An online publication for University alumni and friends
FALL 2005
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Prestigious Grant Funds Mine Fire Research
Transitions ~ Teaching continues for retired professor
Selected Publications
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| Researcher Erin Markel '07 in Centralia
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Prestigious Grant Funds Mine Fire Research
Susquehanna University received a $40,000 grant from the NCUR/Lancy Initiative, a collaborative program between the National Conferences on Undergraduate Research (NCUR) and the Alice and Leslie E. Lancy Foundation to provide exceptional undergraduates with opportunities to do original work in close collaboration with faculty mentors.
The grant was used to support and expand Susquehanna’s Centralia project. Located in the heart of the anthracite coal region in central Pennsylvania, Centralia is a virtual ghost town sitting atop an active mine fire that began when burning trash ignited a near-surface coal seam in 1962.
“We are thrilled to have received this NCUR/Lancy grant, especially since it is one of two grants awarded in a national competition. It has allowed us to further advance one of our key strategic initiatives focused on student-faculty collaboration and support the work of several outstanding students and faculty,” said Linda McMillin, provost and dean of the faculty.
– Victoria Kidd, News and Editorial Manager
| Department |
Student/Faculty Team |
Research Overview |
Biology |
Kristina Brown '06 / Associate Professor of Biology
Tammy Tobin-Janzen |
From a new study area where a very interesting array of vascular plant life is present, they isolated DNA from several soil samples, amplified the bacterial 16S rRNA genes present using universal primers, and constructed clone libraries using the amplified genes. The clones will be sequenced to identify the bacterial species present. |
Chemistry |
Tim Yosca '06 / Associate Professor of Chemistry
Chris Janzen |
The two are researching sulfur speciation in the soils near an active vent above the mine fire using techniques for the determination of elemental sulfur, acid volatile sulfur (AVS), pyritic sulfur, and organic polysulfides adapted for the soils. |
Earth and Environmental Sciences |
Angela Dippold '07 / Associate Professor of Earth and Geological Science Jennifer Elick |
They mapped the geology of the region, described and measured the orientations of geological structures (folds and faults), described the lithologies of mapped rock units, and examined rock samples for mineralogy and rock characterization. |
Earth and Environmental Sciences |
Erin Markel '07 / Associate Professor of Earth and Geological Science
Dan Ressler |
The pair studied temperatures and carbon dioxide in the soil above the mine fire and their effects on plant diversity; plant dominance, diversity, and other statistical measures of the plant communities were related to changes in soil temperature and carbon dioxide concentrations that occur across the environmental gradient near the mine fire. |
Communications |
Jesse McGovern '06 / Assistant Professor of Communication and Theatre Arts J. Patrick McGrail |
They captured on video the scientific, historical and cultural aspects of the Centralia mine fire, including a recording of a nationally-recognized mine fire expert, interviews with researchers and a former resident of the town, the environmental damage caused by the fires, and “B-roll” footage to place Centralia in a regional context. |
History |
Damian Buggy '07 / Assistant Professor of History
Karol K. Weaver |
From secondary sources and oral history interviews with former residents, the pair investigated how physical, psychological, and social effects of the Centralia mine fire both positively and negatively impacted families during the height of the crisis. |
History |
Caitlin Mahoney '07 / Assistant Professor of History
Edward Slavishak |
They examined the current interest in Centralia as a site of ecotourism, heritage tourism, and “alternative tourism” through comprehensive secondary and primary resource searches and by researching the ways in which local chambers of commerce, tourism bureaus, and town councils have addressed the existence of Centralia in their region. |
Transitions Teaching continues for retired professor
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| Harrison was conferred professor emeritus status in absentia during convocation in May 2005. She is pictured (second row, center) with a group of students at Tumaini University College.
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Most retiring professors spend their last semester saying goodbye to old friends and places, and teaching their last few classes. But Carol Harrison spent hers teaching in Tanzania and, although she is retiring, she will not be done teaching any time soon.
For her last semester, the assistant professor of mathematics was on sabbatical at Tumaini University College. In Tanzania, only 10 percent of children attend high school, Harrison says. To help open more high schools, volunteers like her instruct Tanzanian middle-school teachers in higher-level topics like calculus II and abstract algebra.
Harrison returned to the United States in August, but, “My students pleaded with me to please come back. That is really hard to resist!” the professor says. After spending the remainder of the summer with her husband, retired Professor of Biology Rany Harrison, and their family, Harrison returned to Tanzania in late September.
Tanzania is not Harrison’s first African experience. In 1984, she served as the on-site director of Susquehanna’s Semester in Liberia program, which was offered from 1980 to 1989. “I had never even thought of going to Africa,” she says, before her friend, the head of the program, talked her into going. She later returned to Liberia as a Fulbright instructor.
Harrison has been a proponent of “another cultural experience” for all Susquehanna students. “I can see how living abroad in a different culture drastically changed my children’s view of life,” Harrison says. “We very much need to leave our culture long enough to see how others approach life. The world is too small not to have some understanding of just how much of what we think is obvious is culturally biased.”
“When I gave my youngest daughter her African outfit, she held it to her face and said, ‘I smell Africa!’ with a smile on her face. Africa has a smell and a rhythm which is hard to explain, but once you have experienced it fully, you always want more,” Harrison says.
“I will do this as long as there is money to pay for my plane ticket and my family can spare me,” Harrison says. “I don’t feel as if I have retired.”
— Erin Markel ’07
Selected Publications
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Professor of Accounting Richard O. Davis Gaffney, D., R. Davis, R. Weber and M. Smith-Gaffney. 2004. Advance payments: rev. proc. 2004-34 expands rev. proc. 71-21 and provides needed clarity. Journal of Taxation 101(2):84-94.
Assistant Professor of Accounting Barbara Woods McElroy Samuel, S., M.W. Dirsmith and B. McElroy. 2005. Monetized Medicine: From the Physical to the Fiscal. Accounting, Organizations and Society 30:249-278.
Assistant Professor of Biology Alissa Packer Packer, A., and K. Clay. 2004. Development of negative feedback during successive growth cycles of black cherry. Proceedings of the Royal Society 271:317-324.
Professor of Biology David Richard Richard, D. S., R. Rybczynski, T. G. Wilson, Y. Wang, M. L. Wayne, Y. Zhou, L. Partridge and L. G. Harshman. 2005. Insulin signaling is necessary for vitellogenesis in Drosophila melanogaster irrespective of the roles of juvenile hormone and ecdysteroids. Journal of Insect Physiology 51(4): 455-464.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry Balwant Chohan Chohan, B. S., S. C. Shoner, J. A. Kovacs and M. J. Maroney. 2004. Ligand oxidations in high spin nickel thiolate complexes and zinc analogues. Inorganic Chemistry 43(24):7726-7734.
Associate Professor of Communications Randall Hines Basso, J., and R. Hines. 2005. The Writer’s Toolbox: A Comprehensive Guide for PR and Business Communications. Kendall/Hunt.
Assistant Professor of Economics Matthew Rousu Rousu, M., W. E. Huffman, J. F. Shogren and A. Tegene. 2004. “Are United States consumers tolerant of genetically modified foods?” Review of Agricultural Economics 26:19-31.
Professor of English and Creative Writing Gary Fincke Fincke, G. 2004. Amp’d: A Father’s Backstage Pass. Michigan State University Press. Finke, G. 2004. Sorry I Worried You. University of Georgia Press. Winner of the Flannery O’Connor Award for Short Fiction.
Associate Professor of English Laurence Roth Roth, L. 2004. Reading the popular in American Jewish studies. Jewish Quarterly Review 94(4): 694-709.
Assistant Professor of Finance Sirapat Polwitoon Polwitoon, S. 2004. The effects of price limit changes on return volatility: evidence from the stock exchange of Thailand. International Business & Economics Journal 3(9):49-64.
Visiting Assistant Professor of Finance Nivine Richie Richie, N., and J. Madura. 2004. Overreaction of exchange traded funds during the bubble of 1998-2002. Journal of Behavioral Finance 5(2):91-104.
Assistant Professor of Earth and Geological Science Derek Straub Straub, D. J., and J. L. Collett Jr. 2004. An axial-flow cyclone for aircraft-based cloud water sampling. Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology 21:1825–1839.
Assistant Professor of Earth and Geological Science Katherine Straub Kiladis, G. N., K. H. Straub, and P. T. Haertel. 2005. Zonal and vertical structure of the Madden-Julian Oscillation. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 62:2790-2809.
Associate Professor of Sociology Dave Ramsaran Ramsaran, D. 2004. How states react in the context of globalization a class centered analysis: the case of Barbados and Trinidad and Tobago. The International Journal of Comparative Sociology 15:1-2.
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