.
The Department of History is delighted
to announce Dr. Dipesh Chakrabarty\, Lawrence A. Kimpton Distinguished Se
rvice Professor of History\, South Asian Languages and Civilizations\, an
d the College at the University of Chicago\, as the 2015 Arthur L. Throck
morton Memorial Lecturer. \; Dr. Chakrabarty's talk\, titled "Histori
cal Research: The Indian Career of A European Ideal\," will track some of
the debates and processes through which certain Rankean ideas about hist
orical sources\, research\, and telling the "truth" about the past found
a home in British India.
Dr. Dipesh Chakrabarty holds a BSc
(physics honors) degree from Presidency College\, University of Calcutta\
, a postgraduate Diploma in management (considered equivalent to MBA) fro
m the Indian Institute of Management\, Calcutta\, and a PhD (history) fro
m the Australian National University. He is currently the Lawrence A. Kim
pton Distinguished Service Professor in History\, South Asian Languages a
nd Civilizations\, and the College. He is also a faculty fellow of the Ch
icago Center for Contemporary Theory\, an associate faculty of the Depart
ment of English\, holds a visiting professorial fellowship at the Researc
h School of Humanities at the Australian National University\, and an hon
orary professorial fellowship with the School of Historical Studies at th
e University of Melbourne\, Australia. He is a founding member of the edi
torial collective of Subaltern Studies\, a co-editor of Crit
ical Inquiry\, and a founding editor of Postcolonial Studies. He is a contributing editor to Public Culture\, and has serve
d on the editorial board of the American Historical Review. He w
as one of the founding editors (along with Sheldon Pollock from Columbia
University and Sanjay Subrahmanyam from UCLA) of the series South Asi
a Across the Disciplines published by a consortium of three universi
ty presses (Chicago\, Columbia\, and California). He also serves on the B
oard of Experts for the Humboldt Forum in Berlin.
His most recent book\, The Calling of History: Sir Jadunath Sarkar and His Empire of Truth\, is forthcoming from the University of Chicago Press.
The Throckmorton lecture was established in 1963 to commemorate the lif e and work of Arthur L. Throckmorton\, a professor of history at Lewis &a mp\; Clark who died unexpectedly in 1962. Each year the series brings a d istinguished historian to campus to lecture and to meet with faculty and students.
UID:20150203T010000Z-30950@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20141013T133226Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/30950-52nd-annual-arthur-l-thr ockmorton-memorial-lecture CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20141120T224749Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/49758_chakrabarty.rev.1413233136.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:30950 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/49758_chakrabarty.rev.1413233136.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Dipesh Chakrabarty X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The Department of History is delighted to announce Dr . Dipesh Chakrabarty\, Lawrence A. Kimpton Distinguished Service Professo r of History\, South Asian Languages and Civilizations\, and the College at the University of Chicago\, as the 2015 Arthur L. Throckmorton Memoria l Lectuerer. \; Dr. Chakrabarty's talk\, titled "Historical Research: The Indian Career of A European Ideal\," will track some of the debates and processes through which certain Rankean ideas about historical source s\, research\, and telling the "truth" about the past found a home in Bri tish India. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|lecture|send-to-graduate|send-to-law|send-to-und ergraduate|throckmorton END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150203T183000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150203T200000 LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center - Council Chambers GEO:45.44918;-122.670969 SUMMARY:Lecture by Dr. Ed Baptist (Cornell University): "I looked for a s tory about families. I found a story about capitalism." (by the author of "The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and The Making of American Capita lism") DESCRIPTION:Ed Baptist grew up in Durham\, North Carolina\, and received his undergraduate degree from Georgetown University. \; He did his gr aduate work at the University of Pennsylvania. \; Since then\, he has taught first at the University of Miami\, and\, since 2003\, at Cornell University. He will speaking about his new book\, The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capitalism\, published by Basic Books in September 2014. \; (reviewed in the New York Times (http:// www.nytimes.com/2014/10/04/books/the-half-has-never-been-told-follows-the -money-of-slavery.html?_r=1)). Ten years in the making\, this sweeping h istory of the United States from the Revolution to the Civil War puts ens laved African Americans at the center of the story. \; Using intervie ws with ex-slaves\, personal narratives written by survivors who escaped slavery\, the business papers and secret letters of enslavers\, as well a s the newspapers and more public documents of American communities\, this book argues that to understand how the American past is today's prologue without understanding how American slavery grew and changed\, became mod ern\, and shaped the American nation. Baptist has also published Creatin g an Old South: Middle Florida's Plantation Frontier Before the Civil War (UNC Press\, 2002) and with the late Stephanie Camp\, New Studies in the History of American Slavery\, (University of Georgia Press\, 2006.)  \; He and Louis Hyman have also published a co-edited book called America n Capitalism: A Reader\, which was published by Simon and Schuster as an e-book. At Cornell\, Baptist teaches about the history of slavery\, the U.S. Civil War\, American capitalism\, digital history\, as well as a ser vice-learning course that brings American students to work in the schools of a community in rural Jamaica. \; \; Along with Louis Hyman \, he has developed and taught The History of American Capitalism\, a MOO C (Massive Open Online Course) for CornellX. He conceived of this as bein g more of a multi-form\, dynamic textbook for use by other teachers in th eir own classrooms than a stand-alone course. Baptist is also leading a p roject called Freedom on the Move\, [http://freedomonthemove.org (http:// freedomonthemove.org) ] a collaborative effort in digital history that is building a crowdsourced database of all fugitive slave ads. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Ed Baptist grew up in Durham\, North Ca
rolina\, and received his undergraduate degree from Georgetown University
. \; He did his graduate work at the University of Pennsylvania. 
\; Since then\, he has taught first at the University of Miami\, and\, si
nce 2003\, at Cornell University. He will speaking about his new book\, <
em>The Half Has Never Been Told: Slavery and the Making of American Capit
alism\, published by Basic Books in September 2014. \; (reviewed in the New York Times).
Ten years in the making\, this sweeping history of the Unit
ed States from the Revolution to the Civil War puts enslaved African Amer
icans at the center of the story. \; Using interviews with ex-slaves\
, personal narratives written by survivors who escaped slavery\, the busi
ness papers and secret letters of enslavers\, as well as the newspapers a
nd more public documents of American communities\, this book argues that
to understand how the American past is today's prologue without understan
ding how American slavery grew and changed\, became modern\, and shaped t
he American nation.
Baptist has also published Creating
an Old South: Middle Florida's Plantation Frontier Before the Civil War
em> (UNC Press\, 2002) and with the late Stephanie Camp\, New Studies in
the History of American Slavery\, (University of Georgia Press\, 2006.)&#
160\; He and Louis Hyman have also published a co-edited book called
American Capitalism: A Reader\, which was published by Simon and Sch
uster as an e-book.
At Cornell\, Baptist teaches about the h
istory of slavery\, the U.S. Civil War\, American capitalism\, digital hi
story\, as well as a service-learning course that brings American student
s to work in the schools of a community in rural Jamaica. \;
\;
Along with Louis Hyman\, he has developed and taught The History of American Capitalism\, a MOOC (Massive Open Online Cou rse) for CornellX. He conceived of this as being more of a multi-form\, d ynamic textbook for use by other teachers in their own classrooms than a stand-alone course. Baptist is also leading a project called Freedom on the Move\, [http://freedomo nthemove.org ] a collaborative effort in digital history that is buil ding a crowdsourced database of all fugitive slave ads.
UID:20150204T023000Z-32435@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150107T160518Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/32419-lecture-by-dr-ed-baptist -cornell-university-the CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20150108T000518Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/height/80/c rop/1/50984_ed_baptist.jpeg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:32435 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/239/width/80/ height/80/crop/1/50984_ed_baptist.jpeg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public X-LIVEWHALE-CONTACT-INFO:Cathy BushaJoin the Lewis &\; Clark Bookstore on Wednesday\, February 4th to celebrate the latest book from Elliott Young\ , Professor of History.
In Alien Nation\, "You ng traces the pivotal century of Chinese migration to the Americas\, begi nning with the 1840s at the start of the "coolie" trade and ending during World War II. The Chinese came as laborers\, streaming across borders le gally and illegally and working jobs few others wanted\, from constructin g railroads in California to harvesting sugar cane in Cuba". This is the first transnational history of Chinese migration to the Americas.
Light refreshments will be served during this event. \;
p>
UID:20150204T233000Z-33649@college.lclark.edu
DTSTAMP:20150128T143614Z
URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/33640-bookwarming-for-elliott-
young
CATEGORIES:Open to the Public
LAST-MODIFIED:20150128T223614Z
X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events
X-LIVEWHALE-ID:33649
X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles
X-LIVEWHALE-CONTACT-INFO:books.lclark.edu
\nbooks@lclark.edu
X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the Lewis &\; Clark Bookstore Wednesday\, Feb
. 4th for a bookwarming to celebrate the work of Elliott Young\, Professo
r of History.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150204T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150204T203000
LOCATION:Agnes Flanagan Chapel
GEO:45.450821;-122.671419
SUMMARY:An Evening with Sister Helen Prejean and the 20th Anniversary of
the film "Dead Man Walking"
DESCRIPTION:I don't see capital punishment as a peripheral issue about so
me criminals at the edge of society that people want to execute. I see th
e death penalty connected to the three deepest wounds of our society: rac
ism\, poverty\, and violence. \; – Sr. Helen Prejean Sister Helen
Prejean has been instrumental in sparking national dialogue on the death
penalty and helping to shape the Catholic Church's newly vigorous opposit
ion to state executions. She travels around the world giving talks about
her ministry. She considers herself a southern storyteller. Sister Helen
is a member of the Congregation of St. Joseph. She spent her first years
with the Sisters teaching religion to junior high school students. Reali
zing that being on the side of poor people is an essential part of the Go
spel she moved into the St. Thomas Housing Project in New Orleans and beg
an working at Hope House from 1981 – 1984. During this time\, she was
asked to correspond with a death row inmate Patrick Sonnier at Angola. Sh
e agreed and became his spiritual adviser. After witnessing his execution
\, she wrote a book about the experience. The result was Dead Man Walkin
g: An Eyewitness Account of the Death Penalty in the United States. It be
came a movie\, an opera and a play for high schools and colleges. Since
1984\, Sister Helen has divided her time between educating citizens about
the death penalty and counseling individual death row prisoners. She has
accompanied six men to their deaths. In doing so\, she began to suspect
that some of those executed were not guilty. This realization inspired he
r second book\, The Death of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account of Wrongful
Executions\, which was released by Random House in December of 2004.
0\; Sr. Helen is presently at work on another book - RIVER OF FIRE: MY SP
IRITUAL JOURNEY. \; \; An opportunity for purchasing/autographin
g books with Sr. Helen Prejean will be available after her talk. \; T
his event is co-sponsored by the Department of Inclusion and Multicultura
l Engagement and the Office of Spiritual and Religious Life at Lewis &
\; Clark College. Free and open to the public. RSVP Required (limited to
400 people)
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:
I don't se e capital punishment as a peripheral issue about some criminals at the ed ge of society that people want to execute. I see the death penalty connec ted to the three deepest wounds of our society: racism\, poverty\, and vi olence. \; – Sr. Helen Prejean
Sister Helen Prejean has been instrumental in sparking national
dialogue on the death penalty and helping to shape the Catholic Church's
newly vigorous opposition to state executions. She travels around the wo
rld giving talks about her ministry. She considers herself a southern sto
ryteller.
Sister Helen is a member of the Congregation of St
. Joseph. She spent her first years with the Sisters teaching religion to
junior high school students. Realizing that being on the side of poor pe
ople is an essential part of the Gospel she moved into the St. Thomas Hou
sing Project in New Orleans and began working at Hope House from 1981 –
1984.
During this time\, she was asked to correspond with a
death row inmate Patrick Sonnier at Angola. She agreed and became his sp
iritual adviser. After witnessing his execution\, she wrote a book about
the experience.
The result was Dead Man Walking: An Eyew
itness Account of the Death Penalty in the United States. It became
a movie\, an opera and a play for high schools and colleges.
Since 1984\, Sister Helen has divided her time between educating citizen
s about the death penalty and counseling individual death row prisoners.
She has accompanied six men to their deaths. In doing so\, she began to s
uspect that some of those executed were not guilty. This realization insp
ired her second book\, The Death of Innocents: An Eyewitness Account of W
rongful Executions\, which was released by Random House in December of 20
04. \; Sr. Helen is presently at work on another book - RIVER OF
FIRE: MY SPIRITUAL JOURNEY. \; \;
An opportunit
y for purchasing/autographing books with Sr. Helen Prejean will be availa
ble after her talk. \; This event is co-sponsored by the Department o
f Inclusion and Multicultural Engagement and the Office of Spiritual and
Religious Life at Lewis &\; Clark College.
Free and open
to the public. RSVP Required (limited to 400 people)
Come join the History department for a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participa nts will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Part icipants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no forma l presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lc lark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop.
UID:20150224T233000Z-34430@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150220T121127Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/34430-history-faculty-colloqui um-research-presentations LAST-MODIFIED:20150220T201127Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/50364_30744_history_logo.rev.1416337317.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:34430 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/50364_30744_history_logo.rev.1416337317.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the History department for a series of work shops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be ex pected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to ac quire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty|History|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150319T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150319T183000 LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 105 GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Film Screening of Granito followed by Q&A with Kate Doyle\, S enior Analyst for the National Security Archive DESCRIPTION:Kate Doyle is senior analyst of U.S. policy in Latin America at the National Security Archive\, a research institute and advocacy orga nization based at George Washington University that campaigns for the cit izen's right to know\, investigates U.S. national security and foreign po licy\, and uses the Freedom of Information Act to obtain and publish decl assified U.S. documents. She directs several major research projects\, in cluding the Guatemala Project\, which collects declassified U.S. and Guat emalan government documents on the countries' shared history from 1954\, and the Evidence Project\, connecting the right to truth and access to in formation with human rights and justice struggles in Latin America. Since 1992\, Doyle has worked with human rights organizations\, truth commissi ons and prosecutors to obtain government records from secret archives tha t shed light on state violence. She has served as an expert in many human rights criminal cases\, including the 2008 trial of Peru's former Presid ent Alberto Fujimori for his role in overseeing military death squads\, a the case currently before the Spanish National Court of the 1989 assassi nation of the Jesuit priests in El Salvador\, and the 2013 trial of Guate malan dictator EfraÃn RÃos Montt for genocide and crimes against humani ty. She edited the Archive's digital collections of thousands of declassi fied records on El Salvador and Guatemala and has published dozens of rep orts\, book chapters\, articles\, and blogs in Spanish-language and U.S. media. In 2012\, Doyle was awarded the ALBA / Puffin Foundation prize for Human Rights Activism\, which she shared with Fredy Peccerelli of the Fo rensic Anthropology Foundation of Guatemala. \;Granito Plot Summary Granito: How to Nail a Dictator is a story of destinies joined by Guatema la's past\, and how a documentary film intertwined with a nation's turbul ent history emerges as an active player in the present. In Granito our ch aracters sift for clues buried in archives of mind and place and historic al memory\, seeking to uncover a narrative that could unlock the past and settle matters of life and death in the present. Each of the five main c haracters whose destinies collide in Granito are connected by Guatemala's past. \;In 1982\, Guatemala was engulfed in an armed conflict durin g which a genocidal "scorched earth" campaign by the military killed near ly 200\,000 Maya people including 45\,000 disappeared. Now\, as if a watc hful Maya god were weaving back together threads of a story unraveled by the passage of time\, forgotten by most\, our characters become integral to the overarching narrative of wrongs done and justice sought that they have pieced together\, each adding their granito\, their tiny grain of sa nd\, to the epic tale. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Kate Doyle is senior analyst of U.S. policy in Latin America at the National Secu rity Archive\, a research institute and advocacy organization based at Ge orge Washington University that campaigns for the citizen's right to know \, investigates U.S. national security and foreign policy\, and uses the Freedom of Information Act to obtain and publish declassified U.S. docume nts. She directs several major research projects\, including the Guatemal a Project\, which collects declassified U.S. and Guatemalan government do cuments on the countries' shared history from 1954\, and the Evidence Pro ject\, connecting the right to truth and access to information with human rights and justice struggles in Latin America. Since 1992\, Doyle has wo rked with human rights organizations\, truth commissions and prosecutors to obtain government records from secret archives that shed light on stat e violence. She has served as an expert in many human rights criminal cas es\, including the 2008 trial of Peru's former President Alberto Fujimori for his role in overseeing military death squads\, a the case currently before the Spanish National Court of the 1989 assassination of the Jesuit priests in El Salvador\, and the 2013 trial of Guatemalan dictator Efraà n RÃos Montt for genocide and crimes against humanity. She edited the A rchive's digital collections of thousands of declassified records on El S alvador and Guatemala and has published dozens of reports\, book chapters \, articles\, and blogs in Spanish-language and U.S. media. In 2012\, Doy le was awarded the ALBA / Puffin Foundation prize for Human Rights Activi sm\, which she shared with Fredy Peccerelli of the Forensic Anthropology Foundation of Guatemala.
\;
Granito Plot Summary
Gra nito: How to Nail a Dictator is a story of destinies joined by Guate mala's past\, and how a documentary film intertwined with a nation's turb ulent history emerges as an active player in the present. In Granito< /em> our characters sift for clues buried in archives of mind and place a nd historical memory\, seeking to uncover a narrative that could unlock t he past and settle matters of life and death in the present. Each of the five main characters whose destinies collide in Granito are conn ected by Guatemala's past. \;In 1982\, Guatemala was engulfed in an armed conflict during which a genocidal "scorched earth" campaign by the military killed nearly 200\,000 Maya people including 45\,000 disappeared . Now\, as if a watchful Maya god were weaving back together threads of a story unraveled by the passage of time\, forgotten by most\, our charact ers become integral to the overarching narrative of wrongs done and justi ce sought that they have pieced together\, each adding their granito\, th eir tiny grain of sand\, to the epic tale.
UID:20150320T003000Z-34017@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150211T134901Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/34017-film-screening-of-granit o-followed-by-qampa-with CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20150319T201134Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/51743_kate_doyle.rev.1423693610.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:34017 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/51743_kate_doyle.rev.1423693610.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the History department for an open screen ing of the documentary Granito: How to Nail a Dictator. \; \; This film tells the story of the search for justice in Guatemala for genocide crimes committed under former military dictator General Efrain Rios Montt's regime. Kate Doyle will give a brief talk after the screenin g and participate in a question and answer session\, as she was one of th e key interview subjects in the documentary. \; Ms. Doyle currently s erves as senior analyst of U.S. policy in Latin America at the National S ecurity Archive\, based at George Washington University. \; \; 60\; This event is co-sponsored with International Affairs\, Latin Americ an Studies\, SOAN\, and funding from the National Endowment for the Human ities. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|human rights|international affairs|Latin America n Studies|send-to-undergraduate|SociologyAnthropology END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150320T090000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150320T100000 LOCATION:Albany\, Room 218 GEO:45.451415;-122.668211 SUMMARY:Professional Development Workshop with Senior Research Analyst Ka te Doyle DESCRIPTION:The history department invites currently enrolled undergradua te Lewis &\; Clark students to a special professional development work shop with Senior Research Analyst Kate Doyle\, aimed at students interest ed in careers in human rights\, international affairs\, and policy work i n Washington\, DC. \; \;Space is limited. \; RSVP required. \; Kate Doyle works at the D.C.-based National Security Archive\, a research institute and advocacy organization that specializes in obtain ing declassified U.S. documents through the Freedom of Information Act on foreign policy and national security themes. Kate has directed projects on El Salvador\, Guatemala\, and Mexico\; consulted with multiple truth a nd reconciliation commissions\; and given expert testimony in a number of human rights criminal cases in Latin America and Spain. \; At the breakfast workshop\, Kate will discuss her work and the work of the Nati onal Security Archive\, as well as internship opportunities available to undergraduate students interested in pursuing careers in foreign affairs\ , human rights and public research. This represents a great professional networking opportunity for Lewis and Clark students looking to explore th eir career options after graduation. \; A free continent breakfast will be served at the event. The workshop will take place from 9:00-10:0 0am on Friday March 20th in Albany 218. Space is limited\, so to secure y our place please RSVP to by Tuesday\, March 17\, 2015. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The history department invites currentl y enrolled undergraduate Lewis &\; Clark students to a special profess ional development workshop with Senior Research Analyst Kate Doyle\, aime d at students interested in careers in human rights\, international affai rs\, and policy work in Washington\, DC. \; \;Space is limited.& #160\; RSVP required.
\;
Kate Doyle works at the D.C .-based National Security Archive\, a research institute and advocacy org anization that specializes in obtaining declassified U.S. documents throu gh the Freedom of Information Act on foreign policy and national security themes. Kate has directed projects on El Salvador\, Guatemala\, and Mexi co\; consulted with multiple truth and reconciliation commissions\; and g iven expert testimony in a number of human rights criminal cases in Latin America and Spain.
\;
At the breakfast workshop\, K ate will discuss her work and the work of the National Security Archive\, as well as internship opportunities available to undergraduate students interested in pursuing careers in foreign affairs\, human rights and publ ic research. This represents a great professional networking opportunity for Lewis and Clark students looking to explore their career options afte r graduation.
\;
A free continent breakfast will be
served at the event. The workshop will take place from 9:00-10:00
am on Friday March 20th in A
lbany 218. Space is limited\, so to secure your place please
\n The history department invites currently enrolled undergraduate Lewis &\; Clark students to a special professional development workshop wit h Senior Research Analyst Kate Doyle\, aimed at students interested in ca reers in human rights\, international affairs\, and policy work in Washin gton\, DC. \; Breakfast is included. \; Space is limited so RSVP now to reserve your spot. \; This event is co-sponsored by the depar tments of SOAN\, International Affairs\, Latin American Studies\, and fun ding from the National Endowment for the Humanities.\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|international affairs|international education|La tin American Studies|send-to-undergraduate|SociologyAnthropology END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150429T163000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150429T180000 LOCATION:Watzek Library GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:History Senior Thesis Poster Session DESCRIPTION:Please join the students in Professor Ben Westervelt's histor y research seminar as they present their theses at the end-of-semester po ster session. \; The research seminar is the capstone course of the h istory major. \; Student theses involve in-depth primary source resea rch\, mastery of historical literature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. \; The goal of the seminar is t he completion of an original and rigorously researched thesis that advanc es historical scholarship. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join the students in Professor B en Westervelt's history research seminar as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The research seminar is the ca pstone course of the history major. \; Student theses involve in-dept h primary source research\, mastery of historical literature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. \; The go al of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorously researc hed thesis that advances historical scholarship.
UID:20150429T233000Z-35447@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150407T134930Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/35447-history-senior-thesis-po ster-session CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/52923_ambassadors.rev.1429735003.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:35447 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/52923_ambassadors.rev.1429735003.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the students in Professor Ben Westervelt' s history research seminar as they present their theses at the end-of-sem ester poster session. \; The research seminar is the capstone course of the history major. \; Student theses involve in-depth primary sour ce research\, mastery of historical literature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. \; The goal of the semi nar is the completion of an original and rigorously researched thesis tha t advances historical scholarship. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150501T190000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150501T200000 LOCATION:McMenamins Kennedy School\, 5736 NE 33rd Ave\, Portland SUMMARY:Thinking About Oregon DESCRIPTION:After a year of Oregon history\, the "Thinking About Oregon" series ends with Prof. Jane Hunter (Lewis &\; Clark History Dept.) and Prof. Richard Etulian (Emeritus\, University of New Mexico) who will off er two perspectives on the Oregon story in national context. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:After a year of Oregon history\, the "T hinking About Oregon" series ends with Prof. Jane Hunter (Lewis &\; Cl ark History Dept.) and Prof. Richard Etulian (Emeritus\, University of Ne w Mexico) who will offer two perspectives on the Oregon story in national context.
UID:20150502T020000Z-40895@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150427T151905Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/40895-thinking-about-oregon LAST-MODIFIED:20150427T223419Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/0,0,308,308/53001_screen_shot_2015-04-27_at_33127_pm.rev. 1430173913.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:40895 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,0\,308\,308/53001_screen_shot_2015-04-27_at _33127_pm.rev.1430173913.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:After a year of Oregon history\, the "Thinking About Oregon" series ends with Prof. Jane Hunter (Lewis &\; Clark History De pt.) and Prof. Richard Etulian (Emeritus\, University of New Mexico) who will offer two perspectives on the Oregon story in national context. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150916T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20150916T190000 LOCATION:Watzek Library GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:Opening Reception: The Great War 100 Years Later: The College\, t he Country\, and the World DESCRIPTION:"The Great War 100 Years Later" is a centenary commemoration of the First World War focusing on the impact of the war at Lewis &\; Clark College (formerly Albany College) and the personal experiences of M organ S. Odell\, the first President of Lewis &\; Clark (1942-1960) an d a volunteer ambulance driver on the Italian Front during the war. The e xhibition draws from a wide range of documents and artifacts highlighting various aspects of the war and its legacies. Featured items include the letters and personal effects of Sgt. Morgan S. Odell\, US Army Ambulance Section\, 1917-1919\; bulletins from Albany College\, 1916-1919\, with d etails of students and alumni serving in the war\; a first edition of Ern est Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms\; Theodore Roosevelt's The Great Adven ture signed by President Roosevelt and his second wife Edith\; the report and minutes of evidence from the parliamentary investigation into the 19 16 Easter Rising signed by Gavan Duffy\, the lawyer who defended the Iris h rebel Roger Casement at his treason trial\; French propaganda posters f rom the home front\; and military medals and insignia from over a dozen c ountries. This project is funded by a Mellon grant for faculty/student c ollaborative research. The research\, writing\, and curating was done by David Campion\, Pamplin Associate Professor of History\, Sten Eccles-Irwi n (History\, '16)\, Emma Hoch-Schneider (History and Biology\, '16)\, and Nicolas Read (International Affairs and German Studies\, '18) with assis tance from Zachariah Selley and the Watzek Library Special Collections an d Archives. The exhibition will be on display from August 2015 through J uly 2016 in the Aubrey R. Watzek Library Atrium. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: "The Great War 100 Years Later" is a ce
ntenary commemoration of the First World War focusing on the impact of th
e war at Lewis &\; Clark College (formerly Albany College) and the per
sonal experiences of Morgan S. Odell\, the first President of Lewis &\
; Clark (1942-1960) and a volunteer ambulance driver on the Italian Front
during the war. The exhibition draws from a wide range of documents and
artifacts highlighting various aspects of the war and its legacies.
Featured items include the letters and personal effects of Sgt. M
organ S. Odell\, US Army Ambulance Section\, 1917-1919\; bulletins from A
lbany College\, 1916-1919\, with details of students and alumni serving i
n the war\; a first edition of Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms\; Th
eodore Roosevelt's The Great Adventure signed by President Roosevelt and
his second wife Edith\; the report and minutes of evidence from the parli
amentary investigation into the 1916 Easter Rising signed by Gavan Duffy\
, the lawyer who defended the Irish rebel Roger Casement at his treason t
rial\; French propaganda posters from the home front\; and military medal
s and insignia from over a dozen countries.
This project is
funded by a Mellon grant for faculty/student collaborative research. The
research\, writing\, and curating was done by David Campion\, Pamplin Ass
ociate Professor of History\, Sten Eccles-Irwin (History\, '16)\, Emma Ho
ch-Schneider (History and Biology\, '16)\, and Nicolas Read (Internationa
l Affairs and German Studies\, '18) with assistance from Zachariah Selley
and the Watzek Library Special Collections and Archives.
Th
e exhibition will be on display from August 2015 through July 2016 in the
Aubrey R. Watzek Library Atrium.
\n Zachariah Selley
\n Interim Head of
Special Collections / College Archivist
\n Lewis &\; Clark Coll
ege
\n Special Collections &\; Archives
\n 503-768-7758
\n selleyz@lclark
.edu\n
Come join the History department for a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participa nts will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Part icipants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no forma l presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lc lark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop.
UID:20151020T213000Z-93545@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20151015T101304Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/93545-history-faculty-colloqui um-research-presentation LAST-MODIFIED:20151015T171800Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/28457_bernstein_2012pic.rev.1373936848.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:93545 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/28457_bernstein_2012pic.rev.1373936848.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the History department for a series of work shops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be ex pected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to ac quire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty|History|presentation|research|send-to-undergradu ate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151029T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151029T183000 LOCATION:Frank Manor House GEO:45.450219;-122.670175 SUMMARY:A Fiction Reading by John Treat UID:20151030T003000Z-89108@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150930T150319Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/89090-a-fiction-reading-by-joh n-treat CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20151005T210716Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/height/80/cro p/1/55483_treat_photo.rev.1443645522.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:89108 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/4/width/80/he ight/80/crop/1/55483_treat_photo.rev.1443645522.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:John Whittier Treat\, a native of New Haven\, joined the Yale faculty in 1999 after teaching for eighteen years at the Univers ity of Washington\, Berkeley\, Stanford and Texas. He has been Professor Emeritus at Yale since 2014. He continues to teach courses in modern Japa nese literature and criticism\, and occasionally Korean studies and LGBT studies. \; He has recently completed his first novel\, The Rise and Fall of the Yellow House and is at work on a second\, First Consonants. \; This event is co-sponsored by the departments of English\, History\, and Gender Studies. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151104T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151104T184500 LOCATION:Council Chamber\, Templeton Campus Center GEO:45.44918;-122.670969 SUMMARY:Black Lives Matter: The Black Panthers and Their Legacy UID:20151105T013000Z-97396@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20151029T140314Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/97336-black-lives-matter-the-b lack-panthers-and-their CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20151029T211304Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/56169_blm.rev.1446153178.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:97396 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/56169_blm.rev.1446153178.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join us for the second panel on Black Lives M atter as we look back to the Black Panthers to understand their legacy as a black nationalist organization. To what extent is Black Lives Matter a legacy of the Black Panthers? Join us at 5:30 at the council ch amber to hear from our panelists. Q&\;A to follow. END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151105T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151105T183000 LOCATION:Gregg Pavilion GEO:45.4506477144909;-122.671172383575 SUMMARY:Historical Project Runway DESCRIPTION:The History Department is proud to present our fourth annual Historical Project Runway! In this event\, teams of three (majors or non- majors welcome) will compete to accurately and creatively represent histo rical events through fashion. Clothing and design materials will be provi ded. Come strut your stuff historical style! \; Part 1: Design Com petition At 5:30 pm\, teams will be given a historical theme to plan the ir runway outfit (materials provided) that will later be judged by an est eemed professorial panel of judges. \;To compete in the designing com petition\, please email \;oliviadavis@lclark.edu (mailto:juliaduerst@ lclark.edu) \;with a team of 3 and submit the names of your team memb ers as well as a team name. Part 2: The Runway Show The culmination of the teams' efforts\, the runway show\, will begin at 7:00pm. If you canno t participate as a competitor\, please arrive at this time as an audience member. Teams will model their designs on the runway\, after which there will be a critique of each team's design by our panel of judges\, conclu ding with the announcement of the winning team! As the winning team\, yo u will not only win pride and a sense of good work\, but will also win a $50 Red Light Clothing Exchange gift card! \; See you there! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The History Department is proud to pres ent our fourth annual Historical Project Runway! In this event\, teams of three (majors or non-majors welcome) will compete to accurately and crea tively represent historical events through fashion. Clothing and design m aterials will be provided. Come strut your stuff historical style!
\;
Part 1: Design Competition
At 5:30 pm\, teams wi
ll be given a historical theme to plan their runway outfit (materials pro
vided) that will later be judged by an esteemed professorial panel of jud
ges. \;To compete in the designing competition\, please email \;<
a href="mailto:juliaduerst@lclark.edu" target="_blank">oliviadavis@lclark
.edu \;with a team of 3 and submit the names of your team members
as well as a team name.
Part 2: The Runway Show
The
culmination of the teams' efforts\, the runway show\, will begin at 7:00p
m. If you cannot participate as a competitor\, please arrive at this time
as an audience member. Teams will model their designs on the runway\, af
ter which there will be a critique of each team's design by our panel of
judges\, concluding with the announcement of the winning team!
As the winning team\, you will not only win pride and a sense of good
work\, but will also win a $50 Red Light Clothing Exchange gift card!
\;
See you there!
UID:20151106T013000Z-90637@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20151005T140152Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/90637-historical-project-runway CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/55551_louis_croppped.rev.1444079194.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:90637 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/55551_louis_croppped.rev.1444079194.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n The History Department is proud to present our fourth annual Historical Project Runway! In this event\, teams of three (majors or non-majors welcome) will compete to accurately and creatively represent historical events through fashion. Clothing and design material s will be provided. Team designing begins at 5:30pm. \; THE RUNWAY SHOW BEGINS AT 7:00PM. strong> Come strut your stuff historical style!\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|humanities|open to the public|send-to-undergradu ate|student event END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151111T164500 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151111T174500 LOCATION:Watzek Library Atrium GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:The Great War: 100 Years Later Guided Tour DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a guided tour of the Watzek Special Collec tions exhibition "The Great War: 100 Years Later" (https://college.lclark .edu/live/events/73896-special-collections-exhibit-the-great-war-100) by Professor David Campion and student researchers\, Emma Hoch-Schneider '16 &\; Sten Eccles-Irwin '16. With the help of a Mellon grant for facul ty/student collaboratedive research\, Emma and Sten worked with Prof. Cam pion over the summer to curate the exhibition\, which focuses on the  \;impact of the First World War on Lewis &\; Clark (Albany College at the time) and the personal wartime experiences of Morgan S. Odell\, a vol unteer ambulance driver on the Italian Front and later the first Presiden t of Lewis &\; Clark (1942-1960). \; The tour will take place on Veteran's Day (formerly Armistice Day)—Wednesday\, November 11\, at 4:4 5 pm. Please meet in the Watzek Atrium at 4:40. Light snacks will be pro vided in the Library Classroom at the end of the tour. Hope to see you t here! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join us for a guided tour of the Watzek Special Collections exhibition "The G reat War: 100 Years Later" by Professor David Campion and student res earchers\, Emma Hoch-Schneider '16 &\; Sten Eccles-Irwin '16.
With the help of a Mellon grant for faculty/student collaboratedive resea rch\, Emma and Sten worked with Prof. Campion over the summer to curate t he exhibition\, which focuses on the \;impact of the First World War on Lewis &\; Clark (Albany College at the time) and the personal warti me experiences of Morgan S. Odell\, a volunteer ambulance driver on the I talian Front and later the first President of Lewis &\; Clark (1942-19 60). \;
The tour will take place on Veteran's Day (formerly A rmistice Day)—Wednesday\, November 11\, at 4:45 pm.
Please meet in the Watzek Atrium at 4:40. Light snacks will be provided in the Libra ry Classroom at the end of the tour.
Hope to see you there!
UID:20151112T004500Z-100395@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20151109T102432Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/100395-the-great-war-100-years -later-guided-tour CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20151110T230040Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/56421_iwm-q-2756.rev.1447097249.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:100395 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/56421_iwm-q-2756.rev.1447097249.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:British soldier at Third Battle of Ypres\, 1917 . Image: Imperial War Museum (Q. 2756) X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n Please join us for a guided tour of the Watzek Special Collections exhibit\, "The Great War: 100 Years Later" by Profes sor David Campion and student researchers\, Emma Hoch-Schneider &\; St en Eccles-Irwin. \;\n
X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:exhibition|History|open to the public|scholarship|send-t o-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151119T173000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151119T183000 LOCATION:Miller Center 105 GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Panel Discussion: Refugees\, Migrants and History DESCRIPTION:According to the United Nations Refugee Agency\, the number o f refugees fleeing war or persecution exceeded fifty million in 2013\, th e highest number since the Second World War. That number has since grown. Refugee camps in places like Pakistan\, Jordan\, Lebanon\, Kenya\, and T hailand contain millions of occupants. This excludes the millions of addi tional migrants leaving behind poverty and economic despair. Controlling migration\, stopping it altogether\, and assimilating those allowed in ha ve become controversial issues in the domestic politics of countries like the United States and Australia. In Europe migration from Syria and Nort h Africa has created a policy crisis that is testing the European Union. Every day\, it seems\, migration is in the news. Please join the history faculty for a panel \;discussion that will place current patterns of migration into a larger historical context. \; We will examine how p resent-day migration and the political and social reactions compare to ea rlier examples and what we can learn from them. \; Questions from the audience are welcome.Panelists: Elliott Young\, Professor of History D avid Campion\, Pamplin Associate Professor of History Mo Healy\, Associa te Professor of HistoryModerator: Reiko Hillyer\, Assistant Professor of History X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:According to the United Nations Refugee Agency\, the number of refugees fleeing war or persecution exceeded fift y million in 2013\, the highest number since the Second World War. That n umber has since grown. Refugee camps in places like Pakistan\, Jordan\, L ebanon\, Kenya\, and Thailand contain millions of occupants. This exclude s the millions of additional migrants leaving behind poverty and economic despair. Controlling migration\, stopping it altogether\, and assimilati ng those allowed in have become controversial issues in the domestic poli tics of countries like the United States and Australia. In Europe migrati on from Syria and North Africa has created a policy crisis that is testin g the European Union. Every day\, it seems\, migration is in the news.
Please join the history faculty for a panel \;discussion that w ill place current patterns of migration into a larger historical context. \; We will examine how present-day migration and the political and s ocial reactions compare to earlier examples and what we can learn from th em. \; Questions from the audience are welcome.
Panelists:
Elliott You
ng\, Professor of History
David Campion\, Pamplin Associate Profes
sor of History
Mo Healy\, Associate Professor of History
Moderator:
Reiko Hillyer\, Assistant Professor of History
Come join the History department for a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participa nts will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Part icipants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no forma l presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lc lark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop.
UID:20151124T223000Z-93546@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20151015T102216Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/93546-history-faculty-colloqui um-research-presentations CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20151116T174307Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/55051_elliott_photo.rev.1442350751.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:93546 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/55051_elliott_photo.rev.1442350751.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE-CAPTION:Elliott Young X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the History department for a series of work shops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be ex pected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to ac quire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty|History|presentation|research|send-to-undergradu ate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151207T000000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151207T010000 LOCATION:Oregon Historical Society\, 1200 SW Park Avenue\, Portland\, OR SUMMARY:World War II: A World at War\, A State Transformed DESCRIPTION:The Oregon Historical Society presents World War II: A World at War\, A State Transformed\, an original exhibition opening 70 years fo llowing the end of World War II. Artifacts and manuscripts from the Mark Family Collection illustrate this massive conflict\, from the battlefiel ds in North Africa to the home fronts in America. Letters\, historic docu ments\, and military uniforms provide a sense of place and give visitors a lens into the many events of World War II\, including prominent battles and critical political decisions. The exhibit also focuses on Oregon\, a state transformed during the mid-twentieth century. Items drawn from th e OHS archives tells the stories that dramatically changed Oregon\, inclu ding the operation of the Kaiser shipyards\, the internment of Japanese A mericans\, and the fact that the only World War II combat casualties to o ccur in the continental U.S. were in Oregon as a result of the balloon bo mb. Featured artifacts include:Dozens of documents signed by Roosevelt\, Truman\, Stalin\, and other wartime leaders Engima Machine\, German enc ryption device Log of Japan's attack at Pearl Harbor Uniforms of Gens. Patton and Eisenhower and Col. James Doolittle Ring of the Japanese Ball oon Bomb Shrapnel from attack on Fort Stevens\, OR \; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The Oregon Historical Society presents World War II: A World at War\, A State Transformed\, an original exhib ition opening 70 years following the end of World War II.
Artifac ts and manuscripts from the Mark Family Collection illustrate this massiv e conflict\, from the battlefields in North Africa to the home fronts in America. Letters\, historic documents\, and military uniforms provide a s ense of place and give visitors a lens into the many events of World War II\, including prominent battles and critical political decisions.
The exhibit also focuses on Oregon\, a state transformed during the mid -twentieth century. Items drawn from the OHS archives tells the stories t hat dramatically changed Oregon\, including the operation of the Kaiser s hipyards\, the internment of Japanese Americans\, and the fact that the o nly World War II combat casualties to occur in the continental U.S. were in Oregon as a result of the balloon bomb.
Featured artifacts inc lude:
\;
UID:20151207T080000Z-68167@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150806T135134Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/68167-world-war-ii-a-world-at- war-a-state-transformed CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20150806T211605Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/0,0,476,476/54587_yalta.rev.1438895643.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:68167 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,0\,476\,476/54587_yalta.rev.1438895643.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:\n The Oregon Historical Society presents Wor ld War II: A World at War\, A State Transformed\, an original exhibi tion opening 70 years following the end of World War II featuring histori c documents and artifacts from the OHS archives and private collections. The exhibition runs from now through December 7.\n
END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151209T163000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20151209T180000 LOCATION:Watzek Library Atrium GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:History Senior Thesis Poster Session DESCRIPTION:Please join the students in Professors Reiko Hillyer and Susa n Glosser's history research seminars as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The research seminar is the capst one course of the history major. \; Student theses involve in-depth p rimary source research\, mastery of historical literature on a chosen sub ject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorously researched thesis that advances historical scholarship. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join the students in Professors Reiko Hillyer and Susan Glosser's history research seminars as they prese nt their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The researc h seminar is the capstone course of the history major. \; Student the ses involve in-depth primary source research\, mastery of historical lite rature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer re view. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorously researched thesis that advances historical scholarship.
UID:20151210T003000Z-83189@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20150918T105102Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/83189-history-senior-thesis-po ster-session CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/55103_history_logo.rev.1442598578.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:83189 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/55103_history_logo.rev.1442598578.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the students in Professors Reiko Hillyer and Susan Glosser's history research seminars as they present their these s at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The research seminar is t he capstone course of the history major. \; Student theses involve in -depth primary source research\, mastery of historical literature on a ch osen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. \; T he goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorously re searched thesis that advances historical scholarship. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|open to the public|research|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160127T163000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160127T173000 LOCATION:Hoffman Gallery GEO:45.45054;-122.668438 SUMMARY:Preview & Artist Talk\, Intersecciones: Havana/Portland UID:20160128T003000Z-127886@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20160127T132812Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/125505-preview-artist-talk-int ersecciones CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20160127T215649Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/57575_intersecciones.rev.1453930319.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:127886 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/57575_intersecciones.rev.1453930319.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:An opportunity to meet four of the artists who have&# 160\;traveled \;from Havana to install site-specific \;work.\n
\n Susana Pilar Delahante Matienzo
\n Elizabet Cerviño \;
\n Reynier "El Chino" N
ovo
\n Rafael Villares\n
Come join the History department for a series of workshops on faculty research in progress. \; All participa nts will be expected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Part icipants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no forma l presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lc lark.edu to acquire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop.
UID:20160225T233000Z-133741@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20160217T111539Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/133741-history-faculty-researc h-presentations-by-mo-healy LAST-MODIFIED:20160217T191539Z X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:133741 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Come join the History department for a series of work shops on faculty research in progress. \; All participants will be ex pected to read the paper prior to the workshop. \; Participants will critique and discuss the paper\, but there will be no formal presentation of the paper. \; Contact Debbie Richman at drichman@lclark.edu to ac quire a copy of the paper in advance of the workshop. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:faculty|History|research|scholarship|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160307T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20160307T180000 LOCATION:Templeton Campus Center\, Council Chamber GEO:45.44918;-122.670969 SUMMARY:53rd Annual Arthur L. Throckmorton Memorial Lecture DESCRIPTION:The Great Departure: Emigration from Eastern Europe and the M aking of the Free World Beginning in the nineteenth century millions of East Europeans departed from home in search of work or in flight from war and persecution. How did these departures shape the individuals\, famili es\, and societies left behind? And how did governments respond to the ex odus of so many workers\, citizens\, and soldiers? \;Across the rise and fall of empires and nation-states\, dictatorships and democracies\, attempts to manage mass emigration gave rise to new forms of border contr ol\, ethnic cleansing\, social protection\, colonial ambitions\, and huma nitarian activism. It also precipitated a fundamental debate about the me aning of freedom. During the Cold War\, in particular\, mobility came to be seen as a fundamental measure of freedom and human rights. Nothing sy mbolized the brutality and bankruptcy of Communist governments more than the walls and guns that imprisoned people in their own states. But the Ir on Curtain did not simply drop from the sky in 1948 or 1961. Its foundati on was laid decades earlier\, when anti-emigration activists in Eastern E urope mobilized to stop the hemorraghing loss of population to the West. While many migrants insisted that they were leaving home in search of fre edom and prosperity\, these East Europeans claimed that emigration actual ly delivered citizens to new forms of slavery. The debate about leaving h ome ultimately shaped competing views of the meaning of freedom \;its elf- one linked to individual geographic and social mobility and another centered on social solidarity and the freedom to stay home.Tara Zahra is a \;Professor of East European History at the University of Chicago\, where she is also a co-Chair of the Pozen Center for Human Rights and a member of the Center for Jewish Studies and the Center for the Study of G ender and Sexuality. Her research and teaching focus on the transnational and comparative history of modern Europe\; East Central Europe\; migrati on\, childhood and the family\, nationalism\, and European international history. \;Her most recent book\, \;The Great Departure: Mass Mi gration from Eastern Europe and the Making of the Free World will be publ ished by W.W. Norton Press in 2016. \;She is also the author of Kidna pped Souls: National Indifference and the Battle for Children in the Bohe mian Lands\, 1900-1948 (Cornell\, 2008\, paperback\, 2011) and The Lost C hildren: Reconstructing Europe's Families after World War II (Harvard\, 2 011\, paperback\, 2015). Zahra has been the recipient of several book pri zes and fellowships\, including a 2014 Macarthur Fellowship. The Thr ockmorton lecture was established in 1963 to commemorate the life and wor k of Arthur L. Throckmorton\, a professor of history at Lewis &\; Clar k who died unexpectedly in 1962. Each year the series brings a distinguis hed historian to campus to lecture and to meet with faculty and students. \; X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Tara Zahra is a \;Professor of East Europe an History at the University of Chicago\, where she is also a co-Chair of the Pozen Center for Human Rights and a member of the Center for Jewish Studies and the Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality. Her researc h and teaching focus on the transnational and comparative history of mode rn Europe\; East Central Europe\; migration\, childhood and the family\, nationalism\, and European international history. \;Her most recent book\, \;The Great Departure: Mass Migration from Eastern Europe and the Making of the Free World will be published by W.W. Norton Pr ess in 2016. \;She is also the author of Kidnapped Souls: Nationa l Indifference and the Battle for Children in the Bohemian Lands\, 1900-1 948 (Cornell\, 2008\, paperback\, 2011) and The Lost Children: R econstructing Europe's Families after World War II (Harvard\, 2011\, paperback\, 2015). Zahra has been the recipient of several book prizes a nd fellowships\, including a 2014 Macarthur Fellowship.
The T hrockmorton lecture was established in 1963 to commemorate the life and w ork of Arthur L. Throckmorton\, a professor of history at Lewis &\; Cl ark who died unexpectedly in 1962. Each year the series brings a distingu ished historian to campus to lecture and to meet with faculty and student s.
\;
Please join the History department in t he atrium of Watzek Library to celebrate the hard work of senior history majors in Professor Mo Healy's seminar as they present their final thesis projects. \; Refreshments will be provided.
UID:20160426T230000Z-140181@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20160311T100442Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/140181-history-senior-thesis-p oster-session CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/55568_history_logo.rev.1444149312.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:140181 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/55568_history_logo.rev.1444149312.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the History department in the atrium of W atzek Library to celebrate the hard work of senior history majors in Prof essor Mo Healy's seminar as they present their final thesis projects. 0\; Refreshments will be provided. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|open to the public|research|scholarship|send-to- undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161207T160000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20161207T180000 LOCATION:Watzek Library GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:History Thesis Poster Session DESCRIPTION:Please join the students in Professor Andy Bernstein's histor y research seminar on Environmental History as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The research seminar is the capstone course of the history major. \; Student theses involve in-d epth primary source research\, mastery of historical literature on a chos en subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorously rese arched thesis that advances historical scholarship. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join the students in Professor A ndy Bernstein's history research seminar on Environmental History as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The r esearch seminar is the capstone course of the history major. \; Stude nt theses involve in-depth primary source research\, mastery of historica l literature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and p eer review. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an origin al and rigorously researched thesis that advances historical scholarship.
UID:20161208T000000Z-210508@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20161118T134658Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/210508-history-thesis-poster-s ession CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/1,0,110,109/55568_history_logo.rev.1444149312.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:210508 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/1\,0\,110\,109/55568_history_logo.rev.14441493 12.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free and open to the public X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the students in Professor Andy Bernstein' s history research seminar on Environmental History as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The research semina r is the capstone course of the history major. \; Student theses invo lve in-depth primary source research\, mastery of historical literature o n a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer review. 60\; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorou sly researched thesis that advances historical scholarship. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|open to the public|scholarship|send-to-undergrad uate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170223T153000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170223T163000 LOCATION:Albany 220 GEO:45.451415;-122.668211 SUMMARY:More Messages from the Grassroots: Afro-Muslim Anti-Imperial Geog raphy and Community Activism During the War on Drugs DESCRIPTION:Please join the History department for a research talk by 201 7-2018 Postdoctoral Fellow candidate Alaina Morgan. \; The title of h er talk is\, More Messages from the Grassroots: Afro-Muslim Anti-Imperial Geography and Community Activism During the War on Drugs. On November 3 0\, 1987\, The Final Call\, the institutional newspaper of the Nation of Islam\, featured an alternative world map. \; This map reinforced a g eography in which America's imperial conquests\, and the oppression of pe ople of color worldwide\, were connected intimately with each other.  \; While Louis Farrakhan and the editors of The Final Call discussed Amer ican neo-imperialism in the Middle East\, Latin America\, and the Caribbe an\, it was the latter two which formed the basis for much of their criti ques throughout the 1980s and 1990s. \; While the United States was e ngaging in proxy wars abroad to secure resources and political influence throughout Latin America and the Caribbean during the Cold War\, it was w aging a domestic war against drugs which used race neutral language to cr iminalize the Black inner city. \; Noting that the War on Drugs had b ecome a War on Blacks\, the Nation of Islam positioned the War on Drugs a s part and parcel of the same imperial mechanism as American neo-imperial ism\, repeatedly using the language of occupation and control. \; But more significantly\, Farrakhan and his followers took action against the se imperialist forces and launched a grassroots effort to do what the gov ernment refused to do – eradicate drug use in the Black community and p romote rehabilitation. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html: Please join the History department for
a research talk by 2017-2018 Postdoctoral Fellow candidate Alaina Morgan.
\; The title of her talk is\, More Messages from the Grassroots:
Afro-Muslim Anti-Imperial Geography and Community Activism During the Wa
r on Drugs.
On November 30\, 1987\, The Final Call<
/em>\, the institutional newspaper of the Nation of Islam\, featured an a
lternative world map. \; This map reinforced a geography in which Ame
rica's imperial conquests\, and the oppression of people of color worldwi
de\, were connected intimately with each other. \; While Louis Farrak
han and the editors of The Final Call discussed American neo-imp
erialism in the Middle East\, Latin America\, and the Caribbean\, it was
the latter two which formed the basis for much of their critiques through
out the 1980s and 1990s. \; While the United States was engaging in p
roxy wars abroad to secure resources and political influence throughout L
atin America and the Caribbean during the Cold War\, it was waging a dome
stic war against drugs which used race neutral language to criminalize th
e Black inner city. \; Noting that the War on Drugs had become a War
on Blacks\, the Nation of Islam positioned the War on Drugs as part and p
arcel of the same imperial mechanism as American neo-imperialism\, repeat
edly using the language of occupation and control. \; But more signif
icantly\, Farrakhan and his followers took action against these imperiali
st forces and launched a grassroots effort to do what the government refu
sed to do – eradicate drug use in the Black community and promote rehab
ilitation.
Please join the History department for a research talk by 2017-2018 Dissertation Fellowship Candidate James Padi lioni. \; The title of his talk is\, Finding Martin in Atlanta: E ntangling Martin Luther King\, Jr​. and St. Martin de Porres at Atlanta 's Oldest Black Catholic Church.
This talk focuses on the re lation of Martin Luther King\, Jr. and Martin de Porres throughout the lo ng twentieth century at Our Lady of Lourdes\, Atlanta's oldest Catholic c ongregation serving the African-American community. Founded in 1912\, OLL is located a short walk down the street from Ebenezer Baptist Church and is today located within the Martin Luther King\, Jr. National Historic S ite. During the 1950s\, OLL installed a 7' tall statue of Martin de Porre s\, a seventeenth-century Afro-Peruvian friar whose case for sainthood cu lminated in 1962 when Pope John XXIII canonized him as the universal patr on of social justice. Members of OLL founded the St. Martin Human Relatio ns Council in 1965\, participating in anti-police brutality demonstration s following the "Bloody Sunday" incident in Selma\, AL and coordinating a n in-home dialog program to foster mutual understanding around issues of race. From a combination of archival records and ethnographic fieldwork\, Padilioni teases out the ways that congregants at OLL entangled the two Martins together in their mobilizations for social and racial justice\, a s well as the ways OLL transformed Martin Luther King\, Jr. into a "folk saint of Black History" by elaborating his memory through oral history ap ocrypha and hagiographic practices.
\;
UID:20170316T223000Z-226220@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20170310T135621Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/226220-research-talk-by-histor y-dissertation-fellowship CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20170314T162930Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/65622_looking_up_to_martin_copy.rev.1489182936.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:226220 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/65622_looking_up_to_martin_copy.rev.1489182936.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the History department for a research tal k by 2017-2018 Dissertation Fellowship Candidate James Padilioni. \; The title of his talk is\, Finding Martin in Atlanta: Entangling Mart in Luther King\, Jr​. and St. Martin de Porres at Atlanta's Oldest Blac k Catholic Church. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|research|scholarship|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170316T190000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170316T200000 LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 105 GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Historical Project Runway DESCRIPTION:The History Department is proud to present our fifth annual H istorical Project Runway! In this event\, teams of three (majors or non-m ajors welcome) will compete to accurately and creatively represent histor ical events through fashion. Clothing and design materials will be provid ed. Come strut your stuff historical style! \; Part 1: Design Comp etition At 5:30 pm\, teams will be given a historical theme to plan thei r runway outfit (materials provided) that will later be judged by an este emed professorial panel of judges. \;To compete in the designing comp etition\, please email ebiddulph@lclark.edu with a team of 3 and submit t he names of your team members as well as a team name. Part 2: The Runway Show The culmination of the teams' efforts\, the runway show\, will beg in at 7:00pm. If you cannot participate as a competitor\, please arrive a t this time as an audience member. Teams will model their designs on the runway\, after which there will be a critique of each team's design by ou r panel of judges\, concluding with the announcement of the winning team! As the winning team\, you will not only win pride and a sense of good w ork\, but will also win a $50 Red Light Clothing Exchange gift card!  60\; Refreshments will be provided! \; See you there! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:The History Department is proud to pres ent our fifth annual Historical Project Runway! In this event\, teams of three (majors or non-majors welcome) will compete to accurately and creat ively represent historical events through fashion. Clothing and design ma terials will be provided. Come strut your stuff historical style!
\;
Part 1: Design Competition
At 5:30 pm\, teams wil
l be given a historical theme to plan their runway outfit (materials prov
ided) that will later be judged by an esteemed professorial panel of judg
es. \;To compete in the designing competition\, please email ebiddulph@lclark.edu with a tea
m of 3 and submit the names of your team members as well as a team name.<
br />
Part 2: The Runway Show
The culmination of the teams'
efforts\, the runway show\, will begin at 7:00pm. If you cannot particip
ate as a competitor\, please arrive at this time as an audience member. T
eams will model their designs on the runway\, after which there will be a
critique of each team's design by our panel of judges\, concluding with
the announcement of the winning team!
As the winning team\,
you will not only win pride and a sense of good work\, but will also win
a $50 Red Light Clothing Exchange gift card!
\;
Ref reshments will be provided! \; See you there!
UID:20170317T020000Z-223893@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20170216T105157Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/223893-historical-project-runway CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/65151_louis_croppped.rev.1487271163.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:223893 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/65151_louis_croppped.rev.1487271163.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:The History Department is proud to present our fifth annual Historical Project Runway! In this event\, teams of three (majors or non-majors welcome) will compete to accurately and creatively represen t historical events through fashion. Clothing and design materials will b e provided. Team designing begins at 5:30pm. \; THE RUNWAY SH OW BEGINS AT 7:00PM. Come strut your stuff historical style! X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|open to the public|send-to-undergraduate|student event END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170406T160000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170406T170000 LOCATION:Miller Hall\, Room 105 GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:Life Behind Barbed Wires: A First-Hand Account of the Wartime Inc arceration of Japanese Americans DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a talk by Lewis and Clark alumnus George N akata (class of '57) about what it was like to be imprisoned as a Japanes e American during World War II. Mr. Nakata will also speak about the lega cy of the Japanese American incarceration and what it means to us today. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join us for a talk by Lewis and Clark alumnus George Nakata (class of '57) about what it was like to be i mprisoned as a Japanese American during World War II. Mr. Nakata will als o speak about the legacy of the Japanese American incarceration and what it means to us today.
UID:20170406T230000Z-224552@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20170302T101633Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/224552-life-behind-barbed-wire s-a-first-hand-account-of CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20170316T213936Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/0,55,427,482/65445_george_nakata2.rev.1488478850.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:224552 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/0\,55\,427\,482/65445_george_nakata2.rev.14884 78850.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join us for a talk by Lewis and Clark alumnus George Nakata (class of '57) about what it was like to be imprisoned as a Japanese American during World War II. Mr. Nakata will also speak about the legacy of the Japanese American incarceration and what it means to us today. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:alumni|History|humanities|open to the public|send-to-und ergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170425T160000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20170425T173000 LOCATION:Watzek Library GEO:45.450919;-122.669177 SUMMARY:History Senior Thesis Poster Session DESCRIPTION:Please join the students in Professor Elliott Young's history research seminar on Migration and Diaspora in the Americas as they prese nt their theses at the end-of-semester poster session. \; The researc h seminar is the capstone course of the history major. \; Student the ses involve in-depth primary source research\, mastery of historical lite rature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revision\, and peer re view. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion of an original and rigorously researched thesis that advances historical scholarship. X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Please join the students in Professor E lliott Young's history research seminar on Migration and Diaspora in the Americas as they present their theses at the end-of-semester pos ter session. \; The research seminar is the capstone course of the hi story major. \; Student theses involve in-depth primary source resear ch\, mastery of historical literature on a chosen subject\, and intense e diting\, revision\, and peer review. \; The goal of the seminar is th e completion of an original and rigorously researched thesis that advance s historical scholarship.
UID:20170425T230000Z-225569@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20170307T101725Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/225569-history-senior-thesis-p oster-session CATEGORIES:Open to the Public LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/src_region/172,0,936,764/65521_immigration.rev.1488910564.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:225569 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/src_region/172\,0\,936\,764/65521_immigration.rev.1488910 564.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Please join the students in Professor Elliott Young's history research seminar on Migration and Diaspora in the Americas em> as they present their theses at the end-of-semester poster session.&# 160\; The research seminar is the capstone course of the history major.&# 160\; Student theses involve in-depth primary source research\, mastery o f historical literature on a chosen subject\, and intense editing\, revis ion\, and peer review. \; The goal of the seminar is the completion o f an original and rigorously researched thesis that advances historical s cholarship. X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:exhibition|History|research|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171101T170000 DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20171101T180000 LOCATION:Miller Hall\, 4th floor lobby GEO:45.450858;-122.668265 SUMMARY:History Department Meet Your Major DESCRIPTION:Join the History Department on the fourth floor of Miller for Meet Your Major! \; Hear from faculty members and current majors abo ut what it means to study history at Lewis &\; Clark. \; Pizza wil l be provided\, so don't be late! X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:Join the History Department on the four th floor of Miller for Meet Your Major! \; Hear from faculty members and current majors about what it means to study history at Lewis &\; C lark. \; Pizza will be provided\, so don't be late!
UID:20171102T000000Z-260583@college.lclark.edu DTSTAMP:20170920T120535Z URL:https://college.lclark.edu/live/events/260583-history-department-meet -your-major LAST-MODIFIED:20201010T230157Z ATTACH:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/height/80/cr op/1/68281_hlc.rev.1505854322.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-TYPE:events X-LIVEWHALE-ID:260583 X-LIVEWHALE-TIMEZONE:America/Los_Angeles X-LIVEWHALE-IMAGE:https://college.lclark.edu/live/image/gid/73/width/80/h eight/80/crop/1/68281_hlc.rev.1505854322.jpg X-LIVEWHALE-COST:Free X-LIVEWHALE-SUMMARY:Join the History Department on the fourth floor of Mi ller for Meet Your Major! \; Hear from faculty members and current ma jors about what it means to study history at Lewis &\; Clark. \; P izza will be provided\, so don't be late! X-LIVEWHALE-TAGS:History|send-to-undergraduate END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR