6599 Results
1

Fairhurst Article Wins Award

June 19, 2005

The International Communication Association (ICA) recently recognized Gail Fairhurst and her colleague, Linda Putnam, as the 2005 winners of the Outstanding Article Award.

2

Congratulations Dinshaw Mistry and Noriko Fujioka

June 19, 2005

The Dean congratulates the Asian Studies Program, director Dinshaw Mistry, and Noriko Fujioka for the Japan Foundation Grant of $173,000 that will enable the program to initiate its first tenure track position in Japanese.

4

MeetÂ…John Layne

June 19, 2005

While a good portion of the research conducted in the biological sciences is dedicated to understanding why animals do the things they do, assistant professor John Layne is more concerned with understanding how they do the things they do.

5

Meet...Kelly Moore

November 14, 2005

The Sociology Department s newest assistant professor, Kelly Moore, arrived at the university with a lot of enthusiasm about its future: I am excited to be a part of a lively urban university and a department with vibrant intellectual communities.

6

Tytus Fellow Survives Katrina

November 14, 2005

Since media coverage of hurricane Katrina has slowed to a halt, people not directly affected by the storm probably do not think as much about life on the Gulf Coast.

7

Call for Papers: Poverty, Welfare, and Religion

November 14, 2005

Hebrew Union College-University of Cincinnati Center for the Study of Ethics and Contemporary Moral Problems (HUC-UC Ethics Center) and Union Institute & University Graduate College are pleased to announce a call for papers to be presented in the annual program on Poverty, Welfare, and Religion.

8

Bloom in the Spotlight

November 14, 2005

Mia Bloom, Political Science s expert on terrorism and related topics, has captured widespread media attention lately.

10

Popular Course on AIDS Challenges Students

November 14, 2005

Ralph Meyer believes the only way to guide students through controversial subject matter is to encourage them to discuss, question, and debate ; and that s exactly what happens in his innovative, carefully designed freshman seminar, AIDS: Biomedical, Social, and Ethical Issues.