Monthly Archives: August 2016

What’s new on the Brewstorian blog? Three years of OHBA means three months of celebrating!

did you knowAs we surged toward the 3rd anniversary of the founding of the Oregon Hops and Brewing Archives, I pondered a way to share the amazing work we’ve done over the past three years with all our friends, donors, advocates, and all the others who just think this is a pretty cool thing we came up with.

August 1st running through October 31st, be looking for daily postings on The Brewstorian, but also some reposting on Twitter and Facebook.

And please share – we have all these amazing friends and collections because that’s exactly what’s happened for the past three years. People have gotten excited, shared and saved, and now we have a rocking archive of local beer history.

Resident Scholar talk this Friday!

1422404383578Our next Resident Scholar lecture has been scheduled for Friday, August 5th at 2:00 PM in Willamette West.  Our speaker this time is Dr. Michael Kenny, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Simon Fraser University.
Dr. Kenny has been working with the Pauling Papers in developing his talk, “‘Fear of the Mutant:’ Recessive Genes and Racial Degeneration in the Nuclear Fallout Debate.”  An abstract of this presentation is below. We hope to see you there!
 
By the 1950s geneticists had come to partially understand the role that recessive genes play in certain hereditary disorders, some of which were obvious (e.g. Sickle Cell Anemia), others presumably concealed within morbidity and mortality statistics. These possible latent effects were very much on the minds of those, such as Hermann Muller, Linus Pauling, and George Beadle, who were critical of atmospheric nuclear testing. Their concern was a latter day expression of what had been a long-standing obsession of the eugenics movement – the fear of cumulative racial degeneration and decline. This presentation examines how these ideas were articulated in the context of the nuclear fallout debate.