508 research outputs found

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    © 2021, L. Cassidy, D. Hannibal, S. Semple, B. McCowan. This is an author produced version of a paper published in AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PRIMATOLOGY uploaded in accordance with the publisher’s self- archiving policy. The final published version (version of record) is available online at the link. Some minor differences between this version and the final published version may remain. We suggest you refer to the final published version should you wish to cite from it

    ESTHER C. CASSIDY

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    ESTHER C. CASSIDY Inducted: 1999 Citation: Science policy, physics, electrical engineering For leadership of NBS/NIST Congressional relations in turbulent years when existing NBS programs were proposed for elimination (and defended successfully) and major new programs including the Baldrige Awards, Manufacturing Extension Program and Advanced Technology Program were defined, established and implemented. Tenure: 1955-1997 Birth: 1933, Upper Marlboro, Maryland Education: Manhattanville College, BA (Physics), 1955 Positions held: Physical Scientist, Research and Development Scientific Adviser to U.S. Representative Teno Roncalio (D-WY) U.S. Department of Commerce Federal Women's Committee Representative Director of Congressional and Legislative Affairs Honors: U.S. Department of Commerce: Silver Medal, 1970; Science and Technology Fellowship, 1973?74; U.S. Department of Commerce and U.S. Energy Research and Development Administration Special Achievement and Incentive Awards Memberships: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (Senior Member) American Physical Society Electrostatics Society of America Publications: Author of many articles in science and engineering journals and several patents

    Russia in Afghanistan and Chechnya: Military Strategic Culture and the Paradoxes of Asymmetric Conflict

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    The author uses a detailed assessment of the Russian experience in Afghanistan and Chechnya to draw important conclusions about asymmetric warfare. He then uses this to provide recommendations for the U.S. military, particularly the Army. Major Cassidy points out that small wars are difficult for every great power, yet are the most common kind. Even in this era of asymmetry, the U.S. Army exhibits a cultural preference for the big war paradigm. He suggests that the U.S. military in general, including the Army, needs a cultural transformation to master the challenge of asymmetry fully. From this will grow doctrine and organizational change.https://press.armywarcollege.edu/monographs/1805/thumbnail.jp

    Marsden Hartley: Race, Region, and Nation

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    At the vanguard of renewed interest in Maine\u27s influential early modernist Marsden Hartley (1877-1943), author Donna M. Cassidy appraises the contemporary social, political, and economic realities that shaped Hartley\u27s landmark late art. During the late 1930s and early 1940s, Hartley strove to represent the distinctive subjects of his native region--the North Atlantic folk, the Maine coast, and Mount Katahdin--producing work that demands an interpretive approach beyond art history\u27s customary biographical, stylistic, and thematic methodologies.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/facbooks/1008/thumbnail.jp

    Bonny Cassidy, Folio of poetry 2016

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    BACKGROUND - This folio updates my ongoing creative writing practice, with nine poem publications. The poems represent my current interest in twisted or unmoored lyric, in which the speaking voice adopts riddling or changing identities. Influences on this work include contemporary work by local and international poets Michael Farrell, Fiona Hile and Gig Ryan, Lucie Brock-Broido, Tomas Transtromer and Anne Carson. CONTRIBUTION - This poetic mode is a response to feminist poetics, specifically the question of the poetic speaker's identity and its relationship to traditions with gendered associations, such as confessionalism and activist poetry. These poems ask, who is speaking and do they have any relationship to the author apart from the imaginary; does poetry require emotional authenticity? Drawing these questions into my own context as a postcolonial settler writer, these works also ask how analogy, fable, riddle and drama might represent a particularly Australian female voice and experience. SIGNIFICANCE - This folio places my current work within a number of different contexts, national and international. Plumwood Mountain addresses the intersection of ecology and poetry, thus extending the critical framing of my contribution, which was selected by guest editors Peter Minter and Stuart Cooke. Island is a well-established print journal based in Tasmania, its poetry edited by Sarah Holland-Batt, and reaching a national audience of subscribers and wide retail distribution. Poetry (US) is America's foremost poetry journal, and this work will feature in a special issue of Australian work, edited by Robert Adamson. Finally, four of my poems will feature in Active Aesthetics, edited by Lyn Hejinian and published out of the University of California, Berkeley. This collection is published to accompany a symposium of the same name, to be held in April, and made available to a wide range of scholars, students and writers of poetry in America and Australia

    BRIDGE

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    <p>This repository contains the BRIDGE dataset from the paper <a href="https://arxiv.org/abs/2304.09853">Bridging RL Theory and Practice with the Effective Horizon</a>. The code used to generate the data is available at <a href="https://github.com/cassidylaidlaw/effective-horizon">https://github.com/cassidylaidlaw/effective-horizon</a>.</p> <p>See <strong>README.md</strong> for details about the contents of the dataset. <strong>summary.csv</strong> contains an overview of properties of the MDPs. <strong>summary_sticky.csv </strong>contains an overview of the sticky-action versions of the MDPs investigated in the paper <a href="https://arxiv.org/abs/2312.08369">The Effective Horizon Explains Deep RL Performance in Stochastic Environments</a>. <strong>bridge_dataset.zip</strong> contains the tabular representations of the MDPs and analysis results.</p> <p>If you find the dataset useful for your research, please consider citing our papers:</p> <pre><code>@inproceedings{laidlaw2023effectivehorizon, title={Bridging RL Theory and Practice with the Effective Horizon}, author={Laidlaw, Cassidy and Russell, Stuart and Dragan, Anca}, booktitle={NeurIPS}, year={2023} }</code></pre> <pre><code>@inproceedings{laidlaw2024stochasticeffectivehorizon, title={The Effective Horizon Explains Deep RL Performance in Stochastic Environments}, author={Laidlaw, Cassidy and Zhu, Banghua and Russell, Stuart and Dragan, Anca}, booktitle={ICLR}, year={2024} }</code></pre&gt

    Mobile Press-Register sleeve MP0081851

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    Bob Rogers, Bill Watkins, James Cassidy at desk / Diane Foster, Becky Blocker, Dwight Prouty / Children at table, Kyle and Mary Dickinson and Kristin Nekeri / B. Tanner and guests at table / (Saraland

    Evaluation of adherence to guidelines to prevent perinatal infections in Oregon

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    prepared by: Mark Schmidt (PhD, MPH; ABCs Surveillance Officer, Acute & Communicable Disease Program), Sean Schafer (MD; Medical Epidemiologist, HIV/STD/TB Program), Juventila Liko (MD; Epidemiologist, Immunization Program), Maureen Cassidy (MPH; Epidemiologist, Immunization Program), and Ann Thomas (MD, MPH; ABCs Principal Investigator, Acute & Communicable Disease Program).Title from PDF caption (viewed on October 16, 2020)."Adapted from the Protocol for the Evaluation of Adherence to the 2002 Revised Guidelines for the Prevention of Perinatal GBS Disease (Unpublished), by Christina Phares, PhD, Stephanie Schrag, DPhil, Elizabeth Zell, MStat, Katie Arnold, MD, Allen Craig, MD, Ruth Lynfield, MD, Janet Mohle-Boetani, MD, Aaron Roome, PhD, and Ann Thomas, MD, MPH, for the Active Bacterial Core Surveillance Team."This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Includes bibliographical references (page 10).Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English

    Building Breastfeeding Research Relations and Beyond: An Interview With Fiona Dykes

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    Professor Fiona Dykes is Professor Emerita of Maternal and Infant Health at the University of Central Lancashire in the United Kingdom (UCLAN). Fiona has a particular interest in the global, sociocultural, and political influences upon infant and young child feeding practices; her methodological expertise is in ethnography and other qualitative research methods. She founded the Maternal and Infant Nutrition and Nurture Unit (MAINN) in 2000 which she led until she retired from her full-time professorship in 2020. Fiona established the associated MAINN Conference in 2007. The MAINN conference is a 3 day, international, peer reviewed event held bi-annually in the United Kingdom and, more recently, in alternate years overseas (Sydney, Australia; Falun, Dalarna, Sweden; and Florida, United States). The conference draws together key researchers in the field of infant and young child feeding from around the world. Fiona was a founding member of the journal Maternal and Child Nutrition. She is author of Breastfeeding in Hospital: Mothers, Midwives and the Production Line (Routledge) and co-author, with Dr Tanya Cassidy, of Banking on Milk: An Ethnography of Donor Human Milk Relations (Routledge). She is also joint editor of several books including Infant and Young Child Feeding: Challenges to Implementing a Global Strategy (Wiley-Blackwell) and Ethnographic Research in Maternal and Child Health (Routledge). This interview was conducted on April 20, 2023, by Dr. Tanya Cassidy, and is based on a verbatim transcription and edited for readability

    2008 Fall Honorable Mention

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    Honorable Mention Fall The Newsletter of the Honors Program at Westminster College 2008 Influencing the Future: A new generation of Honors students participate in a historic election On the night of November 4, 2008, when Barack Obama officially received 270 electoral votes, Westminster Honors student Cooper Henderson was trapped in an elevator at the Radisson Hotel. Cooper was stuck, teary-eyed and proud, at the Utah State Democratic Party celebration, in a mass of emotional and celebratory liberals. It was a spot he had earned over the course of the last year, working hard on the campaign of Congressman Jim Matheson and volunteering extra time for the campaigns of Barack Obama and Peter Corroon. Another Honors student, Ashley Pederson, spent 16 hours on Election Day working as a receiving clerk at a local polling station. She chatted with her neighbors and heard bits of news and gossip, which she found disheartening as an Obama supporter. When Honors student Ben Rackham picked her up at 9:30 pm, after he spent the day campaigning for Obama, Ashley refused to believe his announcement that Obama won. She turned on the radio and still did not believe. When it finally sunk in, she cried, partly from joy, and partly as a release of stress from her long day working for democracy. For many Honors students, the 2008 election cycle was deep and meaningful, a powerful first opportunity to step up to the polls. The Honors program offered a class this semester called “2008 Presidential Election: Strategy & Substance.” The course was team-taught by life-long Democrat Bob Seltzer, and life-long Republican Roger Livingston. Guest speakers this semester included Utah Senator Bob Bennett, Republican Campaign Manager Jon Butler, and the former Lt. Governor of California under Reagan, John Harmer. Professor Seltzer and Professor Livingston This year, the 18–24 population turned out enmasse to campaign for their candidates and cast their votes. promoted an atmosphere of respect between parties, and they showed the students and one another courtesy, even with issues on which they passionately disagreed. Many Honors students, including Cooper, made this class a part of their election process as they searched for substantial, bipartisan information among the sea of media reportage. Honors student Cassidy Jones, another participant in the election class, tried to bring some serious thoughts to the press when Fox 13 News interviewed her on campus after the second presidential debate. Cassidy also volunteered this season at the Salt Lake City Obama Headquarters. She spent November 3 phoning Colorado voters, reminding and encouraging them to “get out and vote tomorrow.” A large group of Honors students were in rehearsal on November 4 for the Westminster production, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. The director set up a live video feed in the costume room, hoping to appease his cast. Between scenes, toga-clad Honors students dashed backstage to get the latest count. When Obama reached 270, a cheer went up from the cast that could be heard throughout the theater. Colin Crebs blames “all of the missed cues and botched lines that night” on Barack Obama and John McCain. Other Honors students found creative ways to discuss the results. Jennifer Lewis logged into a chat room and discussed the tally with people from all over the world, and Mary Enge called her sister in Ireland for the first time since July. The two girls talked until the phone card ran out, and Mary said that neither of them “could think of a time when we’ve been prouder to call ourselves American.” For a nation with a deep and real history of discrimination and violence, the election of a black president is unquestionably historic. Whether symbolic or otherwise, November 4 ushered in a new era of enthusiasm and optimism. As one might expect, Westminster Honors students were there doing their parts to bring this night about and to mark this historic occasion. -Creed Rykel Archibald News Profs Pick the Flick: SHC Presents Profs Pick the Flick a la Badenhausen The Westminster College Honors Program’s Student Honors Council hosted their first official activity of the 2008–2009 academic year on Thursday, September 25. Profs Pick the Flick is a semi-annul tradition that allows all Honors students the chance to hang out, snag some free snacks, and be culturally enriched by a quality motion picture and discussion lead by an Honors professor. This year S.H.C.’s guest professor was Honors program director-onleave, Dr. Richard Badenhausen—a man whose rare ventures outside his office, along with his fabled valiance in philosophical debates with Nick More, have earned him a mythological reputation with the incoming freshmen. Dr. Badenhausen emerged from the depths of his sabbatical for one special fall evening to present The Lives of Others to an enthusiastic (if somewhat intimidated) audience of Honors students. These students thirsted for some deeper-meaning cinematic entertainment to liberate them from marathons of Will Ferrell movies being shown every night in the residence hall lounges. The Lives of Others, winner of the 2007 Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film, is a German work that explores the activities of the East German secret police before the fall of the Berlin Wall. The plot is based on the true story of an author in East Berlin who was unknowingly under surveillance by the secret police in the 1980s. Following a showing of the film, Richard answered questions about the historical context and details of the work, sharing his knowledge and passion of German history and culture. Virtually none of the students had seen The Lives of Others before that evening, and a lively review and discussion of the film ensued. Profs Pick the Flick once again proved to be a stimulating way for Honors students to connect and interact with each other and professors outside of the classroom. -Cassidy Jones Students discuss The Lives of Others with Richard Badenhousen. Creative Writing Workshop: Honors students enjoy a brief foray into the creative sphere How do you describe a scene using only objects? Pens scratch against paper. Spoons clink against mugs, accompanied by the occasional thoughtful sigh. In the first Student Creative Writing Workshop, sponsored by the Student Honors Council, Honors students gathered around a table in Nunemaker to explore their creativity The workshop was designed for sharing, to encourage students to break out of the norms of academic writing. Students could share works they admired by other authors, author their own work, or just drink warm tea and spiced cider while listening to those who read their impromptu compositions. Ultimately, the workshop was an intimate gathering of friends and colleagues, rather than a group of students participating in a school function. Paula Porter and Stacy Blaylock, page 2 both members of the SHC, coordinated the workshop, volunteering their writing to encourage others to share in a nonjudgmental environment. According to Paula and Stacy, their goal was to design a workshop that encouraged individuality and creativity in a sometimes exasperatingly structured writing world. This evening served as an escape from thesis statements, transition sentences, and the academic rules of writing. Each participant was handed a two-sided sheet covered in writing exercises to help inspire the author and spark their imagination. As the evening progressed, students put their inhibitions aside and attempted to write about a topic using its opposite, or to write a “conversation” in which no words were actually said—using descriptions of body language—to encourage a more creative approach to prose writing. Students shared their own writing inspirations, such as personal childhood experiences, and those they had adopted from other writers. The workshop created such a positive and safe environment that by the end of the night, almost every student had taken time to share their work with the others. Each one left the building with a little more awareness of his or her own talent and a little more appreciation for the talent of others. -Michelle Duprey News Representing at NCHC: Honors students present at national conference On October 22, ten Westminster College Honors students boarded a plane headed for the great state of Texas. Their mission was to share the Honors accomplishments of Westminster students with the members of the larger Honors community at the 2008 National Collegiate Honors Conference. After landing late on Wednesday, the travelweary group checked in to the Marriott Honors Students visit the Alamo. Rivercenter in downtown San Antonio and turned in for the night. The next day, they woke to a beautiful Texas morning, and the adventurous bunch decided to get to know downtown better. They walked to a small German bakery for its signature potato pancakes and “Papa Fritz” breakfast. As no one was scheduled to present that day, many took the opportunity to explore the scenic San Antonio River Walk and sample some local cuisine. Every Westminster student pulled his or her own weight and left an indelible impression on the conference, though perhaps none more so than the seniors Sarah Hatch and Sara Rees. For the fourth consecutive year, NCHC attendees participated in a charity auction, with all proceeds donated to the host city. This year, Westminster was in charge of NCHC’s first live auction, featuring local auctioneer Joe Dorsak. Through the hard work of the “Sarahs,” the event proved to be a success by bringing in 3,667fortheGuadalupeCulturalArtsCenter3,667 for the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center—1,000 more than the previous NCHC auction record. The Program Director for the Guadalupe Center gave emotional thanks to Westminster, telling Sara Rees that the money will tremendously help many underprivileged families and youth. Most of the Honors students attended the conference to give presentations on a variety of academic, administrative, and service topics. The former SHC, Chert Griffith, Paula Porter, Lindsey Roper, and Amanda Ruiz, spoke to a packed room about how Honors programs can reach out to the larger campus community. John Cook, Paula Porter, and Bryan Craven gave a multimedia presentation about their participation in an Honors service-learning activity in which a local middle school personal finance class took on a handful of Honors students in a stock picking contest. Amanda Ruiz and Stacy Blaylock gave a presentation entitled, “V-Day: Until the Violence Stops,” in which they spoke about their programs to raise awareness and funds for the Salt Lake Rape Recovery Center. Ben Rackham displayed a poster of his research on genetically modified food. He and John Cook also participated in the popular “Student Fishbowl,” a session where they and other students from around the country discussed Honors issues and topics in a Socratic style, surrounded by Honors faculty from many different programs. The 2008 NCHC was a success for the individual Honors students who grew together through presenting their hard work and for Westminster Honors Program’s image in the national academic community. Firstyear NCHC attendee Stacy Blaylock said that, though she didn’t know what to expect, “the surprise and adventure of my first NCHC awakened me to the diverse and intense scholarship being conducted by Honors students around the country.” When asked about her experience, Sarah Hatch commented, “Who can say anything bad about San Antonio? The River Walk, The Alamo, the Mexican Market it was one of the best national conferences I’ve attended.” Despite the small size of our program, Westminster had one of the most active delegations at the conference. “There were a lot of people, and it still felt like a community; even with such a large number of people, everyone was involved and interested in each other’s work,” said Sara Rees. Though disappointments from the conference were scarce, Sarah Hatch pointed out her one let-down: “I only wish we could have stayed longer…” Mission accomplished. -John Cook Honors students representing Westminster at the National Collegiate Honors Council Conference in San Antonio, Texas. page 3 News Student News & Notes Living Arts: Just What Is It? Amanda Ruiz spent 2 months in Colombia doing service work with IDEALES, a vocational school for individuals with physical and mental handicaps. She also received a scholarship to attend the 2008 National Conference for College Women Student Leaders held at Georgetown University in Washington DC this last June. • The Social Science Club, including Honors students Jillian Samels, Trevor Beal, Robin Hill, and Amanda Ruiz put on a series of election events, including a film screening, a debate, a costume day, tabling with information, and research presentations in order to promote civic engagement on campus. • Jacob Wayman plays on the Westminster Lacrosse Team, and scored in their National Championship win last year. • Sara Rees backpacked across Europe this past summer. • John Cook, Paula Porter, Bryan Craven, Sara Rees, Sarah Hatch, Chert Griffith, Stacy Blaylock, Amanda Ruiz, Ben Rackham, and Lindsey Roper attended the National Collegiate Honors Council Convention in San Antonio, Texas. • Robin Hill spent the summer in Costa Rica with the Outward Bound Program. He is also a student ambassador. • Brody Leven was elected President of the Associated Students of Westminster College. He spent the summer traveling in Argentina. page 4 As a new school year began, the Honors Program welcomed 38 freshmen. By the end of orientation, the biggest question for many of these freshmen was “What exactly is this Living Arts thing?” What would we be doing every week? Who would be talking to us? Why should we go? As one Two freshmen learning about political polling in this and previous elections. of the new freshmen, or going into medicine, this night these questions gnawed allowed him or her to sample some of at me. As I examined the schedule for the things they will be studying in the the seminars, I found that each night future. was different and several in particular A week later, we met to discuss caught my interest, especially human election media coverage and polling. anatomy, election coverage, and our Our first voting experience was relationship with the planet. only two weeks away and Melissa One cloudy night in October, we all Goldsmith, an expert on public gathered in Nunemaker to explore the opinion polling, helped us understand structure of the human body. Dr. Judy the how the media presents its election Rogers, a professor of biology, told us coverage. She concentrated on the about “Body Worlds,” a display that types of polling we would see. We preserves particular areas of the body discussed exit polling, which has the largest coverage, so the majority of the people are represented. She followed her presentation by leading us in a lively discussion about the election and current events. When we left that night, we were prepared to make an informed political choice. Another evening, we met in the Health and Wellness Center to discuss our carbon footprints and the impact our lifestyles have on the earth. I discovered that it would take three planets like earth for the entire world to live like I do. Kerry Case, the director of the Environmental Center, Pania Seeley signing in for another educational Living Arts event. helped us take what we learned about our carbon footprints and find ways in order to show all of its abilities. We to shrink them. We proposed that the discussed the ethics of human body college should work on purchasing preservation and public display. To locally grown and organic foods. Kerry finish the night, we learned about the then took our ideas and presented processes that cadavers go through them to the college administration. before being used at a university or Living Arts introduces us to a variety college—replacing the blood in the of subjects in the world and takes us veins with chemicals, removing all the beyond our studies. These sessions fat. After her lecture, Dr. Rogers led the way to the science building, and we expand our knowledge, spark our interest in a subject, and give us time examined the cadaver in the anatomy to bond with our fellow freshmen. lab. For any student studying science -Kim Moyer Spooks in Nunemaker: The SHC Urban Legends Night Social The night began with Dorothy, the Joker, and a vampiric Hillary Clinton making s’mores – a motley group, even for Nunemaker. The costumes were as varied as they were creative at this year’s Urban Legends night, sponsored by the SHC. First, a small crowd of Honors students gathered around the fire with skewered marshmallows and told tales about the ghosts that haunt our campus. We started off with legends about a ghost that stayed by his cadaver in the science building and the boy who died in a combine accident where Hogle now stands, but it was the personal stories of the Nunemaker ghost that made the October night seem just a little colder, especially for those of us who planned to sleep over. In the end, no one saw the spectral bride who is rumored to linger in our Honors building, but we were haunted by Student Honors Council Treasurer, Cody Proux, who compensated for a lack of ghosts by making it a goal to scare everyone by the end of the night. But this was just half of the fun on the eve before Halloween. As the fire died down, most of the crew went inside and snuggled into News Student News & Notes Kaitlyn Thomas is the editor of the Forum. She spent the summer working in Arches National Park as a park ranger. • Jesse Resnik presented his summer research project at a conference in Tennessee. • David Mursner-Gonzales helped launch the new Chinese Club on campus. • Paula Porter, SHC President making s’mores at Urban Legends Night. for themselves. The movie marathon was put on pause to award prizes to the two best costumes. Michelle Dupree won second prize for a stunning Grecian-styled priestess dress she designed and made herself. And Christopher Roundy won the first place trophy, a sexy gold witch statuette, for his Joker nurse costume – which was pretty spot-on, from the green hair to the red platform pumps (and a rather chilling face of makeup complete with latex scar smile). The second movie of the evening was the suspenseful and nostalgia-inducing The Sixth Sense, a classic for our generation. Our audience slowly thinned as the night waned into morning hours and our honorables went to bed to rest for a fast-approaching early morning class or Cassidy Jones, Tracy Hansford, and Chris Roundy participate in the costume contest. busy workday. After a Lovesacs to watch “Dreamcatcher,” few more hours of socializing and the film adaptation of a bizarre listening to the creaks and phantom Stephen King novel about fungus and footsteps of Nunemaker Place, the alien invasions. Those less inclined to last of the Honors students left in the watch alien invasions stayed outside morning light, just a little more wary by the fire, discussing everything of apparitions and fungi after having from ghost stories to horror stories enjoyed a sleepover at Urban Legends about the difficulties of Humanities, night. which freshmen were quickly learning -Erika Rodriguez Andrew Waterhouse, Camber Stoddard, Garrett Schoonober, Jenn Niedfeldt, Natalia Noble, and Tracy Hansford are all in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum. • Paula Porter, Chert Griffith, Demetri Coombs, and Chris Roundy are volunteer researchers for an HIV study at the University of Utah ER. • Tracy Hansford and Chris Roundy won “Best PR Standout” award in the “A Day in the Life of a Westminster Student” video contest held by the admissions office. • Cassidy Jones and Meghan Hekker joined the Honorable Mention editing staff. beginning with the Fall 2008 issue. • Natalia Noble progressed through three rounds of auditions for the Fox TV show American Idol. • John Cook and Sharayah Coleman became engaged to be married and are planning a winter wedding. page 5 People Chert Griffith Student Profile Chert Griffith is an Honors Student who truly takes advantage of opportunities, both in the Honors Program and the community as a whole. When I asked Chert what a typical day in his life is like, his reply was an Excel spreadsheet. Judging from his schedule, it is safe to say that Chert is more than involved. Along with current academic and extracurricular commitments, Chert performed summer research with Honors professor, Dr. Bonnie Baxter. Since Chert was actually inventing novel techniques as part of his research, much of his summer was actually spent finding reasons why things had gone awry. Whereas others may have become frustrated, Chert views that last half of summer as an opportunity to investigate methods of virus amplification without a known host and improve research methods for others in his field. For Chert, staying busy is not a problem. Aside from summer research, he volunteers at the University of Utah ER with an HIV study, and he is active in Pre-Med Club, Poker Club, American Chemical Society, and he is in the ASWC Senate. He is a teaching assistant, student instructor, and grades for both genetics sections. He also went to San Antonio to present at the NCHC conference. In addition, Chert continues with his own personal research and works as a writing consultant in the Writing Center. Even Chert’s sleep is scheduled on his Excel spreadsheet. On the two nights he doesn’t work for UPS until 3:00 am, he gets a few hours of free time. This is time allowed for playing poker, cooking, watching college basketball, and watching his favorite TV shows: House and Scrubs. If you think Chert likes hospital shows purely out of a healthy appreciation for sarcastic doctors and dead-
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