(Activities Announced at Faculty
Meetings,
May, 1999 - April, 2000)
CHRISTOPHER
BAILEY and Nancy Karpinski attended the Spring 1999 Conference and
Open House for Health Professions advisors at the New York Chiropractic
College. Professors BAILEY, TOM VAWTER, AND NIAMH O’LEARY, along
with DEAN HALL, participated in the Project Kaleidoscope workshop
on "Environmental Studies: Issues for New and Expanding Programs," at Brown
University, June 18-20. Professor Bailey chaired a session on "Active Learning
in Chemistry," at the 33rd Annual Meeting of the Middle Atlantic
Association of Liberal Arts Chemistry Teachers, September 17, at Lebanon
Valley College in Pennsylvania.
ARTHUR
BELLINZONI, as a result of his service on the Board of Directors of
People for the American, Way, has been invited to join the national Board
of Directors of GLAAD (Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation). Based
in New York, GLAAD works to advance an agenda of full equality for gays
and lesbians. Professor Bellinzoni and actor Alec Baldwin, representing
the Board of Directors of People for the American Way, delivered public
testimony on April 14 at a public hearing before a New York State Senate
committee in support of hate crimes legislation for New York State.
This past summer,BRUCE
BENNETT had poems published in four literary magazines, Tar River
Poetry, Paintbrush, Piedmont Literary Review, and Reflections.
His poems were also published in three anthologies: Real Things: An
Anthology of Popular Culture In American Poetry (Indiana University
Press), in Prentice Hall Canada’s Grade 7 Language Arts Anthology,
and in WESTERN WIND: An Introduction to Poetry, Fourth Edition,
McGraw-Hill. Professor Bennett’s essay "X. J. Kennedy’s Poetry for Children:
A User’s Guide, " appeared in Paintbrush, Autumn, 1999. Professor
Bennett’s book, Navigating the Distances: Poems New and Selected,
was published by Orchises Press. The jacket cover of Navigating the
Distances was designed by Victor Hammer Fellow in the Book Arts JOCELYN
WEBB and features her artwork. Navigating the Distances has received
a starred review in the current issue of Booklist, and the jacket
cover by Jocelyn is also reproduced in that issue of Booklist. Professor
Bennett’s chapbook AH, FIRENZE! was published by Clandestine Press.
All proceeds from the sale of AH, FIRENZE! will be used to support
the Wells College Book Arts Center. He had three poems published in The
Second WORD THURSDAYS Anthology, Editor Bertha Rogers, Bright Hill
Press, 1999. "In Remembrance," a memorial tribute to Robert Wallace, appeared
in the Autumn 1999 issue of Light. He read his poetry at Keuka College
on October 26.
On behalf of the College, Professor
Bennett received a three-year grant from the New York State Council on
the Arts to support Writers’ Appearances for the Visiting Writers Series.
Oh behalf of the Book Arts Center, Professor Bennett received a grant from
the Kaplan Foundation which will enable the Wells Press to publish Sincerely
Yours, Victor Hammer, the collection of Victor Hammer’s letters to
Janet Lewis relating to his publication of her 1948 poetry book, The
Earth-Bound.
Professor Bennett gave three poetry
readings during November. He read at Harvard University on November 12,
at a book signing for Navigating The Distances in Belmont, Massachusetts,
on November 13, and at the Professors Place Restaurant in Watkins Glen
on November 17. His essay, "Not Philosophers or Angels: An Appreciation
of Gail White," was published in the Winter 1999 issue of Light.
A feature article about Professor Bennett and Navigating The Distances,
entitled "Better Verse," written by Bridget Meeds, appeared in the January
19, 2000, issue of the Ithaca Times. On January 22, he gave a reading
for the Ithaca Community Poets at Tompkins County Museum. Navigating
The Distances, has gone into a second printing. In February, Professor
Bennett read his poems at the "Twentieth Century Literature Conference"
at the University of Kentucky in Louisville, Kentucky. He was a featured
writer at SUNY Binghamton on March 9 and 10. He gave a reading of his poetry
on March 9 and held a discussion of his work with the Contemporary American
Writers class the morning of the 10th. Professor Bennett published
a poem in The Laurel Review. He gave two readings of his poetry:
at Hobart William Smith on March 31 and at the Bookery on April 9. Professor
Bennett’s book, Navigating The Distances, was reviewed in the Spring
2000 issue of Harvard Review.
CATHERINE
BURROUGHS’s essay on Fanny Kemble’s poems appeared in the edited volume,
Romanticism and Women Poets: Opening the Doors of Reception, published
by the University Press of Kentucky this past summer. In June, she chaired
a session on technology and the future of higher education at the 4th
National Writing-Across-the-Curriculum conference held at Cornell. Her
review of two recent books on Romantic closet drama appeared in the Fall
1999 issue of the on-line periodical,
Romantic Circles Reviews.
Professor Burroughs read one manuscript and a book proposal on British
women playwrights for Theatre Journal and Broadview Press
in December. After many years in the pipeline, an essay she wrote in the
early `90s on Keats’s poem Lamia and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel,
The Beautiful and Damned will be published this spring by the University
of Georgia Press, in an edited volume called
F. Scott Fitzgerald: New
Perspectives. She was recently asked by Houghton Mifflin to review
the forthcoming Riverside Shakespeare Electronic Concordance. Professor
Burroughs has been reappointed to the Board of Visitors of Wake Forest
University for a term running through 2004. She has also just received
a contract from Oxford University Press for a two-volume anthology tracing
the tradition of British closet drama from the Renaissance to the early
20th century. This project is due in 2002 and will be titled
Between Performance and Text: An Anthology of British Closet Drama, 1550-1900.
CANDACE COLLMER
was a selected participant in a Bioethics Institute for life science faculty
members held at Iowa State University from May 29 to June 3, 1999. This
institute, funded by the National Science Foundation, involved 25 faculty
members who spent more than 40 hours studying ethical theory, thinking
about ways to discuss moral decision-making with students, and constructing
case studies for classroom use. In October, she attended the Nobel Conference
at Gustavus Adolphus College in Saint Peter, Minnesota. This conference,
officially linked to the Nobel Foundation, Sweden, and held every year
at Gustavus Adolphus College, links an audience of several thousand with
the world’s foremost scholars and researchers in debate centered on contemporary
issues related to the sciences. This year’s thought-provoking focus was
"Genetics in the New Millennium." Professor Collmer also was a participant
in a workshop entitled "Genomics: How Do We Teach in the Middle of a Revolution?"
held December 11 in Washington, D.C. This was a special workshop sponsored
by the Education Committee as part of the American Society for Cell Biology’s
39th Annual Meeting. She attended a meeting on March 20, 2000,
entitled "Who Owns Life?" This meeting was sponsored by the Center for
Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania and addressed a host of social,
moral, and legal problems created by the rapid pace of development in biotechnology.
Participation in the meeting was part of a large project at the Center
for Bioethics, where she serves as a member of a focus group that is working
to develop educational materials for use in colleges and high schools that
are related to the upcoming book, Who Owns Life?. This book is a
collection of essays by leading authorities from science, philosophy, law,
religion, history, social sciences, bioethics, and industry, all of whom
address the complex issues around the ownership and patenting of life—genes,
body parts, and even whole organisms.
BEATRICE
FARNSWORTH chaired a session at the national meeting of the American
Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies on "Female Non-Industrial
Workers in the Soviet 1920s and 1930s" in March.
MARGARET FLOWERS
served as scientific consultant for the Rangeley School District, Rangeley,
Maine, and was requested to compile a floristic survey and herbarium collection
of the woody plants for Reed Enterprises, Inc. of North New Portland, Maine.
Her interdisciplinary laboratory exercises, produced under the New Pathways
in Chemistry grant, were purchased by the Commonwealth of Virginia for
use in their public school system. Professor Flowers’ radio interview on
research in the college curriculum, produced by NPR affiliate WAMC for
the nationally syndicated "Best of Our Knowledge," was aired in August.
Professors Flowers and Schwab presented an analysis of the controversy
surrounding the revised Kansas State science education standards at the
Lions Club meeting in Union Springs on September 28. Their paper was entitled,
"Teaching Science in a Climate of Controversy: Recent Developments."
SUSAN FORBES
directed a summer camp for girls for the Wells College Conferences this
past summer. The weeklong intensive performing arts camp offered courses
in private voice and instrumental, tap jazz and modern dance, and in acting,
improvisation and technical theatre. Thirty girls studied, rehearsed and
prepared a 50-minute performance of selections from the musical Annie.
Nancy
Gilbertson also served as a private instructor. Professor Forbes produced
and directed a black box production of absurdist drama entitled "Acts of
Menace." This production brought two artists-in-residence to the Wells
campus. The evening consisted of Harold Pinter’s "The Dumb Waiter," Joan
Schenkar’s "The Lodger," and Jean-Paul Sartre’s "No Exit." Professor Forbes
arranged for playwright Joan Schenkar to be in residence to see the production,
to participate in an audience talkback about the work, and to offer a writing
workshop. Schenkar is an Obie nominated playwright whose work is seen globally.
In addition, the "No Exit" cast was completed with guest actor Jonathan
Robinson, an accomplished professional actor who recently relocated to
Syracuse. The production was attended by approximately 400 people over
five performances. Professor Forbes has been working toward completing
a multi-media certificate course at the United Digital Artists center and
agency in New York and Boston. She will soon be a certified multi-media
artist with an emphasis on interactive design.
NANCY GILBERTSON
presented "Mediterranean Magic," a piano recital of music from the Mediterranean
area, featuring music from Spain, Italy, Greece, Israel, and Egypt last
spring. She also collaborated with LAURA CAMPBELL on a program of flute
and piano music for Horizon Performances of Moravia on April 11, 1999.
Composers represented on this program were Enesco, Bach, Katherine Hoover,
Albeniz, and Claude Bolling. On April 29, Ms. Gilbertson took her Wells
piano students to Westminster Manor in Auburn to give a recital for the
senior citizens living there. In October, Ms. Gilbertson gave a recital
of piano music from Greece, Italy, Egypt, Israel, and Spain at the Schweinfurth
Memorial Art Center. She has recorded and produced this same music on her
first CD titled Mediterranean Magic, which was released in December
and is available in the Wells Book Store. The CD includes a first recording
of the work entitled "Mektà in the Art of Kità by Egyptian
composer, Halim El-Dabh. On February 3 she performed selections from the
CD at the Civic Morning Musical luncheon recital at the Everson Museum
in Syracuse. Ms. Gilbertson accompanied LAURA CAMPBELL in a recital
of all women’s music at Colgate University on March 7, 2000. Included on
the program were a work by Ithaca composer, Margaret Fairlie-Kennedy, and
a work by Katherine Hoover from New York City, both for flute and piano.
Other women composers represented were Thea Musgrave, Donna Kelly Eastman,
and Cynthia Folio. Joining Ms. Campbell and Ms. Gilbertson on the program
was Ithaca College faculty singer Patrice Pastore.
JEANNE GODDARD
directed and co-produced the workshop performance of "House of Butterflies,"
an original opera, at the CRS Barn Studio in Ithaca in May 1998. During
her sabbatical leave, she traveled in Denmark and Finland, attending performances
of the Royal Danish Ballet, the Moscow Ballet, and various modern dance
performers. She visited the University of Jyvaskyla in Finland, where she
met with colleagues in the Department of Physical Education and toured
their newly renovated facility. In October, 1998, Professor Goddard was
a guest artist at Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri, teaching three
levels of modern dance and a Laban/Bartenieff workshop, as well as serving
as adjudicator for a concert of student choreography. From February 1 through
March 5, 1999, Professor Goddard was a guest artist at Ithaca College,
teaching modern dance and dance history. In March she choreographed the
Tri-Cities Opera production of Mozart’s "The Magic Flute" and offered a
movement workshop for cast and chorus. She directed and Performed "Odyssey"
with the Firehouse Dance Company at the Ithaca Festival in June. Her solo
choreographic project, "Natural Studies," developed in various outdoor
settings during the summer, and she also performed in June Finch’s lecture-demonstration,
"How to Make a Dance" as part of the Provincetown Art Association series,
Forum 99. At this time, she contracted with June Finch/Danceworks and with
visual artist Bob Bailey to participate in the Wells College Fall Dance
Concert in October 1999. In August, she performed three works, two of which
she choreographed, in Summerdance 99 at the CRS Barn Studio, and last weekend
she participated in the video-music-dance production, "Luonnotar," also
at CRS Barn.
Professor Goddard choreographed the
Tri-Cities Opera production of Amahl and the Night Visitors in December,
1999, and is currently creating minuets and contra dances for their production
of Don Giovanni. In March, Ms. Goddard took a group of ten students
to the American College Dance Festival at SUNY Brockport, where she taught
a master class in Laban-based modern dance and the students showed two
pieces of choreography. Ms. Goddard has also completed a new choreographic
work for Cornell composer Karel Husa’s "Twelve Moravian Songs."
PILAR GREENWOOD,
from June 1-4, 1999, attended the international conference "A New Millennium:
From the Altamira Caves to the Internet" in Santander, Spain. The conference
was co-sponsored by, among other institutions, the Autonomous University
of Cantabria (Santander, Spain), the Guggenheim Museum of Bilbao (Spain),
and ALDEEU (Spanish Professionals in the USA). She participated in the
panel "Nuevos Conocimientos, Nueva Universidad (New Knowledge, New
University) with a paper entitled, "Posicionalidad y Multiculturalismo
en los años 1990’s" (Positionality and Multiculturalism in the `90’s).
This paper has been selected for publication by the publications committee
at the Universidad de Cantabria. Professor Greenwood coordinated a panel
and presented a paper entitled "Theoretical and Pedagogical Multicultural
Issues in the Foreign Language Classroom" at the "Gaudy Night Conference:
Celebrating Women’s Colleges" at Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania,
November 12-13. The title of the panel was "Multiculturalism Education
in the Context of Small Women’s Colleges" and was entirely composed of
Wells College faculty; participants were Breny Mendoza , Victoria Muñoz,
and Susan Sandman. Professor Mendoza’s paper was entitled "What is
at Stake in Multiculturalism;" Professor Muñoz’s paper was entitled
"The Strangest Things Happen: How I Learned to Tolerate and Then Accept
Heterosexuality;" and Professor Sandman’s title was "Diversity in Music
History Courses." The panelists have accepted an invitation to present
it again at the Wells Collegiate and Diversity Day Conference to be held
in March 2000. Leslie Miller-Bernal also presented a paper entitled
"Variations Among Women’s Colleges: Degrees of Separatism." Professor Greenwood’s
poem "Hurting, Burning" has been accepted for publication by the Journal
of International Women’s Studies. This journal is published by the
Massachusetts College of the Liberal Arts in North Adams, Massachusetts.
The poem, described by JIWS as "moving and beautiful," will appear in the
May issue, which will be posted on line.
MICHAEL GROTH
delivered a lecture entitled "From Slavery to Freedom in the Hudson River
Valley" at Marist College in Poughkeepsie, New York, on October 28. The
lecture was part of the college’s lecture series, "The People and History
of the Hudson River Valley." He delivered a second lecture at the Dutchess
County Historical Society on October 30. Professor Groth has also been
invited to contribute to a volume on African-American life and history
in New York State, and a second volume on the Revolution in New York.
ELLEN HALL
chaired a session at the Council of Independent Colleges Chief Academic
Officers Institute in Williamsburg, Virginia. The conference entitled "Academic
Leadership Today: Creating Connections to Nurture Change" was held November
6-9.
SPENCER HILDAHL
was asked by the library review journal, Choice, to monitor and
analyze a web site for a 30-day period and to write a review of it. His
review of World-Systems Archive, URL was published in the May 1999 issue
of Choice. In addition, his review of the book Technologies of
Knowing: A Proposal for the Human Sciences (Beacon Press, 1999) appeared
in the July/August issue of Choice. His review of the book, A
Nation of Meddlers, by Charles Edgley and Dennis Brissett appeared
in the September 1999 issue of CHOICE. Professor Hildahl’s review
of O.J. Simpson Facts and Fictions: News Rituals in the Construction
of Reality by Darnell Hunt (Cambridge, 1999) appeared in the November
1999 issue of CHOICE. His review of Lead Us Into Temptation:
The Triumph of American Materialism by James B. Twitchell (Columbia,
1999) also appeared in that issue.
CYNTHIA KOEPP
chaired a panel entitled, "Divorce Across the Revolutionary Divide: Staging
Marriage Crises in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century France," at the 11th
Triennial Berkshire Conference on the History of Women that was held June
4-6, 1999, at the University of Rochester, Rochester, New York. In August
she was the outside reader of a Ph.D. dissertation in French History at
the University at Buffalo.
KENNETH LARSON
was elected chair of the personnel committee of the board of trustees of
the South Central Regional Library Council
in March, 2000. The Council coordinates the sharing of electronic and print
resources among the academic, public, school, and special libraries in
14 counties of the Southern Tier and the Finger Lakes and is the lead agency
in creating the prototype for the proposed "New
York Online Virtual Electronic Library" (NOVEL).
TUKUMBI LUMUMBA-KASONGO
was invited by the Auburn Human Rights Commission to give a talk as the
keynote speaker for the Juneteenth Day Celebration on June 10. The title
of his speech was "Global Values and Diversity as Human Rights: Imperatives
for Building the World in the 21st Century with Confidence and
a Sense of Direction." The Local Amnesty International in Ithaca interviewed
him twice on "The Political Conflict in the Great Lakes Region of Africa
and Prospect for the Peace" in June on local public television, Channel
13. He attended and delivered a paper entitled, "Capitalism and Liberal
Democracy as Forces of Globalization with a Reference to the Paradigms
Behind the Structural Adjustment Programs in Africa," at the 12th
African Political Science Congress in Dakar, Senegal. Professor Lumumba-Kasongo
was invited by the Association of the African Women Researcher for Development
in Africa (AAWORD) to attend its 5th General Assembly and Seminar
on July 19-24 in Dakar, Senegal. The paper presented was "Theoretical Perspective
on Capitalism and Welfare States and Their Responses to the Question of
Social Inequality with a Particular Attention to Gender Inequality: What
Lessons for Africa?" He has accepted an invitation by the Executive Committee
of the International Political Science Association to be a convenor and
chair of the panel on "Toward Party Democracy in Africa: Is the International
Environment now Conducive?" for the XVIII World Congress of the International
Political Science to be held in Quebec City, Canada, in August 2000. In
August 1999, he accepted the invitation by the Chief Editor to join the
Editorial Board of the International Third World Studies Journal and Review
starting in September 1999. The journal is published by the University
of Nebraska-Omaha.
Professor Lumumba-Kasongo was invited
by the Organizing Committee of the 31st Annual Conference of
the African Heritage Studies Association to give a talk at its plenary
session. The topic he presented was "Political Conflicts and Pan-African
Issues in the 21st Century." The conference was held on October
14-17 at the Clarion Hotel in Ithaca. In December, he was invited by the
chairman of the Ph.D./MA Program in Political Science, Graduate School
and University Center of the City University of New York, to give public
lectures on "The Agricultural Policy in Tanzania as the Foundation of Julius
Nyerere’s African Socialism: What Should be Learned at the End of Cold
War Era," and on "The Political Legacy of Julius Nyerere," in New York
City. He was invited by the Institute for African Development at Cornell
University to give a public lecture on "Re-conceptualizing the State as
an Agency of Social Progress: The Case of Africa" on February 3. Professors
Dan Schultz and Maryanne Felter of Cayuga Community College at Auburn invited
him to give a lecture on "Comparative Dimensions of the Implications of
Colonialism in Africa with a Particular Reference to the Democratic Republic
of Congo" on February 10.
At the New York State Sociological
Association meetings in Rochester on October 22 and 23, LESLIE
MILLER-BERNAL presented a paper, "Changing Meanings of Single-Sex Education
for Women." At these meetings, she also served as a discussant for a session
on teaching strategies. At a women’s studies conference, "Girls and Women
Claiming an Education," at New Paltz on November 6, Professor Miller-Bernal
presented a paper entitled, "Listening to Women: Students’ Views of their
Educational Experiences in Women’s Colleges and Coeducational Colleges."
Professor Miller-Bernal has been asked to serve as an editorial consultant
for the journal Sex Roles by reviewing a manuscript submitted for
publication. She attended the 70th annual meeting of the Eastern
Sociological Society in Baltimore from March 2-5. On March 2, she presented
her paper, "Separatism as an Educational Strategy for the Promotion of
Gender Equity," in a session entitled "Education and Diversity." On March
3, she was one of a panel of authors in a session entitled, "Authors Meet
Audience: New Books on Gender-Related Themes," where she spoke on her forthcoming
book, Separate by Degree: Women Students’ Experiences in Single-Sex
and Coeducational Colleges. Professor Miller-Bernal has also begun
serving on the Publications Committee of the Eastern Sociological Society.
Recently her book, Separate by Degree: Women Students’ Experiences in
Single-Sex and Coeducational Colleges, has been published by Peter
Lang. She spoke about it as part of a panel on her book at the AERA (American
Educational Research Association) meetings in New Orleans on April 25.
Professor Miller-Bernal has also been asked to contribute a chapter on
coordinate colleges to a forthcoming book on single-sex education at the
secondary and higher educational levels, being edited by a researcher at
Johns Hopkins University.
MILENE MORFEI’s
manuscript, "Continuity and Change in Parenting Possible Selves: A Longitudinal
Follow-Up," has been accepted for publication by the journal, Basic
and Applied Social Psychology." The article will appear in a special
edition on social psychology and aging. Alana Cordeiro `99 is one of the
co-authors of the paper. Professor Morfei presented a paper entitled, "Agentic
and Communal Generativity Themes in the Possible Selves of Midlife Parents"
in Nashville on February 4. The occasion was the first annual meeting of
the Society for Personality and Social Psychology.
VICTORIA MUÑOZ
was a reviewer and panel chair for the GEAR UP program. GEAR UP is a new
US Department of Education program to prepare, through rigorous academic
support, low-income and at-risk students for college. She also participated
in two professional development seminars, "Working with African-American
Clients and Families," through the University of Rochester Medical Center
and "Clinical Sociobiology: Darwinian Feelings and Values," through the
Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
NIAMH O’LEARY
was elected to the Board of Directors of the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network.
The Cayuga Lake Watershed Network is a community-based organization that
advocates for a healthy and sustainable Cayuga Lake watershed. In June,
Professor O’Leary participated in the final session of a three-part workshop
in biomolecular visualization at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
This hands-on NSF-funded program was designed to train faculty in the use
of three-dimensional molecular visualization software and to facilitate
its incorporation into their teaching. She presented a paper entitled,
"Evaluation of Monoculture and Mixed Cropping as Selection Environments
for the Identification of Corn Genotypes Adapted to Intercrop with Bean,"
at the 91st annual meeting of the Crop Science Society of America
in Salt Lake City. The theme of this year’s meeting was "Science Serving
Agriculture and Natural Resources." Professor O’Leary’s article, "Breeding
Corn for Adaptation to Two Diverse Intercropping Companions," appeared
in the American Journal of Alternative Agriculture. The article
was co-authored by Margaret Smith of the Plant Breeding Department at Cornell.
Professor O’Leary presented the content of this article to the Wells faculty
in last March’s Faculty Club.
ERNEST OLSON
presented a paper entitled, "Rooted Traditions and Flowing Talk: Kava in
Tonga and Fiji," to the Department of Anthropology at the University of
Hawaii-Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii, on January 13. He also presented the following
papers during February: "Healing Traditions in the Pacific," for a medical
anthropology class at Ithaca College on February 3; "The Positioning of
the Pulpit in the Fono: Church and Community in the Tongan Village" for
the session, "Meetings as a Cross-Cultural Context Among Pacific Islanders,"
at the annual meeting of the Association of Social Anthropology, Vancouver,
Canada, on February 17; "Sugar Cane and Kava: Separate Roots, Entangled
Contexts," for the session "Transformations of Food and Drink," at the
annual meeting of the Association of Social Anthropology of Oceania, Vancouver,
Canada, on February 18. Professor Olson is serving as a reviewer and assessor
for grant proposals for research in the Pacific Islands, which are submitted
to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada/Conseil
de recherches en sciences humaines du Canada, Ottawa, Canada. On March
1, he had a radio interview with Anita Purcell for Radio New Zealand International
of Wellington, New Zealand. The topic of the interview focused on the nature
of kava ceremonies in Pacific Island cultures and was aired on public broadcast
throughout the Pacific Islands during the week of March 5-11.
ANNE RUSS
presented a talk entitled, "Interesting Characters and Divine Secrets:
Biography as Women’s History," at Alumnae College in May, 1999. Her review
of the book, We Have Come to Stay: American Women and Political Parties,
1880-1960, appeared in the summer issue of Choice. In June,
Professor Russ participated on the Berkshire Book Prize Committee at the
Berkshire Conference on Women’s History at the University of Rochester.
She also moderated a panel on "Public Health and Welfare in New York City"
for the New York State Historical Association at Hartwick College in June.
Professor Russ’s review of We Have Come To Stay: American Women and
Political Parties, 1880-1960 appeared in the October 1999 issue in
Choice.
Her review of The Dynamics of Social Change in Latin America by
Henry Veltmeyer appeared in the April issue of Choice magazine.
SUSAN SANDMAN
participated in a concert of English music for viola da gamba consort entitled
"Frogwork" at the Iva Smith Gallery in Hammond, New York, on August 6,
1999. She performed in the concert "Music of Shakespeare’s Time" on May
1 and July 23 at Wells College and, with Elizabethan Conversation and Friends,
participated in a program of Baroque music by Bach and Marais" on October
1 at Wells. With the Schola Cantorum viol consort, Professor Sandman performed
a concert of Ockeghem at the Pebble Hill Presbyterian Church in Syracuse
on October 17. Her recording, "The Medieval Lady," has received favorable
reviews in The American Record Guide, The Journal of Singing (published
by the National Association of Teachers of Singing, Pan Pipes and
The
Sunday Gazette (Schenectady, New York) and Muze (provides reviews
for online merchants).
LINDA SCHWAB
served as a pre-publication reviewer for two textbooks in the Workshop
Chemistry Project series, "Principles of General, Organic and Biochemistry,"
by Pratibha Varma-Nelson and Mark Cracolice, and "The Workshop Model: Peer
Leadership and Learning, A Guidebook," David K. Gosser, senior editor.
Laboratory modules from the New Pathways to Chemistry project, which Professor
Schwab is co-director, were purchased by the Commonwealth of Virginia for
use throughout the state. An interview with Professor Schwab on undergraduate
research at Wells aired the week of August 9 on the nationally syndicated
radio program, "The Best of Our Knowledge" (a production of WAMC, Albany,
New York).
In March, 1999, THOMAS
STIADLE spoke at the Math Education Colloquium at St. Cold State University
on "Real Numbers, Adic Numbers, and Arithmetic." In April, he spoke at
the Math Research Colloquium at Murray State University on "Algebraic K-Theory
and Complexes of Groups." During May, Professor Stiadle attended the 37th
Annual Cornell Topology Festival. Professor Stiadle spoke on "Generalized
Waldhausen K-Theory and Homology with Stratified Coefficients" at the weekly
Cornell Topology Seminar on November 16, 2000.
CHRISTOPHER
STURR presented a paper entitled, "Ideology Critique and Film Criticism:
Interpretation Versus ‘Reading In`," on November 7 at the International
Conference on Utopia and Dystopia in Literature and the Visual Arts, Including
Cinema, in Atlanta, Georgia.
CRAWFORD THOBURN
conducted the Wells Concert Choir on October 5 in a performance which was
videotaped by television station WCNY (Channel 24) from Syracuse for inclusion
in the holiday special, "Holiday Harmonies." The program was telecast on
November 27, December 25, and several other times during the holiday season.
On October 10, he was invited to guest-conduct the choir of the Thoburn
United Methodist Church of St. Clairsville, Ohio, in a performance of his
published composition, "Immortal Love, Forever Full," at services marking
the 200th anniversary of the founding of the church. The church
was the Thoburn family church when they first came to America and is named
in honor of his great grandfather Bishop James Mills Thoburn and his sister,
Isabella, who were missionaries in India and Malaysia in the 19th
century. Isabella was the founder of the first women’s college in Asia.
On October 17, Professor Thoburn conducted the Wells Concert Choir and
Chamber singers in a joint concert with the Men’s Glee Club of Worcester
Polytechnic Institute at the Sommer Center. The featured work was the "Mass
in G Major" by Carl Maria von Weber sung by the combined choirs accompanied
by vocal soloists and full orchestra. The Concert Choir was accompanied
by Nancy Gilbertson and the orchestra included Wells instrumentalists
prepared by Laura Campbell. Nandani Sinha `03 was the alto
soloist in the Weber Mass. Carl Fischer, Inc. has accepted his arrangement
of the Finnish melody, "In Heavenly Love Abiding," for mixed voices with
accompaniment.
On December 4, the Concert Choir and
Chamber Singers performed as part of "Christmas in Aurora" at the Morgan
Opera House. Later that evening they repeated this performance at Emerson
Park Pavilion in Auburn for the annual Festival of Trees. On December 8
the ensembles presented their annual Holiday Concert in Barler, assisted
by pianist Nancy Gilbertson. Featured on the program was Benjamin
Britten’s "A Ceremony of Carols" with soloists Quinn Smith `03 and Nandani
Sinha `03. The large collection of food donated by members of the audience
was given to the Cayuga County food pantry in Auburn. On December 12, the
Concert Choir collaborated with the Men’s Glee Club of Worcester Polytechnic
Institute and orchestra for two performances in New York City at the Church
of the Good Shepherd in the morning and at St. Patrick’s Cathedral in the
afternoon. Featured work in both performances was the "Mass in G Major"
(Jubelmesse) by Carl Maria von Weber. Nandani Sinha `03 was alto soloist.
In mid-December, the professional chamber choir Madrigalia from Rochester,
conducted by Roger Wilhelm, presented performances in Auburn, Canandaigua,
and Rochester of a program entitled "My Dancing Day," which featured five
of his published compositions and arrangements.
Professor Thoburn’s original composition,
"Spirit of God, Descent Upon My Heart," for mixed voices with keyboard
accompaniment, published by Mark Foster Music Co., has been recently reviewed
in several journals. The reviews have included such comments as "Thoburn
has composed anthems for a variety of voice parts published by several
different companies. You should carefully consider anything you see with
his name on it." Worship Arts. And "…Thoburn has previously distinguished
himself as a choral arranger with a gift for setting both early music and
American folk hymnody. (This work) moves him into new and different territory,
resulting in the creation of a miniature gem for SAB voices and organ…
Serious repertoire for the small church choirs is sadly limited, and Thoburn
is to be commended for making a notable contribution to it." The Choral
Journal (professional journal of the American Choral Directors’ Association).
The Wells Chamber Singers, which Professor
Thoburn conducts, have been invited by audition to be one of the ensembles
in residence at the Millennium Music Festival in Bad Arolsen, Germany,
this coming August 20-26. Prior to the residence at the festival, the group
will spend four days rehearsing at Schloss Seehaus in Franconia. The ensemble
will present at least four concerts during their residence at the festival
and will be staying as guests with families in the city of Bad Arolsen.
Plans have been made for day trips to historical and cultural sites in
the vicinity, and there will be opportunities for informal music making
and socializing with other student performers from Germany, Eastern Europe,
and the British Isles. The Wells Chamber Singers are the only American
group invited to participate in the festival. WALTRUT
DEINERT has played an essential role in the planning and arranging
for this trip.
MUIN UDDIN’s
paper entitled, "The Economics of a Nobel Laureate," has been accepted
for publication in an upcoming book, The Nobel Laureates and the Frontiers
of Economics: A Popular Reading, edited by Professor Abu Wahid of the
University of Tennessee, to be published by the University Press of America.
Professor Uddin presented this paper to the Faculty Club in the last academic
year. In June, he served as an outside examiner for two Honors Theses in
Economics at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. He presented "College from
an Economics Professor’s Point of View" at the Johns Hopkins University’s
1999 College Colloquium on October 10 at Syracuse University. The purpose
of this annual colloquium is to offer high school sophomores, juniors,
and seniors, and their parents a chance to familiarize themselves with
the college process and to explore various education choices by hearing
from college students, university-level advisors and professors. In the
same colloquium, Professor Uddin participated in an Academic Panel consisting
of professors of mixed disciplines in the sciences and humanities. He also
took the opportunity to talk about Wells to those present and to distribute
the Wells’ Admissions Brochure. Professor Uddin participated in the 2000
Central Banking Seminar of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from January
10 through the 12th in New York City. Among the numerous topics
discussed at this 3-day seminar were: The Federal Budget Outlook, The U.S.
Economic Outlook, The Formulation of U.S. Monetary Policy, The Global Economic
Outlook, The European Monetary Union, Issues Facing the Federal Reserve,
and the Environment for the Financial Services Industry.
JERI VARGO
attended the Libraries 2000 conference on September 30 and October 1 in
Albany. She also attended the annual South Central Regional Library Council
meeting on October 8 in Cooperstown, New York.
THOMAS VAWTER
continues to serve as a member of the Technical Committee for the Intermunicipal
Organization (IO), which represents all municipalities in the Cayuga Lake
Watershed. On Wells’s behalf, he hosted a meeting of the Technical Committee
on campus in September. The Technical Committee consists of representatives
from the Genesee/ Fingerlakes Regional Planning Council (G-FLPLC), the
New York Department of Environmental Conservation, the Cornell Center for
the Environment, the US Geological Survey, and other agencies. In October,
Professor Vawter, with Niamh O’Leary and Kent Klitgaard, attended
a conference entitled, "Research on the Cayuga Lake Watershed." The meeting
was sponsored by the US Geological Survey and the Cornell Center for the
Environment. At the conference, he (A. Thomas Vawter, Mansi Amin, and Jody
Weinstein) presented a poster entitled, "Benthic Macroinvertebrates as
Indicators of Water Quality in Two Cayuga Lake Subwatersheds." The poster
is currently displayed outside his office in the basement of Zabriskie.
JOCELYN WEBB
was one of three jury panelists for the National Foundation for the Advancement
in the Arts (NFAA) in Miami, Florida. The panelists selected winners for
the NFAA Visual Arts Fellowship Residency, which takes place at the South
Florida Art Center. Ms. Webb was selected to be a juror by Erik Denker,
the curator of prints and drawings at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington,
DC.
The Wells College Press published
Millennial
Afterlives, a book of 23 prose poems by Stratis Haviaras, poet, novelist,
and curator of the Woodberry Poetry Room at Harvard University. The book
was designed by Victor Hammer Fellow, JOCELYN WEBB. Selections from
Millennial Afterlives were read by five Harvard poets at a reception
in honor of Mr. Haviaras at the Harvard Bookstore in Cambridge, Massachusetts,
on April 7. Readers included Stratis Haviaras, Pulitzer Prize Winning Poet
Jorie Graham, and Nobel Prize winner Seamus Heaney.
ROSEMARY WELSH
presented two papers: "Time and Time Again: Medievalism in Walt Disney"
and "The Wonderful Ways of Medieval Imagery in the Wizard of Oz" and was
part of the plenary session panel at the Studies of Medievalism Conference
in Bozeman, Montana, on September 27. She presented a paper entitled, "Recalcitrant
Women, Filmic Utopias," in Atlanta, Georgia, at the International Conference
of the Association for the Interdisciplinary Study of the Arts on November
7.
JENNY YATES’s
book on The Near-Death Experience was the subject of a two-hour
talk show on New Haven radio on August 29. Her book, Encountering Jung
on Death and Immortality, has just been released by Princeton University
Press. She spoke at the Ithaca Jung Society on December 12 on this book
and the New Alexandrian Bookstore sponsored a book signing. Professor Yates
was invited to participate on a panel of Syracuse professors and alumni
on alternative careers to academia for Ph.D.s in Religion on February 19.
Earlier Announcements
of Faculty Accomplishments
Combined
Listing, May, 1998 - April, 1999
Combined Listing,
May, 1997 - April, 1998
Combined Listing,
May, 1996 - April, 1997
Last updated 01/17/2003
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