Day: May 2, 2025

  • Faculty Spotlight: Amanda Nienow

    Faculty Spotlight: Amanda Nienow

    Amanda Nienow (Chemistry) has received the 2025 Janet Andersen Lecture Award in Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Computer Science from the Midstates Consortium for Math and Science. This award recognizes faculty who, like Dr. Andersen, are exceptional mentors of undergraduate research programs and skilled teachers.

  • Faculty Spotlight: Lisa Heldke

    Faculty Spotlight: Lisa Heldke

    Lisa Heldke (Philosophy) was an invited participant in a conference hosted by the Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future at Boston University, on the topic “The Future of Food.” Heldke’s presentation was based on her forthcoming book, Parasitic Personhood and the Ontology of Eating.

  • Faculty Spotlight: Peg O’Connor

    Faculty Spotlight: Peg O’Connor

    Peg O’Connor (Philosophy) recently presented two papers at international conferences. The first was “Fractured Persons: Wholeness and Unity in Survivors of Sexual Violence,” at the Philosophy of Psychiatry and Lived Experience Conference. The second was “Hindering the Essential Arts of Personhood: The Moral Crisis of Childhood Trauma” at the conference of the Association for Practical…

  • Faculty Spotlight: Glenn Kranking

    Faculty Spotlight: Glenn Kranking

    Glenn Kranking (History and Scandinavian Studies) presented “Sticking the Debate: Immigration and Refugee Discourse on the Streets of Copenhagen” at the annual Society for the Advancement of Scandinavian Study Conference.

  • Faculty Spotlight: Julie Bartley

    Faculty Spotlight: Julie Bartley

    Julie Bartley (Environment, Geography, and Earth Sciences) presented a lecture to the Minnesota Geological Society titled “Stromatolite morphology and diversity–How did (mostly) brainless pond scum build large, complex structures?”

  • Faculty Spotlight: Tom Huber

    Faculty Spotlight: Tom Huber

    Tom Huber (Physics) co-authored a presentation and proceedings paper, “Simulating scanner- and algorithm-specific 3D CT noise texture using physics-informed 2D and 2.5D generative neural network models” at the Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers conference on Medical Imaging in February. The goal of this project is to develop AI Deep Learning models to better understand the…

  • Faculty Spotlight: Tiffany Grobelski

    Faculty Spotlight: Tiffany Grobelski

    Tiffany Grobelski (Environment, Geography, and Earth Sciences & Peace, Justice, and Conflict Studies) published a research article entitled “Changing the coal status quo through scalar practices: The anti-smog movement’s contributions to Polish energy transition” in the journal Environment and Planning C: Politics and Space.

  • Faculty Spotlight: Dario Sanchez-Gonzalez

    Faculty Spotlight: Dario Sanchez-Gonzalez

    Darío Sánchez-González (Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures) taught a virtual guest class at the Julliard School in Shana Komitee’s course “Vibrant Legacies in Theater.” The class, centered on Spanish playwright Federico García Lorca’s essays on performance and his tragedy “Blood Wedding,” was titled “Federico García Lorca: Half a Load of Bread in a Wooden Basket.”…

  • Faculty Spotlight: Lisa Heldke

    Faculty Spotlight: Lisa Heldke

    Lisa Heldke (Philosophy) spent two days at Eagle Hill School in Hardwick, Massachusetts, leading workshops and participating in an all-school assembly as part of the school’s Reading in Common program. This year’s book was Philosophers at the Table: on Food and Being Human, which Heldke co-authored.

  • Faculty Spotlight: Carlos Mejia Suarez

    Faculty Spotlight: Carlos Mejia Suarez

    Carlos Mario Mejía Suárez (Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures) received an honorable mention in the 2025 Plentitudes Fiction Prize for his short story “Ants at Rest.” Plentitudes is a quarterly international literary journal based in New York.