Left. Three Gorges Dam Under Construction. Image courtesy of Linda Butler

November 6 & 7, 2009

The Center for Columbia River History presents “Reversing the Flow: Big Dams, Power, and People in Global Perspective,” an evening reception and full-day conference to explore the historical and cultural contexts of world dams in Afghanistan, Canada, China, Ghana, India, and the Columbia River Basin. The conference will kick off with a reception to welcome our international speakers on Friday evening, November 6 at Vancouver’s Water Resources Education Center. This program will place the Columbia River into global context by offering films, images, and discussion of the historical Columbia River.

Dr. William Lang of Portland State University, and former Director of the Center for Columbia River History, will give the annual Castles Lecture as a keynote address: “Dam Sites: Big Dams and Local Politics on the Columbia and in the World. The conference will be held Saturday November 7 at Washington State University Vancouver, 14204 SE Salmon Creek Avenue, Vancouver, from 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. International speakers include Shripad Dharmadhikary, India; Tina Loo, University of British Columbia; Stephan Miescher, University of California, Santa Barbara; Linda Nash, University of Washington; and Dr. David Pietz, Washington State University.

The program will be held in conjunction with a series of free public lectures through the WSU Vancouver University Scholars program and a photographic exhibit, “The Yangtze Remembered” by Linda Butler at WSU Vancouver November 3 – December 11, 2009. Linda Butler will also present “A Photographer’s Eight Journeys to China’s Yangtze River” on December 7, 6:00 p.m. at WSU Vancouver.

All events are free to the public. Please rsvp by November 5 to Donna Sinclair, CCRH Program Manager, if you will attend the Friday evening reception: info@ccrh.org or 360-258-3289. For a full schedule see, http://www.ccrh.org/calendar.php

The Northwest History Network is holding its regular social night tonight, Monday, October 12th, 6 pm, at It’s A Beautiful Pizza.

NHN board member Ken Lomax and his band will be performing a set of jazz music at the venue from 6 pm to 8 pm that evening.

It’s a Beautiful Pizza is located at 3342 SE Belmont Street in Portland. Please join us for an evening of great music and camaraderie!

Please join your friends and colleagues at the upcoming meeting of the Northwest History Network, at which historian Cathy Croghan Alzner will deliver a presentation titled:

“High Desert Homesteader: Alice Day Pratt, a Single Woman in Post, Oregon”

Event to commence at 7:00 o’clock p.m., Thurs., Sept. 17, 2009, at the Architectural Heritage Center, 701 S.E. Grand Ave., Portland.

Refreshments will be provided.

Cathy Croghan Alzner is a history instructor at Portland Community College. She has served as archivist for Portland State University, and is a former R.N. Cathy received her BSN from Pacific Lutheran University and her BA and MA in History from Portland State University.

View Cathy’s entry on Alice Day Pratt in the Oregon Encyclopedia:

http://www.oregonencyclopedia.org/entry/view/pratt_alice_day_1872_1963/