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Classics

See the Unseen: Help our Vets Heal Through Art and Performance

October 15, 2019 by Thomas G. Palaima

We miss a lot that is important in life because we are busy with our day-to-day concerns. When we do have leisure time, we choose mindless activities for good reasons. It does our souls good to vacate our minds.  Right after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 traumatized our nation, our president advised us: […]

Veterans Ceremony

Consider War Stories Without Romanticizing Them

November 11, 2018 by Thomas G. Palaima

For as long as there have been wars — which in human history is forever — there have been stories about war. They stretch back to Homer’s riveting epic songs of the battlefield — the “Iliad” — and of returning home from it — the “Odyssey.” They come forward in truly sensitive films like Richard […]

Glenn Towery

Beyond the Battlefield: The war rages on, but this time it’s personal

November 9, 2018 by Rachel White

The Thorazine haze was beginning to fade when Glenn Towery was discharged from Oakland Naval Hospital. For the last however-many days he had felt listless, “like a non-human being,” making him forget why he was even there in the first place. Before that, he occupied a hospital cot in the Philippines, next to an injured […]

U.S. soldier practices donning his gas mask during a field exercise.

The Untold Stories of Modern Warriors

November 11, 2016 by Rachel White

The bravest are surely those who have the clearest vision of what is before them, glory and danger alike, and yet notwithstanding, go out to meet it.   – Thucydides  Oftentimes, we are met with spectacular images of war, depicting valiance and vilifying enemies; but these stories, some say, lack an honest narrative. While soldiers […]

Jen posing outside

The Flipped Classroom

August 19, 2013 by Jennifer Ebbeler

After a quiet summer, campus is once again bustling with activity as faculty and students prepare for a new academic year. It may still feel like the dog days of summer outside, but soon enough the campus sidewalks will be filled with groups of students and there will be a foreboding line at the Starbucks […]

"retirement"

Retired Faculty: Spring 2011

May 27, 2011 by Jessica Sinn

More than 30 College of Liberal Arts professors from more than a dozen departments have retired over the past year, after spending decades serving their students and the university community. Retirees include Linguistics Professor Robert King, who was the founding dean of the College of Liberal Arts and served in that post from 1979–1989 and […]

graphic stating "in memorium"

In Memoriam: Spring 2011

May 27, 2011 by Jessica Sinn

Norval Glenn, professor emeritus of sociology, who taught for 47 years at the university, died Feb. 15. He was 77 years old. A prominent scholar of family sociology, Glenn wrote extensively on marriage and divorce, aging and the life course, and methods and survey data analysis. In 2008, he co-directed the first nationally representative sample […]

cover of A Nation of Speachifiers

Awards & Honors: Spring 2010

May 21, 2010 by Michelle Bryant

The Silver Spurs, the student service organization that cares for Bevo, gave out its 21st annual Endowed Teaching Fellowship awards to four liberal arts professors, who each receive a $6,000 prize. The group surprises each recipient with an unannounced presentation. They are: Kirsten Belgum (Germanic Studies) Robert Moser (Government) Elizabeth Engelhardt (American Studies) Lisa Moore […]

Michael Gagarin

Retiring Faculty

May 10, 2010 by Jessica Sinn

James Brow, Anthropology Brow, professor of anthropology and Asian Studies, taught at the university for 30 years and served as chair of the Department of Anthropology from 1995 to 2005. His research focused on social and economic development in South Asia and Sri Lanka. Brow also served as acting director of the South Asia Institute from […]

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