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Diane Nemec Ignashev, Professor of Russian, was awarded a PEN American Center Translation Fund grant. The PEN Translation Fund’s purpose is to promote the publication and reception of translated world literature in English. Professor Nemec Ignashev’s project translates from Russian the Belarusian writer Viktor Martinovich’s dystopian mockumentary Paranoia, a novel banned in the writer’s own country that traces a tragic love affair between a young writer and the mistress of the country’s chief state security officer.
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International music support for Gao Hong Dice
5 July 2011Gao Hong Dice,
Lecturer in Chinese Musical Instruments, has been awarded a USArtists International grant from the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to support her as a composer and performer of her music at The East China Normal University International Music Festival in Shanghai. For more on Gao’s endeavors, see her home page.
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Noah Salomon, Assistant Professor of Religion, is a senior researcher on a team from Centre d’Etudes et de Documentation Economiques, Juridiques et Sociales (CEDEJ), Khartoum Branch, which was recently awarded a grant from the Islam Research Programme (Government of Holland) entitled “Strengthening Knowledge of and Dialogue with the Islamic/Arab World.” Salomon will conduct fieldwork on Muslim minorities in the new state of South Sudan and collaborate with Sudanese and French colleagues on a joint CEDEJ report on the state of religious minorities in North and South Sudan.
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Following on a research award in November 2010 from the Keck Geology Consortium, Cameron Davidson, Professor of Geology, has also received a four-year, $212,563 award from the National Science Foundation’s Tectonics program. Awarded jointly to Professor Davidson and a collaborator at Union College (Schenectady, New York), the NSF grant will supplement and extend work begun with Keck funding, a project entitled “Provenance and thermal evolution of the Chugach-Prince William terrane flysch, southern Alaska.”
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Michael McNally receives Mellon Foundation funding
10 June 2011In June 2011, Professor of Religion Michael McNally received a $50,000 award from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to continue a project, begun in 2006, on the relationship between Native American religion and U.S. law. With the new award, Professor McNally will (in summer 2011) be able to complete two strategically placed law review articles on this topic and (during the 2011-2012 academic year) to begin work on his next book, tentatively entitled No One Word for Religion: Native American Traditions, the Freedom of Religion, and the Law.
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Two research grants awarded to Matt Whited
6 June 2011In May and June,
Matt Whited, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, received two awards from the Research Corporation for Scientific Advancement and the American Chemical Society that will further his research program and provide opportunities for undergraduate students.
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Funds to SERC for STEM projects
25 May 2011In May, the Science Education Resource Center (SERC) received support for various projects.
*Carol Ormand, SERC Geoscience Assistant, was awarded $174,800 from the National Science Foundation (NSF) Transforming Undergraduate Education in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (TUES) program for her project “Developing and Testing Materials to Improve Spatial Skills in Upper Division Geoscience Courses.”
*SERC was awarded a subcontract with Georgia Institute of Technology (GIT) for creating a website supporting faculty development of under-represented groups in the STEM discipline as part of GIT’s NSF project “Advance Leadership Award: Cross-Disciplinary Initiative for Minority Women Faculty.”
*Additionally, a contract with Evergreen State College supports “Sound Learning Communities” with SERC adding to and enhancing the web presence of the Curriculum for the Bioregion Project, funded by the U.S. Department of Education FIPSE program.
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Helen Wong Receives NSF Topology Grant
19 May 2011On May 19, 2011, Assistant Professor of Mathematics Helen Wong received a $124,770 grant from the National Science Foundation for a new three-year research project, “Relating quantum and classical topology and geometry.” The main goal of the project is to strengthen the relationships between quantum theory, geometry, and topology, an area of mathematics concerned with the intrinsic properties of a space – properties that are preserved under continuous deformations. Wong’s project will involve a number of undergraduate researchers during each year and summer of the grant.
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Adeeb Khalid, Jane and Raphael Bernstein Professor of Asian Studies and History, was named Distinguished Visiting Scholar in the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress. His research “Between Empire and Revolution: The Making of Soviet Central Asia, 1917-1932” between December 2010 through May 2011 at the Library of Congress culminated in a lecture, and contributed to his book on Central Asia in the early Soviet period.
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Williams selected as Fulbright Scholar
28 April 2011Harry Williams, Laird Bell Professor of History, has been selected as a Fulbright Scholar for the 2011-2012 academic year. Professor Williams has been placed at the Northeast Normal University in Changchun, where he will offer courses in African American social, cultural, and intellectual history and pursue a research project on China’s relations with black America.