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Kudos
Bonnie Auslander, writer/editor in the Office of College
Relations and part-time lecturer in the writing program, has
been awarded a writing residency for the month of May at the
Edna St. Vincent Millay Colony for the Arts in Austerlitz, New
York. She will use that time to work on her novel.
Barney Beins and Nancy Rader, psychology, chaired
paper sessions at the annual University of Scranton Psychology
Conference on March 20. Students presenting the results of their
original research at the conference were James Adams 99,
David Wimer 98, Theresa Cain 99, Jill
Fadia 00, April Smith 99, Erin Hughes
00, Jamie Donsbach 99, and Tisha Miller
00. Several students working in Raders cognition
laboratory have won awards or had papers accepted for presentation
elsewhere as well. Donsbach and Pavitra Sundar 99
received grants from Psi Chi, the national psychology honor society,
to help cover costs associated with their honors research. May
1998 graduate Jennifer Piazza was one of 575 undergraduate
and graduate students selected last spring to receive a research
award from the National Academy of Sciences. Rader herself recently
had a paper accepted for the biennial meeting of the Society
for Research in Child Development, to be held this April in Albuquerque,
New Mexico. Titled "The Effect of Reflections on Visual
Cliff Avoidance: A Tale of Two Cliffs," the paper was coauthored
by Piazza and Julie Quimby 97.
Bill Dewey, mathematics and computer science, can now
add his listing in the most recent edition of Whos Who
in the World to his résumé. He has been listed
for a number of years in both Whos Who in Science and
Engineering and Whos Who in America.
Carlos Ferguson, art, won the best in show award as
part of the 65th Regional Exhibition at the Arnot Art
Museum in Elmira, New York.
Heinz Koch, chemistry, has received a $65,000 grant
from the Teacher/Fellow Grants Program of the Camille and Henry
Dreyfus Foundation to support a two-year postdoctoral fellowship
in the department. The selected fellow will share teaching duties
with Koch and assist with the new molecular modeling laboratory
that is being established with the support of a $25,000 grant
from the Alden Trust. The Dreyfus grant will also help fund the
continuing teaching/research collaboration between Koch and David
Pysnik, a chemistry teacher at Sidney High School.
Fred Vanderburgh, physical plant, recently received
a certificate of appreciation from the Eastern College Athletic
Conference recognizing his "contributions to the advancement
of ECAC services and programs" for maintaining the best
athletic fields in the region. |