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MICHAEL GERRARD ‘72 COLLEGE HONORS FIVE IS THE GURU OF DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI CLIMATE CHANGE LAW WITH JOHN JAY AWARDS Page 26 Page 18 Columbia College May/June 2011 TODAY Nobel Prize-winner Martin Chalfie works with College students in his laboratory. APassion for Science Members of the College’s science community discuss their groundbreaking research ’ll meet you for a I drink at the club...” Meet. Dine. Play. Take a seat at the newly renovated bar grill or fine dining room. See how membership in the Columbia Club could fit into your life. For more information or to apply, visit www.columbiaclub.org or call (212) 719-0380. The Columbia University Club of New York 15 West 43 St. New York, N Y 10036 Columbia’s SocialIntellectualCulturalRecreationalProfessional Resource in Midtown. Columbia College Today Contents 26 20 30 18 73 16 COVER STORY ALUMNI NEWS DEPARTMENTS 2 20 A PA SSION FOR SCIENCE 38 B OOKSHELF LETTERS TO THE Members of the College’s scientific community share Featured: N.C. Christopher EDITOR Couch ’76 takes a serious look their groundbreaking work; also, a look at “Frontiers at The Joker and his creator in 3 WITHIN THE FA MILY of Science,” the Core’s newest component. Jerry Robinson: Ambassador of By Ethan Rouen ’04J, ’11 Business Comics. 4 AROUND THE QU A DS 4 Reunion, Dean’s FEATURES 40 O BITU A RIES Day 2011 6 Class Day, 43 C L A SS NOTES JOHN JA Y AW A RDS DINNER FETES FIVE Commencement 2011 18 The College honored five alumni for their distinguished A LUMNI PROFILES 8 Senate Votes on ROTC professional achievements at a gala dinner in March. -
October 2004
HOME Site Search ABOUT US NEWS EVENTS CROSS CORE CUTTING RESEARCH EDUCATION ACTION DISCIPLINES THEMES Inside The Earth Institute a monthly e-newsletter October 2004 Message from Jeff Sachs In the News The Columbia Spectator, October 1, 2004 This fall, the Earth Institute is supporting two new graduate programs: a Masters of Arts in Climate and Society, developed primarily by the International Research Institute for Climate Prediction, and a Ph.D. in Sustainable Development, which will be the first doctoral degree granted by the School of International and Public Affairs. The Discovery Channel, September 27, 2004 Real Video (8:10) Edward Cook, a paleoclimatologist from the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, was quoted in this Quicktime Video (8:10) article on research that Lewis and Clark's expedition succeeded in part through favorable climate conditions. The causes and costs of extreme poverty were Earth Institute Receives $4.2 Million discussed by Jeff Sachs and colleagues in a recent Medical News Today, September 21, 2004 Grant to Break Down Barriers and paper published by the Brookings Institute. In his The work of Awash Teklehaimonot, a health expert at e-newsletter video, Jeff stresses the need to use the the Earth Institute, supports the accelerated expansion Increase the Ranks of Women in Earth results of this paper to inform ways to help Africa out of of the health system in Ethiopia. Sciences and Engineering its poverty trap. download Brookings paper The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded the The Columbia Spectator, -
Annual Catalogue of the University Of
lTIJEN T Beginning July I, 1943 The College of Engineering and the College of Mines will operate entirely on the semester system. No classes will be conducted on the quarter system. Summer Session HB" will start on July 1 and end on October 30. The first (or Wincer) semester will begin on November 1, 1943 and end on February 28, 1944. The second (or Spring) semester will begin March 1, 1944 and end on June 30. The two semesters will con stitute an academic year and are to be considered the equivalent of the academic year of three quarters. In all other Schools and Colleges the regular Autumn and Winter terms will be operated on dle quarter s)'Stem as usual. See University Calendar, page 8. THE CAMPUS UNIVERSITY Of WASHINGTON ~~~~~~~~~~ N SYMBOLSt f) _.MlAS --- ---MUIICIM.""UNtS - _.- ~TY LUI'S _·····-N-"OWOLS _ ••• - lUna. lUllS + srC;TlC)IIc;o~ -tS(CflON CO""'II$ A 9-33 The University and its various colleges and schools reserve the right to change the rules regulating admission to, instruction in and graduation from the University and its various divisions and any other regulations affecting the student body, Such regulations shall go into force whenever the proper authorities may determine, and shall apply not only to prospective students, but also to those who may at such time be matriculated in the University. The University also reserves the right to withdraw courses or change fees at any time. \ BULLETIN UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON CATALOGUE 1943-1944 GENERAL SERIES JULY 3, 1943 No. 132 Published twice monthly at Seattle, Washington, by the University of Washington from October to July, inclusive. -
PHILOSOPHY HALL Page 1 United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service______National Register of Historic Places Registration Form
NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK NOMINATION NPS Form 10-900 USDI/NPS NRHP Registration Form (Rev. 8-86) OMB No. 1024-0018 PHILOSOPHY HALL Page 1 United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service_________________________________________National Register of Historic Places Registration Form 1. NAME OF PROPERTY Historic Name: Philosophy Hall Other Name/Site Number: 2. LOCATION Street & Number: 1150 Amsterdam Avenue Not for publication:_ City/Town: New York Vicinity_ State: NY County: New York Code: 061 Zip Code: 10027 3. CLASSIFICATION Ownership of Property Category of Property Private: X_ Building(s): X. Public-Local: _ District: _ Public-State: _ Site: _ Public-Federal: Structure: _ Object: _ Number of Resources within Property Contributing Noncontributing 1 _ buildings _ sites _ structures _ objects 1 0 Total Number of Contributing Resources Previously Listed in the National Register: 0 Name of Related Multiple Property Listing: NATIONAL HISTORIC LANDMARK NOMINATION NPS Form 10-900 USDI/NPS NRHP Registration Form (Rev. 8-86) OMB No. 1024-0018 PHILOSOPHY HALL Page 2 United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service_________________________________________National Register of Historic Places Registration Form 4. STATE/FEDERAL AGENCY CERTIFICATION As the designated authority under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, as amended, I hereby certify that this __ nomination __ request for determination of eligibility meets the documentation standards for registering properties in the National Register of Historic Places and meets the procedural and professional requirements set forth in 36 CFR Part 60. In my opinion, the property __ meets __ does not meet the National Register Criteria. Signature of Certifying Official Date State or Federal Agency and Bureau In my opinion, the property __ meets __ does not meet the National Register criteria. -
1961-1962. Bulletin and College Roster. Hope College
Hope College Digital Commons @ Hope College Hope College Catalogs Hope College Publications 1961 1961-1962. Bulletin and College Roster. Hope College Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.hope.edu/catalogs Part of the Archival Science Commons Recommended Citation Hope College, "1961-1962. Bulletin and College Roster." (1961). Hope College Catalogs. 130. http://digitalcommons.hope.edu/catalogs/130 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Hope College Publications at Digital Commons @ Hope College. It has been accepted for inclusion in Hope College Catalogs by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Hope College. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HOPE COLLEGE BULLETIN COLLEGE ROSTER TABLE OF CONTENTS C O L L E G E R O S T E R page The College Staff - Fall 1961 2 Administration 2 Faculty 4 The Student Body - Fall 1961 7 Seniors 7 Juniors 9 Sophomores 12 Freshmen 16 Special Students 19 Summer School Students - Fall 1961 21 Hope College Campus 21 Vienna Campus 23 COLLEGE DIRECTORY Fall 1961 (Home and college address and phone numbers) The College Staff 25 Students 29 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION Library Information 58 Health Service 59 College Residences 60 College Telephones 61 NEW STAFF MEMBERS-SECOND SEMESTER Name Home Address College Address Phone Coates, Mary 110 E. 10th St. Durfee Hall EX 6-7822 Drew, Charles 50 E. Central Ave., Zeeland P R 2-2938 Fried, Paul 18 W. 12th St. Van Raalte 308 E X 6-5546 Loveless, Barbara 187 E. 35th St. E X 6-5448 Miller, James 1185 E. -
Barnard College Bulletin 2017-18 3
English .................................................................................... 201 TABLE OF CONTENTS Environmental Biology ........................................................... 221 Barnard College ........................................................................................ 2 Environmental Science .......................................................... 226 Message from the President ............................................................ 2 European Studies ................................................................... 234 The College ........................................................................................ 2 Film Studies ........................................................................... 238 Admissions ........................................................................................ 4 First-Year Writing ................................................................... 242 Financial Information ........................................................................ 6 First-Year Seminar ................................................................. 244 Financial Aid ...................................................................................... 6 French ..................................................................................... 253 Academic Policies & Procedures ..................................................... 6 German ................................................................................... 259 Enrollment Confirmation ........................................................... -
Hiroya Miura
CURRICULUM VITAE HIROYA MIURA Department of Music 30 Preble Street, #253 Bates College Portland, ME 04101 75 Russell Street Mobile Phone: (917) 488-4085 Lewiston, ME 04240 [email protected] http://www.myspace.com/hiroyamusic EDUCATION 2007 D.M.A. (Doctor of Musical Arts) in Composition Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Columbia University, New York, NY Advisor: Professor Fred Lerdahl Dissertation: Cut for Satsuma Biwa and Chamber Orchestra 2001 M.A. in Composition Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Columbia University, New York, NY 1998 B.Mus. in Composition (Honors with Distinction) Faculty of Music McGill University, Montréal, QC 1995 D.E.C. (Diplôme d’études collégiales) in Pure and Applied Sciences Marianopolis College, Montréal, QC TEACHING EXPERIENCE 2005-Present Bates College Assistant Professor of Music Conductor of College Orchestra Courses Taught: Music Theory I, Music Theory III and IV, Music Composition, Music and Cinema, Introduction to Listening, Orchestration, Undergraduate Theses in Composition 1999-2005 Columbia University Teaching Fellow (2002-2005), Assistant Conductor of University Orchestra (1999-2002) Courses Taught: Introductory Ear Training (Instructor), Chromatic Harmony and Advanced Composition (Teaching Assistant) Hiroya Miura Curriculum Vitae CONDUCTING / PERFORMANCE EXPERIENCE Calling ---Opera of Forgiveness---* Principal Conductor Electronic Quartet with Jorge Sad, Santiago Diez, and Matias Giuliani at CCMOCA* No-Input Mixer performer Bates College Orchestra Music Director/ Principal Conductor Columbia -
Good Chemistry James J
Columbia College Fall 2012 TODAY Good Chemistry James J. Valentini Transitions from Longtime Professor to Dean of the College your Contents columbia connection. COVER STORY FEATURES The perfect midtown location: 40 The Home • Network with Columbia alumni Front • Attend exciting events and programs Ai-jen Poo ’96 gives domes- • Dine with a client tic workers a voice. • Conduct business meetings BY NATHALIE ALONSO ’08 • Take advantage of overnight rooms and so much more. 28 Stand and Deliver Joel Klein ’67’s extraordi- nary career as an attorney, educator and reformer. BY CHRIS BURRELL 18 Good Chemistry James J. Valentini transitions from longtime professor of chemistry to Dean of the College. Meet him in this Q&A with CCT Editor Alex Sachare ’71. 34 The Open Mind of Richard Heffner ’46 APPLY FOR The venerable PBS host MEMBERSHIP TODAY! provides a forum for guests 15 WEST 43 STREET to examine, question and NEW YORK, NY 10036 disagree. TEL: 212.719.0380 BY THOMAS VIncIGUERRA ’85, in residence at The Princeton Club ’86J, ’90 GSAS of New York www.columbiaclub.org COVER: LESLIE JEAN-BART ’76, ’77J; BACK COVER: COLIN SULLIVAN ’11 WITHIN THE FAMILY DEPARTMENTS ALUMNI NEWS Déjà Vu All Over Again or 49 Message from the CCAA President The Start of Something New? Kyra Tirana Barry ’87 on the successful inaugural summer of alumni- ete Mangurian is the 10th head football coach since there, the methods to achieve that goal. The goal will happen if sponsored internships. I came to Columbia as a freshman in 1967. (Yes, we you do the other things along the way.” were “freshmen” then, not “first-years,” and we even Still, there’s no substitute for the goal, what Mangurian calls 50 Bookshelf wore beanies during Orientation — but that’s a story the “W word.” for another time.) Since then, Columbia has compiled “The bottom line is winning,” he said. -
Student Life the Arts
Student Life The Arts University Art Collection the steps of Low Memorial Library; Three- “Classical Music Suite,” the “Essential Key- Way Piece: Points by Henry Moore, on board Series,” and the “Sonic Boom Festival.” Columbia maintains a large collection of Revson Plaza, near the Law School; Artists appearing at Miller Theatre have art, much of which is on view throughout Bellerophon Taming Pegasus by Jacques included the Juilliard, Guarneri, Shanghai, the campus in libraries, lounges, offices, Lipchitz, on the facade of the Law School; a Emerson, Australian, and St. Petersburg and outdoors. The collection includes a cast of Auguste Rodin’s Thinker, on the String Quartets; pianists Russell Sherman, variety of works, such as paintings, sculp- lawn of Philosophy Hall; The Great God Peter Serkin, Ursula Oppens, and Charles tures, prints, drawings, photographs, and Pan by George Grey Barnard, on the lawn Rosen; as well as musical artists Joel Krosnick decorative arts. The objects range in date of Lewisohn Hall; Thomas Jefferson, in front and Gilbert Kalish, Dawn Upshaw, Benita from the ancient Near Eastern cylinder seals of the Journalism Building, and Alexander Valente, Speculum Musicae, the Da Capo of the second millennium B.C.E. to con- Hamilton, in front of Hamilton Hall, both Chamber Players, Continuum, and the temporary prints and photographs. by William Ordway Partridge; and Clement New York New Music Ensemble. Also in the collection are numerous por- Meadmore’s Curl, in front of Uris Hall. The “Jazz! in Miller Theatre” series has help- traits of former faculty and other members ed to preserve one of America’s most important of the University community. -
Neil Shubin '82 Brings out the Fish in All of Us
ANDRES ALONSO ’79 5 MINUTES WITH … CHARLES ARDAI ’91 REFORMS BALTIMORE’S HISTORY PROFESSOR BRINGS PULP FICTION SCHOOL BUREAUCRACY MAE NGAI ’98 GSAS TO TODAY’S READERS PAGE 22 PAGE 11 PAGE 24 Columbia College March/April 2011 TODAY Neil Shubin ’82 Brings Out the Fish in All of Us Shubin, a paleontologist and evolutionary biologist, co-led a team that discovered evidence of the pivotal shift from aquatic to terrestrial life. ust another J membership perk. Meet. Dine. Entertain. Join the Columbia Club and access state-of-the-art meeting rooms for your conferences and events. For more information or to apply, visit www.columbiaclub.org or call (212) 719-0380. The Columbia University Club of New York in residence at 15 West 43 St. New York, N Y 10036 Columbia’s SocialIntellectualCulturalRecreationalProfessional Resource in Midtown. Columbia College Today Contents 22 12 24 7 56 18 COVER STORY ALUMNI NEWS DEPARTMENTS G O FISH 27 O BITUARIES 2 LETTERS TO THE 12 Paleontologist and evolutionary biologist Neil Shubin 27 Joseph D. Coffee Jr. ’41 EDITOR ’82 brings out the fish in all of us. 28 Garland E. Wood ’65 3 ITHIN THE AMILY By Nathalie Alonso ’08 W F 30 B OOKSHEL F 4 AROUND THE QUADS FEATURES Featured: Adam Gidwitz ’04 4 turns classic folklore on its Northwest Corner Building Opens COLUMBIA FORUM ear with his new children’s 18 book, A Tale Dark & Grimm. 5 Rose, Jones Join In an excerpt from his book How Soccer Explains the College Senior Staff World: An Unlikely Theory of Globalization, Franklin 32 LASS OTES 6 Creed To Deliver Foer ’96 explains how one soccer club’s destiny was C N A LUMNI PRO F ILES Class Day Address shaped by European anti-Semitism. -
Columbia University in the City of New York Family
FAMILY HANDBOOK COLUMBIACOLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK 2009–2010 FAMILY HANDBOOK COLUMBIACOLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK Columbia College The Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science Dean of Student Affairs Office • Lerner Hall, 6th Floor, 2920 Broadway, New York, NY 10027 • 212-854-2446 http://www.studentaffairs.columbia.edu/parents • e-mail: [email protected] Division of Student Affairs At Columbia University Contents WELCOME FROM THE DEAN OF STUDENT AFFAIRS ................................................................3 2009–2010 ACADEMIC CALENDAR.......................................................................................4 1 Our Campus Community . .5 2 Family Involvement Opportunities . .12 3 Campus Resources . .16 ATHLETICS ........................................................................................................................16 CENTER FOR CAREER EDUCATION.......................................................................................16 CENTER FOR STUDENT ADVISING .......................................................................................18 COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ...............................................................................................18 COMMUNITY IMPACT..........................................................................................................20 COMPUTING AT COLUMBIA .................................................................................................20 DINING SERVICES ...............................................................................................................20 -
Caldwell University Celebrates 76Th Annual
FALL 2018 CALDWELL UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE EOFEDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY FUND CELEBRATES 50 YEARS ALSO INSIDE: BRINGING STUDENTS FROM RECORD-BREAKING NUMBER REMEMBERING SISTER THE PAGE TO THE STAGE OF GRADUATES VIVIEN JENNINGS VOLUME 10 ISSUE 2 CALDWELL UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE FALL 2018 Caldwell University Magazine is produced for alumni and friends twice each year by the News and Media Relations Office at Caldwell University. Its goal is to provide news and information about Caldwell University’s students, faculty, staff, alumni, and administration. We welcome your comments and suggestions! Please email us at [email protected]. 20 Blessed by the Holy Father EDITOR Colette M. Liddy ’13 M.A. 28 WRITERS & CONTRIBUTORS Remembering Sister Vivien Jennings Nicole M. Burrell ’09 Lori Funicello Christina Hall Meghan Moran ’07 John Tagliaferri COPY EDITOR John Jurich STUDENT ASSISTANT Andrew Timothy PHOTOGRAPHY table of contents Pushparaj Aitwal Gene Gabelli 4 Celebrating 50 Years of EOF Prasad Gyawali Marina Maret 14 Commencement 2018: Record-breaking Alan Schindler Number of Graduates DESIGN Graphic Imagery, Inc. 25 Coming Home: Hasani Whitfield Returns to Caldwell to SPECIAL THANKS Kimberly Reamer Lead the Baseball Program 14 Reference Services & Archives 30 Beatriz Gomez-Klein ’73: Librarian How Scholarship Forged a New Future Address comments and 32 Caldwell Alumna Builds questions to: Cultural Bridges [email protected] Caldwell University Magazine 120 Bloomfield Avenue Caldwell, NJ 07006 General information COVER: Andrei St. Felix, director