Oregon Quarterly Summer 2015

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Oregon Q U A R T E R LY

SUMMER 2015

THE

MAGAZINE

OF

THE

UNIVERSITY

OF

OREGON


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EDITOR’S NOTE

dialogue

T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S IT Y O F O R E G O N S P R I N G 2 01 5 • VO LU M E 9 4 N U M B E R 3

EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Ann Wiens awiens@uoregon.edu | 541-346-5048 MANAGING EDITOR Jonathan Graham jgraham@uoregon.edu | 541-346-5047 SENIOR WRITER AND EDITOR Rosemary Camozzi rcamozzi@uoregon.edu | 541-346-3606 ART DIRECTOR JoDee Stringham

jodees@uoregon.edu | 541-346-1593

ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Susan Thelen

sthelen@uoregon.edu | 541-346-5046

PUBLISHING ADMINISTRATOR Shelly Cooper

scooper@uoregon.edu | 541-346-5045

CONTRIBUTING EDITOR

Mindy Moreland

PROOFREADERS Sharleen Nelson, Scott Skelton INTERN Chloe Huckins EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD

Mark Blaine, Betsy Boyd, Kathi O’Neil Dordevic, Kathleen Holt, Alexandra Lyons, Kenneth O’Connell, Holly Simons, Mike Thoele WEBSITE OregonQuarterly.com MAILING ADDRESS

5228 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon 97403-5228 Phone 541-346-5045 EDITORIAL 541-346-5047 ADVERTISING SALES Heather Back, SagaCity Media hback@sagacitymedia.com | 971-200-7024 E-MAIL quarterly@uoregon.edu OREGON QUARTERLY is published by the UO in February, May, August, and November and distributed free to alumni. Printed in the USA on recycled paper. © 2015 University of Oregon. All rights reserved. Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the UO administration. CHANGE OF ADDRESS

Alumni Records, 1204 University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403-1204 541-302-0336, alumrec@uoregon.edu ADMINISTRATION

Interim President Scott Coltrane, Acting Senior Vice President and Provost Frances Bronet, Vice President for University Advancement Michael Andreasen, Vice President for Enrollment Management Roger Thompson, Vice President for Finance and Administration Jamie Moffitt, Vice President for Institutional Equity and Inclusion Yvette Marie Alex-Assensoh; Vice President for Student Life Robin Holmes, Interim Vice President for Research Brad Shelton, Associate Vice President for Advancement and Executive Director of the UO Alumni Association Paul Clifford, Associate Vice President for Communications, Marketing, and Brand Management Tim Clevenger UO INFORMATION 541-346-1000

The University of Oregon is an equal-opportunity, affirmative-action institution committed to cultural diversity and compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. This publication will be made available in accessible formats upon request: 541-346-5048. ILLUSTRATION BY ANN WIENS

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contents I think if we were all like Arun,

DEPARTMENTS

DIALOGUE 1

if we all listened the way he

1 Editor’s Note 4

Letters

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does, this world would have a lot fewer problems.

INTRO 9

That peace thing would happen

10 Campus News

in no time.

12 Innocence, Lost and Found

—EMILY CARPENTER, BA ’14

18 Deep Research

28

22 Excerpt: Night Shift 24 Just Dave 27 Hollywood Ducks 28 Profile: Jeff Hansen, BA ’93 29 Bookmarks 30 The Best . . .

OLD OREGON 49 50 Skipping Stones as a Steppingstone 52 Natural Sounds 54 Class Notes 64 Duck Tale

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ON THE COVER: “Dog Running” (2012) by Rick Bartow, part of a major exhibition now on display at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. Read more beginning on page 32. Image above and on the cover courtesy of the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art.

FAR LEFT: PHOTOGRAPH BY INDRID PAPÉ-SHELDON; ABOVE: UO LIBRARIES—SPECIAL COLLECTIONS AND UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES


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The Magazine of the University of Oregon Summer 2015 Vol. 94 No. 4

OQ ONLINE OregonQuarterly.com

WEBSITE EXCLUSIVE Enjoy great nonfiction writing by winners and finalists in our annual essay contest, including “155 Days” by student category first-place winner Nysia Trejo. TALK TO US Comment on stories and share your favorites with others via e-mail and social media.

FEATURES

32

THE MANY WORLDS OF RICK BARTOW Exploring the life and work of an acclaimed Native American artist BY BOB KEEFER

36

12 KEYS TO 6 CASES

Inside Dave Frohnmayer’s Supreme Court victories BY JOHN FROHNMAYER, JD ’72

40

THE GREAT PANDEMIC

Prince Lucien Campbell, the UO, and the Spanish Flu

MORE TO LOVE See additional materials—including video and photo galleries— related to stories in the print edition, and read additional stories not found in the pages of this publication. LEARN MORE Read a little more about the people who create Oregon Quarterly and learn about our approach to covering the university and its alumni.

BY KRISTINE DEACON, BA ’79, MS ’92

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WATER, WATER, EVERYWHERE

JOIN IN Submit letters, class notes, and photos for our “Ducks Afield” section.

The winner of the 2015 Northwest Perspectives Essay Contest BY KRISTIANNE HUNSTBERGER

ILLUSTRATION BY IRENE RINALDI

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dialogue

LETTERS

50 Years Later

Confronting Sexual Assault

Returning to campus for the 50th reunion was joyful and insightful. I didn’t recognize any of those old, gray-haired, deaf people who were inducted into the Order of the Emerald, but I did meet people I never knew in college. I toured the campus with Katy George, BA ’13, who was also a journalism school grad. She waited outside the library while I ordered a copy of my 1964 journalism thesis, which was bound in the archives of the library. It was typed on a portable Smith Corona typewriter: 40 pages long, not too many mistakes, and fairly readable for a 21-year-old, second-generation Oregonian. Of course, I had to attend a football game. My friend Carolyn is Hawaiian and I was looking forward to seeing her Hawaiian homeboy, quarterback Marcus Mariotta, BS ’14. When “I’m Going Home to Oregon” rang through Autzen Stadium, I cried. The sunset over Autzen was Oregon as I remembered it, pink and orange with the silhouettes of pine trees in the foreground. What a place of profound memories, hard times, lost love, golden opportunities, and enduring beauty. Rosemary Eismann, BS ’64 Modesto, California

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The article titled “It’s On Us” (Spring 2015) proves far more important and timely a read than anything, at this point in our history. College campuses, the UO included, are under intense scrutiny regarding the safety of their student populations. I find it hard to believe, after my years of attending University of Oregon sociology and women’s studies courses, that this is not front-cover worthy. In fact, the entire publication could be dedicated to this tragic and challenging social issue. Susan Williamson, BS ’91 Eugene

What the University of Oregon is dealing with are three societal issues that are not new: lack of moral example taught by parents, alcohol abuse, and immature brains, especially in males from age 18 to 25. I’m not putting all the blame for sexual assault on young men. Getting stupid drunk and thinking that the young stud at the party wants you to go to his room to see his . . . toothpick sculpture . . . is NOT acting responsibly. Alcohol abuse PHOTOGRAPH: CC—GARY NISSEN


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dialogue

LETTERS

is at the bottom of rape and a myriad of our societal woes. Alcohol doesn’t have to be banned, but people must be educated about the very real consequences of its abuse. It’s really too bad our universities are expected to take up this role. Good luck. I hope all your committees, task forces, and awareness classes have a positive impact. Annette Hepner, BFA ’00, MFA ’02 Eugene

On the Right Track?

Well . . . maybe I was wrong. My experience at the UO was a wonderful one, but it wasn’t necessarily an environment that encouraged open dialogue and diversity of opinion, especially when it comes to political views. I cringe whenever I hear about commencement speakers shouted down mid-speech, or not even allowed to speak because of political incorrectness or a political view that’s not obviously liberal or left-leaning. After reading “Red, Right, and New,” (Spring 2015), I have new hope that all points of view can be heard on my campus. Mark Patterson, BS ’76 Seattle, Washington

I was taken aback by the comment in the latest Oregon Quarterly from Bret Jacobson, BS ’03, who said his work was “pushing back against the most radical of activists,” including animal rights groups, community organizers, and labor unions. What? He calls these “radical”? Wow. I find that shockingly ridiculous. ELF and Greenpeace maybe, even PETA, but not these established, mainstream organizations. Labor unions, radical? Laughable. Carole Parkinson, BS ’72 Portland, Oregon

The New Look

I love the new look of Oregon Quarterly and especially the recent issue (Spring 2015). The older version was “so yesterday” and the new version reflects an updated image of the University of Oregon. I also like the updated online version of the Daily Emerald and the university website. What I don’t like is the “IF” campaign, which I think is atrocious and should be dumped. Michael P. Richards, BA ’66 Los Angeles, California

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It’s Time to Give Back

The years 1949–53 had to be the best years to be a student at the UO. It was the time of the new Erb Memorial Union, the Oregon Daily Emerald housed in a Quonset hut, and the Pigger’s Guide, a social protocol for attending football games at Hayward Field. Inspirational professors coupled with stimulating courses highlighted the time, but there was something else: the state of Oregon was strongly committed to higher education and the financial support of students. Upon graduation, many of us gave back to the university, often in the form of scholarships. A Google trip to the university today reveals a vast array of activities and excellence in academics and athletics, but there is an exception: state support for higher education has reached new lows. Today’s in-state student (2013–14) paid $9,918 in tuition and fees. My annual cost in 1950: $165. Yes, some of the increase is due to inflation, but the main reason for the difference is that the state paid 70 percent of the education costs in the early 1950s. The figure today is about 5 percent. Another indicator? Forty-nine percent of the 2013 graduates took out loans, with an average indebtedness of $24,540. This makes a mighty case for the state and the UO to help finance quality education for students. But in the current void we—a whole bunch of us—need to step up and give back. Clyde Fahlman, BS ’53 Portland, Oregon

We want to hear from you.

Please submit your letters at OregonQuarterly. com, to quarterly@uoregon.edu, or by mail to Editor, Oregon Quarterly, 5228 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-5228. You may also post comments online at OregonQuarterly.com. Published letters may be edited for brevity, clarity, and style.

Correction In the Spring 2015 issue, we misidentified Via magazine as a publication of the School of Architecture and Allied Arts. It is actually published by the American Automobile Association.


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10 Campus News 12 Innocence, Lost and Found 18 Deep Research 24 Just Dave

intro

No Spring Break These wheelbarrows won’t be resting for long. Jane Brubaker, BLArch ’93, MLA ’95, of facilities services, reports that the grounds crew plants thousands of flowers and hundreds of bushes each May, with help from student and staff volunteers on University Day (May 21 this year).

PHOTOGRAPH BY LORI HOWARD

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CAMPUS NEWS

UO’s Next President

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ichael H. Schill, a University of Incoming president Chicago dean and law professor, Michael Shill was introduced to campus will become the 18th president of the on April 14. University of Oregon following his unanimous selection by the UO Board of Trustees. Schill rose to the top of a competitive pool of applicants and was one of four finalists recommended by the 14-member search committee, which was chaired by Trustee Connie Ballmer, BS ’84. Currently dean and Harry N. Wyatt professor of law at the University of Chicago Law School, Schill will take office on July 1. “I think Mike Schill can be a truly transformational leader for the university,” says Chuck Lillis, PhD ’72, chair of the UO Board of Trustees. “This is not a person who is interested in us being average at anything. He has high academic standards. This could be a really remarkable point in our history.” “We received tremendous input from the campus community on what it was looking for in our next president,” Ballmer says, “and we are confident that Mike embodies the skills, traits, and qualities that the UO’s faculty, students, staff, alumni, and stakeholders wanted. Throughout the search, I was impressed with his curiosity and creativity. He will bring exactly the right type of collaborative but tough leadership necessary to advance the UO’s priorities and its public mission.” Prior to joining the University of Chicago in 2010, Schill served as dean of the UCLA School of Law from 2004 to 2009. His other faculty appointments include tenured positions as professor of law and urban planning at New York University and professor of law and real estate at the University of Pennsylvania. A nationally recognized expert in property, real estate, and housing law and policy, Schill is the author or coauthor of three books and more than 40 scholarly articles. His casebook, Property, coauthored with James Krier and Greg Alexander, is widely used in American law schools. In addition to being the university’s president, Schill also will hold a tenured faculty position in the UO School of Law.

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TrackTown to the World

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he UO’s Hayward Field will host the IAAF World Championships in track and field in 2021. This is the first time the international competition will be held on US soil. “We are thrilled to be able to welcome the world in 2021,” says Vin Lananna, UO associate athletic director and TrackTown USA president.”We thank the IAAF for their decision and the people of Oregon

Masters of Innovation

T

he next generation of sports product gurus can soon enroll in the UO’s new master’s degree program in Sports Product Management, based in Portland. Students will have access to the White Stag Innovation Lab, a product-making space with specialized equipment to design, make, and test prototype sports footwear, apparel, and equipment. A planned Retail Innovation Store will give students practical experience in retail design, management, and marketing. Graduates will be prepared for careers in product line management, merchandising, product development, brand management, sustainable supply chain management, and more. “This program will give our students direct connections to top talent in the industry. Many of our instructors are leaders and innovators in the sports product industry,” says Ellen Schmidt-Devlin, director of the Sports Product Management Program and a 30-year veteran of the industry. MICHAEL SCHILL: CHARLIE LITCHFIELD


Making Water Safer

U

niversity of Oregon geologist Qusheng Jin initially labeled his theory “A Wild Hypothesis.” Now his study of arsenic cycling in a southern Willamette Valley aquifer is splashing with potential significance for arsenic-compromised aquifers around the world. In the journal Nature Geoscience, Jin’s team reports on a bacterial process that turns toxic inorganic arsenic into organic forms that are considered less dangerous. Jin’s conclusion now is that organic arsenic should be monitored. “No one has touched on the link between arsenic on the surface and in groundwater,” says Jin. “Traditionally, the presence of the organic form in groundwater has been ignored. The focus has always been on inorganic forms.” That approach, Jin says, oversimplifies the view on arsenic levels and overlooks how human activities, including pumping and irrigation, or environmental factors such as heavy rain or drought, may influence organic forms.

Hayward Field for their unwavering sup(above) was also port.” Almost 2,000 comthe site of the 2012 petitors from 213 countries Olympic Trials are expected to compete in Eugene, making it one of the largest sporting events in the world that year, and the largest meet ever held at Hayward Field. In 2016, the UO will host the track and field Olympic Trials.

Walth

Tobar

PULITZER PAIR Two Pulitzer Prizewinning journalists have joined the faculty of the School of Journalism and Communication. Brent Walth, managing editor for news at Willamette Week, won the prize in 2001 as a member of a reporting team at the Oregonian. Héctor Tobar, who has taught at the UO as a visiting professor for the last year, earned his award in 1992 while writing for the Los

The UO’s facility in Portland. HAYWARD FIELD: JACK LIU

Angeles Times.

History Retooled

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small stone tool found at a rock shelter site near Riley, Oregon, may be evidence of one the oldest human occupations in the western United States. A team from the UO and the Bureau of Land Management discovered the orange agate tool during a dig at Rimrock Draw Rockshelter in southeastern Oregon in September 2012. They found the tool beneath a layer of ash from a Mount St. Helens eruption that occurred 15,800 years ago. The discovery suggests that the ancient inhabitants who used the tool predated the Clovis culture—long regarded as the oldest cultural tradition in the Americas—by thousands of years. In 2008, research by UO archaeologist Dennis Jenkins revealed a human occupation at Oregon’s Paisley Caves that predated Clovis by 1,000 years. The agate tool has been undergoing various tests and recently came up positive for bison blood residue. T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

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INTERNSHIPS

Innocence, Lost and Found

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A summer internship with the Oregon Innocence Project was a revelation for political science major Alex Deitz. ollege internships generally offer good work experience, but in the best of cases, they are truly transformative. For Alexandria (Alex) Deitz, class of ’15, interning last summer with the Oregon Innocence Project radically changed her belief system. “I am now anti-death penalty,” she says. “Prior to my internship, I believed that the courts were much more effective and accurate. But now that I have seen the many issues people face within the justice system, I do not believe that the death penalty achieves its mission in reaffirming the nation’s moral standards.” The Oregon Innocence Project (OIP), a Portland-based nonprofit dedicated to exonerating wrongfully convicted prisoners, is part of a national network of innocence projects staffed

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primarily by volunteer lawyers and law students. Since the first project was launched in 1989 at the Cardozo School of Law in New York City, more than 1,500 people in the United States have been exonerated, although this is considered to be a small percentage of the innocent people still in prison. “These people have no one on their side,” Deitz says. “They hear about the Innocence Project and it’s a small glimmer of hope.” It is widely estimated that the rate of wrongful convictions among violent felonies may be as high as 4 percent. “There are both statistically and anecdotally too many people in prison who were wrongly convicted,” says UO associate professor of geography Shaul Cohen, Carnegie Council Global Ethics Fellow and chair of the steering committee for the UO’s Inside-Out Prison Exchange program. “We need to make sure they have proper advocacy and are not forgotten. It’s a huge moral and ethical obligation on society to attend to those cases.” PHOTOGRAPH BY STEVE SMITH


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intro

INTERNSHIPS

groundwork during which the staff decides if a case will make it to the next level. “We are looking seriously at a handful of cases,” Kaplan says, “but we haven’t officially taken any yet.” After extensive research to determine overwhelming proof of innocence, attorneys use hard evidence to build their case, possibly including DNA; cyberanalysis; paint-chip analysis; bullet, tool, and tire marks; or footprints. Cases may be as many as 20 years old, and when reinvestigating

214-02

The OIP, launched in April 2014, is a project of the nonprofit Oregon Justice Resource Center. The project began taking requests for legal assistance this past fall and has received “dozens and dozens” of requests from prisoners, says Aliza Kaplan, OIP cofounder and associate professor of law at Lewis and Clark College. Each request starts with a letter, e-mail, or phone call from a prisoner. After that, the inmate fills out a 30-page questionnaire. Then comes the

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them, OIP members look for problems such as eyewitness misidentification, faulty or invalid forensic science, false confessions, bad lawyering, and government misconduct. “So many wrongful convictions are built on emotional pleas by prosecutors who just want to get someone off the street,” Deitz says. “But just because the people had done crimes in the past or weren’t model citizens, that doesn’t mean they should be in jail for a crime they didn’t commit.” Deitz, a Dean’s Access Scholarship recipient who will graduate from the UO after just three years, describes herself as a “nerd” who loves to listen to Supreme Court oral arguments. While at the UO, she tutored student athletes in business, economics, and math; traveled to Russia on an exchange program; and interned with the OIP. “I don’t like to be bored,” she says, without a trace of irony. A political science major, she also received the prestigious Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship—a highly competitive Department of State scholarship—which enabled her to travel to Russia, where she attended political science classes at Saint Petersburg State University. “We had amazing debates with Russian political science students,” she says. “It broke down so many stereotypes.” Her interest in the OIP began when she participated in the December 2013 Final Mile March, a repeat of the last mile of the 700-plus-mile Innocence March (from San Diego to the state capitol in Sacramento), which was organized by three lawyers from the California Innocence Project to raise awareness of 12 wrongly convicted prisoners. Deitz was amazed and changed by the experience. “There were moments throughout the march where I would listen to a friend or family member talk about the person they know and love being incarcerated for crimes they didn’t commit,” she says. “The weight in their voices made me realize how invaluable the Innocence Project is to so many families.” In typical fashion, Deitz didn’t just march the final mile, absorb the moment, and go home. She took action. Having heard that Oregon, one of the last states in the union to create an Innocence Project, was finally getting one started, she called the program’s founders and said she wanted to help. She was one of the OIP’s first interns and the only one who wasn’t a law student. The work wasn’t glamorous. “To be honest, I did a lot of typing,” she says. “But as I listened to Bobbin (S. Bobbin Singh, OIP executive director) and Professor Kaplan talk about the


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INTERNSHIPS

cases, I learned about the process. I got to see the brains behind the organization and how decisions were made.” And during those two months, something happened. “I will look at law completely differently,” says Deitz, who plans to study constitutional law and eventually enter politics. “I classify as a Republican, but being there opened my mind to the biases our judicial system holds—to problems that most people turn a blind eye to. “Everyone who enters the courtroom comes in with biases they don’t even see in themselves,” she says. “Then, huge decisions are made that impact someone’s entire life. We

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intro

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I do not believe that the death penalty achieves its mission in reaffirming the nation’s moral standards.

need to spread the word about how unreliable eyewitness testimony is—how your mind plays tricks on you. We need to show people there are true issues we need to fix.” Kaplan says she loves having student interns involved with the work. “They look at the facts, the cases, the stories with such fresh eyes,” she says. “My students have taught me so much, on purpose or by accident. They say, ‘What about this?’ and I say, ‘Go research that.’ Smart, committed students are such a benefit.” As far as Deitz is concerned, Kaplan can’t say enough good things. “She’s a star,” she says, “a real go-getter. She is incredibly interested and eager to understand the issues and learn about the criminal justice system.” Deitz was equally inspired by the OIP directors. “It’s amazing to see their passion,” she says, “helping people they’ve never met and have no reason to be helping. It restores your faith in humanity.” The California 12, Deitz notes, has now become the California 11, with one wrongly convicted prisoner set free. “That might not seem like much,” she says, “ but it’s an entire life, an entire family, that’s affected. “These are real issues,” she adds. “It’s not just a bunch of kooky liberals trying to get people out of jail.” ROSEMARY HOWE CAMOZZI, BA ’96



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RESEARCH

Deep Research

Doug Toomey and Emilie Hooft, UO geophysicists, team up to explore the underpinnings of the planet.

M

ost of us spend our lives drifting along on the Earth’s continental plates, giving little thought to the mysteries that lie below. Geophysicists are different. They want to understand the underworld: our planet’s ever-shifting tectonic plates, deep pockets of magma, and stress-relieving earthquakes. Show them a No. 2 pencil and it reminds them of a fault line that will flex and flex and flex—and then . . . snap. Pick up a baseball, and in the stitching that encircles it, they see the patterns of our mid-ocean ridge system. Always, they want to know how and why. Why is the Cascadia Subduction Zone so quiet? How big is the magma pocket under central Oregon’s Newberry Caldera? What is the structure of the Aegean Sea’s Santorini volcano?

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And increasingly: Why doesn’t the West Coast have an Earthquake Early Warning System? UO geophysicists (and husband-and-wife team) Doug Toomey and Emilie Hooft are key players in the search to understand volcanic processes, plate tectonics, and yes, that giant earthquake that is forecast to wreak havoc on the Northwest coast. You’ve seen the news. In what is known as the Cascadia Subduction Zone, ranging from northern California’s Cape Mendocino to Vancouver, British Columbia, three plates— the Gorda, Juan de Fuca, and Explorer—are slowly sliding under the North American plate. But they are not grinding and slipping and letting off steam as they subduct. The fault line is locked, eerily quiet relative to other subduction zones, and building up a lot of stress. Of the four corners of the Pacific, ours is the only corner where there hasn’t been a huge earthquake—magnitude 9 or PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVE DUBOIS


the seismometers. Many of the greater—in the last decade. The last Technicians prepare to launch an voy a ge s i nc lude d ge ophy sone happened here in 1700; historics and postdoctoral students, ically, the interval between events ocean-bottom seismometer during giving them valuable research has been observed to vary from 200 rough seas on a experience. Preliminary results to 800 years (a 1 in 300 possibility research expedition for the Cascadia are being released and more are each year, according to Toomey). A Initiative. expected after the last instrudestructive tsunami will likely follow, hitting the Oregon and Washington coasts ments are picked up this fall. “Seismic tomography is like a CAT scan for the within 20 minutes. The disaster is expected to cause financial losses of at least $60 billion as Earth,” Toomey says. “We can measure the structure of the Cascadia Subduction Zone and comwell as loss of more than 10,000 lives. To help prepare for the Big One, Toomey and pare this to surface geology, uplift rates, and the a team of scientists (which includes Hooft as well distribution of earthquakes and their focal mechas others from universities and research insti- anisms” (how the Earth deforms and breaks). As the research has progressed, Toomey has tutes throughout the US) have put together the become an increasingly vocal advocate for a National Science Foundation–funded Cascadia West Coast Earthquake Early Warning System Initiative, a four-year project that uses an array that has been developed by the University of of 70 ocean-bottom seismometers (instruments that measure seismic waves created by ground California at Berkeley, the California Institute motion) deployed at more than 250 sea-floor sites of Technology, the University of Washington, the US Geological Survey (USGS), and the to monitor the Juan de Fuca plate’s movement. The team has conducted marine expeditions University of Oregon. The system will give advance warning of six times each year for the past four years, strong shaking—after an earthquake has been during which they installed and retrieved PHOTOGRAPH BY EMILIE HOOFT

detected but before the shaking arrives—providing minutes of warning for earthquakes on the coast (three to five minutes for Portland and Seattle, respectively, if the earthquake begins in northern California) and up to 30 seconds of warning for large earthquakes near Puget Sound and Portland. That might not sound like much, but in the best case, it would allow time to take such measures as evacuating schools, halting trains, shutting off machinery, stopping sensitive surgeries, and issuing tsunami warnings. So Toomey has a new and urgent role: lobbyist. He has traveled to both the state and federal legislatures to advocate for the system, which will cost $16.5 million a year to operate. Former Oregon governor John Kitzhaber allocated $670,000 to buy 15 high-quality seismometers, and Congressman Peter DeFazio is “a real champion of earthquake early warning,” Toomey says, noting that the federal government has put up $5 million. But more money is needed to set up and run the network.

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RESEARCH

THE ART OF SUBDUCTION

80,000

influential Oregonians listen to KLCC. Do they know your business? Be an underwriter. With signals from Corvallis to Roseburg, along the Oregon Coast, and in Central Oregon, KLCC is the most powerful public radio signal in Oregon. And, 85% of public radio listeners have taken a direct action as a result of underwriting.*

Talk to them. They’re listening. KLCC.org | 541.463.6000 Eugene, Oregon *Source: NPR Profile 2014.

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89.7 FM

NPR for Oregonians

Toomey, a full professor, arrived at the UO in 1990 after earning his PhD in oceanography through a joint program offered by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He knows it’s imperative to donate his time to the early warning system, but his real love, he says, is the research. Along with Hooft, he studies the origins of life itself. “We have life on this planet because of plate tectonics,” he says. “It’s the combination of plate tectonics and water.” Continents are old, Toomey notes, and are embedded in a system of ever-changing tectonic plates. Eighty-five percent of the annual volcanic activity on the planet occurs underwater along the mid-ocean ridge system, which constantly generates the material that forms the new oceanic parts of the plates. “This conveyor belt of generation, evolution, and subduction is processing the long-term chemistry of the oceans and the atmosphere,” he says, explaining that carbon dioxide comes out of volcanoes, goes into the atmosphere, and ends up in the ocean, where it makes carbonate sediments that get subducted back under the continental plates, reemerging at volcanoes that emit carbon dioxide again. “This cycling of CO2 has provided the long-term thermostat of our planet,” he says. His team’s main research goal for the past five or so years has been to understand why mid-ocean ridges are segmented. “There has been a dominant model in our community that we are about to disprove, using data we’ve gathered from the Endeavor segment of the Juan de Fuca ridge,” he says. The prevailing theory has been that the ridges are segmented as a result of blobs of magma rising to the surface. But now that the team has been able to monitor the flow rate and direction of the mantle (the semisolid layer that lies underneath the ridges, between the Earth’s crust and core), they believe that the plates are constantly reconfiguring in reaction to subduction zones around the world, and that the segmentation of the ridges is caused by how the surface plates are behaving or responding to changes in rates of subduction. “So we are finding a global topdown system,” Toomey says.

MEASURING MAGMA Hooft, an associate professor, earned her PhD in oceanography in 1997, also through MIT and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution,


and arrived at the UO as a research associate in 1999. She is chief scientist on a research project at Newberry Volcano in central Oregon, where she and her team of students have been using seismology to pinpoint the properties of its magma chamber. The volcano erupted and collapsed about 70,000 years ago, leaving a five-mile-wide, ovalshaped caldera. The area is still very “hot” (as evidenced by the eruption of the Big Obsidian flow 1,300 years ago and by a number of geothermal springs) and although it is currently in a quiet phase, it is on the USGS list of volcanoes with the highest potential for eruption. Measuring its magma chamber allows the geophysicists to ascertain how deep the chamber lies as well as how molten it is. Until now, it has been difficult to measure small chambers, and part of this research has been to find better ways to understand these relatively small systems that aren’t easy to measure using traditional methods. Hooft’s team began collecting data in 2008, digging holes and installing 81 closely spaced seismometers. After using a drill hole explosion to create seismic waves that traveled through the earth, they measured how the waves rippled, distorted, and indented as they came to the surface after having gone through the magma chamber. They also measured waves from teleseismic earthquakes (very large earthquakes that happen around the world), and by using the two sets of results, they were able to pinpoint the size of the chamber. A third method of discovery is to use mathematical methods to measure and interpret background noise such as waves crashing on the beach. “That noise propagates through all of the US,” Hooft says. “So even if you are far from the coast, you still have that general noise. You can actually start to infer what the structure is just by recording [the structure of] background noise.” Ho of t a lso ha s a w ish l ist : f u nd i ng ($500,000) for 270 small seismometers that can record ground motion in three directions. Unlike the larger seismometers, which are more sensitive but must be dug deep into bedrock, each of these units comes complete with the sensor, computer, and battery; they are rechargeable and can be easily carried in backpacks. “These could be used for all kinds of really cool things,” Hooft says. “You could put them on one part of a volcano for 30 days, and then move them around. Or you could cover a

landslide with them and figure out its thickness. This might help answer the question: if there is an earthquake on Cascadia, will that trigger existing landslides?”

I’ve always been very interested in understanding magma plumbing under volcanoes, especially deep down.

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—EMILIE HOOFT

PLUMBING THE DEPTHS Toomey and Hooft sometimes travel together on a research project, such as one coming up this fall when, along with geophysicists from England and Greece, they will explore the structure of Santorini Volcano in the Aegean Sea. “I’ve always been very interested in understanding magma plumbing under volcanoes, especially deep down,” Hooft says. She wants to figure out how andesite, an evolved type of volcanic rock, is created. One of the reasons she chose Santorini is that the Earth’s crust is not very thick there because of earlier stretching of the tectonic plate. Also, because the caldera is underwater, the team can use equipment that generates bubbles of compressed air to create measurable sound waves. “We will be able to ‘see’ deep into the lower part of the crust and the top of the mantle and be able to reconstruct those regions where the magma is being processed,” Hooft says. “This will bring some constraints to these differing models on how andesite is formed. “It’s important because andesite is thought to be the main composition of continental crust. Therefore, it seems that all the continents were probably formed from some kind of processing through volcanic systems.” So the next time you’re driving over the Cascades or gazing out at the mighty Pacific, consider that underneath that lovely vista, the Earth is growing and growling, lifting and subsiding, growing new plates from deep inside and subducting others under the continents. We live on a planet in constant change. And always, geophysicists are asking why and how. ROSEMARY HOWE CAMOZZI, BA ’96

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EXCERPT

Night Shift

BY RODGER MOODY, BA ’76, MFA ’78 Driving as if my Yellow Cab could satisfy the ache in my headlights to see beyond the dry mouth of July heat lightning, I stop and get out squat to touch the bluegrass that edges the curb, and become again the boy who climbed trees. Four years old I watch Dad’s intent hands weave cord around a basket to shape a net for the dirt court across the street. Twenty-one he played guard with the local boys. and I sat beneath the kitchen table when Dad home early from work embraced Mom with the news: his promotion to night foreman. And much the way the tingle in reaching the top limb of a bare sweet gum leaves the skin in a crisp wanting I didn’t know what it meant until years later though since that day I can’t recall when I last saw him hug her in the light. Rodger Moody has earned fellowships from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and Literar y Arts in Portland. He makes his living as a warehouse worker in Eugene. This poem was originally published in the journal Permafrost and appears in Moody ’s new book, Histor y (Sight for Sight Books, 2015).

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ILLUSTRATION BY PEP MONTSERRAT


An ignition switch for your engine of ideas.

opb.org ORQuarterly_slogans.indd 4

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IN MEMORIAM

Just Dave

David B. Frohnmayer July 9, 1940–March 10, 2015 BY MELODY WARD LESLIE, BA ’79

1958 J

Earned his BA in government, magna cum laude, from Harvard College

Born in Medford, Oregon

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Studied at Oxford University on a Rhodes Scholarship

1962

1940

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1971

1967

1964

Voted “outstanding senior man” at Medford High School

A

fter retiring in 2009 as president emeritus, Dave Frohnmayer maintained a full public schedule while keeping his private battle with prostate cancer under wraps. As a result, his death at the age of 74 was a shock to almost everyone. Within hours of the announcement, messages came pouring in to the university, many from former students. They came from throughout the United States, as well as Germany, South Africa, Japan, and Mexico. Many had taken Dave’s freshman leadership seminar, which he had taught every year since becoming the UO’s “accidental president” (his words) in 1994. The night he died, Dave fell asleep expecting to teach this spring’s cohort the next day. How, especially while leading a major public research university and being actively involved in so many national and international endeavors, did he manage to fit in teaching freshmen? “The students reminded Dave every week of what really mattered, of what we were all in service to,” says Barbara West, BA ’69, MA ’74, PhD ’89, who cotaught the course and was Frohnmayer’s special counsel during his presidency. “The students kept him going.” Dave (he insisted on being called “just Dave”) was a Harvard-educated Rhodes Scholar from Medford and the first native Oregonian to serve as president of one of the state’s large research universities. Those who knew him best will tell you that the thriving campus we know today is largely the result of his unabashed love for his home state, passion for teaching, genuine concern for individuals, dedication to public service, and incredible energy. His closest friends emphasize that above all, he was the adoring husband of Lynn, a

1964

Married Lynn Diane Johnson, with whom he had five children

Earned an MA in philosophy, politics, and economics from Oxford University

Earned his law degree at University of California, Berkeley, School of Law

1969–70

Served as assistant to the US secretary of health, education, and welfare WEDDING PHOTO COURTESY OF THE FROHNMAYER FAMILY


Stanford University graduate and Peace Corps volunteer from Grants Pass, Oregon, with whom he had five beloved children: Kirsten; Katie; Mark; Jonathan, JD ’13; and Amy. Dave was already an Oregon legend when he became the university’s 15th president, and the UO benefitted mightily from the respect and admiration that he had earned from members of both political parties during two decades in elective office. A lifelong Republican, he worked for Robert Finch and Elliott Richardson, secretaries of health, education, and welfare, after earning his JD at the UC Berkeley School of Law in 1967. A master’s degree at Oxford followed, after which he returned home to teach law at the UO. At the height of Watergate, Dave won the right to represent Oregon’s most Democratic house district in the state legislature. In his third term, both political parties nominated him for attorney general. He argued seven high profile cases before the United States Supreme Court (winning six of them) during three terms in that office. [See page 36 for his brother John’s analysis of his high court appearances.] Along the way, Dave and Lynn faced—and refused to back down from—the worst kind of adversity: the loss of daughters Kirsten and Katie to Fanconi Anemia, a rare genetic blood disorder that also threatens Amy. They launched what Dave’s former student, Oregon senator Ron Wyden, JD ’74, termed “a battle royal,” from creating a national support group in 1989 to cofounding the National Marrow Donor Program and raising $20 million to fund research that is now part of mainstream efforts to advance treatments—and a cure—for cancer. Dave was nationally known by the time he ran for governor in 1990, and news accounts confirm

1971–81 Served as a law professor and special assistant to the president, University of Oregon

Dave Frohnmayer leads a class at the law school. “His famous flow charts somehow combined the meticulous detail of an Albert Einstein equation with a good measure of Groucho Marx slapstick,” says Ron Wyden, JD ’ 74.

he was expected to win. However, a far-right candidate made it a three-way race late in the game. The Republican vote fractured just enough to tip the election to Democrat Barbara Roberts. After the election, Dave continued to serve as attorney general until resigning on December 31, 1991, to become dean of the UO School of Law. He took charge just in time to save the state’s only public law school from draconian budget cuts that had hammered the university. When UO president Myles Brand left in 1994 to become president of Indiana University, Governor Roberts quickly appointed Dave as president. He inherited a challenging campus

1981–91 1980

Cofounded the Fanconi Anemia Fund

1975–81

Served three terms as a member of the House of Representatives in the Oregon Legislative Assembly

environment, with state support in free fall and very little private fundraising underway. In moving into the university presidency, Dave practiced what’s known as “leadership through esprit.” Shared vision, team effort. He called it “The Oregon Way.” He wanted Oregon to have—and be—the best, and his passion attracted kindred spirits like philanthropist Lorry I. Lokey, who contributed nearly $140 million to support academics, and Nike’s Phil Knight, BS ’59, a fellow native Oregonian whose many lead gifts during Dave’s presidency began with the William W. Knight Law Center and culminated with the Matthew Knight Arena. Dave’s Oregon Way powered a renaissance on campus: Enrollment shot up 40 percent; federal research grants doubled; more than 90,000 alumni and friends gave $1.1 billion; 14 building projects were launched; the historic White Stag Block became the UO’s hub in Portland; 19 new degree programs came into being; and the UO’s endowment grew into the largest among Oregon’s public universities. He strengthened the UO’s position among North America’s leading research universities by serving on the executive committee of the Association of American Universities (AAU) and raised its profile internationally through membership in the Association of Pacific Rim Universities (APRU). But Dave’s most remarkable gift to the university—something that many doubted was possible and that he devoted himself to achieving before and during his retirement—was self-governance. “Dave, more than anyone else, gave us control over our future,” says longtime friend Chuck Lillis, PhD ’72, chair of the UO Board of Trustees. “The only way to honor Dave is to ensure that

1994–2009

Served three terms as attorney general for the State of Oregon

Served as president of the University of Oregon

1992–94 Served as dean and professor of law, University of Oregon School of Law

2009–15 Served as UO president emeritus and taught courses in law and leadership

2015 Died at home in Eugene

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IN MEMORIAM

No other Northwest media will deliver you this print audience. NONE. Our magazine advertising works. Hard. For information, call Robin Kamerling. She works hard, too.

Oregon Q UA R T E R LY

The Magazine of the University of Oregon

(971) 200-7047 | rkamerling@sagacitymedia.com | OregonQuarterly.com

Dave and Lynn Frohnmayer with their five children.

there is no retreat from the crusade in which he led this campus. We must fulfill his dreams.” As an 18-year-old student recently wrote in a course evaluation, Dave Frohnmayer was “freaking awesome.” His legacy will live, to borrow from the refrain of “Mighty Oregon,” on and on. Melody Ward Leslie has worked as a writer and communications officer at the UO for 20 years.

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What you hear about more often than Dave’s mile-long list of accomplishments is how special he made individuals feel, even if they talked with him only once. He wrote thousands of personal notes on small white cards, quickly sending expressions of congratulations, sympathy, and what longtime executive assistant Carol Rydbom felt was most important of all, a heartfelt, “Good job!” Stories of Dave abound on the UO’s memorial website uoregon.edu/Frohnmayer. His memorial service, held at Matthew Knight Arena, was attended by some 3,000 people, including four Oregon governors. Friends traveled great distances to pay their respects, among them Dr. Greg Downing of Washington, D.C., the cardiologist credited with saving Dave’s life when his heart stopped nearly 16 years ago.


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THE LIST

Hollywood Ducks

D SI M PS O AL

L

MARI

SS

A

A

NEI

TLIN

G

Company and Artists Repertory Theatre— before pursuing graduate school at Yale. She has appeared on The Last Ship, and will play a seismologist in the new film San Andreas, starring Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson.

K

A

IN O L S O ITL

DA

N

MES FRA JA

L W U

r e ce nt g r adu ate of t he S c ho ol of Journalism and Communication, Will Cuddy, BS ’14, appeared opposite Reese Witherspoon in the film adaptation of Wild. A veteran of Duck TV, Cuddy also directed two award-winning short films for Cinema Pacific’s 72-hour Adrenaline Film Project and sang with On the Rocks, the UO’s male a cappella group.

P

roducer, screenwriter, actor, and ’80s bad boy Donald Simpson, BS ’67, graduated with a degree in journalism. Simpson was the producing partner of Jerry Bruckheimer, collaborating on such blockbusters as Flashdance, Beverly Hills Cop, Top Gun, and The Rock. Personal struggles plagued the duo and they dissolved their partnership in 1995. Simpson died of heart failure a month later, at age 52.

IE

WIL

C

UD

DY

A

double major in mathematics and theater arts, Marissa Neitling, BS ’07, delved into the Portland theater community—appearing in productions for Broadway Rose Theatre

N

DO

N

Meet a few members of our flock who have found their places in the limelight.

N

N

CI S IVORY

H

A

cclaimed film director James Francis Ivory, BFA ’51, grew up in Klamath Falls, Oregon. He spent his time at the UO pursuing art in every form, graduating from the School of Architecture and Allied Arts. After receiving a master’s in cinema studies from the University of Southern California, Ivory moved to New York and began a fruitful partnership with Ismail Merchant. Together they earned 31 Academy Award nominations and won six.

ILLUSTRATIONS BY KEEGAN DELLABOUGH

B

est known for her role as Deandra “Sweet Dee” Reynolds on the hit TV show It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Kaitlin Olson , BS ’97, studied theater at the UO. Memorable college moments include a muddy rollerblading incident outside Villard Hall and getting divested of her fake ID at the campus bar Rennie’s Landing. An enthusiastic Ducks fan even before the football team hit its stride, she and her costar husband, Rob McElhenney, are supporters of the university. It’s Always Sunny celebrated its 10th season this year.

ailed as the Johnny Depp of Chinese cinema, international film star Daniel Wu , BArch ’97, was born in Berkeley, California. At the UO, he washed pots and pans in the kitchen of Carson Hall’s dining room and founded the university’s Wushu Club in 1994. Although he had no formal acting training and could not speak Cantonese, Chinese film directors cast him for his exotic “American-ness.” With a little help from Jackie Chan, Wu gained recognition and critical acclaim. In 2006, he received Best New Director from the Hong Kong Film Awards for his film The Heavenly Kings. He was recently cast in the leading role of AMC’s new drama Badlands. CHLOE HUCKINS Know more Hollywood Ducks? Join the conversation at oregonquarterly.com.

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PROFILE

SOFT SELL Microsoft celebrated its 40th birthday in April. That’s pretty impressive in an industry in which most companies aren’t built to last. The only problem is, technology companies aren’t necessarily prized for their longevity. “This industry doesn’t respect tradition,” says Jeff Hansen, BA ’93, who heads Microsoft’s global branding efforts. “The industry respects innovation. Microsoft has a great heritage, and we have been very successful. Surveys show over and over that we are among the most respected brands in the world. But we have to remain focused on what we can offer in the future.” Branding, Hansen says, is built on a deep understanding of qualities that make a company distinctive, and then enacting that “personality” out in the world. But even after a few successful decades, corporations need to be ready to try new things. Hansen sees his role as finding ways to match Microsoft’s tremendous strengths with what the public is seeking at any given time. “My job is to be the voice of the customer,” he says.

Hansen

BY JONATHAN GRAHAM

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Jeff

BA ’93, PSYCHOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY GENERAL MANAGER, BRAND STRATEGY, AT MICROSOFT


BOOKMARKS

ACCIDENTAL MARKETER

At the UO, Hansen majored in psychology and sociology and planned to spend his career researching the criminal mind. What hooked him on branding? “I love the craft,” he says.

BAD EXAMPLE?

Hansen thinks he’s the last person who should be giving advice to students who are planning careers. He admits, “I never expected to pursue a career in business, and I never had a three- to five-year plan.”

DUCK FLOCK

At Microsoft, Hansen leads an informal network for Ducks, using an e-mail listserv and occasional social gatherings to help Oregon alumni network and keep in touch.

Here is a sampling of the many books by UO authors that arrived in our office recently.

AMERICAN PHILOSOPHY: FROM WOUNDED KNEE TO THE PRESENT (BLOOMSBURY PUBLISHING, 2015) BY SCOTT PRATT AND ERIN MCKENNA

Pratt, a UO professor, and McKenna, of Pacific Lutheran University, survey the historical development of American philosophy, introducing readers to the work of the major American thinkers, past and present, and the sheer breadth of their ideas and influence.

HAWAIIAN MUSIC IN MOTION: MARINERS, MISSIONARIES, AND MINSTRELS (UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS PRESS, 2014) BY JAMES REVELL CARR, MA ’98

It turns out that both maritime commerce and imperial confrontation encouraged the development and circulation of Hawaiian popular music during the 19th century. That’s the crux of this new book by a graduate of the UO’s Folklore Program. Carr is an associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

THE BAR BOOK: ELEMENTS OF COCKTAIL TECHNIQUE (CHRONICLE BOOKS, 2014) BY JEFFREY MORGENTHALER, BIARCH ’ 98 AND MARTHA HOLMBERG

CLASS PROJECT

A student paper landed Hansen a job in Microsoft’s fledgling market research department. “The UO made me a much more well-rounded person, and it gave me one skill—the ability to do research—that was absolutely pivotal in my career.”

This how-to guide with more than 60 illustrated recipes describes the essential techniques of bartending and applies them to making great drinks. Geared to those who enjoy making cocktails at home, the book provides inspiration and guidance from Morgenthaler, a celebrated Portland bartender and cocktail blogger. (He created a special cocktail to celebrate Oregon Quarterly’s redesign last fall.)

MIDNIGHT THE BLUES (SIGHT FOR SIGHT BOOKS, 2015) BY FRANK ROSSINI, MA ’74, MFA ’77

EXPANDED BRAND

Under Hansen’s guidance, Microsoft has recently launched partnerships with the Special Olympics, the Nobel Foundation, and the Real Madrid soccer club.

PHOTOGRAPH BY INGRID PAPÉ-SHELDON

Rossini’s poetry evokes blues and jazz music as well as life in New York City more than half a century ago. The poems reference such musical luminaries as Charlie Parker, Ornette Coleman, Miles Davis, and especially John Coltrane. The author says that in his writing his primary goal is to produce “beautiful sound.”

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CAMPUS

THE BEST...

Doorway on Campus

M

ost students first experience our campus during student orientation or when touring with parents. It’s exciting to become acquainted with your home for the next four years and get a taste of the college experience by playing Frisbee in the quad or walking to a game at Autzen Stadium. Unfortunately, my first experience on campus was moving into the dorms right before classes began, despite being from Portland, just two hours away. I was working at Portland Center Stage the summer before my freshman year and could not attend orientation. My family helped me move in that day, and after they left, the terror of being a first-generation college student in an unfamiliar city set in. During my first week on campus, I realized just how much I didn’t know about college. I didn’t know where my classes were. I didn’t know what the Clark Honors College would expect of me. I didn’t know where to get “campus cash,” what it was, or how to use it. I worried that I was making a mistake in pursuing my dream of higher education because everything about the college experience felt so foreign and unknown. In an effort to get to know the campus and relieve my anxiety, I took a walk around what I now know is the Memorial Quad. Immediately, the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art (JSMA) stood out from the surrounding buildings. I have dreamed of attending college since I was seven years old, imagining what it would look like once I got there. At that age, I imagined a campus full of old, ornate brick buildings that made you feel smarter just looking at them. The JSMA was just how I had imagined college as a child. Before entering I stood outside for a moment, admiring the doorway. The architecture of the facade is the most eye-catching on campus, from the patterns of brick to the detailed engravings surrounding the thick iron doors, flanked by floral designs on either side. I could have admired it for hours. While the new, renovated buildings on campus are beautiful in their own way, there is nothing that says “academia” to me like the JSMA. As I admired the doorway, I distinctly remember reading “Museum of Art” handsomely inscribed above the door and feeling at home on campus for the first time. The JSMA was built in 1931 and is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Sometimes I get chills thinking that countless other students have looked upon this same doorway for decades, and maybe thought it was just as breathtaking as I did. It makes me feel like I am part of a community. The rest of my freshman year was a blur of part-time jobs, late nights in the library, and learning to do my own laundry. But my classes were not as intimidating as I expected, I did not get lost as often as I feared, and I didn’t shrink any of my clothes. I settled into life in Eugene easier than I had imagined. I visited the JSMA a handful of times that year, though not as often as I would have liked. I try to study in the adjacent café when I can, and when I have a weekend off, I take advantage of the free admission offered to students and explore the exhibits. Most often, I go out of my way to walk past the doorway of the JSMA. I forget the stress of finals and notice something new about the architecture. I take a moment, admire that familiar doorway, and remember that I am home. BY FRANCESCA FONTANA “The Best …” is a series of student-written essays describing superlative aspects of campus. Francesca Fontana is a junior journalism major from Portland.

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PHOTOGRAPH BY STEVE SMITH


16th Annual Oregon Quarterly

Northwest Perspectives Essay Contest Reading THURSDAY, MAY 28, 2015 5:30 P.M. RECEPTION · 6:00 P.M. READING Alumni Lounge, Gerlinger Hall · 1468 University Street, Eugene

OPENING REMARKS BY THIS YEAR’S JUDGE, LIDIA YUKNAVITCH FIRST-PLACE WINNER: “WATER, WATER, EVERYWHERE” BY KRISTIANNE HUNTSBERGER

Featuring readings of winning essays by Kristianne Huntsberger, Drew Terhune, Sue Lick, Nysia Trejo, Autumn DePoe-Hughes, and Forrest Munro Questions? Call 541-346-5047 Lidia Yuknavitch will also be reading from her work on Wednesday, May 27, at 7:00 p.m. at The Duck Store, 895 East 13th Avenue, Eugene

PHOTOS BY LORI HOWARD

The Oregon Quarterly Northwest Perspectives Essay Contest is presented by Oregon Quarterly magazine support THE M AG A Z I N E with OF TH E U N I V Efrom R S I T YThe O F Duck O R E GStore. O N 31


The Many Worlds of Rick Bartow

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Poignant, whimsical, troubling, and powerful, the work of this renowned artist is now on exhibit at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. BY BOB KEEFER

n another place and another time, Rick Bartow might have been taken for a holy man. Even in the here and now, he seems the part: eyes that see sharply into the world around him, a gentle but probing wit, and easygoing wisdom born of hard experience all lend his hawk-like face and graying hair an otherworldly presence. Such woo-woo talk aside—and Bartow himself suffers none of that kind of acclaim—he is, at the age of 68, one of the most acknowledged and accomplished visual artists working in Oregon. Between his compelling personal history, his Native American ancestry, and his prodigious output of visionary images, Bartow has made an indelible mark. He’s still at work, nearly every day, at his rural home south of Newport, creating images that weave together iconic representations of coyote, raven, skulls, teeth, and antlers with haunting human forms, all amid seas of bright color and primal marks. Things You Know but Cannot Explain, a career retrospective, runs through August 9 at the University of Oregon’s Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. Featuring more than 100 pieces, including prints, paintings, the giant pastels for which he is mostly known, and even some sculpture, the show is curated by Jill Hartz, the museum’s executive director; Danielle Knapp, MA ’10, the JSMA’s associate curator;

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There are old things which I have been able to lay my hands on. I’ve studied. I’ve listened. I sit by the truth. If you slow down a bit, you’ll see that it will help you, too.

LEFT: ABC 123 (2013) After Bartow suffered a major stroke in 2013, he silently repeated over and over the phrase “A, B, C, 1, 2, 3,” as well as his birthdate and other factual histories, in order to stave off fear and the loss of self-identity. The hands in this image surround the body’s core, symbolically acting as healers. Pastel, graphite on paper; 40 x 26 inches. FACING PAGE, TOP: Crow Song Bear (2014). Acrylic on canvas; 56 x 66 inches. FACING PAGE, BOTTOM: Bartow stares unflinchingly at the viewer in this 2001 self-portrait, titled Die Altersschwache (2001). Pastel, graphite on paper; 40 x 26 inches.

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RIGHT: Bear and Red Drum (2010). Pastel, graphite on paper; 40 x 26 inches. FACING PAGE, CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: 3 Hawks (2005). Drypoint etching on Plexiglas; 12 x 10 inches. Rick Bartow in his studio. Bartow’s health concerns led to a number of works that explored his health, mortality, and identity. This 2014 self-portrait, titled CS Indian, is composed with pastel, colored pencil, graphite, tempera, and acrylic on paper. 44 ½ X 44 ½ inches.

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Life experiences are not pleasant. They can scare the pee out of you!

PHOTOGRAPH OF RICK BARTOW BY BOB KEEFER

and Lawrence Fong, BA ’72, the JSMA’s former curator of American and regional art. Bartow, in conjunction with printer Mika Boyd from the UO Department of Art, is creating a series of prints that will be offered as a gift to tribal communities and museums in Oregon. A documentary short on the project will be released this summer. Born in Newport, a member of the Wiyot tribe, Bartow studied art at Western Oregon State College—now Western Oregon University—in Monmouth, where he graduated in 1969 with a degree in secondary art education. That same year, he was drafted and sent to Vietnam. Overseas, though ostensibly working as a clerk typist, Bartow—who is also an adept musician—began playing rock ’n’ roll guitar for friends, parties, and ultimately badly wounded soldiers in military hospitals. He came home with a Bronze Star and a bad drinking habit. After a dark period lost in alcoholism, he dried out and became serious about his art, primarily at the urging of his late wife. Today his work can be seen in Washington, D.C., where in 2012 Bartow installed his monumental We Were Always Here, two large carved western red cedar poles reminiscent of totems, on the National Mall at the National Museum of the American Indian. His work is also at the Portland Art Museum, the Hallie Ford Museum of Art in Salem, and at the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art in Indianapolis. He has worked with printmakers around the world, including his friend Seiichi Hiroshima, and has traveled as an artist to Japan, Germany, Mexico, and New Zealand. None of this has gone to his head. “I am not precious,” Bartow says. “I can tear things up right in front of you and it won’t bother me at all.” In fact, he’s done this a number of times—each time enjoying the shocked expressions of onlookers. Bartow suffered a serious stroke in 2013 that left him, for some time, nearly unable to speak or write. At the hospital, he grabbed a nurse’s pen and a scrap of paper and worked out a quick sketch. Then he called Charles Froelick, his long-time Portland gallerist. “I’m going to be okay,” he told Froelick. “I can’t talk, but I can still draw.” T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

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12 KEYS TO 6 CASES WHEN DAVE FROHNMAYER died on March 10, he left a deep legacy as the University of Oregon’s longest-serving president. But his impact extends well beyond our campus. Here, John Frohnmayer reflects on his brother’s substantial influence in the nation’s highest court, making note of a dozen points that were key to his success.

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f the United States Supreme Court is the World Series of the legal world, then Dave Frohnmayer batted .850 against the best pitching imaginable. He won six out of seven cases that he argued in front of the high court. The takeaway is that Dave was very, very good at lawyering. Long before becoming dean of the UO law school and then president of the university, Dave served as Oregon’s attorney general, taking office on January 5, 1981. Over the next 11 years he built a reputation as the most successful Supreme Court advocate of any state, with a record of wins before that court that stands to this day. Dave was brilliant, and dedicated and ambitious and aggressive, but those qualities alone do not translate into success in the fickle and unpredictable world of the law, so I, as his brother and admirer, will try to explain how he did it.

1

He wanted to be a player.

As a brand-new attorney general, Dave inherited a case involving prison overcrowding, in which the state had been ordered to release some 700 prisoners. Already on board at the attorney general’s office were two young but extremely able lawyers—Bill Gary and Jim Mountain—whose US Supreme Court experience was exactly zero. They cobbled together a request to Justice Rehnquist, arguing that an Ohio case with similar facts was on its way to the Supreme Court, and to their amazement, he granted a stay. They filed an amicus brief in the Ohio case and Dave, along with Gary, flew to Washington, D.C. for the argument. He could have said the case was not his baby, or he had to learn his new job, or dozens of other perfectly acceptable reasons, but he wanted in the game.

BY JOHN FROHNMAYER, JD ’72 | ILLUSTRATION BY AGATA ENDO NOWICKA T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

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2

He wanted to make sure that all states were well represented at the Supreme Court, so he helped provide training for other states’ advocates.

When Dave arrived in D.C. for the case, he was appalled at what he found. The lawyer arguing the case was over-matched and under-prepared. Coincidentally, the Washington Post printed an article saying that the states were doing a lousy job at the Supreme Court. Dave called up the writer of that article and worked with the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) to create a program that helps all states coordinate amicus (or “friend of the court”) briefs, holds practice oral arguments, and trains the states’ advocates to appear before the high court.

3

He convinced his staff that Oregon could be a national leader.

Dave believed his state deserved the best—including the best legal representation possible. He believed that Oregon’s Department of Justice could influence legal policy and practice across the country. The vehicle he found to start building this esprit was a case entitled Oregon v. Kennedy. The defendant was a convicted thief who moved for a mistrial and argued double jeopardy on the grounds of prosecutor misconduct. (A witness said he didn’t do business with the defendant. The prosecutor asked: “Is that because he is a crook?” Oops. Mistrial.) So, does the accused get off scot-free when it was his own motion that aborted the trial? The Supreme Court said it would decide.

4

He sought the advice of others who had more expertise, or simply a different viewpoint, than he did.

Dave had in mind a model that former Washington State Attorney General (subsequently US Senator) Slade Gorton had used to prepare for argument, and he had dinner with Gorton to pick his brain. The team to

shot. He was never more in his element than when he was sparring and matching wits with some of the smartest people on the planet. In oral argument, justices fire questions, sometimes interrupting the advocate in the middle of the first sentence. Then, another justice may ask a question while you are trying to answer the first, so you have to keep multiple balls in the air long enough to get back to the first question and still not lose the three essential points you want to make before your time expires. Dave was a master at this. The tapes of these arguments are available, and confirm that he spoke in complete, compound sentences. He said the court should adopt a rule that is easy to administer, that will not make trial judges reluctant to grant, and that the words used should have clear predicates and establish clear standards. Justice Rehnquist, in the majority opinion favoring Oregon, said that the rules the Supreme Court had set down in the past “. . . had been stated with less than crystal clarity” and that henceforth, when a defendant sought mistrial and argued a bar to further prosecution, it had to be based on the intent of the prosecutor or judge to cause a mistrial (i.e., intentional misconduct). A win.

6

He knew more about his case and all of the precedent law than anyone else did.

Dave’s second Supreme Court case was Oregon v. Bradshaw, where a body was found in a wrecked pickup and the question was, who was driving? The police arrested Edward Bradshaw and he asked for an attorney. The police, under the Miranda doctrine, were obligated to cease the interrogation. Bradshaw was then transferred from Garibaldi to Tillamook (a distance of 10 miles), and while in the back of the police car asked, “What happens to me now?” He subsequently was read the Miranda warning again, was given a polygraph, and confessed that he was the driver. He said he was drunk and had passed out at the wheel. He was convicted of

Up came the wind off the Potomac and blew his notes over the rail, into the bushes, and onto the lawn. Without thinking, Jim Mountain vaulted over the rail, only to find the drop was about the height of a basketball hoop. argue Kennedy consisted of Dave, Bill Gary, John Bradley, and Steve Peifer, all of whom boarded a red-eye, arriving four days before the argument. (Jim Mountain was on the squad as well for all subsequent arguments). One hotel room was a dedicated “war room” with all of the books, binders, and papers of the precomputer days. The team worked 12- to 15-hour days, reviewing all of the cases that might be relevant, listing all of the questions that might be asked. They divided up the justices, reading their opinions and trying to parse what lines of argument might be most persuasive to each. The team brought in seasoned advocates, who had read the briefs and viewed the case with fresh eyes, to participate in moot courts. All of this was both helpful and exhausting, but the case had a major twist: Andy Fry, then solicitor general of the United States, had called and said the government was going to file an amicus brief and wanted half of the 30 minutes of argument time. Arguing for the government was a young lawyer named Samuel Alito, later a Supreme Court justice himself.

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He walked the walk.

As the attorney general, Dave personally argued the case. He was like a basketball player who wanted the ball for the last, crucial

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manslaughter, driving while intoxicated, and driving without a license. Did he waive his Fifth Amendment right to counsel and to remain silent? The Oregon Appellate Court said no and reversed the conviction. Before the Supreme Court, Dave asked whether, under the prevailing case law, a suspect who had requested a lawyer could change his mind. Justice Marshall (a civil rights lawyer before ascending the bench) immediately pounced: “How do you conclude that he changed his mind?” Dave responded that footnote 9 of Edwards (the controlling case) allows for the defendant to reinitiate conversation and thereby waive his Fifth Amendment rights if he does so intelligently and knowingly. Marshall: “Suppose he says: ‘Now I lay me down to sleep?’” Dave: “That is not dialogue.” Dave then spoon-fed back the language and reasoning Marshall had used in another opinion. His knowledge was encyclopedic.

7

He spoke clearly, persuasively, and passionately.

Dave argued from notes, not a prepared text. He scrawled at the top of the page: “Button coat, speak slowly.” It is unlikely that Dave ever looked at the notes while speaking. Here is an example of a sentence that came out of his mouth:


“If initiation [of dialogue between the accused and police] means something more than the simple face of the language [used], which the Edwards decision suggests, then this court inherits a legal quagmire, a hopeless series of Rubik’s Cubes of disputes as to the meanings of thousands of potential utterances that might be initiated by a defendant as to whether they do or do not have legal significance.” Argument before the court is the only opportunity for dialogue with the justices—to find out what they are thinking and to try to respond to their concerns. In Oregon v. Elstad police questioned an 18-year-old suspect in his home and he admitted, without receiving a Miranda warning, that he had been present at the scene of a burglary. An hour later, after being read his rights, he confessed. The Oregon appellate court held that “the cat was out of the bag” and reversed his conviction. Dave argued that a metaphor is no substitute for legal analysis and the subsequent giving of a Miranda warning cures its prior omission. In a colloquy with Justice Stevens, the issue was whether Miranda, as a rule, is on equal footing with the language of the Fifth and Sixth Amendments themselves. After the exchange, Justice Stevens said: “Thank you, that is very helpful.” On the other hand, at the end of the argument, another justice said: “I simply don’t understand the difference between the two cases. Maybe I’m just stupid, I guess.” Dave: “I seriously fail to advance that contention.”

8

He kept his cool, no matter what happened.

The Supreme Court runs on a strict schedule and in the middle of an argument in Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife v. Klamath Indian Tribe, the chief justice called for a lunch break. The Oregon team was escorted to the cafeteria by the marshals, and after lunch, Dave, who was wont to smoke smelly, cheap, disgusting cigars, asked to do so and was escorted to a portico where he laid his notebook on the railing as he groped for a match. Up came the wind off the Potomac and blew his notes over the rail, into the bushes, and onto the lawn. Without thinking, Jim Mountain vaulted over the rail, only to find the drop was about the height of a basketball hoop. The papers were recovered and the marshals greatly entertained. Dave returned to complete the argument completely unfazed.

9

He listened carefully to what the justices were asking.

Dave was afforded a respectful intellectual equality with the justices. This was not achieved in a single session, but over time Dave became familiar to the members of the court, and judges would rather hear a good lawyer than a hack any day. How do I know he had that respect? Chief Justice Burger was speaking to the state attorneys general at a reception shortly after one of Dave’s arguments and remarked that they had heard a very good argument “from that German boy from Or-ee-gone.”

10

When the facts were compelling, he approached his argument like he was presenting to a jury.

Whitley v. Albers arose out of a riot at the Oregon State Penitentiary. A guard was taken hostage, and during his rescue, Gerald Albers, an inmate, was shot in the knee with a shotgun. He claimed he was subjected to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment and sued for violation of his civil rights. Dave started with the details of the rescue and said the whole event took less time than it took him to describe it. He then opined that a jury should not be allowed to second-guess prison officials acting during a crisis. But then, he returned to the facts: a prisoner had a knife, said he had killed one

inmate and would kill others, All of the inmates were out of their cells and refused to go back, the furniture had been trashed, and they had put up barricades. Maintaining order is the primary purpose of prisons, he argued, and the prison officials should be given broad discretion. He ended with a very jury-like plea: “The prison officials here should get a hero’s citation, not a civil rights lawsuit.” He was persuasive, but just barely: the decision was five to four in favor of Oregon.

11

He learned that no matter how prepared or how good you are, you may win (or lose) on a fluke.

Employment Division v. Smith—also known as the peyote case— was Dave’s final and most famous. Peyote is a powerful hallucinogen used in some Native American religious ceremonies. It is also classified as a dangerous (and illegal) drug. Smith was a drug counselor in Douglas County and ingested the drug as a sacrament, after which he was fired for misconduct and denied unemployment compensation. In play were the two somewhat conflicting clauses of the First Amendment: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” After consulting experts and analyzing evidence, Dave chose three paths to demonstrate a “compelling state interest” for its actions: First, that peyote adversely affected the health and safety of the people of Oregon in that it lasts for up to 12 hours and is unpredictable from user to user and from use to use. Second, Oregon must be religiously neutral (to not violate the establishment clause) and thus cannot favor one religion with specific exemptions. And finally, that Oregon should not be put in the position of having to parse what is and is not a part of any given religion. The result flabbergasted Dave. Justice Scalia, writing for the majority, “decided the case on the basis of an argument that was never briefed, never argued, never made, and frankly, never fully imagined by the parties,” Dave said. What Scalia wrote was that religious exemption issues are matters for the state legislatures and not for judicial balancing. He also held that an individual’s religion does not excuse him from compliance with an otherwise valid law that the government is free to regulate. Congress quickly passed the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and later the American Indian Religious Freedom Act Amendments, and the Oregon legislature created an affirmative defense for good faith religious use of peyote.

12

He made all those around him better.

Bill Gary expressed his good fortune to have had the opportunity to work with Dave at the beginning of his career and again years later when Dave was of counsel to his firm. “He made you feel as if you were a partner and a colleague in producing a product of which everyone in Oregon could be proud,” he says. Bill and Jim Mountain would look at each other after hours of reading cases and playing roles in moot courts and wonder that they were getting paid to do this work—the most fun they had ever had in the practice of law. Perhaps that is the final key to success: in order to be good, it has to be fun. John Frohnmayer, JD ’72, served as chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, the Oregon Arts Commission, and Oregon Humanities. His profile of Glenn Jackson appeared in the Summer 2014 issue of OQ. T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

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BY KRISTINE DEACON, BA ’79, MS ’92 Facing page: President Campbell received this advicefilled telegram from an officer at Fort Devens in Boston. Above left: UO President Prince Lucien Campbell. (1923 photo) Above right: Susan Campbell, the president’s wife, worked ceaselessly through the crisis. (1929 photo)

THE SPANISH FLU of 1918 was the first pandemic to occur in the era of “mass society,” when public access to transportation, education, and amusement vastly increased the ability of communicable diseases to spread. When the flu hit the University of Oregon, members of the campus community drew together to care for those who were ill, with the president’s wife personally watching over many students.

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adults in the prime of life, but nearly half of the influenza deaths in the 1919 pandemic were young adults 20–40 years of age,” writes Kolata. The respiratory illness was spread by coughs, sneezes, and personal contact, and it decimated World War I military personnel, who were crowded together on troop ships and in barracks. And so the UO’s 1,375 students, many living in student housing, were at high risk. To compound the threat, the UO did not have an infirmary. Entering his 16th year as UO president, Campbell, like the rest of the country, was reading newspapers, watching the deadly, mysterious, and uncontrollable plague surge across the nation. On August 4, Eugene’s leading newspaper, the Morning Register, reported that at Camp Lewis, in Tacoma, Washington, “Health in camp is good. No deaths in week among 29,887 men. The epidemic has been thoroughly overcome.” But within a month, the second wave of the deadly influenza hit the country. Soldiers stationed near Boston began getting sick on September 8, and by September 28, 100 soldiers a day were dying at Fort Devens. Campbell contacted Fort Devens for advice, and received a Western Union telegram from Lieutenant Colonel Condon C. McCormack, a surgeon stationed there: “No valuable prophylactic treatment for influenza except hygiene//all sick should The influenza ward at Camp Funston, Kansas (1918) be sought for and separated from well//crowding in barracks and lectures prohibited//disease spread by spray from mouth//forwarding detailed suggestions by mail.” Campbell acted proactively. For years he had been lobbying, unsuccessfully, for money to build a student infirmary; now he began to organize temporary hospitals on campus. On October 5, the Oregon Daily Emerald announced that “beginning Monday, every student and every member of the faculty must report daily at sick call in case he is suffering from any illness, however slight it may appear. It was decided that every suspected case would be isolated for observation and treatment. nicknamed it the “Spanish flu.” Normally, influenzas kill one percent of Infirmaries for men and women respectively are now being put in shape and will be ready in a few days. The women’s infirmary is in a nine-room the people they sicken, but this influenza killed 2.5 percent. Most of the house on University Street, just back of the women’s gymnasium, while people who died were healthy young men. “Every other influenza, before and since, has killed the very old and the very young, sparing healthy the men will use the residence on Twelfth Avenue east formerly occupied N 1918, University of Oregon president Prince Lucien Campbell faced a challenge no UO president had faced before: guiding the university through a mysterious, deadly plague. Day by day that fall, he watched students and faculty sicken and die from the Spanish flu, a pandemic that killed an estimated 50 million people worldwide. But by proactively using the tools of organization, communication, and caring, Campbell prevented potential devastation of the campus community. The 1918 Spanish flu epidemic is “America’s forgotten pandemic,” writes New York Times science reporter Gina Kolata in her book Flu: The Story of the Great Influenza Pandemic of 1918. “Nothing else—no infection, no war, no famine—has ever killed so many in as short a period.” The United States entered World War I on April 6, 1917. Eleven months later the deadly influenza first appeared in this country at Fort Riley, Kansas. Thousands of soldiers there got sick, and 38 died. Then, “as summer arrived, the flu seemed to vanish without a trace. But a few months later [it] was back with a vengeance.” It reappeared among troops in Boston on August 28, and within days was roaring across the country. No one knows where the epidemic started, but it hit Spain particularly hard, sickening King Alfonso XIII, so the world press

The respiratory illness was spread by coughs, sneezes, and personal contact, and it decimated World War I military personnel, who were crowded together on troop ships and in barracks.

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called “How to Avoid the Influenza.” Sweetser advised people to avoid all by the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.” Students who stayed in the infirmaspitting, to smother sneezes in handkerchiefs, and to “abandon the one finger ries were charged $2 a day. method of cleaning the nostrils.” Eugene closed all theaters and churches Campbell’s wife, Susan Campbell, helped organize the campus infirand banned all dances, but the university and the public schools were still maries. She had joined the university in 1905 as supervisor of student living, then resigned and married President Campbell in 1908. She worked open. At Camp Arthur in Texas, Earl S. Powell ’18 died of influenza. The next day the first two people in Eugene died of influenza and the ceaselessly throughout the crisis, visiting ill students and providing their city closed the public schools. The UO remained open. parents with updates. On October 10, former UO student Earl Cobb died at Camp Zachary The plague roared toward Oregon. “Influenza has spread to civilian population,” the Register reported on October 3. “Information coming Taylor in Kentucky, leaving behind his widow, Ada Kendall ’13, and their to the public health service was that the disease was rapidly spreading three-year-old son. By October 11, 237 UO students had influenza, as did economics professor Peter C. Crockatt. among the civilian population of the country. The malady has appeared Anxious parents jammed the university’s phone lines. Dr. John F. Bovard, now in 43 states . . . it is epidemic in Virginia, South Carolina, and other dean of the School of Physical places.” That day, Robert Claude Education and chairman of the stuStill ’14 died of influenza at Camp dent health committee, later rememColt, Pennsylvania. His brother, bered, “I cannot but say a good word Lloyd, was attending the UO. for the telephone operators, who On October 4, the Register restood so faithfully by when we were ported, “Epidemic reaches Denver.” so seriously in need of doctors and And on October 8, two days after nurses. There were times when I Campbell celebrated his 57th was at the telephone for two hours birthday, the paper announced, at a stretch, and instead of becom“Four cases of Influenza reported ing tired or cross they stayed at their in Portland.” post and did everything they possiBut it had not yet hit Eugene. bly could to help me out. They have Campbell worked hard to avoid my sincerest thanks.” panic, and he knew the imporSome desperate parents turned to tance of keeping the public the US mail. On October 11, Robert well informed. While attending Harvard, Campbell had dropped out briefly in 1882 and worked as The UO’s first infirmary was located in a house on University Street. a reporter for the Kansas City Star. In 1912, he helped establish a journalism school at the UO. Now he applied his media savvy to the pandemic. “Thirty-eight students sent to hospital with colds, no known cases of Spanish Influenza, meeting held to organize preventative measures at University,” the Register told readers. “Campbell urged students to be calm, and especially urged them not to write letters home which would tend to cause their folks undue anxiety.” Tate, in Portland, wrote to Karl Onthank, Campbell’s executive assistant: The next day, the influenza struck Eugene, sickening several univer“Would you be able to give me some more definite information about the sity students. On October 1, Congress appropriated $1 million to the US Public Health condition of my son, E. Mowbray Tate, staying at the home of Mrs. Hughes. He writes very briefly that he is sick, first with a bad cold and then that his Service to “combat and suppress” the Spanish influenza. The health serstomach is in bad condition and that his fever is up to 102½. He does not say vice sent posters advising the influenza was “As Dangerous as Poison Gas how he is attended, whether he has been removed to the hospital, who is his Shells.” UO students began making posters, too, and by October 10, bright orange fliers with flaring black headlines went up around campus, with physician, so that we could write or call him direct . . .” Onthank replied by letter the next day. “My dear Mr. Tate: I have just directions on how to prevent the spread of the malady. That day, the Register printed an article by A. R. Sweetser, head of the UO’s botany department, talked to Dr. C. W. Southworth, who is attending your son. He tells me

For years he had been lobbying, unsuccessfully, for money to build a student infirmary; now he began to organize temporary hospitals on campus.

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that while the boy has a fairly severe case of the Grip he is in no danger. If it seems best for Mrs. Tate to come down here or the boy becomes seriously ill, you will be telegraphed at once. I believe that Mrs. Hughes, with whom he was staying, wrote to you last evening.” By October 12, the UO had set up four emergency infirmaries: two for women, located at 1191 University Avenue and at the Kincaid House at 14th Avenue and Alder Street; and two for men, at the Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Delta Theta fraternities. They were staffed by volunteers. “Mrs. P. L. Campbell has been working almost unceasingly in equipping the infirmaries,” the Emerald reported. The bright orange influenza posters blanketing campus were proving very popular. Army lieutenant Milton Stoddard ’17, stationed at Fort Stevens in Astoria, wrote to Onthank, asking for posters, saying he first saw and heard of the posters through an officer at Fort Stevens who received one from a University of Oregon student. By now, the plague had spread across the globe, killing millions of people, and on October 15, it killed Turner Neil ’18 in Nièvre, France. On October 16, influenza killed Charles A. Guerne ’12 at Camp Zachary Taylor in Kentucky. But in Eugene, Campbell was optimistic that the worst was over: in a letter to J. M. Day, of the United War Work Campaign, Campbell wrote, “The epidemic of the Influenza at the University has involved some two or three hundred of the students, but with the exception of three or four cases. there is nothing of a very serious nature. I think that probably we have passed the crest of the wave.” Campbell was wrong. On October 17, Thomas R. Townsend ’09, who had returned to the UO to attend officer’s training school, became the first UO student to die of influenza. The next day, two more students died on campus: J. H. Sargent and Richard Shisler. On October 19, the UO lost sophomore Glen V. Walter. On October 20, influenza killed former UO students Luke Allen Farley at Camp Pike, Arkansas; Kenneth Farley at Camp Lewis; and Richard Riddle Sleight ’14 in Portland. On October 21, freshman Emanuel Northup Jr. died at the Phi Gamma Delta infirmary, and former student William Allen Casey died at the officers’ training camp at Fortress Monroe in Virginia. Panic and misinformation gripped the nation, and Campbell dealt with it in Oregon. From Roseburg, Mrs. M. M. Miller wrote to Campbell on October 17, “Will you kindly tell me if it is true, that the boys quarantined in the ‘Girls Gym’ are without any fire & if they are sick they are left there, still without heat and the sick and the well are huddled together?” Campbell replied on October 28: “My dear Mrs. Miller: Please pardon the delay in replying to your letter of some days again. We have been overwhelmed with work in connection with the Influenza . . . At the Women’s Gymnasium, where some of the men were quartered, there is an out-door pavilion in which a number of the men preferred to sleep. They were allowed to exercise their choice in this matter, but there was ample provision made for them inside the Gymnasium where abundant heat was provided. It is absolutely not true that the men were neglected in any way. A very careful organization was made before the Influenza started, and this has been carefully maintained up to and including this present time. I am glad that you wrote me, and I certainly hope that you may correct any mistaken impressions in regarding to conditions at the University.”

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On October 20, the Emerald reported, “There are 179 cases of influenza among all sorts of men and women of the University. Most of these are housed in the University’s temporary infirmaries and 40 are in the Mercy Hospital.” David Foulkes, an executive at the Oregonian, sent Campbell a handwritten note on October 23: “Dear President: Nettie and I thank you sincerely for your interest in Celeste. Dr. Giesy says for her to go to her room when discharged from the infirmary and remain there until her strength is restored.” On October 25, Campbell wrote back, “Your note of October 23rd is at hand. I expect to telephone you today in regard to Celeste. Mrs. Campbell is with Celeste this morning. We are both watching the case as carefully as possible. I am writing because I want you to know the situation fully. You can telephone to me at any time as to what you desire to have me do.” Bovard announced on October 24 that faculty wives, led by Sally Allen, wife of School of Journalism dean Eric W. Allen, had made 10 dozen masks for university nurses and attendants. “Members of the SATC [Student Army Training Corps] here were ordered to wear gauze masks during the influenza epidemic if the situation seemed to warrant it, in a telegram received yesterday morning from SATC headquarters in San Francisco.” However, the US Army surgeon decided the situation did not warrant masks. “The epidemic is practically over as far as the Students’ Army Training Corps men are concerned,” said Colonel W. H. C. Bowen, SATC commanding officer at the UO. That day the Emerald reported bits of good news: “Elmo Madden is spending the week at his home in Seattle while recovering from the influenza. Emma Wotton Hall, who has been ill with the influenza, is reported to be much better. Margaret Kubli has returned from Portland, where she spent the weekend recovering from the influenza. Ruth Nash has been discharged from the infirmary and is back at the Delta Gamma house.” But on October 28, two more students died on campus: John Herbert Creech and Robert Gerald Stuart. Campbell was reeling under the strain. On October 29, he wrote, “We have been overwhelmed with the work required by the Influenza . . . it has been extremely difficult to think of anything except the serious cases which are in the hospital . . . there are two or three about whom we are very anxious.” The next day, student Sanford Sichel died on campus. Student David Stearns Jr. recuperated from the influenza in Portland with his family. On October 30, his father wrote to Campbell: “David has recuperated nicely and practically his old self again. He is anxious to return to his college work . . . unless conditions at the college are such that if he were your son you would think it best for him to stay here for a while . . .” “Homecoming without anyone coming home is to be the rule this year owing to the epidemic of influenza which has held the campus under quarantine for the past month,” the Emerald reported on October 31. But Campbell felt the crisis had peaked. “President Campbell today issued the following statement to the students: ‘There have been almost no new cases of illness during the past week and there is no evidence to show that the epidemic is not practically over . . . now is the time to redouble every preventative measure and wipe out the sick list entirely. Students wishing to lighten their courses owing to less time in the influenza epidemic will be permitted to do so, even below the 12-hour minimum, without petition, as a result of action taken at a special meeting of the faculty Wednesday afternoon in Guild Hall. It was made clear in the discussion


on a statuette, The New Earth, a memorial to that faculty members intend to be lenient in commemorate the Oregon men who had died the matter of making up work missed in the in the war, intended for the University of present emergency, and it is desired that every Oregon campus. Prince Lucien and Susan student forced to miss classes feel easy on that Campbell, who collected Dosch’s art, attended point, since everything possible will be done by his funeral. faculty members for the students’ protection.’” On December 7, Bovard said he could not yet “Tubbing Frosh Now Taboo,” the Emerald estimate the full financial cost of the epidemic, continued, referring to the hazing of freshmen but that drugs alone cost approximately $600, enrolled in the SATC. “An order against all tubnursing services cost between $600 and $700, bing, blanketing, mill-racing, in the University and physicians’ bills totaled $35 a day. was issued from the President’s office Saturday On December 12, Campbell wrote to Mrs. A. G. night. The order was issued on account of the Barker, housemother of Alpha Phi, “Owing recent epidemic of influenza as those measures to the fact that a strict quarantine has been of punishment are considered likely to endandeclared by the city authorities in all the cases ger the health of men.” of influenza, it will be necessary that students Before the influenza outbreak in October, who may have influenza should be removed the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton, The Emerald reported prematurely, on immediately from the sorority houses either to Washington, had sent six medics to the UO for November 14, that the epidemic was over. the infirmary, to one of the city hospitals, or to an internship. Instead of studying, the Emerald some other place where suitable provision can be made for strict isolation reported, “they have given their full time to nursing influenza patients of both patient and attendant and careful observance of the quarantine at the two men’s infirmaries on this campus. Walter Bauman, Paul rules.” The Emerald reported, “Again the influenza epidemic has interHamilton, and Arthur Ritter are stationed at the Phi Gamma Delta House infirmary, while Harold Connelly, Max Wilkins, and Boyd rupted campus social affairs and has closed down all gatherings other Haynes are giving their services at the old Phi Delta Theta house. They than class meetings, leaving nothing more engaging upon the Students have been doing this work for the past three weeks and are attending no calendar than examinations. Christmas parties arranged by various groups for this week-end had been called off.” classes.” As lucky as the university was to have the sailors on campus, After Christmas break, the UO returned to normal. In 1919, a third, the sailors may have been even luckier. Influenza killed 77 seamen at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard; one of the first to die was Dr. Douglas H. mild wave of the disease continued to sicken people: in early January, history professor R. C. Clark and five members of his family were hosWarner, UO Medical School ’18, on October 8. pitalized with influenza. By the spring of 1920, the deadly disease disON NOVEMBER 5, university registrar A. R. Tiffany announced appeared around the globe, as mysteriously as it had appeared. The US Department of Human Services estimates the disease killed 675,000 that “Thanksgiving vacation this year will probably be only one day, people in the United States, out of a population of 105 million, including Thursday, November 28. Some severe penalty for not attending classes 3,675 deaths in Oregon. Friday, November 20, will be decided Wednesday.” But on Wednesday, The new university infirmary opened at 1191 University Avenue in Campbell decided to honor the traditional, four-day Thanksgiving break. In a letter to A. C. Seeley, secretary, State Board of Health, Onthank January 1919, paid for, in part, by a $2.50 per term increase in student fees, and in part by charging ill students $3.00 a day for all services renexplained, “We are very anxious to give the students an opportunity for relaxation. Some of the young women have been ill, and many others dered. In its first six months, 75 students used the infirmary. Its first have been putting in extra time in work in caring for the sick, getting annual report noted, “The dispensary has located sources of infection in health reports and otherwise doing extra work in connection with the cases of smallpox, measles, etc., and has given the committee the chance epidemic. The Dean of Women feels that it is highly desirable they be to keep the desease (sic) from becoming a general epidemic.” A century later, headlines in Eugene are reporting eerily similar probgiven the opportunity to go home and rest for a few days.” On November 9, the Register reported that in Eugene, “Epidemic is lems: globally, Ebola has killed thousands in Africa, and threatened to dying out. Only six new cases reported in three days.” Campbell left jump international borders; and on the UO campus, an infectious meningococcemia outbreak killed one student and sickened several others. The for a prearranged 11-day trip to Chicago, and was there on November tools Campbell proactively used to guide the UO through the pandemic 11, when World War I ended. Jubilant students thronged in the streets, ignoring university staff members imploring them to continue to observe in 1918 are relevant today: organization, communication, and caring. the influenza ban on public gatherings. The students and Oregon celeEditor’s note: In 1936, the Student Health Service moved into a new building brated twin joys: the end of the War to End All Wars, and the apparent (now the Volcanology Building), which housed a 26-bed infirmary. In 1965, the end of the deadliest health crisis in US history. current University Health Center opened, housing a 40-bed infirmary, isolation The epidemic had not ended, but was ebbing. The UO still banned gatherings. Then, on November 27, influenza killed Army lieutenant wing, and kitchen facility. By 1981, the need for infirmary beds had lessened and the in-patient unit was closed. The University Counseling and Testing Center and UO art professor Roswell Dosch, a talented sculptor. Dosch was serving as a bayonet instructor at Reed College in Portland, working now occupies the former infirmary space. UO LIBRARIES—SPECIAL COLLECTIONS AND UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES

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“NOTHING IN THE WORLD IS AS SOFT AND YIELDING AS WATER. YET FOR DISSOLVING THE HARD AND INFLEXIBLE, NOTHING CAN SURPASS IT.” TAO TE CHING

ER ERY WH E V E R, I E T LD A A ,W RIN ER G R E R E N E E NTS B BY KRISTIAN N E H U Y IR AT B N W TI O A R T I L LU S

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THERE WAS THIS TIME in my childhood when I was afraid of water. I can’t exactly point to what brought on the fear. I know it wasn’t always there. It showed up around my seventh year, after my mother’s father died in the room just off the parlor, and my mother disappeared into long hospital visits to save my baby brother. While I was afraid of water, I wore life vests even when they were unnecessary and I dreaded that moment on summer vacation when someone would suggest that sitting in a boat in the middle of drowning-depth water would be fun. I didn’t want to go fishing or swimming. I didn’t want to go on the class beach trip and when a friend had a pool party, I would happen to be ill that day. My parents never asked. We never talked about it. Everything went on with our life. My brother lived, my parents worked, and I went to school and avoided this and that. For a while I thought my fear was limited to the ocean, where water depth was unknowable. Unknowable things had become frightening. But why then my fear also of glittering, astringent swimming pools? The trepidation wasn’t the pounding of the surf or temperature of the water, either. It was the feeling of suspension in that airless space between the water’s surface and the theoretical ground that was unsettling. Between ground and surface, the world was a slower, heavier place where even simple movements were protracted and everything was unpredictable. There was no control in that space. I kept my aquaphobia to myself. Even today my father says he’d never known. My family didn’t talk about the stresses and sorrows we were wading through. My parents didn’t think much of the beach anyway. When we visited Hawaii on the last vacation I took with them, we hardly set foot on the sand. “We aren’t the sort of people who lounge around on the beach,” my mother reminded me. What sort of people were we?

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ONCE UPON A TIME, there was a woman who fell in love with a fish. The woman lived with the people of the high, dry country. Her people talked very little and when they did, they talked about the wind and the soil, the sand and the stones. They rarely talked about the water, and they mostly kept to themselves. The people did, however, need to drink water and the woman was given the task to go down and check the pumps and pipes that moved the people’s water up to the high, dry country where they lived. It was on one of these trips that the woman met the fish. He was swimming near the new pipes the people had laid; the ones the woman was supposed to check that day. She’d never seen anything like the fish before. She stood a long time and watched him swim. She didn’t understand water, but the way he

I WAS STARTLED THAT I HAD SO NATURALLY LEAPT INTO THE AUTUMN WATER, BUT EVEN MORE STARTLED THAT THE WATER WAS FULL OF LIGHT.

I was startled that I had so naturally leapt into the autumn water, but even more startled that the water was full of light. I moved my legs forward and back and set off a storm of little lights like the static lightning my sister and I had made running our feet fast back and forth under our covers as children. These submerged stars flashed and flickered and burnt out in scooped handfuls of water. I couldn’t hold them. They weren’t there when I looked, but were everywhere on my periphery; stars that were neither plant nor animal, eating light and spiraling on their thin arms through the dark water where they would ignite suddenly like fiber-optic tinsel. I squealed and ran through the water like a dog with a ball or a child chased in a game. And when I was worn out and the cold caught up to me, I drew close to the fire and stared back at the dark water that gave no sign, in the distance, of her magic luminescence. I felt like I’d been given a precious secret.

moved made the woman think of the smoke that rose from the night fire and of the snake that slid through the sand and stones. How could he move so much like these other things, she wondered. The fish heard her question, but he didn’t know how to answer. He told her he had been swimming all of his life. He didn’t know what it was like not to swim. He didn’t know whether he’d ever learned it or whether he’d always known. The woman and the fish talked for a long time that day and for many of the days that followed. The woman would go early to inspect the pipes and pumps and she would stay very late. She learned about swimming and about how water had very different tastes and different temperatures and textures. She didn’t understand much of what the fish told her, but she was happiest at the edge of the water with the fish. The fish was also often confused by what the woman told him about the place where she came from where the water from his lake went in those metal veins on the shore. But, he was happiest swimming near the woman and spending days talking with her.

WHEN THE WOMAN told her people that she had decided to move her home to the edge of the water where she could always be near the fish she loved, the people were confused. “You have nothing in common with that water creature,” the woman’s people pointed out. “You are from this place, where it is clean and dry.” The people told her that the water was dangerous; deeper than she thought it was and full of slimy green weeds. They begged her not to go, but she went. And when the fish saw her come to join him, he grew bright with his happiness. The woman reached her hand into the water and when she did, the fish stretched his fin to her and there, where there were none before, he had fingers. And attached to his fingers was a hand, connected to an arm that joined a torso across from a second arm with a hand and fingers. He saw then two legs with knees and feet and toes and the woman reached out again and touched his face. The man and the woman settled on the far shore, away from the pumps and pipes. They planted a little garden and they spoke every day and told stories and laughed. They scooped up water to feed the garden and all along the shore where the couple lived the trees bloomed and stretched toward the sky and fruits and vegetables thrived and so did the people who lived there.

WHEN I MOVED away from my family, it was thousands of miles away to Seattle. Embraced between Puget Sound and Lake Washington, and holding several lakes in her limits, the city is marked by her water. We moved at a respectful distance to one another for a while, but water was pivotal to my daily landscape. It punctuated my view and dictated my transportation options. I always paid attention—I watched kayakers on Lake Union and studied the colors the sun turned the sound as it dipped below the Olympic Mountains—but, over time, the city’s water began to exhibit a stronger pull on me. At the ragged end of a long week, I began to feel an insatiable need to stand on the bank of one of her lakes or on the salty lip of the sound. Even just leaning against the pilings of the downtown Seattle waterfront to hear the tide slosh in and out felt like medicine. One late October night, a group of friends gathered on the beach at Golden Gardens to wish a bright birthday to the woman who’d brought us all together to perform a momentous show about love and imagination that drew more than 5,000 of our neighbors one night. The bonfire was crackling and people were laughing and singing and occasionally dancing. The water might have moved closer to us, or we to the water, but soon someone was swimming and then another and more were on the edge, reaching out their toes. I was up to my waist and the water pulled forward and back like breathing.

I HAD CALLED Seattle home for more than a decade before I met a local boy for whom moving over and through water was second nature. We shared our first kiss on the starboard side of the Bainbridge Island ferry with the cold Puget Sound roiling below us. He folded his arms around me and we stared up at the stars that were so much brighter than those I infrequently saw above the city lights in Seattle. Below the inky black sky swelled the inky black water, spangled with its own array of tiny lights. As winter set in, the two of us took a vacation to Maui and saw all over the island how water overcame. The ocean carved the soft sand and the hard stones alike. It shaped the island, put out fires, pushed down trees and boats and buildings. Bobbing in the swells near the shore, though, was smooth and womb-like. I rose and fell with the clear water like I was part of a breath pulled in and pushed out of salty lungs. Over and over again. After a long day of swimming and snorkeling and sitting in the sun, we would go to our bed and once my eyes closed, and I lay my head against his chest, the phantom waves would lift me up and down as his chest rose and fell and my breath pulled in and out. I had never breathed so well, so fully. I did it for days. For days we repeated this walk to the warm sand and into the gradient blue of the ocean and back upon the shore. For days we sat on the beach, rested, breathed, and were saturated with water. We were those sort of people, I realized. And I was pleased.

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52 Skipping Stones 54 Natural Sounds 59 Class Notes 64 Duck Tale

Full Tilt

Oregon OLD

Mack Robinson, class of 1941, finished second behind Jesse Owens at the 1936 Olympics in Nazi Germany and was older bother to Jackie, who broke baseball’s color barrier. Later, he made his mark fighting street crime in Pasadena, California, where a post office bears his name. The UO will host the US Olympic Track and Field Trials at Hayward Field for the third consecutive time in 2016.

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Old Oregon

MENTOR

Skipping Stones as a Steppingstone

Arun Narayan Toké has mentored dozens of UO students at Skipping Stones magazine.

A Eugene-based multicultural magazine for children has honed students’ editorial skills while providing a sense of sanctuary.

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BY MELISSA HART hen she a r r ived in “Skipping Stones,” she says, “is very dear to Eugene 13 years ago, my heart.” Nina Forsberg, MA ’04, MEd ’06, sufThirty years ago, Arun Narayan Toké—born and raised fered from culture shock at finding in India—attended the War Resisters League international herself back in school in the United conference. World peace, he decided, must begin with the States. She was fresh from a Fulbright in Korea and poised education of children. He came to Cottage Grove, Oregon, to to complete dual master’s degrees in English and education at work as a publication manager at Aprovecho Sustainability the UO. One of her mandatory classes, a course on diversity in Education Center in 1987 and launched Skipping Stones mageducation, required internship hours. Forsberg searched the azine—dedicated to promoting peace through children’s stoYellow Pages and discovered a Eugene-based multicultural ries and poems about their own cultures and concerns—a children’s magazine, where she secured an internship that year later. (In addition to publishing writing and art by paved the way for her work as a professional editor. children, the magazine also occasionally publishes articles

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PHOTOGRAPH BY STEVE SMITH


If we all listened the way Arun does, that peace thing would happen in no time. —EMILY CARPENTER

by adult writers that address such topics as peacemaking, environmental issues, and multiculturalism.) Most of the magazine’s interns, translators, and editors lived in Eugene, so Toké relocated his office to an unassuming building on 12th Avenue near the UO campus. Over the decades, dozens of students from the University of Oregon have pushed through the bright green door, and, surrounded by thousands of books and manuscripts, have helped produce a bimonthly publication of writing and artwork from kids around the world. Over an omnipresent cup of tea, Toké sits down with new interns to talk about their particular interests and experiences and how they might contribute their own writing in keeping with the magazine’s mission. “We’d tell stories and talk about travel,” Forsberg recalls, “in a comfortable office that was such a nice contrast to the hustle and bustle of university study.” Toké speaks of past and current interns with affection, describing their work as clearly as if it’s featured in the current issue. Xiaohui Li, BA ’14, wrote about Chinese New Year traditions; Kamiiya Williams, BA ’14, wrote articles from an African American perspective about growing up on the violent streets of Chicago; Charlotte Rheingold, class of 2015, wrote about her Jewish heritage and festivals she had attended. “I want them to write about their experience,” Toké explains, “about their cultures, their trips, their perspectives. They commit for one term and end up interning two or three terms. They must like the mission.” Interns also help with the magazine’s layout, and review artwork and text submissions from younger contributors. Their handwritten notes in different colored ink on each manuscript give Toké a sense of which pieces will work best for an upcoming issue. “Everyone gets to participate in the big stuff,” says Emily Carpenter, BA ’14, who interned her senior year as a journalism student. She recalls the tough decisions she made about which children’s pieces would get published and which would be returned. Now a reporter at the Argus

Observer, she says her work at Skipping Stones helped teach her the importance of representing a variety of perspectives. “We need to make sure we get the other side of the story,” she says. “I think if we were all like Arun, if we all listened the way he does, this world would have a lot fewer problems. That peace thing would happen in no time.” Daemion Lee, BA ’08, discovered Skipping Stones after his work in the Peace Corps. “I did a lot of writing in Sierra Leone,” he says. “When I got back, I was trying to figure out my next path, and got hooked up with Arun.” Though his official internship has ended, Lee still shows up at the office to read submissions. He admires those that delve into politics. “Kids can be really thoughtful about current events,” he says. “People sent in poems about the protests in Hong Kong and a nonfiction piece about children in Ukraine.” His two-page photo essay about his experiences in Sierra Leone appears in the January-March 2015 issue. Interns find in Toké a validation of their own experiences and ideas. Many describe him as both mentor and friend. Charlotte Rheingold enjoyed working alongside him, taking a break to share his curry and vegetables and her baked goods. “I came to Eugene from Tucson,” she says, “and here was this older, caring, nurturing person. I loved sitting with him—he showed me how to have friends of a different age and background.” Rheingold wrote a piece for Skipping Stones about her relationship to the Sonoran desert. She’s now editor of the Oregon Undergraduate Research Journal and is interested in making a career in magazine publishing and editing. Many former interns at Skipping Stones go on to journalistic careers. Lee interns at Eugene Weekly. Nina Strochlic, BA ’13, works as a reporter for the Daily Beast. Nina Forsberg taught for the International High School at South Eugene High School before working as a professional editor—a job she balances with caring for her two young children. “I’m just waiting for my older daughter to turn five,” Forsberg says, “and then I’ll encourage her to submit her writing to Skipping Stones.” Melissa Hart is an adjunct instructor in the University

Get Your Duck On! The UO Alumni Association is sponsoring regional events in the following locations this spring. For detailed information, visit uoalumni.com/events E-mail: alumni@uoregon.edu Call: 800-245-ALUM

DENVER DUCK BIZ LUNCH Denver May 29

PAC-12/BIG 10 NIGHT AT PETCO PARK San Diego May 30

DUCKS HELPING DUCKS Costa Mesa, California June 2

DESERT DUCKS GOLF SCRAMBLE Scottsdale, Arizona June 4

DUCK BIZ LUNCH

Bellevue, Washington June 16

DUCK BIZ GROUP HAPPY HOUR Mountlake Terrace, Washington June 25

PRESIDENT’S RECEPTION AND STUDENT SENDOFF

Osaka, Hong Kong, Singapore, Beijing June 28–July 4

DUCK BIZ GROUP HAPPY HOUR AND MARINERS GAME Seattle July 9

of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication and the author of Wild Within: How Rescuing Owls Inspired a Family (Lyons, 2014). T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

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Old Oregon

ALUMNI

Natural Sounds

Composer Michael Harrison finds beauty in ancient and modern musical tunings.

See videos at OregonQuarterly. com/Natural

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teachers of Indian music, Pandit Pran ne day in the early 1980s, BY BRETT CAMPBELL Nath. Singers of classical Indian music, Michael Harrison, BMus like many in the rest of the world and in the West stretch’83, noticed that his piano sounded out of tune. ing back to ancient Greece, tend to find harmonies and There was nothing wrong with the instrumelodic intervals based on simple ratios between the frement, the UO music student soon realized. It quencies (3:2 for the interval of a fifth, for example, 4:3 for was his ears that had changed. a fourth, and so on)—a concept called “just intonation.” But That realization set Harrison on a 30-year for the past century or so, much Western music, includpath that would lead him to become one of the ing Harrison’s piano, has used a very different “equal most respected composers of his generation— lauded not just by major critics, who admire tempered” tuning that offered many advantages—at the his innovations in tuning, but also by everyday listeners expense of the sheer sonic beauty produced by natural harmonies. enchanted by his music’s ravishing beauty. “In contrast to most tempered tunings, harmonies in just Harrison’s quest began at the university. Partly inspired intonation ring with clarity and stability,” Harrison writes by a world music class he had taken with his primary mentor, former dean Robert Trotter, Harrison studied in on his website, “and when certain complex ratios are used, California with one of the 20th century’s most renowned the music shimmers with exotic resonance.”

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PHOTOGRAPHS BY UPSTUDIO


Michael Harrison has several well-regarded albums to his credit. His music has been performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum, the American Academy in Rome, and the Sundance Film Festival. He has collaborated with such contemporary music ensembles as Kronos Quartet, Roomful of Teeth, and Bang on a Can.

Harrison’s upbringing equipped him to handle the math he’d later use in his tuning experiments. His grandfather was a dean at MIT, and in the early 1960s, when Michael was six, his father, David, brought the family to Eugene, where he began a three-decade career teaching mathematics at the university. Michael began meditating in high school and studied yoga at

the UO, where his interest in the connection between spirituality and music blossomed. But you don’t need math, meditation, or a background in Indian music to enjoy Harrison’s compositions. Harrison attributes his music’s approachable beauty to his Oregon childhood. “My first love even before music was the outdoors in Oregon,” Harrison remembers. An avid hiker, mountain climber, and skier, he has climbed most of the Cascades’ major peaks and regularly skies Mount Bachelor. “I think that’s why my music is generally accessible. Nature is accessible, and composers affiliated with the West Coast understand the connection between music and nature. Just intonation is nature.” Harrison devoted himself to exploring the beauty of those tunings in his own compositions, which made him a major figure in American contemporary music. In 1986, he created the harmonic piano, which could play 24 notes per octave instead of the usual 12, thereby setting the stage for his breakthrough: the aptly titled Revelation, a 90-minute suite for solo harmonic piano hailed by critics as a revolutionary accomplishment. Harrison’s mesmerizing 2012 release Just Ancient Loops garnered still more honors and spread his reputation ever wider as its performer, cellist Maya Beiser, recorded and toured it around the world. It also signaled new directions: after a quarter-century focused mainly on writing large-scale works in just intonation for piano, Harrison is now composing for larger ensembles and choruses and using electronic instruments, which make unusual tuning much easier. And Harrison has recently begun incorporating other aspects of the Indian music he sings every day into his new music for Western instruments. He’s

Composers affiliated with the West Coast understand the connection between music and nature. cofounder and president of the American Academy of Indian Classical Music. And even though, after his epiphany of intonation, conventional pianos sounded out of tune to Harrison, he’s spent much of his life deeply involved with them. To pay the bills after moving to New York in 1987, he became a piano broker, and eventually cofounded Faust Harrison Pianos (and was later joined by his wife, Marina, an art historian) to restore vintage pianos. He left the successful firm recently as his composition career burgeoned, but still freelances helping buyers, including institutions, find the pianos they want. “It can be deeply rewarding to sustain a lifelong practice in the arts while working in another field at the same time,” he told UO music students when he returned to the university last year to accept the School of Music and Dance’s 2014 Distinguished Alumnus Award. Never having taken a business class, he attributes his business and artistic success to his musical training. “By studying music and dance, we become more intelligent and inventive members of society.” Brett Campbell, MS ’96, lives in Portland, writes for Oregon ArtsWatch, the Wall Street Journal, and many other publications, and teaches journalism at Portland State University.

FOR THE RECORD Time Loops

Revelation: Music in

From Ancient

(Cantaloupe, 2012)

Pure Intonation

Worlds: For

“The music, with

(Cantaloupe, 2007)

Harmonic Piano

its blend of East

A collection of a doz-

(New Albion, 1994)

and West, soars in

en piano pieces that

Harrison spent two

interlocking swirls

experiment with tun-

years modifying

of color, rests in

ing and expression.

a standard grand

a central chorale, and builds steam to an

The Newark, New Jersey, Star-Ledger writes, “A

piano as a harmonic piano. The website

ecstatic conclusion, sounding as if it had

monumental work . . . the pulsing, gamelan-like

Allmusic.com says of the resulting recording,

always been here,” says Tom Huizenga of

waves Harrison conjures from his customized

“This is not easy, but engaging, intense

National Public Radio.

‘harmonic piano’ have a hypnotic effect.”

listening.” T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

53


Old Oregon

CLASS NOTES

Class Notes 1950s

INDICATES UOAA MEMBER

Do you ever wish we printed more notes from your class? Your classmates feel that way, too. Submit a note online at OregonQuarterly.com or mail it to Editor, Oregon Quarterly, 5228 University of Oregon, Eugene OR 97403-5228.

ED DERKSEN, BBA

Advancement of Science.

’64, MBA ’66, has joined

He was selected based

Caldwell Banker Reed

on his contributions to

Bros. Realty in Sisters,

the field of social demog-

Oregon, specializing in

raphy, in particular for

JANET FILBERT

Black Butte Ranch and

enhancing the under-

BRAMAN, BS ’53, escapes

investment properties.

standing of population growth in the United

the rain for a few months

States and China.

each year to live in south-

MICHAEL P. RICHARDS,

east Australia, but she is

BA ’66, is a proud survivor

still a proud Oregonian.

of stage three colorectal

The Portland Art Museum

Prior to retirement,

cancer and will be con-

has acquired Relic, a paint-

she taught in the North

tinuing his 15-year career

ing by West Coast artist

Clackamas School District

as a patient liaison and

RON WIGGINTON, MFA

and enjoyed travel, volun-

volunteer for the UCLA

’68, for its permanent col-

teering, dragon boating,

Department of Emergency

lection. This accession was

and golf. She would like to

Medicine. To ensure the

made possible by a gener-

give a shout-out to all of the

future health of the flock,

ous gift from the DiMare

other part-time Aussies.

he would like to urge all

family of Tiburon.

of his classmates to have

1960s

checkups.

1970s

JOE M. FISCHER, BS ’60,

RON L. WEED, BS ’66,

HOWARD W.

MFA ’63, completed a mural

took up teaching aero-

ROBERTSON, BA ’70,

for the Cowlitz County

space science for the

MA ’78, recently pub-

Habitat for Humanity office

Junior Reserve Officer

lished a book of fic-

and supply complex.

Training Corps at

tion titled Hyperzotica

Kennewick High School.

(Publication Studio, 2015).

J. MICHAEL RICHMOND,

He can still fit into his

He has also published sev-

BS ’62, was honored by

Air Force uniform from

eral poems in the online

the El Sol Neighborhood

his time in ROTC at the

magazine Setting Forth,

Resource Center of Jupiter,

UO, although the belt is a

and recently gave a read-

Florida, upon retiring

bit tight.

ing in the Lane Writers

annual colon and prostate

Reading Series.

after a decade of service

T Protests aplenty as pictured in the 1965 Oregana.

his fall, the University of Oregon Alumni Association will be hosting class reunions for both the Class of 1965 and the Class of 1955—Ducks whose school days were shaped by the Cold War, the beginning of the Space Race, the assassination of JFK, the Vietnam War, and the Columbus Day Storm; not to mention the music of Elvis Presley, the Beatles, and Peter, Paul, and Mary. The reunions, held over three days, will include banquets, campus tours, athletic facility tours, and a tailgate prior to the UO vs. Washington State football game. If you’d like to RSVP for the Class of 1965 or the Class of 1955 reunion, or if you’re interested in holding a reunion for your own graduating class, please visit us online at uoalumni.com/reunions. We hope to see you back on campus soon!

54

O R E G O N Q U A R T E R LY

|

SUMMER 2015

as cofounder, first presi-

DUDLEY POSTON ,

dent, and communications

PhD ’68, a professor of

MICKEY CLARIZO, BS

chairman for the nonprofit

sociology at Texas A&M

’75, MS ’78, will enter his

agency. He is a retired

University, was among

first year as team trainer

journalist and retired San

the scientists elected

for the Boise Hawks. He

Diego, California, district

last November as fel-

got his start working with

director for US Senator

lows of the American

the Portland Beavers and

Dianne Feinstein.

Association for the

the Eugene Emeralds in

F L A S H B AC K

1975

The Summer 1975 issue of Old Oregon includes an item about W. Sherman Savage, MA ’25, the first African American graduate of the UO and the first African American to earn a PhD from Ohio State University. Savage recounts only one unpleasant experience—when he was denied a room at the Eugene YMCA.


Mac in 2013, ROSS KARI,

of New Mexico School of

BS ’80, MBA ’83, has

Architecture, and recently

joined the board of direc-

welcomed a new grand-

tors of Summit Bank.

son into the world: Ronan West. A set of his science

JEFF DAY, BS ’81, cur-

fiction poetry is slated

rently works in Mexico

to appear in the August

in the US Department

issue of the magazine

of State Foreign Service.

ScifaiKuest.

His experiences during Operation Iraqi Freedom

CHARLES PADGETT, BBA

in 2003 prompted him

’83, is the new chief finan-

F L A S H B AC K

1955

General Motors offers the largest scholarship ever bestowed through the University of Oregon. Open to both men and women, the scholarship will provide one student an award of as much as $2,000 per year, depending on need. The scholarship is renewable for four years.

DUCKS AFIELD KELLY PARAS, BA ’07, ANNIE BRANDJORD, BA ’07, and BOBBI JO COYLE, BS ’07, show a little UO pride despite sub-zero temperatures and a grueling 8-hour push to the summit of Africa’s highest peak, Mount Kilimanjaro. We love to track Duck migrations! Send us your favorite photos of yourself, classmates, family, and friends showing your Duck pride around the world. Attach high resolution JPEG or TIFF files to an email and send to quarterly@uoregon.edu, or submit them online at OregonQuarterly.com.

the 1970s. He has spent

alternate history novels

HENDERSON, BS ’78,

JD ’79, as Oregon’s next

the last two years with

under the “Breakpoint”

retired from his posi-

secretary of state.

Major League Baseball’s

banner.

tion with the Denver Post

to write a book, Palace of

cial officer of Verimatrix, a

the End: Inside Abu Ghraib

digital television services

Prison, Confessions of an

company based in San

Interrogator (James, 2013).

Diego, California.

An award-winning deco-

An executive for many of

rator, designer, and author,

the marketing industry’s

THOMAS JAYNE, BA

leading outdoor brands

’82, will celebrate the 25th

over the past 25 years,

anniversary of his New

JOHN SKRABO, BA ’83,

York based company, Jayne

intends to relaunch his

Design Studio, this year.

own marketing agency,

helping to develop base-

Professional golfer STEVE

is currently freelancing

PRUGH, BS ’77, was for-

for various publications,

1980s

ANDY BURNS, BS ’83,

ball in high schools

has been named manag-

SALLY RAU, JD ’84, was

throughout China.

mally inducted into

and traveling around

JIM FORD, BS ’80, was

ing partner of the Portland

appointed to the gen-

the Pacific Northwest Golf

the region documenting

named president and

law firm Cosgrave Vergeer

eral council of Cambium

BRYCE ZABEL , BA ’76,

Hall of Fame by the

his adventures on the

CEO of Central Valley

Kester LLP, which spe-

Networks, a global pro-

won the Sidewise Award

Pacific Northwest Golf

travel website Dog-Eared

Community Bank, a

cializes in business,

vider of wireless broad-

for Alternate History for

Association in recognition

Passport. As for the news-

$1.2 billion community

employment, and litigation

band solutions.

his book Surrounded by

of his impressive career

paper business, he only

bank serving the San

services.

Enemies: What if Kennedy

and skill in every facet of

misses one thing—travel-

Joaquin Valley in Central

Survived Dallas? (Mill

the game.

ing around the Pac-12.

California.

international program,

and moved to Rome. He

Adventure2.

CURT MELCHER, BS ’86,

City Press, 2013) and has

MARK C. CHILDS,

was appointed director of

MArch ’83, became

the Oregon Department of

signed with Diversion

After nearly 40 years as

Governor Kate Brown

After retiring as vice pres-

the associate dean for

Fish and Wildlife.

Books to create a series of

a sportswriter, JOHN

named JEANNE ATKINS,

ident and CFO of Freddie

research at the University

continued on page 58

T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

55


Old Oregon

CLASS NOTES

F L A S H B AC K

1995

Twenty years before the current trend toward wearable technology, professor Zary Segall introduces the Navigator, a wearable computer described as “a cross between a Sony Walkman and a pair of wraparound sunglasses.” Segall says that wearable computers will be functional in a variety of work settings.

Will Power

Is the UO in your will?

Discover how you can help tomorrow’s students with a gift in your estate plan.

56

O R E G O N Q U A R T E R LY

|

SUMMER 2015

“Thank you.” Robel Haile PathwayOregon Scholar, Rogers Memorial Pre-med Scholarship

Contact us 541-346-1687 800-289-2354 giftplan@uoregon.edu


SHOW YOUR SUPPORT OF THE UO BY BECOMING A MEMBER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OREGON ALUMNI ASSOCIATION AT

UOALUMNI.COM

T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

57


Old Oregon

1990s

stories, Thirteen: Stories of

the firm’s sustainability

’86, recently retired from

Transformation. This is his

practice leader, GUNNAR

Lane Community College

LANCE ICHIMURA , BA

first foray into editing, and

HUBBARD, MArch ’92,

in Eugene and moved

’90, was appointed vice

the ninth book released by

was elected a fellow of

to Seattle, where she is

president of product plan-

his publishing company,

the American Institute of

working as an internship

ning and inventory for

Resurrection House. The

Architecture.

coordinator for Bellevue

the automotive division of

title of his anthology is a

College. She also published

Servco Pacific Inc. In his

reference to Death, the 13th

GABRIELLE VALDEZ

the second edition of her

new position, Ichimura

tarot card, which is a sym-

DOW, BA ’95, is the new

textbook, Find Your Next

will be responsible for the

bol of creative change.

vice president of market-

Professional Job.

ordering and distribution

TAMARA PINKAS, MS

RICK BARTOW Things You Know But Cannot Explain

CLASS NOTES

of all Toyota, Lexus, and

ing and fan engagement for Vancouver architect

the Green Bay Packers.

The Monterey County

Scion vehicles for the state

PETER HILDEBRAND,

Environmental Bureau,

of Hawaii.

BArch ’91, and his former

CHUCK WAHR, BS ’95,

classmate, GREG YOUNG,

was appointed vice president of sales and mar-

led by Director of Environmental Health

AMY LEIMBACH, BA ’90,

MArch ’91, participated

JOHN RAMIREZ,

became Alpha Media’s

in a weeklong team proj-

keting for Trijicon Inc.,

BS ’86, received

new regional director of

ect for Impact Ministries

a company that manu-

the 2014 Excellence

business after working

to provide master plan-

factures optical sighting

in Environmental

with the Portland-based

ning and design for a new

devices for firearms.

Health Award for its

company since 2009.

orphanage in Guatemala.

from the California

MARK TEPPO, BA ’90,

The structural engineering

was hired as vice president

Conference of Directors of

edited and published an

consulting firm Thornton

for Bellwether Enterprise,

Environmental Health.

anthology of speculative

Tomasetti announced that

where he will work for

JASON KRUPOFF, BS ’99,

Food Safety Program

Through August 9, 2015 Support for the exhibition is provided by the Ford Family Fund of the Oregon Community Foundation, Arlene Schnitzer, the Coeta and Donald Barker Changing Exhibitions Endowment, The Harold and Arlene Schnitzer CARE Foundation, a grant from the Oregon Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts, a federal agency, the Ballinger Endowment, Philip and Sandra Piele, and JSMA members. Rick Bartow (b. 1947). Bear with Humor (For Walt Come a Sunday), 2004. Wood with pigment, metal, 30 x 17 x 13 in. Collection of Arlene and Harold Schnitzer

http://jsma.uoregon.edu 541.346.3027

DUCKS AFIELD

EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity

58

O R E G O N Q U A R T E R LY

MOULIK D. BERKANA, BA ’00, puts the O in Borobudur—a 9th century Javanese temple and the largest Buddhist monument in the world. |

SUMMER 2015


F L A S H B AC K

2005

From the remains of the moribund School of Physical Education, the Department of Human Physiology has emerged. The Summer 2005 issue of Oregon Quarterly chronicles how a department with very few majors and a poor reputation has morphed into a home for advanced biomedical research. the company’s Western

SETH CRAWFORD, BS

After this year’s 57th

Region office.

’02. The newest addition

Annual Grammy Awards,

will join sisters Chloe

ALISON BJORKEDAL ,

Kathleen and Raegan Lee.

BMus ’03, took home the

JODIE S. MINER, BA

of vice president for

LINCOLN NEHRING, BS

Compendium for her

the Swedish Medical

’01, JD ’04, was named

work with Partch, an

Center Foundation in

the new president and

ensemble that plays the

January after seven

CEO of Voices for Utah

music and instruments of

years with University of

Children, a child advocacy

20th-century composer

Washington Medicine

organization.

Harry Partch.

also currently copresi-

A former leader at Intel,

Bestselling author of

dent of the Association of

RAGHU VALLURI, MBA

Find Your Happy: An

Fundraising Professionals

’01, was promoted to vice

Inspirational Guide to

Advancement.

president of informa-

Loving Life to Its Fullest,

Advancement. She is

MOULIK BERKANA , BA

Together, we’ll map a course that can take you where you want to go

trophy for Best Classical

’99, assumed the role

2000s

DREAM BIG

tion technology solution

SHANNON KAISER,

delivery at the Standard,

BA ’03, has been named

an insurance and finan-

among the top 100 Women

cial company based in

to Watch in Wellness by

Portland.

the online health magazine

541.683.2900 871 Country Club Road • CarterAndCarter.com Securities are offered through Raymond JameS Financial SeRviceS, inc., member FinRa/SiPc.

Mind Body Green.

’00, recently finished a four-year tour as a political

SAM ADAMS, BA ’02, for-

officer at the US Embassy

mer Portland mayor and

EMILY CABLE, BS ’06,

in Jakarta, Indonesia. He

the executive director of

a serials and e-resource

will soon serve another

the City Club of Portland,

librarian at the Salem

one-year assignment at the

will leave his current

Public Library, is the recip-

US Consulate in Peshawar,

position and head to

ient of the 2015 First Step

Pakistan. Although he is

Washington, D.C., to serve

Award, presented by the

home in Eugene sporadi-

as director of US climate

Association for Library

cally, he follows the Ducks

initiatives at the World

Collections and Technical

year-round, and some-

Resources Institute.

Services Continuing

times gets to relax with

Resources Section.

his family and visit the

New York sculptor NICK

Saturday Market.

VAN WOERT, BArch ’02,

BRIAN GANDER, ’07

attracted international

DEd, will become super-

SUSAN CRAWFORD

acclaim last year with

intendent of the Reedsport

(SHOEMAKER), BS ’01,

high-profile solo exhi-

School District this sum-

opened her new Oregon-

bitions in Italy and the

mer after he returns from

based CPA practice this

Netherlands. His latest

teaching in China.

January, with offices in

project, Pink Elephants on

Bend and Prineville. She is

Parade, was recently on

NICHOLAS SWOPE, BS

expecting her third daugh-

display at the University

’08, is a Paul D. Coverdell

ter with her husband,

of Nevada.

continued on page 60 T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

59


Old Oregon

CLASS NOTES

Peace Corps Fellow com-

Former UO All-American

School District in Oregon.

pleting his MS in health

track star PHYLLIS

He developed the trans-

sciences and public

FRANCIS, BS ’14, beat her

portation system for the

health at Western Illinois

personal idol and Olympic

district and implemented

University. His coau-

gold medalist Sanya

a defensive driving and

thored research article, “A

Richards-Ross to take

first-aid course for school

Tornado, a Town, and a

first place in the women’s

bus drivers that was

Team,” was recently pub-

400-meter at the Millrose

among the first of its kind

lished in the March edition

Games this February.

in the state. Right before he retired, he received the Phi

of the magazine Natural Hazards Observer.

IN MEMORIAM

Delta Kappa award for ser-

Three years ago, DANIEL

NORMAN JOHN

cation as an Outstanding Elementary Educator.

vice and leadership in eduSOULE , BA ’09, and his

JOHNSON, BArch ’47,

brother, Tyler Soule,

died March 16 at the age

founded H2O Adventures,

of 97. After working at

ROGER C. WILEY, BS ’49,

a California whitewater

an architectural firm in

MS ’53, PhD ’63, died on

rafting company. They

Seattle, an offer to join

February 14 at the age of 91.

currently offer trips

the UO’s architecture

Being a very tall youth, he

down the south, middle,

faculty made him realize

was courted by the Ducks

and north forks of the

his passion for academia.

basketball team and sub-

American River and the

He earned his doctorate

sequently became the very

north fork of the Yuba

from the University of

first Washington state stu-

River. Their promise of

Pennsylvania and went on

dent to receive an athletic

the “best day ever” is even

to teach at the University of

scholarship to an out-of-state

more tempting for UO

Washington for 29 years.

school. When World War II

alumni—who receive a 30

He was honored with

broke out, his family had to

percent discount.

numerous leadership posi-

convince the Department of

tions and awards, includ-

War to let him serve because

ing the American Institute

he was considered too tall.

of Architects Seattle Medal

He met his wife and moved

of Honor in 1991.

to Pullman, Washington,

2010s

where he became depart-

Beer chemist and former laboratory technician for

ROBY D. HALL , BS ’47,

ment chair of men’s physical

Ninkasi Brewery DANA

died on January 3 at the age

education and recreation.

GARVES, BS ’10, has

of 94. He served in the US

He also continued to work

opened BrewLab—Eugene’s

Coast Guard during World

nationally and served his

first beer analysis facility.

War II and spent 36 years

local community in count-

The company hopes to help

as an educator in the Baker

less ways.

the Oregon brewery community hone its skills and

Your Point of View Oceanfront with views from every room.

improve beer quality. ALICIA INNS, BA ’10,

joined the KXAN News team in Austin, Texas, as a morning show multi-

Pet & Family Friendly • Georgie’s Beachside Grill • Legendary Service

platform journalist. Portland natives KELLY COLLEEN MALONEY,

CALL

855-428-6715

VISIT

hallmarkinns.com

Oceanfront Resort Properties in Newport & Cannon Beach, Oregon

BA ’13, and JARED CHRISTOPHER RASMUSSEN, BS ’13, were

married in September 2014.

60

O R E G O N Q U A R T E R LY

|

SUMMER 2015

F L A S H B AC K

1965

The university holds an allnight teach-in about the situation in Vietnam. The first speaker is Senator Wayne Morse, an outspoken critic of the US position. At the start of the event, 3,000 people are in attendance, but only about 250 remain until the next morning.


WALLACE KAY

2014 in Portland. An early

and chaired and taught

HUNTINGTON, BA ’52,

pioneer of the Oregon

in the art department

died on February 3 in

modernist art move-

for many years. He was

Portland, at the age of 88.

ment, he was intrigued

elected lifetime trustee

While he remained active

by expressive, evocative

emeritus to the National

within his landscape archi-

images. He taught at the

Board of the American

tecture firm, Huntington &

Pacific Northwest College

Craft Council for his role

Kiest, throughout his life,

of Art for 36 years, was

in shaping important

he also taught at Portland

a member of the Oregon

changes in how clay is

State University, wrote a

Arts Commission, and had

used and recognized as an

column for the Oregonian’s

his work featured in 175

artistic medium.

Northwest Magazine, and

exhibitions throughout his

served as a consultant

lifetime. He and his part-

JAN LEWIS WARD, BBA

for many early historic

ner raised three children

’61, died January 4 in Bend,

preservation projects in

and two stepchildren.

Oregon, at the age of 74. A

the region. He was later

fourth-generation resident

appointed to the first State

KENNETH SHORES,

of Bend, the driven housing

Advisory Committee on

MFA ’57, died July 30,

developer had a vision for

Historic Preservation,

2014, in Portland. He was

his city. He built many sub-

and served as presiding

an artist-in-residence

divisions and was a gener-

officer of the Society of

and then director of the

ous community benefactor.

Architectural Historians.

Contemporary Crafts Gallery in the 1960s. He set

GARY ALAN LUDKE ,

HARRY WIDMAN, MFA

up the ceramics facility at

MEd ’62, died on

’56, died on October 24,

Lewis and Clark College

continued on page 62

DUCKS AFIELD JOE ZAWODNY, BA’00, his wife Cari, and their fledgling Ducks Ethan and Zoe score a celebrity photo op with Donald Duck in Disneyland during spring break.

check off your adventure list

Plan your Oakridge getaway at EugeneCascadesCoast.org/Waterfalls | 800.547.5445

T H E M AG A Z I N E O F T H E U N I V E R S I T Y O F O R E G O N

61


Old Oregon

CLASS NOTES

Indulge Your Mind No tests, no grades— just learning for the joy of it!

At the University of Oregon

Lectures, discussions, and study groups for adults who know that learning has no age limit.

LEARN 800-824-2714 • 541-346-0697 MORE: http://osher.uoregon.edu EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity. © 2015 University of Oregon.

Quarterl

RON J. FAORO, BS ’77,

71. He grew up in New

died on March 1 after a

York, served in the

of 79. After serving as

paragliding accident in the

Vietnam War, and went

a Navy radioman in

foothills of Santa Barbara.

on to receive degrees from

the Korean conflict, he

A Portland native, he was

the University of North

married his high school

the owner and clinician

Carolina at Chapel Hill,

sweetheart and became

at St. Francis Pet Clinic,

Ohio University, and the

an educator, counselor,

where he had worked

UO—where he met his

and school adminis-

since the early 1980s. He

wife, CAROLE TANZER

trator in Vancouver,

was also the former pres-

MILLER, BA ’74, in Carson

Washington. He also

ident of the California

Hall. He worked for

Our magazine advertising

served as president of

Veterinary Medical

many years as a self-em-

works. Hard. For information,

the Vancouver Education

Association.

ployed manufacturers

y

Autumn 2014

trust for Building case law. a climate in crisis

the

e Magazin

of

the

ity univers

of

oregon

call Robin Kamerling at (971) 200-7047 or e-mail her at

|

active member of the Presbyterian community.

rkamerling@sagacitymedia.

representative. MARK EVAN GARRABRANT, BMus

MARSHALL K. SAUCEDA , BS ’81, MS

BRENT C. ALLISON,

the age of 60. He began

’94, died December 4 in

BS ’77, MS ’79, died on

his career in experimental

Los Angeles at the age of

February 28 in Juneau,

music in college and even-

60. He recently retired

Oregon

Alaska, at the age of 61.

tually joined the composi-

from the position of asso-

He moved to Alaska to

tion faculty at California

ciate vice president of

work for the Klukwan

Institute of the Arts. He

student affairs at Loyola

Native Corporation and

was an avid cook, cyclist,

Marymount University,

ended his career in risk

and dancer.

where he had worked

The Magazine of the University of Oregon

management for the state.

OregonQuarterly.com

He also cofounded a hot

JOSEPH NORMAN

he served as director

sauce company called

MILLER, MS ’78, died

for the UO’s Office of

“Lavalicous.”

January 27 at the age of

Multicultural Affairs.

Q U A R T E R LY

O R E G O N Q U A R T E R LY

Association and was an

’77, died February 18 at

com. She works hard, too.

62

A shared love of chamber music led recent graduates of the School of Music and Dance to form Delgani String Quartet. JANNIE WEI, DMA ’13, WYATT TRUE, DMA ’14, along with Morgan O’Shaughnessey and KELLY QUESADA, MMus ’13 have already performed widely in Oregon, including a performance at the opening ceremony for the Oregon House of Representatives 2015 session. The group’s repertoire ranges from such classical composers as Mozart and Beethoven to works by living composers.

Washington, at the age

Not one.

in the public

Four Score

March 16 in Spokane,

No other Northwest media will deliver you this print audience.

Oregon

CLASS NOTABLE

SUMMER 2015

since 1997. Previously,


T:2.5” S:2”

JOHN A. SHELLMAN died

Copenhagen—she was the

IN MEMORIAM

on December 16 in Eugene

only other American post-

at the age of 90. He served

doctoral fellow in the lab—

Upward Bound Program, which supports low-in-

JEAN KENDALL

in the Army and attended

and they eventually settled

come high school stu-

GLAZER, BA ’40, died

college on the GI Bill,

in Eugene to join the newly

dents on the journey to

on March 3. Trained

receiving a doctorate in

revamped Department of

college. The Marshall K.

under the renowned

chemistry from Princeton.

Chemistry. He published

Sauceda scholarship has

László Moholy-Nagy at

He met his wife at the

his final paper on his 80th

been created to honor his

the Institute of Design

Carlsberg Laboratory in

birthday.

memory.

in Chicago, she began

Xbox One, starting at just $399 T:2.125”

FACULTY

in establishing LMU’s

S:1.625”

He played a critical role

Microsoft at Pioneer Place 300 SW Yamhill Street Portland, OR 97202 503-265-1400

a lifelong fascination with the Bauhaus move-

DUBIN , MA ’82, died

ment. Glazer eventually

August 1, 2013 in Seattle

returned to the UO and

at the age of 60. Imbued

taught in the then-named

with impressive artis-

School of Education. She

tic skills from a young

traveled extensively and

age, she spent her career

experimented fearlessly,

teaching art in mid-

inspiring generations of

dle schools and high

future artists. The College

schools in Oregon and

of Arts at Portland State

Washington. She is

University established

remembered for her spirit

the Jean Kendall Glazer

of fun, wit, and commit-

Endowed Scholarship in

ment to education.

her honor.

F L A S H B AC K

1985

The UO theater ORDER ONLINE, arts department r o u national n d : file name: MSFT0059_2.5X2.125_Tile_ad_Oregon_Quarterly_R3.indd gains as 3recognition its PRFRDR production job name: Oregon Quarterly date: 10-17-2014 4:00 PM PRDCR of Excursion online element type: Tile Print Ad studioShop artist: Jason Huffat Fare by Dennis Smith, MFA ACD:ART ACTMGR UODuckStore.com color specs: 4C station name: Jason’s Workstation and ’84, travels to the Kennedy skip the shipping fees ACD:CPY STQC with our FREE in-store Center in Washington, D.C., pickup option! link names: XboxOne_Controller_RHS78_TransBG_C_2013.psd (2.35%; 12784 ppi; CMYK), XboxOne_Console_RHS78_TransBG_C_2013_UpRes_600dpi.psd (6.51%; as part of the American 9217 ppi; CMYK), XboxOne_Controller_RHS78_TransBG_C_2013_72dpi_no_shadow.psd (2.35%; 3068 ppi; CMYK), XboxOne_horizontal_C-Wht_cmyk.eps (31.27%), MSFT_logo_c_C-Wht.pdf (17.03%) College Theater Festival. It is inks: inCyan, the first UO production 15 Magenta, Yellow, Black fonts: Segoe Pro (Semibold, SemiLight, Regular) notes: None years to be so honored. UODuckStore.com

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We’re quarterly, and we’re 24/7, too. Hannah L. Sportswear Bachelor of Arts in Public Relations. Aspires to be the Senior Vice President of Marketing and Communication for ABC. Learn more about our grads at UODuckStore.com/Grad2015.

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63

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Old Oregon

CLASS NOTES Do you have a Duck Tale to tell? Visit oregonquarterly. com/contact or e-mail quarterly@uoregon.edu for submission guidelines.

A natatorium and dance hall were part of TB Potter Realty Company’s big plans for Bayocean.

City in the Sand

O

The strophe and anti-strophe of the waves. n the northern Oregon coast, BY JAMES PEARSON, MFA ’98 Bayocean began to vanish almost as soon Tillamook Spit is long and as it was born. The sea ate away at the spit, the reclaiming way of the brush-covered, storm-blasted in the winter. A constant wind turns the waves white with spindrift. Seagulls hang world. It was hubris, building on an unprotected beach. Steadily, the frontage dissolved and a few outbuildings were lost to the ocean. And level, not needing to flap their wings to stay aloft. Driftwood then went the dance hall. A storm in 1936 severed the access road, briefly lies in frozen forms like an accidental still-life. turning the spit into an island. Eventually, the post office closed and the The need to fill in blank spaces . . . I moved to Oregon for last of the citizens moved inland. graduate school. The choice was lightly considered: born in I don’t intend for this to be some sort of ode to melancholy and loss. Ohio, I’d never been west of the Rocky Mountains, never seen the Pacific Ocean. I finished up my MFA in 1998 and It’s not that at all. Maybe this is about the power of the vast ocean. It did not leave. Oregon has a way of getting beneath your skin. Things was the Pacific and the shuddering landscape that brought Potter here for hunting. The water moves as if it is breathing. It is the same change and things evolve. I fell in love and got married and became a father, found work as a teacher, bought a house. And while developing ocean I came to see with my own eyes when I was in my 20s. I moved curriculum for a high school class, I found myself digging into the history to Oregon full of vinegar, sure in my own mind to be the next big thing. I wanted to be Hemingway and wanted to be Faulkner. Older now, I of my adopted state. understand that even the best-laid plans often erode and life cannot be For some reason, the saga of Bayocean struck a chord inside of me. In the early days of the last century, Bayocean was an improbable sort of Oregon strictly planned. Life as a series of unforeseen waves—Potter and his namesake son were sued several times for fraud. dream. A sportsman named Potter, originally from Kansas City, came to A November afternoon—walking on the spit with my wife, watching elk hunt and fish in the coastal wilds. The Oregon coast enchanted him and he found it difficult to leave. But he was also a real estate developer, a our girls climb on the sawgrass-covered dunes, seeking teenage isolation, while our six-year-old boy finds a length of bull kelp and twirls it rich man, and so he bought Tillamook Spit, that narrow bar that separates around his head as he shrieks with laughter. I came to see this place, too. bay from ocean. In 1906, he and his namesake son platted a community They say in some places the remnant foundations of Bayocean can be of some 3,000 lots. Within four years, more than 100 buildings had been constructed in this community without a past—a post office and a fine found if you’re willing to dig. But something else has taken the town’s hotel, a movie theater and a heated saltwater pool. A wooden dance hall place all over again—wildness and pure beauty, a return to the way of was nestled amidst the dunes. Bayocean boasted electric lights and four the world and the wonder. Plans and dreams always change and the miles of paved roads at a time when the rest of the state was mostly mud world reclaims. Everything is in constant transition, unknowable in its tracks. Spring water was piped via an aqueduct from a nearby mountain. changing, day upon day. I know that now. I’ve made my peace with it. I like to think that somewhere old Potter is okay with it too—the way the There was a fish cannery. But Bayocean was always intended as a luxury tourist destination. Hear the music from the dance hall—summer night, tide breaks over the naked and bare Tillamook Spit. It is truly lovely. orchestra on a raised stage. The music shimmer-drifts over swaying couples, a waltz mingled with the sound of the ocean. James Pearson, MFA ’98, lives in Eugene with his family.

64

O R E G O N Q U A R T E R LY

|

SUMMER 2015

PHOTOGRAPH FROM THE COLLECTIONS OF THE TILLAMOOK COUNTY PIONEER MUSEUM


If If has been part of who we are since 1876. That’s when a community asked “What if?” What if we started a new university? One as unique as our state. And what if we founded it right here? In Eugene. In 1876, our community came together and forever changed the lives of thousands of others to come. That “What If?” made promises that have spanned generations. With nearly 130 years of exploration and discovery, that questioning drive has helped shape leaders. Helped form lawyers who make the world cleaner. Architects who make it greener. Professors who teach better teaching. Our feet planted in the humanities and our hands at work in the lab, we teach each other to think critically and live ethically. We reimagine the field of special education with zebrafish research. And rewrite the rules of climatology with journalism students. Because interdisciplinary is more than a word here. It’s our way of life. Our community of curious collaborators searches and finds new ways, together. Driven by the insatiable desire to know what we don’t know. If started it all here. If is what we still do here. We if. At the University of Oregon. UOREGON.EDU EO/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity.


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