Reed in the Media
Reed Dean of Faculty Peter Steinberger appeared on OPB's Think Out Loud to discuss Reed’s drug and alcohol policy, in light of recent scrutiny.
2008 Reed graduate, Lukas Strickland, is featured in the Oregonian for being a recipient of a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship travel grant.
Oregonian story about the Jess exhibition at Reed's Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery.
Marat Grinberg, Reed Russian literature professor, comments in the New York
Review of Books on the "problem of evil" in postwar Europe.
Brian Kassof, Reed visiting assistant professor of history and humanities, contributes to an OPB story on the origins of May Day.
Former President Bill Clinton responding on ABC News to the questioning of Hilary Clinton's campaign strategy by Paul Gronke, Reed political science professor.
Read more media stories.
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Media Advisory
Lecture: "Tropics of Youth: Colonial Modernity and the Case of the Missing Bildungsroman"
WHAT | Jed Esty, associate professor of English and of critical and
interpretive theory at the University of Illinois,
Urbana-Champaign, and the author of
A Shrinking Island: Modernism and National Culture in
England (Princeton University Press, 2004), will give a lecture
at Reed.
The lecture is sponsored by the Reed College Division of
Literature and Languages.
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WHEN | 7 p.m., Thursday, March 2. |
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WHERE | Vollum Lecture Hall, Reed College, 3203 SE Woodstock Blvd., Portland (Use east parking lot off of SE Woodstock Blvd.). |
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COST | Free and open to the public. |
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CONTACT | For more information, the public is asked to visit the Reed events website at events.reed.edu, or call the Reed events line at 503/777-7755. |
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Reed College
Reed College, in Portland, Oregon, is an undergraduate institution of the liberal arts and sciences dedicated to sustaining the highest intellectual standards in the country. With an enrollment of about 1,360 students, Reed ranks third in the undergraduate origins of Ph.D.s in the United States and second in the number of Rhodes Scholars from a liberal arts college (31 since 1915). For more information, visit web.reed.edu.
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