SCIENCE
CENTER PROGRAMS
The
recently completed Science Center now links the Bronfman Science Center with the
Thompson Biology, Chemistry, and Physics Laboratory buildings, Schow Library,
the Morley Science Laboratory wing. Clark Hall completes the Science Center
complex. Serving as the home for astronomy, biology, chemistry, computer
science, geosciences, history of science, mathematics and statistics, physics,
and psychology, this facility fosters interdisciplinary interaction among all
members of the Science Division. This interaction is facilitated through the
sharing of core research equipment and services; through interdepartmental
programs; and, to a great extent, by the spatial juxtaposition of faculty with
common interests regardless of their departmental affiliation. Several Science
Center activities promote this further by specifically encouraging discourse
among scientists at Williams. This is carried out in a number of ways,
including informal faculty presentations at Tuesday lunches (both during the
summer and academic year), the maintenance of a weekly science calendar, the
publication of the Report of Science at Williams, and the faculty lectures
sponsored each semester by the local Sigma Xichapter.
The programs based in the Science Center encompass the
coordination of grant proposals to federal agencies and private foundations, the
distribution of more than $200,000 of research funds annually, and the
allocation of space within the science division. In 2003-2004, individual
Williams College science faculty received over $1,000,000 from active federal
grants for the purchase of equipment and support of student-faculty research
projects. The faculty and student research projects and summer research
opportunities supported by internal divisional funds, as well as those supported
by external grants, are detailed below and in the various departmental reports.
Summer Student Research
Participation
Summer Research Fellowships were awarded to 176
individuals at Williams in 2004. Many of the summer research students are
entering their senior year and beginning work that will lead to senior honors
research. A large number of research fellowships were awarded to rising
sophomores and juniors who were getting their first taste of independent
research. The summer research program also included students from outside
Williams. Students from a variety of other institutions were sponsored by an
NSF/REU site grant to the mathematics and statistics department and worked with
Williams College faculty members. As participants in a chemistry department
exchange program, two students from the University of Leiden worked with
chemistry professors at Williams while two Williams chemistry majors worked with
professors at the University of Leiden.
The summer is a relaxed, yet concentrated time for
research, without the competition of course work to interrupt collaborative
efforts between students and faculty. In addition to the actual research
experience, the Science Center sponsors a weekly Tuesday luncheon featuring a
member of the faculty lecturing on current research, an annual science division
picnic, and a poster session at the end of the summer where summer research
students present their results.
Support for summer research, a $3300 stipend for 10 weeks
plus housing, comes from a variety of sources including College funds, external
grants to individual faculty, foundation grants, and endowed fellowships
provided by generous donations from alumni and friends of the sciences. The
Wege-Markgraf endowment, gifts from Peter Wege and the Class of 1952 in honor of
J. Hodge Markgraf ’52, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, supports summer
research fellowships in chemistry. The Betty and Lewis Somers ’48 Student
Summer Internships Fund supports summer research fellowships in physics. The
Williams Bicentennial Psychology Scholarship Fund supports summer research
fellowships in psychology. The Whitehead Scholarship Fund, a gift from John
Whitehead ’76, to provide an opportunity for Williams students and faculty
to interact with scientists at the prestigious Whitehead Institute, supports
summer research fellowships for Williams biology students to spend the summer
doing research at the Whitehead Institute. The Arnold Bernhard Foundation
Endowed Summer Science Fellows Program, made possible by the generosity of Jean
Buttner, Williams Trustee from 1982-1997, supports summer research fellowships
across the division.
Full or partial federal, foundation and alumni support
for summer student stipends was provided by the following sources:
|
Source of
Funding
|
# of Students
|
|
College funds
|
23
|
|
NSF grants to individual faculty
|
19
|
|
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
|
27
|
|
Arnold Bernhard Foundation Fellowships
|
32
|
|
Essel Foundation
|
12
|
|
NSF/REU
|
13
|
|
RPI-NSEC
|
2
|
|
Synott
|
1
|
|
Dreyfus
|
1
|
|
Class of 1951
|
9
|
|
Mellon Foundation
|
3
|
|
Wege/Markgraf Fellowships
|
6
|
|
Research Corporation
|
4
|
|
Whitehead Scholarship
|
2
|
|
Petroleum Research Fund
|
4
|
|
Somers Fellowship
|
5
|
|
Bicentennial Psychology Scholarships
|
3
|
|
Keck Northeast Astronomy Consortium
|
1
|
|
Lowe Fellowship
|
3
|
|
Center for Environmental Studies
|
6
|
|
*
Note: some students are supported by multiple
grants.
|
|
2004
Summer Science Students and Their Faculty Advisor
|
Astronomy
|
|
|
David Butts
|
Jay Pasachoff
|
|
Ryan Carollo
|
Marek Demianski
|
|
Joseph Gangestad
|
Karen Kwitter
|
|
Kayla Gaydosh
|
Jay Pasachoff
|
|
Kamen Kozarev
|
Jay Pasachoff
|
|
Terry-Ann Suer
|
Jay Pasachoff
|
|
Biology
|
|
|
Alejandro Acosta
|
Joan Edwards
|
|
Papa Adams
|
Jim Carlton
|
|
David Arnolds
|
Wendy Raymond
|
|
Anna Brosius
|
Wendy Raymond
|
|
Kenneth Brown
|
Joan Edwards
|
|
Ian Buchanan
|
Lois Banta
|
|
Oliver Burton
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Lucy Cox-Chapman
|
Hank Art
|
|
Ellen Crocker
|
Manuel Morales
|
|
Jessica Davis
|
Lois Banta
|
|
Jeff Dougherty
|
Dan Lynch
|
|
Christopher Eaton
|
Joan Edwards
|
|
S.Aidan Finley
|
Wendy Raymond
|
|
Rafael Frias
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Kathryn Fromson
|
Lara Hutson
|
|
Alana Frost
|
Claire Ting
|
|
T.Michael Gallagher
|
Hank Art
|
|
Sarah Ginsburg
|
Dan Lynch
|
|
Meaghan Giuliano
|
Lois Banta
|
|
Elizabeth Gluck
|
Steve Swoap
|
|
Drees Griffin
|
Dan Lynch
|
|
Reed Harrison
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Bryce Inman
|
Claire Ting
|
|
Whitney Johnson
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Matthew Keegan
|
Wendy Raymond
|
|
Stephen Kelleher
|
Dan Lynch
|
|
Maria Kerr
|
Heather Williams
|
|
Erika Latham
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Andrew Levy
|
Lara Hutson
|
|
Daniel Lieberman
|
Marsha Altschuler
|
|
Cameron Marshall
|
Lara Hutson
|
|
Richard Marshall
|
Dan Lynch
|
|
Neil Mendoza
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Elspeth Mitchell
|
Hank Art
|
|
Donald Mitchell
|
Joan Edwards
|
|
James Prevas
|
Marsha Altschuler
|
|
Chris Richardson
|
Dan Lynch
|
|
Alan Rodrigues
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Leisa Rothlesberger
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Daniel Runcie
|
David Smith
|
|
Emily Russell-Roy
|
Claire Ting
|
|
Meghan Ryan
|
Lara Hutson
|
|
Adrian Salinas
|
Lara Hutson
|
|
E. M. Seegulam
|
Wendy Raymond
|
|
Lisetta Shah
|
Manuel Morales
|
|
Molly Sharlach
|
Lois Banta
|
|
Jasmine Smith
|
Hank Art
|
|
Ross Smith
|
Steve Swoap
|
|
Analia Sorribas
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Peter Tosirisuk
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Mariana Uribe
|
Dan Lynch
|
|
Stephanie Vano
|
Marsha Altschuler
|
|
Ellen Wilk
|
Steve Swoap
|
|
Jessica Yankura
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
Chemistry
|
|
|
Aashish Adhikari
|
E. Peacock-Lopez
|
|
Ophelia Adipa
|
Anne Skinner
|
|
Noah Bell
|
Lee Park
|
|
Katie Beutel
|
Lee Park
|
|
Gina Calderon
|
Amy Gehring
|
|
Noah Capurso
|
Dieter Bingemann
|
|
Shuo Chen
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Pam Choi
|
Tom Smith
|
|
Jim Enterkin
|
Mark Schofield
|
|
Nathaniel Erb-Satullo
|
Dieter Bingemann
|
|
Abelee Rugh Esparza
|
Anne Skinner
|
|
Salem Fevrier
|
Tom Smith
|
|
Surekha Gajria
|
J. Hodge Markgraf
|
|
Nadria Gordon
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Hue Hoang
|
Tony Truran
|
|
Alcia Jackson
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Wen-Hsin Kuo
|
Tom Smith
|
|
Tomoki Kurihara
|
Tom Smith
|
|
Beth Landis
|
Lee Park
|
|
Kate Larabee
|
Mark Schofield
|
|
Andrew Lee
|
Mark Schofield
|
|
Regine Lim
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Joanna Lloyd
|
Larry Kaplan
|
|
Maggie Lowenstein
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Ryan Manalansan
|
Hodge Markgraf
|
|
Sara Martin
|
Anne Skinner
|
|
Teddy McGehee
|
E. Peacock-Lopez
|
|
Alex Mones
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Manuel Moutinho
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Ruben Musson
|
Lee Park
|
|
Chigozirim Nwankpa
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
G. O’Donoghue
|
Dieter Bingemann
|
|
Paul Obeng-Okyere
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Geri Ottaviano
|
Amy Gehring
|
|
Sharon Owusu-Darko
|
Amy Gehring
|
|
Mikella Robinson
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Brian Saar
|
Jay Thoman
|
|
Devin Schweppe
|
Chip Lovett
|
|
Computer Science
|
|
|
Alexandra Constantin
|
Kim Bruce
|
|
Brendan Dougherty
|
Danyluk, Murtagh, Bruce
|
|
Laura Effinger-Dean
|
James Teresco
|
|
James Kingsbery
|
Duane Bailey
|
|
Marina Lifshin
|
Steve Freund
|
|
Arjun Sharma
|
James Teresco
|
|
Bartolome Tablante
|
Duane Bailey
|
|
|
|
|
|
Geosciences
|
|
|
Andrea Burke
|
Heather Stoll
|
|
Jennifer Campbell
|
David Dethier
|
|
Emily Clinch
|
Heather Stoll
|
|
Tyler Corson-Rikert
|
Ronadh Cox
|
|
Ryan Gordon
|
Paul Karabinos
|
|
Robert Hahn
|
David Dethier
|
|
Karl Johanson
|
David Dethier
|
|
Eli Lazarus
|
David Dethier
|
|
Jane McCamant
|
Cox/Dethier
|
|
Carolyn Reuman
|
David Dethier
|
|
Paul Skudder
|
Markes E. Johnson
|
|
Susanna Theroux
|
Heather Stoll
|
|
Seth Zeren
|
Heather Stoll
|
|
Mathematics
|
|
|
C. Brakken-Thal
|
Stewart Johnson
|
|
Nathan J. Brown
|
Kristopher Tapp
|
|
Ivan Corwin
|
Frank Morgan
|
|
Darren Creutz
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
Jeffrey Danciger
|
Satyan Devadoss
|
|
Christopher Dodd
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
Rachel Finck
|
Kristopher Tapp
|
|
Stephanie Hurder
|
Frank Morgan
|
|
Phakawa Jeasakul
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
P. Jirapattanakul
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
Daniel Kane
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
John Mugno
|
Satyan Devadoss
|
|
Evelyn Robinson
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
Vojislav Sesum
|
Frank Morgan
|
|
Donald Sheehy
|
Satyan Devadoss
|
|
Matthew Spencer
|
Kristopher Tapp
|
|
Noah Stein
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
Tomio Ueda
|
Satyan Devadoss
|
|
Jade Vichyanond
|
Dick Deveaux
|
|
Rachel Ward
|
Satyan Devadoss
|
|
Zhongtao Wu
|
Kristopher Tapp
|
|
Ya Xu
|
Frank Morgan
|
|
Physics
|
|
|
John BackusMayes
|
D. Tucker-Smith
|
|
Ersen Bilgin
|
Bill Wootters
|
|
Justin Brown
|
Dwight Whitaker
|
|
Colin Bruzewicz
|
Tiku Majumder
|
|
Mark Burkhardt
|
Tiku Majumder
|
|
Eric Cheung
|
Tiku Majumder
|
|
Joshua Cooperman
|
Bill Wootters
|
|
Jesse Dill
|
Daniel Aalberts
|
|
Ian Jessen
|
Tiku Majumder
|
|
Utsav KC
|
Dwight Whitaker
|
|
Joseph Kerckhoff
|
Tiku Majumder
|
|
Aubryn Murray
|
Jefferson Strait
|
|
Sean O'Brien
|
D. Tucker-Smith
|
|
Joseph Shoer
|
Jefferson Strait
|
|
Jennifer Simmons
|
Sarah Bolton
|
|
Daniel Weintraub
|
Sarah Bolton
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Psychology
|
|
|
Rebecca Allen
|
Ken Savitsky
|
|
Matthew Barhight
|
Paul Solomon
|
|
Emily Bloomenthal
|
Steven Fein
|
|
Caroline Byrnes
|
Safa Zaki
|
|
Janette Funk
|
L.Heatherington
|
|
Geshri Gunasekera
|
Noah Sandstrom
|
|
Deborah Hemel
|
Paul Solomon
|
|
Jaime Hensel
|
Steven Fein
|
|
Ju Kim
|
Noah Sandstrom
|
|
Matthew Kugler
|
Al Goethals
|
|
Justin Lavner
|
L.Heatherington
|
|
Sulgi Lim
|
Lauren Shapiro
|
|
Rui Nie
|
Betty Zimmerberg
|
|
Jose Reyes
|
Steven Fein
|
|
Hyejin Rho
|
Lauren Shapiro
|
|
Lydia Romano
|
Lauren Shapiro
|
|
John Rudoy
|
Noah Sandstrom
|
|
Amy Shelton
|
Fein,Savitsky
|
|
Kyle Skor
|
Robert Kavanaugh
|
|
Clare Whipple
|
Betty Zimmerberg
|
|
Adam Zamora
|
Robert Kavanaugh
|
Summer Research Colloquia
2004
A luncheon is provided every Tuesday for participants in
the Summer Science Program. Faculty members from the science departments give
talks on their research at these lunches, with opportunity for discussion
afterwards. The speakers this summer were:
Professor Anne Skinner,
Department of Chemistry, Williams College
“Lab Safety: How to
Spend Your Summer without a Bang”
Professor Satyan Devadoss,
Mathematics and Statistics Department, Williams College
“Pictures and
Proofs”
Professor Hank Art, Biology
Department, Williams College
“The Sunken Forest: Eco
System Function and Malfunction”
Professor Bob Kavanaugh,
Psychology Department, Williams College
“Searching for a Theory
of Mind”
Professor J. Pasachoff,
Astronomy Department, Williams College
“The Transit of
Venus”
Professor Karen Kwitter,
Astronomy Department, Williams College
“Planetary Nebulae:
Illuminators of Stellar Evolution, and More...”
Professor Marsha Altschuler,
Biology Department, Williams College
“It's a Small World
after All: The World of Tetrahymena”
Professor Dwight Whitaker,
Physics Department, Williams College
“Cornus Canadensis:
Nature's Weapon of Mass Reproduction”
Academic Year Science Lunch
Colloquia
During the academic year, the science faculty meets for
lunch on Tuesdays in the Science Center to discuss matters of interest to the
sciences as a whole, and to hear informal reports on faculty research and other
science developments. The following talks or discussions were held during
2003-2004.
Professor Protik Majumder,
Department of Physics, Williams College
“Discreet Symmetries in
Physics”
Professor Douglas Gill,
Department of Biology, University of Maryland, Williams College
“Restoration of Native
Grasslands”
Professor Thomas Smith,
Department of Chemistry, Williams College
“Through the Looking
Glass: Asymmetry in Drug Design”
Professor Jefferson Strait,
Department of Physics, Williams College
“Short Pulses in Optical
Fiber”
Professor Stephen Freund,
Department of Computer Science, Williams College
“Finding Bugs in
Software”
Professor Marlene Sandstrom,
Department of Psychology, Williams College
“Children’s
Self-Perceptions of Social Status: Links with Aggressive Behavior”
Professor Lara Hutson,
Department of Biology, Williams College
“Genetic and
Environmental Influences on Neural Development in the Zebrafish”
Professor Kristopher Tapp,
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Williams College
“Symmetry in
Geometry”
Professor Frank Morgan,
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Williams College
“Shortest Paths on
Spheres and Bundles”
Professor Ann McNeal, School of
Natural Science, Hampshire College
“Investigative Labs in
the Sciences”
Professor Safa Zaki, Department
of Psychology, Williams College
“Predictions of a
Mathematical Model of Categorization and Recognition Behavior”
Professor Richard De Veaux,
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Williams College
“Statistics in the 21st
Century: What's Not to Like?”
Professor J. Pasachoff,
Department of Astronomy, Williams College
“This June's Transit of
Venus”
Professor Larry Kaplan,
Department of Chemistry, Williams College
“Forensic Science: Where
Chemistry and Crime Collide at Williams College”
Professor Claire Ting,
Department of Biology, Williams College
“Understanding the
Mechanisms of Photosynthesis and Stress Response in Globally Important
Cyanobacteria”
Professor Donald deB. Beaver,
Department of History of Science, Williams College
“Science at Williams,
1965-2002: A Preliminary Look”
Professor David Tucker-Smith,
Department of Physics, Williams College
“The Mystery of
Electroweak Symmetry Breaking”
Professor Chip Lovett,
Department of Chemistry, Williams College
“Finding DNA Repair
Genes”
Professor Allison Pacelli,
Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Williams College
“The Idealization of the
Prime”
Pre-First
Year Summer Science Program
In its eighteenth summer in 2004, the Summer Science
Program (SSP) provides an enriching and intensive five-week immersion in
science, mathematics, and English for a talented group of science-oriented
Williams pre-first year minority students. The goal of the Program is to
promote and encourage continuing participation in science and science related
studies by members of minorities that have historically been under represented
in the sciences.
Sixteen students took classes in chemistry (including a
major laboratory component), biology, mathematics and English (literature and
expository writing). Although not replicas of Williams’ academic year
offerings, the Summer Science Program classes are taught at a college level,
thus introducing participants to the rigors and demands of college academics.
In addition to the regular classes, the students participated in geology
laboratory and field experiments. They also engaged in a variety of
extracurricular activities, including the Williamstown Theatre Festival, and a
weekend trip to Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.
Enthusiasm for the program has been high. Participants
have taken full advantage of the opportunity to study at Williams in the summer.
As a result of the Summer Science Program, their academic year experiences have
been successful and many of the students have continued their studies in science
or mathematics. A significant number of former participants have returned to
campus in the summertime as summer research students in science and mathematics,
have become tutors for the Summer Science Program, or have secured positions
elsewhere in science research institutes.
Professor Charles M. Lovett, Director of the Summer
Science Program, taught the chemistry lectures and Professor David P. Richardson
conducted the laboratory sessions. Professors Olga R. Beaver and Cesar Silva
taught the mathematics component. Professor Wendy Raymond taught the biology
lectures. Professor D.L. Smith taught the English sessions and Professor David
Dethier conducted the geology-in-the-field laboratory.
The Summer Science Program has been funded primarily by
Williams College as part of the institution’s commitment to encourage the
participation of traditonally underrepresented groups in the sciences. Since
1991, SSP has received additional funding from a biological sciences award from
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. This grant contributed support for several
SSP components, and has provided summer research stipends for SSP students after
their first year at Williams. Special thanks go to the many science faculty and
students of Williams College who, during the summer as well as during the
academic year, have contributed to the success of the Program and of its
participants.
Pre-First
Year Program Participants
Students
|
Faculty
|
|
Talia J.
Anders
|
Charles M. Lovett, Director
|
|
Marie-Christine
Andre
|
Olga R. Beaver
|
|
Adam M.
Banasiak
|
Daniel Lynch
|
|
Ashley M.
Burrell
|
Wendy Raymond
|
|
Jing W.
Cao
|
David Richardson
|
|
Rachel
Fevrier
|
Cesar Silva
|
|
Luz M.
Gomez
|
David L. Smith
|
|
Daniel S.
Jamorabo
|
|
|
Anna C.
Jolly
|
Tutors
|
|
Sergio N.
Marte
|
Alcia Jackson
|
|
Adam J.
Mckay
|
Brett Hammond
|
|
Ana E.
Pacheco-Navarro
|
Jonathan Turriago
|
|
Nicholas D.
Reynolds
|
Mariana Uribe
|
|
Amy S.
Steele
|
|
|
Justin
Vassar
|
|
|
Jarrad L.
Wood
|
|
Williams College Sigma Xi
Chapter
The Williams College Sigma Xi Chapter has played an
active role on the Williams Campus since it was founded as the Sigma Xi Club in
1969. Sigma Xi is a national society honoring and encouraging research in
science. The Williams Chapter also sponsors outreach programs designed to
stimulate interest in science among grade school, junior high and high school
students. The officers for 2003-2004 were Professor Jay M. Pasachoff of the
Astronomy Department, President, and Professor Protik Majumder of the Physics
Department, Secretary/Treasurer.
During the 2003-2004 academic year, our chapter held the
traditional fall and spring Sigma Xi lecture series. In the fall, Susan Engel
of the Psychology Department delivered a pair of lectures on the subject of
developmental psychology. In the first lecture, a brief history of the field
was addressed focusing on the revolutionary work of Piaget. On the second day,
she discussed more recent work in this area, including some of her own studies
of the way in which children balance play and reality. In the spring, Anne
Skinner of the Chemistry Department presented lectures on electron spin
resonance (ESR), a relatively new dating technique which she has used on
excavated materials from Oldevai Gorge in Tanzania. Her talks focused on the
dating technique itself and the implications of her findings using ESR for
theories on human development.
The Sigma Xi Chapter sponsored a High School Science
Award for a student at Mount Greylock Regional High School, Williamstown, MA, in
recognition of a high level of motivation and accomplishment in science courses.
This year the award was given to Sarah Hirsch.
One of the primary purposes of Sigma Xi is to recognize
graduating science students who have demonstrated exceptional ability and
promise for further contributions to the advancement of scientific research.
These students are elected as Associate Members of Sigma Xi and are then
inducted into the Society at a ceremony during Commencement Weekend. On Class
Day, the Chapter honored 38 newly elected Associate Members from the Class of
2004 in a ceremony in the Bronfman Auditorium. The names of this year’s
honorees are listed below and a detailed description of the research projects of
these students is presented in the Student Abstracts section of this
Report.
Associate
Sigma Xi members from the Class of 2004
|
Astrophysics
|
|
|
Jesse W. Dill
|
Sarah Bolton
|
|
Matthew J. Hoffman
|
Bill Wootters
|
|
Lissa C.F. Ong
|
Ronadh Cox
|
|
Biology
|
|
|
David E.W. Arnolds
|
Wendy Raymond
|
|
Flynn Boonstra
|
Hank Art
|
|
Gregory Q. DelPrete
|
Heather Williams
|
|
Tory A. Hendry
|
Heather Williams
|
|
Galen P. Holt
|
David Smith
|
|
Michelle M. Kron
|
Steve Zottoli
|
|
William G. McDowell
|
Manuel Morales
|
|
Joanna S. Touger
|
Rob Savage
|
|
Chemistry
|
|
|
Victoria D. Bock
|
Tom Smith
|
|
Daniel R. Calnan
|
Larry Kaplan
|
|
Adrian A. Dowst
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Tom Smith
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Jeffrey J. Ishizuka
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E. Peacock-Lopez
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Charles E. Jakobsche
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Hodge Markgraf
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Steven T. Scroggins
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Lee Park
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Edward A. Wydysh
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Mark Schofield
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Geosciences
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Katherine C. Ackerly
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Bud Wobus
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James M. Eros
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Markes Johnson
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Eli D. Lazarus
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Paul Karabinos
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Paige M. McClanahan
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Bud Wobus
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Maritime Studies
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Emily C. Clinch
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Ronadh Cox
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Mathematics
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Kai Chen
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Susan Loepp
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Eric H. Engler
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Satyan Devadoss
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Neil R. Hoffman
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Frank Morgan
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David H. Jensen
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Susan Loepp
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Kari F. Lock
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Ed Burger
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Aaron D. Magid
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Colin Adams
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Neuroscience
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Kristin A. Sagesar
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Betty Zimmerberg
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Physics
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Samuel M. Arons
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Sarah Bolton
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Mark H. Burkhardt
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Tiku Majumder
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Eric G. Daub
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Daniel Aalberts
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Nathan O. Hodas
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Daniel Aalberts
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Leon A. Webster
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Dwight Whitaker
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Psychology
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Nicolas A. Bamat
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Noah Sandstrom
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Rosemary Eseh
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Betty Zimmerberg
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Janette L. Funk
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Laurie Heatherington
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