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9:25 a.m., Oct. 14, 2003--For the Record provides information about recent professional activities of University of Delaware faculty and staff.
Books
Publications
Presentations
Service
Awards
William H. Meyer, professor of political science and international relations, Security, Economics and Morality in American Foreign Policy: Contemporary Issues in Historical Context, Pearson Prentice Hall Publishers.
H. Perry Chapman, professor of art history, Reading Dutch Art: Science and Fiction in Vermeer, in The Art Historian: National Traditions and Institutional Practices, edited by Michael F. Zimmerman, Yale University Press, pages 110-127.
Lawrence Nees, professor of art history, The Illustrated Manuscript of the Visio Baronti (Revalatio Barronti) in St. Petersburg (Russian National Library, cod. Lat. Oct. v.1.5), in Court Culture in the Early Middle Ages: The Proceedings of the First Alcuin Conference, pages 91-128, and a review of Wilhelm Koehler and Florentine Mütherich, Die Schule von Reims, Zweiter Teil, von der Mitte bis zum Ende des 9. Jahrhunderts, Die karolingischen 6, 2 (Berlin, 1999), in Speculum vol. 78, pages 925-928.
Michae Leja, Sewell C. Biggs Chair of American Art History, The Evolution of Progress in Sculptural Allegories at American Worlds Fairs, in 19th-Century Art Worldwide, an online journal, spring.
Hans-Joerg Busch, assistant professor of foreign languages and literatures, Computer-Based Readers for Intermediate Foreign Language Students, in Educational Media International, vol. 40, no. 3 and 4, pages 277-285.
Lawrence Nees, professor of art history, Godescalcs Career and the Problems of Influence, at a conference on Under the Influence: The Concept of Influence and the Study of Illuminated Manuscripts, at Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London, July; and Antiquity, Pseudo-Antiquity and Anti-Antiquity in Medieval Art, at opening exhibition on Transforming Tradition: Motifs of Ancient Art in Medieval Manuscripts, at J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, September.
Michael Leja, Sewell C. Biggs Chair of American Art History, Marcel Duchamp in New York, at Houston Museum of Fine Arts, Oct. 21.
Douglas F. Tuttle, instructor in School of Urban Affairs and Public Policy, with Delores A. Stafford of George Washington University, How To Comply with the Clery Act: Campus Crime Reporting for Security and Compliance, a national audio conference by Magna Publications, Sept. 9.
Peter J. McLaughlin, senior scientist, Delaware Geological Survey, Life As a Geologist at a Geological Survey, at the Department of Geological Sciences, Rutgers University, Oct. 2.
A. Scott Andres, senior scientist, Delaware Geological Survey, Groundwater Recharge Mapping for Protection of Water Resources, at fall Delaware Policy Forum Conference on Land Use Change and Water Quality, Clayton Hall, University of Delaware, Oct. 2.
William W. Boyer, Charles P. Messick Professor Emeritus of Public Administration, Confronting Transatlantic Discord: Major U.S. Policy Differences with Europe, at Pusan National University, Sept. 24, Pusan, Korea, and at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Sept. 26, Seoul. He also served as rapporteur at the 2003 Democratic Pacific Assembly, Sept. 19-21, Taipei, Taiwan.
Frank B. Murray, H. Rodney Sharp Professor of Educational Studies and Psychology, was appointed by the board of directors of the Council for Higher Education Accreditation to a three-year term on the specialized/national advisory panel, effective in January.
William S. Schenck, scientist, Delaware Geological Survey, Richard Sacher, manager, Information Technologies (IT), Christina Callahan, researcher, IT, and John Callahan, resource consultant, IT, received the John Wesley Powell Award from the U.S. Geological Survey at a Sept. 25 ceremony at USGS headquarters, Reston, Va. Named for the distinguished scientist and early USGS leader, the Powell award is the highest honor possible for those not employed by USGS.
David M. Stone, associate professor of art history, was awarded membership in the School of Historical Studies, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, N.J., to work on his book Caravaggio and the Knights of Malta.
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