(Activities Announced at Faculty
Meetings,
May, 2001 - April, 2002)
During his sabbatical
year, CHRISTOPHER BAILEY participated in a course in Solid State
Inorganic Chemistry and two courses in Geographic Informations Systems
at Cornell University. As part of the GIS courses, he prepared several
exercises that were introduced into the environmental studies curriculum
in fall 2001. He attended the NSF-funded ChemConnections Workshop, June
14-18, at Beloit College, Wisconsin, where he learned about the "modular-approach
to teaching chemistry," one of the National Science Foundations’ "Systematic
Change Initiatives." He introduced several of these context-driven modules
to his courses this year.
Professor Bailey reviewed grant proposals
for the National Science Foundations’ Course, Curriculum, and Laboratory
Improvement (CCLI) program in Arlington, Virginia, July 17-20. He attended
the annual meeting of the Middle Atlantic Association of Liberal Arts Chemistry
Teachers, October 5-8, at Mount St. Mary’s College, Maryland, where he
acted as recording secretary for one session. He presented his work on
"Giving Context to the Lab and the Lab Report" at the Gordon Conference
on "Innovations in College Chemistry Teaching," held in Ventura, California,
January 6-13. Professor Bailey organized Wells participation (including
nine students) and attended the National Conference on Undergraduate Research,
University of Kentucky (Lexington), March 15-17. He was asked by publisher
J. Wiley to write a review of the textbook, Chemistry: Structure and
Dynamics, to be used by the authors in the preparation of the second
edition of this text. He gave presentations to Professor Collmer’s "Genetics"
and non-majors "DNA and Society" courses on how x-ray crystallography principles
helped decipher the structure of DNA. Professor Bailey was elected to the
Board of Trustees of the Hazard Library Association in Poplar Ridge and
named Treasurer of that organization.
In March 2002, Professor Bailey served
as the external evaluator for the Chemistry Program Evaluation Report at
Cabrini College in Radnor, Pennsylvania.
BRUCE BENNETT
served
as judge for the Newbury Art Association Annual Spring Poetry Contest in
May 2001. The contest drew 504 entries, sent in from poets from 24 states.
All of the winners were invited to read their prize-winning works at an
Awards Day Reading on May 20. Professor Bennett also presented several
of his poems, as well as offer comments on the award winners." During his
recent sabbatical leave last spring and over the summer, Professor Bennett
published 17 poems in the following magazines: PAINTBRUSH, Light, Tar
River Poetry, SMARTISH PACE, nycBIG CITYlit, TROUBADOUR, and RELECTIONS.
His chapbook, BRUCE BENNETT; GREATEST HITS 1962-2000, was published
by Pudding House Publications. He wrote an essay for PAINTBRUSH
and a review for HARVARD REVIEW, and a review of his that originally
appeared in THE NATION was reprinted in the journal Contemporary
Literary
Criticism. Books by Professor Bennett were reviewed in Light
and Edge City Review, and poems of his were nominated for inclusion
in Pushcart Prize XXVI: Best of the Small Presses. Professor Bennett
also did a reading and workshop for the Steele Memorial Library in Elmira
and read at the McLaughlin Foundation in South Paris, Maine. In January,
he had poems published in Tar River Poetry and Atlanta Review.
He gave a reading, sponsored by the Bookery, at the Ithaca Public Library
in January. Professor Bennett also served as Judge for the category of
Light Verse for the annual North Carolina Poetry Society Poetry Contest.
He read his poetry at the Twentieth-Century Literature Conference at the
University of Louisville on February 22. He had his poems published in
Hummingbird and Harpur Palate. Professor Bennett read his
poetry in March at Writers and Books in Rochester, New York, as part of
the Genesee Reading Series.
Professor Bennett conducted a poetry
workshop, sponsored by Friends of the Library, at the Steele Memorial Library,
Elmira, New York, on October 6, 2001. His chapbook, WERE I TO TELL YOU,
with drawings by William Roberts, and
broadside of his poem, "Calligraphy," also with a drawing by Professor
Roberts, were published by the Wells College Press on September 19 to commemorate
Professor Roberts’ Thirty Year Retrospective. Professor Bennett’s sonnet,
"The True Story of Snow White," was published in The Penguin Book of
the Sonnet. Professor Bennett delivered the welcoming remarks to open
"Writing by Degrees: National Graduate Creative Writing Conference," at
the State University of New York at Binghamton, November 2-4. He presented
a reading/discussion of his villanelles and sonnets at the conference on
November 3. On November 11, he participated in a reading to celebrate the
publication of the book, Voices in the Gallery: Writers on Art,
at the Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester. His poem, "Perspectives: A Triptych,"
on three paintings in the Gallery’s permanent collection, appears in the
book. His new book, Hey, Diddle Diddle: Fables of Love and Sex,
was published this month by FootHills Press. In January, he had poems published
in Tar River Poetry and Atlanta Review. He gave a reading,
sponsored by the Bookery, in Ithaca in January. Professor Bennett also
served as Judge for the category of Light Verse for the annual North Carolina
Poetry Society Poetry Contest.
CATHERINE
BURROUGHS has published an article in Volume 23 of the electronic journal,
Romanticism
on the Net. It is part of the special issue on Romanticism and Sexuality
and is titled: "British Women Playwrights and the Staging of Female Sexual
Initiation: Sophia Lee's The Chapter of Accidents (1780)." This
article will soon be re-printed in a forthcoming special issue of European
Romantic Review that will focus on Romantic drama and theatre. In addition,
she has published a review essay of a recently-staged early 19th-century
play called Obi; or Three-Fingered Jack, which she saw performed
a year ago in Arizona at the annual conference of the North American Society
for the Study of Romanticism.
CANDACE COLLMER
was selected to attend a two-week summer institute at Dartmouth College
in June 2001 on the Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications of the Human
Genome Project. Twenty faculty members from diverse disciplines across
the United States and Brazil worked together on a wide range of timely
issues. The wealth of resources from the Dartmouth Bioethics Institute
were available to Professors Collmer and Purdy as they worked together
to plan their new course on this topic for spring semester, 2002. Professor
Collmer is being featured in Project Kaleidoscope's 2000-2001 Annual Report
as a successful alumna of a PKAL-sponsored, NSF-supported, weeklong Faculty
Leadership Institute held in Boca, Colorado.
WALTRAUT DEINERT
accompanied a group of Wells students to the Cornell weekend sponsored
by the German Academic Exchange Service and the German Studies Department.
The lectures and discussions took place on Sept. 22-23. This year's topic
was: Tradition and Transitions: Appropriations of German Thought and Culture.
BEATRICE
FARNSWORTH’s article, "The Rural Batrachka and the Soviet States’ Campaign
to Unionize Them," appeared in the Spring 2002 issue of the Journal
of Women’s History, which is published by Ohio State University and
Indiana University Press.
During the summer,
MARGARET
FLOWERS’ essay on "Science, Reason and Faith" was published in The
God Factor. This book, published by HarperCollins, is an anthology
of contributions from 50 members of the international scientific community.
Professor Flowers is one of only three women from the United States and
the
only biologist whose work was selected for publication. She has been retained
as a content consultant for Prairies, Fields, and Meadows, a combined
lecture and laboratory text to be published by the Franklin Watts division
of Grolier Press. She returned as an invited fiber arts lecturer-demonstrator
for the New York Wool Council at the New York State Fair. Professor Flower’s
article, "A Sometime Diversion: The Hymn Translations and Original Hymns
of John Wesley" has been accepted for publication by
Methodist History.
SUSAN FORBES
served as the Stage Manager and Assistant to the Director for A Christmas
Carol and the New England Premiere of the stage adaptation of John
Irving’s The Cider House Rules at the Tony award winning Trinity
Repertory Theatre in Providence, Rhode Island, during the 2000-01 academic
year. While at Trinity, Professor Forbes assisted Kevin Moriarity on A
Christmas Carol. Mr. Moriarity recently took the helm as Artistic Director
of the Hangar Theatre in Ithaca this past summer; he also directs regularly
at Syracuse Stage. In addition, Professor Forbes had the privilege of working
closely with Oskar Eustis on The Cider House Rules I and II. Mr.
Eustis is a nationally recognized director and dramaturg who served as
Mr. Kushner’s dramaturg and mentor of the Tony award winning Angels
in America. Professor Forbes also collaborated with scenic designer
Eugene Lee on Cider House. Mr. Lee has been the head scenic designer
for Saturday Night Live since its inception and won a Tony award
for his designs for the Broadway production of Ragtime. Professor
Forbes is the only Stage Manager in the history of the Trinity Repertory
Company to have work mentioned in a review.
Professor Forbes also assisted Pulitzer
Prize winning playwright Paula Vogel in a collaborative writing workshop
held in concert with Brown University and Trinity Repertory Conservatory.
During her residence at Trinity, she also assisted in a workshop reading
of Tony Kushner’s new play, Kabul/Homebody, which recently premiered
to critical acclaim in New York and is currently running at Trinity Repertory
Company directed by artistic director, Oskas Eustis.
CYNTHIA GARRETT
reviewed Gwynne Kennedy's Just Anger: Representing Women's Anger in
Early Modern England for Renaissance Quarterly.
NANCY GILBERTSON
and Laura Campbell presented a flute
and piano recital in Barler Hall in February. Music included in the program
was a solo flute sonata by E.P.E. Bach and piano work by Rameau. Together
they performed works by Berkeley, Roussel, Faure, and Bolling.
During summer
2000, JEANNE GODDARD taught dance classes at CRS Barn Studio, and
performed with June Finch/Danceworks in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and
with Jill Becker on the Ithaca Commons and in the lobby of the Clinton
House. She was artistic director, choreographer, and performer in "Dances
with Friends," a collaborative concert at Wells College with pianists Nancy
and Kim Gilbertson, choreographer Jean McGregor of Ithaca College, and
visual artist Mary Reynolds of Ithaca. Professor Goddard choreographed
three productions for Tri-Cities Opera in Binghamton, New York, "Barber
of Seville," "Amahl and the Night Visitors," and "Merry Wives of Windsor."
She served as outside professional evaluator for Hobart & William Smith
Colleges’ faculty dance concert. During the 2000-01 academic year, Professor
Goddard’s proudest moment was sharing the stage of the Clemens Center in
Elmira, New York, with illustrious dancers and choreographers from New
York City and the Fingerlakes/Southern Tier Regions in Jamie Cunningham’s
and Tina Croll’s "From the Horse’s Mouth." Participation was by invitation
only—she sang a song about a mouse.
Professor Goddard spent 3 1/2 weeks
in Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (late May through mid-June, 2001) with her partner,
singer Steven Stull. Together they offered four music-and-dance concerts
with members of the Mukhtarov family: a lecture-demonstration at the American
University in Kyrgyzstan, two concerts at Philharmonic Hall and a gala
concert at the State Opera House. Both artists taught master classes. Professor
Goddard taught a repertory class at the Choreography College and a modern
dance technique class at the ballet studios of the State Opera House. Although
Professor Goddard missed Wells College Commencement, she attended commencement
ceremonies at AUK, where Mr. Stull sang the Star Spangled Banner with the
Kyrgyz army band. They toured the countryside by auto and horseback, staying
in yurts and drinking fermented wheat mash.
Stateside, Professor Goddard performed
with June Finch/Danceworks at the Provincetown Art Association in Provincetown,
Massachusetts, on July 28 and 29. She also choreographed, co-produced and
performed in the music-and-dance extravaganza, OPERA COWPOKES, including
seven dancers, eight singers and seven instrumentalists, with performances
at the CRS Barn Studio on August 19 and 20. Professor Goddard performed
in two site-specific events in October. On October 14 she took part in
the City of Rochester's outdoor event, "Artwalk: Dances on the Avenue,"
performing Lesley Tillotson's choreography. On October 21 Jeanne performed
in Galleria, choreographed by Saga Ambegaokar, a multi-installation event
at the Johnson Art Museum, Cornell University. Professor Goddard also choreographed
and produced the Wells College Fall Dance Concert, "Our Dances/Our Stories,"
in collaboration with Professor Susan Forbes, Designer/Tech Director Joe
DeForest, and the students from the Page-to-Stage class.
Professor Goddard performed with baritone
Steven Stull and pianist Read Gainsford in a program that included original
choreography to Vaughan Williams' "Songs of Travel," at the Presbyterian
Church in Ithaca on February 27. She also served as outside evaluator for
a recent performance of faculty and guest artist works by the Dance Department
at SUNY College at Brockport and escorted a group of students to the American
College Dance Festival in Boston, where she taught a master class.
PILAR GREENWOOD
attended the international conference "2001: A Space Odyssey Between Cathedrals
and Skyscrapers," in Leon, Spain, and presented a paper entitled, "Identity
in Transnational Spaces: Gender and Nationality in ‘Gringo Viejo` and ‘In
the Name of Salome.`" The paper has been selected for publication by the
publications committee at the Universidad de Leon. She also chaired a session
entitled, "Spanish Women Writers." The conference was co-sponsored by the
University of Leon and ALDEEU (Spanish Professionals in the United States
of America) during summer 2001. Professor Greenwood was invited to contribute
an article on aspects of Spanish language and culture for the Bulletin
of the Annual Fair in the town of Herencia (Ciudad Real), Spain. Her
article entitled, "On the Uses of Hyphenated Last Names Among Medieval
Frontier Settlers," (Sobre los apellidos de los herencianos") was published
in the September 2001 issue of the Bulletin.
Professor Greenwood, together with
seven of her Spanish 203 students, participated throughout the fall semester
in "La Hora del Cuento" (Story Hour in Spanish), a program organized by
the Tompkins County Public Library in Ithaca for pre-school and elementary
school Spanish-speaking children. As part of the Wells experiential learning
and volunteer service learning program, these "Story Hours" took place
every last Sunday of the month during the fall term. In addition to the
seven students, both Professor Greenwood and Terry Martinez contributed
by reading stories in Spanish. On November 24, Professor Greenwood read
and then led a dramatized version of her own short story, "El Tlacuache
y el Coyote," based on a classic Maya/Aztec myth.
LYDIE HAENLIN
and her husband, Jim, were awarded a grant from the New York State
Council on the Arts for their translation of the poems of Senegalese poet
Amadou Lamine Sall. Wells College Press will publish the Haenlins’ translation
in a book this coming spring.
SUZANNE HECHT,
Professor of French Emerita, has translated a play by Gilles Ségal,
En
ce temps là l’amour… (In Those Days Love…). Her translation
has been approved by the author and approved for publication by his European
publishers, Lansman (Belgium).
SPENCER HILDAHL’s
review of Women Television Producers: Transformation of the Male Medium,
by Robert S. Alley and Irby B. Brown, appeared in the January 2002 issue
of
CHOICE.
KENNETH LARSON
was one of sixteen participants in a week-long NEH-sponsored workshop on
digital imaging hosted at Cornell University May 14-18, 2001. Participants
came from throughout the United States and from the National Archives of
Sweden. Besides technical concerns such as defining quality metrics the
workshop concentrated on management issues, including legal considerations
and projecting realistic staffing costs for the creation and ongoing maintenance
of digital projects.
In May 2001,
THEODORE
LOSSOWSKI juried the graduating student art show at Monroe Community
College and awarded prizes for that show in twelve different categories.
Professor Lossowski's multi-media sculpture was part of the show, "The
Faculty Selects" in the Tower Fine Arts Gallery at Brockport State College.
TUKUMBI LUMUMBA-KASONGO’s
professional activities during spring sabbatical leave include the following.
He published the following articles:
-
"Rethinking Educational Paradigms in Africa:
Imperatives for Social Progress in the New Millennium," In P. Higgs, N.C.
G. Vakalisa, T.V. Mda, and N.T. Assié-Lumumba (Editors.), African
Voices in Education, Landsdowne, South Africa: Juta & Co. Ltd.
2000.
-
"Reflection on Nationalistic Discourses
and Ethnonationalism in the Struggles for Democracy in Africa," In L. Adele
Jinadu (Editor), The Political Economy of Peace and Security in Africa:
Ethnocultural and Economic Perspectives, Harare, Zimbabwe: AAPS Books,
2000.
-
"Tribute to President Mzee Laurent-Désiré
Kabila’s Assassination: An Attempt to End Three Decades of A Nationalist’s
Political Struggle for Independence," Africa Notes, (April 2001).
-
"Globalization, Capitalism, Liberal Democracy,
and the Search for New Development Paradigms in Africa," Occasional
Paper Series, Volume 5, Number 1 (2001: African Association of Political
Science).
-
"President Laurent-Désiré
Kabila’s Assassination and Its Implications in the Struggle for Peace,
Democracy, and Social Progress in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
and in the Great Lakes Region of Africa," Journal of Comparative Education
and International Relations in Africa, Volume 3, Numbers 1-2 (December
2000).
-
Two Articles: (1) "United States’
Legacy in Liberia," and (2) "Political Parties and Ruling Governments
in Sub-Saharan Africa," both In Robert Dibie (Editor.), The Politics
and Policies of Sub-Saharan Africa,Lanham, New York and Oxford: University
Press of America, Inc, 2001.
Conferences and papers presented:
(1)"Reflections on Liberal Democracy
and International Debt Issues in Post-Cold War Africa: Which Way Out?,"
paper presented at the International Conference on Debt held in the Centre
Africain d’Études Supérieures en Gestion (CESAG,) Dakar,
Senegal on December 11-16, 2001.
(2) "Reconceptualizing the State
as the Leading Agent of Development in the Context of Globalization in
Africa," paper presented at the African Association of Political Science
Biennal Conference held in Yaoundé, Cameroon on June 19-25, 2001.
New Research Project:
Professor Lumumba-Kasongo started to
conduct a major research project in which he is using archives, libraries,
internet, interviews, etc., on "Constitution-Making, Citizenship, Power,
and Labor in the World of the States in the 21st Century." Countries
included in this project are: China, Russia, the United States, France,
Saudi Arabia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Côte d’Ivoire, and
Kenya.
Relating to his research project Professor
Lumumba-Kasongo also taught a political science seminar in the Department
of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts -Boston.
Professor Lumumba-Kasongo co-organized
a major international conference on "Women and Higher Education in Africa:
Engendering Human Capital and Upgrading Human Rights to Schooling," which
was held at Cornell University on March 28 and 29. The conference was co-sponsored
mainly by the CEPARRED (Pan-African Studies and Research Center in International
Relations and Education for Development with its Headquarters in Abidjan,
Côte d'Ivoire) and the Cornell Program on Poverty, Inequality, and
Development Initiative (PIDI) with also the financial support from more
than 15 other academic units at Cornell University and the Office of the
Dean of Wells College. Presenters/discussants were scholars, policymakers,
international technocrats, diplomats, and students who represented various
institutions of higher learning, international organizations, international
non-governmental organizations, research centers, and governmental agencies.
They came from Brazil, Botswana, Côte d'Ivoire, Ethiopia, France,
Kenya, Mali, Uganda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, etc. Two Wells
Faculty members were also among the presenters/discussants in the conference.
Sixteen papers were presented. Several Wells students also attended and
participated in some sessions of the conference.
LAURA MCCLUSKY’s
book Here, Our Culture Is Hard: Stories of Domestic Violence from a
Mayan Community in Belize, was published by University of Texas Press
(and is available at Long library). On October 12, she presented a paper
entitled "Indigenous and The Media: Trivializing Sustainable Lifeways"
at the Learning Sustainability Conference in Buffalo, New York.
LESLIE MILLER-BERNAL
was invited to speak on her book, Separate by Degree: Women Students’
Experiences in Single-Sex and Coeducational Colleges, at the annual
meeting of the Ithaca branch of the American Association of University
Women on May 16, 2001. Her book was also reviewed this summer in two publications,
Teachers’
College Record and Contemporary Sociology, The Journal of Reviews
of Books in Sociology. On September 27 and 28, Professor Miller-Bernal
and Dr. Mark Hayward of Penn State University, conducted an outside review
of Oberlin College’s Sociology Department. Professor Miller-Bernal was
the discussant for a session at the History of Education Society meetings
at Yale University on October 19. The title of the session was "Single
Gender versus Coeducational Higher Education: Is Separate Ever Really Equal?"
On October 12 and 13, she and three Wells students attended the New York
State Sociological Association meetings at Canisius College in Buffalo.
The students presented some of the findings from the spring Research Methods
class’s survey on the racial climate at Wells College. Professor Miller-Bernal
has an article forthcoming in a book edited by Amanda Datnow and Lea Hubbard,
Doing
Gender in Policy and Practice: Perspectives on Single-Sex and Coeducational
Schooling, to be published by RoutledgeFalmer Press. The title of her
chapter is, "Conservative Intent, Liberating Outcomes: The History of Coordinate
Colleges for Women." Her book, Separate by Degree, was reviewed
in the fall issue of the
History of Education Quarterly. She reviewed
an article for possible publication for the journal, Sociological Perspectives.
She was one of four sociologists at the Easter Sociological Society meetings
in Boston on March 7 who participated in a panel called, "The Art of Collaboration:
Pleasures, Pitfalls, and Practicalities." On March 29, Professor Miller-Bernal
participated in the CEPARRED & PIDI Conference on Women and Higher
Education in Africa: Engendering Human Capital and Upgrading Human Rights
to Schooling at Cornell University. She presented and discussed a paper
prepared by sociologist Rémi Clignet, "Mismeasuring Gender Disparities
in University Enrollments."
MILENE MORFEI's
article, "Continuity and Change in Parenting Possible Selves: A Longitudinal
Follow-Up," was published in the September, 2001 issue of Basic and
Applied Social Psychology. She attended the third annual conference
of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology in Savannah, Georgia,
Jan. 31 - Feb. 3.
VICTORIA MUÑOZ,
Kim VanNorman, senior in Women's Studies, and Anna Cohen, sophomore in
Psychology attended the American Educational Research Association’s annual
conference held this year in Seattle. Professor Muñoz delivered
a paper, "The History of Sex Education: Implications for Contemporary Queer
Youth" based on her current research at the Human Sexuality Collection
at Cornell. All had dinner and lively conversation at Cascadia Restaurant
with alumnae Kristina Gray Bartleson, '88 (the pastry chef), Sally Warren
Soest, '64, and Jill Mullins, '00. This trip was made possible by the offices
of the Dean of Experiential Learning, the Dean of the College, and External
Relations.
NIAMH O' LEARY
represented the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network and the Wells College Environmental
Studies Program in a panel discussion following a screening of "The Waterkeepers"
at the Cornell Center for the Environment's film festival. She also coordinated
the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network's annual outreach event, "Lakefest".
Professor O’Leary presented a paper at the Annual Meetings of the Crop
Science Society of America, held October 21-25 in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The paper, entitled "Selection Criteria for Corn Performance in No-till
Cropping Systems," was co-authored by Margaret Smith of Cornell's Plant
Breeding Department and Amber Nolder, Wells class of 2001.
NIAMH O' LEARY and THOMAS
VAWTER have contributed to the production and editing of the draft
Cayuga Lake Watershed Restoration and Protection Plan. Both have facilitated
small group discussions at open meetings for public comment on the draft
plan. Professor Vawter is a member of the Technical Committee of the Intermunicipal
Organization that has drafted the document, and Professor O' Leary is a
member of the Cayuga Lake Watershed Network's committee currently evaluating
the draft. In collaboration with scientists from Cornell's Center for the
Environment, Professors O’Leary and Vawter received a research grant for
work from the USDA's Agricultural Ecosystems Project. The grant funded
research into citizen monitoring of water quality in the Cayuga watershed.
The article entitled
"The Eastern Shoshone in Wyoming," co-authored by ERNEST OLSON and
Brooke Olson, has been published in the volume Endangered Peoples of
North America: Struggles to Survive and Thrive, edited by Tome Greaves
and published by the Greenwood Press, 2002. Professor Olson’s review of
Voyages:
From Tongan Villages to American Suburbs, by Cathy Small and published
by Cornell Press, will be forthcoming in the journal Pacific Studies.
LAURA PURDY
had two articles published: "Medicalization, Medical Necessity, and Feminist
Medicine," in Bioethics, 15(3), June 2001, 248-261, and "What Feminism
Can do for Bioethics," in Health Care Analysis, 9:117-32, 2001.
Her book review of From Chance to Choice: Genetics and Justice,
by Allen Buchanan, Dan Brock, Normal Daniels, and Daniel Wikler, was
published in Isis (vol. 92(2):429-30. She gave a presentation on
a panel entitled "Eight is More Than Enough" at the American Society for
Bioethics and the Humanities on October 26. Professor Purdy participated
as a Dow Fellow at the Dow Visiting Scholars and Artists Program on November
5 and 6. She taught two classes, gave a public lecture on xenotransplantation,
and had a public conversation with Greg Bear, science fiction writer, on
issues in genetics and xenotransplantation. Professor Purdy was one of
four visitors the other three were Greg Bear, Brian Tokar, and David Burke.
The subject of the symposium was genetics.
DAVID REIS was
recently awarded a grant from Harvard University's Pluralism Project (http://www.pluralism.org)
to document the various religious traditions of Central New York.
LINDA SCHWAB’s
essay on "Faith and Experience" has been published in The God Factor,
an anthology edited by John Ashton and published by HarperCollins. This
anthology, which was released in June 2001 in Australia (United States
release expected later this year), contains selected contributions from
50 members of the international scientific community.Professor Schwab presented
two invited lectures to the graduate class in "The Formative Era: The Patristic
and Medieval Church" at Northeastern Seminary in Rochester, New York: On
December 20, "Apologists of the Early Church: Justin Martyr to Athanasius,"
and on February 21, "God and Matter: Icons and Sacraments."
AMY STAPLES
has published an article entitled "Primal scenes/primal screens: ‘The homosocial
economy (academy?) of dirty jokes’ and scandalous women who refuse to leave
the room" in High Anxiety: Masculinity in Crisis in Early Modern France.
In August 2001 she was named a Visiting Scholar at Cornell University,
where she serves as a consultant to the interdisciplinary French Studies
Program.
THOMAS STIADLE
attended the Annual Cornell Topology Festival, held May 4-6, 2001, at Cornell
University. Professor Stiadle attended the 2001 Albany Group Theory Conference
in Rensselaerville, New York, on October 12-14. He reviewed the second
edition of Robert Smith's and Roland Minton's "Calculus" for McGraw-Hill.
CRAWFORD THOBURN
presented a lecture entitled, "Mozart’s Masonic Music," at a meeting of
the Scipio Lodge #110 F. & A.M. in Aurora. Under his direction on May
13, 2001, the Wells Concert Choir and Chamber Singers presented "A Celebration
of Spring," featuring music for women’s voices from four centuries. Professor
Thoburn’s arrangement of a 15th century Dutch folk tune for
mixed voices with accompaniment, entitled, "Come Unto Me," has been accepted
for publication by Mark Foster Music, Inc. His original setting of Isaac
Watts’ poem, "Shepherds, Rejoice!," for accompanied mixed voices has been
accepted for publication by Carl Fischer, Inc. This work was commissioned
by the Thoburn United Methodist Church of St. Clairsville, Ohio, and received
its first performance last December. His letter to the editor of the British
journal, Choir and Organ, dealing with the history of the St. Martin
Singers of London, appeared in the July/August issue of that publication.
Professor Thoburn’s arrangement of
Gregor Aichinger’s motet, "Ave Regina Coelorur" for unaccompanied
treble voices has been accepted for publication by Mark Foster Music. They
have also accepted his original composition, "A Psalm of Praise" for mixed
voices with organ accompaniment. This work was commissioned and received
its first performance by the choir of Trinity Episcopal Church, Watertown,
New York. Professor Thoburn’s arrangement for accompanied mixed voices
of the Finnish melody "Nyland" set to the text, "In Heavenly Love Abiding,"
and published by Carl Fischer, Inc., was favorably reviewed in the November
issue of "The Choral Journal," the official publication of the American
Choral Director’s Association. Two of his published works for unaccompanied
mixed voices, an original setting of "A Lovely Rose" and an arrangement
of the French carol, "Whence Comes This Lovely Fragrance," are included
in a new commercial Christmas CD by the professional chamber choir "Madrigalia"
from Rochester, New York, conducted by Roger Wilhelm. The title of the
CD is "Christmas with Harp and Voice," and it will be available at Borders
and other book and record shops in the Central New York area. Under the
direction of Professor Thoburn, the Wells Concert Choir and Chamber Singers
presented a concert for Parent’s Weekend on November 10 in Barler Hall.
The choral ensembles were joined for this concert by the Wells Chamber
Orchestra, conducted by Laura Campbell. On December 1, the choral
ensembles presented a concert at the Morgan Opera House in Aurora for the
annual "Christmas in Aurora" celebration. Mark Foster Music Publishers
has accepted two more of Professor Thoburn’s original compositions for
publication, "Adam Lay Y-bounden" and "I Sing of a Maiden." Both are settings
of anonymous 15th century English texts for unaccompanied mixed
voices. His original published work was sung during the holiday season
by many choral groups. Notable performances thus far include his setting
of "A God and yet A Man," which has been sung several times during the
Advent season by the choir of St. John’s Episcopal Cathedral in Jacksonville,
Florida, under the direction of John Barray, and "In the Bleak Midwinter"
sung by the choir of Allegheny College, conducted by Ward Jameson. In
December the Wells Concert Choir and Chamber Singers, conducted by Professor
Thoburn and accompanied by pianist Nancy Gilbertson, presented their
annual holiday concert to a large and enthusiastic audience in Barler Hall.
A sizeable amount of canned and packaged food donated by the audience was
collected and delivered to the Cayuga County Food Pantry for distribution
to needy individuals and families in the community. During the holiday
season recordings of two of his choral works, "Whence is that Lovely Fragrance
Flowing" and "A Lovely Rose is All My Song," performed by the chamber chorus
"Madrigalia under the direction of Roger Wilhelm, were featured on broadcasts
from WXXI FM in Rochester, New York. Professor Thoburn’s published choral
work was featured in a workshop sponsored by the Taiwan Theological Seminary
located in Taipei on February 4, 2002. Under the direction of Professor
Thoburn, the Wells Concert Choir and Chamber Singers presented two concerts
with The Men’s Glee Club of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute. On February
17, they performed at the Art Museum in Worcester, Massachusetts, and on
March 3, they sang at the Sommer Center. Each choral group performed alone
and then combined to present three compositions by the contemporary English
composer, John Tavener, "The Lamb," "Funder Ikos," and "Song for Athene,"
as well as Ralph Vaughan Williams’ "Mass in g Minor." The student soloists
in the Vaughan Williams were sopranos Sarah Beck and Karina Conkrite and
altos Nandani Sinha and Michelle Trickey.
In the published
proceedings of the conference, "Environmental Research in the Cayuga Lake
Watershed," sponsored by the Cornell Center for the Environment and the
United States Geological Survey, 12 October 1999, is an abstract from a
poster THOMAS VAWTERsubmitted in collaboration with two former Wells
BCS majors, Mansi Amin and Jody Weinstein. The poster and abstract are
entitled, "Benthic Macroinvertebrates as Indicators of Water Quality in
two Tributaries of Cayuga Lake, New York." Professor Vawter delivered a
presentation entitled "Linking Public and Scientific Inputs in Water Quality
Monitoring" at a symposium on water monitoring in the Cayuga Lake Watershed
held at Wells College in March. He presented the results of water quality
research done in collaboration with Niamh O' Leary and colleagues
from Cornell's Center for the Environment.
CHRISTINA WAHL
attended the annual meeting of the American Society for Cell Biology in
Washington, D.C. in December. In addition to several days of great
science, she attended the keynote addresses. Among the speakers were
Christopher Reeves, who spoke in advocacy of educating Congress about science
in general and about stem cell research in particular. Also speaking
was Craig Ventner, the CEO of Celera and the man who made all the headlines
by coming up with a technique that sequenced the human genome in a fraction
of the time the "traditional" science community expected it would take.
He spoke about the amazing potential for science in the years ahead that
will develop as bioinformatics becomes refined and more accessible to scientists
and others. Professor Wahl published a paper with her colleagues, R. A.
Cushman and J.E. Fortune, entitled "Bovine Ovarian Cortical Pieces
Grafted to Chick Embryonic Membranes: A Model for Studies on the
Activation of Primordial Follicles." It was published by the European Society
of Human Reproduction and Embryology in their journal, Human Reproduction
volume 17, no. 1 pp. 48-54, 2002.
ROSEMARY WELSH
has been awarded an appointment as a Regional Visiting Fellow to the Regional
Visiting Fellows Program of the Institute for European Studies at Cornell
University. The appointment is from September 1, 2001, through August 31,
2002, with the possibility of renewal for two additional years.
JENNY YATES
was interviewed online by a writer at the Center for Writing Excellence
at the University of Oregon, Portland, regarding her split-brain research
with Nobel Laureate Roger Sperry. It is available on the cgjungpage.org.
She served as Parliamentarian for the World Congress of the International
Association of Analytical Psychology at Cambridge University in August.
She also presented a paper on "The Female Self" and chaired the session
on Dreams. In October, Professor Yates gave a paper entitled, "On the Pulse
of Mourning," at meeting of Jungian analysts from the United States and
Canada in Montreal. During March, Professor Yates was invited to speak
on her book, Jung on Death and Immortality, for the Triangle Jung
Society in Chapel Hill and in Wilmington, North Carolina. She has been
selected for inclusion in Who's Who Among America's Teachers.
BOOK ARTS CENTER
The special edition of Welford Taylor’s
book, The Woodcut Art of J. J. Lankes (originally published in 1999
by David Godine) was published in September. Its author, Welford Taylor,
delivered a lecture on J. J. Lankes on September 19 to celebrate the Wells
Press edition. Professor Taylor’s lecture was entitled, "Wells (Re)Visited.
The WELLS COLLEGE PRESS has published Christina Pugh’s chapbook,
Gardening
at Dusk, as part of its new Emerging Writers Chapbook Series.
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Last updated 01/17/2003
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