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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Michelangelo Aust keeps in touch while traveling through Europe; Urban and Public Affairs Dean Nohad Toulan steps down after 31 years; computer engineering professor is looking for new meaning in medical monitor data; why are violent crime victims in Oregon not seeking compensation from the state?; Aesop’s Fables can teach the principles of strategic management; player, manager, coach: Tom Trebelhorn dedicates his life to baseball; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Distinct history, politics, and social customs—not Western-style democracy—dominate this region; the comic twists and turns of one man discovering his niche; little is known of the black servant William Clark brought on his historic exploration of America; a biology professor shares the thrill of a new species discovery; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Alumnus Clayton Brainerd’s big voice is taking him to opera houses around the world; a brief glimpse at the past 15 years and 50 issues of PSU Magazine; a startup company finds the secrets within every wisp of air; a Mongolian vacation creates a new calling for a retired professor; more than just the disciplinarians of last resort, principals are selfless problem solvers; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Students make amazing creative leaps with digital graphics; the fall of Enron casts a spotlight on honesty in business; wires, sensors, and cameras help unclog the nation’s highways; for Ray Grimsbo ’72, the challenge of forensic science is looking beyond the obvious; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Professor Gary Perlstein has become a national media resource on terrorism; faculty to use new electron microscope to see the unseeable; record heard count prompts the urge to discover the typical PSU student; facial expressions become languages unto themselves that often defy translation; a PSU professor examines the Japanese monarchy just as the country greets a new princess; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Talented women faculty are beating the odds to make it in a demanding field; China looks to PSU in facing the gargantuan task of curbing pollution while feeding its people; Professor Dan Johnson makes a modern pilgrimage on an ancient road through Spain; business and industry offer myriad career choices for the mathematically trained; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Ideas for downtown Portland that never made it off the drawing board; professor calls for change in how businesses think about work; alumni take their knowledge base to careers overseas; young civil engineering firm molds alumni and students to its culture; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Finding ancient remnants of a rich Northwest culture; young readers—and the authors who love them—are shaking up the book world; a professor tells of his trip up the Amazon to bring medical care to isolated peoples; love ’em or hate ’em, holiday letters are an American tradition; a strong focus launches Michelle Collins ’85 on a stellar career; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Faculty engage in the ethical debate surrounding genetic privacy; the football team makes Hillsboro its home away from home; photos and stories shed light on the history of Portland’s YWCA; after 35 years, the artist who painted the mural in Smith Center has returned to campus; an economic professor’s fiery invention could help people in the Third World; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: The hottest and coldest places on earth reveal a vast array of microbial life to three PSU scientists; how seriously should Oregonians take the state’s new rating of public K-12 schools?; a mechanical engineering professor is helping perfect the swat in softball plays; alumnus Dave Kemper was on site restoring this old Simon Benson House to former glory, and then some; June Jones, Viking football legend from the 1970s, is a miracle coach for the University of Hawaii; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: It was a deal made in cyberspace for this Web entrepreneur and PSU students; Gen. Colin Powell has designated PSU and University of Promise—a role that President Dan Bernstine takes to heart; the 2000 census is coming, and we better be ready; it’s almost always a blast when students in the Aerospace Society get together; needed: teachers fluent in English and another language for Oregon’s growing immigrant population; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: The Willamette River can be made safe to drink, say researchers, but who wants to?; the technology for a super fast, home, Internet connection is brand new, in demand, and taught at Portland State; new help is finding the right word and the right career in writing; performing jazz drives this alumna to local night spots and to the recording studio; alumni and faculty support a program that links at-risk children with long-term mentors; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Adventurous theater from around the globe comes to Portland each summer through PIP Fest; a long-forgotten burial ground in New York City is providing new clues into 18th-century slavery; dependable, dedicated and loud, Vern Schultz is always there for the Vikings; former governor Barbara Roberts is on faculty sharing what she knows best—leading in times of change; broken homes, collapsed tunnels, washed-out roads, and eroded beaches—PSU geologists say this is just the beginning; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: More powerful than a locomotive, Dark Horse Comics becomes the third largest comic book publisher in the U.S.; from Back to Beatles, the PSU Chamber Choir is spreading music around the globe; the university honors the life’s work of the late George Hoffman; students are getting into medical school with the help of PSU’s premed program; KPSU 1450 AM—it’s student-run radio at its boldest; an influx in immigration to the United States is changing the face of America; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: What makes seemingly good kids don ski masks and rob and terrorize a city?; a grand entrance into Portland State and south downtown is now under construction; for three alumni, finding the right job was not a daydream or a nightmare, but a real choice; in the last issue of PSU Magazine the School of Engineering was hot news. It just keeps getting better; hidden in the Columbia River Basin are stories historians are now discovering; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: It’s a home field win for women’s softball, as the team gives Coach Teri Mariani her 500th career victory; the Oregon coast has provided the setting and inspiration for PSU’s Haystack program during the past 30 years; just two years ago, the PSU Engineering School was in trouble—now it is the hub of a new statewide network; the Rev. Phil Harder is leaving his congregation—the PSU campus—after more than 20 years of spiritual guidance; freelance writer susan hauser shares her funny, quirky stories of Portland people and events; the world was the classroom for students and their dean, Bob Vieira, on board Semester at Sea; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: The six galleries on campus display local and national art—they also do great First Thursdays; help your child become a good speller. Plus, take a test to determine your own spelling aptitude; the food industry is finding new ways of doing business with the help of a PSU management program; when a company needs turning around, Renee Fellman is the specialist a history journal of the Pacific Rim is right at home in Cramer Hall; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Dan Bernstine brings to Portland State a reputation for building consensus and endowments; as a member of Clinton’s Bioethics Advisory Commission, a PSU researcher helped form national policy on cloning; a grant from the Turkish government has put PSU in some elite company; a new place, a new life—PSU students are making it easier for recent refugees; the university received its first $1 million gift from an alum—and four months later it happened again; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: President Judith Ramaley’s legacy for PSU is one of innovation through teamwork and a renewed sense of pride; four alums had what it takes to start high-tech companies and become members of the digital elite; novelist Molly Gloss ’66 has turned her richly crafter writing to the mysteries of utopia; outstanding productions and virtuoso grads make the Opera Program a starred attraction; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Baby boomers are telling a PSU prof what life will be like when they’re sixty-four; students give PSU’s new inquiry courses high marks—and so do some key national foundations; the Helen Gordon Center comes of age as the first child of an alum joins its sandbox student body; thwarting electronic sabotage and theft is the research subject of four computer scientists an alumna is helping people who are battling poverty help themselves; the university is honoring its own coaches and student athletes from Vanport to today; and more
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: After a decade and a half without men’s basketball, the team is back playing Division I in the Big Sky Conference; as the high-tech industry in Oregon prospers, higher education is looking to catch up; an entire graduate program, including faculty and students, has moved from Lewis & Clark to PSU; Jim Aalberg ’72 left the mergers, downsizing, and buyouts of the banking industry to join Fred Meyer Inc.; Portland Public Schools may open its first new grade school in more than 20 years on PSU’s campus; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Halfway between infancy and adulthood lie life’s most confusing years—adolescence; Professor Gordon Dodds tells an American tale of rebirth and second chances; alumni share their memories of Portland State in celebration of the university’s 50th anniversary; the new Center for Academic Excellence dismantles tradition in order to boost teaching skills; a PSU prof is finding new links between genes and addiction; PSU salutes friends, faculty, and alumni who have made a difference to the university and the community; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: The university cleaned up, set up, and put out the welcome mat for Bill Clinton and Al Gore this summer; through EnviroCorps, Portland State students and others are learning about the environment, teamwork, and community pride; a week-long summer music camp for inner-city children is the brainchild of music professor Mary Kogen; in celebration of Portland State’s 50th anniversary, we’ve profiled five students whose educational experiences span the years; thirty years ago, four PSC students and their faculty coach brought home the G.E. College Bowl trophy; new athletics director Kim Sterk is leading Portland State into the Big Sky Conference; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Engineering education has changed and grown under the leadership of retiring dean Chik Erzurumlu; a land of stunning contrasts and uses, the Columbia River Gorge is the home of a bold experiment in land-use planning; what does Washington State University’s new 348-acre campus in Vancouver mean for PSU?; Kathleen Cornett ’75 has made the needs of Oregonians her business; a group of citizen volunteers are serving as sentinels for Oregon’s lakes; a week-long retrospective of the 1970 PSU student protest is planned this may; and more.
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Portland State Magazine
Portland State University. Office of University Communications
PSU’s alumni magazine, published 2-3 times a year. In this issue: Moving PSU athletic teams to the Big Sky Conference—a match made in heaven or a crash landing?; if gangs only conjure up an image of urban black youth, you’re wrong; dealing with today’s complex world requires new thinking, as suggested in this article by System Science professor Harold Lintone; the dinosaur bones Dave Taylor dug up in Oregon this past summer are now part of the museum collection he oversees; a screenplay writer and PSU alum finds success in Tinseltown; and more.
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