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Faculty/Staff News of Note November 2001 Dr.
Daniel Barnard,
lecturer in music, has learned that his composition, Three Short
Choral Works on Texts by E. E. Cummings, was named runner-up in
the 2001 Virginia Chorale Composition Contest. Discussions are ongoing
with the Chorale about including his work in next year's program. Dr.
Michael A. Campbell, associate professor of biology, and several
student co-authors have had their paper published in Plant Physiology
Biochemistry, vol. 39, 855-860 (2001). The article is titled "Genes
Encoding for Branched-chain Amino Acid Aminotransferase are
Differentially Expressed in Plants." Student authors are Jignesh
Patel, Julie Meyers, Lindsey Myrick, and Jeffrey Gustin. Dr.
Michael Christofferson, assistant professor of history, recently
attended the annual conference of the Western Society for French
History in Indianapolis, Indiana. While there he provided comment for
a panel on the "French Social Cinema in the 1990s." Mary
Connerty, lecturer in English, has received notice that her book
Yevanic: Linguistic and Sociolinguistic Features of Judeo-Greek, will
be published next spring by Jay Street Publishers in New York City.
Connerty also competed in the Dublin Marathon October 29, completing
the race and raising $4,200 for the Arthritis Foundation. Dr.
Ralph Ford, associate professor of electrical and computer
engineering, recently completed a $15,500 grant to develop advanced
algorithms for plastic bottle inspection. He received the grant from
AGR International in Butler, Pennsylvania. Dr.
Anthony Foyle,
assistant professor of geology, attended the 113th Annual Meeting of
the Geological Society of America November 4-7 in Boston,
Massachusetts. While there he presented a paper, "The Floridian
Aquifer on the Georgia/South Carolina Coast: Using High-Resolution
Geophysics to Locate Areas Susceptible to Sea Water Intrusion," and
a poster, "An Integrated GIS-based Approach to Quantifying the Rates
of Erosion." Dr.
Thomas Hemminger, associate professor of electrical and computer
engineering, chaired a session and presented at paper titled
"Validating Digital Terrain Elevation Data with Neural Networks"
at the Artificial Neural Networks in Engineering (ANNIE) Conference,
held November 7 in St. Louis, Missouri. His co-author was Dr. Robert
Gray, assistant professor of engineering. Dr.
Victoria Kazmerski and Dr. Dawn Blasko, associate
professors of psychology, and student Banchi Dessalegn presented
"Age Differences in an ERP Spatial Stroop Task" at the annual
meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research held October
13 in Montreal, Canada.
John
Kerwin, assistant professor of communication, presented his
research at the Urban Mission Conference on Innovative Methods of
Teaching, October 26 at Jersey City University in Jersey City, New
Jersey. His paper, "Teaching Gender Sensitivity and Communication to
Non-traditional Students in Non-traditional Classrooms," relates his
experience teaching maximum-security inmates at the Walla Walla,
Washington, penitentiary. Dr.
James A. Kurre, associate professor of economics, attended the
Forty-eighth North American Meetings of the Regional Science
Association International November 15-17 in Charleston, South
Carolina. The meetings included 280 participants from around the
world, and 230 papers were presented. While there Kurre presented
"Can Foreign Trade Help to Stabilize a Metro Economy?" which he
co-authored with Dr. Barry Weller, associate professor of economics,
and Jennifer Warner, a December 2000 business economics graduate. The
paper was based on work done by Warner, who was funded by a summer
undergraduate research grant, to identify foreign countries whose
business cycle patterns are opposite of Erie's. The paper
hypothesizes that expanding trade with such countries could help
reduce Erie's cyclical fluctuations. Dr.
William C. Lasher, associate professor of mechanical engineering,
has submitted a proposal titled "Experimental Determination of
Downwind Sail Force Coefficients" to the Council on Undergraduate
Research. His proposal requests $4,000. Eric
Obert, coastal environmental specialist and associate director of
Pennsylvania Sea Grant, will chair the committee of Sea Grant
Extension Directors for the coming year. The position rotates among
Sea Grant leaders in Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin,
Michigan, Minnesota, and the combined Sea Grant office of Illinois and
Indiana. Dr.
Boon Wee Ong,
lecturer in mathematics, attended the International Conference on
Technology in Collegiate Mathematics November 2-4 in Baltimore,
Maryland. Dr.
Clare Porac, professor of psychology, attended the Psychonomics
Society meeting in Orlando, Florida, November 15-18. While there she
gave a presentation on her paper titled "Handedness Profiles of
Individuals with Successful and Unsuccessful Switches of Left-hand
Writing." Dr.
Yorke Rowan, lecturer in anthropology, and J. Ebeling presented
"Continuity and Change: Ritual Associations of Ground Stone
Artifacts from Late Prehistory Through the Late Bronze Age" at the
Annual Meetings of the American Schools of Oriental Research, held
November 17 in Boulder, Colorado. Their presentation was part of a
panel organized by Rowan and Ebeling titled "Not the Same Old Grind:
Recent Studies of Ground Stone Artifacts in the Southern Levant." Dr.
Kimberly A. Skarupski, director of research at CORE, presented her
paper titled "Health Status of African Americans in 'White'
Nursing Homes vs. 'Black' Nursing Homes" at the Fifty-fourth
Annual Scientific Meeting of the Gerontological Society of America,
held in Chicago, Illinois, on November 18. Dr.
Meng Su, assistant professor of computer science, attended the ACM
Tenth International Conference on Information and Knowledge Management
November 5-8 in Atlanta, Georgia. While there he presented a paper,
"An Optimal Construction of Invalidation Reports for Mobile
Databases." Also,
he has had
his article, "A Non-Linear Parameter Dependent Boundary Value
Problem," published in volume 63, number 3 of Semigroup Forum, a
journal published by Springer. He co-authored the article with Dr. Ron
Grimmer. Dr.
James Warren, assistant professor of biology, attended the annual
meeting of the Society for Neuroscience November 9-14 in San Diego,
California. While there he presented a poster, "Cloning and
Characterization of a Putative FRGX-related Protein Gene from
Zebrafish." Return to Faculty and Staff News Index |
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