bates college office of the dean of the faculty...

35
BATES COLLEGE Office of the Dean of the Faculty PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES OF THE FACULTY 1 June 1999–31 May 2000 Note: This list does not include forthcoming publications or papers read on campus, unless at regional or national meetings that took place at Bates. Except for minor revisions of format, the bibliographical information appears as submitted by the members of the Faculty. The academic titles used in this document are the official titles for the 1999–2000 academic year. * Indicates a Bates student co-author or co-presenter. Lee H. Abrahamsen, Associate Professor of Biology Paper read: “Growth of Uropathogenic Strains of Escherichia coli in Artificial Urine and Human Urine from Males and Females,” Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology, Chicago, IL, June 1999 (with K. Palin and C. Hersey*). Claudia Aburto Guzmán, Assistant Professor of Spanish “Postales desde la orilla,” GraFemas: Publicación de la Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica, vol. 5, no. 1 (1999). Also at http://acs.tamu.edu/~grafema. Paper read: “Exploring the Cartography of Hybridity through Latino/a Performance Pieces,” 22 nd International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Miami, FL, March 2000. Paper read: “La autobiografía en la construcción de la latinidad: Scattering the Ashes por María del Carmen Boza (1998), 10º Congreso Internacional de la Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica, Querétaro, Mexico, September 1999. Paper read: “Performing Hybridity: Boleros by Eliana Rivero and the Remapping of Nostalgic Desire,” Hijas del Quinto Sol Conference, San Antonio, TX, July 1999. Paper read: “La representación de/l/a marginado/a vis a vis la patricia en Chile 1911 o ‘Wini’ y sus Viditas,” Latin American Literatures Conference, University of Southern Colorado, Pueblo, CO, March 1999. [Not reported in the 1998–1999 publications list.] Paper read: “The Spectator as Accomplice in Coser y Cantar by Dolores Prida,” 9º Congreso Internacional de la Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, September 1998. [Not reported in the 1998–1999 publications list.]

Upload: dinhkhue

Post on 28-Mar-2018

215 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

BATES COLLEGEOffice of the Dean of the Faculty

PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES OF THE FACULTY1 June 1999–31 May 2000

Note: This list does not include forthcoming publications or papers read on campus, unless at regional ornational meetings that took place at Bates. Except for minor revisions of format, the bibliographicalinformation appears as submitted by the members of the Faculty.

The academic titles used in this document are the official titles for the 1999–2000 academic year.

* Indicates a Bates student co-author or co-presenter.

Lee H. Abrahamsen, Associate Professor of Biology

Paper read: “Growth of Uropathogenic Strains of Escherichia coli in Artificial Urine andHuman Urine from Males and Females,” Meeting of the American Society forMicrobiology, Chicago, IL, June 1999 (with K. Palin and C. Hersey*).

Claudia Aburto Guzmán, Assistant Professor of Spanish

“Postales desde la orilla,” GraFemas: Publicación de la Asociación de LiteraturaFemenina Hispánica, vol. 5, no. 1 (1999). Also at http://acs.tamu.edu/~grafema.

Paper read: “Exploring the Cartography of Hybridity through Latino/a PerformancePieces,” 22nd International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association, Miami,FL, March 2000.

Paper read: “La autobiografía en la construcción de la latinidad: Scattering the Ashes porMaría del Carmen Boza (1998), 10º Congreso Internacional de la Asociación deLiteratura Femenina Hispánica, Querétaro, Mexico, September 1999.

Paper read: “Performing Hybridity: Boleros by Eliana Rivero and the Remapping ofNostalgic Desire,” Hijas del Quinto Sol Conference, San Antonio, TX, July 1999.

Paper read: “La representación de/l/a marginado/a vis a vis la patricia en Chile 1911 o‘Wini’ y sus Viditas,” Latin American Literatures Conference, University of SouthernColorado, Pueblo, CO, March 1999. [Not reported in the 1998–1999 publications list.]

Paper read: “The Spectator as Accomplice in Coser y Cantar by Dolores Prida,” 9ºCongreso Internacional de la Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica, ArizonaState University, Tempe, AZ, September 1998. [Not reported in the 1998–1999publications list.]

2

Paper read: “Posturas estratégicas frente a la Iglesia en el Chile de principios de siglo:Polanco de Hoffman y La Redención,” Conferencia del Instituto Internacional deLiteratura Iberoamericana y la Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile, June 1998.[Not reported in the 1998–1999 publications list.]

Fiction reading: “Night Running,” from Resistance, Hijas del Quinto Sol Conference, SanAntonio, TX, July 1999.

Director and performer: Coser y Cantar by Dolores Prida, 9º Congreso Internacional dela Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ,September 1998. [Not reported in the 1998–1999 publications list.]

William G. Ambrose, Jr., Associate Professor of Biology

“Decision between a Small and Large Prey Species: Reduced Energy Acquisition by Pre-migratory Purple Sandpipers, Calidris maritima, on Svalbard,” Polar Biology, vol. 22(1999) : 264–70 (with H.P. Leinaas).

Poster presented: “Chemical Analysis of Anthropogenic Heavy-Metal Contamination andIts Relation to Land Use in Two Maine Salt Marshes,” Meeting of the New EnglandEstuarine Research Society, May 2000 (with S. Canfield*, M. Retelle, L. Ongley, and T.Wenzel).

Posters presented: “Chemical Analysis of Anthropogenic Heavy-Metal Contaminationand Its Relation to Land Use in Two Maine Salt Marshes” (with S. Canfield*, M. Retelle,L. Ongley, and T. Wenzel); “Effects of Sea Grass on the Growth Rates of the Soft-Shelled Clam Mya arenaria” (with D. Smart*); “Miobenthos of the Arctic Ocean:Patterns and Processes” (with L. Clough and A. Vanreusel); “Phenotypic and GenotypicVariations of Nucella lapilus across a Gradient of Wave Exposure in Maine, USA” (withJ. Kasper* and J. Pelliccia), 29th Annual Benthic Ecology Meetings, Wilmington, NC,March 2000.

Talk: “Maine’s Rocky Intertidal,” Stanton Bird Club, Lewiston, ME, March 2000.

Martin E. Andrucki, Professor of Theater

Wrote a series of study guides published by The Public Theatre (Lewiston, ME) duringthe 1999–2000 season: “Dracula, A Study Guide,” “Italian-American Reconciliation, AStudy Guide,” “Lend Me a Tenor, A Study Guide,” and “Three Days of Rain, A StudyGuide.”

3

David A. Aschauer, Elmer W. Campbell Professor of Economics

“Do States Optimize? Public Capital and Economic Growth,” The Annals of RegionalScience (April 2000).

“Public Capital and Economic Growth: Issues in Quantity, Finance, and Efficiency,”Economic Development and Cultural Change (January 2000): 391–406.

Paper read: “A Continent Apart: Public Policy and Economic Growth in Mauritius andSierra Leone,” United Nations Experts’ Meeting on Public Sector Expenditures, NewYork, NY, June 1999.

Kiran Asher, Assistant Professor of Political Science

"Mobilizing the Discourses of Sustainable Economic Development and BiodiversityConservation in the Pacific Lowlands of Colombia," Strategies: A Journal of Theory, Cultureand Politics, vol. 13, no. 1 (May 2000): 111–25.

Paper read: “Afro-Colombian Women and the Biodiversity Discourse," Meeting of theCaribbean Studies Association, St. Lucia, May 2000.

Paper read: "The Pacific Lowlands of Colombia: Economic Frontier, BiodiversityHotspot, or Ethnic Territory?" 22nd International Congress of the Latin American StudiesAssociation, Miami, FL, March 2000.

Rachel N. Austin, Assistant Professor of Chemistry

“Incorporation and Characterization of Iron(III)tetramesityl Porphyrin andMicroperoxidase-8 in the Molecular Sieve MCM-41,” Inorganic Chemistry, vol. 38, no.21 (1999): 4901–5 (with V. Schünemann, A. Trautwein, I. Rietjens, M. Boersma, C.Veeger, D. Mandon, R. Weiss, K. Bahl*, C. Colapietro*, and M. Piech*). Abstractpublished in Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 74 (1999): 72.

Papers read: “Mechanistic Studies of Organic Hydroxylation Mediated by MCM-41Encapsulated Metalloporphyrins” (with M. Danahy*, I . Rietjens, and M. Boersma), and“Iron Porphyrin Modified TiO2 as Reductive Catalyst” (with M. Danahy*, K. Hagstrom*,H. Yang*, and J. Ferry), Annual Meeting of the American Chemical Society, SanFrancisco, CA, March 2000.

“Supported Metalloporphyrins as Enzyme Mimics,” Metals in Biology GordonConference, Ventura, CA, January 2000 (with M. Danahy*, K. Hagstrom*, and H.Yang*).

4

Pamela J. Baker, Associate Professor of Biology

“Heterogeneity of Porphyromonas gingivalis Strains in the Induction of Alveolar BoneLoss in Mice,” Oral Microbiology and Immunology, vol. 15 (2000): 27-32 (with M.Dixon, R. Evans, and D. Roopenian).

Paper read: “Balancing Content and Critique: Faculty Development,” 20th NationalConference of the National Women’s Studies Association, Albuquerque, NM, June 1999.

Amy C. Beal, Assistant Professor of Music

Paper read: “1972, A Case Study: German Support of American Experimental Music,”Annual Meeting of the Society for American Music, Charleston, SC, March 2000.

Christopher M. Beam, Lecturer in History and Director of the Muskie Archives

Lecture: “The Making of a Two-Party State: Edmund S. Muskie and the MaineDemocratic Party, 1945–1960,” Series on Politics, Power, and Influence in Maine, MaineHistorical Society, Portland, ME, November 1999.

Illustrated lecture: “The Nixon White House Tapes,” Meeting of Maine College andUniversity History Departments, Colby College, Waterville, ME, November 1999; andMargaret Chase Smith Library, Skowhegan, ME, July 1999.

Talk: “The Next Step: Bringing Students to the Archives,” Maine Libraries Conference,Augusta, ME, May 2000.

Curtis C. Bohlen, Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies

“Evolution of Environmental Service Learning, Bates College, Lewiston, Maine,” inEnvironmental Studies—Acting Locally: Concepts and Models for Service-Learning inEnvironmental Studies, ed. Harold Ward. Washington, DC: American Association forHigher Education, 1999 (with L. Ongley and A. Lathrop).

Talk: “Wetlands Protection as though Landscapes Matter,” Stanton Bird Club, Lewiston,ME, April 2000.

Bruce J. Bourque, Lecturer in Anthropology

Paper read: “Morlot’s Influence on the Development of Archaeology at Harvard,” AnnualMeeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Philadelphia, PA, April 2000.

5

Drake R. Bradley, Charles A. Dana Professor of Psychology

“Overestimation of the Effectiveness of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation as a Function ofCPR Certification Level,” Perceptual and Motor Skills, vol. 90 (2000): 349–50 (with J.Abrams and L. Tangel*).

Robin B. S. Brooks, Professor of Mathematics

Complete Solutions Manual for Reese’s University Physics, Volumes I and II. PacificGrove, CA: Brooks/Cole, 2000 (with R. Reese and M. Semon).

Student Solutions Manual for Reese’s University Physics, Volumes I and II. PacificGrove, CA: Brooks/Cole, 2000 (with R. Reese and M. Semon).

“When Is the Standard Analysis of Common Property Extraction under Free AccessCorrect? A Game-Theoretic Analysis,” Journal of Political Economy, vol. 107 (1999):843–58 (M. Murray, S. Salant, and J. Weise*).

Paper read: “The Absolute Degree and Nielsen Root Number of Compositions andCartesian Products of Maps,” Conference on Theory of Fixed Points and Its Applications,Instituto de Matematica e Estatistica of the University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil,July 1999.

Charles V. Carnegie, Associate Professor of Anthropology

Lectures: “Garvey and the Black Transnation” and “An Introduction to the Bahá’iFaith,” University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria, January 2000.

Suzanne R. Coffey, Associate Professor of Physical Education

“Committee Updates: Interpretations and Legislations,” column in NCAA Division IIINews, March and June 2000, September and December 1999.

Television program: National Division III Issues Videoconference of the NationalCollegiate Athletic Association, November 1999 (produced by National CollegiateAthletic Conference).

John R. Cole, Thomas Hedley Reynolds Professor of History

Lecture: “Why Plato?” International Scholar Athlete Hall of Fame, University of RhodeIsland, Kingston, RI, June 1999.

6

William S. Corlett, Professor of Political Science

Class Action: Reading Labor, Theory, and Value. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press,1998. [Not reported in 1998–1999 publications list.]

Paper read: “Race, Class, and the Environmental Justice Movement,” Annual Meeting ofthe American Political Science Association, Atlanta, GA, September 1999.

Paper read: “Respect and Difference in the Work of Elizabeth Gurley Flynn,” BiennialMeeting of the Working Class Studies Association, Youngstown State University,Youngstown, OH, June 1999.

Paper read: “Radical Labor and the Fabrication of the Working Man,” Annual Meetingof the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC, September 1998. [Notreported in 1998–1999 publications list.]

Rebecca W. Corrie, Phillips Professor of Art

“The Perugia Triptych and the Transmission of Byzantine Art to the Maniera Greca,” inActs, XVIIIth International Byzantine Congress, Selected Papers: Moscow, 1991, VolumeIII: Art History, Architecture, Music, ed. Ihor Sevcenko and Gennady G. Litavrin.Shepherdstown, WV: Byzantine Studies Press, 1996, 1998 (released summer 1999).

Paper read: “Angevin Ambitions: The Conradin Bible Atelier and a NeapolitanLocalization of Chantilly’s Histoire Universelle,” International Symposium on FrankishCulture at the End of the Crusades, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, March2000.

Jane T. Costlow, Associate Professor of Russian

Review in Slavic Review, vol. 58, no. 4 (1999): 935–6.

Paper read: “’The Mushroom that Grew at the Steps to Our World’: Languages of Naturein Irina Polysanskaya’s ‘Clean Zone,” Meeting of the American Association for Teachersof Slavic and East European Languages, Chicago, IL, December 1999.

Lecture: “Women and Nature in Turgenev,” Harriman Institute, Columbia University,New York, NY, February 2000.

7

Matthew J. Côté, Associate Professor of Chemistry

Lecture: “Scanned Probe Microscopy: A New Tool for Probing and ManipulatingSurfaces on the Nanometer Scale,” Bowdoin College, Brunswick, ME, April 2000.

Margaret S. Creighton, Associate Professor of History

“Finding Mother Courage: Black and White Women and the Battle of Gettysburg,” 1st

Annual Conference on Women and the Civil War, Gettysburg, PA, March 2000.

David R. Cummiskey, Associate Professor of Philosophy

Review in Ethics, vol. 110, no. 2 (January 2000): 421–6.

Review in The Philosophical Review, vol. 109, no. 1 (January 2000): 736–40.

Talk: “The Oregon ‘Death with Dignity’ Act,” Mid Coast Hospital, Brunswick, ME,March 2000.

Loring M. Danforth, Professor of Anthropology

Paper read: “Alexander the Great: A Contested Symbol of Macedonian Identity,”Conference on Memory, Identity, and Geopolitics, Watson Institute for InternationalStudies, Brown University, Providence, RI, May 2000.

Paper read: “South Melbourne Hellas or South Melbourne Lakers? Cultural Hybridity ina Greek Soccer Club in Australia,” Symposium of the Modern Greek StudiesAssociation, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, November 1999.

Florence C. Deininger, Lecturer in French

Paper read: “Images de la maternité dans l’œuvre romanesque d’André Malraux,”Twentieth-Century Literature Confererence, University of Louisville, KY, February2000.

Anne W. Dodd, Visiting Associate Professor of Education

The Story of the Sea Glass. Camden, ME: Down East, 1999.

8

“The Challenge of Changing Schools,” Journal of Maine Education, vol. 16 (winter2000): 21–7 (with S. Betournay*, E. Blevins*, K. Conceison*, M. Dow*, S. MacBride*,J. Reich*, K. Reinhalter*, L. Stone*, K. Uhlmansiek*).

“Making Schools Safer for All Students: Why Schools Need To Teach More than the 3R’s, NASSP Bulletin, vol. 84, no. 614 (March 2000): 25–31.

“Parents and Educators as Partners,” High School Magazine, vol. 7, no. 5 (January 2000):8–13 (with J. Konzal). Also published in Education Digest, vol. 65, no. 7 (February2000): 18–22.

“Making Our High Schools Better,” The College of New Jersey Magazine (autumn1999): 32–6 (with J. Konzal).

“Resources for Teachers,” column in Northwords, Maine Council for English LanguageArts, January-February and March-April 2000, September-October and November-December 1999.

Reviews in NAASP Bulletin, vol. 84, no. 614 (March 2000); vol. 84, no. 613 (February2000); vol. 83, no. 609 (October 1999).

Paper read: “Connecting the Philosophical Roots to One’s Classroom Practice:Assessment that Reflects Personal Beliefs and Reality in K-12 Schools,” Spring Meetingof the National Council of Teachers of English, New York, NY, March 2000.

Paper read: “Reflecting on Learning: Autobiographies as a Powerful Tool forUnderstanding the Teacher Self,” Annual Meeting of the National Council of Teachers ofEnglish, Denver, CO, November 1999.

Paper read: “Using and ‘Not Grading’ Informal Writing as an Assessment of Learning inProgress,” Maine Council of English Language Arts Conference, University of Maine,Orono, ME, October 1999 (with R. Cohoon*).

Address: “Why Write?” Downeast Young Authors’ Conference, Machias, ME, April2000.

Elizabeth A. Eames, Associate Professor of Anthropology

“Navigating Nigerian Bureaucracies,” in Stumbling toward Truth: Anthropologists atWork, ed. Philip de Vita. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press, 2000.

Paper read: “Whoopi Afri/canis,” Makin’ Whoopi: A Symposium on the Career ofWhoopi Goldberg, Bates College, Lewiston, ME, May 2000.

9

L. Lynnette Eckersley, Assistant Professor of English

“Gender Theory,” in Reader’s Guide to Lesbian and Gay Studies, ed. Timothy F.Murphy. Chicago: Fitzroy Dearborn, 1999.

“Joseph Reed” and “James Townley,” in The New Dictionary of National Biography, ed.H.C.G. Matthew. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999.

Paper read: “’The Power to Oblige’: Aphra Behn’s Oroonoko and The Widow Ranterversus Thomas Southerne’s Oroonoko,” Aphra Behn Conference, Philadelphia, PA,November 1999.

Paper read: “’A Female Author Does Your Smiles Implore’: An Examination of theMarginal(ized) Careers of Mary Pix and Catharine Trotter,” Annual Conference of theCanadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies, Toronto, Canada, October 1999.

J. Dykstra Eusden, Jr., Associate Professor of Geology

Chloroapatite (Ca5(PO4)3Cl) Characterization by XPS: An Environmentally ImportantSecondary Mineral, Surface Science Spectra, vol. 6, no. 3 (1999): 210–8 (with T.Eighmy, A. Kinner, E. Shaw, and C. Francis).

“Hinsdalite (PbAl3PO4SO4(OH)6) Characterized by XPS: An Environmentally ImportantSecondary Mineral, Surface Science Spectra, vol. 6, no. 3 (1999): 184–92 (with T.Eighmy, A. Kinner, E. Shaw, and C. Francis).

“Hydroxylapatite (Ca5(PO4)3OH) Characterization by XPS: An EnvironmentallyImportant Secondary Mineral, Surface Science Spectra, vol. 6, no. 3 (1999): 193–201(with T. Eighmy, A. Kinner, E. Shaw, and C. Francis).

“Petrogenesis of Municipal Solid Waste Combustion Bottom Ash,” AppliedGeochemistry, vol. 14 (1999): 1073–91 (with T. Eighmy, K. Hockert*, E. Holland*, andK. Marsella*.).

Plumbogumite (PbAl3(PO4)2(OH)5 H20) Characterization by XPS: An EnvironmentallyImportant Secondary Mineral, Surface Science Spectra, vol. 6, no. 3 (1999): 202–9 (withT. Eighmy, A. Kinner, and E. Shaw).

“Timing of the Acadian Orogeny in Northern New Hampshire,” Journal of Geology, vol.108 (2000): 219–32 (C. Guzofski*, A. Robinson*, and R. Tucker).

Whitlockite (β-Ca3(PO4)2) Characterization by XPS: An Environmentally ImportantSecondary Mineral, Surface Science Spectra, vol. 6, no. 3 (1999): 219–27 (with T.Eighmy, A. Kinner, E. Shaw, and C. Francis).

10

Abstracts published: “Continued Geologic Mapping in the Presidential Range, NH: AProgress Report for EDMAP 1999,” (with F. Brown* and S. Cannon*) and “AcadianTectonics as Viewed from Mt. Washington, NH,” Geological Society of AmericaAbstracts with Programs, vol. 32, no. 1 (2000): 8, 15–6.

Paper read: “Comparisons between Ancient Acadian and Active New ZealandTectonics,” Appalachian Symposium, Brunswick, ME, April 2000.

Paper read: “Acadian Tectonics as Viewed from Mt. Washington,” Meeting of theGeological Society of America Northeast Section, New Brunswick, NJ, March 2000.

Robert L. Farnsworth, Lecturer in English

“Bright Thing.” Connecticut Review, vol. 22, no. 1 (spring 2000).

“The Shutters.” The Tampa Review, no. 19 (winter 2000).

“The Sculpin.” Michigan Quarterly Review, vol. 38, no. 5 (summer 1999).

Poetry reading: Alice James Press Reading Series, University of Maine, Farmington,ME, March 2000.

Robert A. Feintuch, Lecturer in Art

Work reviewed in Art in America (January 2000), Bay Area City Search (December1999), Arts Monthly (November 1999), and ArtNet Magazine (4 June 1999).

Group exhibition: Figuration, Ursula Blickle Stiftung, Kraichtal Germany; RupertinumMuseum, Salzburg, Austria; and Museum für moderne zeitgenössische Kunst, Bolzano,Italy, September 1999–February 2000.

Group exhibition: Making Change, The Jewish Museum, San Francisco, CA, November1999–January 2000.

Frank Glazer, Lecturer in Music and Artist-in-Residence

Piano performances in Maine, North Carolina, and Florida.

Benefit performances for First Unitarian Church and Portland Conservatory of Music,Portland, ME, February 2000 (with C. Astrachan and K. Beecham) and October 1999;and for Saco River Festival Association, Saco, ME, April 1999.

11

Dennis Grafflin, Professor of History

Group exhibition: Western Maine Art Group Art Show, Norway, ME, July 1999.

Sandra L. Groleau, Documents Librarian

“The Maine Connection: U.S. Government Publications about the State of Maine(1998),” The Maine Entry, vol. 9, no. 3 (summer 1999) (with R. Phelan).

René Harder Horst, Assistant Professor of History

“Las comunidades indígenas y la democracia en el Paraguay: 1988–1992,” SuplementoAntropológico, Universidad Católica, Asunción, Paraguay (fall 1999).

Paper read: “Political Advocacy and Religious Allegiance: Catholic Missions andIndigenous Resistance in Paraguay, 1982–1992,” 22nd International Congress of the LatinAmerican Studies Association, Miami, FL, March 2000.

Paper read: “Consciousness and Contradiction: Indigenous People and Paraguay’sTransition to Democracy,” Meeting of the American Historical Association, Chicago, IL,January 2000.

Paper read: “Indigenous People and Military Rule in Paraguay,” Meeting of the NewEngland Council on Latin American Studies, Yale University, New Haven, CT, October1999.

Lecture: “Authoritarianism, Indigenous Resistance, and Religious Missions,”Appalachian State University, Boone, NC, March 2000.

Lecture: “Opposition to Military Rule in Southern Latin America,” State University ofNew York at Fredonia, Fredonia, NY, February 2000.

Talk: “Perón and Panama: What’s the Connection?” Wells High School, Wells, ME,December 1999.

Paul R. Heroux, Lecturer in Art

Group exhibition: Interior and Exterior, The Clay Studio, Philadelphia, PA, May 2000.

12

Rebecca M. Herzig, Assistant Professor of Women’s Studies

“Removing Roots: ‘North American Hiroshima Maiden Syndrome’ and the X-ray,”Technology and Culture, vol. 40, no. 4 (October 1999): 723-745. Also at<http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/technology_and_culture/v040/40.4herzig.html>.

Atsuko Hirai, Kazushige Hirasawa Professor of History

“Government by Piano,” in Piano Roles: Three Hundred Years of Life with the Piano, ed.James Parakilas. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2000: 303–16.

Steven L. Hochstadt, Professor of History

“The Unspoken Purposes of Service-Learning: Teaching the Holocaust,” in ConnectingPast and Present: Concepts and Models for Service Learning in History, ed. Ira Harkavyand Bill M. Donovan. Washington, DC: American Association for Higher Education,2000: 189–197.

“My Early Years,” Points East, Sino-Judaic Institute, vol. 14 (November 1999): 10–1(interview with Boris Katz).

“Vertreibung aus Deutschland und Überleben in Shanghai: Jüdische NS-Vertriebene inChina,” IMIS-Beiträge, Institut für Migrationsforschung und Interkulturelle Studien,Universität Osnabrück, vol. 12 (1999): 51-67.

Review in Social History, vol. 25 (January 2000): 98–100.

Paper read: “The Holocaust Interview: Methodologies, Techniques, and Interpretations,”Conference on “Biographische Ansätze in der historisch-sozialwissenschaftlichenErforschung des Nationalsozialismus—Praxiserfahrungen, Erkenntnispotentiale undmethodische Probleme,” Düsseldorf, Germany, December 1999.

Paper read: “Outdated Geographical Models of Migration,” Annual Meeting of the SocialScience History Association, Ft. Worth, TX, November 1999.

Lecture: “Teaching the Holocaust: Creating a Holocaust Syllabus” and “Escape from theHolocaust: Jewish Refugees in Shanghai,” Summer Seminar of the Holocaust HumanRights Center of Maine, Lewiston, ME, August 1999.

Douglas I. Hodgkin, Professor of Political Science

“Angus King” and “James B. Longley,” in Encyclopedia of Third Parties in America, ed.Immanuel Ness and James Ciment. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe, Inc., 1999.

13

James W Hughes, Associate Professor of Economics

“The Gender Wage Gap in Urban China: The Effects of Institutional Change,” Allied SocialSciences Association Meetings, Boston, MA, January 2000 (with M. Maurer-Fazio).

“The Effect of Job Mobility on Academic Salaries,” Meetings of the Western EconomicsAssociation, San Diego, CA, July 1999 (with D. Barbezat).

Patricia Johann, Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science

“Testing and Enhancing a Prototype Program Fusion Engine,” SIGSOFT SoftwareEngineering Notes, vol. 25, no. 1, January 2000.

“A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Formula: Demonstrating Equality ofFunctions and Programs,” SIGCSE Bulletin, vol. 34, no. 4, December 1999.

Pamela A.E. Johnson, Assistant Professor of Art

“Liquid, Solid, Virtual: Visual Arts in a Visual Culture,” National Symposium on NewInformation Technologies and Liberal Education, Furman University, Greenville, SC,May 2000.

Victoria L. Johnson, Assistant Professor of Sociology

Co-editor: Waves of Protest: Social Movements since the Sixties. Boulder, CO: Rowman& Littlefield, 1999 (with J. Freeman). [Not reported in 1998–1999 publications list.]

“The Strategic Determinants of a Countermovement: The Emergence and Impact ofOperation Rescue Blockades,” in Waves of Protest: Social Movements since the Sixties,ed. Victoria L. Johnson and Jo Freeman. Boulder, CO: Rowman and Littlefield, 1999:276–7. [Not reported in 1998–1999 publications list.]

Review in Contemporary Sociology, vol. 29, no. 1 (January 2000): 276–7

Penelope Jones, Lecturer in Art

Two-person exhibition: Paintings and Collages, Zero Station Gallery, South Portland,ME, May–June 2000.

Group exhibition: Clark House Gallery, Bangor, ME, December 1999.

14

Group exhibition: Seven Collage Artists, Clark House Gallery, Bangor, ME, August1999.

Emily W. Kane, Associate Professor of Sociology

Paper read: “Race, Ethnicity, and Beliefs about Gender Inequality,” Annual Meetings ofthe Society for the Study of Social Problems, Chicago, IL, August 1999.

Paper read: “Keeping a Running Tally: Couples’ Perceptions of Fairness over Time,”Annual Meetings of the American Sociological Association, Chicago, IL, August 1999(with L. Sánchez).

Stephanie Kelley-Romano, Assistant Professor of Rhetoric

Paper read: “Alien Whoopi: Star Trek and the Goldberg Generation,” Makin’ Whoopi: ASymposium on the Career of Whoopi Goldberg, Bates College, Lewiston, ME, May2000.

Paper read: “The Movement of Radical Environmentalists: Confrontational and CoactiveRhetorical Styles of Earth First!” Annual Meeting of the American Popular CultureAssociation, New Orleans, LA, April 2000.

Paper read: “TV and ET: The Role of Television in the Identity Formation of AlienAbductees,” Annual Convention of the Central States Speech CommunicationAssociation, Detroit, MI, April 2000.

Paper read: “The Myth of Communion,” International Conference on Narrative,Lexington, KY, November 1999.

John E. Kelsey, Professor of Psychology

“Perforant Pathway Stimulation in Rats Produces Seizures, Loss of HippocampalNeurons, and a Deficit in Spatial Mapping, Which Are Reduced by Prior MK-801,”Behavioural Brain Research, vol. 107 (2000): 59–69 (with K. Sanderson* and C. Frye).

“Medial Septal Lesions in Rats Enhance Locomotor Sensitization to Amphetamine,”Psychopharmacology, vol. 146 (1999): 233–40 (with J. Grabarek*).

Paper read: “Undergraduate Neuroscience at Bates College: A Curriculum Based onLaboratory Science,” Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, Miami Beach, FL,October 1999 (with N. Kleckner, C. McCormick, and T. Rioux). Abstract published inSociety for Neuroscience Abstracts, vol. 25 (1999): 264.

15

Paper read: “Co-administration of MK-801 Appears to Block the Development ofLocomotor Sensitization to Nicotine in Rats,” First Congress of the BehavioralPharmacology Society and the European Behavioural Pharmacology Society, Boston,MA, September 1999 (with T. Beer* and A. Wagner*). Abstract published inBehavioural Pharmacology, vol. 10, supplement 1 (1999): S53.

Mark A. Kessler, Professor of Political Science

“Expanding Legal Services to Rural America,” in Courts and Justice: A Reader, ed. G.Larry Mays and Peter R. Gregware. Prospect Heights, IL: Waveland Press, 2000.

Reviews in The Law and Politics Book Review, vol. 20, no. 4 (April 2000): 284–6; vol.10, no. 1 (January 2000): 16–9; and vol. 9, no. 6 (June 1999): 280–2.

Sharon Kinsman, Associate Professor of Biology

“Plant-Animal Interactions,” in Monteverde: Ecology and Conservation of a TropicalCloud Forest, ed. Nalini M. Nadkarni and Nathaniel T. Wheelwright. New York: OxfordUniversity Press, 2000: 245–302.

Paper read: “Balancing Content and Critique with Students,” 20th Annual Conference ofthe National Women’s Studies Association, Albuquerque, NM, June 1999.

Nancy W. Kleckner, Assistant Professor of Biology

Paper read: “Undergraduate Neuroscience at Bates College: A Curriculum Based onLaboratory Science,” Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, Miami Beach, FL,October 1999 (with C. McCormick, T. Rioux, and J. Kelsey). Abstract published inSociety for Neuroscience Abstracts, vol. 25 (1999): 264.

Paper read: “Testosterone, Dihydrotestosterone, or 3-androstanediol, but Not Vehicle, toCorticosteron-Depleted Rats Attenuates Pyknotic Cells in the Granule Layer of theDentate Gyrus,” Meeting of the Society for Neuroscience, Miami Beach, FL, October1999 (with C. McCormick and C. Frye).

David A. Kolb, Charles A. Dana Professor of Philosophy

“Hypertext as Subversive?” Culture Machine 2 (2000):<http://culturemachine.tees.ac.uk./frm_f1.htm>

16

“Learning Places: Building Dwelling Thinking On-Line,” Journal of Philosophy ofEducation, vol. 34, no. 1 (winter 2000): 121–33.

“The Spirit of Gravity: Architecture and Externality in Hegel,” in Hegel and Aesthetics,ed. William Maker. Albany: SUNY Press, 2000: 83–96.

“Modernity’s Self-Justification,” The Owl of Minerva, vol. 30, no. 2: 253–76.

Paper read: “”Variations on a Theme by Disney,” Conference on Architecture, Language,and Alterity, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, ME, April 2000.

Paper read: “Genius Fluxus: The Spirit of Change,” Conference on the Flux of Place,Sandbjerg, Denmark, October 1999.

Paper read: “Casey on Site and Place,” Seminar on Edward Casey’s The Fate of Place,School of Architecture, Lund, Sweden, October 1999.

Lecture: “Full Theme Ahead,” Center for the Study of American Design, Texas A&MUniversity, College Station, TX, March 2000.

Lecture: “Hypertext and Print,” Center for the Study of Digital Libraries, Texas A&MUniversity, College Station, TX, March 2000.

Lecture: “Complex Grammars: Saving Suburbia,” Studio E and Building FunctionDepartment, School of Architecture, Lund University, Sweden, October 1999.

Lecture: “Hypertext at Work,” Design@Work, Lund, Sweden, October 1999.

Lecture: “The Particular Logic of Modernity,” Hegel Society of Great Britain, PembrokeCollege, Oxford, England, September 1999.

James S. Leamon, Professor of History

Lecture: “Mason Locke Weems, George Washington, and the American Identity,” OldFort Western Lecture Series on Washington’s World, Augusta, ME, March 2000.

Lecture: “The Making of a Loyalist: The Reverend Jacob Bailey and the Declaration ofIndependence,” Maine Historical Society Lecture Series on the American Revolution andthe New Republic, Portland, ME, February 2000.

Hong Lin, Associate Professor of Physics

“Suppression of Transverse Instabilities in a Laser by Use of a Spatially FilteredFeedback,” Journal of the Optical Society of America B, vol. 17 (2000): 239–46.

17

Paper read: “Suppression of Transverse Instabilities in a Large-Aperture Laser,” AnnualMeeting of the Optical Society of America, Santa Clara, CA, September 1999.

Francisca López, Associate Professor of Spanish

Paper read: “Género y cultura popular: Te trataré como una reina de Rosa Montero,” 10ºCongreso Internacional de la Asociación de Literatura Femenina Hispánica, Querétaro,Mexico, September 1999.

Kathryn G. Low, Associate Professor of Psychology

Paper read: “Birds and Bees for Daughters: What Mothers Tell Their Daughters aboutSexuality” Annual Meeting of the Association for Women in Psychology, Salt Lake City,UT, March 2000 (with J. Weiswasser*).

Poster presented: “AIDS Knowledge and Related Behaviors in U.S. and TurkishSamples,” Annual Meeting of the New England Psychological Association, Hartford, CT,October 1999 (with M. Gazioglu).

Marcia Makris, Assistant Professor of Education

Paper read: “A Practicum in Reading Instruction: The Evolution of an Independent StudyCollaboration,” Meeting of the New England Educational Research Organization,Portsmouth, NH, April 2000.

Cristina Malcolmson, Associate Professor of English

Heart Work: George Herbert and the Protestant Ethic. Stanford, CA: StanfordUniversity Press, 1999.

“’What You Will’: Social Mobility and Gender in Twelfth Night,” in ShakespeareCriticism, vol. 46, ed. Michelle Lee. Farmington Hills, MI: Gale Research, 1999.

“Introduction to the Writings of Katherine Chidley,” Renaissance Women On-line,Women Writers Project, Brown University (1999):<http://www.wwp.brown.edu/texts/rwoentry.html>.

Paper read: “The Science and Politics of Color in the Cavendish Circle,” WesleyanRenaissance Colloquium, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, April 2000; and 9th

Annual Interdisciplinary Symposium in Medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque Studies,University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, February 2000.

18

Paula D. Matthews, Associate Librarian

Paper read: “Preserving and Digitizing Music Materials,” Meeting of the EuropeanSociety for the Cognitive Studies of Music, Rome, Italy, August 2000.

Lecture: “How Oberlin Shaped My Career,” Oberlin Alumni Librarian Conference,Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH, November 1999.

Lecture: “Renovation and Music Libraries: The Juilliard School,” Library of the JuilliardSchool of Music, New York, NY, November 1999.

William R. Matthews, Alice Swanson Esty Professor of Music

Musical compositions: “Evensong” and “Fish Fry (Uneven Song),” From a Book ofHours (II), for string trio, 2000.

Musical compositions: “Lullabye,” “Blue Ridge,” “Cooper Square,” and “Blue Rider,”String Quartet, for string quartet, 1999.

Musical compositions: “Duo,” for violin and piano, 1999.

Musical composition: “Bluebop,” for computer-controlled synthesizers, 1999.

Composition performed: “Duo,” for violin and piano; Boston, Andover, and Haverill,MA; February 2000 (H. Cumming and D. Cumming).

Composition performed: String Quartet, Portland, ME, December 1999 and January 2000(Portland String Quartet: S. Kecskemethy, R. Lantz, J. Adams, and P. Ross).

Margaret Maurer-Fazio, Assistant Professor of Economics

Paper read: “Gender-Wage Discrimination in the Shanghai Migrant Labor Market,”Annual Meeting of the Allied Social Science Association, Boston, MA, January 2000(with J. Hughes).

Lisa Maurizio, Assistant Professor of Classics and Classical and Medieval Studies

“The Panathenaic Procession: Participatory Democracy on Display?” in Democracy,Empire, and the Arts, ed. K. Raaflaub and D. Boedeker. Cambridge, MA: HarvardUniversity Press, 1999.

19

Lecture: “Dionysiac Pleasures and Anxieties: Civic Bodies and Civic Places,”Department of Classics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, April 2000.

John H. McClendon, III, Assistant Professor of American Cultural Studies andPolitical Science

Paper read: “Whoopi from the Back of the Bus, Or Feets Don’t Fail Me Now,” Makin’Whoopi: A Symposium on the Career of Whoopi Goldberg, Bates College, Lewiston,ME, May 2000.

Paper read: “On Assessing the Ideological Impact of Garveyism on Nkrumaism: PoliticalSymbolism contra Theoretical Substance,” Conference on Garveyism, Malcolm X, andNkrumaism in the New Millennium, State University of New York at Albany, Albany,NY, April 2000.

Cheryl M. McCormick, Associate Professor of Psychology

“The Neurosteroid 3α-androstanediol Prevents Inhibitory Avoidance Deficits andPyknotic Cells in the Granule Layer of the Dentate Gyrus Induced by Adrenalectomy inRats,” Brain Research, vol. 855 (2000): 166–70 (with C. Frye).

“Androgens Are Neuroprotective in the Dentate Gyrus of Adrenalectomized FemaleRats,” Stress (1999): 185–94 (with C. Frye).

Paper read: “Neuroprotective Effects of Androgens and Estrogen in Male and FemaleRats,” International Behavioral Development Symposium, Minot, ND, May 2000 (withC. Frye).

Paper read: “Hormonal and Maternal Factors in the Sexual Differentiation and Functionof the Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis,” Annual Conference of the Society forBehavioral Endocrinology, Charlottesville, VA, June 1999.

Posters presented: “Effect of Brief Periods of Corticosterone Treatment Neonatally onCorticosterone Release, Corticosteroid Receptors, and Morris Water Maze Performance”(with R. Fisher*, K. Lang*, K. MacLaury, S. Teillon*, and T. Rioux); “Inhibitory Effectsof Dihydrotestosterone Implants in the Medial Preoptic Area on Stress-RelatedCorticosterone Release” (with H. Morgan and B. Sallinen*); “North East Under/graduateResearch Organization for Neuroscience (N.E.U.R.O.N.): Our Third Conference toPromote Neuroscience Training,” (with C. Frye and P. Kehoe); “Testosterone,Dihydrotestosterone, or 3α-androstanediol, but Not Vehicle, to Corticosterone-DepletedRats Attenuates Pyknotic Cells in the Granule Layer of the Dentate Gyrus” (with N.Kleckner and C. Frye); and “Undergraduate Research at Bates College: A CurriculumBased on Laboratory Science” (with N. Kleckner, T. Rioux, and J. Kelsey), Conference

20

of the Society for Neuroscience, Miami, FL, October 1999. Abstracts appeared inSociety for Neuroscience Abstracts, vol. 29: 270, 131, 48, 269, 49.

Posters presented: “Correlations among Corticosterone Release and CorticosteroidBinding Globulin Levels in Male and Female Rats Treated with Sex Hormones,” (withW. Linkroum* and K. MacLaury*); “Effect of Brief Periods of Corticosterone TreatmentNeonatally on Corticosterone Release, Corticosteroid Receptors, and Morris Water MazePerformance” (with K. MacLaury*); “Inhibitory Effects of Dihydrotestosterone Implantsin the Medial Preoptic Area on Stress-Induced Corticosterone Release”(with B.Sallinen*); and “Testosterone, Dihydrotestosterone, or 3α-androstanediol, but NotVehicle, to Corticosterone-Depleted Rats Attenuates Pyknotic Cells in the Granule Layerof the Dentate Gyrus” (with C. Frye), Annual Meeting of the International Society forBehavioral Neuroendocrinology, Charlottesville, VA, June 1999.

Posters presented: “Androgen-Mediated Effects of Lateral BNST Lesions on HPAFunction in Rats” (with N. Miller*); “Effects of Blocking Testosterone’s Aromatizationand 5a-reduction on Pyknotic Cell Number in the Granule Layer of the Dentate GyrusInduced by Short-Term Corticosterone Depletion in Male and Female Rats” (with L.Spataro); “Menstrual Cycle and Gender Differences in Spatial Performance: Associationwith Salivary Cortisol Levels” (with S. Teillon*); “Neuroprotective Effects ofTestosterone in Long-Term Adrenalectomized Rats” (K. Lang* and C. Frye); and“Progestin Administration Reduces Pyknotic Cell Number in the Granule Layer of theDentate Gyrus Induced by Short-Term Corticosterone Depletion in Male and FemaleRats,” Fourth Annual Conference of N.E.U.R.O.N., Wellesley College, MA, April 2000.

Emily Mechner, Assistant Professor of Economics

Paper read: “Class, Occupation, and the Sugar Revolution in Barbados, 1638–1680,”Conference on the Rise of the Atlantic Economy, Charleston, SC, October 1999.

Paper read: “Pirates, Politics, and Monopoly in the Spanish West Indies Trade, 1492–1650,” UCLA Economic History Workshop, Los Angeles, CA, April 1999. [Notreported in 1998–1999 publications list.]

Elke Morris, Lecturer in Art

Paper read: “Imagemakers: Recent Work,” Northeast Regional Conference of the Societyfor Photographic Education, George Eastman House, Rochester, NY, November 1999.

Group exhibition: Ground Zero, CEPA Gallery, Buffalo, NY, January–March 2000.

21

Michael P. Murray, Charles Franklin Phillips Professor of Economics

“Teaching in a Computer Classroom: Lessons from an Econometrics Course,” Journal ofEconomic Education (summer 1999): 308–21.

“When Is the Standard Analysis of Common Property Extraction under Free AccessCorrect? A Game-Theoretic Analysis,” Journal of Political Economy, vol. 107 (1999):843–58 (R. Brooks, S. Salant, and J. Weise*).

Paper read: “Taking Linear Estimators Seriously in Introductory Econometrics,”Conference on Monte Carlo Methods in Economics, Middlebury College, Middlebury,VT, October 1999.

Lecture: “Econometrics in a Computer Classroom,” University of Virginia,Charlottesville, VA, April 2000.

Lillian R. Nayder, Associate Professor of English

“Rebellious Sepoys and Bigamous Wives: The Indian Mutiny and Marriage Law Reformin Lady Audley’s Secret,” in Beyond Sensation: Mary Elizabeth Braddon in Context, ed.Marlene Tromp, Pamela K. Gilbert, and Aeron Haynie. Albany: State University of NewYork Press, 2000: 31–42.

“Wilkie Collins Studies: 1983–1999,” Dickens Studies Annual, vol. 28 (1999): 257–329.

Paper read: “Decadent Detection: The Fate of Fenella (1891–92) and Mystery forMystery’s Sake,” Victorians Institute Conference on Framing the Victorians, VirginiaCommonwealth University, Richmond, VA, October 1999.

Lecture: “Constructing Catherine Dickens,” Speakers Series, University of Exeter,Exeter, England, November 1999.

Joseph L. Nicoletti, Lecturer in Art

Illustrated lecture: “Joseph Nicoletti: Maine Light,” U.S. Ambassador’s Residence,Santiago, Chile, April 2000.

One-person exhibition: Joseph Nicoletti, Paintings and Drawings, Greenhut Galleries,Portland, ME, May 2000.

Group exhibition: Maine Light, U.S. Ambassador’s Residence, Santiago, Chile, October1999–2001.

22

Group exhibition: Percent for Art, Maine Coast Artists, Rockport, ME, October–November 1999.

Georgia N. Nigro, Whitehouse Professor of Psychology

Paper read: “Action Research: Guiding Questions that Test Classroom Practices,”Conference of the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, Boston,MA, December 1999 (with D. Bonneau and M. Clifford).

Dolores M. O’Higgins, Associate Professor of Classics and Classical and MedievalStudies

Paper read: “Aristophanes on the Thesmophoria,” Annual Meeting of the AmericanPhilological Society, Dallas, TX, December 1999.

Mark B. Okrent, Professor of Philosophy

“Verso una teoria pragmatica del contentuto,” in Il Neopragmatismo, ed. G. Marchetti.Florence: La Nuova Italia, 1999: 209–40.

Paper read: “Heidegger and Korsgaard on Human Reflection,” Meeting of theInternational Society for Phenomenological Studies, Asilomar, CA, July 1999.

Lectures: “Practical Identity and That-For-the-Sake-of-Which We Act,” University ofEssex, Colchester, England, October 1999; and University of Warwick, Coventry,England, October 1999.

Lois K. Ongley, Assistant Professor of Geology

“Evolution of Environmental Service Learning, Bates College, Lewiston, Maine,” inEnvironmental Studies—Acting Locally: Concepts and Models for Service-Learning inEnvironmental Studies, ed. Harold Ward. Washington, DC: American Association forHigher Education, 1999 (with C. Bohlen and A. Lathrop).

“Rank Distribution of 1997 Geoscience Teaching Faculty,” Journal of GeoscienceEducation, vol. 47 (1999): 357–61.

Abstracts published: “Low Tech Remediation of Arsenic Contaminated Groundwater,Zimapán, Mexico—A Progress Report,” GSA [Geological Society of America] Abstractswith Programs, vol. 31, no. 7: 333 (with K. Heggeman*, W. Miller, S. Pickelner, and A.Armienta); and “Groundwater Flow Simulation of the Urban Area of Zimapán, Mexico,”

23

Ground Water Supply Issues in the Next Century, 1999 Abstract Book: 36 (with P.Beeson*, R. Rodríguez, M. Armienta).

Review in GAEA, newsletter of the Association for Women Geoscientists (January–February 2000).

Lecture: “Arsenic Contaminated Groundwater, Zimapán, Mexico,” SusquehannaUniversity, Selinsgrove, PA; and The University of Tennessee at Martin, Martin, TN,March 2000.

Lecture: “Arsenic in Maine,” Meeting of the Turner Conservation Commission, Turner,ME, July 1999.

Lecture: “Service-Learning in an International Context, Rural Service LearningConference,” St. Joseph’s College, Standish, ME, June 1999.

James P. Parakilas, Professor of Music

Editor and contributing writer: Piano Roles: Three Hundred Years of Life with the Piano.New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2000.

Paper read: “’Nuit plus belle qu’un jour’: Poetry, Song, and the Voice in the PianoNocturne,” Chopin Sesquicentennial Symposium, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN,September 1999.

Talk: “Prokofiev’s Romeo and Juliet,” Portland Concert Association, Portland, ME,March 2000.

Joseph G. Pelliccia, Associate Professor of Biology

Poster presented: “Biology 478: Research and Seminar in the Molecular Biology ofModel Organisms,” International C. elegans Research Meeting, Madison, WI, June 1999.

John K. Pribram, Professor of Physics

Review in American Journal of Physics, vol. 67, no. 12 (1999): 1284.

Erica Rand, Associate Professor of Art

Co-editor: Radical Teacher, no. 55, special issue (June 1999) (with M. Field).

“Introduction,” Radical Teacher, no. 55 (June 1999): 2–3.

24

“Rusty Fems Out: Straightening Hair, Sexuality, and Gender in Freckled and Fourteen,”in Swinging Single: Representing Sexuality in the 1960s, ed. Hilary Radner and MoyaLuckett. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999: 326–46.

Review appeared in Signs, vol. 25 (autumn 1999): 288–90.

Paper read: “Breeders, Butt Shots, and Liberty’s Legs: Immigration for the Holidays,”International Conference on Feminism, Television, and Video, Notre Dame, IN, May2000.

Paper read: “’A Great New Sporty Equality Look,’ The Ellis Island Snow Globe, andOther Trips in Shopping,” Conference on Transnational Politics of Gender andConsumption, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, October 1999.

Talk: “Barbie, Youth Violence, Queer Sex, and Censorship: Mixing It Up,”Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, March 2000.

Joseph P. Reilly, Assistant Professor of Physical Education

Talk: “Individual Offensive Moves off the Dribble,” Kingswood Oxford FundamentalBasketball School, West Hartford, CT, July 1999.

Michael J. Retelle, Associate Professor of Geology

Poster presented: “Laminated Sediment from Cape Hurd Lake, A Coastal Isolation Basin,Southwestern Devon Island, Nunavut, Canada,” 30th Arctic Workshop, Institute of Arctic,Antarctic, and Alpine Research, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, March 2000 (withJ. Hershberger*, S. Roberts*, and B. Trafton*). Abstract appeared in Program andAbstracts of the Thirtieth Arctic Workshop, Institute of Arctic, Antarctic, and AlpineResearch (2000): 141.

Lecture: “Paleoenvironmental Arctic Sciences, PARCS, A New NSF Initiative,” NSFOcean-Atmosphere-Ice Interaction Initiative Annual Meeting, Virginia Beach, VA,October 2000.

Mary T. Rice-DeFosse, Professor of French

Co-editor: A Feminist Encyclopedia of French Literature. Westport, CT: GreenwoodPress, 1999 (with E. Sartori, P. Gethner, S. Spencer, J. Parnell-Smith, and P. Proulx).

25

“Compagnonnage,” “Flora Tristan,” “Introduction to the Nineteenth Century,”“Revolution of 1848,” “Roman champêtre,” “Romanticism,” in A Feminist Encyclopediaof French Literature, ed. Mary Rice-DeFosse, Eva Sartori, Perry Gethner, SamiaSpencer, Juliette Parnell-Smith, and Patrice Proulx. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press,1999.

Review in Women in French Newsletter, vol. 13, no. 2 (fall 1999): 20; and George SandAssociation Newsletter (fall 1999): 1–2.

Paper read: “Artist at Work: Women Crafting Fictions,” Colloquium on Women inFrench, St. Paul, MN, April 2000.

Paper read: “Masculin/Féminin in the Poetry of Louise Colet,” Kentucky ForeignLanguage Conference, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, April 2000.

James G. Richter, Associate Professor of Political Science

The Case for Assisting Russian NGOs. Program on New Approaches to RussianSecurity, Policy Memo No. 137. Cambridge, MA: Davis Center for Russian Studies,2000.

“Citizens or Professionals: Evaluating Western Assistance to Russian Women’sOrganizations,” Project on Democracy Assistance and NGO Strategies in Post-Communist Societies, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace (2000):<http:www.ceip.org/programs/democr/NGOs/richter.pdf>.

Paper read: “Power, Principles, and the Russian Campaign against Domestic Violence,Or How Taking Agency Seriously Changes the Constructivist Picture,” Conference forthe Program on New Approaches to Russian Security, Cambridge, MA, January 2000.

Paper read: “Foreign Assistance and Social Movement Organizations in Russia: CreatingCivil Society?” Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, Atlanta,GA, September 1999.

Lecture: “Power and Norms: The Case of Domestic Violence in Russia,” Davis Centerfor Russian Studies, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, March 2000.

Trombone performance: The Creation by Franz Joseph Haydn, Maine Music Society, Sts.Peter and Paul Church, Lewiston, ME, January 2000.

26

Peter J. Rogers, Instructor in Environmental Studies

“International Conservation Organizations and the Governance of East African Biodiversity,”Forty-second Annual Meeting of the African Studies Association, Philadelphia, PA,November 1999.

Shepley L. Ross, II, Associate Professor of Mathematics

“Will the Real Bifurcation Diagram Please Stand Up!” The College Journal ofMathematics, vol. 31, no. 1 (2000): 2–14 (with J. Sorensen).

Michael J. Sargent, Assistant Professor of Psychology

Paper read: “How Perceivers Judge the Competence of Affirmative Action Recipients:On the Role of Cognitive Motivation,” Annual Meeting of the Midwestern PsychologicalAssociation, Chicago, IL, May 2000 (with M. Brewer and R. Arkin).

Poster presented: “Meritorious Selection May Boost Women’s Competence Ratings butNot Necessarily Their Confidence,” Annual Meeting of the American PsychologicalSociety, Denver, CO, June 1999 (with M. Brewer and R. Arkin).

Paula J. Schlax, Assistant Professor of Chemistry

Poster presented: “rpoS mRNA Translational Regulation: Investigations of theRelationship between mRNA Structure and Translational Initiation,” Fifth AnnualMeeting of the RNA Society, Madison, WI, May 2000 (with M. Mroz * and A. Colby*).

Ellen E. Seeling, Assistant Professor of Theater

Puppeteer: The Doctrine of Similar Things (with E. Bass) and Stories for the Sultan (withM. Shandler), National Puppetry Conference, Eugene O’Neill Theater Center, Waterford,CT, June 1999.

Costume designer: What the Butler Saw, Mad Horse Theater Company, Oak StreetTheater, Portland, ME, May 2000.

27

Mark D. Semon, Professor of Physics

Complete Solutions Manual for Reese’s University Physics, Volume Two. PacificGrove: Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole ITP, 2000 (with R. Brooks and R. Reese).

Student Solutions Manual for Reese’s University Physics, Volume Two. Pacific Grove:Pacific Grove, CA: Brooks/Cole ITP, 2000 (with R. Brooks and R. Reese).

Lavina D. Shankar, Assistant Professor of English

“De-privileging Positions: Indian Americans, South Asian Americans, and the Politics ofAsian American Studies,” Journal of Asian American Studies, vol. 3, no. 1 (2000): 67–100 (with S. Dave et al.).

Paper read: “Group Identities and Interethnic Communities among Pre-1950 South AsianAmerican Immigrants,” Annual National Convention of the Association for AsianAmerican Studies, Scottsdale, AZ, May 2000.

Paper read: “Home and Belonging in Tahira Naqvi’s and Shani Mootoo’s Short Fiction,”International South Asian Women’s Conference, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, May 2000.

Paper read: “Negotiating New Identities and Home(land)s in Indian DiasporicLiterature,” International Conference on Literature of the Indian Diaspora, University ofthe West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad, March 2000.

Lecture: “A Part, Yet Apart? Do South Asians Belong in Asian America?” AsianAmerican Awareness Day, University of Illinois, Chicago, IL, April 2000.

Lecture: “Women’s Roles in Home and the World,” Elmhirst Institute of CommunityStudies, Santiniketan, India, January 2000.

Bonnie J. Shulman, Associate Professor of Mathematics

Review appeared in MAA Online Book Review (October 1999):<http://206.4.57.253/reviews/mystic1.html>.

Paper read: “The Group Thesis: A Collaborative Environment to Foster IndividualResearch,” Conference on Models for Integrating Research into the UndergraduateExperience, Tucson, AZ, February 2000.

Paper read: “Collaboration within and across Disciplinary Divides,” National Conferencefor Women in Higher Education, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, March2000.

28

Paper read: “Your Critique, My Content: The Difficulties of Crossing AcademicBoundaries,” 20th Annual Conference of the National Women’s Studies Association,Albuquerque, NM, June 1999 (with E. Tobin).

John E. Smedley, Associate Professor of Physics

Poster presented: “Collisional Deactivation of Ba(5d7p) 3D1 by Rare Gases,” FallMeeting of the New England Section of the American Physical Society, Colby College,Waterville, ME, November 1999 (with S. Coulter, E. Felton, and K. Zomlefer).

Jazz guitar performances in Lewiston and Auburn, ME.

Stacy L. Smith, Assistant Professor of Education

Co-editor: Foundational Perspectives in Multicultural Education. New York: LongmanPress, 2000 (with E.M. Duarte).

“Being Equal versus Becoming Equal: Some Tensions,” in Philosophy of Education,1999, ed. Randall Curren. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,2000: 134–7.

Rebecca J. Sommer, Assistant Professor of Biology

Paper read: “In Utero and Lactational TCDD Exposure Alters Estrogen Receptor-AlphaExpression in the Rat Mammary Gland,” Thirty-ninth Annual Meeting of the Society ofToxicology, Philadelphia, PA, March 2000. Abstract published in Toxicological SciencesSupplement, vol. 54, no. 1 (2000): 646 (with B. Lewis, S. Hudgins, A. Lewis, K. Schorr,R. Peterson, J. Flaws, and P. Furth).

Susan A. Stark, Assistant Professor of Philosophy

Paper read: “Virtue and Emotion,” Meeting of the Maine Philosophical Institute,Bowdoin College, Brunswick, ME, April 2000.

Paper read: “Sympathy and Moral Worth,” Meeting of the Pacific Division of theAmerican Philosophical Association, Albuquerque, NM, April 2000.

Paper read: “Breasts, Bodies, and Norms,” Dowling College Colloquium, Oakdale, NY,March 2000; and Far West Popular and American Culture Association Conference, LasVegas, NV, February 2000.

29

Lecture: “Why Equal Protection Requires Exclusionary Practices,” University of Nevada,Las Vegas, NV, February 2000.

Carl B. Straub, Professor of Religion and Clark A. Griffith Professor ofEnvironmental Studies

Lecture: “Looking for a Providential Ecology,” Center for the Study of Values in PublicLife, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, April 2000.

John S. Strong, Professor of Religion

“Bones, Stones, and Buddhist Monks,” Buddhist Studies Review, vol. 16 (1999): 109–19.

Paper read: “Relics of Previous Buddhas: The Case of the Stupa of Kasyapa at Toyika,”12th Conference of the International Association of Buddhist Studies, Lausanne,Switzerland, August 1999.

Sarah M. Strong, Associate Professor of Japanese Language and Literature

Review in Japanese Religions, vol. 24, no. 2 (1999): 215–9.

Review in Choice, vol. 37, no. 1 (1999): 130.

Talk: “The Haiku Connection,” Workshop on China and Japan, Bowdoin College,Brunswick, ME, May 2000.

Carole A. Taylor, Professor of English

The Tragedy and Comedy of Resistance: Reading Modernity through Black Women’sFiction. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000.

Paper read: “’Interventions in the World’: Black Women’s Writing, Genre, and the‘Plurisignant’ Text,” Annual Convention of the Modern Language Association, Chicago,IL, December 1999.

Paper read: “Narrative and the Laborer’s Body in Pain,” Conference on Making SocialClass Visible, Metropolitan State University, St. Paul, MN, October 1999.

30

Robert J. Thomas, Professor of Biology

“Correlation between Differential Growth and Possible Auxin Mediation of Gravitropismin Pellia (a Liverwort),” Sixteenth International Botanical Congress, St. Louis, MO,August 1999 (with T. Woodward* and H. Rogoff*).

Thomas F. Tracy, Phillips Professor of Religion

“Evil, Human Freedom, and Divine Grace,” in Freedom of the Will and Theology, ed.Michael McLain and Mark Richardson. Lanham, MD: University Press of America,1999.

Paper read: “Philosophical Issues Raised by the Idea of Divine Action,” VaticanObservatory/CTNS Preparatory Conference on Quantum Theory and Theology, WyeCollege, Wye, England, September 1999.

Saam Trivedi, Assistant Professor of Philosophy

Review in Mind (April 2000).

Paper read: “Musical Expressiveness: Variations on a Theme,” Meeting of the PacificDivision of the American Society for Aesthetics, Pacific Grove, CA, March 2000.

Gina Ulysse, Assistant Professor of African American Studies

“In Their Own Words: Persistent Patriarchies across Parties: How Women Maneuver inParliament,” Women’sNet (2000): <http://womensnet.org.za/election/gina.htm>.

A Collection of Poems by Gina Ulysse, Windows on Haiti (2000):<http://windowsonhaiti.com/ffrew.htm>.

Paper read: “Going Home Again and Again and Again: The Material and Symbolic Rootsof Haitian Dyas Identities,” Conference on Questions of Home and Migration, Institutefor Women’s Studies, Lancaster University, Lancaster, England, May 2000.

Paper read: “Transporting Culture: Globalization, Informal Commercial Importers, andthe Bricolage in Jamaican Popular Representations,” Annual Meeting of the AmericanAnthropological Association, Chicago, IL, November 1999.

Paper read: “Outing the Dyas: Disordered Capital, Silences, and Social Mobility,” 10th

Annual Meeting of the Haitian Studies Association, Atlanta, GA, October 1999.

31

Lecture: “Of Ladies, Women, and Platform Shoes: Breaking Methods for a ReflexivePolitical Economy,” Institute for Research on Women and Gender, University ofMichigan, Ann Arbor, MI, May 2000.

Lecture: “Modern Market Women in Jamaica,” Berry College, Berry, GA, March 2000.

Poetry reading: “VOI FAMN/Voices of Women,” Simbi Art and Stone Gallery,Brooklyn, NY, March 2000.

Poetry reading: “I Came of Age Colonized,” Emerson College Fifth Annual PRISMConference, Boston, MA, February 2000.

Luz María Umpierre, Associate Professor of Spanish

“Poema para Elliott,” in Floating Borderlands, ed. Lauro Flores. Seattle: University ofWashington Press, 1999.

“La jogocracia,” in ¿Sabías qué? ed. Bill Vanpatten and James F. Lee. New York:McGraw-Hill, 1999.

“La receta,” in ¿Sabías qué? ed. Bill Vanpatten and James F. Lee. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1999.

Paper read: “De-coding Isabel Allende’s ‘Dos palabras,’” Romance LanguagesConference, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, OH, May 2000.

Paper read: “Unscrambling Allende’s ‘Dos palabras,’” Multi-ethnic Literatures of theU.S.A. Conference, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA, March 2000.

Poetry reading: State University of New York, College at Fredonia, Fredonia, NY, March2000.

Katalin Vecsey, Lecturer in Theater

Lecture: “Voice Work for Professional Voice Users,” Barczi Gustav College, Budapest,Hungary, June 1999.

Videotape: Voice Workout in Hungarian for Professional Voice Users, Budapest,Hungary (2000).

32

Richard V. Wagner, Professor of Psychology

Paper read: “Ethnic Conflict in the Former Yugoslavia: How to Rebuild,” Meeting of theMaine Humanities Council on “Ethnic Conflict: Yugoslavia and Beyond,” September1999.

Henry J. Walker, Lecturer in Classics and Classical and Medieval Studies

Paper read: “The Birth of the Literary Field at Rome,” Annual Convention of theClassical Association of the Mid-West and South, Knoxville, TN, April 2000.

Melissa L. Wender, Assistant Professor of Japanese Language and Literature

“Mothers Write Ikaino,” in Koreans in Japan: Critical Voices from the Margin, ed. SoniaRyang. New York: Routledge, 1999: 74–102.

Paper read: “Korean Osakas: Urban Space, Sexuality, and Ethnicity in Film andNarrative,” Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, San Diego, CA, March2000.

Paper read: “Between Anxiety and Celebration: Admitting Resident Korean Literature tothe Bundan,” Annual Meeting of the Association of Japanese Literature, Boulder, CO,November 1999.

Thomas J. Wenzel, Charles A. Dana Professor of Chemistry

“(+)-(18-Crown-6)-2,3,11,12-Tetracarboxylic Acid and Its Ytterbium(III) Complex as ChiralNMR Discriminating Agents,” Journal of Organic Chemistry, vol. 65 (2000): 1243–8 (withJ.E. Thurston*).

“Cooperative Student Activities as Learning Devices,” Analytical Chemistry, vol. 72 (2000):293A–6A.

“Dysprosium(III)-Diethylenetriaminepentaacetate Complexes of Aminocyclodextrins asChiral NMR Shift Reagents,” Chirality, vol.12 (2000): 30–7 (with R. Miles*, K. Zomlefer;D. Frederique*, M. Roan*, J. Troughton*, B. Pond*, and A. Colby*).

“Magnetic Resonance Applications: Enantiomeric Purity Studies Using NMR,” inEncyclopedia of Spectroscopy and Spectrometry, vol. 1, ed. J. Lindon, G. Tranter, and J.Holms. London: Academic Press, 2000: 411–21.

“Practical Tips for Cooperative Learning,” Analytical Chemistry, vol. 72 (2000): 359A–61A.

33

“Does Problem-Based Learning Sacrifice Content and Fundamentals?” Analytical Chemistry,vol. 71 (1999): 693A–5A.

“The Lecture As a Learning Device,” Analytical Chemistry, vol. 71 (1999): 817A–9A.

Paper read: “Active Learning in Analytical Chemistry,” National Conference of theAmerican Chemical Society, New Orleans, LA, August 1999.

Paper read: “Lanthanide-Crown Ether Couples as Chiral NMR Shift Reagents,” 11th

International Symposium on Chiral Discrimination, Chicago, IL, July 1999.

Address: “All the World’s a Sample,” National Society of the American Chemical Society,New Orleans, LA, August 1999. Published in the American Chemical Society Division ofAnalytical Chemistry Newsletter (spring 2000): 1, 10–2.

Eugene L. Wiemers, Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs, Director ofInformation Services, and Librarian

Lecture: “Information and Library Services at Bates College: Structural Issues 1991–2000,” NERCOMP Library Special Interest Group Workshop on Library/ITCollaboration, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, January 2000.

Anne D. Williams, Professor of Economics

“London’s Bethnal Green Museum,” Game Researchers’ Notes, vol. 30 (1999): 5696–7.

“Monopoly’s Antecedents: The Scottish Landlord’s Game,” Game Researchers’ Notes,vol. 30 (1999) 5702–12.

Linda F. Williams, Assistant Professor of Music and African American Studies

Review in American Ethnologist, vol. 26, no. 3 (fall 1999): 758–9.

Lecture: “Women and Performance in Hip-Hop,” Virginia State University, Petersburg,VA, April 2000.

Lecture: “Representing Feminism in Hip-Hop,” Portland State University, Portland, OR,March 2000.

Saxophone performance: Ritz-Carlton Hotel, St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, May 2000 (withthe Eddie Bruce Trio).

34

Saxophone performance: Lionel Hampton Annual Jazz Festival, University of Idaho,Moscow, ID, February 2000.

Joshua B. Williamson, Lecturer in Theater

Lighting designer: Lend Me a Tenor, The Public Theatre, Lewiston, ME, May 2000.

Lighting designer: Dracula, The Public Theatre, Lewiston, ME, October 1999.

Lighting designer: A Comedy of Errors, Theatre at Monmouth, Monmouth, ME, July1999.

Lighting designer: Harvey, Theatre at Monmouth, Monmouth, ME, July 1999.

Lighting designer: The Lion in Winter, Theatre at Monmouth, Monmouth, ME, July1999.

Lighting designer: Romeo and Juliet, Theatre at Monmouth, Monmouth, ME, June 1999.

Richard C. Williamson, Charles A. Dana Professor of French

“Teaching in a Small Liberal Arts College,” ADFL Bulletin, vol. 31, no. 1 (fall 1999):10–3.

Review in French Review, vol. 73, no. 2 (1999): 378–9.

Review in Québec Studies, vol. 26 (1999): 128–9.

Eric R. Wollman, Professor of Physics

Lecture: “Dark Matter and the Discovery of Galaxies,” Astronomical Society of NorthernNew England, Sanford, Maine, May 2000.

Lecture: “Dark Matter, Cosmic Opacity, and the Microwave Background in a Cold EarlyUniverse Model,” Colloquium, Time Services Department, U.S. Naval Observatory,Washington, DC, March 2000; and Colloquium, Department of Astronomy, YaleUniversity, New Haven, CT, December 1999.

35

Peter N. Wong, Associate Professor of Mathematics

“Estimation of Nielsen Type Numbers for Periodic Points, II,” Conference Proceedingsof the XI Brazilian Topology Meeting (Rio Claro 1998), ed. S. Firmo, D. Gonçalves, andO. Saeki. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Company, 2000: 23–32.

“Equivariant Nielsen Theory,” in Nielsen Theory and Reidemeister Torsion, ed. J.Jezierski, Polish Academy of Sciences. Warsaw, Poland: Banach Center Publishers,1999: 253–8.

Reviews in Mathematical Reviews, vol. 2000d: 55003, 50004; vol. 2000c: 55003; vol.2000a: 55002, 55003; and vol. 99g: 55002.

Paper read: “Homotopy Theory in Nielsen Coincidence Theory,” InternationalConference on Homotopy Theory and Nielsen Fixed Point Theory, Seoul, South Korea,April 2000.

Paper read: “Nielsen Coincidence Theory on Nilmanifolds,” Spring Meeting of theKorean Mathematical Society, P’ohang, South Korea, April 2000.

Paper read: “A Reidemeister Degree for Equivariant Maps,” Second Symposium onNonlinear Analysis, Toru’n, Poland, September 1999.

Paper read: “Positive Codimensional Coincidence Theory,” International Conference onTheory of Fixed Points and Its Applications,” São Paulo, Brazil, July 1999.

Lecture: “Coincidence Theory on Nilmanifolds—Anosov’s Theorem Revisited,”Voronezh Winter Mathematical School 2000, Voronezh, Russia, January–February 2000.

Shuhui Yang, Associate Professor of Chinese

Stories Old and New: A Ming Dynasty Collection. Seattle: University of WashingtonPress, 2000.