Ruth Slonim taught twentieth-century literature and contemporary poetry in the WSU English Department for 36 years. She published four books of poetry: London: An American Appreciation, San Francisco: "The City" in Verse, Outer Traces, Inner Places, and Proems and Poems (Pulitzer Prize Nominee). She was a beloved teacher to two generations and an acclaimed poet whose fourth book of poetry was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. She studied poetry with the Nobel Laureate Czeslaw Milosz and personally knew great writers of her time, including Robert Frost, Carl Sandburg, Louise Bogan, Langston Hughes, Gwendolyn Brooks, and W. H. Auden. She shared programs with the likes of Stephen Spender and Auden, and spoke at Cambridge University and at Trinity University-Dublin, and many other prominent places, about poetry. Her poetry also appeared in such venues as Botteghe Oscure, International Who's Who in Poetry Anthology, and The Sounds of Pacific Northwest Poetry. The Ruth Slonim Poetry Corner in Holland Library commemorates her professional achievements and her service to the university community. For many years, she was in charge of officially hosting well-known writers to speak on our campus--including W. H. Auden, Louise Bogan, and Gwendolyn Brooks. She worked with other well-known authors to help Ezra Pound in his later years. She was WSU'S Outstanding Faculty Woman (1965) and the first woman to give the Distinguished Faculty Address (1967). She was an invited speaker to major national conferences, including the AAUP, the scholastic honoraries Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Kappa Phi, and the National Council of Teachers of English. Besides teaching in our department, she held visiting professorships at the University of Puerto Rico and the School of Irish Studies in Dublin. Her honors also included the Washington Governor's Arts Award, 1988 (Governor's recognition for significance in her field). |