March,
2003
BRUCE BENNETT read
his poems at the Twentieth Century Literature Conference in Louisville,
Kentucky, on March 1, and at a FootHills Authors Reading at Downtown Writers
in Syracuse on March 7. His essay/interview, "Gavin Ewart and Civil Humor:
An Interview with Stephen W. Delchamps," appeared in the Winter 2002-03
issue of Light. His poem, "Patterns," was published in the March
2003 issue of Hummingbird.
TERRENCE CHOUINARD’s
work, produced by his Wing & the Wheel Press, is on display at the
Arrowmont School of Arts & Crafts, Gatlinburg, Tennessee, in an exhibit
titled "Under the Influence: Teachers and Students in the Book Arts." Also
on display in this exhibit is the Wells College Press "Gardening at Dusk,"
which was printed by Wells students in the second level letterpress class.
He has also been nominated for membership in the Grolier Club, America's
oldest (founded in 1884) and largest society for bibliophiles and enthusiasts
in the graphic arts.
The Book Arts Center
was awarded a $15,000 grant from the Kauffman Foundation, which will go
to support a national book arts symposium to be held on campus at the end
of April 2004.
CANDACE COLLMER attended
the third ASM (American Society for Microbiology) and TIGR (The Institute
for Genomic Research) Conference on Microbial Genomes in New Orleans from
January 29 to February 1, 2003. This was the first leg of one of her projects
for her sabbatical leave next year, when she will be learning about bioinformatics
and some of the companies developing and using sophisticated computer tools
for the analysis of biological data. She commends Michelle Landers
for obtaining a grant from the Kauffman Collegiate Entrepreneurship Network,
which will support some of her work on bioinformatics next year. One additional
goal of that grant is to connect Wells students with entrepreneurs at companies
engaged in bioinformatics.
SUSAN FORBES has been
elected to the Cayuga County Arts Council and will serve on a special advisory
committee for the renovation and restoration of the historic Schines Theatre
in downtown Auburn.
NANCY GILBERTSON presented
a solo piano recital on February 2 in Barler Recital Hall. Music on the
program was "Children's Corner" by Debussy, two early works by Rachmaninoff,
"China Gates" by American minimalist composer John Adams, which was written
in the 1970's, and one of the "war" sonatas (written during World War II),
Sonata No. 7 by Prokofieff. This program was also presented at Moravia
Central High School.
TUKUMBI LUMUMBA-KASONGO
attended the 10th General Assembly of the Council for the Development of
Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA) held in Kampala, Uganda, December
8-13, 2002. The topic of the paper presented was: "Reflections on Liberal
Democracy and International Debt Issues in Post-Cold War Africa." He was
invited by the Department of Africana Studies and Research Center at Cornell
University on February 27, 2003, to give a public lecture in its Annual
Lecture Series; the topic of the paper presented was: "Conflicts, Transition,
and Reconstruction in the Democratic Republic of Congo."
LAURA MCCLUSKY received
word that the editors of The Encyclopedia of New York State accepted
her entry on Keuka College, a former Finger Lakes women's college. Her
review of the book, Media Worlds: Anthropology on New Terrain,"
will appear in Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly.
MICHAEL MIGDAL co-authored
the article, "Self-awareness, deindividuation, and social identity: Unraveling
theoretical paradoxes by filling empirical lacunae," which has been accepted
for publication by the Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
The other authors were B. Mullen, and D Rozell. He presented his research
entitled, "Correlating measures of group variability: Separate measures
are not equivalent," at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality
and Social Psychology in Los Angeles, California, in February.
NIAMH O' LEARY and
THOMAS VAWTER jointly delivered a talk entitled, "Citizen Involvement
in the Cayuga Lake Watershed Restoration and Protection Plan," in Ithaca
College's Biology Seminar Series on March 6.
DAVID REIS’s paper
"Jesus' Farewell Discourse, 'Otherness,' and the Construction of a Johannine
Identity" was accepted for publication in Studies in Religion/Sciences
Religieuses.
SARAH ROBERTS gave
a presentation on "Poetic Vision and the Aesthetics of Print" at the Associated
Writing Programs Annual Conference in Baltimore, Maryland. True False,
a 23-foot accordion book created by Sarah Roberts, is on exhibit this month
at the annual Center for the Book invitational in Iowa City, Iowa.
The Wells College Press has
published Professor Emeritus of French Suzanne Hecht’s translation
of Gilles Ségal’s play, In those days, love… The publication
of this translation is a noteworthy accomplishment for Professor Hecht,
who is proud of having received the author’s permission to translate his
work. Thanks go to the members of the Book Arts Center staff, Terry
Chouinard, Nancy Gil, and Sarah Roberts; as well as to Professor
Emeritus Alan Clugston, Librarian Jeri Vargo, Professor Linda Lohn,
and Attilio Rezzonico, former manager of the Wells College Bookstore,
for their various roles in bringing Professor Hecht’s work to fruition.
Earlier Announcements
of Faculty Accomplishments
February,
2003
December,
2002
November,
2002
October,
2002
September,
2002
May, 2002
-
Combined Listing,
May, 2001 - April, 2002
-
Combined Listing,
May, 2000 - April, 2001
-
Combined Listing,
May, 1999 - April, 2000
Combined Listing,
May, 1998 - April, 1999
Combined Listing,
May, 1997 - April, 1998
Combined Listing,
May, 1996 - April, 1997