president`s message - Digital Scholarship Services
Transcription
president`s message - Digital Scholarship Services
CRISTIN MACDONALD '05 ANALYZING STUDENT HOUSING CONSTRUCTION AS C O N S T R U C T I O N C O N T I N U E S on new student residence halls on campus, civil engineering major Cristin MacDonald '05 analyzed the workers' productivity in an effort to identity ways to improve it in an honors thesis. "Construction productivity is said to be decreasing throughout the United States since 1970, while every other industry's productivity has gone up," she says. "I argue that a correct method of measuring productivity has not been found." She met twice a week with John Ricketts '03, an engineer from Manhattan-based Turner Construction Co., which is overseeing the four-building project. The two examined weekly schedules on the construction, and MacDonald used the data in her analysis. David Veshosky, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering, served as her research adviser. Previously, he led MacDonald in EXCEL Scholars research using a computer program to examine and resolve different scenarios that might occur on Boston's Central Artery/Tunnel project or Big Dig. The computer program, which will be made available for distribution, is used for project management and construction management classes on campus. She worked on anodier EXCEL project using a computer modeling system called ANSYS that may help young patients who require hip implants. She also was a member of a student team that developed an inexpensive method to remove arsenic from drinking water in New Mexico for the 13th annual International Environmental Design Contest. MacDonald was an associate representative for Student Government and a member of the swimming and diving team and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. • FEATURE 4 DAN WEISS Lafayette's 16th president BY ROBERT ). BLIWISE '76 CHRONICLES 18 TREASURES' HOME Special collections and archives have bright new quarters in Skillman Library. 21 LEARNING COMMUNITIES Students opt for special-interest living groups. 22 GREAT DEBATE Teamwork and preparation make the difference in forensics. 24 FORGET T H E BEACH Dan and Sandra Weiss with sons Teddy and Joel, and family pet Callie. Lafayette volunteers pitch in from Virginia to Honduras. 26 PEZ POPS D O W N T O W N DEPARTMENTS Easton museum displays distinctive dispensers. 36 ROBESON REMEMBERED Three-day event kicks off a series of Lafayette conferences on the history and culture of civil rights and civil liberties. 38 2 PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE 3 LETTERS 28 170™ C O M M E N C E M E N T Tom Ridge speaks, College honors Rothkopfs. 40 FOR MORE www.lafayette.edu FROM THE CLASSROOM Francis A. March: Selected Writings of the First Professor of English, edited by Paul and June Schlueter, celebrates a towering figure among faculty of the 19th century. SNAPSPOTS PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE YOUR DEVOTION AND SUPPORT I FIRST SAW T H E LAFAYETTE CAMPUS when I arrived for freshman orientation on September 17, 1951, along with 375 or so other nervous, beanie-wearing members of the Class of 1955.1 had never really been away from home before. And I certainly had no idea that the College would become my "home" not only for the next four years but also for a significant portion of my life. My second extended stay on College Hill began in 1993, when I returned as acting president. I have always thought of myself as an "accidental president." If another president, George Herbert Walker Bush, had been re-elected, I would never have relocated from Washington to Easton. It was, however, a move that led to the most rewarding period of my career— the opportunity to serve a college that I love and to work closely and productively with so many others who feel as I do about Lafayette. As I make my final preparations to leave the President's Office, my feelings are understandably complex. Last month I congratulated my twelfth and final group of proud and relieved seniors. Two weeks later I was joined here on campus by a number of the classmates with whom I graduated fifty years ago, most of us with considerably less hair than we had under our freshman "dinks" but all of us with the same bond to one another and to our college that we shared then. Barbara and I would like to take this opportunity to thank each of you for making the past twelve years so special. The memories—and the friendships—will always be important to us. Thank you, as well, for the warm welcome I know you will extend to Dan and Sandra Weiss and their family as Dan begins his term as president. I remain confident that the best is yet to come for Lafayette, and I look forward, as I know you do, to celebrating the many wonderful things that lie ahead. A. " L a f a y e t t e C o l l e g e h a s d o n e its h o m e w o r k a n d is e a r n i n g h i g h e r and higher points a m o n g top students. —Fiske Guide to Colleges 2005 Arthur J. Rothkopf '55 Lafayette Magazine is published for the alumni, parents, faculty, staff, and friends of Lafayette College by the Office of Public Information, Lafayette College, 17 Watson Hall, Easton, PA 18042; (610) 330-5120, Fax (610) 330-5127, www.lafayette.edu. Managing Editor Pam Lott lottp@lafayette.edu Senior Editor Roger B. Clow clowr@lafayette.edu Executive Editor Glenn Airgood airgoodg@lafayette.edu Design Editor Donna Kneule kneuled@lafayette.edu LETTERS TRULY TRANSFORMED It is with sadness that I just read that President Rothkopf will be stepping down after this academic year. I am happy to have had the honor of meeting and speaking with him at several alumni events in San Francisco. Often I find the praise awarded to one at the end of a career appears unjustified, or at least hyperbolic. This is certainly not the case with Art Rothkopf—and in a very personal way, not for me. When I attended Lafayette, I was blessed to receive an extraordinarily good education—one that more than prepared me for an excellent graduate school career and beyond. Unfortunately, at that time the College was still a terribly homogeneous place where I, as a lower middle class woman, frequently felt painfully an outcast socially. Pay no attention to the fact that I was a sorority member and all that—the pecking order was well defined. I left the College never to look back, feeling academically enhanced but emotionally scarred. Well, somewhere along the line, Lafayette found me and I began, somewhat unwillingly at first, to read the alumni magazine. I noted scores of changes from my day, especially increased diversity, routing of rogue fraternities, championing of volunteerism. So much of this occurred under President Rothkopf's watch. I see a college truly transformed, retaining its best aspects, while changing those that kept it from being the most it could be. So I say a resounding "thank you" to all my teachers for all that you taught and instilled in me, and to President Rothkopf, his administration, and others who have recreated the institution that is Lafayette in my eyes. As a token of my appreciation here is my first donation to Lafayette. In tremendous gratitude for the work that the financial aid office did in my behalf, I hope, if possible, that it be placed in a Hind intended to defray costs for female engineering students, but I am certain that one way or another, the College will use it wisely. Kathleen A. Dudley '81 Oakland, Ca. THE RIGHT PLACE Lafayette has turned out to be everything that we had hoped for—plain and simple. The professors are incredible— and have rekindled the learning fire that had been dormant in Ben for a number of years. The other kids have become great friends and support for him. Ben is a very happy young man—and so is his dad. Thanks for all you have done for us. We are looking forward to another 3 years—or longer if Maggie decides she likes the place! John A. Gardner P'08 Lewisburg, Pa. EXTERNSHIP PROMISE I just wanted to thank Ms. Dayna De Simone, Marketing Coordinator, Scholastic Inc., New York, N.Y. for being such a fantastic externship host. Even though neither of us had any previous experience with the wonderful world of externships, I'd say we succeeded in achieving what Lafayette has always promised the program to be. I can certainly say that all of the expectations that I had going in to the externship were not only met, but far exceeded. I learned so much. Having little professional experience myself, it was quite the eyeopener (in the best possible sense). I am now more concretely convinced that a career in the publishing world is for me, if not in marketing, then perhaps editorial or copywriting. The externship has really given me the confidence to push forward as I begin my job search. Thanks. Michael Bruno '05 Massapequa Park, N. T. Write to Us! We welcome your letters and comments about the contents of the magazine as well as all aspects of the Lafayette Experience. Email: alumnews@lafayette.edu or send to Lafayette Magazine, Office of Public Information, Lafayette College, 17 Watson Hall, Easton, PA 18042. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. DANIEL WEISS LAFAYETTE'S NEW 16™ PRESI D E N T — " T H E W H O L E PACKAGE" N O O N E AT J O H N S HOPKINS University pokes holes in the image of Dan Weiss' doughnut consistency. When he brings in morning snacks for his dean's-office colleagues, forget about the strawberry-frosted, cinnamon-cake, or apple-and-spice varieties. It's all about upholding the primacy of glazed doughnuts. If he won't think outside the glazed-doughnut box, Daniel H. Weiss is wide-ranging in his thinking, and his accomplishments, in every other sense. Weiss, named in December as Lafayette's 16th president, has fans all across Hopkins—and beyond. William G. Bowen, president of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and formerly president of Princeton University, calls him "one of those rare people who have, as it were, the whole package. He's a very, very talented academic, an outstanding art historian with a worldwide reputation, and a fine teacher. Beyond that, he had business experience and a background in management consulting before he became an art historian; that gave him, early on, experience working BY R O B E R T J. B L I W I S E '76 | with genuinely complex problems. Then, of course, he's had major administrative experience at Johns Hopkins. And his interpersonal skills are outstanding. He listens well and he tells you what he thinks, and without a trace of arrogance." Weiss has been James B. Knapp Dean of the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at Johns Hopkins since 2002. His responsibilities include oversight of academic departments, graduate and undergraduate academic programs, scholarly and scientific research, budget and financial P H OTO C R A P H Y B Y D E N N IS CO N N O R S Alan R. Griffith '64 and Dan Weiss John Meier, professor of mathematics, and Dan Weiss operations, strategic planning, development and alumni affairs, student life, and admissions. "One of the particular things about Hopkins is the high degree of decentralization," says Paula Burger, who reports to Weiss as dean of undergraduate life. "The deans really run mini-colleges; they have the responsibilities that the president would have at a college. They have a great deal of independence in establishing their school's priorities and identifying the resources to achieve them." In Burger's view, Weiss' core values, as well as his responsibilities as dean, make him ideally suited for a college presidency. "At his heart, in terms of his university service as a teacher and scholar, he has always been passionate about undergraduates in the classroom," she says. Hopkins is the nation's first research university, ONE OF THOSE RARE PEOPLE WHO HAVE, AS IT WERE, THE WHOLE PACKAGE. HE LISTENS WELL AND HE TELLS YOU WHAT HE THINKS, AND WITHOUT A TRACE OF ARROGANCE." —William C. Bower), president of the Andrew W. Mellon and formerly president of Princeton University Foundation and it has long stressed teaching and graduate education. Weiss, though, "has been persuasive in holding up the vision that our advances in undergraduate education don't have to be at the expense of graduate education," says Burger. "He's gotten the faculty on board with that. And that's no mean accomplishment." Adds the Hopkins provost, Steven Knapp, who once held Weiss' job as dean of arts and sciences, "This was not a place that paid a lot of attention to the integrated experience of the student inside and outside the classroom. That has been a really strong emphasis of Dan's. He has become the principal point of accountability for student life on the campus." Knapp says Hopkins' administration "did a very unusual thing" when Weiss' predecessor left: "We appointed Dan to the position without doing a national search. We were confident that we had in him the right person for the deanship, and the faculty agreed with us. That's a pretty extraordinary tribute to him." As dean, Weiss put in place an advisory council of high-powered alumni to help in formulating, and gathering support for, the school's strategic plan. Its chair was Tony Coles, now a Hopkins trustee and senior vice president, commercial operations, for Vertex Pharmaceuticals. Coles speaks admiringly of Weiss' ability to reach out broadly, incorporate the ideas of many individuals, and then build consensus. Weiss' savvy understanding of management, he says, makes him an effective leader, focused on accomplishing results and capable of getting the most from those he's working with. Weiss is equally sensitive to the values of the academy, he says, and "models himself after some of the great educators of our time." (Weiss mentions as role models A. Bartlett Giamatti, who was Yale's celebrated president, and Princeton's Bowen.) "I think Dan has every capability to have a huge impact on this century's education," Coles says. Part of Weiss' impact at Hopkins came on the issue of diversity, where he's spearheaded more assertive efforts in student and faculty recruiting, along with a push to endow professorships and open centers in ethnic and regional studies. "It's not done by incremental change," he says. "You have to simply take it on all at once." He points out that Hopkins, which had lagged in its diversity efforts, last year was cited by the Journal of Blacks in Higher Education as a leader in campus diversity. A faculty-member colleague notes that as international students were feeling besieged by new visa WHAT I FOUND VERY EXCITING AND APPEALING ABOUT LAFAYETTE IS A SENSE OF COMMUNITY, A COMMITMENT THAT EVERYONE HAS TO CREATING A LEARNING ENVIRONMENT THAT IS PRODUCTIVE AND REWARDING AND COMPREHENSIVE." —Dan Weiss restrictions, Weiss wrote them to assure them that the university community valued their presence. The faculty has been another priority for Weiss. Together with the engineering school, he worked to revamp the policy for granting tenure, so that faculty members there, as at most campuses, could earn tenure at the associate-professor rank. Under the old policy, tenure could be an 11-year quest—a fact that had hurt faculty recruiting. The outcome of that complex but collegial effort shows that Weiss is "very good at articulating a vision," Knapp, the provost, says. "That's one of those important things that a president does—to be able to say in very clear terms where it is that he's trying to lead the institution. I've seen his effecdveness in being able to get support from above and below. He's very thoughtful on the issues of higher education. So he can provide the kind of philosophical and moral leadership that you want from a president." Weiss' dedication to higher education began at George Washington University. As a sophomore, he found himself attracted to a woman planning to enroll in an art-history course, and he duly followed her lead. Art history (along with psychology) would become his major. His professor, a medievalist, impressed him as "dynamic, articulate, and energetic." Weiss speaks passionately about the transformative influence of teachers; he dedicates one of his books, Art and Crusade in the Age of Saint Louis, to all of his teachers, and he's still in touch with HE HAS ALWAYS BEEN PASSIONATE ABOUT UNDERGRADUATES IN THE CLASSROOM." —Paula Burger, dean of undergraduate life at Johns Hopkins University his second-grade teacher. The day after he graduated in 1979, he started working at the Kennedy Center in Washington, managing the gift shops. To prepare for graduate work, he took courses in French, German, and Greek. After two years he went to Johns Hopkins for a master's degree in art history. He was drawn to the medieval period because of the influence of his art-history professor, and also because it was intellectually challenging, requiring him to look below the surface, to consider meanings beyond the obvious. His scholarship has cast a new light on the Sainte-Chapelle, the stained-glass-saturated Paris church dedicated in 1248—under the patronage of King Louis IX— to enshrine sacred relics, notably Christ's crown of thorns. "One has to look beyond the religious images to understand what those images really mean," says Weiss. "All the things that I've studied are fundamentally or explicitly about religious subjects, but in fact they're much broader than that. So my study of the Sainte-Chapelle is really about the way in which that building, which is completely dripping with religious imagery, is a political and social monument that speaks to the ambitions of the king. And as it turns out, people in the Middle Ages were no different from people today in that they had the same kinds of curiosities and concerns. But they expressed those curiosities and SANDRA jARVA WEISS IT WAS A SHARED CULTURAL INTEREST—or a shared employer— that brought Dan Weiss and Sandra Jarva together. As George Washington University undergraduates, Weiss was working in a Kennedy Center shop, and his future wife was a Kennedy Center theater usher. larva Weiss majored in economics and continued into law school at George Washington. Starting out as a corporate attorney, she did legal work for a hospital, became interested in health care, and then worked as a hospital general counsel. She later entered private practice with a specialty in health care. She is now a partner in the Baltimore office of DLA Piper Rudnick Gray Cary. "I work on 10 or 12 different things a day," she says. "It's a juggling act." She'll be continuing that juggling act with the move to College Hill. The firm, through a recent merger, is one of the largest law firms in the United States, with over 50 offices world wide. Those offices include Philadelphia, and Jarva Weiss plans to work there part-time. She says she's also looking forward to taking part in campus events, and to finding community involvements as well. Dan and Sandra Jarva Weiss are the parents of two sons—Teddy, eight, Dan and Sandra with (L-R) and Joel, six. She says that both boys Teddy and Joel. are excited by the adventure of the impending move; they're already enamored of the Crayola Factory at Two Rivers Landing in Easton. "Every visit we've made to Lafayette has been more terrific than the last," Jarva Weiss says. "This is a friendly environment. You see that as you walk past people and they naturally smile at you. We have had such an incredibly welcoming reception, whether being greeted by students on campus or by shopkeepers in Easton. It will be a wonderful place for the family." concerns through a more limited range, namely, through Christian subject matter. I've found the possibility intriguing of trying to see beyond the surface of that subject matter." Although he was invited into the Ph.D. program, Weiss—contemplating a career in museum administration— left Hopkins to study nonprofit management at the Yale School of Management. With his M.B.A. in hand, he joined the global consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton. "None of the work that I did was in any way involved with higher education," he recalls. "That said, however, I learned more about how to be a teacher and to work in a collegial environment at Booz Allen than I did anywhere else. It was a total meritocracy—whoever had the right answer for the client would prevail, whether that was the senior partner or a brand-new associate. There was no thought of hierarchy." I THINK DAN HAS EVERY CAPABILITY TO HAVE A HUGE IMPACT ON THIS CENTURY'S EDUCATION." —Tony Coles, trustee of Johns Hopkins University He says that he also learned that "in order to be a successful consultant, you have to be able to develop skills in expressing your ideas clearly and compellingly. And that was a very valuable lesson for a teacher. I had to organize my thoughts clearly and intelligently and make a compelling case for students to engage in what it was that I cared about. If I didn't do that, then I would have lost the students in the same way that I would have lost the clients." After four years as a consultant, Weiss returned to Johns Hopkins and to Ph.D. work in art history. He joined the Hopkins faculty in 1992, three weeks after defending his dissertation. He was chair of art history from 1998 to 2001 and then, before being tapped to take the helm of the Krieger School, dean of the faculty in 2001-02. One of his longtime faculty colleagues, Steven Nichols, chair of Romance languages and literatures, points to Weiss' work on the SainteChapelle as the sign of an original thinker. "What he did was to take something that was under everybody's nose, the set of windows of the SainteChapelle that deal with the Crusades, and showed a very different way of looking at it. Through that process he unearthed a whole series of things having to do with politics, religious "THE CLOSER WE G E T T O EXCELLENCE, THE HARDER IT IS TO DO BETTER. THE DECISIONS THAT WE'LL MAKE IN THE NEXT TEN YEARS ARE GOING TO BE HARDER DECISIONS THAN THE ONES WE'VE HAD TO MAKE IN THE PAST, BECAUSE WE'RE GETTING CLOSER TO THAT RAREFIED LEVEL" —Dan Weiss "THAT'S ONE OF THOSE IMPORTANT THINGS THAT A PRESIDENT DOES—TO BE ABLE TO SAY IN VERY CLEAR TERMS WHERE IT IS THAT HE'S TRYING TO LEAD THE INSTITUTION. I'VE SEEN HIS EFFECTIVENESS IN BEING ABLE TO GET SUPPORT FROM ABOVE AND BELOW." —Steven Knapp, provost of Johns Hopkins reforms, and cultural movements. There's an Italian term, meraviglia., it's a kind of wonder, marvel, awe— the excitement of discovery. That's the quality that has propelled Dan as a scholar." Nichols has cotaught with Weiss and considers him a gifted teacher with a particular knack for encouraging student engagement. That assessment is echoed by Meredith Pasmantier, who took a survey and two other classes with Weiss and became one of his advisees. "He had such enthusiasm for the material that it was always an energetic atmosphere. It was never that he was talking at the students; he would always engage them. And University he has such a wonderful sense of humor that you would find yourself laughing through the lecture. You wouldn't necessarily expect that in art history," she says. She later transferred to Columbia to be near her mother, who was receiving cancer treatment in New York. Even after she transferred, she says, Weiss remained a mentor. Pasmantier is aiming for a career as a professor in theater studies. She says that goal reflects Weiss' enduring influence. "I remember how he would perfectly time every lecture. He would never seem to be consulting notes, but everything was perfectly laid out and would end perfectly on time, on just the right theme." Weiss is thematically wide-ranging as a scholar. Part of the "enormous privilege" of working in the academy, as he puts it, is "the time to reflect and think about whatever one wants to." Much of the Crusader-era art that he explores is steeped in representations of war. And the intersections between war and culture have shaped his scholarship in other areas. He has written about Masha Bruskina, who was born in Minsk in the Soviet Union, and during World War II volunteered as a nurse to care for wounded Red Army soldiers. She also helped them escape by supplying them with civilian clothing and false identity papers. Bruskina was informed on and then captured by the Nazi occupying troops. Looking defiant and dignified in facing death, she appears in photos of the first public execution of Soviet partisans. But in later Soviet narratives she was officially identified as "unknown," despite evidence of her identity as a young Jewish w o m a n elements of a troubling history that prompted Weiss to explore "the spirit of resistance" and "the politics of denial" as parallel strands in the story. More recently Weiss has embarked on a Vietnam-era project. It centers on Michael O'Donnell, who was shot down while piloting a helicopter and DAN IS GOING TO FIGURE OUT WHERE LAFAYETTE CAN MAKE SOME BOLD DECISIONS TO DIFFERENTIATE ITSELF FROM OTHER LIBERAL-ARTS COLLEGES." —William Conley, dean of enrollment services at Johns Hopkins listed for decades as missing in action. He was also a poet whose poem "Save Them a Place," which reflects on lives wasted in war, appears on physical and virtual sites dedicated to Vietnam veterans. As he takes on the assignment of mastering a new campus culture, Weiss has made frequent visits to Lafayette. He has also read through the Skillman and Gendebien histories of the College—which, he jokes, together are longer than a standard history of the Crusades. He's laying the groundwork to lead the College through a comprehensive strategicplanning process. "What I found very exciting and appealing about Lafayette is a sense University of community, a commitment that everyone has to creating a learning environment that is productive and rewarding and comprehensive. And that's something that I've been trying to do in my own way at Johns Hopkins. So I think those experiences that I've had here will translate rather well to Lafayette. I want to make sure that I'm respectful of the culture and the community. But at the same time, I will bring new ideas and new perspectives. I think the challenge is to manage that balance in a way that is productive and collégial. I'm not going to come in with lots of ideas that don't fit well into that community. By the same token, I'm not looking to fit into a Students organized an April reception to meet the new president. community that doesn't need to move forward or change." One of the most important strategic issues facing the College in the next several years, Weiss says, will be "to develop a viable approach to our athletics program that is consistent with the mission of the College." He calls himself a firm believer in a strong athletics program. At Hopkins, he's helped oversee a bifurcated program—Division I lacrosse, Division III in other sports. Ideally, he says, the Patriot League would have been able to maintain its commitment to its basic principles—"presidential oversight of athletics, academic comparability of athletes and nonathletes, and no athletic scholarships." But Lafayette is the only college in the league that doesn't award athletic scholarships. "We are now," says Weiss, "in a position that is, over the long term, probably untenable, which is to be the smallest school in the Patriot League, the only one not giving athletic scholarships, and trying to compete at the Division I level." He doesn't have predetermined answers, he says, but he does welcome sparking "a very careful and collegial process among students, faculty, administration, alumni, and trustees to talk about how athletics ought to be envisioned." Hopkins' William Conley isn't surprised that Weiss would place such an emphasis on the collegial process of change. Conley, who was hired by Weiss as dean of enrollment services, worked in Lafayette's admissions office in the early 1980s. Weiss is not a maverick, he says, but he is Sandra, Teddy, Dan, and Joel tour a wintry campus. "a bold thinker." Just as he worked to transform the undergraduate experience at Hopkins, he is likely to challenge an ethos of risk-aversion at Lafayette, Conley says. Conley calls Lafayette "a sleeping leopard." As he puts it, "Dan is going to figure out where Lafayette can make some bold decisions to differentiate itself from other liberal-arts colleges." For his part, Weiss says, "Lafayette is in many ways an absolutely wonderful place that need not be any different than it is. It has a lot going for it. But that isn't what the leadership of the college aspires to. What I see is a platform to do more. Lafayette wants to be a place that embraces its history and tradition but that has stronger academic programs than it has today, that continues to challenge itself to increase the quality of the experience—not just the quality of what goes on in the classroom but the learning environment comprehensively. The difference between Lafayette and a lot of other places is it has the goods to do that: It has the resources, it has the commitment, it has the infrastructure. And it has had the leadership that now allows us to ask hard questions about how we can do better. The last 12 years under Arthur Rothkopf have been exceptional." Weiss says he expects to see Lafayette adopt a version of what, in the Hopkins context, is known as selective excellence. He's especially attuned to the need to build up the arts and humanities. Nationally, colleges and universities have been concentrating resources in the sciences and technology. But with a targeted strategy, the arts and humanities too can be a source of "buzz," areas of excitement and visibility, he says. And so he sees challenge and an opportunity ahead. "It's my sense that there's a very strong egalitarian principle at work in everything that happens at Lafayette. Everybody is deserving. At some level that is a very appealing thing. But if we are going to go to the next level of academic excellence, we're going to have to make investments in some things more aggressively than in other things. We're going to have to be identified for a handful of academic programs that are the equal of any in the country." Those programs, he says, are likely to make connections among disciplines, and they're likely to build on core strengths. They may even exploit unrealized strengths, such as Lafayette's proximity to New York and Philadelphia and the possibility of tapping into the intellectual energy of those two cities. "The closer we get to excellence, the harder it is to do better," he says. "The decisions that we'll make in the next 10 years are going to be harder decisions than the ones we've had to make in the past, because we're getting closer to that rarefied level." • Bliwise '76, a former editor of this magazine, is editor a/Duke Magazine and teaches magazine journalism at Duke University. Students and faculty in government & law and history explore the relationship between the imperial past and the contemporary world COMMUNITY OF SCHOLARS NEW GRANT SUPPORTS TEAMS FOR THREE-YEAR RESEARCH PROJECTS LAFAYETTE IS RECOGNIZED as a national leader in undergraduate research in U.S. News & World Report's America's Best Colleges 2005, and over the past two years, 81 Lafayette students have been invited to present their work at the National Conference on Undergraduate Research. One of the major opportunities for under- graduate research is the College's EXCEL Scholars program, which provided more than 160 students with a stipend to assist professors with their research last school year. Many EXCEL Scholars publish their work in academic journals and present it at conferences. A $200,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation is providing PHOTOGRAPHY BY D A V I D W. C O U L T E R more opportunities for EXCEL collaborations in the humanities and social sciences. The grant has established Community of Scholars, a series of three-year projects in which faculty research an academic topic with a team of students. Four Community of Scholars projects launched last summer or fall. LAFAYETTE IS RECOGNIZED AS A NATIONAL LEADER IN UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH IN U.S. NEWS e[ WORLD REPORT'S AMERICA'S BEST COLLEGES 2005. The Imperialism Project is an effort to create the most comprehensive and searchable database about the characteristics of empires and colonies. The first group to work on it was comprised of Brian Geraghty '05, Sandamali Wijeratne '06, Vijay Krishnan '07, Milos Jovanovic '07, Neil Englehart, assistant professor of government and law, Paul Barclay, assistant professor of history, and Joshua Sanborn, associate professor of history. Countless books and papers outline various aspects of colonialism throughout history, but no one has ever assembled a comprehensive database of these colonies. This will allow scholars and researchers to conduct statistical analyses on various components of colonialism and imperialism. Curlee Holton, professor of art, mentors (L-R) seniors Zoe Cavriilidis, Maya Freelon, and Nicole Kozyra in projects based at the Experimental Printmaking Institute. Wijeratne, who hails from Sri Lanka, says the project had personal significance because she comes "from a country that was colonized and where die impact of that imperialism is still felt, more than 50 years after independence." Using photographic images from the past and present, and original works that envision the future, seniors Maya Freelon, Zoe Gavriilidis, and Nicole Kozyra joined with Curlee Holton, professor of art and director of the Experimental Printmaking Institute, to create and install a 130-foot mural in Farinon College Center. The series of one-foot digital images blends together in a montage that illustrates Lafayette's past, present, and future. The women also were involved in a variety of tasks linked to the EPI, including taking care of prints for other artists and making prints of works created by artist Faith Ringgold Bruce Allen Murphy (center), Kirby Professor of Civil Rights, and (L-R) seniors Jamie Hughes, Josie Dykstra, and Mitchell Feld analyze how life's phases influence U.S. Supreme Court justices. for a display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. "I want to be able to create my own art and go to grad school," notes Kozyra. "This has been an invaluable experience because it's really showed me what I'm going to deal with when I practice art myself—it's an introduction to the art world." THE EXCEL SCHOLARS PROGRAM PROVIDES MORE THAN 150 STUDENTS EACH YEAR WITH STIPENDS TO ASSIST PROFESSORS WITH THEIR RESEARCH. Seniors Mitchell Feld, Josie Dykstra, and Jamie Hughes, and mentor Bruce Allen Murphy, Fred Morgan Kirby Professor of Civil Rights, used a theory based on Daniel Levinson's Seasons of Life to explain why a Supreme Court justice casts certain votes. The team believes this theory can be used to predict justices' future actions. Similar to the four seasons of nature, humans have four life seasons, Murphy explains, and almost everyone faces certain crisis points and periods of stability in each. "Being a justice is a job like no other," he says. "You are married to eight other people for the rest of your life; there's a lot of pressure built into this and everything you do has a lot of scrutiny. If we could figure out how they evolve as humans, maybe we could transfer that understanding as a human being to their evolution as a judicial decision-maker." Community of Scholars also funded the extension of a collaboration that Donald L. Miller, John Henry MacCracken Professor of History, began in fall 2003. He enlisted Emily Goldberg '05 as chief student researcher and Alexandra Kenney '06 and Jessica Cygler '07 as assistants in writing D-Days in the Pacific, a 448-page companion volume to a series that will air on the History Channel. "The students were involved in every aspect of this book and were really a tremendous help," says Miller, who thanks them in the book. The students conducted research, helped assemble the bibliography, did copy editing and fact checking, proofread the manuscript, and worked with Simon & Schuster staff. World War IPs largest D-Day was not the invasion of Normandy, says Miller, but rather the April 1 invasion Emily Goldberg '05 and several other students assist Donald L. Miller, MacCracken Professor of History, with research on World War II and the Battle of Vicksburg. VICTORY IN THE PACIFIC of Okinawa. It was the largest amphibious operation in history, both in number of ships and troops. The students, joined this spring by Marisa Floriani '07, also continued work they did in fall 2003 on one of Miller's books-in-progress, Bomber Boys, about the American Air Force in World War II. Kenney also conducted research last summer and over the January interim session at the Library of Congress and the National Archives to collect photographs for Bomber Boys. She uncovered a cache of unpublished pictures and discovered that a large collection of relevant photos is available in Savannah, Ga. In addition, the group worked on a second book-in-progress, The Crisis of the Confederacy: The Siege of Vicksburg, a full-scale social and military history of the Civil War's decisive campaign. • DONALD L. MILLER, John Henry MacCracken Professor of History, is a featured on-camera expert in "Victory in the Pacific," a program that debuted May 2 on the most-watched history series on television, PBS' American Experience. Miller's book The Story of World War II is listed as a main source for "Victory in the Pacific" on the program's companion web site. His most recent book, D-Days in the Pacific, is a sweeping chronicle of the four-year battle for Pacific dominance in World War II. Its publication this year coincides with the 60th anniversary of the final stages of the war with Japan. Miller also has been selected from 200 candidates nationwide by The National D-Day Museum in New Orleans for its first yearlong fellowship, which includes a role as cochair of its International WWII Conference Oct. 5-9. Expected to be the largest World War II conference ever, it will bring together historians, World War II veterans, and other participants from all over the world to discuss the evolution and implications of World War II thought and writings over the last 60 years. In addition to Miller, conference speakers will include Ken Burns, Sir Max Hastings, Andy Rooney, Austin Hoyt, Viscount David Montgomery, and Enola Gay Commander Paul Tibbets. Denise Calarza Sepulveda, assistant professor of foreign languages and literatures, researches in the special collections reading room. TREASURES' HOME SKILLMAN'S BRIGHT NEW QUARTERS FOR SPECIAL C O L L E C T I O N S AND ARCHIVES AMONG MYRIAD other benefits to die College, Skillman Library's expansion and renovation provides attractive, practical new quarters for special collections and archives. The Griffith Special Collections Suite, named for Board Chair Alan Griffith '64 and Penny Griffith, features a large reading room where students and scholars can consult materials and a work room with facilities for cataloging, digital imaging, and preservation. The second-floor suite, close to rooms used for classes focusing on special collections materials, overlooks the Simon Room and its "Alcuin and Charlemagne" Tiffany window. The Schlueter Rare Book Room, named for Provost June Schlueter and Paul Schlueter, houses archives, manuscripts, and rare books widi PHOTOGRAPHY BY D A V I D ARETZ ample space for processing collections, including organizing and rehousing materials and creating finding aids to assist researchers. "We now have more collection storage space, organized and usable work areas, and a gracious reading room," says Diane Windham Shaw, special collections librarian and College archivist. "The entire area is both functional and beautifiil." • 20 L A F A Y E T T E . SUMMER 2OO5 mm fföwam. CHRONICLE LEARNING COMMUNITIES S T U D E N T S OPT FOR SPECIAL-INTEREST LIVING GROUPS ACADEMIC INTERESTS, lifestyles, and social goals are among the bonds bringing together students in special-interest living groups. Based in designated sections of residence halls, the groups integrate living and learning. "They are an alternative to Greek life and they make college a more pleasant environment," says Rasheim Donaldson '06, resident adviser for the Brothers of Lafayette floor. "They usually result in students creating stronger bonds because they have similar interests." Cassandra Schettino '06, president of Haven, says her substance-free group is more than a living floor, it's also a club. "The people on the floor really get to know each other and become friends," she says. "Most of the time, the lounge is full with people playing games, working, or just hanging out." The German House consists of those who speak German, are taking or have taken German classes, or are members of the German Club. Activities include film nights, field trips to restaurants and museums, and seasonal events such as Oktoberfest. "The German House is very successfi.il and enjoys a strong, dedicated membership," says Nicole Kozyra '05, who just finished her third year as a member and second as president. Dry Surfers focuses on technology and a substance-free lifestyle. Activities have included game nights, movie nights, and build-a-computer or cleanyour-computer-out days. The group hosts brown bag discussions on BY K E L L Y S A V A C O O L | Enjoying Trivial Pursuit are Volunteer Floor residents (clockwise from bottom left) Amanda DeLoureiro '07, Rachel Fischer '07, Stacey Cromer '05, Kristen Balsamo '05, Michael Favara '08, Liz Nguyen '07, and Angie Boyd '06. biotechnology, manufacturing, and globalization. "I think that a living group is an excellent idea," says Joanna Vogel '06. "It gives people who share a common lifestyle a chance to develop their own community. For the Dry Surfers, technological literacy isn't something we can get together as a club and just do; it's something we are. And living together lets us express that." Other special-interest living groups are the Japanese Interest Floor, French House, H.O.L.A. (Heritage of Latin America), El Mundo, Lafayette Communications Union, Volunteer Floor, and CHANCE (Creating Harmony and Necessary Cultural Equality), as well as Arts House apartments. • PHOTOGRAPHY William Hwang '07 and Lan Nguyen '07 hang a banner on the Japanese floor. BY D A V I D W. C O U L T E R A N D L I S A M A S S E Y BUFFER GREAT DEBATE TEAM WORK AND PREPARATION M A K E T H E DIFFERENCE IN FORENSICS MOST WEEKS during the school year, a half-dozen students pore through a host of newspapers and clip more than 100 articles, each student focusing on a particular region. The time-consuming work isn't an assignment for a journalism class, or any course at all, for that matter. It's preparation for extemporaneous speech, one event among many in which members of Forensics Society compete. In extemporaneous speech, contestants are given three topics in the general area of current events, choose one, and have 30 minutes to prepare and then deliver an original speech of up to seven minutes. Limited notes are permitted. The students' arduous labor and skillful on-the-fly speechwriting have paid dividends in a number of events. Forensics Society placed third in speech and sixth in debate in a field PHOTOGRAPHY BY D A V I D W. C O U L T E R of more than 80 schools at the National Forensic Association's annual championship tournament in April. Erik Heins '05 finished in the top 16 and Christian Dato '07 in the top 32 among the 78 competitors in debate. Heins also was within the top 24 among 188 impromptu speakers and Mark Kokoska '08 was one of the top 12 extemporaneous speech competitors among 143 students. Teamwork is rarely a factor in the THE FORENSICS SOCIETY PLACED THIRD IN SPEECH AND SIXTH IN DEBATE OF MORE THAN 80 SCHOOLS AT THE NATIONAL FORENSIC ASSOCIATION'S ANNUAL CHAMPIONSHIP TOURNAMENT actual performances of forensics events, nearly all of which are solo ones, such as informative, persuasive, and after-dinner speaking, rhetorical criticism, prose interpretation, dramatic interpretation, and LincolnDouglas debate. Yet teamwork is a major ingredient in Forensic Society's success. "The students often work with each other during the week, especially the senior members with the younger ones, giving them fresh perspectives," says Scott Placke, director of forensics and one of two Forensics Society coaches along with Jonathan Honiball, debate coach. "That's part of what makes Lafayette a good team." Between meeting with one other and the coaches and preparing on their own, Placke estimates that the more active competitors devote five or six hours to preparation each week. Tournaments also are time-consuming, requiring one or two days for a regional competition and up to three or four for national ones. Yet the rewards for devoting so much time to the cocurricular activity are many. "I started with forensics because I thought it would be a good skillbuilding activity for law school," says Heins. "I've kept with it because it's fun, the team is very good, and we're a family-like community." "You learn a lot about important topics," adds Heins. "Through debate, I've learned about issues dealing with the environment, criminal justice, terrorism, and other areas. In extemporaneous speech, you have to know what's going on in the world at any given moment." Students also find it rewarding to be part of a program that has enjoyed a meteoric rise to prominence since its founding six years ago by Bruce Allen Murphy, Kirby Professor of Civil Rights. In addition to the national tournament, this season's highlights included placing second at the state championship for the third straight year through 22 event finishes in the top six or better, including the top four places in debate; winning St. Anselm College's Jack Lynch Tournament, besting last year's national speech and debate champion along the way; taking the first four places in debate at a Bloomsburg University tournament; and having Dato be a semifinalist in impromptu speech and Bill O'Brien '07 place fifth in communication analysis at a University of Texas at Austin tournament, "the most impressive and difficult speech tournament I have ever attended, outside of a national championship," according to Placke. • Scott Placke, director of the forensics team (L-R), works with team members Jeremy Bennett '05, Mark Kokoska '08, Bill O'Brien '07, and Kim Moore '05. Christian Dato '07 (opposite, left) preparing for a tournament with team members. FORGET THE BEACH LAFAYETTE V O L U N T E E R S PITCH IN FROM VIRGINIA TO H O N D U R A S MORE T H A N 30 STUDENTS served communities this school year through the Alternative School Break (ASB) Club, with two projects taking place over spring break and two during the January interim session. One group traveled to Danville, Va., from Jan. 15-22 to restore houses with Telamon Corporation, which constructs and renovates houses that are then sold to low- and middleincome families. Each day, the students split into two groups and worked on restoring two homes. One group worked on a house that required cosmetic work, including painting and staining woodwork, and the other focused on construction. "The most rewarding part was to look at the progress we had made by the last day," says Natalie Kamphaus '05. "We started with the basic frame of a home and we left with die home having installation, door frames, and drywall." Her ASB teammates were Sandra Goldman '05, Emily Allen '06, Elizabeth Litchfield '05, Ingrid DeVries '05, Emily White '05, JoAnna Vetreno '06, Jillian Carinci '08, Kathleen Reddington '08, Christina Morley '06, and Amy Ahart '97, special assistant to the dean of students. The second interim group complemented the Engineers Without Borders' ongoing project to provide a local water supply to villages in Honduras. The ASB team, which worked with Hondurans to build a grain house, included Emily Groves '05, Odakwei Mills '06, Jackie Golden '07, Christa ICelleher '08, and Stephanie Cote, Landis Community Outreach Center coordinator. The group arrived Jan. 8 and returned Jan. 16. Spring break (March 14-18) marked the fifth time that an ASB group has volunteered in Sea Island, S.C., with Habitat for Humanity, where students worked on various stages of house construction. "I joined ASB because I wanted to Opposite (L-R): Helping build a grain house for Honduran villagers. Ingrid DeVries '05 (left) and Christina Morley '06 restore a house in Danville, Va. Framing a new house in Sea Island, S.C. Emily White '05 (left, L-R) and Jillian Carina '08 paint in Virginia. Matt Verbyla '06 (below, L-R), Kate Brandes, and Fidel Maltez '05 survey in Honduras. give back to the community at large," says Veronica Hart '05. "It seemed fitting to make my last spring break at Lafayette meaningful by doing a service project." Her teammates were Lauren Cash '07, Jillian Gaeta '07, Frank Giannelli '07, H u o n g Nguyen '08, Sara Windish '08, Meredith Jeffers '05, Kristin Radziwanowski '07, Steve Caruso '06, and Kevin Worthen, associate dean of students and director of student life administration. Another team traveled to Homestead, Fla., to volunteer with the Outpost and Wildlife Refuge in the Everglades, working on environmental and animal protection projects. "I have always loved the environment and wish to preserve the quality of outdoor life," says Daina White '07, who volunteered at the Gesundheit! Institute in West Virginia last year. "I also love animals and have wanted to work with them, so this trip [was] a dream for me." Joining her in Florida were Long Tran '08, Allison Kramer '08, Rasheim Donaldson '06, Martha Petre '08, Amy Goldstein '05, and Dan Ruch, AmeriCorps*VISTA staff member in the Landis Center. • ENGINEERS WITHOUT BORDERS T H E S T U D E N T chapter of Engineers Without Borders-USA is featured on the cover of a National f l ^ v C u P W. ^ ' y B^^^^pj^^^^^^^J^H^BBB An article features Lafayette's EWB chapter, which was founded last M . . ] \ ^g^fe school year and is working to provide H a f t * I : J ft.-^' about 1,000 Hondurans with clean 'J^^iSS^ F drinking water. EWB students attended a National Engineers Week Banquet held Feb. 25 at Green Pond Country Club in Bethlehem, where Bernard Amadei, founder of the national Engineers Without Borders organization, was keynote speaker. PEZ POPS DOWNTOWh EASTON MUSEUM DISPLAYS DISTINCTIVE DISPENSERS SINCE JULY 2003, EASTON has been home to one of two Pez dispenser museums in the world. The colorful and nostalgic Easton Museum of Pez dispensers tells the history of Pez through interactive time-period displays, detailed character scenes, and challenging games. Around the corner from die Crayola Factory, the vibrant purple, teal, pink, and yellow painted windows and doors invite visitors to encounter the surprises inside. Created by brothers Kevin and Tim Coyle, the museum developed from a chance cleaning of their father's attic that uncovered a box of old Pez dispensers. In 1927 Austria, Edward Haas created Pez as an alternative to smoking. Derived from the first, middle, and last letters of pfefferminz, the German word for peppermint, Pez received mild acceptance from adults, but once character heads and Visit the Easton Museum of Pez Dispensers at 15-19 South Bank Street. fruit-flavored candies were added to the dispensers in 1952, Pez became a huge hit with children. The museum uses sequential exhibits to display original and reproduction dispensers. Character collections include Star Wars, Sesame Street, Popeye, SpongeBob Squarepants, Kiss, and many others. Displays include a real Volkswagen Beetle, a haunted house with sound effects, a magical tree with hidden treasures, and a castle. The museum offers age-appropriate puzzles and a store that sells classic, new, small, large, and talking Pez dispensers and related items. Admission is $4 for adults, $2 for children from four to 12 years old, and free for children under four. Visitors are free to browse the museum at their leisure or join a free guided tour through the last 50 years of Pez. Interesting facts shared by the museum include a story about a man who created an Internet auction site so his girlfriend could buy and sell Pez dispensers. The couple is now married and the auction site, on eBay, helped make them one of the top 40 richest families in the country. Winnie the Pooh is the most popular dispenser of all time; only three real people have ever been produced on dispensers: Betsy Ross, Paul Revere, and Daniel Boone dispensers were created as part of the American bicentennial series. • FROM THE CLASSROOM A NATIONAL REPUTATION FOR ACADEMIC E X C E L L E N C E FIRST PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH T H O U G H IT IS C O M M O N for one academic generation's leaders to be eclipsed by succeeding generations, some groundbreaking researchers have been so instrumental in advancing the profession that it is imperative they be remembered. Francis Andrew March (1825-1911), distinguished American philologist, lexicographer, educator, and professor of English at Lafayette College, is such a figure. For March in his day was preeminent among both American academicians and scholars of language. Note these specifics: • He was the first to hold the title "Professor of English Language and Literature" anywhere in the United States or Europe. • He was the first to teach a required Shakespeare course. • He was the first to teach Milton as well as a number of other English and American authors, including then-contemporary writers, at the college level. • He was the first to study and write about the history of English from a historical perspective, thus establishing the ground from which most subsequent historical linguistic research sprang. • He was among the first to embark on then-uncharted linguistic frontiers such as spelling reform and phonetic spelling. • He formulated concepts about the teaching of English in college and about the role of liberal arts colleges that still resonate with relevance and original insights. As Frederick L. Rudolph, an historian of higher education, has Lafayette faculty are experts in their fields. In "From the Classroom," faculty members give insight into their particular subject, providing a window on the intellectual rigor that characterizes the environment of academic excellence at Lafayette. Departing from the norm, this issue features a towering figure among faculty of the 19th century to celebrate the publication of Francis A. March: Selected Writings of the First Professor of English by Paul and June Schlueter. Copyright ©2005, Lafayette College. A L B E R T K. M U R R A Y ; P O R T R A I T O F F R A N C I S A. M A R C H , 1 9 4 1 LAFAYETTE C O L L E G E ART C O L L E C T I O N . OIL ON CANVAS G I F T O F T H O M A S J. W A T S O N FROM THE CLASSROOM A NATIONAL REPUTATION FOR ACADEMIC E X C E L L E N C E Francis Andrew March (shown with his wife, Mildred, in 1909) was the first to hold the title "Professor of English Language and Literature" anywhere in the United States or Europe. noted, March, in combining literary analysis and comparative philology, "wrested English literature away from the old rhetoric tradition, with its stultifying emphasis on form and rules, and took to it some of the concern with thought, criticism, and esthetics that had characterized the uses of literature in the literary societies." Lexicographer Clarence L. Barnhart observed that the fact that "English has been established as a serious discipline instead of an avocation is in no small part owing to March." Stuart Berg Flexner called March "a true linguistic pioneer" and "one of the best linguistic minds America has produced." Norman Cousins quotes an editor for whom he worked when he was young as believing March's famed Thesaurus-Dictionary to be the "most remarkable reference book about words to grace the English language"; the editor stated that although Peter Mark Roget "employed the basic principles of a thesaurus," it was March who "converted those principles into art." Kemp Malone, himself a pioneering linguistic and literary researcher, once noted that March "raised collegiate instruction in English to the dignity of a mental discipline, and gave it the place which it has since occupied alongside the study of the classics." In addition, during his long professorial career, spent wholly at Lafayette College from 1855-1906, March demonstrated unusual breadth and dexterity, even for the relatively relaxed professional standards of the era, by also teaching numerous other subjects, including constitutional, public, and Roman law (he was also an attorney), mental and moral philosophy, political science, languages (French, German, Latin, and Greek), and even botany, and he served as the college's first librarian. Were the term not so easily abused, one would be tempted to apply the label "renaissance man" to March, for it seems in retrospect that there was little that he tackled that he couldn't do well. . . . March was a prolific, pioneering author of papers and books—some 195 in one incomplete 1895 compilation—in philology, the historical study of grammar, lexicography, spelling reform, the teaching of literature, and pedagogy. He was the director of American readers for the creation of the Oxford English Dictionary (and is cited some 15 times in the OED as the source of various usages), he was instrumental in the creation of the Standard Dictionary (1893-95), and he edited four volumes of Greek and Latin classics. March has long been recognized for these contributions; for example, he has been the subject of an entry in the Encyclopaedia Britannica since 1910, he is the subject of a fine tribute by Kemp Malone in the Dictionary of American Biography, and he has been praised for his pioneering work by other, varied voices. . . . Given [the] varied explicit and implicit acknowledgments of March's pioneering efforts, it is astonishing to realize that only one of his highly influential books— THE SCHLUETERS AND FRANCIS A. MARCH March's long academic career, 1855-1906, was spent wholly at Lafayette. A Comparative Grammar of the Anglo-Saxon Language . . . (1870)— is currently listed in Books in Print, though not from a major academic or scholarly press. His most popular work, A Thesaurus Dictionary of the English Language, prepared with his namesake son and published in 1903, went through five editions and remained in print for more than 40 years; it was reprinted (with slight variations in title) in 1958 by Doubleday in both cloth- and paperbound editions and in 1980 by Abbeville Press. March prepared the theoretical organizational plan for this influential work in 1861, the year before English philologist Peter Mark Roget (1779-1869) issued the first edition of his more renowned—and endlessly reprinted—thesaurus; initial editions of Roget's thesaurus used a cumbersome organization that was changed in succeeding editions to the format that March initially proposed and that even today makes March's thesaurus far more usable. . . . March's work may not be widely read today; indeed, to a modern audience, removed from the century in which his groundbreaking analyses PAUL SCHLUETER AND JUNE SCHLUETER are editors of Francis A. March: Selected Writings of the First Professor of English, newly published by Lafayette College for the Friends of Skillman Library. Paul Schlueter taught college English for many years before turning to research and writing. He has published widely on modern literature and other subjects. June Schlueter, provost and Charles A. Dana Professor of English, is a specialist in Renaissance and modern drama. In addition to many publications they have authored and edited individually, the Schlueters have collaborated on three previously edited works, most recently An Encyclopedia of British Women Writers {1988, 1999). Having been appointed tutor at Lafayette in 1855, Francis A. March was named, in 1857, Professor of the English Language and Lecturer in Comparative Philology, the first such professorship anywhere in the United States, giving Lafayette "the honor and distinction of being the first college in America to establish a chair for the extended and systematic study of the English language in the English classics in the light of modern philology" (David Bishop Skillman). .March's simple question, "Why not teach English like the Latin and Greek?", was a revolutionary concept. The weekly journal The Independent said opportunities to study English were "the best in the country" at Lafayette; British Quarterly said "nowhere else" was the subject treated with "equal competence and success"; and the London Athenaeum claimed March's philological instructional methods "are not surpassed by those which we are accustomed to associate with the German universities." first saw print, his ideas may seem dated . . . Yet much of his scholarship remains remarkably current, and there is no dispute about the major role this distinguished figure played in the establishment of English as an independent discipline. . . . March specialized, in common with then-contemporary interests and tastes, in "Anglo-Saxon," i.e., Old English or early medieval English. His landmark book A Comparative Grammar of the Anglo-Saxon Language, in Which its Forms are Illustrated by Those of the Sanscrit, Greek, Latin, Gothic, Old Saxon, Old Friesic, Old Norse, and Old High German (1870), is not just a mouth-filling title; it also suggests the kind of work he was attempting in virgin scholarly territory, a profoundly detailed comparative analysis of the forms of the English language with other major Indo-European tongues. As Kemp Malone noted, in this book March "laid the foundation on which all future historical grammarians . . . were destined to build, and his fame will ever rest secure as . . . the founder of a science." In the same year of 1870, March published his Introduction to Anglo-Saxon: An Anglo-Saxon Reader, a textbook intended for classroom instruction (and in continual use for graduate study for some 80 years, until 1950 or thereabouts), suggesting his dual thrust of scholarly writing for both specialists in the field and for students FROM THE CLASSROOM A NATIONAL REPUTATION FOR ACADEMIC E X C E L L E N C E "Irregyular and Unrizonabl" "Dhi preblem ev illiterasi haz leng bin familiar tu Americanz as won ev dhi most important ev soshal saiens. It haz letli cum up fresh and ftrful in England. And it iz fuli recegnaizd dhat dhi trubl laiz in dhi irregyular and unrizonabl speling of English." — A t the forefront of the 19th-century movement in spelling reform, March "advocated such widespread changes that it almost became an obsessive cause." While he used conventional spelling in all but a few writings (including this 1877 essay, "Spelling and Progress"), "March was indeed a true believer in such change." March played a major role in the establishment of English as an independent discipline. His scholarly accomplishments greatly influenced several generations of scholars in some of the nation's foremost academic institutions. just beginning linguistic analysis, a practice also illustrated in his earlier Method of Philological Study of the English Language (1865). Nor was March interested solely in linguistics, for, as indicated by some of the selections that follow, he was also a pioneer in teaching works of literature previously unrepresented in college classrooms. March had much to say, of course, about writings in Latin and Greek, for these were the heart of the nineteenth-century literature curriculum. But recognizing the importance of literature in English, March transferred his instructional methods to the study of the vernacular, relying on select literary passages for an analysis that the professor would "make . . . as hard as Greek." . . . What survived long into the twentieth century was March's esthetic sense: a lover of both language and literature, he characterized the language of literature as "an ideal language, shaped to peculiar forms by men of genius under the direction of an idea of the beautiful." March . . . wrote numerous essays and reviews of literature in English. He showed a special interest in Malory, Shakespeare, and Milton, but he also had perceptive comments to offer on nineteenth-century figures, including Lamb, Tennyson, Arnold, Browning, and Morris. Generally respectful of these now-canonical writers, he bristled on his first encounter with Whitman, railing in his review of Leaves of Grass against the poet's "dullness" and "repulsive" diction. (It is an essay we may now say reflected more about the nineteenth century's squeamishness about sexual expression in literature than about Whitman's merits as a poet.) March wrote about education as well: the idea of the scholar; tributes to other scholars; high school instruction as preparation for admission to and success in college. His comments about the teaching of English at Lafayette College, his sole home as a professor, are equal mixtures of dated pedantry and tributes to a college that had proven willing to concur with [the] innovative ideas . . . evident throughout his scholarly career. Much of his pioneering work in language and literature was accomplished before the Civil War, but he was still active in his 70s, contributing important and influential writing. Although only a fraction of his work remains in print a century after his death, his essays form a body of historical literature that remains fascinating and instructive, not only to those holding a Lafayette College degree but to all who use and admire the English language. • Francis A. March: Selected Writings of the First Professor of English is available through the Lafayette College Store, (610) 330-5513. CHRONICLE EMBRACING TECHNOLOGY S T U D E N T S E N H A N C E LANGUAGE SKILLS T H R O U G H MULTIMEDIA Mary Toulouse, director of the Foreign Languages and Literatures Resource Center, works with Andrey Chelebiev '05 on the Smart Board, a giant computer monitor. T H E FOREIGN LANGUAGES and Literatures Resource Center has changed significantly since its establishment in 1990, transforming into a full-service, multimedia facility. Located on the fourth floor of Pardee Hall, the center is home to two state-of-the-art computer rooms (Mac and PC); a software developer's studio; informal work space with satellite connections for resources such as international news broadcasts; an interactive Smart Board for annotating and editing students' written assignments, videos, and presentations; newspapers from different countries; and an international fashion exhibit. "The main goal is to create a cooperative learning center," says director Mary Toulouse, adding that even in informal work space, students "encounter not only each other, but also different cultures." Many students have benefited from the FLLRC and its technology, including Meghan Jackson '05. "She used the new iMovie software to subtitle a long clip from a commercial," Toulouse explains. The FLLRC web site has an archive of video projects, such as performances by elementary German students depicting campus life, humorous situations filmed by an intermediate Spanish class, and scenes from Le Fantôme de l'Opéra as interpreted by intermediate French students. Kathy Schubel '06 used the Smart Board to create a presentation on Japanese cartoons, and many students BY K E L L Y S A V A C O O L | PHOTOGRAPHY have used the center's language software, which allows them to view and record their voices over silent film clips. "I think the language software is an amazing tool for interactive learning," says Simon Mushi '06. "After using it for the first time, I could immediately tell that it was a good way to sharpen my comprehension and feedback skills in French, both of which are essential if you aim to be fully conversant." "Over the past few years, I have noticed more professors integrating the video, moderated language laboratory teaching, and computer-based grammar and oral exercises into their curricula," adds Hart Feuer '05. "It's a very powerful arrangement and a unique opportunity for language students at Lafayette." • BY D A V I D W. C O U L T E R Iv \ T H E MAJOR AMERICAN ARTIST MAKES A S I G N I F I C A N T GIFT TO LAFAYETTE FOLLOWING HIS HIGHLY successful experience at Lafayette last year as the Grossman Visiting Artist, Stephen Antonakos has made a significant gift to the College of 19 original works on paper. Antonakos is a major twentieth century American artist who, at 80 years old, is enjoying significant resurgent interest in his work. The works he has given to Lafayette are examples of his minimalist approach from 1970 to 1998 and complement the neon piece he gave the College, PHOTOGRAPHY "FOR J.T.," at the conclusion of his Grossman Artist visit and exhibit. The New York City sculptor was featured in multiple exhibitions that spanned the Williams Center for the Arts and Grossman Galleries at Lafayette, and the former BY R I C K S M I T H A N D D A V I D W. C O U L T E R ANTONAKOS IS A MAJOR TWENTIETH CENTURY AMERICAN ARTIST WHO, AT 80 YEARS OLD, IS ENJOYING SIGNIFICANT RESURGENT INTEREST IN HIS WORK. MCS Gallery in downtown Easton. "Antonakos, who uses light in the way that painters employ brushes, has the distinct ability to use light as both line and form," says sculptor Jim Toia, director of the Grossman Gallery and former assistant to the artist. In presenting the 19 pieces to Ed Kerns, Clapp Professor of Art and director of Williams Visual Arts Building, Antonakos said his chief reason for the gift was to encourage development of a "teaching" collection, and some day a College museum. F O R M O R E WWW.lafayette.edu Click on Magazine Highlights. He told Kerns his visit to Lafayette was one of the best experiences he has had as a visiting artist. Kerns (pictured above on right), reviews one of the 19 gift pieces with Lew Minter, media lab director, Williams Visual Arts Building. • tkk Keynote speaker: Paul Robeson Jr. AN APRIL CONFERENCE on Paul Robeson's history and development as an intellectual inaugurated a series of major Lafayette conferences on the history and culture of civil rights and civil liberties. The event included three days of keynote talks, performances, films, and scholarly presentations on a range of topics relating to Robeson, from his work as a singer and actor to his influence on the U.S. civil rights movement. Attendees of the conference's various sessions totaled more than 1,000 people. Performer: Saul Williams, poet and actor ¿ktÒ)k Keynote speaker: Randall Robinson, founder and former president of TransAfrica tXtltOtòl òtfcó (ktjk.&t(L t CO Oblici % t tcCcZs.e.t< LÓKLZ >LCÓ<- kCcòt MAURICE BENNETT '06 RECEIVES AWARD Performer: Monique Saunders of Greater Shiloh Church, Easton, Pa. T H E CONFERENCE included the awarding of Lafayette's inaugural Paul Robeson Humanitarian Award to Maurice Bennett '06, an outstanding student in economics and business and Patriot League all-star middle linebacker. Currently serving a 10-week internship on Wall Street through the national organization Sponsors for Educational Opportunity, Bennett this spring did an independent study of the wealth gap between whites and African-Americans and differences in their approaches to investing with guidance from Sheila Handy, assistant professor of economics and business. He has also analyzed real estate investment opportunities under the direction of Rexford Ahene, professor of economics and business, and researched the effects of outsourcing on the U.S. economy with David Stifel, assistant professor of economics and business. Bennett's other activities include serving as a peer mentor and as treasurer of Brothers of Lafayette. "The rich diversity and complexity of Paul Robeson's life is an important prism through which the American national identity can be contemplated. Robeson's life is a prime example of a life-long quest in the exploration of personal and national identity issues. Not only did he achieve Paul Robeson Jr. and his wife Marilyn look noteworthy excellence on as Maurice Bennett '06 receives the in performance and with Paul Robeson Humanitarian Award from his scholarship, but he was Gladstone Hutchinson, dean of studies. also an influential and controversial political and social activist, especially on civil rights and civil liberties issues," said Gladstone (Fluney) Hutchinson, dean of studies, who presented the award to Bennett. "As an academic institution, Lafayette highly values these ideals and sees them as the best example of lifelong liberal learning. This is why we have decided to honor Maurice, a standout in the classroom, on the football field, and as a mentor and humanist, as the student who best represents the ideal of Robeson's life." Presenter: James E. Lennertz, Lafayette associate professor of government and law FOR MORE www.lafayette.edu Click on Magazine Highlights. COMMENCEMENT LAFAYETTE AWARDED 532 degrees to 524 I graduating seniors and honorary doctorates to five I distinguished leaders, including Tom Ridge, former ^ V ^ H n f l ^ U U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security and former ^ H J I J I I I P J H M i Governor of Pennsylvania, at the 170th •RH LAFAYETTE 3= C o m m e n c e m e n t M a y 2 1 . President Arthur J. R o t h k o p f ' 5 5 awarded i mm Ridge the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws. B - t i k i i jfflk Brian P. Lamb, president and chief executive officer of C-SPAN, was awarded an honorary Doctor of Letters, and Dorothy Gulbenkian Blaney, president of Cedar Crest College, received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters. The College conferred honorary degrees upon Rothkopf and Barbara S. Rothkopf in recognition of their contributions to Lafayette. Arthur Rothkopf concludes his service as the College's 15 th president in June after 12 years in the position, during which he led a far-reaching transformation of Lafayette. He was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws. Barbara Rothkopf received an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters. The faculty adopted on Commencement weekend a resolution expressing "profound appreciation of Arthur Rothkopf for unwaveringly and courageously advancing the College's educational mission." Clockwise from bottom left: Veronica Hart, who was the first graduate to receive her diploma as holder of the top C P A in the class, with Jeffrey Chittim ; Lisa Cosenza; Trustee Riley K. Temple '71 with Britney McCoy; Fidel Maltez; Pepper Prize winner Oliver Bowen delivers farewell remarks for the class with commencement speaker Tom Ridge looking on; Barbara S. Rothkopf and President Arthur j. Rothkopf '55 were awarded honorary doctorates. PHOTOGRAPHY BY D A V I D W. C O U L T E R SNAPSPOTS ROTHKOPF NAMED AT U.S. CHAMBER A HANDLE ON CALLING equipment. Waite worked to improve a prototype machine that was created last year in a Lafayette senior design project to automate die method of testing a material's resistance to galling. "Unlike a lot of odier areas in engineering, designing against galling or characterizing galling resistance does not have a straightforward recipe," Waite says. "That's the excidng aspect, working on discovering how galling occurs and how we can prevent it from presenting design problems." Waite's mentor, Scott Hummel, associate professor of mechanical engineering, has advised several students in research on galling in stainless steel. Their results have been published in Tribology International and Wear and presented at the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) Committee Week conference. Hummel was awarded a National Science Foundation grant and appointed chairman of a Galling Resistance Test Review Task Group by the ASTM Subcommittee on Non-Abrasive Wear. • Vijay Krishnan. They were mentored by James DeVault and Edward Gamber, associate professors of economics and business. Following a talk by Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, the student teams simulated a Federal Open Market Committee meeting, with each team member taking on the identity of a committee governor or chairperson. They used their knowledge of die Fed and economics to forecast where the economy is headed and recommend national monetary policy and then were questioned by three judges for about 15 minutes. The Lafayette contingent advanced to the final round by winning a 12-team regional competition at the Baltimore Branch of the Federal Reserve of Richmond. This was just the second year that Lafayette participated in the contest. • Ryan Waite '05 (left) and Scott Hummel, associate professor of mechanical engineering. SENIOR honors research by Ryan Waite '05 will help enable engineers to accurately test galling, or wear that occurs in metal-to-metal contact. The biomedical field will benefit most from the work, which Waite hopes will prolong the life of expensive operating-room MEETING THE CHALLENGE A TEAM of students took third place at the College Fed Challenge National Championship in Washington, D.C. The octet shared a $5,000 prize and won an additional $2,500 for the economics and business department. Team members were seniors Peter Gagliano, Jennifer Rute, Shreedhar Sasikumar, Samantha Schackman, and Katelyn Wilkins, juniors Daniela Simova and Dogan Yiginer, and sophomore PRESIDENT Arthur J. R o t h k o p f ' 5 5 has been named senior vice president and counselor to the president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Washington, D.C. He will assist on several initiatives including workforce development, education, and transportation, as well as assist with the chamber's new initiative on capital markets. "Arthur's skills and experience will be invaluable as we address the important challenges facing the business community—finding workers with the right skills, rebuilding our nation's infrastructure, and protecting the capital markets," said Thomas J. Donohue, president and CEO of the chamber, the world's largest business federation, representing more than three million businesses of every size, sector, and region. "At a time when businessbashing has become a popular sport, Ardiur's wisdom, keen intellect, and corporate legal experience will provide a reasoned influence. He can provide a unique perspective with combined knowledge from academia, public service, law, and finance." • TAKING RESEARCH OVERSEAS CHEMICAL engineering major Gabriella Engelhart ' 0 5 (right) conducted research with James K. Ferri (left), assistant professor of chemical engineering, at the Max Planck Institute for Colloids and Interface Science in Golm-Potsdam, Germany, as part of her yearlong honors thesis. The recipient of the national Goldwater and Udall Scholarships, she earned second place in the poster competition for her presentation at November's annual meeting of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers. Ferri is conducting 18 months of research at the Planck Institute over three years through a fellowship from the Alexander von GRANT FUNDS BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH Humboldt Foundation, focusing on the materials science of nanoscale films— those at the atomic, molecular, or macromolecular level— synthesized using layerby-layer adsorption of oppositely charged polymers. These new materials are finding application as sustained drug-delivery vehicles; as photonic crystals used in telecommunications, detector technologies, and lasers; and in biotechnology and chemical catalyst areas. • Earning Outstanding Soloist kudos for "Can't Take My Eyes Off of You," Toni Ahrens ' 0 5 (above) led the women of Cadence to a second-place finish in an 11-team field and a spot in the regional finals later that day where they placed third. Cadence qualified for the Cornell competition by placing third in a divisional contest at Rochester Institute of Technology, where Ahrens was also named Outstanding Soloist. Quintessence, a coed jazz group, and The Chorduroys, a male ensemble, advanced to the semifinals by finishing third and fourth, respectively, in a divisional competition at Rutgers University. Kaytlin Henry ' 0 7 of Quintessence received an Outstanding Arrangement award for "I Dream of Jeannie." • SWEET SOUNDS LAFAYETTE was the only school with three ensembles in the midAtlantic regional semifinal round of the International Championship of Collegiate A Cappella at Cornell University. T H E NATIONAL Science Foundation awarded Yih-Choung Yu, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering, a $138,000 grant to enhance learning opportunities for students in his biomedical laboratory in Acopian Engineering Center. Funded by a Lindback Foundation grant, Yu and three students developed a mock circulatory system that simulates key blood pressures and flows in the systemic circulation of the human cardiovascular system. The NSF grant makes possible continued improvement of the system as well as development and testing of a controller for ventricular-assist devices, or heart pumps, used as bridge-to-transplant or bridge-to-recovery devices for heart-failure patients. Six students have worked with Yu, and more will help model the human cardiovascular system and develop ventricular-assist devices through independent studies, honors theses, and EXCEL collaborations with Yu and other professors. • FOR MORE www.lafayette.edu Click on Undergraduate Research. HILLEL RECORDS HEBREW BALLADS TREASURE RESTORED HILLEL SOCIETY president Benji Berlow '06 and other students are recording a CD of Hebrew ballads to enrich the society's weekly Friday evening services. Jessica Lenza '05 is singing lead vocals, and Berlow is accompanying her on guitar and singing on some tracks. The CD, which includes English translations of the lyrics as well as Hebrew-to-English transliterations, will be available to all students. "It's exciting to think we're close to having a professionally recorded CD," says Lenza, the society's religious chair, who hopes to become a cantor. "I love Jewish music and find my own spirituality AN EGYPTIAN papyrus from Skillman Library's special collections underwent conservation treatment at the Conservation Center for Art and Historic Artifacts in Philadelphia, one of the nation's largest regional conservation laboratories. Adhered to a thick pane of glass in a number of areas, the papyrus had suffered major damage, including tears and cracks. Staff at CCAHA have removed the papyrus from the glass and consolidated it and are preparing a new housing for it. Jessica Lenza '05 sings vocals and Benji Berlow '06 is accompanying her on guitar. when I play during services," Berlow says. "Many people have told me the services have opened them up to a different and invigorating style of service that tries to be as inclusive as possible." Lafayette Hillel has about 100 active members. "I love that our Hillel attracts a lot of non-Jewish members and I think this CD will encourage even more people to come and be a part of Hillel," Lenza says. • BLACK HISTORY MONTH: PICTURING US AN EXHIBITION of students' photos showing how students of color see themselves at Lafayette and how others perceive them was a highlight of Black History Month. The College's celebration explored perceptions and pictorial representations of Africans, African-Americans, and the Diaspora across generations and illustrated the many different ways that students of color have been and continue to be a part of the Lafayette community. • The center features the restoration on its home page (www.ccaha.org), with images of the papyrus. Lafayette students in the Ancient Art class taught by Ida Sinkevic, associate professor of art, visited the lab to learn about the treatment. The papyrus will be returned to the College during the summer. • FOR MORE www. I afayette.edu Click on News/Headlines for Campus News, updated daily. EQUI-LIBRIUM PLAN FOR Project ATHLETICS CERTIFICATION SHE'S LEARNED as much outside the classroom as in it, says Emily Fogelberg '05. That's saying something for a double major (history and economics & business) who has studied abroad, collaborated with faculty in EXCEL research, and written an honors thesis. Among other cocurricular and extracurricular activities, Fogelberg headed the Landis Community Outreach Center's Equi-librium program, which provides weekly horse-riding lessons for children and adults with cognitive and physical disabilities. "It helps people physically by working their muscles and helping them learn to control their body and posture, but there is a C O M P U T E R science majors developed a plan to guide the Easton human services organization ProJeCt for People in updating its technology and using it to promote literacy. It was a senior capstone project for Michael Bohr, Konstantinos Bousmalis, Rob McEwen, Lucas Girdley, Matthew Hokanson, Stephen Kelley, and Andrew Phillips. They were guided by Chun Wai Liew, assistant professor of computer science. ProJeCt administers language and literacy, emergency assistance, and children's programs and is the administrative agency for Northampton County Communities That Care, which serves local elementary and secondary students. • W I T H T H E second cycle of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division I athletics certification program under way, the College and the NCAA are reviewing Lafayette's athletics program in accordance with NCAA guidelines mandating periodic evaluations. Lafayette has been certified by the NCAA since 1998, the first phase of the ^^^^^^^^ really important psychological aspect in having them control, ride, and develop a relationship with a horse," says Fogelberg, who has 14 years' experience riding horses and has competed in national and international equestrian competitions. "When you can ride and control a 1,000-pound animal, you open up a lot of other possibilities." • FEUER'S FULBRICHT T H E N I N T H student to receive a Fulbright grant in the last six years is Hart Feuer ' 0 5 who will study trans-boundary environmental cooperation between Israel and Jordan. A two-time Udall Scholarship recipient, Oregon state finalist in this year's Rhodes Scholarship competition, and national finalist for a 2004 Truman Scholarship, he conducted research in Cambodia with funding from the Henry Luce Foundation. He analyzed the social capital, market interaction, and incomegeneration capability of two Cambodian villages in a senior honors thesis with the guidance of David Stifel (right), assistant professor of economics and business. The former president of Lafayette Environmental Awareness and Protection, he is interning at the Philadelphia-based organizations Energy Justice Network and ActionPA and intends to pursue a career with agencies engaged in the topic of social capital and environmental conflict mediation. • initiative, which evaluates academic integrity, rules compliance, student-athlete welfare and equity, and other factors. The current process is designed to earn reaffirmation of that certification. Lafayette will submit a self-study report to the NCAA in October. Representatives of other colleges and universities will visit the College in February to evaluate the report and how the athletics program conforms with the College's mission and with NCAA rules. • STOCKTON STUDIES KOREA AWARDED A Fall Fellowship in Korean Studies by Freeman Foundation and Korea Information Service, Larry Stockton (left with Ashlee Snyder '05), professor and head of music, visited points of historical and cultural significance in South Korea for 12 days, hearing prominent scholars speak on Korea's history, art, language, architecture, economy, literature, and culture. "As former director of East Asian Studies, I am SENOCAKIN RESIDENCE | § | 2 very interested in adding more depth to the Korea component of the program. Our current strengths lie primarily in Japan and China, and we are committed to expanding elements of Korean studies," he says. Stockton also intends to incorporate traditional Korean culture in his World Music Traditions course. His similar previous experiences in Japan (1986), Indonesia (1991), and Ghana (2000) all resulted in either new courses or significant additions to courses. "The direct educational benefits of these experiences have been fantastic," he says. • REMEMBERING TSUNAMI VICTIMS T H E COLLEGE community honored tsunami victims with a candlelight vigil on the Farinon College Center steps. Speakers included President Arthur J. Rothkopf'55; Char Gray, director of the Landis Community Outreach Center; College Chaplain John Colatch; Patti Price '75, deputy director of the Northeast region of CARE; Mevan Jayasinghe '08; and Inku Subedi '05. "It was frustrating to College Chaplain John Colatch speaks at a candlelight vigil for tsunami victims. be unable to approach and console my friends and family during the worst times," says Jayasinghe of Colombo, Sri Lanka. "Being so far away from home, I could only hope that things would get better. I owe it to my professors and companions at Lafayette for supporting me morally during those difficult and helpless times." A Tsunami Relief Committee of students, faculty, and staff coordinated by the Landis Center organized the event. A number of fund raising events have been planned by the committee and others on campus, including a Phi Psi poker tournament that raised $260. • TURKISH-GERMAN writer Zafer Senocak, a leading voice in discussions of German national and cultural identity, was the College's first Max Kade Distinguished Writerin-Residence. With Margarete Lamb-Faffelberger, associate professor and head of foreign languages and literatures, Senocak taught a course that explored the concepts of identity and home in contemporary German literature. He also gave poetry readings and participated in discussions with students and faculty. Senocak is a widely published poet, essayist, journalist, and editor whose works have been translated into English, Hebrew, Turkish, Dutch, and French. His essays and articles often address Turkish-German issues and problems of multiculturalism in Germany. Lamb-Faffelberger is director of Lafayette's Max Kade Center for German Studies, established in 2002-03 through a grant from the Max Kade Foundation. • POETIC JUSTICE T H E POETRY Society of America honored Lee Upton, professor of English and writer-inresidence, with two awards at its 95th annual awards ceremony this spring. Upton received the society's Lyric Poetry Award and The Writer Magazine/EmAy Dickinson Award. Author of nine books, Upton is the recipient of a National Poetry Series Award and Pushcart Prize, and was twice the winner of the Georgia Contemporary Poetry Series Award. Her fourdi book of literary criticism, Defensive Measures, is forthcoming this year. Some of her poems will be published soon in the New Republic, American Poetry Review, and Vespertine, and her fiction has appeared in the most recent issues of The Antioch Review and in Ascent. • ACADEMIC SCHOLARSHIPS INCREASED T H E LAFAYETTE Scholars Program is being enhanced. Beginning with the class of 2009 awards to Marquis Scholars with no or low financial need will increase from $12,500 to $16,000 per year. Marquis Scholars with high need will now receive $2,500 in addition to assistance in the full amount of their demonstrated need. All Marquis Scholars will continue receiving one interim-session study-abroad course with program fees paid by the College. The minimum award to Trustee Scholar-ship recipients has been increased from $7,500 to $8,000 each year for students with no or low need, or full grant to need each year if need exceeds $8,000. The College awards about 90 Marquis and Trustee scholarships annually. • WHAT YOU SEE... CORTAZAR SHINES LEOPARDS' third baseman Frank Cortazar '07 was named to the ESPN The Magazine Academic AllDistrict II Team. A starter in all but one of Lafayette's 44 games, Cortazar batted .310 with 3 home runs and 18 runs batted in and was named second-team All-Patriot League. Throughout the academic year, Cortazar, a Marquis Scholar and biochemistry major, conducted research on a protein called DNA photolyase as an EXCEL Scholar in collaboration with Yvonne Gindt, assistant professor of chemistry. The work is continuing this summer. • Students helped French artist Georges Rousse create an "optical puzzle" in the Williams Center Gallery, part of an exhibition entitled Interventions. Rousse integrates photography with drawing, painting, sculpture, and architecture to create site-specific work. H e and the students worked with paint, simple building materials, and the laws of perspective. FOR MORE www.lafayette.edu Click on Calendar of Events for a listing of campus exhibits, performances, etc. Official Lafayette Sports Photos Available for Purchase Online Lafayette alumni, parents, and fans can purchase official photos of their favorite Leopard student-athletes at www. GoLeopards. com. Action photos from 2005 men's and women's lacrosse, Softball, track and field, and baseball seasons are available. DANCIN'FOR CHARITY MATH TEAM ISN0.1 Proceeds from the 26th annual 24-hour Dance Marathon, hosted by Kappa Delta Rho fraternity and Pi Beta Phi sorority, benefited the Children's H o m e o f Easton. O r g a n i z e d by Joanna Mack '05, the event featured performances by the Lafayette Dance Team, cheerleaders, T h e Chorduroys, guitarist Kevin Fitzpatrick '05, and a rock band led by Dan Fast '05. F O R T H E fifth consecutive year, a Lafayette team earned first place in the annual math contest conducted by the Lehigh Valley Association of Independent Colleges. Leading the way with 91 of a possible 100 points were Rob McEwen '05, Ekaterina Jager '06, and Jinjin Qian '08. Lafayette squads took four of the top five places in the October event hosted by Moravian College. • STUDENT EXPERIENCES: "THROUGH MY EYES, IN MY WORDS" STUDENTS have begun sharing their Lafayette Experience on the web by telling their story using their own words complemented by a small photo album. The project is coordinated by Toni Ahrens '05 who is one of the featured students. She writes on her page: "There is something for everyone at Lafayette, but if you can't find what you are looking for, you can create it." Creating is just what Ashlee Snyder '05, a neuroscience and music graduate, did when she came to Lafayette with ambitions of tackling not only the sciences but the arts as well. In her photo album, she can be seen singing in Soulfege, touring with classmates AWARD AIDS MATH STUDENTS in Finland, and helping students as a chemistry teaching assistant (above center). Snyder plans on using both of her majors to attend medical school and become an entertainment specialist. Throughout the coming year, more students will be adding their Lafayette Experience to the site. Currently featured are Ahrens, Snyder, Jay Amarillo '05, Benji Berlow '06, Gabi Engelhart '05, LeAnn Dourte '05, Hart Feuer '05, Emily Fogelberg '05, Maya Freelon '05, Brad Maurer '07, Dave Mitchell '05, and Ben Wilmoth '05. Assisting with the project are Dan DiMartino '08, who developed a Flash presentation for the photos, and photographer Greg Davis '08. • F O R M O R E WWW.lafayette.edu Click on Magazine Highlights to visit "Student Experiences: Through My Eyes, In My Words." LAFAYETTE IS one of six colleges and universities nationally this year to receive the American Mathematical Society's Waldemar J. Trjitzinsky Memorial Award to aid talented undergraduates studying math. Prince Chidyagwai '05, Ekaterina Jager '06, and Blerta Shtylla '05 benefited from the $4,000 award. Chidyagwai has presented research at national conferences. Jager has presented research at a national conference and had a publication accepted by an academic journal. Last summer Shtylla participated in the Program for Women in Mathematics held by the Institute for Advanced Study and Princeton University and studied in the bioengineering department at the Mayo Graduate School. • WILEY PLAYS ON CHEMICAL engineering major Alyssa Wiley '05 was tapped to perform in the spring festival of the Pennsylvania Intercollegiate Band, a 125-member ensemble that brings together the best college musicians in the state. A clarinetist, she's the first Lafayette student so BEINECKE FORGENDLER honored in nearly 20 years, and nothing could stop her from performing in the March fest, not even a January auto accident that put her right hand in a cast for 7 weeks with multiple compound fractures of four bones and doctors' cautionary pronouncements that she might never play her instrument again. "This is a big accomplishment; it's like a student presenting a paper at a national conference," says James Moyer, associate professor of music and director of bands. "This puts us on the map for high school students who want to play in college." • ALUMNI SHARE CAREER INSIGHTS NEUROSCIENCE major Amy Goldstein '05 spent five days shadowing Philip Pacchiana '91, staff surgeon at Fifth Avenue Veterinary Specialists & Emergency Care, New York City, during January interim. She was among 215 students who gained first- hand knowledge of the professional world through short externships with 191 alumni and parents in various occupations. The students observed work practices, learned about careers, and developed professional networking contacts. "The externship was a really great experience," says Goldstein. "It taught me a lot of things and definitely confirmed for me that I want to go to vet school." "I did a similar externship myself while I was at Lafayette," says Pacchiana. "It's a great position to be in to do that for someone else." • F O R MORES WWW.lafayette.edu Click on Externships and Internships to read about other sudents' experiences or volunteer to host. A BEINECKE Scholarship, providing funding for graduate studies in the arts, humanities, or social sciences, was awarded to Alex Gendler '06, a double major in English and philosophy. One of 18 recipients, Gendler is in excellent company. Each year about 100 colleges and universities are invited to nominate one student each for the award. This year's 104 eligible institutions included 41 of the nation's top liberal arts colleges as currently ranked by U.S. News & World Report. Of these, only five had scholarship recipients: Lafayette, Holy Cross, Mount Holyoke, Pomona, and Reed. Other recipients are from national universities, including Harvard, Princeton, Pennsylvania, Columbia, Stanford, and Johns Hopkins. A Trustee Scholar, Gendler is currently serving as EXCEL research assistant to James Woolley (right), Frank Lee and Edna M. Smith Professor of English. • SNAPSPOTS KIDS AND BOOKS ONEOFAKIND T H E LAND IS Community Outreach Center launched its new First Book program during the center's fourth annual Literacy Day on campus. Each child participating in Literacy Day activities was given two new books. First Book, a national nonprofit whose mission is to give children from low-income families the opportunity to read and own their first new books, distributes books to children through existing outreach programs. Scholastic Community Starter Books donated 4,000 new books to Lafayette's First Book program. NATURE, the international weekly journal of science, featured the simulated snowflakes of Cliff Reiter, professor of mathematics, as the lead item on its web site. Working with Prince Chidyagwai '05, Reiter used mathematical processes called cellular automata to model the growth of snowtlakes with "the classic 'dendrite' form, in which six central stems divide and taper to increasingly fine fronds," the site says. The research will be published in the journal Chaos, Solutions and Fractals. Reiter has mentored more than 30 students in various academic projects in the last seven years. "To be able to publish has been the biggest thing for me as an undergraduate, and a lot of it is due to the wonderful working relationship I've had with Cliff," Chidyagwai says. • "The goal of First Book is that each child will receive a book per month for a whole year. This is how First Book enables children to build their own collections, and this is how it is able to make the impact that it has," says Dan Ruch, chair of Lafayette's First Book campus advisory board. • McCOURT SCORES WITH MAXWELL CLUB T H E MAXWELL Football Club of Philadelphia named Joe McCourt '05, powerhouse tailback of the Patriot League champion football team, Tri-State Player of the Year. The league's Offensive Player of the Year, McCourt was named All-America by the American Football Coaches Association and CollegeSportsReport.com and All-Adantic Region by Football Gazette. He ran for 1,193 yards and a school-record-tying 16 touchdowns to help Lafayette advance to the NCAA Division I-AA Playoffs for the first time. He's Lafayette's No. 2 career rusher (4,474 yards) and just the second player to run for 1,000 yards in three different seasons. McCourt received the Maxwell prize at the club's 68th annual awards banquet March 4. Among other honorees were Indianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning, the pro player of the year, and Oklahoma University quarterback Jason White, national collegiate player of the year. • SHOWCASING INTERIM COURSES ABROAD ON TOP DOWN UNDER PICTURED by the 10thcentury Muiredach Cross at Ireland's Monastery of Monasterboice are Erin Whittaker ' 0 5 (L-R), Jodie Ahart '06, Toni Regan ' 0 5 , Catherine Hobby ' 0 5 , Meghan Mara '05, and Jillian Carpenter '05. They were among two dozen students who studied Ireland's land and landscape during interim session with Joseph J. Martin, associate professor emeritus of English, and Jack Truten, visiting assistant professor of English. Each year more than 150 Lafayette students take three-week, faculty-led courses around the world in January. Other destinations this year were Kenya and Tanzania, Thailand and Myanmar, Germany and the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, and France. • AN ACADEMIC prize and Dean of Students Commendation were won by Inku Subedi ' 0 5 while studying at Australia's University of Queensland. F O R M O R E WWW.lafayette.edu Click on Magazine Highlights. Students share their experiences and images in "Through My Eyes, In My Words." PROGRAMMED FOR SUCCESS TWO TEAMS of Lafayette students combined to place sixth among 73 institutions in the mid-Atlantic regional competition of the Association of Computing Machinery's International Collegiate Programming Contest. The first team included Oliver Bowen '05, Stephen Kelley ' 0 5 , and Zachary Reiter '07, and the second Farhan Ahmed '05, Konstantinos Bousmalis '05, and Mayank Lahiri '05. "The students worked very well together and came very close to qualifying for the world championships to be held in Shanghai, China, since the top four teams overall qualify," says team adviser Chun Wai Liew, assistant professor of computer science. • She received Queensland's Frank Pavlin Memorial Prize, which includes a cash award, for earning the highest mark in an introductory course in social work. The dean's commendation was for placing in the top tier of students enrolled in the university's study-abroad program. A double major in anthropology & sociology and psychology, Subedi was active outside the classroom as an events coordinator for Oxfam-UQ, events convener of Amnesty International-UQ, and member of the NepalAustralian friendship association. • NEW CENTER, NEW LOGO ROTHKOPF SCHOLARS TO SPAIN T H E FIRST Arthur J.'55 and Barbara S. Rothkopf Scholars studied art and architecture in Spain during May. Stefany Feliciano '06 (L-R), art historian Lynette Bosch, Greg Herchenroetlier '06, Jenna Cellini '06, and Kristen Holahan '06 visited Segovia's gothic cathedral (above) on Plaza Mayor (Main Square). "Each year a select group of the department's most promising junior majors will study overseas," says Robert S. Mattison, Metzgar Professor and head of art, funded by an endowment established through gifts to the Lafayette Leadership Campaign in the Rothkopfs' honor. The students explored multiculturalism in Spain, examining Christian, Jewish, and Muslim components of Spanish culture through art and architecture in Madrid, Santiago de Campostela, Granada, Segovia, Salamanca, Avila, and Toledo. Experts from outside Lafayette will lead the trips. The first was Bosch, associate professor of art history at State University of New York College at Geneseo. • INSPIRED BY Roy Lichtenstein, Elizabeth Robb '05 designed the logo for downtown Easton's new Lehigh Valley Center for Modern Art. 2ML A |LEHIGH VALLEY CENTER FOR MODERN 1 Students in the course Solving Communication Problems, taught by Lew Minier, director of the art department's media lab in the Williams Visual Arts Building, took their shots at coming up with a logo for the new center, with Robb's coming out on top. The students also developed letterhead, envelopes, and business cards. • FOR MORE www.lafayette.edu SENIORS' PROM T H E LANDIS Community Outreach Center's third annual Lafapalooza weekend volunteering blitz mobilized scores of members of the Lafayette community for two solid days of service projects in Easton and the surrounding area. Jen Spiciarich '08 helped out at a "senior prom" featuring dining and dancing at Easton Senior Citizens Center. • ART| Click on Creative Projects. HONOR FOR HOLTON T H E LIBRARY of Congress has selected The Skillet, an etching and collage by Curlee Raven Holton, professor of art and director of the Experimental Printmaking Institute, for inclusion in its collection. Measuring 22 by 30 inches, The Skillet is a hand-cut, acid-effected metal-plate etching featuring the image ATHLETIC AND ACADEMIC ACCOLADES of an African mask. It was produced in 1989. Another Holton piece, The Qiiilt, was recently acquired by Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. • AUTHENTIC ARTIFACTS A first-team Patriot League all-star at right guard and co-captain of the Leopards' league championship team, Stephen Bono '05 (right) was awarded an NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship and Division I-AA Athletic Directors Association Postgraduate Scholarship. The Marquis Scholar civil engineering graduate plans to pursue an advanced degree in structural engineering. A four-year starter on the gridiron and the league's Scholar-Athlete of the Year in football, Bono was also named to the ESPN The Magazine Academic All-America First Team and made his third consecutive appearance on both the CoSIDA Academic All-District II Team and I-AA Athletic Directors' Academic All-Star Team. He is the only two-time winner of the Maroon Club's Scholar-Athlete of the Year Award. • DIGITAL STORYTELLING Lindsay Laborda '08 (left), Solange Bethart '08, and classmates created "artifacts" of a fictitious civilization in their First-Year Seminar "Fact or Fiction: Authenticity and Artifact." The results were displayed at the Williams Center Gallery. T H E CENTER FOR Educational Technology, Middlebury, Vt., and Lafayette's instructional technology staff presented a workshop for faculty, librarians, and technologists on multimedia narrative at Skillman Library. Multimedia narrative, or digital storytelling, uses digital media (e.g., recorded voice, still images, video, visual effects) to build a short video that can teach a lesson, illustrate literature, describe a process, recall historical or family events, or accomplish other communications purposes. The workshop gave attendees greater theoretical understanding of multimedia narrative and technical skills to create pedagogical materials and teach students to communicate effectively through multimedia projects. • FACULTY BOOKS Sotise A Huit Personnages [Le Nouveau Monde] Librairie Droz S.A., 2005, 344 pp. By Olga Anna Duhl, associate professor of foreign languages and literatures Faith Ringgold: A View from the Studio Bunker Hill Publishing, 2004, 64 pp. By Curlee Holton, professor of art and director of Lafayette's Experimental Printmaking Institute, with Faith Ringgold Wildlife Diseases: Landscape Epidemiology, Spatial Distribution and Utilization of Remote Sensing Technology The Pennsylvania Academy of Science, 2005, 506 pp. Co-edited by Shyamal K. Majumdar, Gideon R. Jr. and Alice L. Kreider Professor of Biology SOTISE A H U I T PERSONNAIGES |1 r .Nnuma M.ntr| The Missing Person Alfred A. Knopf, 2005, 294 pp. By Alix Ohlin, assistant professor of English Francis A. March: Selected Writings of the First Professor of English Lafayette College, 2005, 280 pp. Edited by Paul Schlueter and June Schlueter, provost and Charles A. Dana Professor of English Literature, Religion, and East/West Comparison: Essays in Honor of Anthony C. Tu University of Delaware Press, 2005, 296 pp. Edited by Eric J. Ziolkowski, Charles A. Dana Professor of Religious Studies and department head D-Days in the Pacific Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2005, 426 pp. By Donald L. Miller, John Henry MacCracken Professor of History F O R M O R E WWW.lafayette.edu Click on Exceptional Faculty. SPOTLICHT BRENDAN RIVAGE-SEUL '05 STUDYING PERILS OF WATER PRIVATIZATION HAVING TRAVELED ACROSS the globe through four study abroad experiences, Brendan Rivage-Seul '05 has witnessed the negative consequences when water becomes a privatized commodity in impoverished areas. The double major in international affairs and Spanish examined the issue in an honors thesis guided by James DeVault, associate professor of economics and business. "The increasing levels of unregulated water privatization in developed and undeveloped countries alike represent a direct threat to the lives of the nearly 2.2 billion people worldwide living in absolute poverty," says Rivage-Seul. His interest was piqued by an eight-month program that took him to England, Tanzania, Oman, Singapore, India, New Zealand, and Mexico, where he saw firsthand what happens when people are denied access to clean drinking water. "I came away from the experience convinced that water has become the new oil, and will be the hot topic of the 21st century," he says. Rivage-Seul was chair of the Programming Committee, student director of Lafayette's Kids in the Community program at St. Anthony's Recreation Center, student associate with the Landis Community Outreach Center, and representative for the College's study abroad Spanish program. He also was a member of the junior varsity basketball team, the varsity golf team, Students for Social Justice, Investment Club, International Students Association, and the Kirby Government and Law Society. He was a resident adviser and Residence Hall Council liaison, assistant fitness trainer, intramural basketball referee, student representative on the faculty Wellness Committee, writer for The Lafayette, and member of the orchestra. • • U.S. News & World Report's America's Best Colleges 2005 spotlights Lafayette as a national leader in undergraduate research, an "outstanding example of academic programs that are believed to lead to student success." "In College, In Depth" highlights the EXCEL Scholars Program and the collaborative research of Noah Goldstein '04 and Ilan Peleg, Dana Professor of Government and Law. • Katelyn Connell '04, Gabriella Engelhart '05, and Elizabeth Ponder '04 are recipients of National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships. • Fox News Channel's national "Fox Report Saturday" features Lafayette in a story about the new Scholastic Aptitude Test, saying, "This is Lafayette College in Easton, Pa. It's listed in Barron's as one of the toughest schools to get into in the whole country." • Alex Gendler '06, a double major in English and philosophy, is awarded a Beinecke Scholarship for graduate studies in the arts, humanities, or social sciences. • History Channel International's weekly Global View program features Joshua Sanborn, associate professor of history, in an episode on the Russian Revolution and its impact on the 20th century. • Katie Thoren '06 is awarded a Goldwater Scholarship, the premier national undergraduate award in math, science, and engineering. Lafayette students have received 11 Goldwaters in the last six years, and the College is No. 1 among the nation's top 100 liberal arts colleges in U.S. News & World Report in the number of Goldwaters (nine) in the last four years. • The New York Times features the 140th renewal of Lafayette vs. Lehigh, college football's most-played rivalry, in "Still Playing After All Those Years." • Thirty-nine students are invited to make presentations on their scholarly research at the 19th annual National Conference on Undergraduate Research. • The Christian Science Monitor mentions Lafayette's interim-session course in Kenya and Tanzania in a story on "short, tightly focused programs abroad [that allow students] exposure to worlds they might otherwise never see." • Donald L. Miller, MacCracken Professor of History, is a featured on-camera expert in "Victory in the Pacific," a program on PBS' American Experience series. He is author of a new book. D-Days in the Pacific, companion volume to a three-part History Channel program of the same name. He has been selected as co-chair of the National D-Day Museum's International WWII Conference in October. • U.S. News & World Report spotlights Jamila Bookwala, assistant professor of psychology, in its cover story "50 Ways to Fix Your Life." • Joseph Crobak '06 is among fewer than 20 students in the nation to receive a scholarship from Upsilon Pi Epsilon, the international computer science honor society. Lafayette is the only institution to have three students in four years earn a UPE scholarship. INTERNATIONAL Uà ¿to eljc JCctu Jjork eimcs I CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR IfllNÄlilONflaREKUTATIONiRORTACADEMICjEXCEÜÜENCEi National Science Foundation