Szilvia Kadas
Szilvia Kadas, Art and Art History Department, exhibits her recent graphic design works at “The SUNY Design Invitational” at The College at Brockport among other graphic design faculty at the State University of New York system. The exhibition opened to the public on Jan. 30 and will be on display through March 6 at the Tower Fine Arts Center Gallery, located at 180 Holley St., Brockport, N.Y.
Teagan Bradway
Teagan Bradway, English Department, gave the keynote lecture for the annual Shifting Tides, Anxious Borders Graduate Conference hosted by the Department of English, General Literature, and Rhetoric at Binghamton University. Bradway’s lecture, presented on March 23, was titled “Feeling the Fantasy: The Politics of Pleasure in Queer and Trans Camp."
Caroline Kaltefleiter
Caroline Kaltefleiter, Communication and Media Studies Department, presented a paper titled, “How Soon Is Now: Wave Resistance: Liminality, and Critical Girlhood Studies” at The Girl in Theory: Toward a Critical Girlhood Studies Online Symposium. Also, she moderated a panel titled, “(Re)Defining the Girl.” The event, held March 29 to 31, was sponsored by the Girlhood Studies Collective at Rutgers University, Camden, N.J.
Dan Harms
Dan Harms, Library, had two books published this summer. The first, The Long-Lost Friend, is a book of Pennsylvania German folk remedies from 1820 published by Llewellyn. The second, Experimentum Potens Magna, is a handwritten and illuminated manuscript of folk belief published by Caduceus Books of Burbage, Leicestershire, Pa.
Carol Costell Corbin
Carol Costell Corbin, Advisement and Transition, recently attended the 14th annual National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students (NISTS) conference in Atlanta, Ga. She co-presented with Michael Henningsen, Mohawk Valley Community College, on the New York State Transfer and Articulation Association (NYSTAA). Their session title was “A State-Wide Transfer Professional Organization: The Good, the Bad, and the Future.” Henningsen currently serves as NYSTAA president, and Corbin serves as president-elect. At the conference, Corbin was awarded the Bonita C. Jacobs Transfer Champion Rising Star award.
Steven Gabriel
Steven Gabriel, Health Department, and colleagues had their article titled “Women’s Motivators to Engage in Opioid Use Disorder Treatment While Enrolled in an Opioid Intervention Court,” published in April in the journal Substance Use & Misuse.
Carolyn Bershad
Carolyn Bershad, Counseling and Student Development Center, presented “Highlights from the AUCCCD 2016 Directors’ Survey” with Peter LeViness, Ph.D., at the annual conference of the Association for University and College Counseling Center Directors (AUCCCD) on Oct. 15 in Denver, Colo.
Paul Arras
Paul Arras, Communication and Media Studies Department, has a new book titled Seinfeld: A Cultural History. It is part of a series of books by Rowman and Littlefield Publishers that focuses on iconic television shows called The Cultural History of Television, which includes shows like “Friends," “The Simpsons,” “Gilmore Girls,” “Mad Men,” “Breaking Bad,” “Cheers,” “Star Trek,” and “Fraiser.” Arras’ graduate research on ’90s television turned into his first book, The Lonely Nineties, which has a chapter on “Seinfeld” among other TV shows such as “Friends,” “Law & Order” and “The Simpsons.”
Gregory D. Phelan
Gregory D. Phelan, Chemistry Department, recently presented at the Board on Research Data and Information of the National Academies. The public symposium included speakers from Columbia University, Stanford University and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. His talk on the use of digital media in scientific research is currently being prepared for publication.
Ashley Crossway
Ashley Crossway, Kinesiology Department, coauthored a research article recently published in the Athletic Training Education Journal. It is titled “Program Directors’ and Athletic Training Students’ Educational Experiences Regarding Patient-Centered Care and Transgender Patient Care.”