IPFW Comgrad

February 23, 2007

Purdue University System Student Research Competition

Filed under: Uncategorized — Steven Carr @ 2:22 am

The symposium will be held on Friday April 20th and Saturday April 21st, 2007 in “The Center” at Purdue University-Calumet.

Cash prizes of $500 for first place and $300 for runner-up, will be awarded for the best presentations in each category of competition.  There will be separate undergraduate and graduate divisions of competition for each category.  The five categories are:

Agricultural, Physical and Mathematical Sciences
Business, Management, Economics and Public Administration
Education, Health, Nursing, Nutrition and Clinical Sciences
Engineering and Computer Science
Humanities and the Behavioral and Social Sciences

Undergraduate Eligibility:
- All registered undergraduate students in all academic fields attending IPFW.
- Students must be registered for at least 12 hours during the academic year.
- The student must have worked on the research during the summer, fall or spring semester of the academic year at IPFW or in cooperation with an IPFW mentor.
- A project may be from an individual student or with other student co-authors, but not a faculty or staff member co-author.

Application Process
Undergraduate or graduate students currently enrolled at IPFW, as well as alumni who received their degrees in the previous summer or fall are eligible.  Students wishing to participate should submit a research summary by Monday March 26th to Carl Drummond, Vice Chancellor for Research. Please use MS-Word for your submissions and send by email to: drummond@ipfw.edu.

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February 20, 2007

Student Achievement Award Nominations

Filed under: Uncategorized — Steven Carr @ 1:46 pm

Let me know by W 21 Feb if you’re interested in being nominated for a student achievement award.

The deadline for nomination submission is Wednesday, February 28th by 5:00 p.m. to the Student Life office. Late submissions will not be considered.

If you have questions regarding this award, please contact Audrey Moore at 481-6283 or moorea@ipfw.edu.

Cover Letter and Nomination Form

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February 19, 2007

Future 40 Award

Filed under: Uncategorized — Steven Carr @ 3:47 pm

Another award – let me know if you’re interested in being nominated…

The Upstate Indiana Business Journal is searching for Northeast Indiana’s most dynamic leaders in business, medicine, government, the arts, and social services that are under the age of 40.  We will honor them for their outstanding contributions to their profession and community at a recognition dinner in April, 2007. Each honoree will have their bio published in the April 2007 issue of the Upstate Indiana Business Journal.  We think these individuals are vital to the success of the region and they deserve to be publicly recognized and acknowledged for their contributions. 
 
 Through their individual efforts each honoree must demonstrate exemplary performance that brings great pride to the organizations they represent and their community. The candidates we seek are concerned for their companies, share a commitment to professional excellence, and actively contribute to their community.   These are the individuals who will shape the future of our region.

Take a moment and nominate a Future Forty. The Nomination deadline is 5PM, March 1, 2007.
  
To nominate someone click on the link below or logon to  www.upstatein.com.  To purchase tickets for the awards ceremony, contact Urs Nolan at unolan@fwbj.com or 260-260-420-5415. Tickets are  just $45.00 per person.

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.asp?u=292882471616

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February 17, 2007

Producer Bobby Moresco to Meet With Students/Faculty

Filed under: Uncategorized — Steven Carr @ 3:56 pm

A one-on-one discussion with screenwriter and producer Bobby Moresco, of “Crash” and “Million Dollar Baby” fame, has been arranged  on Monday afternoon from 4 – 5 p.m. in CM 159.

Mr. Moresco will lecture that evening as part of the Omnibus Lecture Series, but will make himself available for students and faculty Monday afternoon.  Please distribute this information to as many students and faculty as you can, as we have found these opportunities in the past have been very beneficial for our students.  Thank you for helping us pass the word.  Many thanks, Louise Teague

Bobby Moresco
Bobby Moresco has achieved Academy Award-winning successes with his last two films: Crash and Million Dollar Baby. He also directed and co-wrote 10th & Wolf, which is set for release in 2006.

Crash marked Moresco’s first feature-film project as a co-writer and producer. He also was lauded as co-producer of Million Dollar Baby.

Crash sparked discussion among filmgoers and received critical acclaim. With a story involving a tapestry of strangers whose lives collide during the days before Christmas in modern-day Los Angeles, it exposes social and racial prejudices.

“I think that on some level everybody in America is touched by the question of race and racism,” says Moresco. “There’s nobody who has escaped it that I know of.”

Moresco had an acting role in Turk 182 (1985) and has co-created and produced some of the most critically acclaimed series on television including EZ Streets, Falcone, and Millennium, which won the 1997 People’s Choice Award for Best New Drama of the Year. He recently shot a pilot for NBC, The Black Donnellys.

Moresco founded his own theatre company, The Actor’s Gym, in 1978 in Los Angeles and has written, produced, or directed more than 35 theatrical productions. These include directing Colin Quinn in An Irish Wake on Broadway and the critically acclaimed Blackout in Los Angeles.

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February 8, 2007

Third Annual Global Forum – United Nations, New York

Filed under: Uncategorized — Steven Carr @ 2:01 pm

The Global Forum will convene at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, USA 6-8 June 2007 and will involve 400 young professionals and college age students from various national and international Universities, Colleges, and Civic Organizations.

more…

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February 7, 2007

Grad Student Conference in Visual and Verbal Arts – Cleveland OH

Filed under: Uncategorized — Steven Carr @ 2:49 pm

Image and the Imagination in the Visual and Verbal Arts
A program of the Society for Critical Exchange in conjunction with the
M/MLA conference in Cleveland, OH, November 8-11, 2007

This working conference aims to examine the image—broadly conceived as
pictorial, textual, and digital representations—and its relations to
the collective imagination. We invite papers that explore how images
are adopted, adapted, and translated in a variety of media (textual,
visual, or digital), across borders, and among cultures. We invite
papers from all disciplines, including but not limited to art history,
literature, the history of the book, anthropology, law, library and
information sciences, and the cognitive sciences.

Potential rubrics include:

Literature: How can illustrations, cartoons, and photographs affect
the way that literature is interpreted? How have comic books and
graphic novels altered conceptions of literature or come to define
themselves in the context of what is traditionally thought of as “the
canon”? How do images figure in conceptions of generic boundaries? How
does text/image interaction change when texts are serialized,
collected into monograph form, or excerpted, especially when images
are added or subtracted?

Digital Environments: How has the availability of digital material
changed researchers’ interactions with archival material? What does
the individual consumer look for in digital archives, whether of
scholastic, scientific, or lay interest? How has the basic knowledge
of professionals working in archives and libraries changed to
incorporate new standards and practices for database design, interface
design, and semantic markup? What analogies and differences between
physical and digital architectures emerge when considering the
representation of texts?

The Visual Mass Media: How do images and texts interact to present
coherent narratives of events in print, broadcast, or digital news?
What attitudes desires, and/or ideologies do advertising images such
as billboards, websites, posters, commercials, etc., codify?
Approaches might include the visual rhetorical, semiotic, or
iconological.

Remediation: How has web design changed our understanding of the print
page’s determination of both the appearance and meaning of prose? What
do current digital re-imaginings of literary texts indicate? What is
involved in the translation of the word to the screen, whether
cinematic or digital? How do movies that aren’t adaptations of novels
use text in their narrative techniques?

Trans-cultural and Trans-temporal Images: Whether in the context of
the modern pilgrimage, of cultural or leisure tourism, of
anthropological or colonial exploration or other, how do travel images
detail and propagate the “sacred,” the “civilizational,” the “exotic,”
the “primitive,” or the “Other”? How do images produced by the mobile
eye or self organize, narrate, and/or reconfigure the world? How do
culturally- and historically-based approaches to adaptation theory
change the way that we see adapted images?

Abstracts of no more than 500 words and a CV of no more than 2 pages
to textimage.sce@gmail.com by March 15.  Submissions from graduate
students are particularly encouraged.

_______________________________________________
CULTSTUD-L mailing list: CULTSTUD-L@lists.comm.umn.edu
http://lists.comm.umn.edu/mailman/listinfo/cultstud-l

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