June 15 is summer graduation application
deadline
June 15 is the final day that students can apply to graduate in summer
2004. Students applying for summer 2004 graduation will participate in
the winter 2004 commencement exercises held in December.
The graduation application
and payment deadlines will be strictly enforced, university officials said.
Candidates for associate, bachelor,
and master's degrees can apply for graduation by logging into their LEOnet
campus accounts and choosing the “Apply for Graduation” option. Instructions
are available on the "Student"
link at www.selu.edu or by calling Southeastern's
Office of Records and Registration at 985-549-2066/62.
The $35 application fee should
be paid directly to the Controller's Office, located on North Campus in
the Financial Aid Building.
 Graduation
honors
Marjorie A. Morrison, far left, received Southeastern’s Golden Ambassador
Award at the university’s spring 2004 commencement May 15. Morrison was
recognized for her outstanding contributions to both her community and
the university. Also at commencement, left, President Randy Moffett, Mike
Woods of the University of Louisiana System board of supervisors and commencement
speaker and Louisiana Commissioner of Administration Jerry Luke LeBlanc
congratulated the winners of the President's Medal at the university’s
commencement May 15. The award is presented to the top student in
each academic college. Medal winners with LeBlanc, far left, and Woods
and Moffett, far right, are, from left, social work major Gloria Jean Solorzano
of Folsom, College of Education and Human Development; Janice I. Ezegbunam
of Nassau, Bahamas, College of Business and Technology; Lindsey C. Halbert
of Baton Rouge, College of Nursing and Health Sciences; Tammy B. McCardle
of Ponchatoula, College of Nursing and Health Sciences; Yessica Rizelia
of Jakarta, Indonesia, College of Business and Technology; Patrick J. Renfro
of Hammond, College of Business and Technology; Sean P. Kerrigan of Kenner,
College of Arts and Sciences; Joseph W. Ferguson of Ethel, College of Business
and Technology; and Bradley Paul Gautreaux of Walker, College of Business
and Technology. |
Deep Delta Civil War Symposium
examines “Politics of War”
"The Politics of War: Unionism, Leadership, and Decisions Affecting
Combat, 1861-1865" will be the theme of Southeastern’s annual Deep Delta
Civil War Symposium, June 11-12.
Now in its 18th year, the symposium
is one of the largest Civil War conferences in the United States and annually
attracts a national audience as well as many local Civil War enthusiasts.
Sponsored by the Center for Southeast Louisiana Studies and the department
of history and political science, the two-day symposium will be held in
the War Memorial Student Union Theatre.
Center for Southeast Louisiana Studies
Director Samuel C. Hyde Jr., Southeastern’s Ford Family Chair in Regional
Studies, said topics to be covered include General Sherman’s march through
Georgia, Confederate General Pat Cleburne’s efforts to see freed slaves
enlisted as Confederate soldiers, unionism in the wartime South, and the
personal views of Confederate officers observing the conflict.
Hyde said the list of presenters “is
undoubtedly the finest ever assembled during the course of the symposium.”
Speakers include noted authors Gordon Rhea, Craig Symonds, Herman Hattaway,
Terry Jones, Ann Bailey, and Terry Winschel.
The program will begin at 12:30 p.m.
on Friday, June 11, and will feature hourly presentations until 7:30 p.m.
Sessions will resume from 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m., Saturday, June 12.
“Social hours are interspersed throughout
the program to offer guests the opportunity to share views with the scholars,”
Hyde said. “A 2:45 p.m. roundtable debate on Saturday is designed to encourage
lively exchanges of views between the presenters and the audience.”
Special prices are available for advance
purchases of tickets but guests can purchase individual session or full
conference tickets at the door. Southeastern faculty may attend the sessions
at no charge, but should call the center if they want to participate in
meals.
For additional information about the
Deep Delta Civil War Symposium, call 2151, e-mail selahistory@selu.edu
or visit the “events” link at www.selu.edu/Academics/Depts/RegionalStudies.
Groundbreaking
for new student housing
Southeastern, Capstone Development Corp., and Capstone Building Corp.
will host a groundbreaking ceremony on June 17 for the university's new
student housing.
The ceremony is scheduled for 9 a.m.
in the area north of Lee Hall, off SGA drive. A reception will follow at
the Alumni Center.
The first phase of the new student housing
plan will be a four-story structure to be built near the university's main
entrance off University Avenue. For more information about the ambitious
$55 million plan to replace all of its older housing with new student-focused
residential facilities, visit www.selu.edu/news/NewHousing.html. |
Novelist
named writer-in-residence
Olympia Vernon, an award-winning young author, is joining the faculty
of Southeastern, her alma mater, as a writer-in-residence.
Vernon, who has received universal praise
for her debut novel, Eden, will teach a course in creative writing
this fall. She joins a growing contingent of noted creative writers within
the Southeastern faculty, including Timothy Gautreaux, another writer-in-residence;
poets Jack Bedell and Alison Pelegrin; and short story writer and novelist
Norman German.
“We are pleased and honored to have
Ms. Vernon on board,” said President Randy Moffett. “Not only will her
talent, expertise and experience as a writer benefit our students, but
her success is sure to inspire them as well.”
"We are very happy to have Ms. Vernon
join us as a member of the English faculty," said Tammy Bourg, dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences. "As a successful author of national acclaim,
she is sure to be a motivating force for our students, particularly when
they realize she is a homegrown talent."
Vernon received a bachelor’s degree
in criminal justice from Southeastern in 1999. Her love of writing, nurtured
by her Southeastern English professors, inspired her to earn a master of
fine arts degree from Louisiana State University in 2002. Eden has
prompted descriptions of Vernon as a “gifted new writer” and an “immense
talent.” Her second novel, Logic, a coming-of-age tale of a young
girl in Mississippi, was published in April.
Vernon is the two-time recipient of
the Matt Clark Memorial Scholarship and was nominated for the Robert O.
Butler Award in Fiction in 2002. She was recently selected by the American
Academy of Arts and Letters to receive the Richard and Hinda Rosenthal
Foundation Award for her literary achievement in Eden. The award
is given for an American work of fiction “which is a considerable literary
achievement." Previous recipients
have included authors such as Alice Walker, Joyce Carol Oates, John Updike
and John Knowles. |
Summer driver training
class
In accordance with state regulations, all university employees are
required to attend a driver training class every three years if they drive
a university or personal vehicle for university business. Employees
cannot be reimbursed for travel unless they have completed the class.
For your safety, and for the university
to be in compliance with state regulations, please attend the only class
being
offered this semester: The class is scheduled for 2 p.m., Thursday,
June 17, in the University Center, room 133.
Those who want to attend this class
must register before June 15 by e-mailing jquarles@selu.edu.
An e-mail reminder will be sent to you on June 16.
The class will last approximately one
hour. You must have your W# and driver's license number when you sign in
at the registration table to receive your folder for the class.
If you do not know when you last attended
a driver training class, please call Janet at 549-2157.
“Wild
Kingdom,” a video produced by Southeastern Louisiana University faculty
and staff, was selected as an award finalist in the first annual Flint
Film Festival 2004 held in Flint, Mich., June 4-6. The film’s creators
are, from left, seated, producer Martie Fellom, editor Andrew Richmond;
standing, composer Stephen Suber, videographer Claude Levet, and author
Alan Marsh.
Wild
Kingdom selected for Flint
Film Festival
Wild Kingdom, a video produced by Southeastern faculty and staff,
was selected as an award finalist in the first annual Flint Film Festival
2004 held in Flint, Mich., June 4-6.
Based on a short story written by Alan
Marsh in 1992, Wild Kingdom humorously depicts a junior high school
student who employs the techniques of camouflage by wild animals to avoid
notice in class. Marsh wrote the screenplay and directed the video, which
premiered during Southeastern’s 2001 Fanfare season. It was shown in April
at the second annual Longbaugh Film Festival.
Southeastern dance professor Martie
Fellom produced the 27-minute piece, while music professor Stephen Suber
wrote the score. University photographer Claude Levet of the Office of
Public Information videotaped the production with student assistant Andrew
Richmond doing the editing. The video, which used area high school students
as the cast, was shot on Southeastern’s campus, at areas around Hammond,
and at the Global Wildlife Center in Robert.
Marsh said the story was inspired by
his own memories of school. “Most of us have spent time in classes when
we were either shy or felt unprepared and wished we could really hide,”
he said.
Fellom, who has produced several award-winning
videos in recent years, including Wish and An Act of Bravery,
said the final version of Wild Kingdom took two years to complete.
“It was a wonderful, collaborative experience, as we had a terrific cast
and crew,” she said. “Even after the premiere, we continued refining it.
Alan wrote a subplot, which we shot last May. Then we re-edited the whole
piece for better pacing.”
Fellom said the script has also been
translated by faculty volunteers Evelyn Bornier (French) and Cheryl Javaherian
(Spanish).
Suber’s musical contribution, which
was done completely electronically over several weeks, was the first movie
score he had written. “I’ve always wanted to write a movie score, but never
had the opportunity,” he said. “I saw the video cuts, and the piece really
wrote itself.”
“I really enjoyed the collective spirit
in making Wild Kingdom, because we all shared in the creative process,”
said Levet. “I was especially impressed with the dedication of the cast
members; in shooting a film, there is a lot of ‘hurry up and wait.’ We
shot over four long weekends, and everyone was on time and eager to work.”
Fellom said the team is currently working
on a new video project, The Firefly Club, which should be ready
next year. |
President
Randy Moffett, far right, congratulated the Southeastern faculty and staff
who received the largest grant awards in 2003-2004 at the Office of Sponsored
Research and Program's annual awards recognition reception in May, From
left, Gary Howard, Gary Childers, Gerald Guidroz, Jim Owens, Veda Abene,
Ron Abels, and Jerry Patton.
Southeastern
to receive $473,678 in Board of Regents grants
Southeastern will receive almost a half million dollars – $473,678
– in grants from the Louisiana Board of Regents for instructional equipment
and scientific and industrial research.
In the research and development/industrial
ties category, the university had a higher percentage of their proposals
funded than any other state institution, said Emily Bond, director of the
Office of Sponsored Research and Grants.
Bond said that only four institutions
– Louisiana State University’s main campus, LSU’s agriculture center, the
University of New Orleans and the University of Louisiana-Lafayette – received
more BOR grant money than Southeastern.
“However, looking at the numbers of
grant proposals submitted and the numbers actually funded,” she said, “we
find that Southeastern’s percentage – 38 percent – was higher than these
four universities. Also, in the research category, both of our funded proposals
were ranked number one. That was a job well done.”
Bond said biology professors Kyle Piller
and Volker Stiller received $133,692 and $112,978, respectively, while
chemistry professor Randolph Belter’s award of $135,000 was the university’s
first in the Industrial Ties category. A total of 52 of the 226 grant proposals
were funded statewide.
Belter will partner with the engineering
firm Cox-Walker & Associates to develop a chemical process for manufacturing
fluorochemicals from light petroleum products. The fluorochemicals are
typically used as refrigerants, foam blowing agents and fire-supressants.
In the undergraduate enhancement category,
visual arts professors Gary Keown and John Valentino were awarded $92,000
for equipment to expand the digital technology course offerings. Nursing
professor Ann Carruth received $8,000 for a bone scanner that will allow
the School of Nursing to add osteoporosis screening to its health van.
Piller plans to examine the phenomenon
of “adaptive radiation,” when multiple species evolve in a relatively “short”
amount of time – tens of thousands of years as compared to hundreds of
thousands or even millions of years evolution usually takes. To carry out
his studies, he will travel to central Mexico to collect the 23 species
of silverside fishes.
“From an economic viewpoint, this group
of fishes is an important food source for the people of the region,” Piller
said. He said the fishes are also interesting from the standpoint of ecology
and evolution because they range from tiny plankton eaters to foot-long
predators with as many as 12 different species sometimes inhabiting the
same lake.
In his Southeastern lab, Piller and
his graduate assistant will sequence DNA from all of the species to examine
their evolutionary relationships and to determine how such a variety of
morphologically and tropically diverse species have developed in such a
short amount of time.
Stiller’s research proposal focuses
on the development of strains of rice which can be highly productive in
areas of the world subject to frequent drought. The biologist has discovered
a new mechanism for refilling water in rice leaves, and has developed a
technique to detect embolisms that can develop in a plant’s water conducting
tissue – xylem – when water supply is restricted. Normally, he said, plants
combat xylem embolism by using “nightly root-pressure” to compress and
flush out air bubbles. At least one rice variety, however, reverses xylem
embolism with the novel refilling mechanism.
He will use several varieties of rice
to examine this “novel refilling mechanism.” Researchers, he said, “have
no idea how this refilling mechanism works. Right now we are just beginning
to study in which plants it can occur.”
Comparing several species of rice, Stiller
will attempt to discover whether plants that lack the ability to generate
sufficient root-pressure use the novel refilling mechanism to compensate.
He will also eye the nature of the novel refilling method.
“If we can answer the basic questions
and find the genetic basis for the novel refilling mechanism, it would
have far-reaching implications for the field of plant water relations as
a whole,” Stiller said. “It would also lead to a breakthrough in plant
breeding with respect to plant growth and yield in arid environments and
under restricted water supply.” |
Sanichiro
Yoshida, assistant professor of physics, reviews data with Southeastern
students Raghuveer Dodda, a computer sciences major from India, and Kristin
Rogillio, a physics major from Walker, at the LIGO facility in Livingston.
Physics
students to participate in summer fellowships
Two Southeastern students have been awarded prestigious summer research
opportunities at the LIGO facility in Livingston, while another has earned
a national fellowship for research into plasma physics and fusion energy.
Raghuveer Dodda, a computer sciences
major from India, and Kristin Rogillio, a physics major from Walker, have
each received a $5,000 stipend to work in the LIGO summer research program
administered by the California Institute of Technology and funded by the
National Science Foundation’s Research Experiences for Undergraduates Program.
Physics major Tiffany Findley of Prairieville received a National Undergraduate
Fellowship in Plasma Physics and Fusion Energy Sciences funded by the United
States Department of Energy. She is one of only 25 students nationwide
selected for the fellowship and will receive a $4,800 stipend for her work.
Dodda and Rogillio will perform research
under the direction of Sanichiro Yoshida, assistant professor of physics
at Southeastern and collaborating scientist at LIGO.
LIGO – which stands for Laser Interferometer
Gravitational-Wave Observatory – is focused on researching gravitational
waves from sources such as black hole collisions, pulsations of newborn
neutron stars and the background remnants of the Big Bang itself. Funded
by the National Science Foundation and operated by the California Institute
of Technology, LIGO in Livingston is one of only six such installations
in the world. The students will be expected to present findings of their
research at a LIGO Scientific Collaboration meeting later in the summer.
Findley, who earned a LIGO research
fellowship last year, will join other recipients for an intense one-week
course on plasma physics and fusion energy given by research scientists
and faculty at Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory in Princeton, N.J. She
will spend the rest of the summer working on a research project with Daniel
McCarthy, head of the department of chemistry and physics at Southeastern.
A scientist specializing in plasma physics and fusion energy, McCarthy
will serve as her research mentor.
“It is truly gratifying to see our students
earning these prestigious research opportunities,” McCarthy said. “It reflects
on the quality of students we are attracting to our program as well as
on our faculty who have helped prepare them. The chance to perform this
level of research as undergraduates will be invaluable for their future
careers.” |
Camps, camps, and more
camps!
Looking for fun activities for your children this summer? Registration
is underway for a variety of campus camps, including the annual summer
day camp and specialty camps in art, foreign languages, science, and sports.
The first of four two-week sessions
of the popular Children's
Summer Day Camp begins today, June 7, and runs through June 18. Additional
sessions are scheduled June 21-July 1, July 12-23, and July 26-August 6.
The camps are open to boys and girls
ages 5-12 years old (must be 5 years old by the end of December 2004).
Counselors -- graduate and undergraduate students in kinesiology
and health studies and elementary education -- will lead young campers
in developing sports skills and enjoying recreational games and swimming.
Young artists, ages six to 14 can participate
in the Department of Visual Arts and Department of Continuing Education’s
Children’s
Art Workshops, July 5-15. Sessions will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 11
a.m. and 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday.
Students will model with Crayola's Model
Magic, create mixed media collages, create their own stencils, paint paintings,
and make nature prints. Children 10-14 years of age will complete two photography
projects.
To register or for further information,
contact Southeastern Continuing Education at 985-549-2301 or 1-800-256-2771.
The third annual Young
Writer's Camp sponsored by the Southeastern Louisiana Writing Project
is scheduled for July 26-30. The camp is open to children ages 9-14, and
will be held from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. The camp, which will be held at the
Hammond Regional Arts Center in downtown Hammond, will feature photo journals,
narratives, poetry and many other forms of writing, reading and art activities.
The cost is $95 per child and early registration is recommended since space
is limited. For more information contact Dr. Beth Calloway, 549-2414 or
scalloway@selu.edu.
Youngsters can also have fun and build
skills through summer camps being offered by many of Southeastern's coaches.
Complete information is available at www.lionsports.net/content/camps.
Arts and Sciences offers “cool” summer
camps
The College of Arts and Sciences is offering a series of summer
camps for young students in the first grade through high school.
Linda Munchausen, the college's coordinator
of education initiatives, said the camps are designed to spark youngsters'
interest in foreign languages, creative writing and science.
“Through these camps we want to stimulate
children’s curiosity about the physical world around them,” said Munchausen.
“The summer is an excellent time for the university to provide a quality
learning experience through fun, activity-based camps. It’s all about motivation
and stimulating critical thinking skills.”
The camps are all scheduled from 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m., weekdays. Before and after care for the two foreign languages
and four “Science Adventures” camps is available for an extra $15 per day.
Camp applications are available through Southeastern Continuing Education,
located in the University Center, 985-549-2301.
The camps are:
• Foreign Language Summer Camp,
June 7-11 (French); June 14-18 (Spanish): Open to students in grades kindergarten
through six, the camps will be taught by foreign languages professors Margaret
Marshall and Lucia Harrison. They will combine learning French and Spanish
with fun activities, including dancing, singing, painting, sports, food,
creative dramatics, puppet shows, art, ballet and fairy tales. The activities,
Munchausen said, “will all be used to stimulate the children’s interest
in a foreign language. Our instructors are fluent in the languages and
are excited to share their cultural knowledge and love for their languages.”
The cost for each language camp is $125.
They will be held in D Vickers Hall, rooms 283 and 285. Children should
bring two daily snacks and a lunch, smock for painting, a folder for take
home activities, sneakers, suntan lotion and hats (optional).
For additional information, contact
Harrison, 985-549-2153, 985-549-3088 (fax), or lharrison@selu.edu.
• Creative Writing Camp, June
21-25: Under the guidance of award-winning poet Jack Bedell, Southeastern’s
director of creative writing, high school students (grades 9-12) will explore
various genres of creative writing through exercise and personal expression.
The creative writing camp also costs
$125. For more information, Bedell can be reached at 985-549-5595, 985-549-5014
(fax), or jbedell@selu.edu.
The four Science Adventures camps are
open to students in grades 1-7, and cost $180 each. “Scientists love to
talk about what we do,” said Munchausen, who is a professor of chemistry
and former department head. “These camps are going to be really cool and
will stimulate children’s curiosity about the physical world around them.”
• The Great Dinosaur Mystery,
July 5-9: “Join the hunt and take a bite out of science,” Munchausen said.
Through this camp, students will become “dinosaur detectives,” unearthing
clues, bone by bone, in a search for a fossil treasure. The “wild chase
through the natural sciences” will include squid dissection, Sea-Monkeys,
and a real meteorite.
• Robo Tech X-Treme, July 12-16:
Students will build “Buggy Gizmo’s largest walking K’nex robot,” discover
rainbow crystal ice cream, and explore the upside down world of gravity
racers, touchable bubbles, and the invisible force of magnetism.
• Space and Rocketry, July 19-23:
In “an amazing space odyssey,” participants will build and launch a solid-fueled
Screamer model rocket, and investigate the mysteries of the solar system
from the sands of Mars to the icy rings of Saturn. Participants will explore
the far reaches of space as they design a Mars Rover, build a telescope
and discover the dark secret of black holes.
• Newton’s Motion Madness, July
26-30: This camp asks, “Do you have what it takes to challenge Isaac Newton
in a race through the science of motion?” Students will master the forces
of physics and harness the power of the electron to create the “Night Crawler,”
an electrically powered vehicle able to cross the roughest terrain. They
will traverse land, sea and sky with magnetic cars, submarines, and rocket
planes and create a bouncing superball.
Additional information about the Scientific
Adventure camps is available from Munchausen at 985-549-3935, 985-549-5126
(fax), or lmunchausen@selu.edu.
PPR training for classified employees
A brief training program on the Performance Planning and Review process
will be provided for classified employees from 9 a.m. to 10:30 a.m., Tuesday,
June 15, in the University Center, room 122. Topics to be covered include
the rating system and its factors, planning sessions and timetables of
which employees should be aware.
The training will help classified employees
better understand the process which is used in evaluating their performance.
This training is reserved exclusively for classified employees. Training
for supervisors of classified employees will be offered at a later date.
Classified employees planning to attend should get their supervisor's permission
and register by e-mailing Jan Ortego at jortego@selu.edu.
SBDC offers e-commerce seminar June
17
On June 17 the Small Business Development Center, along with Tangipahoa
Economic Development Foundation, the Hammond Chamber of Commerce and Louisiana
Tech University, will provide an opportunity for rural/small business owners
to develop e-commerce for their businesses. This seminar is aimed at developing
rural businesses' presence on the World Wide Web. For selected businesses
that meet specific criteria, the seminar can lead to one year of free technical
assistance and a basic package of services for marketing themselves on
the World Wide Web.
This event will be held at the Southeast
Louisiana Business Center in Hammond from 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. For more
information or to register, contact Sandy Summers at 985-549-3831.
Community awareness bulletin
Recently, there have been reports of calls from persons claiming to
represent a credit card company's fraud division. The callers claim to
be checking on an errant charge and sound very professional. They will
ask for part of a credit card number to "verify possession of the card."
Any information they get will be used to make unauthorized charges against
a person's credit card. We ask the members of our community to protect
themselves from credit card fraud by keeping private their personal information.
We do our best to keep frauds and scam artists out of our community, but
we need your help.
If you receive a call similar to this,
please contact the University Police Department immediately at 985-549-2222.
Let's work together to keep our community safe!
Volleyball wins inaugural Southeastern
Cup
The Southeastern volleyball team scored 255 points during the 2003-04
Athletic Year to win the inaugural Southeastern Cup, as the Lady Lions
were the athletic department’s top team in terms of participation and involvement
in athletic and community events during the past year.
The Southeastern Cup Competition, sponsored
by the university’s Student-Athlete Advisory Committee, is primarily based
on a team’s attendance, as well as the team’s head coach’s attendance at
events that were designated as Southeastern Cup events. Teams earned points
by attending the events, as well as reaching team grade point average goals
and getting involved in community service projects.
The competition allows Southeastern
Athletic teams to show their pride by participating in community events,
as well as encouraging their fellow student-athletes. Southeastern head
volleyball coach Roni Armeda-Hipp and her squad’s outstanding efforts have
earned them the Southeastern Cup Trophy, along with an engraved plaque
that will be displayed in the lobby of the Southeastern Athletics Building.
The women’s basketball and softball
teams were tied for second in the competition with 150 points, with the
women’s tennis team following closely behind at 140 points.
Summer 2004 SOT Calendar
The Office of Institutional Research & Assessment asks all faculty,
department heads, and deans to note the following schedule for the administration
of the Student Opinion of Teaching (SOT) instruments for the Summer 2004
semester:
Term 1 (June 3 – June 28): Packets
delivered to departments, Monday, June 21;
administration of SOT, Tuesday-Wednesday, June 22-23; deadline to be
returned to IR&A, Wednesday, June 23.
Full Term (June 3 – July 22): Packets
delivered to departments, Friday, July 16;
administration of SOT, Monday-Thursday, July 19-22; deadline to be
returned to IR&A, Thursday, July 22.
Term 2 (June 30—July 22): Packets
delivered to departments, Friday, July 16;
administration of SOT, Monday-Tuesday, July 19-20; deadline to be returned
to IR&A, Tuesday, July 20.
Any questions regarding SOT administration
should be directed to Glenda at extension 2077.
Coming up ...
June 7-11
French Foreign Language Summer Camp,
grades K-6. 9 a.m.-3 p.m., weekdays. D Vickers Hall, room 283.
$125. Contact: Lucia Harrison, 985-549-2153, 985-549-3088 (fax), or lharrison@selu.edu
June 10 – July 8
Center for Contemporary Arts – Sculpture
installation, by Allison Lacher. Clark Hall Gallery. 985-549-2193.
June 11
Alumni – Red Stick Coaches Memorial
Golf Tournament. 1 p.m. Santa Maria Golf Course. 985-549-2150 or 1-800-SLU-ALUM.
June 11-12
Deep Delta Civil War Symposium – “The
Politics of War: Unionism, Leadership, and Decisions Affecting Combat,
1861-1865.” 12:30-7:30 p.m., June 11; 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m., June 12.
War Memorial Student Union Theatre. Fee and contact information: 985-549-2151,
e-mail selahistory@selu.edu,
or www.selu.edu/Academics/Depts/RegionalStudies
June 14-18
Spanish Foreign Language Summer Camp,
grades K-6. 9 a.m.-3 p.m., weekdays. D Vickers Hall, room 285.
$125. Contact: Lucia Harrison, 985-549-2153, 985-549-3088 (fax), or lharrison@selu.edu
June 17 – July 15
Center for Contemporary Arts – The Photography
of Gerard Lange. Clark Hall Gallery. 985-549-2193.
June 21-25
Creative Writing Camp, grades 9-12.
9 a.m.-3 p.m., weekdays. D Vickers Hall, room 283 or 285. $125. Contact:
Jack Bedell, 985-549-5595, 985-549-5014 (fax), or jbedell@selu.edu
Professional activities
Stephen Smith, vice president for administration & finance,
has been selected to serve a three-year term on the 2004-2005 Comprehensive
College & University Committee (representing such schools in Louisiana)
with the Southern Association of College and University Business Officers
(SACUBO).
Erica Sharp (Biology) presented
her research on the aggregation of polysachharides as a talk at the 10th
Annual Student Conference for Research and Creative Arts, held April 21-22
at the University of Houston-Clear Lake. The research was conducted in
collaboration with Dr. David Norwood (Chemistry and Physics) and
supported by the Department of Chemistry and Physics and the College of
Arts and Science's OSCAR Program.
Dr. Michael B. Doughty (Chemistry
and Physics) recently published a manuscript in the Journal of Biological
Chemistry with co-authors R. Seifert, Andreas Gille, and G. Lushington
from the University of Kansas, Roger A. Johnson from the State University
of New York, Stony Brook, and T.-C. Mou from the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center. The paper, entitled "Differential Inhibition of Adenylyl
Cyclase Isoforms and Soluble Guanylyl Cyclase by Purine and Pyrimidine
Nucleotides" (2004, 279, 19955-19969), describes exciting new developments
from our laboratories in the discovery of novel signal transduction inhibitors.
The inhibitor leads were synthesized in Dr. Doughty's biochemistry laboratory
at Southeastern by chemistry undergraduate Amanda Melerine and microbiology
undergraduate Edward Vaughn.
Dr. John G. Boulahanis (Sociology
and Criminal Justice) and Dr. Martha J. Heltsley (Blackburn College) published
an article entitled "Perceived Fears: The Reporting Patterns of Juvenile
Homicides in Chicago Newspapers" in Criminal Justice Policy Review,
15(2), pp. 132-160.
Dr. Brian Canfield (Human Development)
presented a two-day training workshop entitled "Current trends in counseling
and systemic therapy" in Cyprus. The workshops were sponsored by the Cyprus
Society of Family Therapy and took place in the cities of Nicosia and Limassol.
Participants included medical and mental health professionals from both
the governmental and private sectors.
ByLion is published weekly online
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Louisiana University. Send submissions to publicinfo@selu.edu,
SLU 10880, fax 985-549-2061, or bring to Public Information Office in East
Stadium. Submission deadline is noon on Friday. Contact: Christina Chapple,
chapple@selu.edu,
985-549-2341/43.
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