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Washington State Magazine :: Summer 2013

Washington State Magazine :: Summer 2013

Larry Clark
0/5 ( ratings)
In this issue of Washington State Magazine:
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Features
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The Animal Mind Reader :: Beyond the notion that animals other than humans may indeed possess consciousness, Jaak Panksepp’s work suggests a litany of philosophical implications: How should we treat animals? Do we have free will? Where might we search for the meaning of life? Are our most fundamental values actually biological in nature? by Eric Sorensen

Something Old Something New—A history of hospitality :: When Washington State College introduced its hospitality program in 1932, no one had yet imagined an airport hotel, a drive-through restaurant, a convention center, or the boom of international travel. Eighty years later, as the industry grows in new and unexpected ways, the School of Hospitality sends its graduates out to meet its evolving needs. by Hannelore Sudermann

Waiting for the Rain :: “The point of our visit was to talk about food, drought, and war. Begnemato sits in central Mali, in the east of Mopti province, where staples like millet and rice sell for six times what they did a year ago. Andoule blames their food problems on the fighting in the north and last year’s poor rains.... The previous year’s drought had depleted village seed stocks, and the conflict in northern Mali has either cut off many farmers from their fields or frightened them away.” From We Never Knew Exactly Where: Dispatches from the Lost Country of Mali. by Peter Chilson
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Panoramas - Short articles on research, outreach and alumni of Washington State University
------------
:: Why aren’t plants more sick than they are?

:: Chicha in the landscape

:: Let everyone eat bread

:: Training the island police

:: Gun Show Nation—a conversation with Joan Burbick

:: Soldiering on
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Departments
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:: First Words: Small Towns You Should Visit

:: Posts

:: Sports: Games everyone can play

:: In Season: Juice grapes

:: Last Words: Spaces between
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Tracking - Profiles of alumni of Washington State University
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:: Eric Zakarison ’81 and Sheryl Hagen-Zakarison ’83, ’91—Thinking small

:: Marcia Steele Hoover ’90—Running with a mission

:: Dan ’44 and Val ’46 Ogden—Staying activist in older age

:: Greg Blanchard—On timing and taste

:: Alumni news: Cougars pounce on new plates
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New media - Reviews of books and music by WSU faculty and alumni
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:: Blasphemy: New and Selected Stories by Sherman Alexie ’94

:: We Are the Bus by James McKean ’68, ’74

:: Chicago, Barcelona Connections by Greg Duncan ’98

:: WSU Cougars from A to Z by Carla Nellis ’90

:: New & Noteworthy: Planet Rock Doc: Nuggets from Explorations of the Natural World and The Whole Story of Climate: What Science Reveals about the Nature of Endless Change by E. Kirsten Peters; Blazing a Wagon Trail to Oregon: A Weekly Chronicle of the Great Migration of 1843 by Lloyd W. Coffman ’87; Career Choices for Veterinarians: Private Practice and Beyond by Carin A. Smith ’84
Pages
99
Format
Kindle Edition
Publisher
Washington State University
Release
April 26, 2013

Washington State Magazine :: Summer 2013

Larry Clark
0/5 ( ratings)
In this issue of Washington State Magazine:
------------
Features
------------
The Animal Mind Reader :: Beyond the notion that animals other than humans may indeed possess consciousness, Jaak Panksepp’s work suggests a litany of philosophical implications: How should we treat animals? Do we have free will? Where might we search for the meaning of life? Are our most fundamental values actually biological in nature? by Eric Sorensen

Something Old Something New—A history of hospitality :: When Washington State College introduced its hospitality program in 1932, no one had yet imagined an airport hotel, a drive-through restaurant, a convention center, or the boom of international travel. Eighty years later, as the industry grows in new and unexpected ways, the School of Hospitality sends its graduates out to meet its evolving needs. by Hannelore Sudermann

Waiting for the Rain :: “The point of our visit was to talk about food, drought, and war. Begnemato sits in central Mali, in the east of Mopti province, where staples like millet and rice sell for six times what they did a year ago. Andoule blames their food problems on the fighting in the north and last year’s poor rains.... The previous year’s drought had depleted village seed stocks, and the conflict in northern Mali has either cut off many farmers from their fields or frightened them away.” From We Never Knew Exactly Where: Dispatches from the Lost Country of Mali. by Peter Chilson
------------
Panoramas - Short articles on research, outreach and alumni of Washington State University
------------
:: Why aren’t plants more sick than they are?

:: Chicha in the landscape

:: Let everyone eat bread

:: Training the island police

:: Gun Show Nation—a conversation with Joan Burbick

:: Soldiering on
------------
Departments
------------
:: First Words: Small Towns You Should Visit

:: Posts

:: Sports: Games everyone can play

:: In Season: Juice grapes

:: Last Words: Spaces between
------------
Tracking - Profiles of alumni of Washington State University
------------
:: Eric Zakarison ’81 and Sheryl Hagen-Zakarison ’83, ’91—Thinking small

:: Marcia Steele Hoover ’90—Running with a mission

:: Dan ’44 and Val ’46 Ogden—Staying activist in older age

:: Greg Blanchard—On timing and taste

:: Alumni news: Cougars pounce on new plates
------------
New media - Reviews of books and music by WSU faculty and alumni
------------
:: Blasphemy: New and Selected Stories by Sherman Alexie ’94

:: We Are the Bus by James McKean ’68, ’74

:: Chicago, Barcelona Connections by Greg Duncan ’98

:: WSU Cougars from A to Z by Carla Nellis ’90

:: New & Noteworthy: Planet Rock Doc: Nuggets from Explorations of the Natural World and The Whole Story of Climate: What Science Reveals about the Nature of Endless Change by E. Kirsten Peters; Blazing a Wagon Trail to Oregon: A Weekly Chronicle of the Great Migration of 1843 by Lloyd W. Coffman ’87; Career Choices for Veterinarians: Private Practice and Beyond by Carin A. Smith ’84
Pages
99
Format
Kindle Edition
Publisher
Washington State University
Release
April 26, 2013

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