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For the Record, Nov. 24, 2004 To view past For the Records, click here. 9:48 a.m., Nov. 24, 2004--For the Record provides information about recent professional activities of University of Delaware faculty and staff. Books Lawrence Hotchkiss, research consultant, IT-User Services, with Linda Eberst Dorsten, Research Methods and Society: Foundations of Social Inquiry, Prentice Hall. Robert R. Nelson, associate professor of hotel, restaurant and institutional management, editor, Current Issues in Convention and Exhibition Facility Management, Haworth Press. Publications Floralba Cakoni, assistant professor of mathematical sciences, and Eric Darrigrand, The Inverse Electromagnetic Scattering Problem for a Mixed Boundary Value Problem for Screens, in Journal of Computational and Applied Mathematics, vol. 174, pages 251-269. Presentations Jennifer L. Mass, adjunct assistant professor of art conservation, Science in Art Conservation: Antiques Roadshow Meets Crime Scene Investigators, at Eastern Analytical Symposium, November, Sommerville, N.J. Debra Hess Norris, Henry Francis du Pont Chair in Fine Arts, Fundraising for Conservation Education in a Changing Financial Environment and Storage for Photographic Collections, at Midwest Regional Conservation Guild annual meeting, November, Cleveland. Elizabeth Higginbotham, professor of sociology and criminal justice, Searching for the Souls of Black Women: W.E.B. Du Boiss Contribution, at 2004 Matthew Lemert Memorial Lecture Series, Oct. 12, Wesleyan University; Rethinking Integration: Lessons from Racial Pioneers in Predominantly White Colleges in the Era of Integration, at colloquium in the School of Education, University of Delaware, Oct. 28; Working for the City: Focusing on Black Professional Women, Robin M. Williams Jr. Lecture, Nov. 3, at Le Moyne College, Syracuse, N.Y.; and The Work of Integration: Learning About Invisible Work from Racial Pioneers in Predominantly White Colleges, an invited presentation, Department of Sociology, Syracuse University, Nov. 4, Syracuse, N.Y. Service Vic Klemas, professor of marine studies, was appointed to the Coastal Ocean Applications and Science Team by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The national panel will advise NOAA, NASA and the Navy on the design of a new generation of satellites that will observe coastal waters more frequently and in more detail. Richard Wolbers, associate professor of art conservation, was a member of the CESMAR7 group that organized a biennial conference, Oct. 29-30, in Thiene, Italy, on the topic of Color and Conservation: The Minimal Intervention in Structural Repairs in Paintings. For the Record submissions To learn how to subscribe to UDaily, click here. |