Lawrence University

Tag: Lawrence University

Lawrence University Celebrates Inauguration of Jill Beck as its 15th President

For the first time in more than 25 years, Lawrence University will officially install a new president.

Formal inauguration ceremonies of Jill Beck as the 15th president in Lawrence’s 158-year history will be held Saturday, May 7 beginning at 10:30 a.m. in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel.

Delegates representing more than 50 colleges, universities and learned societies from around the nation will participate in the inaugural procession of Lawrence faculty and trustees into the chapel.

William O. Hochkammer Jr., chair of the Lawrence Board of Trustees, will deliver the inauguration’s welcome. Community greetings will be presented by Appleton Mayor Tim Hanna and Wisconsin Lieutenant Governor Barbara Lawton, a 1987 Lawrence graduate.

Additional greetings will be delivered by John Bassett, president of Clark University, Beck’s alma mater, as well as individuals representing Milwaukee-Downer College alumnae and Lawrence alumni, faculty and current students.

Beck will deliver the inaugural address “Taking Flight: Exploring New Collaborations Between the Arts and Science.”

Inaugurations of college and university presidents trace their roots to 17th-century America. The custom was established by the country’s nine colonial colleges as a way of formally acknowledging a change in leadership at a school’s highest level within a context of tradition and continuity.

“A presidential inauguration is a significant event in the life of a college,” said Hochkammer, a 1966 Lawrence graduate. “It provides a wonderful opportunity to share and reflect on our role in the community and to showcase some of the people who make this institution such a special place.”

Prior to Saturday’s inauguration, Lawrence will hold a community open house on Friday, May 6. The day-long event (10 a.m. – 4 p.m.) will celebrate the academic life of the college, the connections between the arts and liberal learning and the many partnering activities engaged in by Lawrence and the Fox Cities communities.

Among the open house’s activities will be departmental displays, panel presentations or tours of all academic buildings, several art exhibitions, including a display of the recently completed Picturing Peace Project featuring photographs and poems by Appleton students and performances in the Lawrence Memorial Chapel by area kindergarten through 12th-grade students who were involved in ArtsBridge projects.

Concluding the day’s festivities will be an inaugural celebratory concert by Lawrence conservatory of music faculty. Detailed schedules of all open house activities will be available at the inauguration information desk in Main Hall on Friday (5/6) beginning at 9 a.m.

Beck was elected president on January 23, 2004 by the Lawrence Board of Trustees and began her duties on July 1 of last year, succeeding Richard Warch, who had served as president from 1979.

Prior to being named president of Lawrence, Beck held the position of director of the da Vinci Research Center for Learning Through the Arts at the University of California, Irvine. Beck founded the da Vinci Center in 2001 during her tenure (1995 2003) as UCI’s dean of the Claire Trevor School of the Arts.

A nationally recognized arts innovator, Beck also founded the ArtsBridge America program, a national model for the advancement of educational arts partnerships between universities and K-12 communities. Under her direction, the outreach program has grown from just seven students in 1996 to nearly 800 “Arts Bridge Scholars” at 21 institutions in 13 states, providing hands-on, experientially-based arts instruction to more than 30,000 school children.

Lawrence became the national headquarters of the ArtsBridge America program last year and is the only private institution among its 21 participating colleges and universities.

A native of Worcester, Mass., Beck earned a bachelor of arts degree cum laude in philosophy and art history at Clark University in 1970 and a master of arts degree in history and music from McGill University in 1976. She earned her doctorate in theatre history and criticism in 1984 from City University of New York.

Beck has written broadly on issues of arts education, as well as directed ballet and modern dance repertory extensively. During her career, Beck has been the assistant director of the dance division at The Julliard School and was the chair of the dance department at City University of New York, Connecticut College and Southern Methodist University before being appointed dean at UCI.

Beck is married to Robert Beck, a visiting professor of education at Lawrence.

Demise of Eugenics Focus of Lawrence University Biomedical Ethics Series Address

Duke University Professor Allen Buchanan will offer an alternative perspective to the popular views of the demise of the American eugenics movement and discuss the role of ethics as a discipline in the final installment of Lawrence University’s 2004-05 Edward F. Mielke Lecture Series in Biomedical Ethics.

Buchanan, professor of public policy studies and philosophy at Duke University’s Terry Stanford Institute of Public Policy, presents “What Was Really Wrong with Eugenics” Wednesday, May 11 at 7 p.m. in Lawrence’s Wriston Art Center auditorium. The lecture is free and open to the public.

The product of a late 19th- and early-to-mid 20th-century effort to produce superior human beings through selective breeding, the eugenics movement promoted a legislative agenda that favored legalized sterilization of the genetically flawed or socially unacceptable and prevented racial and ethnic groups from mixing.

Buchanan believes the standard view that eugenicists were utilitarians who cared little for justice and individual rights is flawed. He will argue instead that eugenicists appealed to familiar moral principles, but that they systematically distorted the application of these principles by embedding them in a web of false factual beliefs.

Buchanan also will discuss the role of scientific experts in eugenics and the public’s deference to their judgment, positing ethics as a discipline must be reexamined to avoid similar mistakes in the future. According to Buchanan, ethics should be as concerned with understanding the role of social institutions and practices in producing and transmitting factual beliefs that can either help or hinder moral judgment and reasoning as much as it is with articulating moral principles and critiquing moral justifications.

Buchanan has written or co-written six books, among them “Ethics, Efficiency and the Market” and “From Chance to Choice,” which examines ethical issues raised by the growth of genetic technology and discusses the need for justice and fairness in using such advances.

He served as the staff philosopher for the President’s Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research, from 1980-83 and was a principal author of the commission’s two book-length reports on ethical issues in genetics.

Buchanan spent four years (1996-2000) as a member of the Advisory Council for the National Human Genome Research Institute and is currently the director of the Consortium on Pharmacogenetics.

Buchanan, who earned his Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of North Carolina, joined the Duke faculty in 2002 after previous appointments at the universities of Arizona, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Duke University Public Policy Expert Discusses Just War Theory in Main Hall Forum

The parameters of Just War Theory, which provides norms for constraining world leaders’ recourse to war, will be discussed in a Lawrence University Main Hall Forum.

Allen Buchanan, professor of public policy studies and philosophy at Duke University’s Terry Stanford Institute of Public Policy, presents “Global Governance” Tuesday, May 10 at 4:30 p.m. in Lawrence’s Main Hall, Room 201. The lecture is free and open to the public.

Modern Just War Theory asserts war is justified only in response to an occurring or imminent unjust attack. Conversely, “preventive war” to avert a future unjust attack that is not imminent and war to establish democracy are both strictly forbidden.

In his address, Buchanan will discuss the feasibility and morality of allowing a more permissive norm within institutions designed to reduce the risks of abuse and error that have led Just War theorists to assert a blanket prohibition on preventive war and forcible democratization. He also will examine the Bush administration’s attempt to justify preventive war and forcible democratization.

A specialist in political philosophy, Buchanan is the author of six books, including 2003’s “Justice, Legitimacy and Self-Determination: Moral Foundations for International Law” in which he advocates justice, not simply peace among states, as the primary goal of the international legal system and rejects the notion that a state can conduct its foreign policies exclusively according to “national interest.”

Buchanan, who earned his Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of North Carolina, joined the Duke faculty in 2002 after previous appointments at the universities of Arizona, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

Frank Lloyd Wright and the Influence of Women in his Work Examined in Lawrence University Lecture

Frank Lloyd Wright’s pattern of eliminating the role and important contributions of several women to his work in presentations of himself will be examined in a Lawrence University address.

David Sokol, the director of museum studies in the department of art history at the University of Illinois at Chicago, presents “The Exclusion of Women from the Narrative of Frank Lloyd Wright” Thursday, May 12 at 4:30 p.m. in Wriston Art Center auditorium. The event is free and open to the public.

The talk will focus on Wright’s Unity Temple in Oak Park, Ill., one of the best known and widely admired buildings of the 20th century. Built in 1905 and now a national historic landmark, the church has been analyzed and illustrated in dozens of monographs, hundreds of books on 20th-century architecture and American architectural surveys.

In his autobiography, Wright detailed how the commission for the Unity Temple came about and how he developed its design. While nearly all scholars have accepted that story at face value, Sokol will argue Wright’s presentation is inaccurate in many details and how it overlooks the role and contributions of several women who deserve more credit.

A long-time chairperson of the Historic Preservation Commission of Oak Park, Ill., Sokol is the co-author of a guide to the Frank Lloyd Wright Historic District in Oak Park and recently completed a monograph on the Unity Temple.

Sokol has written widely about American painting and architecture and was the first curator of the Terra Museum of American Art. He has taught American art and museology at UIC since 1971, serving as chair of the art history department the past 17 years.

He earned a bachelor’s degree in Sociology at Hunter College and a Ph.D. in American and modern art and architecture at New York University.

His appearance is sponsored by the Fine Art Colloquium, Main Hall Forum and the Gender Studies Department.

Twice as Nice: Two Lawrence University Vocalists Cited by Down Beat Magazine

Who could blame Lawrence University voice teacher Chris Salerno for feeling doubly happy these days?

For the first time in its history, two Lawrence students — Charlie Christenson and Megan Hamm — have been recognized for excellence in the same year by Down Beat magazine.

Christenson, a senior from Neenah, and Hamm, a junior from Madison, were individually cited as “outstanding performers” in the college jazz voice category in Down Beat’s 28th annual student music awards contest. Both are students in Salerno’s voice studio.

The awards — known as “DBs” — are considered among the highest honors accorded college and high school music students. Announced in the magazine’s June edition that hit newsstands May 2, Christenson’s and Hamm’s DBs are the 11th and 12th earned by Lawrence students since first winning one in 1985.

Prior to Christenson and Hamm, the Lawrence University Jazz Singers were honored with their second Down Beat honor in 2002, sharing the “outstanding performance” award in the college division vocal group category.

“It is incredibly exciting to have two of my jazz voice students receive these kind of outstanding national awards,” said Salerno, who also had a hand in the Jazz Singers’ 2002 DB as the group’s co-director. “Charlie and Megan are two of the most talented and self-motivated individuals I have ever had the pleasure to work with. It is a great honor to have their talents recognized by Down Beat and I couldn’t be happier for them. They’re both so deserving.”

“All credit must go to Megan, Charlie and vocal jazz professor Chris Salerno,” said Fred Sturm, director of jazz and improvisational music at Lawrence. “Within the scope of her part-time faculty appointment on the conservatory faculty, Chris has expanded Lawrence vocal jazz offerings well beyond the Jazz Singers to incorporate a special focus upon jazz solo singing.

“Since the Lawrence Jazz Singers have already been recognized twice in the DB competition, it’s great to see our individual soloists earn these highly coveted national awards,” Sturm added. ” I’m particularly happy to see Chris being recognized nationally for the superb jazz educator that she is.”

For Christenson, winning a DB means one less thing on his to-do list.

“When I was a sophomore, I told one of my friends that my only goal at Lawrence was to win a Down Beat award before I left, which, of course, we kind of all just laughed about at the time,” said Christenson, a 2001 graduate of Neenah High School. “But now that it’s actually happened, I just can’t quite seem to wrap my mind around it. Some of my all-time favorite musicians have been linked with this award in the past. I’m so proud to be a part of that tradition.”

A trumpet player and classical singer in high school, Christenson credits a Bobby McFerrin concert at Lawrence for his jazz epiphany.

“I came to Lawrence wanting to be a choir director, which is still a definite possibility, but after attending a Bobby McFerrin concert my freshman year, I decided jazz was something I wanted to try,” said the music education major who plays piano with the LU Jazz Band and with Vale Todo, the Lawrence salsa band. “I hadn’t played or listened to hardly any jazz before coming to Lawrence, but I liked the freedom that jazz musicians got to play with while they performed.”

Christenson displayed some of that musical freedom on the audition tape he submitted to Down Beat, recording four pieces for the competition: “Seven Steps to Heaven,” “Alice in Wonderland,” “Beyond the Sea” and “Caravan.”

“I recorded the tape with my usual ‘gigging’ trio of John Sutton (bass) and Nick Kraus (drums),” said Christenson. “We recorded the tracks live with no overdubbing. I improvised on all of the tracks and on ‘Caravan,’ I improvised using a poem by Allen Ginsberg called ‘Vision 1948.’”

The first time proved to be the charm for Hamm. Her audition tape was the first solo recording of any kind that she had ever made. Accompanied by students Karl McComas-Reichl on bass, Eric Cline on piano and Zach Preston on drums, Hamm sang Miles Davis’ up-tempo tune “Four” and the classic Thelonious Monk ballad “’Round Midnight.”

Hamm, who took up the piano at the age of six, got turned on to jazz by listening to Ella Fitzgerald scat on a rendition of “How High the Moon.”

“I joined my high school’s jazz band as a junior, mainly to play the piano but I did some occasional singing, too,” said the 2002 graduate of Madison East High School. “I’ve been performing with the Lawrence’s Jazz Singers since my freshman year and have been taking jazz voice lessons with Ms. Salerno for more than a year.”

News of the awards put Christenson’s powers of concentration to the test, while Hamm was only partially caught off guard.

“Chris (Salerno) called my cell phone while I was in class taking a psychology mid-term exam,” said Christenson. “She was yelling about how proud and ecstatic she was about us winning the award. I called Megan later and we both talked about how amazing it was that we had won together.

“The last few years, Megan and I have had a lot of the same teachers and have spent a lot of time together on jazz singing, performing and listening to music with each other. Now we have both won this award and I can’t think of anyone else in the voice department whom I would rather share this sort of honor with.”

“When I heard that Charlie and I had both won Down Beat awards, I was only half surprised because I kind of figured Charlie would get one at some point,” said Hamm, also a music education major. “It’s really cool that we both won one in the same year. I was so excited and surprised to learn that I’d won. I never would have thought it was possible.”

This fall, Christenson will spend a semester teaching music at an inner city Chicago school through the Associated Colleges of the Midwest’s Urban Education program. While on the program, he’s hoping to hook up with one of his idols, Kurt Elling, who lives in Chicago.

“I hope this award leads to many more great opportunities and experiences,” said Christenson. “I’m ready to get out in public and show people what I can do.”

With another year of school to go, Hamm is still trying to sort out which direction in which to steer her musical talents.

“I’m studying classical voice as well as jazz” said Hamm, who was cast in the role of Hansel in Lawrence’s opera production of “Hansel and Gretel” earlier this year. “Lawrence is a really unique place in that sense because I’m able to study both, which is rare for vocalists.

“I’m still swimming around in the middle, because I enjoy both styles a great deal. I’ve decided I’m not going to take the Down Beat award as some kind of ‘sign’ that I should focus on jazz. I’m just hoping that if I am forced into one area or the other, that I won’t have to make that decision for long, long time.”

Dark Energy: University of Chicago Physicist Unravels Mystery of the Universe’s Secret Force in Lawrence University Colloquium

University of Chicago cosmologist Sean Carroll discusses the mysterious “dark energy” that scientists believe accounts for 70% of what makes up the universe in a Lawrence University Science Hall Colloquium.

Carroll, assistant professor of physics at the University of Chicago, the Enrico Fermi Institute and the Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics, presents “Our Preposterous Universe” Monday, May 2 at 4:15 p.m. in Science Hall, Room 102. The event is free and open to the public.

According to Carroll, what people think of as ordinary matter — atoms and molecules, stars and planets — actually accounts for less than five percent of the known universe. In his talk, Carroll will address current theories, which are based on such observations as gravitational pull and galaxy dynamics, that suggest the presence of an unseen, unknown form known as dark energy that some scientists believe is the most abundant substance in the universe. Among the most widely held theories Carroll will discuss is the existence of “vacuum energy,” a minute amount of energy that is inherit in the very fabric of space-time itself.

Carroll, whose research interests focus on the fundamental laws of physics and how they are revealed in the evolution of the universe, joined the University of Chicago faculty in 1999 after spending three years in the physics department at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He earned his Ph.D. in physics at Harvard University.

Columbia University Political Scientist Discusses Status, Implications of New European Constitution in Lawrence University International Studies Series Lecture

The status of a new European Union constitution, the angst over France’s perceived reluctance to ratify it and the ramifications for its adoption on relations with the United States will be discussed in the final installment of Lawrence University’s international studies lecture series “U.S. and European Security: Challenges and Choices.”

John Huber, a 1984 Lawrence graduate, professor of political science at Columbia University and faculty fellow at the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy, the research arm of the social sciences at Columbia, presents “France, the European Constitution and its Implications for the Transatlantic Alliance” Monday, May 9 at 7 p.m. in Science Hall, Room 102 on the Lawrence campus. The event is free and open to the public.

On May 29, France will hold a nation-wide referendum on the new European Union constitution (treaty), which all member countries must ratify for it to take effect. There is growing concern that France will not ratify the constitution because its citizens are against it, leading some experts to predict dire consequences if that happens, including those who argue France’s rejection could lead to the demise of the EU itself.

Huber will provide an overview of the key elements of the constitution, explain why it appears the French will reject the constitution when they have been such a driving force in creating it and discuss whether it will even matter if they do vote “no.”

In his address, Huber will argue that it is in the best interest of the French to adopt the EU constitution. Based on public opinion data, Huber says the French have a great deal of confidence in the EU, in fact they trust it more than their own government and are not worried it will diminish national autonomy or threaten French national identity. The concerns, according to Huber, are related to issues of unemployment, globalization and the fear that a new EU constitution will enable jobs to leave France for low-wage countries within the EU.

As for relations with the United States, Huber believes uncertainty in institution-building within the EU will further erode U.S.-EU relations. As it moves to address the concerns of its own citizens, the EU will become more protectionist, placing additional strain on EU-U.S. trade relations. Without a new constitution, the EU will have a difficult time forging common foreign and defense policies, which will make it easier for the United States to adopt foreign policy decisions that divide the member states of the EU and lead to increased contempt of many citizens in Europe towards the United States.

Huber is co-author of the book “Deliberate Discretion? Institutional Foundations of Bureaucratic Autonomy,” which develops a comparative theory of delegation in advanced democracies and wrote 1996’s “Rationalizing Parliament: Legislative Institutions and Party Politics in France,” which received honorable mention honors for the Gregory Luebbert Prize, which is awarded for the best book in comparative politics.

His writing also has been recognized with the Heinz Eulau Award by the American Political Science Association for his article “Restrictive Legislative Procedures in France and the U.S.” and the Georges Lavau Prize from the French Politics and Society Group of the APSA, which honors the best dissertation on French politics. Among his current research interests are individual turnover among cabinet ministers in parliamentary democracies and the impact of legal structure on policy-making venues.

Huber joined the Columbia political science department in 1998 and spent the 2002-03 academic year as a senior visiting research fellow at Princeton University’s Center for the Study of Democratic Politics. He also taught at the University of Michigan for six years and spent the 1991-92 academic year in the political science department at Ohio State University.

The “U.S. and European Security: Challenges and Choices” lecture series is sponsored by the Mojmir Povolny Lectureship in International Studies. Named in honor of long-time Lawrence government professor Mojmir Povolny, the lectureship promotes interest and discussion on issues of moral significance and ethical dimensions.

Wisconsin Business Leader Discusses Manufacturing’s “Global Realignment” in Lawrence University Economic Address

Jim Kurtz, an advisor to the Chicago branch of the Federal Reserve Bank, shares his perspective on what he calls a world-wide “manufacturing evolution” in an address at Lawrence University.

Kurtz presents “Innovation, Creativity, Education and the Global Realignment of Manufacturing” Wednesday, May 4 at 4:15 p.m. in Science Hall, Room 102. A question and-answer session will follow. The event is free and open to the public.

In his address, Kurtz will discuss the need for small- and medium-sized manufacturers to develop new business strategies, emphasize continuous education and form domestic and international partnerships in order to survive in the new global marketplace.

As an advisor to the FRB, Kurtz surveys manufacturers in Wisconsin on their business activity eight times a year. His findings are included in the “Beige Book,” which is reviewed by members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee. As part of his presentation, Kurtz will share his interpretation of the FOMC’s reaction to the state of the economy in general and manufacturing in particular. The FOMC next meets May 3, the day before Kurtz’ appearance.

During a recent visit to China, Kurtz says he found a country “very focused” on its economic future, with an emphasis on advanced technical training, the development of high skill sets and a rapid expansion of its infrastructure. According to Kurtz, China graduates approximately 400,000 new engineers every year, while the United States only produces around 60,000 new engineering graduates a year. He believes the next five to 10 years will be a critical time for American manufacturers as they try to adjust to increased international competition, perhaps shifting away from actual physical production to more distribution businesses.

Kurtz is involved in a wide range of business and economic activities on behalf of Wisconsin manufacturing interests, including serving as the president of The Group, Inc., an international organization of professionals from several fields who work together to assist small- and medium-sized manufacturers expand their potential.

He is a former member of the Governor’s Council for Manufacturing, serves as a member of Forward Wisconsin and the Independent Business Association and is active in the Society of Manufacturing Engineers. A small-business owner himself, Kurtz operates Screen Specialists, Ltd., an industrial screen-printing business in Waukesha.

His appearance is co-sponsored by the Lawrence economics department and UW Extension.

Lawrence University Political Scientist Awarded Fulbright Grant to Study Role of NGOs in Refugee Resettlement in War-Torn Sierra Leone

For more than 20 years, political scientist Claudena Skran has held an intense interest in refugee issues. This fall, she will embark on a research project in Africa that will put her in the middle of an ongoing struggle to rebuild lives and resettle refugees in a country ravaged by war.

An associate professor of government at Lawrence University, Skran has been awarded a $60,000 grant by the Fulbright Scholar Program to conduct a study on the role of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in refugee resettlement in post-civil war Sierra Leone.

Arguably the poorest country in the world, Sierra Leone is dealing with the aftermath of a brutal 10-year-long civil war that left 50,000 citizens dead, destroyed 300,000 homes and 80% of the country’s schools and forced nearly three-quarters of a million people to flee their homes. Since the war’s end in 2001 and national elections in 2002, an estimated 245,000 refugees have returned to the war-torn country, while more than 200,000 others who were displaced have made their way back home.

Among the nearly one-half million returnees are thousands of people with special needs, including amputees, orphans, former child soldiers and women who were victims of rape and sexual abuse.

“Under any circumstances, the task of assisting so many returning people would be difficult, but for Sierra Leone, which had the lowest ranking among 177 countries on the 2004 Human Development Index, it is proving to be especially daunting,” said Skran. “These people are now trying to rebuild their lives in a country that has been shattered.”

According to Skran, the new Sierra Leone government is attempting to reconstruct a economic, political and social infrastructure in a country with a grim profile. The annual per capita income is $150, the literacy rate is just 36% and life expectancy is less than 35 years of age. Only two percent of the country’s population is 60 years of age or older and with 250 of 1,000 children dying before the age of five, it has the world’s worst infant mortality rate. Because of the sheer enormity of the situation, says Skran, NGOs will play a vital role in the process of refugee resettlement and reintegration in Sierra Leone.

“Local NGOs and the local affiliates of international NGOs are working hard to create important links to the major international agencies that are involved in Sierra Leone, including the office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees,” said Skran.

Using the capital city of Freetown as the base of her operation and working closely with the Sierra Leone Opportunities Industrialization Centre (SLOIC) Skran will turn her research project on the role of NGOs in world politics in Sierra Leone into a case study. She will focus her study on four major questions: organization, governance, goals and impact.

“I plan to investigate how NGOs in Sierra Leone are organized, how they are funded, how they are governed, how they interact with each other as well as with the local and national governments,” said Skran. “I am also interested in seeing what impact they are having on the resettlement and reintegration of refugees and how they are specifically addressing those victims with special needs, especially the former child soldiers and the female victims of sexual abuse.”

Skran has conducted extensive research on refugee interests in Europe and is the author of the book “Refugees in Interwar Europe: The Emergence of a Regime” in which she analyzed the major players in the early days of the international refugee arena, including private volunteer agencies, the forerunners to today’s NGOs.

She also has conducted field research in Central America, studying displaced people in El Salvador and refugee issues in Mexico and Belize. Most recently, while teaching at Lawrence’s London Centre, Skran met with asylum seekers and natives of Sierra Leone, Ghana, Nigeria and other former British colonies in Africa.

“Most of my earlier research has focused on the role of NGOs at the international level, but with this Fulbright grant, I’ll be able to shift my perspective a bit and consider how NGOs help or hinder refugee resettlement and development at the local and national levels,” Skran explained. “The people at the SLOIC and other organizations that I have discussed this project with are all excited it, especially since a lack of funding prevents them from conducting any kind of independent research themselves.”

Skran joined the Lawrence faculty in 1990. She earned a bachelor’s degree in social science from Michigan State University, where she was named a Rhodes Scholar in 1983. She earned her master’s and doctorate degrees in international relations at Oxford University.

Established in 1946, the Fulbright Scholar Program provides grants for teaching and research positions in more than 140 countries worldwide and is administered by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars (CIES). Skran was selected from research proposals submitted in disciplines ranging from the sciences and humanities to the fine arts.

Lawrence University Physicist Discusses Electron Plasma Research in Science Hall Colloquium

Lawrence University physicist Matthew Stoneking discusses his current research with electron plasmas and their potential role in the future production of electric power Monday, April 25 in a Science Hall Colloquium.

Stoneking presents “Confining Electron Plasmas in a Toroidal Magnetic Field” at 4:15 p.m. in Science Hall, Room 102. The event is free and open to the public.

In his presentation, Stoneking will outline some basic plasma physics experiments in which electrons are trapped in a toroidal (doughnut-shaped) magnetic field. He will explain how charged particles, which flow along magnetic field lines like beads on a wire, can be exploited in experiments that might lead to a nuclear fusion type of power source.

Pure electron plasmas are collections or “clouds” of electrons that are confined in a vacuum chamber using magnetic and electric fields. Stoneking’s research focuses on the criteria needed for confining a stable electron plasma in a toroidal magnetic field and the factors that limit the duration of the confinement in such systems.

Since joining the Lawrence physics department in 1997, Stoneking has received three grants in support of his research, including a $178,000 grant from the National Science Foundation in 2003. He earned his Ph.D. in physics at the University of Wisconsin.