By The Week
 
April 21, 2006
The next issue of By The Week will be published on Friday, April 28, 2006. The deadline for the submission of news items is Wednesday, April 26. Please send your news items to Sarah Day, BTW coordinator. The Communications Office reserves the right to edit all material for space, style and content. Click here for By The Week archived issues.
 
 

News  

UNE receives $225,000 grant from MELMAC Foundation to enhance 1st-year student retention efforts
The University of New England recently received a nearly quarter-million-dollar grant from the MELMAC Education Foundation to fund a four-year, first-year student retention project. The project will center on reducing overall attrition rates at the University, focusing particularly on first-year students, who are the most at risk.

The $225,000 grant will be awarded to the University over four years. The University Campus in Biddeford, which houses 78% of UNE's undergraduate population, will be the primary recipient of the money. The grant program was developed through the collaborative efforts of the University's Undergraduate Retention Committee.

As proposed, an Office of First Year Student Advisement will be established where staff and peer mentors will have the opportunity to provide individualized advising sessions to new students to develop mutually agreed-upon plans of academic and student life success. A new requirement for all incoming first-year students will be to complete an online Noel-Levitz College Student Inventory (CSI), allowing the University to collect data on individual students' needs and strengths. This will aid staff in pinpointing students who are most at risk for attrition from the University and will provide them with needed support services indicated by their CSI responses. More Information

Portland Press Herald column focuses on sophomore Ashley McDonald's
lacrosse career
Ashley McDonaldThe Portland Press Herald on April 13, 2006 highlighted UNE lacrosse player Ashley McDonald '08's outstanding field career. Although only a sophomore, MacDonald has already matched the UNE program's career record for assists with 50.  She needs only 23 goals and 17 points to claim those categories as her own. With MacDonald on the team, the Nor'easters are 17-12, including a school-record 11 wins in 2005, and are averaging roughly 12.5 goals per game. Coach Julie Redman said that MacDonald is helping everyone score more, and win more: "She's our career assist leader in a season and a half. What does that tell you? It's never just the Ash Mac Show." More UNE in the News

English Chair Anouar Majid's New York Times letter responds to story
on financing college
Anouar MajidThe New York Times on April 14th published a letter by Professor Anouar Majid, Ph.D., in response to the April 10th NYT story "Some Parents Letting Children Choose College, and Pay for It." Majid, chair of the English Department, wrote that "with the average United States household weighed down by increasing debt, financing higher education for children is bound to become intolerable for middle-class families. We certainly need well-educated people, but saddling college students who are barely out of their teenage years with thousands of dollars of debt makes it appear that a good education is a luxury, not a necessity. ... The future, under such circumstances, doesn't look promising." More UNE in the News

Events


Art Gallery presents 'Studio Connections: Artists Supporting MPBN' April 2-30th
Abbott Meader, Look Out from the Shade"Studio Connections: Artists Supporting MPBN" will be on view April 2-30, 2006 at the University of New England’s Art Gallery on the Westbrook College Campus.

The exhibition features select works of fine art and crafts chosen by a jury of art professionals from the hundreds donated to The MPBN Great TV Auction. More Information


Art Gallery presents 'In Black and White and Color: Photographs by Denise Froehlich and Murad Sayen,' May 4 – July 2
Denise Froehlich Murad Sayen "Blue Goddess"In Black and White and Color: Photographs by Denise Froehlich and Murad Sayen  will be on view May 4 through July 2, 2006 at the Art Gallery on the Westbrook College Campus.

An opening reception will be held on Thursday, May 4 from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m.

Two separate conversations with the artists are scheduled at the Art Gallery. Murad Sayen will speak on Wednesday, May 10th, 5:00 - 6:30 p.m., and Denise Froehlich will speak on Tuesday, June 13th, 5:00 - 6:30 p.m. More information

Spring Fest
All members of the UNE community (and their guests) are welcome to join us for Spring Fest, Friday, April 21, 2006 on the Westbrook College Campus.

BBQ: Alexander Lawn- 5:00 p.m.  ( $2 for Children under 12, $4 for Adults )
Games: Life-Sized Operation Game, Rock Climbing Wall & More! Alexander Lawn & Ludcke Green 5:00 - 6:30 p.m. (Free)
Band:  Mckinley Place -Ludcke Auditorium 7:00 p.m. (Free)

Please feel free to e-mail jdeburro@une.edu or call x4269 for further details.

Honors Thesis Biological Research Presentation
Senior Honors Thesis Student, Kelsey L. Walton, will present "Ecdysone receptor plays a role in determining social behavior of adult male Drosophila" on Wednesday, April 26, 2006 at 3:00 p.m. in Cafeteria Function Room #2, University Campus.

She will reprise her thesis at the Arts and Sciences Symposium on Wednesday, May 3rd.

Harvard scholar David Haig to speak on ‘The Divided Self: Brain, Brawn and Superego,’ April 28th
David HaigHarvard biologist David Haig, Ph.D., will deliver the fifth annual William D. Hamilton Memorial Lecture on "The Divided Self: Brain, Brawn and the Superego" April 28, 2006 at 7:00 p.m. in the College of Health Professions Lecture Hall on the University of New England's Westbrook College Campus, 716 Stevens, Ave., Portland.

The lecture, sponsored by the University of New England's New England Institute, is free and open to the public.

Haig will discuss emerging theories on the conflicts between genes within a single individual, an organism at odds with itself. He will use the example of conflicts between maternally and paternally imprinted genes: genes that are expressed only when inherited from one's mother and those expressed only when inherited from one's father.
More information

American medicine's powerful influence on the American dream is the topic of author Carl Elliott's April 28th Crosley Lecture
Carl ElliottMore and more Americans are using drugs and medical technology to make themselves more attractive, happier and better performers, according to Carl Elliott, M.D., Ph.D.

Ethics scholar and author Dr. Elliott will address this issue in his lecture “American Medicine Meets the American Dream” at noon on Friday, April 28, 2006 in Room 6, Blewett Hall on the Westbrook College Campus.

“There is nothing new about the American pursuit of happiness. But how are we to understand the steady incorporation of medicine into that pursuit?,” asks Dr. Elliott. “Over the past half-century American doctors have begun to use the tools of medical technology not merely to make sick people better, but to make well people better than well. From Botox, Viagra and Propecia to antidepressants, breast augmentation and sex-reassignment surgery, vast numbers of Americans now deploy the tools of medical technology to transform themselves, ward off shame and social stigma, and achieve self-fulfillment. Why do we feel so uneasy about these drugs and therapies even as we embrace them? What has drawn American medicine into the pursuit of the American dream?” More information

UNECOM Hosts Sixth Annual Spring Symposium at Eastland Park Hotel
The Eastland Park Hotel in Portland will be the setting for the Sixth Annual UNECOM Spring Symposium on April 28th. 

Titled “Practice Dilemmas: Topics in Rheumatology,” the symposium will feature presenters Jonathan S. Coblyn, M.D., director of the Center for Arthritis and Joint Diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.  Also presenting are Charles Radis, D.O. and Brian Kerouack, M.D., rheumatologists from Portland, Edward Reardon, D.O. a rheumatologist from Providence, RI, Rob Smith, M.D., M.P.H., director of the Infectious Disease Fellowship at MMC, and others. 

Topics will include Rheumatoid Arthritis, Gout, Safe & Effective Rheumatoid Pain Management, Lyme Disease, the latest medications, Osteoarthritis, and Age/Gender Considerations in Rheumatoid Disease.  In addition, there will be 3 hands-on workshops: Joint Exam Refresher, the Use of Osteopathic Manipulative Medicine for Pain Relief and Joint Injection/Aspiration Techniques. 

Registration is $50; UNE Residents/Interns: $25; Students may attend for free.  For more information or to register, please call Marolyn Bissonnette, CME Office Manager, at x2589 or email her at mbissonnette@une.edu.  See the full brochure on the CME web page: www.une.edu/com/cme/events.asp

Fourth Annual CHP Research Symposium
The Fourth Annual College of Health Professions Research Symposium will be held on Wednesday, May 3, 2006 from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. on the Westbrook College Campus.  Oral presentations will be held in both Coleman 7 and the CHP Interactive Classroom from 8:30 - 10:10, while posters will be displayed in Ludke Auditorium from 10:30 to 11:30.  Light refreshments will be served.

All are welcome to come and hear from both students and faculty about their research efforts.  Posters and oral presentations will be from four programs: Dental Hygiene, Occupational Therapy, Nursing and Social Work.

Aging and Public Health: Optimizing the Linkages to Benefit Maine Elders
The Maine UNE Geriatric Education Center is cosponsoring a conference on “Connecting Public Health, Aging and Clinical Resources: Optimizing the Linkages to Benefit Maine Elders” on April 26th for 8:00 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. at Maple Hill Farm in Hallowell, Maine.

The goal of the event is to identify and highlight the linkages between Maine aging and public health resources and to strengthen the linkage between clinicians and aging and public health recourses to enhance communication, coordination, collaboration and ultimately, the number of people served.

Registration is $20 with a deadline of April 18th.

Cosponsors include the Harvard School of Public Health, Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Maine Center for Public Health and the New England Alliance for Workforce Development.

For more information on the event, contact Ann Conway at aconway@mcph.org. For more information on registering or to receive a registration form, contact Dani Kalian at dkalian@mcph.org.

Workshop for medical professionals and students on Handheld Personal Digital Assistants and Epocrates Software
A workshop for medical professionals and students on the usefulness and value of handheld personal digital assistants (PDAs) and Epocrates (user software) will be held from 1 to 3:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 27, in Room 233, Blewett Hall, Westbrook College Campus.

The workshop, “Introduction to Handhelds and Epocrates,” will be taught by Rorie Lee, Ph.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of family medicine and assistant director of medical education at the College of Osteopathic Medicine. The workshop, part of the University of Maine Center on Aging’s Spring 2006 Professional Excellence in Geriatrics Series (PEGS), is co-sponsored by UNECOM and the Maine UNE Geriatric Education Center. More information.

1st Annual Student-Athlete vs. Faculty/Staff Wiffle Ball Tournament
The UNE Student-Athlete Advisory Committee would like to invite all of you to participate in our 1st Annual Student-Athletes vs. Faculty/Staff Wiffle Ball Tournament!

The tournament will be held on Friday, May 5th from 4-7 p.m. on the athletic fields. This will be a 16 team, single-elimination tournament. Teams will consist of a minimum of 7 players, with a minimum of 4 female players.

Interested participants may sign up their complete teams only either via e-mail to Julie Redman - jredman@une.edu , or by signing up on her office door (back of the CC Gym).

This is going to be a wonderful family-oriented event, and everyone is encouraged to stop by and catch the excitement!

SAAC will also be hosting a good old fashioned cookout from 4-6 p.m. out on the fields!
Please contact Julie Redman with any questions at Ext. 2907.

10th Annual UNE Golf Classic
The 10th Annual University of New England Golf Classic will be held on Friday, May 19th at 8:00 a.m. at Nonesuch River Golf Course in Scarborough, Maine. The format is a four-person scramble and the cost is $120 per person. Please come support UNE's Athletic Department by taking part in this year's fundraising Classic.

New to the tournament this year will be a chance to win great hole-in-one prizes from a new car to a choice of airline tickets or a 7-day cruise. All you have to do is knock it in the hole!  To enter a foursome in the Classic, please contact Kasey Keenan at ext. 2555 ASAP.


People 

Kilian James Garvey, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology, will present at the 18th Annual Meeting of the Human Behavior and Evolution Society. He will present a paper titled "The Interaction of Epistemic, Existential, and Ideological Motivations of Anti-Darwinian Cognitions," and a poster titled "Affectively Motivated Cognition Supporting Creationism and Intelligent Design."

Elizabeth De Wolfe, Ph.D., associate professor of American studies, presented a colloquium as part of the "American Conversations" series at Boston University. The series brings scholars of American studies to BU to talk about their research. American Conversations is sponsored by the BU American and New England Studies Program, from which De Wolfe earned her Ph.D. in 1996.

India Broyles, Ed.D. (COM), and Cynthia Cartwright, M.S.Ed., RN, MT (Maine Health: Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation) had an invited column published in the April edition of the newsletter of the American College of Osteopathic Surgeons: “Assessment and evaluation in competency-based education.”  ACOS News, Vol. 44, No. 5, pp. 4-5, 7.
 

   
       

Back to Top

 
» Advanced Search