Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

College Town

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • College Town

    Worcester Telegram, MA
    Sunday, October 5, 2008

    College Town

    By Lisa D. Welsh TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF

    College Town extends its condolences to the family and friends of
    Becker student William L. Smith, who was killed during a recent
    off-campus party.

    Cyber month
    October is Cyber Awareness Month, but Internet protection is a
    year-round concern for Worcester District Attorney Joseph D. Early
    Jr. So, as the only local university that assists students, faculty
    and staff with a school-sponsored laptop theft program and the only
    local university to offer an ID theft prevention program, Worcester
    Polytechnic Institute has invited Mr. Early and his staff to partner
    with its Information Technology Division at noon Tuesday in Higgins
    Lab, Room 218 at WPI, 100 Institute Road, to teach the WPI community
    about Internet safety. Information, software, and video examples of
    how children get themselves into trouble via the Internet will be
    discussed during the seminar.

    A lesson in good health
    Michael Samuelson, president and CEO of The Health & Wellness
    Institute, outlined 12 "understandings" for living a healthy lifestyle
    at Nichols College and emphasized the importance of moving out the
    "Village of Someday - a self-defined state of inertia." Using an
    airplane analogy of putting on your own oxygen mask before trying to
    assist others, Mr. Samuelson said, "The most selfless thing you can do
    is to be selfish about your own health care."

    "I would suggest that what you consider to be your health plan is
    actually your sickness plan," he told faculty and staff at a luncheon.

    Mr. Samuelson is an internationally recognized authority in the areas
    of health care economics and health and wellness, but became a patient
    after discovering he had breast cancer nine years ago. After meeting a
    friend who was in chemotherapy, Mr. Samuelson felt a growth in his
    breast and decided to seek immediate medical advice.

    "Like most men, part of me didn't want to know," he said.

    "It's time to move past the dialogue about why our health care system
    is falling apart and do something about it," he said, adding that each
    of us has radar capable of detecting early warnings about personal
    health issues. "In terms of your own personal health, it's your
    responsibility. It's time to live a life of healthy uncertainty."

    "Everyone has stones in their life path," Mr. Samuelson said. "You can
    gingerly walk around them because you're too afraid to know what lies
    underneath. After all, it may be creepy, crawly and slimy. But once
    you pick up the rock, you're never a victim. And sometimes, you find a
    real treasure."


    Corduroy's buttons pushed
    The Fitchburg State College education department and McKay Campus
    School took part in the nationwide "Read for the Record" program
    Thursday. The annual event was created by the national early education
    organization Jumpstart and the Pearson Foundation to emphasize the
    importance of reading to young children. "Corduroy" by Don Freeman was
    read to thousands of children across America and broke the world
    record for the amount of children reading the same book on the same
    day with an adult.

    The Pearson Publishing Co. donated 480 copies of the children's book
    to the elementary school, a total gift of $4,315. Fitchburg State
    College's education department faculty member Nancy Murray and student
    Alexa Raczkowski helped establish the event at FSC.

    Becker MetroWest
    Becker College has opened its MetroWest Center for Accelerated and
    Professional Studies at 337 Turnpike Road, Southboro. Located near the
    intersections of Routes 495 and the Mass Pike and situated right on
    Route 9, the new center puts an accelerated bachelor of science degree
    in business within easy access of working adults.

    If walls could talk
    The English department at Quinsigamond Community College will host a
    screening of "Stanley's House," a documentary by filmmaker Tobe Carey,
    at 2 p.m.

    Thursday in HLC 109 A and B. Stanley Kunitz, the former U.S. poet
    laureate who died at age 100 in 2006, was a major literary figure and
    one of the country's most famous poets.

    Mr. Carey discovered that he shared his formative years in the same
    house that Mr. Kunitz had lived in as child and embarked on a personal
    and historical journey to unfold the connections of people, art and
    local legacy. The Kunitz home on 4 Woodford St. in Worcester is the
    central focus of the film.

    Lucky 13
    Thirteen teacher-scholars have joined the tenure-track faculty at
    Clark University.

    "This is a truly outstanding group of teacher-scholars," said
    President John Bassett. "It is as if their names were on the job
    descriptions. They are fully committed to working with Clark students
    ... They will be significant players in Clark's commitment to
    challenge convention and change our world for the better."

    They are as follows:

    Taner Akcam joined Clark's Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies, occupying the Robert Aram and Marianne Kaloosdian
    and Stephen and Marion Mugar Professorship in Armenian Genocide
    Studies on July 1. He is also associate professor in the History
    Department. He recently served as visiting professor of history at the
    University of Minnesota and a visiting scholar at the Armenian
    Research Center, University of Michigan-Dearborn.

    John Aylward has been named assistant professor of music in the Visual
    and Performing Arts Department. In May and June of this year, he was a
    fellow at the Sacher Stiftung in Basel, Switzerland. Just prior to
    arriving at Clark, he was in residence at the Virginia Center for
    Creative Arts.

    Maricela Correa-Chavez, who recently finished an American Educational
    Research Association-Institute of Educational Sciences postdoctoral
    fellowship at UCLA, joins the Frances L. Hiatt School of Psychology as
    assistant professor.

    Anita Hausermann Fabos has been named associate professor in the
    Department of International Development, Community and
    Environment. She recently worked as a senior lecturer and program
    leader in refugee studies at the School of Social Sciences, Media and
    Cultural Studies at the University of East London. She begins her post
    in January.

    John Garton has been named assistant professor in Clark's Visual and
    Performing Arts Department. For the past five years he has served as
    assistant professor of art history at the Cleveland Institute of Art.

    Sergio Granados-Focil joins the Carlson School of Chemistry and
    Biochemistry as an assistant professor. He recently completed
    post-doctoral research at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.

    Chang Hong, who has conducted research at the International Monetary
    Fund in Washington, DC, for the past two years, has been named
    assistant professor in the Economics Department.

    Arpita Joardar, who previously served as assistant professor of
    international business at the University of Texas - Pan American, has
    been named assistant professor in Clark's Graduate School of
    Management.

    Robert J. Johnston has been named director of the George Perkins Marsh
    Institute and professor of economics. He previously worked at the
    University of Connecticut as associate professor of agricultural and
    resource economics and associate director of the Sea Grant College
    Program.

    Olga Litvak has been named associate professor of history and Michael
    and Lisa Leffell Chair in Modern Jewish History. She most recently
    served as the director of the Center for Jewish Studies and associate
    professor in the Department of Judaic Studies at University at Albany,
    State University of New York.

    Robert D. Tobin has been named professor in the Foreign Languages and
    Literatures Department and the Henry J. Leir Chair in Foreign
    Languages and Cultures. He recently served as associate dean of the
    faculty and chair of the Division of Arts and Humanities at Whitman
    College, in Walla Walla, Wash.

    Heather Wiatrowski, who recently conducted research in the Department
    of Biochemistry and Microbiology at Rutgers, the State University of
    New Jersey, is assistant professor in the Biology Department.

    Christopher A. Williams, who has been named assistant professor in
    Clark's Graduate School of Geography, previously served as a research
    scientist at the Goddard Earth Sciences and Technology Center at the
    University of Maryland, Baltimore County.

    Contact Lisa D. Welsh via e-mail at [email protected].

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X