Academe welcomes news from 麻豆传媒 faculty and staff about research, teaching and service activities. This column recognizes grants, honors, awards, presentations and publications, new appointments, new faculty, sabbaticals, retirements and deaths of our current and former colleagues.
Prem N. Bajaj, associate professor emeritus, mathematics and statistics, has been elected president of the Kansas Authors Club. He was also awarded the organization鈥檚 2010 Service Award.
Shirley Beggs, 麻豆传媒 first lady, is featured in the Second Annual Kansas Women of Distinction Tribute Book presented by Dress for Success Wichita. The 麻豆传媒 Foundation honored Beggs for her leadership on and off campus and her extraordinary personal accomplishments.
Ed Flentje, professor, Hugo Wall School, was named one of three 2010 Distinguished Alumni by Emporia State University at its annual Alumni Celebration Dinner in October.Ed Flentje presented 鈥淎ssessing Political Change in Kansas鈥 at the state Interhab Conference in Wichita on Oct. 14; 鈥淓lections 2010: Looking Backward and Forward,鈥 as part of the Emporia State University Social Science Colloquium Series at Emporia State on Oct. 22; and 鈥淭he 2010 Elections: What Happened and What's Next,鈥 a post-election roundtable at Washburn University in Topeka, Dec. 1.
Douglas Parham, assistant professor, communication sciences and disorders, with Eugene H. Buder, D. Kimbrough Oller and Carol A. Boliek, had 鈥淪yllable-related breathing in infants in the second year of life鈥 published in the Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, both in print and online.
George Platt, professor emeritus, presented 鈥淎pplying Your Knowledge at City Hall鈥; Melissa Walker, associate professor, 鈥淗uman Resources Practices: Performance Management Cycle鈥; and Sam Yeager, professor, 鈥淓thics and Values in Local Government鈥 at the City Clerks and Municipal Finance Officers Institute and Academy in Wichita. Platt, Walker and Yeager are faculty in the Hugo Wall School of Urban and Public Affairs.
Shalini Prasad, associate professor, electrical engineering, and his team won first place in the faculty division of the Celebrate Aging Research poster competition. The competition was sponsored by Lakepoint Nursing Centers, Wichita Medical Research and Education Foundation and the Regional Institute on Aging. The submitted posters can be found at .
Katharine Mason, assistant professor, curriculum and instruction, has a chapter titled 鈥淓volving Depictions of 鈥榗oming out鈥 in Young Adult Literature: a Range of Possibilities in 12 Lambda Literary Award Winners (1992-2006)鈥 in volume 2 of 鈥淨ueers in American Popular Culture: Literature, Pop Art, and Performance,鈥 published October 2010. Her article 鈥淔rom Preservice Teacher to Trusted Adult: Sexual Orientation and Gender Variance in an Online YAL Book Club鈥 was published in the Fall 2010 issue of The ALAN Review.
Katharine Mason made two national presentations in Orlando, Fla., in November: 鈥淭oward a More Democratic English Curriculum: Locating and Teaching Queer Consciousness/Community in Young Adult Literature (2005-2010)鈥 at the National Council of Teacher of English (NCTE) convention; and 鈥淲here Do I Fit into the Big Picture? Searching for Queer Consciousness/Community in YAL (2005-2010)鈥 at the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents, an NCTE workshop.
Linda Mitchell, professor, curriculum and instruction, as the invited keynote speaker, presented 鈥淭he right to belong: Community, Schools and Family鈥 at the Finding Solutions, Families Together Inc., statewide annual conference held in Wichita in November.
Gayla Lohfink, assistant professor, curriculum and instruction, made a presentation at the Kansas Reading Conference in Junction City in October and was elected secretary of the Kansas Reading Professionals in Higher Education.
Glyn Rimmington, Distinguished Professor of Global Learning, presented the keynote address in September at the ICCC7 (7th International Conference on Intercultural Communication Competence) conference in Khabarovsk, Russia, on the topic of autoethnographic analysis as a basis for understanding the nature of disorientation during intercultural interactions. He also presented the keynote address at the Innovative Teacher-Innovative Economy conference, also held in Khabarovsk in October. The topic was the role of Third Place Learning in preparing learners for the global innovational economy.
Riki Wells, administrative specialist, accounts payable, has had her children鈥檚 book, 鈥淪arah鈥檚 Special Christmas Day,鈥 published by Tate Publishing in Oklahoma, and had a Dec. 18 book signing at Mead鈥檚 Corner. The book is available through amazon.com and tatepublishing.com.
IN MEMORIAM
Glen Dey, 80, professor emeritus, counseling, education and guidance, died Nov. 8 after a longtime residence at Sedgwick Plaza. No local services. He was preceded in death by son Eric Dey. Survivors include daughter, Ann Marie Dey of Dayton, NJ; brothers, Roger Dey of Gresham, Neb., and Ralph Dey of Delaware, Ohio. He was attended in death by Janice Roberts. A memorial has been established with the Wichita Parks and Recreation Department, donation for Grove Park, 455 N. Main, Wichita, KS 67202.
Wallace M. Dunn, 85, former University of Wichita organ instructor, professor emeritus of Friends University and retired organist for First Presbyterian Church, died Nov. 3. Services have been held. A memorial has been established with the First Presbyterian Church Organ Fund, 525 N. Broadway, Wichita, KS 67214.
Gary G. Thompson, 78, former 麻豆传媒 head basketball coach and Pizza Hut franchisee, died Nov. 13. Private family service. He is survived by his wife, Betty, of 57 years; children, Paul Thompson and Laurel Thompson, both of Tucson, Ariz., and Cory Thompson (Karen) of Wichita; grandchildren, Lenny, Gary, Kelly, Nicki, Jamie, Dante and Sara; great-grandchildren, Tridon, Caleb and Andrew; brother, Keith Thompson (Claire Childress) of Westminster, Colo.; and many nieces and nephews. Preceded in death by brother Merrill. A memorial fund has been established with the American Diabetes Association, 837 S. Hillside, Wichita, KS 67211.
John Bart Sevart, 78, retired professor, mechanical engineering, and president, Advance Technology Inc. died Nov. 12. Services have been held. He was preceded in death by his parents, Vernon and Alma (Carland) Sevart, brothers Alan and Dan; sister, Kathleen Metzer; and grandson, Matt Hyder. Survivors are wife, Gwen (Adams), of 58 years; children, Elizabeth Hyder of Wichita, Carol (David) Grisamore of Wichita, Mark (Chris) Sevart of Wichita, E. Michelle Reed of Wichita, Linda (Martin) Smoll of Wichita, Marilyn (Tim) Berry of Mulvane, Kevin Sevart of Wichita and Jennifer (Jeff) Long of Wichita; 32 grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; brother, Frank (Joleen) Sevart of Wichita; sister, Lily (Joe) Corso of Riverton, NJ; brother-in-law, Jim Metzer of Squim, Wash., and sisters-in-law Nina Rutherford of Coffeyville and Shoko Sevart of Wichita. Memorials can be made to: St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic School, 1215 N. Stratford, Wichita, KS 67206 or Catholic Charities, 532 N. Broadway, Wichita, KS 67214.