(Activities Announced at Faculty
Meetings,
May, 2005 - April, 2006)
CHRISTOPHER
BAILEY participated in a NSF-Funded workshop on Photoelectron Spectroscopy
in summer 2005 at the University of Arizona. He had received an email saying
that they were overrun with applications, so he feels fortunate to have
been selected to attend. Professor Bailey discusses this technique in General
Chemistry as a way of understanding atomic electron energies. On March
3, he gave a talk on "Teaching Chemistry (And Other Duties) in a Small
College Environment" to graduate students and faculty in the Chemistry
Department at the University of Vermont, Burlington, Vermont.
Professor Bailey escorted Wells students
to the 20th annual National Conference for Undergraduate Research (NCUR),
held this year at the University of North Carolina, Asheville, April 6
- 8. This is the 18th year that Professor Bailey and Wells students have
participated in this meeting. The student presenters for 2006, their research
topics, and their faculty advisor(s) were:
Jennifer Cole '06, Environmental
Studies, "The Impact of Runoff and a Wastewater Treatment Facility on Fecal
Contamination in Paines Creek, Aurora, N.Y." Faculty: Niamh O'Leary
Lisa Gibson '06, Sociology,
"Changes in Agriculture: An Analysis of Small- and Large-Scale Farms."
Faculty: Leslie Miller-Bernal
Melanie Jones '06, Physics,
"Imaging Buried Monolayers at Atomic Resolution Using Electron Channeling."
Faculty: Dr. David Muller from the Department of Applied and Engineering
Physics at Cornell University.
Stephanie Jones '06, Chemistry,
"New Building Blocks for Colloid-Based Materials by Imprinting Peanut Shape."
Faculty: Dr. Chekesha Liddell from the Department of Materials Science
and Engineering at Cornell University. Melanie and Stephanie performed
their research at Cornell through the National Science Foundation's Research
Experiences for Undergraduates program; their Wells NCUR sponsors were
Professors Heinekamp and Bailey, respectively.
Professor of Religion Emeritus ARTHUR
BELLINZONI'S "Ancient Apostates," a review of Stephen G. Wilson's Leaving
the Fold: Apostates and Defectors in Antiquity, appeared in the December
2005 volume of The Expository Times, published in London. At its
meeting in December, the Board of Directors of People For the American
Way elected Arthur Bellinzoni to a third three-year term on the Board.
Professor Bellinzoni’s article "The Gospel of Luke in the Apostolic Fathers,"
originally presented in 2004 at a conference at Lincoln College, Oxford
University, has been published by Oxford University Press in Trajectories
Through the New Testament and the Apostolic Fathers, one of two volumes
in their centennial publication, The New Testament and the Apostolic
Fathers.
BRUCE BENNETT
has poems published in Hummingbird and Knocking on the Silence,
the new FootHills Anthology of poems about the Finger Lakes. He read his
poetry on September 13 at the Seneca Falls Public Library. Professor Bennett
had additional poems published in The Healing Muse, the online journal,
Enskyment, and in Western Wind: An Introduction to Poetry
(5th edition, McGraw-Hill). He gave poetry readings at Bright
Hill Center in Treadwell, New York, (with Mary Crow) on September 22 and
at the Schweinfurth Memorial Art Center in Auburn on September 29. Professor
Bennett also read his poems at The Healing Muse publication party
at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse on October 5. He has also
had had three poems published in the literary journal Iambs & Trochees
and a poem published in the journal Rattapallax. Professor Bennett
had poems published in Tar River Poetry, Hummingbird, and
on the on-line journal Enskyment. A review of his book of poems,
Grief and Love, appeared in the Fall 2005 issue of Tar River
Poetry. In December, he had a poem published in the on-line journal,
Enskyment, and five poems published in the on-line, Innisfree
Poetry Journal. Professor Bennett and English major Caitlin Rice read
as the featured poets at the PoetryZone Program in the Saratoga Springs
Public Library on February 12. He also conducted a poetry workshop for
the members of the PoetryZone group. On March 2, Professor Bennett gave
a reading at the Yesteryears Café in Auburn, New York. In late March,
Clandestine Press published WILL NOBODY STOP THE POET?, a chapbook
of humorous poems by Professor Bennett to celebrate April Fools’ Day. He
had a third poem published in the on-line journal, Enskyment.
CATHERINE
BURROUGHS taught two courses at Cornell University this past summer--one
on the personal essay and the other on dramatic literature. This latter
course was for rising seniors in high school from New York City, Baltimore,
Washington, D.C., and Houston who received scholarships acknowledging their
scholastic achievement. In August she presented a paper entitled, "'The
Father Fostered at His Daughter's Breast': Fanny Kemble and The Grecian
Daughter," at the annual meeting of the North American Society for
the Study of Romanticism (NASSR) in Montreal. Her paper was part of a special
session that she organized called "The Erotics of Home: Staging Sexual
Fantasy in Romantic Women's Writing." She published the following article,
"Teaching Women Playwrights from the British Romantic Period (1780-1840),"
in Teaching British Women Writers, 1750-1900, edited by Jeanne Moskal
and Shannon Wooden (New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 2005. 140-149). In
addition, Texas A&M University Press has under review her manuscript,
America's First "Peace-Keepers": Letters Between Mother and Son During
the Pre-Korean War Conflict (1946-1948). During the fall semester,
Professor Burroughs reviewed manuscripts for the Keats-Shelley Journal
and European Romantic Review. She was also asked to review
the dossier of a candidate for promotion to full professor in the Department
of English at Swarthmore College. The Modern Language Association Press
is reviewing Professor Burrough’s proposal for a volume titled Approaches
to Teaching Early British Women Playwrights--to be co-edited with Bonnie
Nelson, Associate Professor of English at Kansas State University. In November,
she attended the annual meeting of the American Society for Theatre Research
(ASTR) in Toronto where she participated in the Feminist Historiography
Working Group. Professor Burrough’s contribution was a paper titled: "'If
the informing spirit be mine': Frances Anne Kemble and Theory in Rehearsal."
Cambridge University Press has chosen to include Professor Burrough’s book--Women
in British Romantic Theatre: Drama, Performance, and Society, 1790-1840
(2000)--in its program of paperback reprints within the Humanities
and Social Sciences. Professor Burroughs was invited to participate in
a conference called "The Performing Society: Britain in the Nineteenth
Century" in California in March. Papers will be included in a volume to
be published by Palgrave Macmillan, part of a series of five edited volumes
on "Redefining British Theatre History." Each volume contains essays by
leading scholars in the field, and each volume is being inaugurated at
a special-invitation conference at The Huntington Library. The volume in
which Professor Burroughs’ essay will appear is co-edited by Peter Holland
and Tracy Davis. Also in March, she attended a conference in Bourdeaux,
France, called "La Satire litteraire depuis la revolution" sponsored by
La Centre de Recherche sur les Modernites de l'universite Michel de Montaigne-Bordeaux
III. Her essay, "'If the informing spirit be mine': Frances Anne Kemble
and Theory in Rehearsal," has been accepted for a special issue on Romantic
Drama to be published by Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Theatre
Research.
MEGHAN CALLAHAN was an invited
speaker on September 15 in the Fall 2005 lecture series at the Center for
Medieval and Renaissance Studies of Binghamton University (SUNY). She gave
a paper entitled "'Suor Domenica's Convent': An Example of Female Architectural
Patronage in Sixteenth-Century Florence."
CANDACE COLLMER
and Wells students Monica Chapman, Alicia Lewis, and Jessica Reuter successfully
completed a 3-day workshop on Prokaryotic Annotation and Analysis Training
at TIGR, The Institute for Genomic Research, in Rockville, Maryland, April
25-27, 2005. This field trip was part of the Wells course, Introduction
to Genomics and Bioinformatics, where the students are using their newly-learned
skills on a genomics project on the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae
pv. tomato. This project is part of a collaboration with scientists
at Cornell University. Professor Collmer was an invited participant at
a Gene Ontology (GO) Annotation Workshop held at Stanford University, June
1-4, 2005. The focus of the workshop was to provide hands-on experience
at assigning the appropriate information (i.e. the correct GO terms) to
specific genes based on published experiments in the literature. Members
of the Gene Ontology Consortium and expert annotators from different genome
projects (e.g. mouse, Drosophila, yeast) facilitated the workshop. Professor
Collmer was an invited participant in a Gene Ontology (GO) Content meeting
held at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) in Rockville, Maryland,
on November 15-16, 2005. Major topics included expansion of the terms previously
developed by the PAMGO (Plant Associated-Microbe Gene Ontology) group,
of which she is a member, to meet broadened demand as a result of new,
federally funded initiatives for annotating genomes of important animal
pathogens. Another major topic was the integration of terms for defense
responses in plants into the broader area of immune response, which also
includes the animal immune system. The PAMGO group recently received a
three-year grant from the National Science Foundation to continue work
on the annotation of genes in important plant pathogens. The grant includes
funding for Professor Collmer to work full time on this project during
the next three summers. Professor Collmer was one of the authors on a poster
presented at the Twelfth International Congress on Plant-Microbe Interactions,
held December 14-19, 2005, in Merida, Mexico. The poster was entitled "The
PPI Website: Information hub for sequence analysis, genome viewing, Hop
effector nomenclature, and ongoing annotation of the genome sequences for
three pathovars of Pseudomonas syringae," by Magdalen Lindeberg, Candace
Collmer, and Alan Collmer. Professor Collmer attended and assisted at a
two-day training workshop for newly hired annotators of PAMGO---the Plant-Associated
Microbe Gene Ontology group, of which she is a member. PAMGO, which is
officially associated with the Gene Ontology Consortium, is beginning an
NSF-funded, three-year project on annotating the genes of different types
of microbes that are pathogens of plants. The meeting was held February
23-24, 2006, at The Institute for Genomic Research (TIGR) in Rockville,
Maryland. Professor Collmer attended the annual meeting of the Gene Ontology
Consortium, held in St. Croix, Virgin Islands, from March 30 through April
2, 2006. One agenda item at this meeting was the consideration of changes
to the Gene Ontology proposed by PAMGO, the Plant-Associated Microbe Gene
Ontology group, of which Professor Collmer is a member. The changes proposed,
and now accepted, allow for more complete annotation of the genes of both
plant and animal pathogens that are involved in pathogenesis.
BEATRICE
FARNSWORTH attended an Executive Board meeting of the Middle Atlantic
Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies held at Fordham University
on January 28, 2006. She chaired the Russian History panel at the Middle
Atlantic Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies at Fordham University
Law School, April 1, 2006
DEBORAH GAGNON
attended the 6th Annual Conference on Case Study Teaching in Science sponsored
by the National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science at the University
at Buffalo, October 7-8. She presented "Conceal to Reveal: The Mask as
a Reflection of Identity" in January at the National Institute on the Teaching
of Psychology in St. Petersburg, Florida. She was awarded the annual Doug
Bernstein Award by the Institute Faculty for the work's "originality and
creativity" as a pedagogical device for teaching about diversity and identity
development. Professor Gagnon, together with colleagues Holly Sweet (MIT),
Melissa Terlecki (Cabrini College), and Rebecca Stoddart (St. Mary's College),
have had their symposium "Tapping the Creative: Using Self-Expressive Methods
in Teaching Psychology" accepted for presentation at the annual meeting
of the American Psychological Association in New Orleans, Louisiana. The
symposium will focus on how the presenters have used creative self-expressive
techniques (photography, drawing, drama, etc.) to teach about psychology
and diversity
EDNIE GARRISON
presented a paper entitled, "Non-Feminine Femme, Or, How Can a Femme Register
as Androgynous-Masculine on a Personality Test?," at the GenderQueer/QueerGenders:
Conversation Among Artists, Academics, and Activists conference at the
University of California, Santa Barbara, February 11-13, 2005. Five Wells
student attended this conference with her: Jenna Basiliere, Carrie Elliott,
Katie Fong, Eliza Heppner, and Christina Lunsford. Professor Garrison presented
a paper entitled, "The Erotics of Femme Smartness," at the Queering Femininities
Conference, in Seattle, Washington, May 28-31, 2005.
EDNIE GARRISON and VICTORIA
MUÑOZ co-facilitated a roundtable discussion entitled, "What's
Feminist About Single-Sex Education for Women? Students Talk About Protesting
the Decision to Go Co-Ed at Wells College' (with students Jenna Basiliere,
Meredith Burks, Chelle Carr, Carrie Elliott, Nicole Pellegrino, and Erica
Peters), at the Annual National Women's Studies Association Conference
in Orlando, Florida, June 9-12, 2005.
NANCY GILBERTSON
and LAURA CAMPBELL presented a recital
for flute and piano at Wells College on February 11. Music programmed included
a sonata by Robert Muczynski and a sonata by Cesar Frank. Ms. Campbell
offered a work titled, "Flying Lessons for Solo Flute" and Ms. Gilbertson
performed "A Rag For New Orleans, September 2005" for solo piano by Brian
Dykstra.
JEANNE GODDARD
began her sabbatical activities in October 2004 with a master class at
Hobart and William Smith Colleges entitled, "Space Harmony Applications
in Repertory Work." In January 2005 she created movement workshops and
full chorus, and lead choreography for the Tri-Cities Opera production
of Purcell’s "Dido and Aeneas," with three performances at the Forum Center
for the Performing Arts in Binghamton, New York. In March 2005 Professor
Goddard performed a concert of repertory work with baritone Steven Stull
and pianist George Damp at the First Presbyterian Church, Ithaca, New York.
Her review of Janice Ross’s book, Moving Lessons was published in
the March issue of the Journal of Dance Education. She also premiered
a dance monologue, performed to Ithaca composer Mark Simon’s "Philosopher’s
Rag," in a benefit concert for Carol Buckley at the Congregational Church,
Ithaca, New York. In May, Professor Goddard showed two solo works, "Sovra
balze" and "Lascia ch’io pianga" in the Ithaca Choreographers’ Showcase
at the Community School of Music and Arts, Ithaca, New York. She also began
consultations with June Finch for the revival of Finch’s children’s musical,
"Phoebe and the Pheasant" in Provincetown, Massachusetts. June saw Professor
Goddard teaching her annual six-week series of modern dance and repertory
classes at the CRS Barn Studio, Ithaca, New York. She also co-produced
two new music-for-dance albums, with pianist William Moulton of NYU’s Tisch
School of the Arts and with John White of the Ithaca College School of
Music. The John White Album will be released on September 15. In July,
Professor Goddard co-conceived and co-produced (with Steven Stull) "The
Handel Project," a spectacular outdoor evening of Handel arias at the CRS
Barn Studio in Ithaca. She created choreography and staging for nine dancers,
seven singers, and two instrumentalists, one of whom was Assistant Professor
of Music Victor Penniman. Set design was by Wells Lecturer in Theatre,
Robert DiGiacinto, and Steven Stull. August 2005 took Professor Goddard
back to the Cape for rehearsals and performances with June Finch/Danceworks.
The production, at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown,
included Finch’s 2004 work, "Nightwatch," as well as the children’s musical,
"Phoebe and the Pheasant," in which Goddard played the leading role. Finally,
Professor Goddard conceived and co-produced "Re:Cycling," a multidisciplinary
performance event at the CRS Barn Studio, Ithaca, New York. Structured
improvisations on the lawn and in the studio involved fourteen feisty,
independent dancers, three musicians, and enormous pile of paper and plastic.
The production included Goddard’s choreography as well as works by colleagues
from Hobart and William Smith Colleges and from Ithaca, one of whom was
Wells alumna Margaret Irving ’04.
Professor Goddard performed her 2003
solo, "Aria" and spoke briefly about choreography, dance and healing, at
the annual meeting of the Ithaca Suicide Prevention and Crisis Center on
October 19. On October 29, she performed her 2002 solo, "Something about
a lamp...," with score by Professor Emeritus of English Hugo Theimer,
edited by Aurora composer Ethan MacCormick, at the Second Ithaca Choreographer's
Showcase produced by Wide-eye Dance Company. With a group of Wells College
students and Ithaca dancers, Professor Goddard re-staged and performed
a segment of her summer 2005 work, "Re:cycling" as part of American Recycles
Day at the Pyramid Mall in Ithaca. Finally, on December 3 and 4, Professor
Goddard danced at the annual holiday concert of the Hudson Valley Arts
Chorales choir, at the Redeemer Lutheran Church in Kingston, New York.
In April Professor Goddard produced and directed the Wells College Spring
Dance Concert, "Dances Then and Now," and created two new pieces for the
program. She hosted guest artist Barbara Dickinson, who performed three
solo works and taught two master classes. Professor Goddard is currently
serving as an examiner on the field of dance for the International Baccalaureate
program at Binghamton High School in Binghamton, New York.
SIOUXSIE GRADY
was awarded "Excellence in Direction" by the Theatre Association of New
York State for the Wells’ production of "A Piece of My Heart". This is
the third year in a row that Ms. Grady has received this award. Joe DeForest
also won an award for set and lighting design and the cast won an award
for ensemble work. Adjudicator Pam Rapoza had this to say about the production,
"This production was a flowing piece of living, breathing Art with beautiful
representations and a strong ensemble cast that brought us to Vietnam and
the even bigger hell that was ‘coming home’." As an American, and as a
woman, I thank this company for reminding us all what humanity is. The
play truly grabbed a piece of MY heart." In February Professor Grady presented
"Dream House," a talk about her recent performance installation work, at
Goddard College as a part of her graduate studies. She also recently participated
in a Playback Theatre workshop with members of Playback Theatre NYC, furthering
her research in this innovative art form that combines improvisational
theatre, music and movement to transform the stories of the audience into
the art of theatre. In March, Professor Grady opened her new exhibit "The
Whimsical Dreams of August" at the Avenue Art Gallery in Endicott, New
York. This exhibit contains her installation art, photography, and several
original theatre pieces. The visual art was on display at the gallery through
the end of March.
PILAR GREENWOOD
was invited to participate in the International Colloquium "Cervantes and
the Frontiers of Fiction: A Celebration of 'Don Quijote': 1605-2005."
She presented a paper entitled, "Cervantes,
¿El autor de la triste figura?: Las ironías de la fama."
("Cervantes, The Author of the 'Sorrowful Countenance'?: The Ironies of
Fate").
The colloquium, organized by the Department
of Romance Studies, The Society for the Humanities, University Lectures,
and other Cornell University programs, was held on April 22-23, 2005, on
the Cornell campus and included over 20 international scholars and writers.
On April 23, Professor Greenwood read a paper contrasting XVIth century
and current perceptions of Cervantes as an author. Professor Greenwood
presented a paper at the XXV ALDEEU Conference, which took place in Burgos,
Spain, in July 5-9, 2005. Celebrating the linguistic origins of the Spanish
language and in collaboration with the "Instituto Castellano y Leonés
de la Lengua," the conference was a forum for the discussion of linguistic
and literary perspectives. Professor Greenwood’s paper, entitled "Más
versado en desdichas: Cervantes y la locura de los críticos" ("Acquainted
with Controversy: Cervantes and the Critics’ Folly") dealt with the history
of literary criticism involving Cervantes’ masterpiece. Professor
Greenwood’s play for children, El árbol de sombrerera (The
Hat Tree) has been published in the professional journal, Cuadernos
de ALDEEU, Vol. XXI, November 2005, pp. 100-105.
MICHAEL GROTH
attended the Conference on New York State History held at the SUNY College
of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse. Professor Groth
worked with other members of the conference's program committee to plan
the June meeting. He reviewed a manuscript being considered for publication
by a major university press and composed an essay entitled "Black Loyalists
and African-American Allegiance in the Mid-Hudson Valley," to be published
in Joseph Tiedemann and Eugene Fingerhut, eds., The Other Loyalists
(SUNY Press, forthcoming)."
SCOTT HEINEKAMP
was elected to a four-year term to the Executive Committee of the New York
State Section of the American Physical Society. He attended the fall meeting
of the New York Section of the American Physical Society on October 14
and 15 at Colgate University and also met with the executive committee
on which he serves. The meeting theme was "Einstein's Legacy." Two Wells
students also attended. Professor Heinekamp gave a talk for the Ithaca
College Physics Colloquium on March 15 on Einstein's work during 1905 (
his annus mirabilis) on Brownian motion, with some more contemporary ways
of looking at the problem. He also attended, with two Wells students, the
Spring 2006 meeting of the New York Section of the American Physical Society,
at Finger Lakes Community College and Infotonics, both in Canandaigua,
New York.
SPENCER HILDAHL’s
review of the book, War and The Media: Reportage and Propaganda,
1900-2003, edited by Mark Connelly and David Welch. I.B. Tauris,
2005, appeared in the January 2006 issue of the library journal, CHOICE.
JILL HILL
will be presenting her research, "Decolonizing Personality Assessment:
An Examination of the MMPI-2," as part of a symposium presentation at the
114th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association to be
held in New Orleans, Louisiana, August 10–13, 2006. This symposium features
all American Indian psychologists presenting a body of research regarding
the validity and use of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory–2
with American Indian adults. The discussant of the symposium is renowned
American Indian psychologist, Dr. Theresa LaFromboise (Miami), Associate
Professor of Counseling Psychology at Stanford University. The symposium,
entitled, "The MMPI-2 and American Indians: Norms, Contexts, Constructions,
Meanings, and Controversies," is co-sponsored by APA’s Division 17, Society
of Counseling Psychology, and Division 45, Society for the Psychological
Study of Ethnic Minority Issues.
JILL HILL, VICTORIA MUÑOZ,
MILENE MORFEI, and DEB GAGNON had their symposium proposal titled,
"Transforming the Standard: How We’re Making the Undergraduate Psychology
Curriculum Culturally Inclusive and Relevant for an Interdependent World"
accepted for presentation at the 23rd Annual Winter Roundtable on Cultural
Psychology and Education, Teachers College, Columbia University. The Winter
Roundtable is the longest running continuing professional education program
in the United States devoted solely to cultural issues in psychology and
education. This year, the Winter Roundtable continues its tradition of
bringing together scholars, practitioners, researchers, social change agents
and students interested in the intersections between race, ethnicity, social
class, gender, sexual orientation, and religious affiliation in psychology
and education. The theme of the 2006 conference, "Empowerment and Social
Justice in Cultural Psychology and Education," underscores the Roundtable's
commitment to recognizing the multiple and complex effects of culture and
social location in psychological and educational matters. For more information
go to http://www.tc.edu/roundtable/
JILL HILL, SANDRA MARSHALL,
and VICTORIA MUÑOZ led a session titled, "Transforming the
Standard: How We’re Making the Undergraduate Psychology Curriculum Inclusive
and Relevant" as part of the 23rd Annual Winter Roundtable on Cultural
Psychology and Education, Teachers College, Columbia University, February
17-18, 2006. They also attended workshops and lectures on white privilege,
race and racism, teaching social justice, developing multicultural competence,
and the uses of autobiography in teaching and learning across differences.
The Winter Roundtable is the longest running continuing professional education
program in the United States devoted solely to racial and cultural issues
in psychology and education. The Winter Roundtable brings together scholars,
practitioners, researchers, social change agents and students interested
in the intersections between race, ethnicity, social class, gender, sexual
orientation, and religious affiliation in psychology and education.
JILL HILL and VICTORIA MUÑOZ
presented their paper titled, "Assimilative Pressure, Resistance, and Transformation
in Developing Culturally Competent Psychology Curriculum," as part of the
paper session, Feminist Perspectives within Academia, at the 31st Annual
Conference of the Association for Women in Psychology, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
The conference focused on the theme, Intersecting Identities: Multicultural
Feminist Perspectives on Women's Lives, March 2006.
JOSEPH HOFFMANN co-authored
the application that led to the Center for Inquiry’s unanimous acceptance
as an NGO by the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations. The
Center has been granted "special consultative status" which entitles it
to designate official representatives to UN headquarters in New York and
UN offices in Geneva and Vienna. He participated in the SUNY/CFI summer
honors college at SUNY Buffalo, co-teaching the course, "Sex and the Holy
City" with Professor Joyce Salisbury (University of Wisconsin). In July
2005, Professor Hoffmann taught a "parents' class" at Wells Warm-Up, "Just
War and Jihad: Theories of Violent Action in Christianity and Islam." His
article "The Violent Bear it Away: The ‘Totalizing Imperative’ as a Source
of Religious Violence in Islam" was accepted for publication in Faith
and Freedom: the Journal of Liberal Religion (Manchester College, Oxford).
Following the July 7 bombings in London, he was invited by the editors
to join a consultation of religion scholars commenting on the incident,
to be published in January. Professor Hoffmann was commissioned in June
to write four articles for the New Interpreters Bible, on "Marcion,"
"Marcionism," "New Testament Canon," and "Christianity, Early Pagan Opposition
to." He wrote the introduction to a new edition of Karl Jaspers' and Rudof
Bultmann's Myth and Christianity (NY: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 2005). Professor
Hoffmann did a feature radio interview October 13 with Buffalo NPR station
WFBO on the political future of religious right and President Bush's Supreme
Court nominees. He has been commissioned to write an introduction to Maurice
Goguel's Jesus of Nazareth: Myth or History, reprint edition. Professor
Hoffmann has been invited to the membership of the Highlands Institute
of American Religious and Philosophical Thought, a research group dedicated
to exploring the American liberal religious tradition with special reference
to the work of the "Chicago School" and naturalism in American theology
and philosophy. Professor Hoffmann has been named a life trustee of the
NAC, a human rights organization based in Birmingham, United Kingdom, comprising
non-governmental organizations, groups, and people from across the globe
who are working to stop religiously-based abuse of children, women, and
minority non-citizen residents and refugees. http://nac1.bravehost.com
Professor Hoffmann will deliver a plenary session paper at the annual meeting
of the Society for the Study of Esotericism entitled "Julianus Platonicus:
Reconstructing the 'Apostate's' Religious Thought" at the University of
California-Davis in June 2006. In late October, he chaired the CSER section
of the international congress of the Academy of Humanism in Amherst, New
York, "Toward a New Enlightenment." The conference was a coordinated response
to the threat of the religious Right to public policy, education, and values-formation.
In late January he videotaped a series of six lectures at the Center for
Inquiry with a grant from the Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in
Theology and Religion, "The New History of Jesus." His book, Just War
and Jihad: Violence in Judaism, Christianity and Islam, was published
recently by Prometheus Books. He edited and included an introduction to
the new edition of Maurice Goguel's book, Jesus the Nazarene, Myth or
History, which was published in January by Farrar, Straus, Giroux,
New York. Professor Hoffmann taught an intensive course during January,
"The New History of Jesus" at CFI-Amherst and University at Buffalo Honors
College. The course was video-recorded for distribution to schools and
colleges, which was made possible by a grant from the Wabash Center for
Teaching and Learning in Religion and Theology. His article, "London Postscript:
7 July 2005," was published in the Autumn/Winter 2005/6 issue of the Oxford
theological journal, Faith and Freedom (58:161), pp 9-24. An expanded
version of the same article, "On the Limits of Religious Tolerance: A Liberal
Writes Back," appeared in the Unitarian publication, the Journal of
Liberal Religion on March 25. Professor Hoffmann's assessment of the
Dover (PA) School Board "Intelligent Design" case is part of a forum scheduled
for the March/April issue of Free Inquiry, "Of Brights and Dims:
Why Hard Science Won't Cure Easy Religion." His book proposal and sample
chapters of The Christ Myth: From God Incarante to the Historical Jesus
in Radical Theology has been accepted for publication by E.J. Brill
for its Interpretations of the New Testament series.
ETHEL
KING-MCKENZIE made presentations in Professor Munoz's Psychology 360L
class on November 3 and at the Auburn Community Wide Dialog Group held
at the Salvation Army on September 27, 2005.
The Education Program Team, ETHEL
KING-MCKENZIE, SUSAN TALBOT, and SUSAN WANSOR made a presentation
at the Sociology Conference held at Wells College on October 14 and 15,
2005. The title of their presentation was, "Preparing Teachers for the
21st Century and Beyond: Focus on Diversity and Social Justice."
CYNTHIA J. KOEPP
presented an invited lecture entitled "Dialogues and Dramas for Children:
The Enlightened Pedagogy of Louis-François Jauffret," at an international
conference on "Education and Culture in the Long Eighteenth Century (1688-1832),"
which took place from September 8-11 at the University of Cambridge, Cambridge,
England. At the same conference she also chaired a panel that looked
at science, religion and women's education in the late eighteenth century.
Professor Koepp was awarded a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship
to support a year of writing on her current project entitled, "The Forgotten
Best-Seller of Eighteenth-Century Europe: the Abbe Pluche's Spectacle de
la Nature and the popular enlightenment." The study focuses especially
on a new fascination for science and progressive ideas about education
and experiential learning that emerged in the decades before the French
Revolution.
THEODORE
LOSSOWSKI had his multimedia sculptures on exhibit in the String Room
Gallery from September 7 through October 6.
TUKUMBI LUMUMBA-KASONGO
attended the Executive Committee meeting of the African Association
of Political Science (AAPS) as one of its Vice-President. The meeting was
held in Tshwane (Pretoria), South Africa, April 15-17, 2005. His article
entitled, "Rethinking Global Design as a Social Value in Search of Alternative
Design Paradigms for a 'Democratic World'," was published in In.Form: The
Journal of Architecture, Design, and Material Culture, Volume 5: A Global
View of Interior Design, published by University of Nebraska-Lincoln (2005).
His book, Liberal Democracy and Its Critics in Africa: Political Dysfunction
and the Struggle for Social Progress, was published by United Kingdom,
London: Zed Books, July 15, 2005. His article, "International Interventionism,
Democracy, and Peace-Building in the Great Lakes of Africa: A Regional
Perspective to Challenges," was published in African and Asian Studies,
Volume 4, No. 1-2. (Special Issue, 2005). Professor Lumumba-Kasongo participated
in the Advanced Placement Program as a reader of Government and Politics,
which was held on June 10-19, 2005, Colorado State University, Fort Collins,
Colorado. He renewed his contract for two more years (2005-07) as A Visiting
Research Fellow, Center for the Study of International Cooperation in Education
(CICE), Hiroshima University, Higashi-Hiroshima, Japan. Professor Lumumba-Kasongo
served as Chair of the Panel, "Globalization: Theory and Consequences,"
at the New York Sociological Association’s 53rd Annual Conference held
on October 14 and 15 at Wells College. He also presented a paper entitled:
"Reflections on Democracy: A Comparative Analysis of Social Indicators
of Liberal, Social, and Transitional Democracies" at the conference. His
book, Who and What Govern in the World of the States?: A Comparative
Study of Constitutions, Citizenry, Power, and Ideology in Contemporary
Politics, was published by Lanham: Maryland: University Press of America,
November 2005. His article, "Congo-Brazzaville: Multipartyism or Illiberal
Democracy?," was published in NEWS From the Nordic Africa Institute, No.3
(October 2005): 12:15. Professor Lumumba-Kasongo attended the CODESRIA
11th General Assembly held on December 6-10, 2005, in Maputo, Mozambique
(Southern Africa). The topic of his presentation was "A Reflection on Welfare
State within the Context of Liberal Globalization in Africa: Is the Concept
Still Relevant in the Search for Social Progress Policy Alternative in
Africa?" He was also the keynote speaker and a participant in the program
on "Shaping New Africa" in the Netherlands. His talk was entitled: "Liberal
Democracy in Africa and Its Critics." He was invited to participate in
this program by the Netherlands Institute for Southern Africa (NCDO), SAHAN
Consultancy (NiZA), and the Centre for International Development Issues
Nijmegen (CIDIN). The program was held in Amsterdam on January 10-15, 2006.
MATTHEW MCCABE
presented a paper titled, "Valuing Unfunded Deferred Compensation Assets
in Matrimonial Actions," at the 32nd annual conference of the Eastern Economic
Association in Philadelphia on February 25, 2006. He is also a reviewer
for the "Journal of Forensic Economics."
LESLIE
MILLER-BERNAL presented her paper, "Women’s Colleges Since the 1960s:
Responses to the Challenges of Coeducation," at the Berkshire Conference
of Women Historians, June 2-5, 2005, at Scripps College in Claremont, California.
Her paper was part of a panel, Women's Colleges in a Coed Era, formed on
the basis of her forthcoming book, co-edited with Susan Poulson. Professor
Miller-Bernal’s chapter, "Diverse Responses to Coeducation: Women's
Colleges in the U.S.," has appeared
in the recently published book, Girton: Thirty Years...in the life of
a Cambridge College, edited by Marilyn Strathern and Val Horsler (Third
Millenium Publishing, UK, 2005). She was an invited contributor to this
work. She presented a paper, "Colleges' Gender Composition and Prestige:
Consequences for the Coeducation Movement of the 1970s," at a regular session
of the annual meeting of the Eastern Sociological Society (ESS) in Boston,
February 26, 2006. As Chair of the ESS Publications Committee, Professor
Miller-Bernal led the Society in its search for a new publisher for its
journal, Sociological Forum. She arranged for five invited publishers
to make presentations about their proposals for publishing the journal
and facilitated discussions about the proposals' comparative merits. Professor
Miller-Bernal’s co-edited book, Going Coed: Women's Experiences in Formerly
Men's Colleges and Universities, 1950-2000, was reviewed, along with
three other books, in a four-page review in Feminist Collections,
Volume 26, number 4, Summer 2005
MILENE MORFEI
attended the annual meetings of the Society for Personality and Social
Psychology in New Orleans, Louisiana, during January 2006.
VICTORIA MUÑOZ
delivered a talk, "Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation: When Sex Changes
So Can Desire," which presented findings of the Gender Identity and Sexual
Orientation study (GISO) at the XVII World Congress of Sexology Montréal,
Québec, Canada, in July 2005 as part of the symposium, "Sexual Orientation."
Professor Muñoz also presented the paper, "Carmen Miranda, Sylvia
Rivera, and Queer Latinidad" at the annual National Women's Studies Association
conference, Orlando, Florida, in June 2005. Professor Muñoz was
awarded a $5,000 grant from The Small Change Foundation to continue the
Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation (GISO) study. The funds are for
research assistance and transcription of interviews. This is the second
time GISO has been supported by The Small Change Foundation. The first
grant was in 2003. Professor Muñoz gave a presentation for the New
York Sociological Society Association Conference, October 14, 2005, Aurora,
New York titled, "Translating Gender: Transgender Narratives of Race, Class,
and Sexuality Or The Grand Narrative and Its Discontents." She had a paper
accepted, "Transgender Men of Color: Gender Identity, Race, Culture, and
Sexuality," for presentation in the session, "Intersecting Identities:
Sexual Orientation, Race/Ethnicity, and Gender" at the American Psychological
Association annual conference to be held this August in New Orleans. Professor
Muñoz’s paper is sponsored by Division 44 Society for the Psychological
Study of Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Issues. She has also had another paper
accepted for presentation, "The Master Narrative and Transsexual Women:
Intersectionalities of Gender, Class, Race, Sexuality and Diagnostic Hegemony,"
at the annual conference of The Association for Women in Psychology which
took place in March in Ann Arbor. Professor Muñoz presented a paper
titled, "GID as a Master Narrative: Intersectionalities of Gender, Class,
Race, Sexuality, and Diagnostic Hegemony," as part of the paper session
Sexual Orientation and its Impact on Identity, at the 31st Annual Conference
of the Association for Women in Psychology, Ann Arbor, Michigan, March
2006.
NIAMH O' LEARY
was invited to participate in an Oxford Round Table conference at the University
of Oxford, Oxford, England in August 2005. The topic of the conference
was "Globalization in the 21st Century." Professor O' Leary was also recognized
for the second time by the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network for her contributions
to that organization. She is currently Chair of the Network's Community
Outreach Committee. Professor O’Leary was a co-organizer of the Cayuga
Lake Watershed Network's outreach and public education event: 'Something's
Fishy in Cayuga Lake', held at Wells College in November. She has been
invited to join the Advisory Board of the Cayuga Nature Center, a not-for-profit
organization that focuses on environmental and outdoor education in the
Cayuga Watershed. Professor O’Leary attended a Symposium on "Culture, Climate
and Change in East Asia" at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in Geneva,
New York, in March 2006.
NIAMH O' LEARY and THOMAS
VAWTER were invited to participate in a Regional Watershed and Science
Educators Meeting at the Finger Lakes Institute in Geneva in April 2005.
They were also invited to make a presentation at the 38th Annual Conference
of the New York State Outdoor Education Association, which took place in
Ithaca October 6-9. They presented a field and laboratory exercise on calculation
of Net Primary Productivity. This exercise was developed at Wells College.
ERNIE OLSON’s
presentation "Strengthening and Sustaining Relations Among Haudenosaunee
Nations and Local Finger Lakes Communities of Central New York" was accepted
for the 2005 World Indigenous People's Conference on Education held in
New Zealand during November 2005. He has had a number of photographs included
in Eva Mackey's (McMaster University) article "Universal Rights in Conflict"
published in Anthropology Today, No. 2, April 2005. Professor Olson participated
on a panel presentation for the Johns Hopkins University Center for Talented
Youth 2005 College Colloquia held at Syracuse University November 20, 2005.
He presented a paper entitled, "Kerr Dam, the Confederated Salish and Kootenai
Tribes and the Challenges of Repossession" on the panel "The Language of
Dispossession: Indigenous Struggles over Discourse, Land, and Resources"
at the New York State Sociological Association Annual Conference held at
Wells College October 14 and 15, 2005. Recent Wells graduates Meghan McCune
`03 and Ariel Merkel `05 also gave presentations on the panel. Professor
Olson has had his presentation "Congregational Circles and Colonial Displacement:
Meaning and Place in Tongan Churches of the Diaspora" accepted for the
Hawaii International Conference on Arts and Humanities which was held in
Honolulu, January 11-14, 2006.
VICTOR PENNIMAN
performed the Baroque ensemble "Quadro Ithaca" at a benefit concert
for Carol Buckley at the First Congregational Church in Ithaca on May 1,
2005. Ms. Buckley is a singer and founding member of the musical
group Women’s Works, who is suffering from Lou Gehrig’s disease. On May
8, he performed with Quadro Ithaca in a concert of German and French Baroque
music at the First Congregational Church in Ithaca. On May 15, he performed
with members of the group "Frogwork" and violist da gamba Alex Korolov
in Barler Recital Hall. Selections included works by English composers
Simpson, Lawes and Jenkins, and French composer Marin Marais. Professor
Penniman showcased and performed on the Ruby Gamba at the Boston Early
Music Festival, June 13-19, an international Early Music event held every
two years in Boston. The Ruby Gamba is a solid body electric viola
da gamba that has been developed by Jan Goorisen in the Netherlands.
He has been working closely with Mr. Goorisen for the last year to continue
to develop the instrument and its repertoire, and he is one of four or
five professional players of the instrument in the world. Professor Penniman
attended the Viola da Gamba Society of America’s annual Conclave, July
24-31. He has been chosen to participate in the Society’s new program,
the Consort Collective, which has been created solely for professional
and professional level players. Professor Penniman performed bi- and tri-weekly
with his new group, Kh’mi, throughout the summer to the present in Syracuse,
Auburn and Cortland, New York. At the Viola da Gamba Society of America
Annual Conclave (Worcester, Massachusetts) on July 26-31, he directed and
performed in the Consort Cooperative and performed on the Ruby (electric)
Gamba at the banquet. During August 23-25, Professor Penniman performed
in the Handel Project at the CRS Barn Studio, Ithaca, New York. He provided
the pre-show music for The Little Theater production of Moliere’s Les
Ridiculous Presieuses in Auburn, New York, July 15-16 and performed
with Women’s Works and Water Bear ensembles in Ithaca on July 17. He also
performed a demo showcase for the Ruby Gamba at the Boston Early
Music Festival, June 14-17. Professor Penniman spent January engineering,
mixing and playing on Kh'mi's new 5-song EP, "Lovers and Thieves." The
CD was recorded at Ormesby Productions Studios, Aurora, New York. The CD
is available for sale at Dorie's, or copies can be ordered directly from
him. Kh'mi appeared at the Fargo on February 8, at the Blue Frog in Cortland
on February 10, and appeared at Dinosaur Barbecue in Syracuse on February
20, the Fargo on the 22nd, and at The Nines in Ithaca on March
4. Professor Penniman appeared on Sammy Award-winning singer-songwriter
Ashley Cox's new CD, "Honey By The Pound." The CD was released in March;
dates for the supporting tour will be announced at a later date. He appeared
with Ashley every Monday in February at Dinosaur Barbecue in Syracuse,
at Manhattan's in Hanover Square on February 17, Harry's in Syracuse on
February 24, and Om in Syracuse on March 7.
LAURA PURDY
gave a talk entitled "A Modest Proposal: COI’s and Some Remedies," at The
Ethics of Bioethics conference, sponsored by the ASBH at Union College
and Albany Medical College, in Schenectady, NY, April 7-9, 2005. Her paper
"Genetic Diseases: Can Having Children Be Immoral?" has been reprinted
in Robert Card, Critically Thinking about Medical Ethics, Prentice
Hall, 2004. Professor Purdy presented a talk entitled, "The Politics of
Preventing Premature Death," at the Biomedical Ethics Unit of the Faculty
of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, on September 30, 2005. Her book
review: "Marriage isn't for Everyone," Marriage on Trial: The Case against
Same-Sex Marriage and Parenting, by Glenn T. Stanton and Dr. Bill Maier,
appeared in Free Inquiry, Oct./Nov. 2005, pp. 63-64. Professor Purdy
has been elected to the Advisory Board of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics
for the term 2005-2007. She has also been elected Senior Fellow of the
Committee for the Scientific Examination of Religion of the Center for
Inquiry, Buffalo, New York. She gave a presentation entitled, "A Bioethics
Perspective on Transex Procedures," at the New York State Sociological
Association, Aurora, New York, on October 14, 2005. Her talk, "Like a Motherless
Child: Fetal Eggs and Families," was accepted for the Feminist Ethics and
Social Theory Conference scheduled for October 23 in Clearwater, Florida,
but was preempted by Hurricane Wilma. Her article "Genetics and Reproductive
Risk: Can Having Children Be Immoral" will be reprinted in Michael Cummings,
Human Heredity: Principles and Issues, Wadsworth, 7th edition. She
presented a paper entitled, "Sex, Lies, and the Religious Right: How the
'Culture of Life' Leads to Misery and Death," to the Committee for the
Scientific Examination of Religion, The New Enlightenment, Center
for Inquiry, Buffalo, New York, October 29, 2005. Professor Purdy reviewed
an article submitted to the journal Bioethics. Her article, "Like
a Motherless Child: Fetal Eggs and Families," was published in The Journal
of Clinical Ethics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (Winter 2005), 329-34. She wrote
a chapter entitled, "Vitoria's Just War Theory: Still Relevant Today?"
for R. Joseph Hoffmann’s book, Just War and Jihad, (Amherst, New
York: Prometheus Press, 2006), 255-276. Her review of the book, Ending
Life: Ethics and the Way We Die (by Margaret Battin), has been published
online in Journal of the American Medical Association. Professor
Purdy has been invited to give a talk tentatively entitled, "What Basis
is There in Religion for Promoting Sexual and Reproductive Rights?," as
part of a panel tentatively entitled, "Religion and Reproductive Freedom,"
accepted by the American Academy of Religion for it's November 2006 meeting.
WILLIAM ROBERTS
photographed the Buffalo Bills/Houston Texans game in Buffalo on September
11, 2005, for the Houston Texans. He was one of three photographers assigned
to cover the field for the Texans. Professor Roberts had five paintings
featured in an invitational exhibition, "As The Crow Flies" at the Schweinfurth
Art Center in Auburn, New York, during November and December. He had two
drawings auctioned off at the Maryland Racing Association's annual fund
raising dinner in November. Professor Roberts photographed the Army Navy
Game in Philadelphia on December 3. He also photographed the Baltimore
Ravens-Houston Texans game in Baltimore on December 4, 2005. In March,
Professor Roberts had a show at the Saltonstall Art Salon. His work was
part of a show entitled, "MUSEUM OF THE EARTH;" the other artists were
Virginia Cobey, Linda Swanson and Craig Mains. Professor Roberts describes
his painting as an emotional and psychological process that requires a
certain "letting go and staying loose." He does not know what a painting
will look like when he begins. Quite often in these paintings, he'll do
a portrait then completely paint it out and start over again. Underneath
each finished painting are probably six to ten other preliminary paintings.
How does he know when a painting is complete? He stated that "something
just tells me, and I feel good about how things have pulled together."
JACLYN SCHNURR's
paper "Herbaceous Plant Community Responses to Fire in Longleaf Pine Forests"
has been accepted for presentation at the 90th meeting of the Ecological
Society of American meetings, to be held August 7-12, 2006, in Montreal,
Canada. Additionally, Professor Schnurr has been selected as a member of
the Teaching Issues and Experiments in Ecology research team, sponsored
by the Education Section of the Ecological Society of America. As a member
of the research team, she will work with other ecology faculty to plan
the study, which will be carried out during the 2005-2006 academic year,
learn about and receive mentoring on basic tools for classroom evaluation
and research, and contribute to the collective wisdom about inquiry-based,
active ecology teaching.
From November 3-5, ANDRE
SIAMUNDELE was at the University of Johannesburg in Johannesburg, South
Africa, where he participated in an International Conference on Comparative
African Literature. His paper was on Transcultural Articulations in African
Literature. He also chaired the session on Exile. On March 25, 2006, Professor
Siamundele was the guest of the Yale Resource Center for the Teaching of
French and the Council of African Studies to deliver the keynote presentation
during the one-day workshop on "Bringing Africa to the Classroom: Practical
Approaches to the Study of and Teaching about Francophone Africa"
The anthology written by specialists
on contemporary art is to be published by the University of Minnesota Press.
JELENA STOJANOVIC is one of the contributors. She had written a
chapter on European contemporary art, and her talk on "Contemporary Art?"
on April 20 was an excerpt from this chapter. The book is very ambitious,
one of the first comprehensive studies on this important topic, and it
did require a very long and detailed preparation. A very positive response
arrived from the reviewers and the book went to the press in May 2005.
SUSAN TALBOT
attended a conference entitled, "Building a Culture of Quality-- An Expeditionary
Learning Outward Bound Demonstration Site Seminar," in Rochester with a
group of seven education students on October 27-28.
This past fall, the choir of Trinity
Episcopal Church in Watertown, New York, conducted by Susan Maxwell, presented
a festival of anthems by CRAWFORD THOBURN.
Since early September, over half of the Sunday services have featured performances
of published compositions or arrangements by Professor Thoburn. On, November
12 in Oswego, and November 13 in Watertown, the Trinity Choir combined
for choral evensong with the choir of Oswego's Episcopal Church of the
Resurrection. Featured in these services were Professor Thoburn's original
composition, "Jesus, The Very Thought of Thee," published by Harold Flammer,
Inc. On November 5, the Wells Concert Choir, conducted by Professor Thoburn
and accompanied by pianist Nancy Gilbertson, and the Wells Chamber Orchestra,
conducted by Laura Campbell, performed for the Wells Family Weekend during
the dinner held in the Sommer Center. On November 19, Professor Thoburn
conducted the Wells Concert Choir in two twenty-minute performances of
holiday music for the tree-lighting ceremony at the Bass Pro Shop in the
Auburn Fingerlakes Mall. On December 4, he conducted the Wells Concert
Choir and Chamber Singers in their 46th annual Holiday Concert in the Barler
Recital Hall. The Concert Choir was accompanied in this performance by
pianist Nancy Gilbertson and the featured work on the program was Benjamin
Britten's "A Ceremony of Carols," opus 28. As has been the custom in the
past, a sizable amount of food was donated by members of the audience,
which was forwarded to the Cayuga County Food Pantry. During the holiday
season, Professor Thoburn’s published choral compositions and arrangements
were widely performed from California to Virginia and points in between.
In early December, his original setting of Christina Rossetti's poem "In
The Bleak Midwinter" was sung by the Choir of Allegheny College in their
concert at Heinz Hall in Pittsburgh, and later in their Christmas Concert
on the college campus. His original composition for unaccompanied mixed
voices, "Adam Lay Y-Bounden," published by Mark Foster Music, received
several performances during the fall by the St. Martin Singers of London,
England, conducted by Mattthew Maule. A recorded performance of "A Christmas
Triptych," consisting of three of his original settings of 15th century
English texts for unaccompanied mixed voices, has been included in a new
CD issued by the professional chamber choir "Voices" from Toronto, Canada,
conducted by Ron Cheung. Professor Thoburn is cited and quoted several
times in a recently published book entitled, She Has Done A Beautiful
Thing For Me, by Dr. Anne Kwantes. This work recounts and discusses
the work of thirteen women who have had an important impact on the lives
of women in Asia. His contributions are contained in the chapter devoted
to his great-grand aunt, Isabella Thoburn, who founded the first college
for women in Asia. Professor Thoburn’s arrangement of the English Folksong,
"Scarborough Fair," published by Mark Foster Music Inc. was performed by
the Women's Ensemble of Allegheny College, conducted by Ward Jamison, in
their Spring Concert on April 8, 2006, on the campus in Meadville, Pennsylvania.
THOMAS VAWTER
has been named "Principal Scientist" on a project team for EcoLogic, LLC,
of Cazenovia, New York. The team has submitted a proposal, "Development
of a Vision for the Onondaga Lake Watershed" to the Onondaga Lake Partnership,
a consortium of local, state and federal agencies charged with the clean
up of Onondaga Lake. If the proposal is accepted, this project will constitute
an important part of Professor Vawter's sabbatical leave activities next
year. Professor Vawter presented the opening remarks entitled "Thinking
Outside the Box (or at least inside a bigger one)" at the Six Mile Creek
Partnership's progress report symposium in Brooktondale, New York, on November
1, 2005. His article entitled "Managing Sediment in Six-Mile Creek" was
published in the Winter 2005-2006 issue of "The Land Steward," the newsletter
of the Finger Lakes Land Trust.
CHRISTINA WAHL
has had a paper accepted for publication in the Journal of Molecular
and Developmental Reproduction: Gigli, I., R. Cushman, C. Wahl, and
J.E. Fortune (2005, in press) "Evidence for a Role for Anti-Mullerian Hormone
in the Suppression of Follicle Activation in Mouse Ovaries and Bovine Ovarian
Cortex Grafted beneath the Chick Chorioallantoic Membrane." Ellen Sweet,
laboratory manager, and Professor Wahl attended a seminar at Cornell on
May 4, 2005, on "Fish Health Management" for which they each received three
continuing education credits. Professor Wahl is a contributor to the Ithaca
Journal column "Ask a Scientist". So far she has written two pieces for
the Journal, the first one was titled "Over-stimulation to inner ear causes
tinnitus, or 'ringing'", and appeared on November 25, and the second was
titled "Human eye is more like a camera than a computer monitor" and appeared
on March 31. Professor Wahl has been re-appointed to another 5-year term
as a Courtesy Assistant Professor in the Department of Biomedical Sciences
at Cornell, College of Veterinary Medicine, effective September 1, 2005
through August 31, 2010. In December, Professor Wahl attended the American
Society for Cell Biology Annual meeting in San Francisco, where she participated
in a workshop on science teaching strategies. Professor Wahl has completed
a chapter entitled "Periocular Mesenchyme: Neural Crest and Mesodermal
Interactions" for Duane's Archives of Ophthalmology. It has been accepted
by the editor and will be published in 2006. She completed a peer review
of a manuscript for the journal "Vision Research." Professor Wahl was invited
to participate in a panel discussion on April 13 which was sponsored by
the New York Academy of Sciences' "NY Science Alliance for Students and
Postdocs." Her topic was how science professionals integrate their science
into teaching jobs at small liberal arts colleges. She discussed Wells
and how we teach hands-on science as part of our curriculum.
XIAOLIANG (LEON)
ZHU had an article published on Physical Review B 73, 064115 (2006),
in February. The title is "Critical behavior of an elastic Ising model
on a stacked triangular net at constant volume." It is a Monte Carlo study
of an elastic three-dimensional Ising model, a continuation of his Ph.D.
dissertation.
ELSIE TORRES attended the Book
Expo 2005 in New York City in June. While there she evaluated many bibliographic
resources in the area of Education, which were shared with Professor Susan
Talbot for possible library acquisition.
Librarians FRANKIE ANDERSON, MURIEL
GODBOUT, and JERI VARGO attended Academic Libraries 2005 in
Saratoga Springs, New York. The conference theme was "The Information Commons:
Adapting to the Culture of the Net Generation Students".
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