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He asked the University of Oklahoma for a year?s leave to try his hand at another book, but administrators refused because Stone?s project was not in geology and he had already spent time away at Cambridge and the Carnegie Institution. So, he quit to write Blizzard.
Blizzard plunged into science fiction with a cautionary tale about a weather warfare experiment gone horribly awry. ?I had always loved snow and started to wonder what would happen if it never stopped snowing,? Stone says of his inspiration. This second novel did better commercially than the first. Combined, the two were published in 20 editions in 11 countries. Stone did three national book tours and landed a contract to write four more books.
Back to ?Real Job?
During this time, he met Eileen Marotte, now his wife. Stone relocated to Eileen?s home town of Milwaukee. When his third book proved something of a struggle, she suggested he get ?a real job again,? he says with a chuckle. He made a deal with Eileen that if she would return to college, so would he. He taught part-time in the University of Wisconsin System and part-time at MATC, where Eileen was already enrolled.
When offered a full-time position at MATC eight years ago, Stone grabbed the opportunity. Since then he has developed several new courses, including ?Climate Change Fundamentals? and an online class called ?Weather Fundamentals.? He and colleague Rahim Setoodeh also developed a course called ?Energy in Nature, Technology and Society,? aimed at giving students a basic understanding of energy and how it affects the planet, the economy and their careers.
Riding the Wind
Stone has led the charge in many ambitious energy initiatives at MATC, including co-chairing the annual Wisconsin Renewable Energy Summit, which drew 2,500 people this March. With help from others, he wrote and won grant proposals to support the purchase of photovoltaic panels and a wind turbine to collect sun and wind energy for the Mequon Campus. He is involved with renewable energy initiatives at the Energy Conservation and Advanced Manufacturing Center at the Oak Creek Campus and is co-chair of MATC?s Sustainability Committee.
Stone has attended, organized and presented sessions at several national and international conferences on climate change. In August 2008, he participated in two seven-day excursions in Iceland and Norway, where he viewed first hand the accelerating meltdown of icecaps and outlet glaciers.
He also has organized and presented workshops and coordinated speaker visits at MATC. ?I want to raise awareness and infuse it throughout the curriculum district-wide,? he says. ?My greatest reward in teaching about renewable energies is getting students interested. Then they can take over the fight to save the planet.?
For more information on MATC's Liberal Arts and Sciences associate degree, see:
http://matc.edu/student/offerings/liberalaas.html
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