Whitman Stories

July 28, 2020
First Year Seminar Program Opens New Possibilities
What is childhood? What is the process of othering? How do we differentiate between humans and animals? How do humans experience time? How do we conceive of community and solitude outside of the boundaries of the ordinary? This fall, new students will engage these questions and more while they sharpen their critical thinking, writing and reading comprehension skills in Whitman College’s new First Year Seminars program.
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July 28, 2020
Physician Tanny Davenport '98 on Preventing COVID-19: "Masking Works"
Davenport, an internal medicine doctor at Virginia Mason Memorial Hospital in Yakima, Washington, a national hotspot for coronavirus cases, tells Morning Edition host Steve Inskeep how encouraging everyone in the community to wear masks helped cut transmission of the virus in half.
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July 27, 2020
Associate Professor of Politics Jack Jackson Discusses Constitutional Principles, Protests
Jackson is the author of “Law Without Future: Anti-Constitutional Politics and the American Right."
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July 21, 2020
Into the Woods: Senior Clara Hoffman Studies the Impact of Predators in the Pacific Northwest
On a late spring day, Clara Hoffman is creeping through the woods, as quietly as possible. She and her fellow researchers are using radio signals to triangulate the location of a cow elk in the area. Somewhere near her, a calf is hidden in the woods. Their mission is simple: Find the calf, blindfold it to keep it calm, fit it with its own radio collar, take measurements, and then clear out.
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July 20, 2020
Seattle Mariners CEO John Stanton '77 on Bringing Major League Baseball Back Safely
As teams are set to kick off a shortened, 60-game season, the Mariners are following strict guidelines for testing, tracing, cleaning and more. Even though fans won’t be in T-Mobile Park, the safety of players, coaches and ballpark personnel is paramount.
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July 19, 2020
Campaign Manager Katharine Gillen '20 Finds Creative Solutions During COVID-19
The politics graduate is serving as campaign manager for April Berg, a Democrat and Everett, Washington, school board member vying for a 44th District open seat in the House. After attempting to work remotely together on the campaign, they recently combined households.
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July 17, 2020
Emily Brucia ’11 Launches Telehealth Service When Americans Need it Most
In April 2020, Emily Brucia '11 launched Elemental Telehealth — a health tech company focused on connecting people with psychologists in private practice who provide holistic, evidence-based care. The business was always designed to exist in the telehealth space, but launching it during a global pandemic was never her intention.
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July 16, 2020
Christian Moreno ’21 Pursues Dream Puerto Rican Internship from Walla Walla
This summer, Christian Moreno '21 is an intern for Haser Inc, a nonprofit group that works to strengthen other nonprofits in Puerto Rico by offering administrative support, strategic planning and proposal development and fiscal sponsorship. Moreno is helping create business plans for organizations that focus on sustainable education, agroecology and community well-being.
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July 9, 2020
Online COVID Course Introduces Incoming Students to Whitman Academics
When prospective students visit Whitman College, they often get the chance to meet with faculty, sit-in on classes, and get an up-close view of the academic excellence for which the college is known. But this spring, the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered in-person classes, and forced the Admission Office to suspend its Spring Visitors Day and Admitted Students Day on-campus events.
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July 6, 2020
Infectious Disease Class Takes on New Relevance in COVID-19 World
Born in a new millennium, the students in Associate Professor Jim Russo’s infectious disease course have never known a time that HIV/AIDS wasn’t treatable. But Russo was a graduate student in the 1980s as the virus was first discovered
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July 6, 2020
Associate Professor of Psychology Erin Pahlke on Role of Diverse Literature in Raising Anti-Racist Kids
“Having a diverse media landscape in your house gives kids examples of lots of different, positive people who are from different racial and ethnic groups,” Pahlke says. “It also gives families an opening to have important conversations.”
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July 1, 2020
Grant Funds Creation of Course to Take On ‘Grand Challenges’ Through Civic Engagement
Kaitlyn Patia brings her passion for community engaged learning to Whitman College, thanks to the Mellon Periclean Faculty Leadership Program in the Humanities, a grant program run by nonprofit higher education consortium Project Pericles. It’s the first time a Whitman faculty member has received the $4,000 grant, which supports the development of a course dedicated to tackling the “grand challenges” of climate change, education access, immigration, mass incarceration, race and inequality or voter engagement.
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