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September 22, 2000: Volume 50, Number 3 |
The Chronicle
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College Welcomes New Faculty
The College this fall welcomes 25 new members to the faculty. Others were introduced in previous issues. The remainder are:
Bernhard Kuhn, visiting instructor of English, earned his Ph.D. in comparative literature from Princeton University. His teaching and research interests include enlightenment and romanticism in Europe and England, realism through expressionism, and autobiographical writing.
Brian Ladd, visiting assistant professor of history, holds a Ph.D. from Yale University. He has taught history courses at Siena College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the University at Albany. His research focuses on urban decline, historic preservation and citizens' movements in the German Democratic Republic.
Michael Langham, visiting assistant professor of physics, earned his Ph.D. from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he has held teaching appointments. His Ph.D. thesis was on "Strings, Gauged Supergravities and Vertex Operators."
Melinda Lawson, visiting assistant professor of history, earned her Ph.D. from Columbia University with a thesis on "Loyalty and National Identity in the Civil War North." She teaches courses including U.S. history survey; 19th-century political, social or cultural history; African-American history; Jacksonian America and the Gilded Age.
Judith Lewin, instructor of English, holds a Ph.D. in comparative literature from Princeton University. Her interests include 18th- and 19th-century French, German and English literatures; 20th-century world literature; the Bible in western literature; genre studies; and autobiography.
Kara Doyle, assistant professor of English, holds a Ph.D. in medieval studies from Cornell University. Her research interests include fictional and historical female readers of medieval literature; Chaucer; Old French romance; feminism and medieval studies; medieval English and French history; Dante; World Wide Web, electronic text and medieval studies.
Michael Mathias, visiting assistant professor of philosophy, holds a Ph.D. from the University of Rochester. His teaching and research is in the fields of ethical theory, history of ethics, moral psychology and history of modern philosophy.
Thomas Michl, visiting associate professor of economics, has Ph.D. and master's degrees from the New School for Social Research. He has held teaching appointments at Colgate University. His teaching fields include macroeconomics, labor economics and Marxian political economy. His research interests cover income distribution and economic growth, productivity and technical change, minimum wages and social security and economic growth.
Cheikh Ndiaye, visiting instructor of modern languages, holds a Ph.D. from the University of Connecticut. He has been teaching courses in French and West African oral literature at Trinity College.
Joan Ramage, visiting assistant professor of geology, earned her Ph.D. from Cornell University, where she was also a NASA graduate fellow. Among her interests is satellite remote sensing of glaciers, tectonics and erosion.
Martin Schaden, visiting assistant professor of physics, holds a Ph.D. from the University of Vienna, Austria. He has taught courses at New York University and the Cooper Union in general physics, quantum field theory, modern physics and electromagnetism.
Junko Ueno, instructor of modern languages (Japanese), earned master's and Ph.D. degrees from Indiana University's School of Education, where she also has held teaching appointments. She has been involved with computer-assisted foreign language training, preparing second and foreign language teachers, and teaching Japanese as a foreign language.
Wilfried Wilms, visiting instructor of modern languages (German), earned his master's and Ph.D. degrees from Indiana University. His interests include German intellectual history, enlightenment philosophy, political philosophy and contemporary debates on modernity and postmodernity.
Joann Yarrow, visiting assistant professor of performing arts (theatre), has been artistic director at the American Laboratory for Actor Training. She received her master of fine arts degree in directing and choreography at the University of California at Irvine. She has previously taught theater courses at Union and Skidmore College.
John Zumbrunnen, visiting assistant professor of political science, earned his Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota. His fields of interest include political theory, history of political thought, democratic theory and American politics.
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