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Letter From the Dean

Dear Friend of the College,
Welcome to the August 2009 issue of
Inside A&S,
the monthly e-newsletter of the
College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences at Villanova University.
In a few short weeks, our students will be returning
to campus to begin the 2009-2010 academic year. New Student Orientation
begins on August 20, and classes begin on August 24. We welcome all of our
students back to campus and extend a special welcome to our new students.
I am pleased to announce that Kenneth R. Miller,
Ph.D., is the 2009 recipient of the
Mendel Medal. You'll read more about Dr.
Miller, his work, and the Mendel Medal in this issue of Inside A&S.
The
Theology Institute at Villanova will sponsor
its annual conference -- "Who
is My Enemy? Religious Hope in a Time of
Fear"
-- on October 27-28. You'll read more about the conference in this issue of
Inside A&S.
In addition, the University will host the
38th Annual Mid-Atlantic Region Association
for Asian Studies Conference, "Asia Beyond
Borders," on October 30 to November 1.
For information, please
click here. Many on campus events will
be held as part of this exciting annual conference.
Many events are scheduled in September 2009, too,
including
Lincoln as Commander-in-Chief. You'll read about this event and others
in this issue of Inside A&S.
Be sure to check out this year's edition of the
Enchiridion, the College's undergraduate student handbook. This marks
the 20th year the College has been producing the Enchiridion, a handy
policy and procedural reference guide -- both in print and
online -- for
students, advisors, and faculty. Hardcopies of the Enchiridion are
available in the Dean's Office.
Enjoy the remaining days of the summer break.
Everyone in the Dean's Office looks forward to your return. Thank you for continuing to read
Inside A&S. We appreciate your ongoing
interest in the life of the College, and, as always, we welcome your
feedback.
Sincerely,
Rev. Kail C. Ellis, O.S.A., Ph.D. Dean of the College
In College News …
La Universidad de Cádiz and Villanova
Celebrate 20 Years of Academic Cooperation

In July 2009, the Rev. Peter M. Donohue, O.S.A., Ph.D., president of
Villanova University; Rev. Kail C. Ellis, O.S.A., Ph.D., dean of the College
of Liberal Arts and Sciences; Mercedes Julia, Ph.D., chair of the department
of Modern Languages and Literature; and el rector de la Universidad de Cádiz,
Diego Sales, celebrated the academic relationship between the two
institutions.
Click here to learn more. Photo courtesy of La Universidad de Cádiz.
The Villanova Summer Program in Cádiz, Spain, is one of the oldest international
program at Villanova. The program was designed by Mercedes Juliá, Ph.D.,
in 1989, and this year is celebrating its 20th anniversary. From the very
beginning, the program has been a very popular one among Villanova students.
You can learn more about the program
here.
The city of Cádiz, situated in the southwestern part of Spain, is a living
relic of the 18th century, with the Caleta beach at the center of the city.
Cádiz is a small port city located away from tourist routes. It still
conserves old traditions, and people live in a relaxed, safe, and friendly
atmosphere. The six-week program is designed for students who wish to
increase their proficiency in Spanish and be introduced to Spanish culture
and society.
"Lincoln as Commander-in-Chief": A Lecture
by Renowned Historian James McPherson
James
McPherson, Ph.D., is the George Henry Davis
1886 Professor of American History,
Emeritus, at Princeton University. He will
speak on campus on Wednesday, Sept. 30, at 7
p.m., in
the
Villanova Room of Connelly Center on the
topic of "Lincoln as
Commander-in-Chief."
Dr. McPherson
received the Pulitzer Prize for Battle
Cry of Freedom and most recently has
written, 'Tried by War: Abraham Lincoln
as Commander- in-Chief. Dr. McPherson’s
visit is sponsored by the Lore Kephart, ’86,
Distinguished Historians Lecture Series.
This event is the series’ inaugural lecture.
For more information, please contact
Diane Brocchi.
Bioengineering Minor Offered to Students
Studying the Sciences
Courtesy
of the
College of Engineering. Students looking to acquire knowledge in
an important field, to have a cross-college, multidisciplinary experience,
and to be more attractive to future employers should check out Villanova
University’s new minor in Bioengineering.
Available starting in fall 2009, the minor introduces students to an area of
study that, according to the National Science Foundation and National
Institutes of Health, is “an essential underpinning field for the 21st
century.” The field draws upon engineering and biology to produce new
knowledge, processes, procedures, systems, and products for the benefit of
society.
Learn more here.
Master of Public Administration Program
Receives First-Time Accreditation
The
Villanova Master
of Public Administration (MPA) Program in the College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences was fully accredited for the first time by the National
Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration (NASPAA) this
July. The accreditation is for a period of seven years, the maximum length
possible.
Learn more here.
VCLE and Political Science Awarded NEH Grant
on “Enduring Questions”
The Villanova Center for Liberal Education (VCLE) and the Department of
Political Science have received a $24,600 grant from the National Endowment
of the Humanities to offer a new course entitled “The Question of Justice:
From Piraeus to the Mountaintop.” The NEH is funding the course as part of a
new initiative called “Enduring Questions,” a nationwide experiment in
building intellectual community through courses in which students and
teachers “join together in a deep and sustained program of reading in order
to encounter influential thinkers over the centuries and into the present
day.”
Learn more here.
College Welcomes Hanna Lee to the Center for
Undergraduate Research & Fellowships
Hanna Lee has joined the University staff as the Assistant Director of
the
Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships. Hanna received a B.A.
from Haverford College (2003) with a major in English Literature and a minor
in German. Following her undergraduate studies, Hanna worked as an
admissions counselor for Manhattan School of Music and Swarthmore College,
where she worked closely with students and faculty to outreach to
prospective students through program development and counseling. In 2007,
Hanna returned to academia to study social policy and practice at the
University of Pennsylvania (2009), where she received a MSW.
During her graduate studies, Hanna conducted research in the Republic of
Korea focusing on the policy and practice responses to intimate partner
violence in South Korea. In addition, she completed two year-long
internships at Project Rainbow and Bryn Mawr College, where she provided
individual and group counseling to young women. Hanna is excited to be
joining the Center for Undergraduate Research and Fellowships. She is
looking forward to taking part in increasing access to research and
fellowship opportunities and working with students to explore and achieve
their academic and professional goals.
Psychology Department Hosts Upcoming
Colloquium
Morris
Moscovitch, Ph.D., Professor of Psychology
and the Max and Gianna Glassman Chair in
Neuropsychology and Aging at the University
of Toronto, will present a Psychology
colloquium on September 9, 2009, at 4 p.m.,
Driscoll Hall Auditorium, Room 132.
In
recognition of his lifetime contribution to
the basic science of psychology, Dr. Moscovitch recently was awarded the William
James Fellow Award from the Association for
Psychological Science. Dr. Moscovitch’s
research program aims to understand the
cognitive and neural bases of memory,
attention, face recognition, and object
recognition, and he will discuss his most
recent work at the colloquium. For more
information, please
click here. Please contact
Dr. Irene Kan for details.
Faith and Culture Lecture: "Notes Toward a
Poetics of the Sacramental Sublime: What
Hopkins Has to Teach Us"
Dr.
Paul Mariani, University Professor of English at Boston College, will be the
keynote speaker at the Faith and Culture Lecture on Thursday, September 17,
2009, at 7 p.m. in the Driscoll Hall Auditorium. The title of the lecture
is: "Notes Toward a Poetics of the Sacramental Sublime: What Hopkins Has to
Teach Us." There will be a reception immediately following the lecture in
the Driscoll Hall Atrium. The lecture is free and open to the public. Please
contact Marie Kelly for more
information.
Cultural Film Series Explores "Hidden
Treasures"
SEPT. 12, 13, 14. PRICE OF LIFE, directed by Dan Hunt and Margaux LaPointe,
2009, USA, 45 m. This documentary, filmed by a group of undergraduate
Villanova students over the course of a semester, depicts the transformation
of a Philadelphia ex-offender into a leader of community change and a
spokesperson for the National Comprehensive Center for Fathers. MONDAY
SPEAKER: Villanova student filmmakers. SEPT 19, 20, 21, ACROSS THE UNIVERSE,
directed by Julie Taymor, 2007, USA, 133 m. Taymor’s distinctively
flamboyant visual flair is show-cased in this musical, set during the
turbulent 1960s and featuring more than 30 songs by the Beatles. MONDAY
SPEAKER: Joan D. Lynch. SEPT 26, 27, 28, THEY WERE EXPENDABLE – directed by
John Ford, 1942, USA, 132 m. Based on real-life heroics, this action film
focuses on skirmishes between American and Japanese forces in the
Philippines, early in World War II. Star Robert Montgomery provides a sense
of authenticity, as he actually served on a PT-boat and later commanded a
destroyer at Normandy. MONDAY SPEAKER: Rick Worland.
The CULTURAL FILM & LECTURE SERIES, FALL 2009, will take place in the
Connelly Center Cinema and is presented by the Communication Department and
the Office of Student Development. This series, "Hidden Treasures," features
an eclectic roster of works that have been overlooked in the past. Each of
the films has been selected by one or more people closely associated with
the CFS. Every film will be shown four times: Saturdays at 7 p.m.; Sundays
at 3:30 and 7 p.m.; Mondays at 7 p.m. Admission is FREE for students with ID
and $5.00 for all others. Tickets are available at the Connelly Center
Cinema box office, approximately 20 minutes prior to any showing. For more
information, call (610) 519-4750 on weekdays between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., or
consult the CFS Web site.
Villanova Celebrates Constitution Day on
Thursday, Sept. 17
The
Matthew J. Ryan Center and Department of Political Science will celebrate
Constitution Day on Thursday, Sept. 17, with a series of special events open
to the entire campus community and surrounding areas. Stephen Knott, Ph.D.,
an associate professor of political science in the U.S. Naval War College,
will lecture on the topic of "Alexander Hamilton's Constitutional Legacy,"
in the Radnor/St. David's Room of Connelly Center at 9:30 a.m. David Tucker,
Ph.D., an associate professor in the Department of Defense Analysis and
Co-Director of the Center on Terrorism and Irregular Warfare at the Naval
Postgraduate School, Monterey, California, will lecture on the subject of
"American Politics in the 1790's: Thomas Jefferson and the Third Way," in
the Radnor/St. David's Room of Connelly at 10:45 a.m. At 1 p.m., Drs. Knott
and Tucker will conduct a roundtable discussion, "Hamilton vs. Jefferson,"
in the Connelly Center Cinema. For more information, please contact
Susan Fiorentino.
Reconsiderations III: A Conference on the
Thought and Legacy of Augustine of Hippo
The
Augustinian Institute sponsors an international conference on St.
Augustine and his thought under the title
"Reconsiderations." The first was held in 2003 and the second in 2006.
On both occasions, leading scholars from around the world were invited to
Villanova, and their papers were published in a special issue of the journal
Augustinian.
On Thursday, Sept., 17, Isabelle Bochet, S.F.X., Institut Catholique
Institut d’Études Augustiniennes, Paris, will deliver the "Saint Augustine
Lecture" entitled, "Scripture in Augustine's Controversy with Porphyry."
For a complete list of speakers and locations, please
click here.
Graduate Studies Publishes Most Recent Issue
of Newsletter
The
Graduate Studies Newsletter is published quarterly by the Office of
Graduate Studies at Villanova. A different program is highlighted with every
publication. In these newsletters, you will also find student and faculty
profiles, faculty and departmental news, thesis and dissertations listings,
student accomplishments, news on alumni, and more.
In this issue, you'll find feature stories on the Classical Studies and
Biology Graduate Programs along with lots of other news.
Check out the June 2009 issue here.
Learn More About UNIT's Initiative, myNova
The University is phasing in Sungard's Luminis product, which is an
online gateway known as a
"portal" that will eventually take the place of our current Villanova
internal (logged in) homepage for faculty, staff, students and alumni.
The
myNova
portal is customized to bring you targeted information you need based on
your role within the University. You will log into
myNOVA and have access to many of
Villanova's applications, such as E-mail, Banner, Blackboard, Novasis, and
more, without having to log in again to those applications.
is Villanova's web portal (online gateway) that provides improved and
personalized access to online, internal Villanova information and Web
services (E-mail, Web, Banner, Blackboard/WebCT Vista, Novasis, etc.) for
faculty, staff, and students.
On August 3, 2009, myNova goes live. The current internal (logged in) VU
homepage will be replaced with your new personalized portal.
Learn more about
here.
"Geckos -- Tails to Toepads” Now at the
Academy of Natural Sciences
Aaron Bauer, Ph.D., a professor of biology and
holder of the Gerald M. Lemole, M.D., Endowed Chair in Integrative
Biology, is a research associate at the Academy of Natural Sciences in
Philadelphia and a world-renown expert of geckos.
Learn
more about the exhibit, “Geckos -- Tails to Toepads, which is now at the
Academy,” here.
In addition, Dr. Bauer was quoted in a Philadelphia Inquirer article
entitled,
"There's an 'ole 'ost of geckos out there." He also was featured in a
Norristown Times-Herald article entitled,
"Geckos get their own show."
Most recently, on Monday, July 6, Dr. Bauer was a guest on the WHYY show
"Radio Times."
Listen to the broadcast here.
Find A&S Departments on Facebook
Many A&S departments have
developed Facebook pages. Find them here:
Department of Humanities,
Department of Psychology, and the
Department of Philosophy. Become a fan today!
Former Mendel Medalist Nominated to be Head
of the National Institutes of Health
From the New York Times. President Obama on Wednesday, July
8, nominated Dr. Francis S. Collins, a pioneering geneticist who led
the government’s successful effort to sequence the human genome, as head of
the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Collins was awarded the Mendel Medal
in 1998.
Read the full article here.
Psychology Department Inducts New Members
Into the Psi Chi Honor Society
On
Thursday, April 23, 2009, twenty students
were inducted into Psi Chi. Psi Chi is the
national honor society in psychology,
founded in 1929 for the purposes of
encouraging, stimulating, and maintaining
excellence in scholarship, and advancing the
science of psychology. Membership is open to
graduate and undergraduate men and women who
are making the study of psychology one of
their major interests and who meet the
minimum qualifications. Psi Chi is a member
of the Association of College Honor
Societies and is an affiliate of the
American Psychological Association (APA) and
the Association for Psychological Science (APS).
Ninth Annual MPA Dinner Features Keynote
Speaker Arthur Haywood
Article
Courtesy of David Mrochko (M.P.A. December
2009).
Pictured in the photo at the left:
Craig Wheeland, Christine Palus, Arthur
Haywood, and Catherine Wilson.
This
year’s M.P.A. Dinner was held on May 2,
2009, in Connelly Center. The evening began
with a reception in the President’s Lounge,
followed by a meal and keynote address. More
than 40 current students, alumni, faculty,
and friends attended the ninth annual event,
which was highlighted by the keynote
speaker, Mr. Arthur Haywood, the General
Counsel to Nueva Esperanza, Inc., and
Esperanza USA, and the head of Haywood, LLC.
Mr. Haywood’s work over the years has helped
to produce jobs, housing, and opportunity
for persons and communities that have been
traditionally excluded. He received his B.A.
magna cum laude from Morehouse College in
1979, his M.Sc. from the London School of
Economics and Political Science in 1981, and
his J.D. from the University of Michigan Law
School in 1985. Arthur Haywood has been a
member of the Pennsylvania Bar since 1985.
Throughout Mr. Haywood’s speech, he focused
on his commitment to public service and
stressed the importance of community
involvement. Weaving humor and wisdom, Mr.
Haywood discussed the struggles and
successes of Nueva Esperanza, as it has
grown from a small local organization into a
large organization of national prominence.
Nueva Esperanza continues to serve
underprivileged communities by bringing
educational and economic opportunities to
those who would otherwise be excluded. Mr.
Haywood reassured students that their
commitment to the community and to public
service is both admirable and rewarding.
The M.PA. Program’s Non-Profit Coordinator,
Dr. Catherine Wilson, said, “I have known
Art Haywood for eight years when I first
started my dissertation research on
Esperanza. He has always displayed a
consistent understanding of the true meaning
of public service, both in his work as
senior legal counsel at Esperanza – one of
the largest and most reputable Hispanic
faith-based organizations in the United
States – and in his recent Democratic
primary win as contender for the position of
Cheltenham Township Commissioner. It was an
honor to have him as keynote speaker at our
dinner and to learn that his work has been
not only a professional service but also a
genuine vocation.”
For more information about the Villanova
M.P.A. Program, please visit the program’s
Web site, or contact the M.P.A.
Director,
Christine Palus, Ph.D.
The College Welcomes New Department Chairpersons
John
H. Durnin, Ph.D., an associate professor and program coordinator of
Undergraduate Teacher Education, will serve as Acting Chair of the
Department of Education and Human Services during the 2009-2010 academic
year. The College extends its sincere thanks to Connie Titone, Ed.D., who
has served the department and the College as chair for the past eight years,
for her dedicated service and leadership.
The Department of
Education and Human Services prepares teachers, human service providers,
counselors, supervisors, and administrators. Through its certification and
licensure programs, the Department combines theory with practical experience
in school and community settings to help improve the quality of the lives of
others.
The department offers an undergraduate major, with concentrations in
Elementary Education, Secondary Education, and Human Services. The
department also offers a graduate program with three master's degree
programs: Counseling and Human Relations, Teacher Education, and Educational
Leadership. The department also offers a Post-Master's program with
concentrations in Counseling or Educational Leadership, as well as a
Teacher's Certification program. |
In
addition, A. Maria Toyoda, Ph.D., an assistant professor of political
science and director of the East Asian Studies Program, will serve as the
new chair of the Department
of Political Science beginning in August 2009. Dr. Toyoda will replace
Robert Langran, Ph.D., who has served as acting chair of the department
during the 2008-2009 academic year. The College also thanks Dr. Langran for
his service to the College.
The Department of Political Science’s mission is to enable students to
understand politics in the United States, in other countries, and among
nations. It seeks to satif]>On
Friday, Nov. 20, Kenneth R. Miller, Ph.D., a professor of biology at Brown
University, will deliver the
2009 Mendel Medal
Lecture -- Darwinian Grandeur: A Biologist’s Journey Through Evolution’s
“Tangled Bank,” -- in the Connelly Center Cinema (refreshments will be served at 2
p.m.; the lecture begins at 2:30 p.m.). This is an event not to be missed.
On Saturday, he will be awarded the Mendel Medal.
Dr. Miller is a pre-eminent evolutionary scientist. In addition, Miller is
the author of the acclaimed book, Finding Darwin’s God: A Scientist’s
Search for Common Ground Between God and Evolution, a lively and
cutting-edge analysis of the key issues that seem to divide science and
religion. He contends that, properly understood, evolution adds depth and
meaning not only to a scientific view of the world, but also to a spiritual
one.
The
Mendel Medal
is awarded to outstanding
scientists who have done much by their painstaking work to advance the cause
of science, and, by their lives and their standing before the world as
scientists, have demonstrated that between true science and true religion
there is no intrinsic conflict.
Dr. Miller was the lead witness in the Pennsylvania
“intelligent design” case, which was the first direct challenge brought in
U.S. federal courts against a public school district that required the
presentation of “intelligent design” as an alternative to evolution to
explain the origin of life.
Learn more about Dr. Miller and his work here.
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Save the Date: Villanova to
Host the 38th Annual Mid-Atlantic Region
Association for Asian Studies Conference
Villanova
will host the
38th Annual Mid-Atlantic Region Association
for Asian Studies Conference, "Asia Beyond
Borders," on October 30 to November 1.
For preliminary information, please
click here. More information to come!
Also, feel free to contact
Dr. Maria Toyoda, Conference Manager 2009,
for details.
Trip to Jordan and Egypt: December 26 to
January 6
Join
us on a
trip to Jordan and Egypt. Learn more
here!
Villanova Theatre Proudly Announces Its
2009-2010 Season
Villanova
Theatre proudly announces its 2009-2010 Season. Subscriptions are now
available and may be ordered by calling the Villanova Theatre Box Office at
610-519-7474. Faculty, staff, and alumni subscriptions cost just $40 plus
handling. The Zoo Story by Edward Albee and directed by Joanna Rotté
-- September 22 – October 4, 2009; As You Like It by William
Shakespeare and directed by Harriet Power -- November 10 – 22, 2009;
Medea by Euripides and directed by Shawn Kairschner -- February 2 – 14,
2010; and Annie Get Your Gun, book by Herbert and Dorothy Fields,
music and lyrics by Irving Berlin, directed by Valerie Joyce -- March 23 –
28 and April 6-18, 2010.
Villanova Co-hosts
American Ornithologists' Union Annual
Meeting
Villanova
will co-host the 127th stated meeting of the
AOU, the largest professional society of
ornithologists in the Western Hemisphere.
The meeting, taking place at UPenn August
12-15, includes invited and contributed
presentations, along with special events.
For more information,
click here.
VU Team Produces Virtual-Reality Tour of St.
Paul's Basilica for Vatican Web Site
Be
sure to check out the work of Villanova students working in the Vatican
here.
Related to this significant work, Bryan Crable, Ph.D., an associate
professor and chair of the Department of Communication, was featured in a
recent front-page Philadelphia Inquirer article entitled,
"Villanova team films virtual reality of the Vatican." The Chronicle
of Higher Education also wrote about the project in an article entitled,
"College Students Help Connect the Vatican to Internet 2.0."
Photo to the left: In the Sistine Chapel, Villanova's Bryan Crable
and Samantha Coveleski discuss filming. From the Inquirer article:
Coveleski, 22, said the experience filming inside the Sistine Chapel, as
well as working in the basilicas, left her "speechless."
"We were really able to go past the red rope, behind the altar, back where
the pope might stand, to get these beautiful shots, and that was pretty
incredible," said Coveleski, a communication major from Lewes, Del., who
graduated in May 2009.
Learn more about this project here.
Villanova Astronomer Ed Guinan Featured in
Philadelphia Inquirer
From
the front page of the
Philadelphia Inquirer. Villanova
astronomer Edward Guinan, Ph.D., has had
some adventures over the years, from
scrounging for black-market cement to make
Iran's first high-powered telescope to
discovering the rings around Neptune at an
observatory in New Zealand. Learn more here.
Learn more here.
PHOTO CREDIT: SHARON
GEKOSKI-KIMMEL/Staff Photographer for the
Philadelphia Inquirer
Location, location, location: Villanova
astronomer Edward Guinan is searching near
dimmer stars for planets that are not too
hot, not too cold, but just right.
Patristic, Medieval, and Renaissance Studies Hosts
34th International PMR Conference
The
PMR committee this year extends a special invitation to scholars from
all disciplines in these fields to address our plenary theme, "Ora et Labora:
Pray and Work," featuring John Van Engen University of Notre Dame, author of
Sisters and Brothers of the Common Life and M. Michele Mulchahey
Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, Toronto, author of First the
Bow is Bent in Study on Oct. 16-18, 2009. For Call for Papers details,
please
click here.
Call for Papers: Education as a Human Right
Special
issue of the
Journal for
Peace and Justice Studies
on Education as a Human Right. Deadline for
submissions: November 15, 2009.
Click here under "Call for Papers" for
more information.
Call for Papers: Who is My Enemy? Religious
Hope in a Time of Fear
The
Theology Institute at Villanova will sponsor
its annual conference -- "Who
is My Enemy? Religious Hope in a Time of
Fear"
-- on October 27-28, 2009.
Learn more here.
Call for Nominations: 2010 Praxis Award in
Professional Ethics
The
Ethics Program invites nominations for the
2010 Praxis Award in Professional Ethics. To highlight and celebrate the
work of professionals and academics in the field of professional ethics, the
Ethics Program of Villanova University’s College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences recognizes the work of such a person by awarding him or her with
the Praxis Award.
Learn more here. |
College Enters the Blogosphere!

The
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has
started a blog to help its many
constituencies stay well informed on
Colleges news, events, and initiatives.
View the blog here.
Find the College on Facebook
Become
a
fan of the
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences on
Facebook. This is an ideal way for all
Facebook
users to stay informed of College news
and events.
Click here to visit the College on Facebook.
Follow the College on Twitter
Follow
the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
on Twitter.
A Video Message From the Dean
Check out this
video message from Rev. Kail C. Ellis,
O.S.A., Ph.D., dean of the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences. This video also
may be found at the bottom right-hand side
of the
College's home page.
Reminder: Grant Development Web Site Live
Faculty are strongly
encouraged to visit the
Grant Development Web site. Here you
will find the
guidelines for the submission of proposals.
Explore iTunes University on the Web

Download faculty lectures and subscribe to
podcasts all at
iTunes University. Connect to what is happening at Villanova anytime,
anywhere.
Visit Mideastwire.com Today!
The College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences is pleased to offer to its students, faculty,
and staff access to
Mideastwire.com, an Internet-based
news service that employs a team of translators from around the region to
gather important stories from and about the Middle East.
Learn more here.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences Partners with
the Financial Times
Providing
Students With Global Perspectives on World Events
The
College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences has partnered with the
Financial Times, internationally recognized for its
authoritative news, comment, and analysis, to provide students and
faculty with full access to the FT’s electronic edition and to
FT.com’s Level Two subscription service. This partnership will
enable the University to further educate its students on
socio-economic and geo-political issues that affect everyone
regardless of a student’s major.
How To Access the Financial Times Online
There are many ways to access the FT online:
IT Corner
-
Confused about how to advertise your announcements and events?
Please check out the College's
Announcement(s) Quick Guide.
-
Creating a Digital Sign. Located in the lobby of the St. Augustine
Center for the Liberal Arts and the west lobby entrance of the Mendel
Science Center, the purpose of these signs is to display University and
College news, events, and other special announcements. Powered by the
RISE Display Network software, the College can create announcements that
serve to further educate students, faculty, staff, and visitors about
happenings within the College.
Learn how to create a digital sign here.
-
2009 PC Refresh. There will be a refresh of full-time faculty
computers this summer. For the first time, the (new) 13-inch MacBook
will be an option (requiring additional funding from departments). More
information will be forthcoming.
-
The College IT Office: Supporting the Technological Needs of the
College’s Faculty and Staff.
The College provides a vast array of supplemental and vital IT
support to its faculty and staff. The College IT Office, which reports
to the Office of the Dean in the College, employs a staff of talented
and dedicated IT professionals who work to meet specific needs within
all of the College’s unique departments and programs.
Learn more here.
-
Faculty and Staff Photographs. Did you have your photo taken at one
of the recent faculty and staff photo shoots? If you did, then you can
find your photo archived
here.
Please log in with your user name and password.
If you need
your photo added to your
Bio Page, please e-mail
Elisa.
Save the Dates!
Please mark your calendars for these important
dates:
August 20-23 New Student Orientation and Registration
August 24 Classes Begin
August 30 Last Day for Dropping and/or
Adding Classes
Please
click here for the complete academic calendar.
Event Round-up
Be
sure to visit the
College's home
page for a more complete rundown of upcoming events!
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Faculty Scholarship
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Pamela Blewitt, Ph.D., has published a
paper with three former graduate students, Keiran Rump, Stephanie
Shealy, and Samantha Cook. The paper, in the Journal of
Educational Psychology, is entitled, “Shared book reading: When
and how questions affect young children’s word learning.” Dr.
Blewitt also co-authored three posters at the recent meetings of the
Society for Research in Child Development in Denver, Colorado,
co-authored by former graduate students Alexis Dolena, Megan Fedor,
and Autumn Wyant.
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Rebecca Brand, Ph.D., presented three
posters at the Society for Research in Child Development meeting in
Denver, Colorado. They are entitled, “Parental Perceptions of
Infant Screen-time Predict Foreground and Background Exposure to
Videos in Children Under 2,” “Structure in Mothers’ Demonstrations
to Infants of Objects,” and “Non-Parents Use Motionese When
Demonstrating Objects for Infants,” and the last was co-authored
with five-year BA/MS student Courtney Casperson.
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Nicole Else-Quest, Ph.D., traveled to
Denver in April to present her meta-analytic research on
cross-national gender differences in mathematical achievement,
attitudes, and affect at the biennial meeting for the Society for
Research in Child Development.
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Francis A. Galgano, Ph.D., associate
professor and chair, Department of Geography and the Environment,
recently published two papers: the first, titled, "Shoreline
Behavior Along the Atlantic Coast of Delaware," was published in the
Middle States Geographer in May 2009; and the second, titled,
"The Borderless Dilemma of Contemporary Maritime Piracy: Its
Geography and Trends," was published in the Pennsylvania
Geographer in July 2009. Dr. Galgano also recently presented a
paper titled, "Climate Change Models and Outcomes: An Environmental
Security Perspective," at the 8th International Conference on
Military Geosciences in Vienna, Austria, on 15 June 2009. The
Austrian Army, NATO, and the U.S. Army Research Office jointly
hosted the conference. He also served on the editorial board of the
22d edition of Goode’s World Atlas, which was published by
Rand McNally in July 2009.
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Judy Giesberg, Ph.D., an assistant
professor of history, has published an article, “The Fortieth
Congress, Southern Women, and the Gender Politics of Postwar
Occupation,” in Occupied Women: Gender and Military Occupation
and the American Civil War, LeeAnn Whites and Alecia P. Long,
eds., Louisiana State University Press, 2009: 185-193.
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Keith G. Henderson, Ph.D., an associate
professor in the Department of Geography and the Environment,
recently presented a paper titled, “Local Climate Effects of Autumn
Leaf-Drop,” at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American
Geographers in Las Vegas, Nevada.
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Irene Kan, Ph.D., recently published a
paper entitled, "Contribution of prior semantic knowledge to new
episodic learning in amnesia," in the Journal of Cognitive
Neuroscience. This work was done in collaboration with Michael
P. Alexander, M.D., of Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital and Harvard
Medical School, and Mieke Verfaellie, Ph.D., of the Memory Disorders
Research Center, VA Boston Healthcare System, and Boston University
Medical Center. Dr. Kan also was awarded the Christian R. and Mary
F. Lindback Foundation Minority Junior Faculty Grant.
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Deborah Kendzierski, Ph.D., a professor
of psychology, presented research at the annual meeting of the North
American Society for the Psychology of Sport and Physical Activity
held in Austin, Texas, in June. The poster, “Expertise and
Self-Prototype Matching in Distance Runners,” was coauthored with
former graduate students Tracy L. Jackson and Kara-Lynne Kerr.
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Steven Krauss, Ph.D., presented a poster
entitled, “Autonomy, divinity and community morality and value
priorities in Turkey and USA,” at the Association for Psychological
Science Annual Convention in San Francisco. This work was done in
collaboration with Ozge Gurel, a former Villanova graduate student.
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John Kurtz, Ph.D., and Patrick
Markey, Ph.D., co-authored a study presented to the Society for
Personality Assessment in Chicago last March. The presentation was
entitled, “Erikson’s Psychosocial Crises from the Perspective of the
Interpersonal Circumplex.” Dr. Kurtz has also recently presented
advanced training workshops in personality assessment to military
psychologists at Madigan Army Medical Center in Tacoma, Washington,
and Eisenhower Army Medical Center in Augusta, Georgia.
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Helen K. Lafferty, Ph. D., Associate
Dean and College Professor of the Liberal Arts and Sciences and the
Department of Education and Human Services, was invited to teach at
the University of San Francisco in its Institute for Catholic
Educational Leadership (ICEL) this summer. Her course was on current
leadership issues and decision-making processes that impact on
Catholic school leaders and administrators. Her class was comprised
of master's and doctoral students. Patrick Kennedy, VU '95,
president of SGA his junior and senior years, was a student in her
class.
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J. Harold Leaman, Ph.D., an associate
professor in the Department of Geography and the Environment,
recently presented a paper titled, “Chad and Oil: The Resource
Curse,” at the Annual Meeting of the Association of American
Geographers in Las Vegas, Nevada.
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Gina Ligon, Ph.D.,
published an article, “Development of outstanding leadership: A life
narrative approach,” which was selected by The Leadership
Quarterly Journal's editorial board as “The Most Influential
Paper of 2008.” This award comes with a monetary prize and an
expense paid trip to present a colloquium on her work at the Academy
of Management’s Annual Leadership Meeting at the Center for Creative
Leadership on September 1. Dr. Ligon’s co-authors on this paper are
Samuel Hunter of Penn State and Michael Mumford of University of
Oklahoma.
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Timothy McCall, Ph.D., an assistant professor of history, has
published the following two articles: “The Gendering of Libertas and
the International Gothic: Carlo Crivelli’s Ascoli Annunciation,”
Studies in Iconography 30 (2009), 168-197, and “Visual
Imagery and Historical Invisibility: Antonia Torelli, her Husband,
and his Mistress in Fifteenth-century Parma,” Renaissance Studies
23/3 (2009), 269-287.
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Emmet McLaughlin, Ph.D., a professor and director of the
Graduate Program in History, has recently published “Paul in
Early Anabaptism,” in A Companion to Paul in the Reformation
(ed. R. Ward Holder) (Leiden 2009) pp.215-240.
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Charlene Mires, Ph.D., an associate professor of history,
recently has published two articles: one related to her work in
public history, and the other connected to her current research on
the many local campaigns to become the home of the United Nations.
"Invisible House, Invisible Slavery: Struggles of Public History at
Independence National Historical Park," in Culture and Belonging
in Divided Societies: Contestation and Symbolic Landscapes, ed.
Marc H. Ross (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009): 216-37, and
"Sault St. Marie as the Capital of the World? Stellanova Osborn and
the Pursuit of the United Nations, 1945," Michigan Historical
Review (Spring 2009): 61-82.
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Bernard F. Reilly, Ph.D., Professor Emeritus, presented a
paper, “Alfonso VI of León-Castile (1065-1109) and His Bishops," on
April 24, 2009, at a conference, “Alfonso VI en Nueva York,
Encuentro de Estudiosos con Ocasión del IX Centenario de la Muerte
del Rey Alfonso VI (1109-2009),” held at New York
University. The conference was intended to serve as introduction to
another, three-day conference on the same theme, to be held in León
and Sahagún, Spain, in October 2009. On May 8, 2009, Professor
Reilly
presented a paper, “Rodrigo Jimenez de Rada: Writing History in
Thirteenth-century Iberia,” at the International Congress on
Medieval Studies in Western Michigan University. His was one of a
series of papers given at three panels there in order to celebrate
the 80th birthday of the historian of medieval Spain, Professor
Joseph F. O’Callaghan, emeritus from Fordham University.
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Lisa J. Rodrigues, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the
Department of Geography and the Environment, was selected to be a
fellow at the Marine Geoscience Leadership Symposium, in Washington,
D.C. This was a competitive selection process and recognized Dr.
Rodrigues’ leadership in the field of marine/oceanographic research.
Dr. Rodrigues was given a grant to attend the symposium and present
her research. Additionally, she was able to network with funding
agencies and attend grant proposal writing workshops.
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Deborah Schussler, Ed.D., recently published the
article, "Beyond content: How teachers manage classrooms to
facilitate academic engagement for disengaged students," in the
publication, Theory Into Practice 48(2),114-121.
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Suzanne Toton, Ed.D., a professor of theology and religious
studies, and coordinator of the Villanova/Catholic Relief Services
Partnership, gave a paper entitled, "Savings and Internal Lending
Communities: Catholic Relief Services Building the Capacity for
Peace in Rwanda," at the 55th Annual Convention, College Theology
Society at Notre Dame University on May 29. In addition, she gave
the keynote address entitled, "The Catholic University Advancing
Urban Solidarity," for the Walsh University's 34th Annual Philosophy
and Theology Symposium, Canton, Ohio, March 20-21, 2009. Toton also
was a panelist along with Charles Currie, S.J., president of the
Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, and David O'Brien,
Ph.D., Loyola Professor Emeritus of Roman Catholic Studies and
History at the College of the Holy Cross, for the Cabrini College
President's Inaugural Academic Symposium, "From Service to
Solidarity: New Directions in Catholic Higher Education," on
November 14, 2008.
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Ingeborg Ward, Ph.D. and Byron Ward, Ph.D., published an
article in the April 2009 issue of Hormones and Behavior, the
official journal of the Society for Behavioral Neuroendocrinology.
The article, which is entitled, “Conceptual and Technical
Contributions from a Pioneer in Behavioral Endocrinology,” was a
tribute to Professor Arnold A. Gerall, the recipient of the 2008
Daniel S. Lehrman Lifetime Achievement Award in Behavioral
Neuroendocrinology.
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Nathaniel Weston, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the
Department of Geography and the Environment, was a co-author for a
paper titled, “Benthic metabolism and the fate of dissolved
inorganic nitrogen in intertidal sediments,” which was recently
published in Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science.
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Dennis D. Wykoff, Ph.D., an assistant professor of biology, has
published an article in the June issue of the peer-reviewed journal
Genetics entitled, "Candida glabrata PHO4 is necessary and
sufficient for Pho2-independent transcription of phosphate
starvation genes." The first author of this paper is
Christine Kerwin who earned an M.S. in biology at Villanova
in 2008. This work dissects a signaling pathway in a yeast that is
commensal with humans and highlights the idea that bioinformatic
techniques must be followed up with molecular genetics. This study
suggests that evolution in trans can modify the characteristics of
an entire signal transduction pathway, which is a controversial
topic in evolutionary biology.
Alumni in the News
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Bridget Bucardo-Rivera, '02, an honors
and economics dual major, is completing her master's degree in Fordham's
International Political Economy and Development Program. She was
selected as an International Development Fellow with Catholic Relief
Services (CRS). She will be placed next fall with CRS in Nicaragua.
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Frank DiBello, '64, who received a
bachelor's degree in mathematics, has been named the interim president
of Space Florida.
Learn more here.
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Samuel Freedman (Dec. '08 B.A.,
Philosophy) has been awarded a Fulbright to serve as an English Teaching
Assistant in New Delhi, India, next year. In the Fall of 2007, Sam
studied abroad in India, Nepal, and Tibet as a Connelly-Delouvrier
International Scholar. He documented his experiences in Asia in an
article published in October '08 in the Travel Section of the
Philadelphia Inquirer. After his Fulbright year, Sam will return to
the United States to pursue a Ph.D. in Asian Studies or Philosophy.
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Carolyn Hurwitz ('09 B.S., Biology) was
notified that she is an alternate for a Fulbright Grant to pursue a
course of study in food culture and communication in Italy.
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Timothy Johnson, '09, who received a
bachelor's degree is history, wrote his senior paper on “The British in
Philadelphia: The Mid-Eighteenth Century Colonial Experience.” His
opinion piece, "Unaltered beauty tells story best," appeared in the
Philadelphia Inquirer on July 8. Johnson currently is a graduate
student in the University of Pennsylvania's History Department.
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Jennifer Riley (A&S '99, M.A. History,
'01) graduated from Temple University Beasley School of Law in May 2009.
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Samuel Silverman (’09, Political
Science/Geography) has received a
2009 Critical Language
Scholarship to study Mandarin Chinese this summer at Soochow
University, located in the historic cultural center of Suzhou, Jiangsu
Province in central-eastern China. Sam hopes to remain in China next
year teaching English. The Critical Language Scholarship, sponsored by
the U.S. Department of State and the Bureau of Educational and Cultural
Affairs, is administered by the Council of American Overseas Research
Centers (CAORC). It offers intensive summer language institutes overseas
in 11 critical-need foreign languages. The program began in 2006 in an
effort to expand dramatically the number of Americans studying and
mastering critical need foreign languages. Sam is the first Villanovan
to receive this award.
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Robert F. Smith, Ph.D., earned a master's
degree in history from Villanova in 1998. In September 2008, he earned a
Ph.D. in history from Lehigh University. He recently was appointed
Assistant Dean for Humanities and Social Sciences at Northampton
Community College. He and his wife recently welcomed their first child,
Samuel.
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Kevin Woods ('07 B.S., Mechanical
Engineering; Ph.D. candidate in ME) has received a SMART Scholarship
from the Department of Defense (http://www.asee.org/fellowships/smart/)
to complete his doctoral studies in Mechanical Engineering at Villanova.
The Science, Mathematics And Research for Transformation (SMART)
Scholarship for Service Program is an opportunity for students pursuing
an undergraduate or graduate degree in Science, Technology, Engineering,
and Mathematics (STEM) disciplines to receive a full scholarship in
exchange for a period of full-time civilian employment with a Department
of Defense organization. Kevin is the first Villanova student to
received this award.
Faculty and Staff in the News
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Joseph Betz, Ph.D., a professor of philosophy, received the
Lawrence C. Gallen, O.S.A., Faculty Service Award.
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Thomas W. Busch, Ph.D., a professor of philosophy, received the
Outstanding Faculty Mentor Teaching Award.
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Bill Cowen, director of the public relations program in the
Department of Communication, was quoted in a recent Philadelphia
Inquirer article entitled,
"Nonprofits tap online networks to raise funds."
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Barbara Cullen in the Office of International Studies won the
Facultas Award this year at the annual faculty and staff picnic. The
Facultas Award acknowledges and honors exceptional staff who provide
vital, yet often unnoticed, services essential to the smooth and
efficient functioning of the Villanova community.
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Frank Galgano, Ph.D., associate professor and chair of the
Department of Geography and the Environment, was featured in a recent
article,
"Sustainability for a Year," which appeared in
Inside Higher Ed.
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Michael H. Prosch, Ph.D., a professor of philosophy, received the
Pohlhaus-Stracciolini Award for Teaching Excellence.
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Jody Ross, an instructor in the English Department, was featured
in a recent article,
"Don't dismiss journalism schools just because newspapers are in
trouble," which appeared in
OJR:
The Online Journalism Review.
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Klaus Volpert, Ph.D., an associate professor of mathematics,
received the Christian R. and Mary F. Lindback Award for Outstanding
Teaching.
Students in the News
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Psychology graduate student Rebecca DeMoor
recently attended the annual conference for the Society of Interpersonal
Theory and Research in Toronto. At this conference, she presented a
paper co-authored with Drs. Patrick Markey and John Kurtz entitled,
“Convergent validity of the PAI interpersonal scales with the IIP-SC.”
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Kyle Haney, a psychology major, has recently
been awarded the Villanova Undergraduate Research Award for her
investigation of cognitive processes underlying mental rotation strategy
using an eye tracker.
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Amy Richards
('10 Honors) has been selected to represent the state of Pennsylvania
this summer at the
Henry Clay
Student Congress. U.S. Senators from each of the 50 states are asked
by the Henry Clay Center for Statesmanship to recommend one college
junior from their state to attend the Student Congress. Amy was
nominated by Senator Robert Casey.
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