Mitchell
to chair geology department
Charles E. Mitchell, professor in the Department of Geology, has been
named chair of the department.
A UB faculty
member since 1983, Mitchell is co-director of the Graduate Group in
Evolutionary Biology and Ecology.
His research
focuses on the paleobiology, systematics and evolutionary history of
graptolites, an extinct group of colonial organisms; the correlation
of Middle and Upper Ordovician rocks based on their graptolite and conodont
faunas, and collaborative projects employing stratigraphy, biostratigraphy,
geochemistry, structural geology and tectonics aimed at deciphering
the history of sedimentary basins and their causes.
Co-director
of the Western New York Science and Technology Forum that shares new
developments in science, technology and mathematics with high-school
teachers, Mitchell is a recipient of a SUNY Chancellor's Award for Excellence
in Teaching, a Milton Plesur Award for Excellence in Teaching from the
UB undergraduate Student Association and a Dean's Award for Excellence
in Teaching from the former UB Faculty of Natural Sciences and Mathematics.
Weiss receives
top award for book
Sociologist Lois Weis, professor of comparative education in the Graduate
School of Education, has received the 2001 Outstanding Book Award from
the Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights, one
of the top awards in the human rights field.
Weis and
her co-author, social psychologist Michelle Fine, received the award
for "Construction Sites: Excavating Race, Class and Gender Among Urban
Youth," published last year by Teachers College Press.
The Myers
Outstanding Book Award annually honors particularly outstanding authors,
books and publishers that advance understanding of bigotry and power
imbalances in North America and propose ways to develop equitable future
communities and societies.
Weis' book
is a collection of essays by leading educators, psychologists, sociologists
and human rights advocates who implore educators, community activists,
youth and youth workers to imagine environments for work with youth
that don't rely on schools, families or religious institutions aloneparticularly
now, in a time of what the authors call "shriveled state responsibility
for youth and the evaporation of public spaces, especially for poor
and working class youth."
Experimental
play to be performed
"Cornered," an experimental play by Tim McPeek, a cook's helper in the
dining center in the Governors residence complex, will be performed at
7 p.m. Feb. 1 and 3 p.m. Feb. 3 in Rust Belt Books, 202 Allen St., Buffalo.
The performances
are free of charge and open to the public.
The play
will be presented by Blue Garrote Collective, featuring Christina Kaulbach-Stosuy,
Brian Lampkin, Kristi Meal and Tara Merenda.
Hwang
to speak
Jennie S. Hwang, founder and president of H-Technologies Group, Inc. of
Cleveland, will discuss "Meeting Market Demands: New and Emerging Technologies
for Electronic Packaging and Assemblies" during a lecture Feb. 8 as part
of the Distinguished Women Speaker Series sponsored by the Institute for
Research and Education on Women and Gender at UB.
The lecture,
presented in conjunction with the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace
Engineering at UB, will be held at 2 p.m. in 225 Natural Sciences Complex
on the UB North (Amherst) Campus. A reception will follow.
In her
presentation, Hwang will provide a capsule view of key segments of electronics
hierarchy in market needs and in the development of new technologies.
Key development areas in chip level, package level and board level,
as well as critical supporting materials and infrastructure, will be
highlighted.
She will
conclude her talk by addressing some select issues related to education,
business and technology.
An internationally
renowned authority in surface mount technologyan area of electronic
packaging technologyHwang is the author of more than 200 publications
and five textbooks. She is a member of the National Academy of Engineering,
an inductee of the Women in Technology International Hall of Fame and
a fellow of ASM International.
For further
information on the lecture, contact Deborah Chung at 645-2593, ext.
2243, or at ddlchung@acsu.buffalo.edu.
NSF
workshops planned
A series of workshops designed for faculty members who want to learn the
"ins and outs" of applying for National Science Foundation grants will
be presented next month by the Office of the Vice President for Research.
The NSF
workshops come on the heels of a highly successful series of workshops
on obtaining National Institutes for Health grants that was offered
last semester.
The workshops
will be held from 7:30-9:30 a.m. on successive Friday mornings, beginning
Feb. 8with the last lecture scheduled for March 8in 200G Baldy Hall
on the North Campus.
The topics
to be covered will include an overview of the agency, proposal writing
and review criteria, budget preparation, examples of successful proposals
presented by junior faculty members, mock review panels and special
mechanisms.
NSF program
staff will be invited to attend some of these lectures.
All students,
faculty and professional staff are invited to attend the workshops.
Anyone
who has been an NSF reviewer (in-person panelist) in the past and would
be willing to serve on a mock panel, or who has been a successful NSF
grantee and would be willing to have his or her awarded proposal reviewed
in a mock panel setting (identifiers removed) should contact Bruce McCombe
at mccombe@mccombe.physics.buffalo.edu
or Andres Soom at soom@eng.buffalo.edu.
Further
instructions and a detailed agenda will be posted at www.research.buffalo.edu.
New research
fund created
The Office of the Vice President for Research has created a new fund to
promote research collaboration in areas that cut across two or more schools.
The Interdisciplinary
Research and Creative Activities Fund (IRCAF) will support and facilitate
the formation of collaborations and the exploration of innovative ideas
that will open new directions in research and creative activities, enhance
the intellectual environment of the campuses and lead to long-term funding
support from external sources, said Jaylan Turkkan, vice president for
research, in announcing the new funding source.
The fund
will support the development of interdisciplinary research working groups
that will meet to identify and explore common interests. It is anticipated
that these working group discussions, or planning proposals, will lead
to collaborative research proposals and symposia, workshops and conferences.
The maximum award for planning proposals is $10,000.
The fund
also will support research/creative activities proposals for new or
expanding interdisciplinary and inter-decanal research that is innovative
and has a high potential for return on investment, but which is not
yet sufficiently developed to obtain external funding. The maximum award
for research proposals is $50,000.
The deadlines
for either type of award are Feb. 1 and Oct. 1.
Although
proposals from all areas of research and creative activity will be considered
for awards, Turkkan encouraged faculty and professional staff members
to submit proposals that are aligned with programs identified as research
priorities for UB.
Further
details on the IRCAF can be found at www.research.buffalo.edu/internal_funding/default.htm,
or by contacting Turkkan or Kenneth Tramposch, associate vice president
for research, at 645-3321.
Art history
to present series of brown bag lectures
Charles Carman, associate professor of art history, will discuss "Reading
Gesture in the Renaissance and Maniera" Monday during the first in a series
of a brown-bag lectures presented by the Department of Art History.
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A
1922 Frank Lloyd Wright sketch of a house for Charles P. Lowe in
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All lectures
will take place at noon in 606 Clemens, North Campus, except for the
March 18 lecture, which will be held in the University Art Gallery in
the Center for the Arts, North Campus.
The series
is designed to offer faculty and students the opportunity to hear about
recent research in art history, learn about issues of concern to art
historians and become acquainted with exhibitions on campus.
The remainder
of the schedule:
-
Feb. 18:
"The Repatriation of Art Objects," Alan Birnholz, associate professor
of art history
- March
18: "Tour of the Alan Cober Exhibition," Sandra H. Olsen, director,
University Art Galleries
- April
15: "Frank Lloyd Wright and Nature," Jack Quinan, professor of
art history
SOM
students travel to China
Seventeen undergraduate honor students from the School of Management traveled
to China earlier this month for a study tour of the Chinese economy and
culture.
Funded
by a $152,000 grant from the Freeman Foundation, the trip was part of
the SOM's Stewart Honors Program for outstanding students. The students'
itinerary included visits to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, the Chinese
Folk Museum and Zhongshan University, the largest university in southern
China.
The students
also met with executives from Rich Products' subsidiary in China to
learn about the company's business goals and strategies in China, and
toured Huawei Technologies Co. for a glimpse of how one privately owned
Chinese company has flourished in China's evolving capitalistic economy.
"The objective
of the trip was in line with the mission of the Freeman Foundation,
which is to foster a better understanding of China and its people,"
said John Thomas, associate dean of international programs at the management
school.
"China
is predicted to become the world's largest economy within the next few
decades," he added. "This was an excellent opportunity for our students
to observe the progress of a country that likely will become more important
to their lives and careers over the next several years."
To prepare
for the trip, the students participated in seminars on the Chinese economy,
government, culture, cuisine and language. Upon their return, they are
required to submit research papers describing how cross-cultural issues
have impacted the Chinese-U.S. business relationship and how China's
recent entry into the World Trade Organization will impact U.S. business
interests.
The students
also met with their Chinese counterpartsfellow UB students and alumni
from the SOM's two Executive MBA programs in China, which are based
at Renmin University and Motorola University.
Philadanco
to perform
The Center for the Arts will continue the 2001-02 KeyBank Dance Series
with a performance by Philadanco at 8 p.m. Feb. 9 in the Mainstage theater
in the CFA on the North Campus.
Media sponsors
for The KeyBank Dance Series are Adelphia Media Services and soft rock
favorties-96.1, WJYE-FM.
Hailed
by critics as "exuberant" (The New York Times) and "a miracle
of skill and energy" (Dance Magazine), Philadanco has established
itself as one of America's foremost dance ensembles.
Tickets
for Philadanco are $20, $16 and $12 for the general public and $10 for
UB students. Discount coupons are available at all area KeyBank locations.
Tickets are available in the CFA box office from noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday
through Friday, and all Ticketmaster locations. For more information
call 645-ARTS.
Falletta
to appear on WBFO 88.7 FM
JoAnn Falletta, music director of the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra,
will participate in a live, call-in show at 3 p.m. Wednesday on WBFO 88.7
FM, UB's National Public Radio affiliate.
The show
will be hosted Bill Raffel.
Listeners
can call 829-6000 to speak with Falletta.
Intensive
English Program accredited
The Intensive English Program (IEP) of the English Language Institute
(ELI) has been accredited by the Commission on English Language Program
Accreditation (CEA), joining a distinguished group of 30 U.S. intensive
English programs that have received CEA accreditation since 1999.
"We are
delighted that CEA has accredited our Intensive English Program," said
Stephen C. Dunnett, ELI director and vice provost for international
education. "This is an acknowledgment of our program's compliance with
the highest standards in the field."
In order
to receive accreditation, the IEP had to demonstrate that it met or
exceeded CEA standards reflecting best practices in a number of areas,
among them mission; curriculum; faculty; administrative and fiscal capacity;
student services; recruiting, and student achievement.
Overseeing
for the ELI the self-study and site-review process that were necessary
for the IEP to win accreditation were Barbara A. Campbell, program director
for intensive programs, and John J. Wood, assistant director for communications.