Meet Virginia`s - Norfolk State University
Transcription
Meet Virginia`s - Norfolk State University
January 2013, issue 14 nORFOlK stAte UniveRsity ® MAKinG WAVES Dr. tony Atwater, President • A semi-Monthly newsletter for Faculty, staff, Alumni and Friends of norfolk state University Achieving Excellence. Success Beyond Measure. Meet Virginia’s Outstanding Faculty Award Recipient D r. Frances Williams, NSU associate professor of engineering, is among the recipients of the 2013 Outstanding Faculty Award presented by the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia and Dominion Resources. The Outstanding Faculty Award is the Commonwealth's highest honor for faculty at Virginia's public and private colleges and universities and recognizes superior accomplishments in teaching, research and public service. Dr. Williams is one of 12 recognized statewide. This is the second consecutive year that a Norfolk State University faculty member received the award. “To be recognized in consecutive years with this honor speaks to the exemplary quality of faculty at NSU,” said President Tony Atwater. “Dr. Williams is an innovator and has been instrumental in leading our efforts in providing researchers throughout the region with a state-of-the-art user friendly cleanroom.” Continued on page 2 Dr. Frances Williams UniveRsity KiCKs OFF the ‘i AM nsU’ AnnUAl FUnD M ichael Rooks, a business major with a marketing concentration, was struggling to pay for his senior year at Norfolk State. He’d saved enough money to buy a car—but now he was thinking about getting a title loan on it so he could finance his last year of school. When he couldn’t do that, he asked his parents. They were tapped out. His options were narrowing. Then he heard about help offered through University scholarships. Thanks to those who have given to NSU, Rooks is now on track to walk across the stage in May to receive his diploma. “I would like to thank each and every one of you,” he said at the kick-off of the I AM NSU Annual Fund. Rooks didn’t just go to school—he took advantage of what NSU had to offer. During his time here, he obtained internships at the Port Authority, Apple Computer and Hertz. Because of his experiences here, he is glad to say, “I am NSU!” The I AM NSU Annual Fund is a six-month campaign with a $2 million goal. It will end June 30. “This is about making a direct impact on the quality of life of our students, campus and the community,” said Danielle Smith Jones,’00, the campaign’s general chair. “I am NSU because of the education and support I received here and the push I received from my professors who said quitting was not an option.” to give to the i AM nsU Annual Fund, go to www.nsu.edu/giving Michael Rooks Rev. Dr. Richard W. Wills sr. Civil Rights Require Civil Responsibilities T he Rev. Dr. Richard W. Wills Sr., the keynote speaker at the University’s Martin Luther King Jr. program, told those in attendance that civil rights come with certain responsibilities. Wills, the pastor of First Baptist Church, Hampton, said that Dr. King had the belief that African Americans had the right to be in America. “That was a bold position to take at the time,” said Wills. “Dr. King understood that our rights as a citizen didn’t originate from the Constitution. He understood that our rights come from God.” Even though Dr. King held that belief, Wills told the audience that the civil rights leader also knew that rights come with responsibilities. Those responsibilities, he said, are preparation, partnership and posterity. “The rights are in place, but they require sweat equity, a work ethic and preparation to be the best that I can be,” Wills instructed. The responsibility of partnership is important because as the world has become more interconnected and interdependent, the projects are more complicated and complex. To work with those situations requires partnership. Finally, Wills said there is a responsibility to our posterity. “Dr. King understood that if our dreams, our hope and our destiny were not bigger than us, then they were not big enough. That the good fight that we are fighting is not just for us but for our great-grandchildren…for generations unborn.” OUtstAnDinG FACUlty AWARD ReCiPient Continued from page 1 Dr. Frances Williams (center) talks with students in the $6.5 million cleanroom. MAKinG WAVES Making Waves is published semi-monthly by the Office of Communicationsand Marketing. (757) 823-8373 Tony Atwater, Ph.D. President Stephen McDaniel Interim VP for University Advancement Cheryl Bates-Lee AVP of University Relations Stevalynn Adams Regina Lightfoot Christopher Setzer submit articles to [email protected] 2 Dr. Williams has conducted extensive research in the area of acoustic microsensors, microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) devices and processes. In 2010, she was granted a patent that is expected to save the semiconductor industry money. Dr. Williams is interim director of the Center for Materials Research and director of the Micro- and Nanotechnology Center (MiNaC), a $6.5 million state-of-the-art cleanroom. She is also the diversity director for the Center for Integrated Access Networks (CIAN) Engineering Research Center (ERC), a multi-university center that is funded by the National Science Foundation. Since coming to Norfolk State in 2004, Dr. Williams has been awarded grants that total more than $12 million. She has been recognized for her research and innovation. Dr. Williams was named an Emerging Scholar by Diverse: Issues in Higher Education in January 2012. She was recognized by Norfolk State University in 2010 with a Distinguished Faculty Award, receiving the University Award of Excellence—the highest University faculty award at that time. In 2012, Dr. Williams was recognized by the NSU Board of Visitors for her innovation. She received the B.S. and M.S. degrees in electrical engineering from North Carolina Agricultural & Technical State University and earned the Ph.D. degree in electrical and computer engineering from the Georgia Institute of Technology where she was a National Science Foundation Graduate Fellow, Office of Naval Research HBCU Future Engineering Faculty Fellow, Facilitating Academic Careers in Engineering and Science Fellow, and an Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Scholar. Making Waves Pepsi Campus A global food and beverage leader with a diverse product portfolio will now have a place on the Norfolk State University campus. T hrough a competitive Request for Proposal process, the Pepsi Beverages Company (PBC) was recently awarded a five-year beverage contract at NSU valued at $1.9 million. The NSU/PBC partnership makes PBC the exclusive beverage provider on campus for all fountain machines, vending machines and sales of bottles and cans on campus. Pepsi-Cola beverages include carbonated soft drinks, Aquafina bottled water, SoBe, Gatorade, AMP, Rockstar, Ocean Spray fruit juices, Lipton Brisk iced tea and Starbucks Frappuccino. Installation of the new vending and fountain dispensing machines has occurred. PBC will provide and maintain all vending and fountain dispensing equipment throughout the duration of the contract. PepsiCo was founded in 1965. In early 2010, PepsiCo acquired the Pepsi Bottling Group and Pepsi Americas to form the world’s largest manufacturer and distributor, Pepsi Beverages Company. Scott to be honored at BEYA STEM Conference M aureen Scott, assistant professor of biology, will receive the Science Spectrum Trailblazer Award at the 27th Black Engineer of the Year (BEYA) and Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) conference. The conference takes place Feb. 7-9 in Washington, D.C. Trailblazers are men and women who are demonstrating outstanding performance that will shape the future course of science and technology. “You and the other science leaders are individuals whose stories of phenomenal success merit national recognition,” Tyrone D. Taborn, publisher and CEO of Career Communications Group, wrote in the congratulatory letter to Scott. She will receive a certificate of recognition at the Trailblazers’ Luncheon. “We hope this certificate will validate what you must already know,” Taborn continued, “that you are a special and gifted person.” CAMPUs Briefs Cheryl D. Nottingham, ’83,’03, assistant coordinator for the Title III Program, received her master of business administration with a concentration in public administration from Strayer University in October 2012. She graduated with a 4.0 GPA and was listed among the honor graduates for the class. Reggie Garrett, ’12, a former member of the Spartan football team, was nominated for and accepted into the NCAA Future Reggie Garrett Football Coaches Academy, which ran January 6-8 in Nashville, Tenn. Garrett, who earned his bachelor’s degree in building construction in December, was one of 30 college players nationwide who participated in the academy, which is an educational forum for individuals who have recently completed their collegiate eligibility and have a desire to enter the college football coaching profession. The NSU-American Association of University Women collegiate chapter participated in the President’s Inaugural 2013 National Day of Service on January 19 at the Trinity Washington University (TWU) project site in Washington, D.C. The students packed food for families in need. They were escorted by chapter advisor Dr. Amelia RossHammond, professor of music and director of service-learning and civic engagement. Carol Pretlow, associate professor of political science, has accepted the invitation to write and author publications in the magazine “The Diplomat” (http://the-diplomat.com), the premier international currentaffairs magazine for the Asia-Pacific region. She also represented Norfolk State University at the World Affairs Council of Greater Hampton Roads on Tuesday, January 8, at Norfolk Waterside Marriott. The topic was “From the Cuban Missile Crisis to Iran: Confronting the Nuclear Threat.” The council covers a broad Continued on page 4 Making Waves 3 CAMPUs Briefs Continued from page 3 range of issues most pressing and time urgent before the international community today. “Cloud Pot,” can be viewed at http://www.virginiamoca.org/newwaves-2013. Dr. Donald J. Reaves, Chancellor, has recommended Janella Melius, a Ph.D. graduate from the Ethelyn R. Strong School of Social Work, to the Board of Trustees of Winston-Salem State University for tenure and promotion to associate professor in the Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Work. Dr. Danny Adams, professor and associate dean of liberal arts, reviewed “Trading Zones and Interactional Expertise: Creating New Kinds of Dr. Danny Adams Collaboration,” by Michael E. Gorman, ed., (2010) The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA ISBN: 978-0-262-514835. The review is published in “Integrative Pathways,” of the Association for Integrative Studies, Vol. 34, No. 4 (December 2012) ISSN 1081 647X. A presentation by Shellye Sledge, a doctoral student in the Ethelyn R. Strong School of Social Work, titled “H.E.L.P.! A Humanistic EfficacyBased Learning Paradigm Designed to Cultivate Potential in Marginalized African American Women with Health and Socio-Economic Challenges,” has been accepted for presentation at the Eleventh Annual Mississippi Child Welfare Institute Conference in Jackson, Miss. Dr. Colita Nichols Fairfax, associate professor of social work, co-authored the article, “A change has come: the Obamas and the culture of black marriage in Dr. Colita nichols Fairfax America,” with Cassandra Chaney in “Ethnicities,” http://etn.sagepub.com/content/early/ 2012/11/29/1468796812463546. Dr. Fairfax’s poster, “Teaching African Philosophy in Mezzo Practice,” has been accepted for presentation at the National Association of Black Social Workers 45th National Conference to be held in Jacksonville, Fla., April 12. The Lyman Beecher Brooks Library hosted the quarterly meeting of the Virginia Tidewater Consortium Collections Subcommittee Thursday, December 6, 2012. Acquisition and Collection Development Librarians meet to discuss joint projects as well as individual library collection efforts at their institutions. The library also hosted the Virginia Tidewater Consortium Library Director’s meeting on January 17. The training session focused on e-books and the use of Kindles in an academic environment. Dr. Cassandra Newby-Alexander, professor of history and project director, received $69,529 from National Endowment for the Humanities for “Observing 1619: The African Diaspora in American History and Culture.” This project consists of two symposia, several teacher workshops, and the development of educational resources on the African diaspora in the New World, with a focus on the arrival of 20 Africans at Old Point Comfort (Fort Monroe, Va.) in August 1619. Daniel Goodwin, a visual studies student in the Department of Fine Arts, received acceptance of his sculpture to the “New Waves” juried show at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), January 25–April 28. MOCA presents its annual juried exhibition, New Waves 2013, for the 18th year. Over 180 artists from across Virginia submitted work to this exhibition of diverse materials and approaches that are used in contemporary art today. Goodwin’s work, titled 4 Under the direction of Paul I. Adams, interim director of bands, NSU Spartan Legion Marching Band made its debut performance at the 29th Annual Dominion Power Christmas Parade on December 2, in Richmond, Va. The band was awarded the trophy (Silver Platter) for "Best Marching Band" in the 2012 Norfolk Grand Illumination Parade, held November 17, 2012. Dr. Suely M. Black, chemistry professor and a member of the Center for Materials Research, has been named a member of the External Advisory Dr. suely M. Black Board for the Indiana Louis-Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation. The nomination reflects the close collaborative ties that have developed between Purdue University, the project lead institution, and the Center for Materials Research. NSU and Purdue currently collaborate on two funded projects which combined bring $1.2 million per year to campus. Dr. Black also presented the seminar "The Brave New World of Nanomaterials and Nanotechnology" to more than 120 students, parents and teachers. The event was held November 13 at Ocean Lakes High School as part of their Math and Science Academy Lecture Series. Technical seminars to local, broad audiences contribute to the goals of the Partnership for Research and Education in Materials, a National Science Foundation-funded project in the Center for Materials Research led by Dr. Mikhail Noginov. In December, Mohammad Mayy, Thejaswi Tumkur and Oluwakayode Bamiduro, three Ph.D. students in materials science and engineering, joined a select group of international researchers at the weeklong workshop in Trieste, Italy, for nanophotonics offered by the Abdus Salam International Centre for Theoretical Physics. Dr. Mikhail Noginov, professor of physics and a member of the Center for Materials Research, was an invited speaker at the workshop. Introduction to University Life (IUL) computer science students Ernest Thomas, Kenneth Davis, Alexaye Geeter and Gregory Henderson Jr. (Team 1), and Woodrow Conklin, Jamari Jones, JaJuan Hoke, Tyrell Hite and Craig Eddings (Team 2) won 1st place in the first IUL-101 Service Learning Fair. The students presented Making Waves their recycling projects in a poster competition. The winning team proposed two very ingenious projects. Both teams were advised by Dr. Cheryl V. Hinds, instructor of computer science. Dr. Aswini Pradhan, professor in the Center for Materials Research and Department of Engineering, and his group members Dr. Aswini Pradhan attended the MRS Fall meeting on November 26, 2012, in Boston, Mass. The group presented several papers. Sha’La Fletcher presented “Mechanical properties of multi-layer ultra-thin films of BTO/LSMO on STO and LaO." Brandon Walker presented on “Nanostructure patterning of functional oxide thin films by electron beam lithography with HSQ patterned templates.” Olu Bamiduro presented “The effects of varying the thickness of Mo thin films for solar cell applications." Dr. Pradhan presented “One dimensional ZnO nanoarray using electron beam lithography.” Rajeh Mundle presented “Optoelectronic properties of Aluminum doped ZnO films with varying carrier concentration for multifunctional applications.” Rajini Konda presented “Impact of Aluminum Oxide Inter-layer as self-cleaning processors of various oxygen sources on the Interface properties of Zirconium oxide on GaAs." Dr. Bo Xiao presented “Structural and electrical properties of functional dielectrics on GaN and ZnO.” Sandra Olanitori, instructor, advisor, recruiter in the Department of Nursing and Allied Health, and the students in her Introduction to University Life 101-ST 7, 8, and 9 won second place in the Service Learning Fair held November 29, 2012. Their recycling projects were on "Nurses Shoes, Plastic Bottles and Candy Wrappers". They received a 2nd place trophy and certificates. Camilla Major, health services management-December 2012 graduate, received the Parsons Honors College Medallion at the Honors College Public Speaking Contest and Medallion Ceremony for December graduates on November 27, 2012. Margaret Pemberton, a 1959 School of Nursing graduate, attended the Nursing and Allied Health Classroom Building Margaret Pemberton groundbreaking ceremony on December 6, 2012. She sponsors the Margaret Pemberton endowment fund at NSU. The PREM project, led by Dr. Mikhail Noginov, professor of physics and member of the Center for Materials Research, offered the “Materials Science Day” at NSU on December 5, 2012. About 45 selected students and teachers from Booker T. Washington, Princess Anne and Ocean Lakes High Schools spent five hours in the Center for Materials Research. The program included seminars by professors and graduate students about materials science and related careers, tours of the laboratories and exposure to opportunities for enrollment and research. Dr. Carray Banks, chair of the Department of Technology, won the Virginia Building and Code Official Association Dr. Carray Banks (VBCOA) 2012 Citizens Award in recognition of his outstanding work with the association’s student membership initiative. NSU is the first college or university in the Commonwealth of Virginia to have student members of VBCOA. The award was presented to Dr. Banks at VBCOA’s 84th Annual Conference in October. Dr. Arletha McSwain, interim dean of the School of Extended Learning, recently completed the Quality Matters Certification for Institutional Representatives. Quality Matters is a National Benchmark for Online Course Design and provides quality assurance through faculty development and course design. submit articles to [email protected] nsU and tidewater Community College (The TCC/NSU Links Scholars) have a new partnership that has just accepted 25 students. A kick-off reception is scheduled for February 7, from 2-4 p.m. on the second floor of the Lyman Beecher Brooks Library. NSU President Tony Atwater, TCC President Edna Baehre-Kolovani and the Links Incorporated representatives will be in attendance. The NSU TransferMation Center, which will provide the necessary one-stop shop infrastructure and staff support to enhance resources currently devoted to transfer students, will hold a ribbon-cutting ceremony on March 7 from 2-4 p.m. on the second floor of the Student Center. Making Waves 5 $$ "!##"! #! ! .$&- ,5614; 106+ = 14)1.- 6$6( 0,8(45,6; Monday, FEBRUARY 4 Movies Everyone Should See in College Series: ROOts Marathon followed by discussion. location: Student Center (SC), Room 149. time: 5-10 p.m. Contact: Honors College (757) 823-8208. Tuesday, FEBRUARY 5 SIGNATURE/THEME EVENT 150 years of the emancipation Proclamation: What does it mean? A panel discussion featuring NSU professors: Dr. Stephanie Richmond, Dr. Cassandra Newby-Alexander, Dr. Colita Nichols Fairfax. location: SC, Room 138. time: 6 p.m. Contact: Dr. Khadijah Miller or Dr. Stephanie Richmond (757) 823-8828. Wednesday, FEBRUARY 6 SIGNATURE/THEME EVENT Conversations in the Kitchen, Part ii: Black Women talking about 150 years after emancipation, the March on Washington and Black Women today, featuring NSU faculty members. location: Brown Theatre, Brown Memorial Hall (BMH). time: 6 p.m. Contact: Dr. Khadijah Miller (757) 823-2864. Black history and the struggle for equality in Cuba featuring Dr. Tomas Fernandez Robaina, Archivist, Cuban National Library and Dr. Geoffroy de Laforcade. NSU student screening of “1912: Breaking the Silence,” a film by Gloria Rolando. location: NSU Archives Activity Room, Library, 2nd floor. time: 4 p.m. Contact: Dr. Geoffroy de Laforcade (757) 823-2819. Thursday, FEBRUARY 7 Mid-day Concert featuring Afro-Cuban Jazz. location: SC, Room 138. time: 12:30-2 p.m. Contact: Professor Gwendolyn Pharr (757) 823-8828. SIGNATURE/THEME EVENT and OPENING RECEPTION novel Release, Discussion and signing of the treason of Mary louvestre, by My Haley (Alex Haley’s widow). location: SC, Room 149. time: 6:30 p.m. with book signing afterwards. Contact: Honors College or Dr. Khadijah Miller (757) 823-2864. Fri./saT./sun., FEBRUARY 8, 9, 10 nsU Players, King hedley ii by August Wilson. time: 8 p.m., Fri. & Sat.; 6 p.m., Sunday. location: Brown Theatre, BMH. Contact: Dr. Clarence Murray (757) 823-8891. Monday, FEBRUARY 11 Walter Rodney, honoring a legacy of African Diaspora and Black Consciousness featuring Dr. Patricia Rodney, widow of Guyanese scholar and Pan-African activist Walter Rodney. location: SC. time: 6 p.m. Contact: Dr. Geoffroy de Laforcade (757) 823-2819. Tuesday, FEBRUARY 12 Black Men’s health Forum/Discussion. location: SC, Room 138. time: 12:30 p.m. Contact: Professor Gwendolyn Pharr (757) 823-8828. Wednesday, FEBRUARY 13 African American health Fair including screenings, information dissemination, and more sponsored by NSU Nursing Department. location: SC, Room 138. time: 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Contact: Dr. Jessica Parrott (757) 823-9013. SIGNATURE/THEME EVENT the Crossroads of social Justice: Pioneering Black social Workers Post emancipation, sponsored by the School of Social Work. location: SC, Room 138. time: 5 p.m. Contact: Dr. Colita N. Fairfax (757) 823-9593. Thursday, FEBRUARY 14 SIGNATURE/THEME EVENT nsU’s Civil Rights Activism: A panel discussion featuring NSU alumni, faculty, and staff. location: NSU Archives, 2nd floor, LBB Library. time: 12:30 p.m. Contact: Professor Gwendolyn Pharr (757) 823-8828. Fri./saT./sun., FEBRUARY 15, 16, 17 nsU Players, King hedley ii by August Wilson. time: 8 p.m., Fri. & Sat.; 6 p.m., Sunday. location: Brown Theatre, BMH. Contact: Dr. Clarence Murray (757) 823-8891. sunday, FEBRUARY 17 My Black is Beautiful talent show. location: SC. time: 7 p.m. Contact: Student Activities (757) 823-8200. Monday, FEBRUARY 18 Black history for Peace in West Africa, featuring Ana Edwards, president, Virginia Friends of Mali “The African Heritage of Cultural Diversity: Lessons from the History of Mali,” & Dr. Geoffroy de Laforcade, NSU. location: NSU Archives, 2nd floor, LBB Library. time: 6:30 p.m. Contact: Dr. Geoffroy de Laforcade (757) 823-2819. Tuesday, FEBRUARY 19 Movies Everyone Should See in College Series: BelOveD followed by discussion. location: SC, Room 149. time: 7-10 p.m. Contact: Honors College (757) 823-8208. Thursday, FEBRUARY 21 *:0<0:0,9 Obama’s second term Presidency: the state of the Black Union: a panel discussion featuring national and local politicians, community activists, media perspectives and national organizations. location: SC, Room 149. time: 12:30-4 p.m. Contact: Professor Carol Pretlow (757) 823-8999 or (757) 823-8192. sunday, FEBRUARY 24 Generation X. Location: SC. time: 6 p.m., Contact: Student Activities (757) 823-8200. Monday, FEBRUARY 25 SIGNATURE/THEME EVENT Movies Everyone Should See in College: Steven Spielberg’s linCOln (2012) followed by discussion. Location: SC, Room 149. time: 7-10 p.m. Contact: Honors College and Student Activities (757) 823-8200. Tuesday, FEBRUARY 26 Presentation, lessons and Discussions on African American Jazz. Location: SC, Room 138. time: 12:30 p.m. Contact: Professor Gwendolyn Pharr (757) 823-8828. Wednesday, FEBRUARY 27 SIGNATURE/THEME EVENT Remembering Dr. Martin luther King, Jr. & the March on Washington: how Do We Preserve his legacy? A panel discussion featuring NSU professors. location: SC. time: 6 p.m. Contact: Student Activities (757) 823-8200. Thurs., FEBRUARY 28 AND Fri., MARCH 1 Annual local Writers Festival. Contact: Professor Daniel Pearlman (757) 823-8891.