Oct 19, 2001
Skye Harris ’02 Seeks Secret to Lake’s Survival
Three times last summer, Skye Harris ’02 traveled to Syracuse, N.Y., to slog through the shallows of mercury-contaminated Onondaga Lake and collect samples…
Academic News
Three times last summer, Skye Harris ’02 traveled to Syracuse, N.Y., to slog through the shallows of mercury-contaminated Onondaga Lake and collect samples…
Susan Basow, Charles A. Dana Professor of Psychology, recently published “Androcentrism” in Encyclopedia of Gender, Volume One, pages 125-135, edited by…
Leanne Speitel ’02, a philosophy major from Ocean City, N.J., is exploring the implementation and impact of parental consent requirements on abortion in…
After 23 years of visiting the remote 2,000-person Chinantec Indian village of San Pedro Yolox in the Sierra Juarez Mountains of Oaxaca, Mexico, Dan Bauer…
As an undergraduate, Lorenzo Traldi fell in love with mathematics, taking only math courses his last three years of college and earning 88 credits in the…
“Conducting research means you continue to learn and stay curious, which creates enthusiasm that you can bring into your teaching,” says Robin Rinehart…
Comets are interesting astronomical phenomena today, but centuries ago they were considered harbingers of disaster. Andrew C. Fix, professor and head of…
“My emphasis is on teaching,” says J. Ronald “Bud” Martin ’66, associate professor of chemical engineering. “I enjoy it the most of all faculty duties…
Sheila Handy, assistant professor of economics and business, will present the results of her research on student experiences with learning accounting through…
Robert Libutti ’02 (Sinking Spring, Pa.), a geology major and anthropology and sociology minor, is investigating how pop culture portrays our prehistoric…