Parting Thoughts

Thompson Hall in vibrant yellow, pink, and blue.

WHAT WAS YOUR FAVORITE COURSE TO TEACH?

I’ve loved teaching the senior-level quantum mechanics course. At this stage of the game, students have enough math skills and physics background to delve deeply into the subject—it’s pretty exciting for them and for me as well. It all starts to come together. I learn more every time I teach the course.

- Greg Elliott, professor of physics, retiring after 30 years at Puget Sound

Endless Beauty

Sunrise over Karakorum Range. Photo by Sarah Strattan ’11.

Sarah Strattan ’11 grew up in Evergreen, Colo., fascinated by the “Fourteeners”—the Colorado peaks that exceed 14,000 feet. In college, Puget Sound Outdoors introduced her to backpacking, and an outdoor leadership experience in Alaska taught her about mountaineering. She climbed Rainier, then Denali. Then she set her sights on the Himalayas. Strattan, who taught middle school science for a time and now works on the ski patrol at Aspen Highlands Ski Area, spends part of each summer challenging herself on Asia’s tallest peaks.

Coming Home

President Emeritus Ronald R. Thomas

Ronald R. Thomas is home. For 13 years, from the summers of 2003 through 2016, that beloved home was here, as president of University of Puget Sound. His irrepressible enthusiasm for all things Puget Sound so animates the campus today that it’s impossible to speak of it in the past tense. He loved it all: every student, every possibility, every building, every blade of grass. The campus looks the way it does because he was a master of master planning.

University of Puget Sound to Remove Name of Former Professor from Museum of Natural History

Specimens on display in the Museum of Natural History

TACOMA, Wash. — University of Puget Sound will remove the name of a former professor and proponent of eugenics from the college’s museum of natural history. On May 12, Puget Sound’s Board of Trustees unanimously voted to approve President Isiaah Crawford’s recommendation to remove the name “Slater” from the Slater Museum of Natural History following a request from a student and subsequent review by a committee.

University of Puget Sound Names Drew Kerkhoff as Provost

The fountain in Jones Circle surrounded by flowers.

TACOMA, Wash. — Following an extensive and highly competitive national search, University of Puget Sound has named Drew Kerkhoff as the institution’s new provost effective July 10, 2023.  Kerkhoff comes to Puget Sound from Kenyon College in Gambier, Ohio, where he currently serves as associate provost.

Nine University of Puget Sound Students Named Fulbright Finalists and Semi-Finalists

Jones Hall as seen from above campus.

Every year, University of Puget Sound students are selected to receive highly competitive grants, awards, scholarships, and fellowships which enable them to continue their educations and dive deeper into their fields of expertise. This year is no different, with nine Loggers being named semi-finalists for the Fulbright U.S. Student Program, including four finalists for the award and one alternate.

Five Questions With Professor of International Political Economy Emelie Peine

Professor Emelie Peine

As professor and director of the International Political Economy (IPE) program at Puget Sound, Emelie Peine combines tools from sociology, politics, geography, economics, and other social sciences to shed some light on how governments, markets, and societies interact to create the world we live in. Peine researches the role of multinational corporations in the global food regime. We recently sat down with her to learn about international trade, experiential learning, and why we should all be studying food systems.

University of Puget Sound Student Takes Action for the Environment

Kaylynn O'Curran ’23

Long before she had heard the term “sustainability,” Kaylynn O’Curran ’23 was obsessed with recycling. She wanted to live a lifestyle as close to zero-waste as possible, so she did her research on products to minimize her impact on the planet and try to be a conscious consumer. She felt good about her choices, but when she started studying at University of Puget Sound, she quickly learned that addressing climate change requires more than individuals making sustainable choices—it demands wide-ranging changes on a collective scale.

Five Questions With University of Puget Sound Professor of History Katherine Smith

Katherine Smith

Professor of History Katherine Smith studies what scholars sometimes refer to as “the long 12th century,” encompassing the social and political events from around 1050 to 1200 CE. As a member of the Puget Sound faculty since 2005, Smith has taught a wide variety of classes in the History Department. Both of her books, War and the Making of Medieval Monastic Culture and The Bible and Crusade Narrative, were inspired by classroom discussions. She is currently working on a new book that examines life in the Middle Ages through everyday objects.