Features

Book Season: Washington State love its literature – In a report released last summer, the National Endowment for the Arts warned that literary reading has declined over the last 20 years. Scary stuff, huh? So we did our own informal survey of faculty, students, and alums. Their response? Read on! by Hannelore Sudermann

Shock Physics: Power, Pressure, and People – After the Soviet Union tested its first nuclear device, the U.S. determined that staying ahead in the arms race would require the best scientists and the best weapons. A new federal funding model emerged, channeling money into universities around the country for research and the training of the next generation of national scientists. By the late 1950s, WSU had started on shock-wave research. by Hannelore Sudermann

Bear Bones: A Murder Mystery – It must have been easy to drop the body into this part of Pullman, a section that sees so little traffic. The old county road was research land where hardly anyone but the groundskeepers ventured. But somebody had an ugly secret to hide. by Hannelore Sudermann

Panoramas

Leading the rebirth of the blast zone

University buys Adams Mall

All’s well that ends well

A Nobel laureate promotes a “new Africa”

A private matter

Happy 25th, KZUU!

A building full of answers

Jell-O brains and boa constrictors draw kids to science

Gig Harbor: Laureen Lund markets the town she loves

Savor the flavor

WEB EXCLUSIVE – Story: Birth, Death & Architecture – Architecture professor Paul Hirzel wanted to push his students out of their mindsets. So he asked them to design a single building for both the beginning and the end of life: a funeral home/birthing center.

Departments

FIELD NOTES: In Search of the Wild Chickpea

FOOD AND FORAGE: Asparagus

SEASONS|SPORTS: Jim McKean makes poetry of a powerful time

WEB EXCLUSIVE – Story: One-on-one: A chapter from Home Stand – A chapter from Home Stand: Growing Up in Sports, a memoir by James McKean ’68, ’74 about growing up in the Pacific Northwest in the late ’50s and early ’60s.

Tracking

What I’ve learned since college: King County sheriff Sue Rahr

This man might save your life—or teach your class

Pharmacist uses chemistry to duplicate human hormones

Alumni Achievement Awards

The hospital doctor

Ruth Bennett puts a crimp in Christine Gregoire’s majority

CLASS NOTES

IN MEMORIAM

Books, etc.

Genes and DNA: A Beginner’s Guide to Genetics and Its Applications

False Roads to Manhood

In Praise of Fertile Land

Dancing to the Concertina’s Tune: A Prison Teacher’s Memoir

Till Hell Freezes Over

 

Cover: After 54 years of diligence, “Nature Boy” (more correctly, The Reader) takes a break from the west face of Holland Library for some beach and reading time with Seattle’s Hammering Man.” (Illustration by David Wheeler) Read story “Book Season: Washington State love its literature.”