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John Feldmeier, YSU assistant professor of astronomy, is part of a team
of astronomers that has discovered a high–speed collision between two
galaxies in the nearby Virgo cluster. This picture of part of the Virgo
cluster shows monumental tendrils of ionized hydrogen gas 400,000
lightyears long connecting the elliptical galaxy M86 (right) and the
disturbed spiral galaxy NGC 4438 (left). The image was taken with the
wide–field Mosaic imager on the National Science Foundation’s Mayall
4–meter telescope at Kitt Peak National Observatory near Tuscon, Ariz.
See News Brief below. Photo credit: Tomer Tal and Jeffrey Kenney/Yale
University and NOAO/AURA/NSF
Below are a variety of items about upcoming events and other news notes on the campus of Youngstown State University.
- CEO of Parsons Corp. honored at fall commencement
- YSU prof part of team that discovers galaxy collisions
- Faculty/staff awards, presentations, publications
Calendar
Tuesday, Dec. 2. YSU Board of Trustees meets in the Presidential Suite of Kilcawley Center: 8 a.m., Investment Subcommittee; 9 a.m., External Relations Committee; 10 a.m., Academic and Student Affairs Committee.
Tuesday, Dec. 2, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. YSU’s sixth annual
SMARTS — Students Motivated by the Arts — Holiday Open House. The
SMARTS Center is located at 258 Federal Plaza West in downtown
Youngstown, adjacent to the DeYor Performing Arts Center. During the
open house, the SMARTS Store will be open for holiday shopping, and
there will be hands–on art activities for children and light
refreshments. The public is invited. For more information or to learn
more about SMARTS, call 330–941–ARTS or visit www.fpa.ysu.edu/smarts.
Wednesday, Dec. 3, 7 p.m. The
Dana School of Music presents “Carols & Cocoa” and the “Holiday
Concert” in Stambaugh Auditorium on Fifth Avenue in Youngstown. Tickets
may be purchased in advance either in person at the Bliss Hall Box
Office or by phone at 330–941–3105.
Wednesday, Dec. 3, 7:05 p.m. YSU women’s basketball plays St. Francis (Pa.) in Beeghly Center.
Thursday, Dec. 4. YSU Board of Trustees meets in the Presidential Suite of Kilcawley Center: 8 a.m., Audit Subcommittee; 9 a.m., Internal Affairs Committee; 10 a.m., Finance and Facilities Committee.
Thursday, Dec. 4, 7:05 p.m. YSU men’s basketball takes on Horizon League foe Valparaiso in Beeghly Center. The men also play Saturday, Dec. 6, 7:05 p.m., against Butler.
Friday, Dec. 5, and Saturday, Dec. 6, 8 p.m. YSU’s Ward Beecher Planetarium presents “Skywatch: Star Maps.” The planetarium shows “Wilbear’s Adventure” at 1 and 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 6.
Saturday, Dec. 6, noon. Annual Football Awards Banquet will be in the Chestnut Room of Kilcawley Center.
CEO of Parsons Corp. honored at fall commencement
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John Allen Scott
Youngstown State University alum John Allen Scott, president and chief
operating officer of Parsons Corp., will receive an honorary doctor of
science degree at YSU’s fall commencement 2 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 14 in
Beeghly Center.
Scott, who lives in Arcadia, Calif., earned a
bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from YSU in 1971 and a
master’s degree in industrial engineering from Texas A&M University
in 1973.
Boasting 12,000 employees and $4 billion in annual
revenue, Parsons is one of the world’s largest engineering and
construction companies with infrastructure and defense projects across
the globe. For more information on the company, visit http://www.parsons.com/.
Scott, a member of the YSU President’s Council and
the YSU Centennial Capital Campaign Cabinet, is a recognized expert in
the technologies and processes for the destruction of the world’s
stockpile of chemical and biological agents and weapons. He has played
a key role in the design, construction and operation of every major
chemical agent demilitarization facility in the world. He holds
multiple patents on the processes to dispose of chemical agents and
explosives and has authored and presented numerous papers on related
subjects throughout the world.
Scott, who joined Parsons in 1985, received the
Dwight Look College of Engineering Outstanding Alumni Award and the
Department of Industrial Engineering Outstanding Alumnus Award from
Texas A&M. He also received the Captains of Industry Award from the
Institute of Industrial Engineers and the U.S. Army Toxic Hazardous
Materials Agency Outstanding Service Award.
YSU prof part of team that discovers galaxy collisions
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John Feldmeier
John Feldmeier, YSU assistant professor of astronomy, is part of a team
of astronomers that has discovered a high–speed collision between two
galaxies in the nearby Virgo cluster.
“Due to the striking nature of the astronomical images involved, it has received a lot of notice,” Feldmeier said.
The team, led by Jeffrey Kenney, professor and chair of astronomy at
Yale University, studied images taken by the wide–field Mosaic imager
on the National Science Foundation telescope at Kitt Peak National
Observatory near Tucson, Ariz. The team found evidence that high–speed
collisions between large elliptical galaxies may prevent new stars from
forming. The findings were to be published in a November 2008 issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Feldmeier, who joined YSU’s faculty in 2006, said the study concerns
discovering that the giant elliptical galaxy M86, in the heart of the
Virgo cluster, has interacted with another galaxy in the Virgo cluster,
NGC 4438. The two galaxies are connected by tendrils of ionized
hydrogen.
“This discovery provides some of the clearest evidence yet for
high–speed collisions between large galaxies, and it suggests that the
consequences of such collisions are a plausible alternative to black
holes in trying to explain the mystery of what process turns off star
formation in the biggest galaxies,” Kenney said in a press release from
the National Optical Astronomy Observatory.
In addition to Kenney and Feldmeier, other co–authors of the study are
Yale graduate student Tomer Tal; Hugh Crowl, a postdoctoral fellow at
the University of Massachusetts; and WIYN Observatory Director George
Jacoby.
To learn more about Feldmeier and his research, visit http://www.as.ysu.edu/~jjfeldme/.
Faculty/staff awards, presentations, publications
Doug Faires, professor emeritus, Mathematics, has co–authored The Contest Problem Book VIII, published by the Mathematical Association of America. Faires and co–author
David Wells of Pennsylvania State University directed the American Mathematics Competitions from 2000
through 2007, and the book includes problems and solutions from those
competitions. A subsequent volume will be released later this
year.
Stephen Ray Flora, professor, Psychology, made three presentations at the Association
for Behavior Analysis International Conference in Chicago. He presented
a workshop titled “Applying Behavior Analysis to Improve Health,
Fitness, Diet, Healthy Lifestyles and to Optimize Athletic
Performance,” and gave a presentation titled “Rapid Strengthening and
Extinction of Conditioned Avoidance and Disgust Responses to the Verbal
Stimulus ‘Love’.” Finally, working with YSU psychology major Lindsey
Hardie, Flora presented “The Use of a Multiple Baseline Design and
Nicotine Gum in Achieving Smoking Cessation.”
Eleanor Congdon, assistant professor, History, attended the International Maritime
Economic History Association conference at the Greenwich Naval
Observatory in Greenwich and the World History Association Conference
in London. She presented a paper at the IMEHA conference titled
“Venetian Roundships Around 1400 AD” and spoke at the WHA conference on
the subject “Venetian and Ottoman Relations in the Aegean: Military
Actions and Trade during the ‘War’ of 1469–1482.” While in London,
Congdon also spent four days conducting research in the library and
manuscript room at the University of Cambridge.
Rosanna M. O’Neil, head of collections services, Brian K. Brennan and Lisa M. Garofali, library media technical assistants, and Kevin J. Whitfield,
catalog librarian, all of Maag Library, attended a two–day workshop at
Kent State University titled, “Archival Description: DACS, MARC, and
EAD.” The workshop focused on how archival
collections are organized and described, the creation of archival
finding aids, and how to generate metadata versions of these
descriptions.
Carol M. Lamb,
assistant professor, Engineering Technology, presented a paper titled
“Assessment Process: A View from the Trenches” at the American Society
for Engineering Education National Conference in Pittsburgh. The paper
was co–authored by David G. Kurtanich, associate professor, Engineering Technology, and was published in the proceedings of the conference.
Howard Mettee, professor, Chemistry, coauthored a paper, titled “Mechanical & Chemical Modification of Wood Materials — Compressed Wood and Oxidized Charcoal,” which was published in the Web–based journal BioResources.
Robert J. Beebe,
professor, Educational Foundations, Research, Technology and
Leadership, traveled to Paris to present a research paper titled “State
Principal Standards: Development, Alignment, and
Implementation,” which discusses Ohio’s efforts to develop and
implement standards for school principals. He was lead author, working
with faculty from Kent State University, the University of Akron and
Ashland University. Ohio has been among the leading states in
making standards–based reforms, and Beebe has been involved in the
effort since its inception. The paper was accepted for publication in
the official proceedings of the conference. Beebe is also serving in a
leadership role in Educational Insights, a progressive national
educational think tank, developing a position paper, “The High School
of the Future.”
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