Washington State Magazine

Washington State Magazine - Summer 2012


Summer 2012

Collectors edition

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In This Issue...

Features

Managing Nemo :: While collectors are hunting for tropical fish along the reefs of West Hawaii, marine scientist Brian Tissot is looking for ways to protect and replenish the colorful populations. We dive into his story, and the waters of Hawaii, as he checks in on the aquarium fishery. by Eric Sorensen

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Story: A Brush with Snorkel Bob }

The Collectors :: In 1988, hundreds of rare documents from colonial Mexico disappeared from the WSU Library archives. The author and readers go on a hunt through history to explain how they came to Pullman in the first place, and describe the investigation that led to their welcome return. by Hannelore Sudermann

{ Historically Yours :: WSU professor Paul Philemon Kies and his autograph collection. by Hannelore Sudermann }

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Gallery: Paul Philemon Kies Autograph Collection }

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Gallery: The Regla Collection :: Documents and photos from the WSU Archives}

The Atomic Landscape :: Seven decades after the first nuclear production facilities were sited at Hanford, we discover the cultural legacy. We sample from poetry, history, and art, as well as a WSU student’s master’s thesis. by Tim Steury

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Gallery: Historical Hanford }

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Gallery: “Chain Reaction” by Zach Mazur }

Panoramas

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Story: The Manis Mastodon Site: An Adventure In Prehistory }

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Video: How to inseminate honey bee queens }

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Video: Pervious concrete for stormwater management }

Departments

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Recipes: Recipes with raspberries }

{ WEB EXCLUSIVE—Video: Plume, by Kathleen Flenniken }

Tracking

:: John E. Olerud ’65—Science is a lot like baseball

:: Dan Newhouse ’77—Farm to director’s office

:: Donald Wayne Bushaw, 1926-2012—A great teacher and a great learner

:: Alumni news: 10,000 More Members!

New Media

:: Winning the West for Women: The Life of Suffragist Emma Smith DeVoe by Jennifer M. Ross-Nazzal PhD ’04

:: The Persuasive Power of Campaign Advertising by Travis N. Ridout and Michael M. Franz

:: Alaska: A History by Claus-M. Naske ’70 PhD and Herman E. Slotnick

:: Governing Washington: Politics and Government in the Evergreen State edited by Cornell W. Clayton and Nicholas P. Lovrich

:: Dog Days, Raven Nights illustrated by Evon Zerbetz ’82

Cover: Brian Tissot looks in on some raccoon butterflyfish off West Hawaii. Photo Eric Sorensen


Summer 2012
Web Exclusives

Video: Travels with Garrison—The gig of a lifetime

by Becky Phillips | © Washington State University

Band members were grinning as their raucous beer medley swung its way around the audience seated in the St. Louis Fox Theatre. Polka music flirted and twirled. Fiddle player Richard Kriehn raised his violin to take a solo, but in that moment, his bow slipped and snagged itself on the violin microphone. With four million listeners also tuned in via National Public Radio, crunching and screeching filled the air as Kriehn struggled to pry the bow loose.

“Great...” thought Kriehn, who was on his debut tour with the band. “I just wanted to crawl under a rock at that point.”

After a few embarrassing seconds, the show went on and so too did Kriehn, who travels with Garrison Keillor’s A Prairie Home Companion radio road show—as a member of The Guy’s All-Star Shoe Band.

Kriehn is also an instructor and academic advisor in Washington State University’s School of Music, where he teaches violin, mandolin, viola, and guitar. In 2006, he sent a sample of his music to A Prairie Home Companion, hoping to land a place in an upcoming performance at Pullman’s Beasley Coliseum. The music director invited him to sit in with the band and things gradually unfolded from there. Kriehn now spends weekends with the group, playing about thirty shows a year plus special tours.

“It’s been such a great experience,” says Kriehn, “and if it had been a single gig, a single month, it wouldn’t have mattered. It’s just been fun.”

His students benefit from that fun in turn, with Kriehn providing professional tips such as how to book gigs and fill basic sound equipment needs. He also brings inspiration, sharing musical ideas from the show with his guitar class.

On the other hand, Kriehn is inspired by his students and can “put on his teacher’s hat” to help organize young performers on the road. In certain cities, he has arranged fiddle medleys for teenagers—assigning parts and writing out charts for the recital.

To hear more of this story and get an inside glimpse at the production of A Prairie Home Companion, please click on the following video.

A Prairie Home Companion can be heard on Northwest Public Radio, a community service of The Edward R. Murrow College of Communication at Washington State University. 

Categories: Music | Tags: Radio, Video, Fiddle, Musician, National Public Radio