Welcome From the New Dean
Table of Contents
ELEMENTS The School of Science and Mathematics
It is my pleasure to be writing this note as the new Dean
of the School of Science and Mathematics. I joined The
Citadel in August 2012, after serving as department chair
of physics at Wright State University in Ohio (where
else?!) for eight years. Having been in the position for a
few months now, I can say that it is every bit what I ex-
pected – from the clear mission, to the outstanding peo-
ple (faculty, staff, students), to the challenges and oppor-
tunities. I should thank my predecessors, Dr. Chuck
Groetsch, the founding dean, and Dr. Spike Metts, the
interim dean, for giving the School a great start. My vi-
sion is to take the School to the next level, with signature
programs and faculty and student achievements that will
be recognized state-wide, nationally, and internationally.
We remain committed to being at the forefront of STEM
education in the region. This includes improving science
literacy, preparing science and mathematics teachers,
educating the future researchers and educators, and help-
ing train tomorrow’s workforce. I was recently at a re-
gional STEM meeting where one school counselor asked
what The Citadel is doing to help with the shortage of
STEM teachers; clearly, we need to do a better job adver-
tising our academic programs. It is, of course, difficult to
provide an affordable first-class education when state
funding is below 10%. A large part of my duty as Dean
is to help our departments identify additional resources
for helping us carry out our mission.
We have had an annual newsletter since 2008 and I cer-
tainly look forward to continuing this tradition for re-
porting on news and events from the past year. I encour-
age you to read about all the great things our faculty and
students do. I do want to welcome a couple of new assis-
tant professors who started in 2012: Dr. Rigoberto Flórez
(PhD, Mathematics, SUNY Binghamton) and Dr.
Michelle Richardson (PhD, Sports Management, Univer-
sity of New Mexico). We also welcome three new staff
members to the School, Ms. Margaret Gannon (fall
2011) in MACS, Ms. Ijuana Gadsden (fall 2012) in
HESS and Deborah Howard (fall 2012) in Physics. Last
but not least, I would like to thank Dr. Dena Garner for
serving as interim department head of HESS last year
and congratulate Dr. Harry Davakos on his appointment
as the new department head of HESS.
School of Science and Mathematics News… p. 1-3
Department of Biology News … p. 4-5
Department of Chemistry News... p. 6-7
Department of Health, Exercise and Sports Science News… p. 8-9
Department of Mathematics News… p. 10-11
Department of Physics News… p. 12-13
The Citadel
Lok C. Lew Yan Voon, Dean
School of Science and Mathematics News
Page 2 ELEMENTS
The recipient of the 2012 Distinguished Alumnus award of the
School of Science and Mathematics is Dr. James D. Bearden
III (‘65). Dr. Bearden is the Vice President of Clinical Research
for Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System; Managing Physi-
cian for the nationally recognized Gibbs Cancer Center; and
Director of the Bearden-Josey Center for Breast Health. He is
board-certified in Internal Medicine, Clinical Oncology and
Hematology; he is the first Board-certified oncologist in South
Carolina.
While at The Citadel, Dr. Bearden was President of the Pre-
Medical Society. Dr. Bearden graduated from MUSC in 1969
and has served as an adjunct professor there. He has also
worked in adjunct faculty positions at Wake Forest University
Cancer Center in Winston-Salem, N.C., and the University of
Texas Science Center in San Antonio, Texas. Dr. Bearden has
made significant contributions to the medical profession by
publishing a large volume of articles in scholarly journals.
Bearden is a Certified Principal Investigator by APPI and has
served as a Principal Investigator for one of only eight continu-
ously funded CCOPs in the country. He is also Principal Inves-
tigator for one of only 10 sites funded by the National Cancer
Institute’s Community Cancer Center’s Program. He has been
affiliated with the M. D. Anderson Cancer Center since 2005.
At Spartanburg Regional, he served as Medical Director for the
Hospice Program for 10 years. He is a Past President of the
Spartanburg Medical Society and is a Senior Partner and Presi-
dent of Palmetto Hematology Oncology Associates. He has also
served as President and founding Board Member of the South
Carolina Oncology Society.
Only one of two community physicians on the National Cancer
Institute’s steering committees for Multiple Myeloma and SX-
QOL, Bearden has served as a member of the American Society
of Clinical Oncology Cancer Prevention Committee, as well as
a member of the Executive Committees of both the Southwest
Oncology Group and the Alliance Oncology Group. Bearden is
a Research Affiliate of Hollings Cancer Center and was Chair-
man of the Cancer Care Committee at Spartanburg Regional
from 1976 to 2010. A former member of the Spartanburg Re-
gional Healthcare System Board of Directors, Bearden is a
Charter Founding Member of Carolina Alliance Bank and is an
Elder and prior deaconate at 1st Presbyterian Church in Spartan-
burg. He is also on the Board of Trustees and was a former Vice
Chairman of the Board for Spartanburg Day School. Dr.
Bearden served his country through a military career that in-
cluded 10 years of active duty and 10 years of reserve duty and
retired as a Navy Captain.
He has been awarded the Distinguished Alumni Award by the
Medical Alumni Association of the Medical University of
South Carolina. He is a recipient of the Order of the Palmetto
and the Betty Ann Moore Award in honor of extraordinary ser-
vice in the fight against colon cancer. Dr. Bearden currently
practices in Spartanburg, where he has lived with his family for
more than 30 years.
Outstanding Student Award
Each spring, the School selects one cadet to receive this
award for outstanding academic achievements. There are
always numerous seniors who qualify and it is never an
easy decision to select the most outstanding one. For
2012, the awardee is Shanna M. Couch (HESS). One
can read about her Citadel accomplishments in the HESS
section. In addition, she has been honored with an NCAA
Postgraduate Scholarship following her graduation this
past spring. Couch, who is currently pursuing her doctor-
ate of physical therapy at the University of Kansas Medi-
cal Center, was one of just 29 female student-athletes
nationally, and the first in Citadel history, to receive the
prestigious award.
2012 Distinguished Alumnus Award
Dr. James D. Bearden III, ’65 Awardee
Page 3 Vol. 4 No. 1 Fall 2012
2012 Undergraduate Awards School Awards: School of Science and Mathematics Outstanding Student
Award for outstanding academic achievement in the School of
Science and Mathematics. Shanna M. Couch –HESS
Thomas Francis McGarey Award for outstanding achieve-
ment in the field of natural science.
Charles Preston Payne – Biology, Evan Aguirre - Physics
Dr. Francis Eugene Zemp Award for the highest scholastic
rating for a graduating senior continuing on to medical
school. William Welch - Biology
Biology: Outstanding Freshman Award—Rosemary Eggers
Outstanding Sophomore Award—Grace Raines and Ryan
Rhodes
Outstanding Junior Award—Stiles Harper
Outstanding Senior Award—Charles Preston Payne
Chemistry: Outstanding Freshman Award—Bradley Mueller, Joshua
Arp, Barrett Bradham and Samuel Huntington
Outstanding Sophomore Award—Stiles Harper
Outstanding Junior Award—Benjamin Cook
Outstanding Senior Award—Anna Fuzy and Dolph Eich
Analytical Chemistry Award—Frederick Shriner
Wideman Scholar—Samuel Huntington (freshman), Kyle
Page (sophomore) and Nicholas Hasty (junior)
American Chemical Society Award—Joshua Edwards
Health, Exercise, and Sport Science: NASPE—The National Association for Sport and Physical
Education (NASPE) Outstanding Major of the Year Program.
Shanna M. Couch, Bonnie J. Ramage and Paul J. Wasilchak
The Keith Hamilton Award—Senior HESS Major best
demonstrating outstanding academic achievement and poten-
tial for future professional growth.— Alexandria R. Burns
Mathematics and Computer Science George E. Reves Award— For Superior Ability and Out-
standing Achievements in Computer Science and Mathematics
Gordon C. Finlay (Computer Science) and Chinnaphon Ut-
taraparwanich (Mathematics)
Physics: Outstanding Freshman Award—Levi G. Southerton
Outstanding Sophomore Award—Ryan J. Boodee
Outstanding Junior Award—Daniel K. Pittman
Outstanding Senior Award—Evan M. Aguirre
Teaching Assistant Award—for excellence as student teach-
ing assistant or physics tutor.
Kurt L. Lichtenstein
National Physics Honor Society SPS— for Junior or Senior
Physics Majors or Applied Physics Minors displaying an out-
standing academic record in physics.
Eric S. Berman, Daniel K. Pittman and Djordon L. Porter
New Director for The STEM Center of Excellence
I am pleased to announce the hiring of a new director for the STEM center, Ms.
Glenda P. La Rue. Ms. La Rue has an MS in Civil Engineering from Virginia Tech
and was most recently the Program Director of the College of Engineering Diversity
& Outreach Office at The Ohio State University. In her previous position, she was
responsible for a variety of tasks including K-12 outreach, recruitment and reten-
tion, and also increasing the representation of women in engineering. Her role will
be to promote STEM education in all its form at The Citadel working with the
Schools of Education, Engineering and Science and Mathematics, and with the
community.
Seed Fund for Student and Faculty Research
Ms. Glenda P. La Rue
This past year, the School received a generous donation from Dr. Hap McSween (’67) to help establish an umbrella fund to sup-
port student and faculty research. We are very grateful for his vision that this is one of the primary needs in our School. Over the
last few years, faculty in our School have increased their efforts at providing a research experience to the undergraduates with a
small but effective summer research program. The donation by Dr. McSween provides us with the incentive to seek further
funds in order to endow a research fund for both student and faculty research.
The donation of the “Indian Hut” property by V. Lee Faircloth (Mathematics, ’67) has been a catalyst for several educational and
research activities over the past year. The property consists of 544 acres of bottomland forest habitat near Georgetown, including
an idyllic stretch of over one mile of Black River shoreline. Cadets and graduate students enrolled in Ecology, Invertebrate Zoolo-
gy, and Field Methods courses took field trips to the property for experiential learning opportunities. In-depth observations of
wildlife and flora in and around the property were made on these trips. In addition, Dr. Joel Gramling and graduate student Kristie
Burr developed a GIS Wetland Habitat map of the property that has been geo-referenced to the National Wetlands Inventory data-
base. This will allow for a more systematic study of habitat diversity on the property. Dr. Gramling has also started to compile a
list of plant species found on the property. Dr. Paul Nolan and graduate student Sarah Diaz (pictured above) are currently conduct-
ing a survey of birds using the property.
Biology News
Page 4 ELEMENTS
tion to The Citadel’s CASTLE group enti-
tled, “A Novice Perspective on Building
an Online Course in Blackboard Learn.”
Drs. Paul Rosenblum and Danny Gus-
tafson returned to the faculty after taking
well-deserved sabbaticals this past year.
Dr. John Zardus is on sabbatical for the
2012-2013 academic year, and he will
spend time with colleagues in Australia at
the James Cook University in Townsville.
Ms. Sandra Walsh has become a Visiting
Instructor within the Department. Dr.
Paul Nolan recently traveled to Lund,
Sweden to present at the International
Society for Behavioral Ecology. One of
his undergraduate research students, Cait-
lin Black from the College of Charleston,
also presented at this international meet-
ing. Noteworthy is the fact that Caitlin
Black won the best student poster presen-
tation awards at both the Society of Inte-
grative and Comparative Biology and the
South Carolina Academy of Sciences this
past spring for research conducted with
Dr. Nolan. Dr. Kathy Zanin will be pre-
senting education research entitled
“Effectiveness of Supplementing Tradi-
tional Lectures with Animation” at the
American Society for Cell Biology this
December. She has also given a presenta-
Student accomplishments for the
2011-2012 academic year included
Preston Payne being awarded the
Thomas Francis McGarey Award for
outstanding achievement in the field
of natural science, William Welch
was awarded the Dr. Francis Eugene
Zemp Award for highest scholastic
rating for a graduating senior continu-
ing on to medical school. Outstand-
ing Biology major awards went to
Rosemary Eggars (Freshman), Grace
Raines and Ryan Rhodes
(Sophomores), Stiles Harper (Junior)
and Preston Payne (Senior). Cadets
Ronald Willis and Mark Pierce, and
graduate students Pamela Corwin and
Jonte Miller were inducted into the
Charleston Chapter of Sigma Xi this
past Spring.
Student Accomplishments
Dr. John Weinstein with the Biology major award
winners at the School of Science and Mathemat-
ics Undergraduate Award Ceremony in April.
Graduate student Sarah Diaz
Faculty
Biology Research at the Faircloth “Indian Hut” Property
Page 5 Vol. 4 No. 1 Fall 2012
Presentations Joel Gramling “Invasive Plants on Kiawah Island” - October, 2011. “Diverse Wetland Restoration Approaches under Working-Lands
Programs in the Southeastern U.S.: Implications for Ecosystem Services” Ecological Society of America’s 96th Annual Meeting in
Austin, Texas by Diane DeSteven* and Joel Gramling, August, 2011. “Conservation Ecology in the Lowcountry of SC: Aliens, sea
level rise and other threats” The STEM Center of Excellence at The Citadel’s STEM Innovation Institute for K-12 Teachers in July,
2011.
Sarah A. Latshaw, Paul M. Nolan, and John A. Gerwin. “Using the habitat preferences of painted buntings (Passerina ciris) to
guide restoration initiatives on a developing barrier island in South Carolina.” Annual meeting of the Ecological Society of Ameri-
ca, Austin, TX, August 2011.
Claudia Rocha “Microbial Pathogenesis: weapons and strategies”. The 2011-2012 STEM Innovation Challenges Institute. July 11-
15, 2011. The Citadel, Charleston, SC.
B. Burnley*, H. Matthews*, P. Sullivan*, C.L. Rocha and D. Donnell. 2011. “A system for the Expression and Control of Appe-
tite Regulation Protein in E. coli”. Cadet Undergraduate Research Conference. The Citadel. March 18. Charleston, SC.
E. Hinkle*, J.R. Tyrrell, P.M. Nolan and C.L. Rocha. 2011. “Who said all feces are bad feces?”. Cadet Undergraduate Research
Conference. The Citadel. March 18. Charleston, SC
John Weinstein “Sediment Contamination in Coastal Stormwater Detention Ponds,” Charleston Area Stormwater Pond Manage-
ment Conference. North Charleston, SC.
Coen L.D., Proffitt C.E., Geiger S.P., Kimbro D.L., Weinstein J.E. 2011. “Florida Gulf Coast oysters and associated fauna: Effects
of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill and setting baseline conditions for future disturbances.” Coastal and Estuarine Research Federa-
tion 21st Biennial Conference, Daytona Beach, FL. October 2011.
Blick, J.P., Zardus, J.D., Frick, M.G., & Clementz, M.T. “Archaeological Sea Turtle Barnacles from San Salvador, Bahamas Date
to A.S. 900-1320”, 31st International Sea Turtle Symposium, San Diego, CA, April 12-15, 2011.
Northcutt, Z.D.*, & Zardus, J.D. “From Sea Snakes to Mud Crabs: Genetic Variability Amongst Hitchhiking Octolasmis Barna-
cles”, Citadel Undergraduate Research Conference, Charleston, SC Mar. 18, 2011 (1st place award). *student collaborator
Joel Gramling—Department of Defense Cooperative Agreement –Monitoring of the rare plant Lindera melissifolia at the Marine Corps
Air Station in Beaufort SC ($7,943)
-NASA (SC SpaceGrant Consortium) –Use of remotely–sensed data to analyze locally-collected data on the hammock islands of the
Lowcountry. Education reform (K-12) and the importance of experiential learning for educators and students. ($7,140)
-Commission on Higher Education – Improving Teacher Quality (ITQ) Grant - “Developing Highly Qualified Middle and High School
Level Science and Mathematics Teachers through Project-Based Learning” ($76,000, in collaboration with School of Education)
-Commission on Higher Education – Improving Teacher Quality (ITQ) Supplemental Grant 2012– “The Kiawah Island Chinese Tallow
Tree Survey Institute” which was proposed through The Citadel School of Education. ($52,160, in collaboration with School of
Education)
John Zardus -Continuation of a National Science Foundation grant, year 4 of a 5 year award, Phylogeny on the Half-Shell -- As-
sembling the Bivalve Tree of Life, $25,816, Senior Collaborator (P.I. Gonzalo Giribet - Harvard University).
John Weinstein- BP/Florida Institute of Oceanography. The Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill: Assessing Impacts on a Critical Habitat,
Oyster Reefs, and Associated Species in Florida Gulf Estuaries. Subcontract through Florida Atlantic University, $20,706, year 2 of
2.
Faculty Grants
Echt, C.S., Demeer, D, & Gustafson, D.J. 2011. Patterns of differentiation among endangered pondberry populations. Conservation
Genetics, 12, 1015-1026.
Frick, M.G., J.D. Zardus, A. Ross, J. Senko, D. Montano-Valdez, M. Bucio-Pacheco, and I. Sosa-Cornejo 2011. Novel records and
observations of the barnacle Stephanolepas muricata (Cirripedia: Balanomorpha: Coronuloidea); including a case for chemical medi-
ation in turtle and whale barnacles. Journal of Natural History 45: 629-640.
Gramling, J.M. , Laurel Wilt, A Growing Disease Problem in Bays and Other Woody Species. The Journal of the South Carolina
Native Plant Society, Spring (2011), 5-7.
Publications
Interior and exterior renovations to Byrd
Hall began this summer. The building
was surrounded by barriers making the
normal things like delivering nitrogen gas
interesting. The exterior stucco has been
repaired and the building coated thanks to
funding from the TCF. Faculty, staff and
students endured the noise and disrup-
tions this summer and the beginning of
the fall semester and now the external
part of Byrd Hall looks great. Additional-
ly, funding has been provided to upgrade
the analytical chemistry laboratory as
well as a research laboratory. Four hoods
will be added to improve the ventilation
on the third floor of the building. These
improvements are expected to be started
later this fall and completed in the spring
of 2013.
Research Focus
quantification of biologically and envi-
ronmentally relevant metals.
The faculty has received grants from the
Citadel Foundation and the South Caroli-
na Space Grant Consortium (SCSGC).
Dr. Holly Bevsek received a grant from
the SCSGC to investigate "Reaction of
Methane with Hydrogen Peroxide Ad-
sorbed on a Martian Soil Analog". Dr.
Bevsek, Dr. Blanton, Dr. Dorko and Dr.
Adair received grants from the Citadel
Foundation (TCF) to support their re-
search projects. Dr. Bevsek’s TCF sup-
ported research project involves reactions
of nitrogen oxides in carbon nanotubes.
Dr. Dorko’s research project is a theoreti-
cal investigation of beryllium sulfide and
magnesium sulfide clusters as possible
hydrogen storage materials. Dr. Blan-
ton’s research examines chiral catalysts
and reagents for use in novel asymmetric
syntheses. Dr. Adair’s research is to de-
velop, validate, and optimize sample col-
lection and preparation techniques for
Chemistry News Faculty
Bryd Hall Renovations
Page 6 ELEMENTS
The Chemistry Department welcomed
twenty freshman majors in August after
saying congratulations to five graduates
in May. The faculty continues to stress
the importance of involving students in
research as part of their education at The
Citadel. Six students participated in re-
search projects this summer. The faculty
and students presented and published
their research, received awards and are
active in the community. The department
has submitted its periodic report to the
American Chemical Society for the re-
view to retain certification. Construc-
tion upgrades and repairs of Byrd Hall are
underway.
The department continues to encour-
age our students to pursue research
through working with faculty in the sum-
mer as well as with the senior research
thesis. The faculty believe research pro-
vides the opportunity for the student to
experience the excitement (and some-
times frustration) of science learned in
their courses. The faculty has also been
involved in research. Dr. Michael Dorko
and Dr. Ron Hemingway received the
Medbery Research Mentor Award for
their work with undergraduate students in
the research laboratory. Patrick Riley and Dr. Ronald Hemingway at the
National ACS Meeting in San Diego
Randall W. Hicks and Holly M. Bevsek, “Utilizing Problem-Based Learning in Qualitative Analysis Lab Experiments”, Journal of
Chemical Education, 2012, 89(2), 254-257.
Brian C. Hixson, John W. Jordan, Erica L. Wagner, Holly M. Bevsek, “Reaction Products and Kinetics of the Reaction of NO2 with
gamma-Fe2O3”, Journal of Physical Chemistry A, 2011, 115(46), 13364-13369.
Blanton, J.R. Clark, R.W. Asymmetric Syntheses Utilizing Crown Ethers with Chiral Appendages as Phase Transfer
Catalysts. Journal of Undergraduate Chemistry Research, 2012 11(2), 25-28.
SJ Christopher, EL Kilpatrick, LL Yu, WC Davis, BM Adair. Preliminary evaluation of a microwave-assisted metal-labeling strate-
gy for quantification of peptides via RPLC–ICP-MS and the method of standard additions. Talanta, 2012. 88: 749-758.
HJ Clewell, RS Thomas, EM Kenyon, MF Hughes, BM Adair, PR Gentry, JW Yager.“Concentration and Time-dependent Genomic
Changes in the Mouse Urinary Bladder Following Exposure to Arsenate in Drinking Water for up to 12 Weeks.” Toxicological
Sciences. 2011 123: 421-432.
New Technology
Publications
This summer we had 5 students involved
in research with our faculty and 1 student
participating in an internship with
MeadWestvaco. Joshua Neeper (rising
senior), Holly Horton (rising sophomore),
Ben Cook (rising senior), Rick Shriner
(rising senior), and Sam Harbison (rising
junior) participated in undergraduate re-
search with Dr. Hemingway, Dr. Bevsek,
Dr. Dorko and Dr. Adair. Matt Hill
(rising senior) worked with scientists in
the Oilfield Chemicals Division of
MeadWestvaco. They were involved in
the following research projects:
Dr. Holly Bevsek organized a biweekly
lunch time research meeting for the facul-
ty and students from Chemistry and Phys-
ics to share their work. The students high-
lighted recent results, successes, and chal-
lenges and offered support and helpful
tips to each other.
This “group” meeting was funded by the
Chemistry Department and the Dean of
the School of Science and Mathematics.
Students working with faculty in the de-
partment received small stipends from the
Jane Allan and Samuel Adam Wideman
Student Research Fellowship.
methods. This summer two of our
students used this instrument in their
research.
In the spring, the department purchased
an Inductively Coupled Plasma - Optical
Emission Spectrometer (ICP-OES) with
funds from the Provost’s Office, the
Dean’s Office and the Chemistry Depart-
ment Restricted Fund (donations to the
department through TCF). The ICP-OES
is used to quantify multiple elements sim-
ultaneously and over a wide range of con-
centrations. This instrument will be used
by the students as well as by Dr. Adair in
her research to develop, validate, and
optimize sample collection and prepara-
tion techniques for quantification of bio-
logically and environmentally relevant
metals and metalloids in representative
matrices at relevant concentrations and to
apply element specific detection of het-
eroatoms or elemental tags to produce
more accurate biomolecule quantification
Student Accomplishments
Page 7 Vol. 4 No. 1 Fall 2012
Cadets John Jordan, Patrick Riley,
Anna Fuzy and Evan Eich
Health, Exercise, and Sport Science News
Faculty
Page 8 ELEMENTS
and a knowledge and experience of the
sport industry, through various positions
she held over the years in industry.
Dena Garner and Lori Williams were
appointed Directors of Exercise Science
and Teaching program respectively.
Finally, the HESS department offers now
three Bachelor degrees in: Physical Edu-
cation –Teaching, Sport Management,
and Exercise Science. In addition, it of-
fers three Graduate programs: M.A.T. in
Physical Education, M.S. in HESS
(Exercise Science), and a Graduate Certif-
icate in Sport Management –Sales and
Marketing.
Tim Bott Served as SCAPES – past pres-
ident (SC Professional association for
Teaching and Coaching. Also attended a
coaching education program conducted
by a local sport organization, and re-
viewed the curriculum for a local compa-
ny, Stretch and Grow Charleston, and
provided them with an analysis of the
content related to movement education
and fitness. Stretch and Grow Charleston
currently provides physical education and
physical activity for preschool children in
the area.
Harry Davakos was appointed Chair of
HESS department, July 1, 2012.
Wes Dudgeon completed data collection
for 2nd year of NIH-funded grant investi-
gating the effects of home exercise inter-
ventions in persons living with HIV/
AIDS.
Dena Garner – served on Thesis Com-
mittee for Ashley Strickland (CGC)
“Performance mouthpiece Reduces Blood
Lactate Concentrate During and After
Resistence Training Exercise.” and
Thesis Committee for Larry Buchanan
(CGC) “Mouthpiece Use Reduces Serum
Cortisol During and After Acute Exercise.
Research with Ben Hepner (CGC) Effects
of Mouthpiece Use on Gold Perfor-
mance” Michelle Richardson was appointed as
Assistant Professor of Sport Management,
replacing Dr. Linda Schoonmaker who
retired after five years at The Citadel. Dr.
Richardson brings in a zest for teaching
Student Accomplishments Shanna Couch graduated in 2012 with a perfect 4.0
GPA and was named the first honor graduate of the
Corps of Cadets. Additionally, she was the 2012 Out-
standing Student of the School of Science & Mathemat-
ics, and an Outstanding Major of the Year for the Na-
tional Associations of Sports and Physical Educa-
tion. Shanna was also a member of the Women’s Soccer
team. Besides majoring in Health & Wellness, Shanna
also minored in Biology and she began work in her doc-
tor of physical therapy degree at the University of Kan-
sas Medical Center last June.
Alexandra Ray Burns was a participant in the Honors
Program, and she was named second honor graduate of the
Corps of Cadets. This is the first time that two female ca-
dets shared the top academic honors, and both coming from
the same academic department. Burns served as 4th Battal-
ion Academic Officer. She has been accepted in the Col-
lege of Pharmacy at MUSC, where she started in the fall of
2012.
Page 9 Vol. 4 No. 1 Fall 2012
Publications Garner, D.P., Dudgeon, W.D., and McDivitt, E. The effects of mouthpiece use on cortisol levels during an intense bout of re-
sistance exercise. Journal of Strength and Conditioning, 25(10) (2011), 2866-2871.
Garner, D.P., Dudgeon, W.D., Scheett, T.P., and McDivitt, E.J. The effects of mouthpiece use on gas exchange parameters during
steady-state exercise in college-aged men and women. Journal of the American Dental Association. 142(9) (2011), 1041-1047.
W. D. Dudgeon, “Impact of aerobic and resistance exercise on the health of HIV-infected persons.” In the Journal of Lifestyle Medi-
cine [3(6); 489-499, 2009] 2011 Encyclopedia of Lifestyle Medicine.of the American Dental Association. 142(9) (2011), 1041-1047
Presentations Bott, T. & Norris, D. (2011, November). Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Motor Competence, a developmental Per-
spective. Annual South Carolina Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance Conference, Myrtle Beach, SC.
Bott, T., Lyles, B., Garnet, C., and Neuroth, D. (2011, November). Clear!!! A badminton progression for secondary
physical education. Annual South Carolina Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance Conference, Myrtle
Beach, SC.
Bott, T. & Williams, L. (2011, March). Fit to Teach: Achieving NASPE/NCATE Standard 2. American Alliance for Health, Physi-
cal Education, Recreation and Dance Convention, San Diego, CA.
Davakos. H. Economic Impact of 2011 Cooper River Bridge Run. International Conference of Sport Management, Athens, Greece,
July, 2011.
Dietary Habits of Greek High School Students (co-presenter).Thessaloniki, Greece, April 2011.
Physical Education and Sport: Greece (co-presenter). As part of International Physical Education and Sport. San Diego, CA, March
2011.
Networking 101 (co-presenter). As part of Sport Management Forum: Voices from the Experts. Greensboro, NC, Feb. 2011.
Dudgeon, W. Suspension Training Improves Muscular Endurance, Muscular Strength, Cardiovascular Fitness and Body Composi-
tion in College-Aged Females. Presented at National Strength and Conditioning Association Meeting in Las Vegas, NV.
Garner. D.P. (November, 2011). Use of mouthguards in athletics. Southern District/South Carolina Alliance for HPERD Conven-
tion, Myrtle Beach, SC.
Garner, D.P. (November, 2011). Use of mouthpiece in golf to improve performance. Southern District/South Carolina Alliance
for HPERD Convention, Myrtle Beach, SC.
Garner, D.P. (June, 2011). The effects of mouthpiece use on gas exchange parameters during steady-state exercise in college-aged
men and women. American of Dental Sleep Medicine Conference, Minneapolis, MN.
Garner, D.P. Scheett, T.P. Dudgeon, W.D., McDivitt, .J. and Rodriguez, M.A. (February, 2011). Increases in VO2/kg, VCO2, and
VO2 with mouthpiece during steady state runs. Southeast Regional Chapter of American College of Sports Medicine, Greenville,
SC.
Werner, P., Williams, L., & Sweeting, T. (2011, April). Coal miners’ song: Folk dance and the national dance standards. American
Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance National Convention & Expo, San Diego, CA.
Werner, P., & Williams, L. (2011, February). An integrated approach to folk dance to implement national standards. Southern Dis-
trict AAHPERD/NCAAHPERD Joint Convention & Exposition, Greensboro, NC.
Werner, P., & Williams, L. (2011, November). Using traditional folk dance to teach creatively. South Carolina Alliance for Health,
Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance Conference and Exposition, Myrtle Beach, SC.
Werner, P., & Williams, L. (2011, November). Designing sequences in children’s gymnastics. South Carolina Alliance for Health,
Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance Conference and Exposition, Myrtle Beach, SC.
Williams, L. & Kirchner, A. (2011, November). What’s your approach to improving children’s fitness? South Carolina Alliance for
Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance Conference and Exposition, Myrtle Beach, SC.
Williams, L., & Hall, T. (2011, January). A school wide approach to combating the obesity epidemic Part II: Strategies and models
for events and activities. Share the Wealth Physical Education Conference, Jekyll Island, GA.
Werner, P., & Williams, L. (2011, November). Using themes to develop units of work in gymnastics. South Carolina Alliance for
Health, Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance Conference and Exposition, Myrtle Beach, SC.
Meyer, F., Williams, L., & Bowie, S. (2011, February). Setting the stage for quality dance. Southern District AAHPERD/
NCAAHPERD Joint Convention & Exposition, Greensboro, NC.
Faculty Grants Wes Dudgeon - Funding agency: NIH/NINR (1R21NR011281-01A2) Role: Investigator Title: Home Based Exercise for the Pre-
vention of HIV-associated Cardiovascular Disease. Amount: $227,583 (Subcontract to Citadel for $67,803) Date:(2010-13).
Cadet Chinnaphon Uttaraparwanich and
OC Gordon C. Finlay were the winners of
the Reves Award for the 2011-2012 aca-
demic year for “Superior Ability and Out-
standing Achievements in Mathematics
and Computer Science.” The Reves
Award is given annually in honor of the
late George E. Reves, former professor
and department head. Both Cadet Ut-
taraparwanich and OC Finlay were Elec-
trical Engineering majors. Cadet Ut-
taraparwanich earned a minor in Applied
Mathematics, and OC Finlay earned a
minor in Computer Programming. In
addition to their outstanding academic
record in this department, both have been
very active in department activities out-
side the classroom.
Mathematics and Computer Science News Faculty
Page 10 ELEMENTS
Dr. Leslie S. Cohn is on sabbatical for
the fall 2012 semester, and Dr. Mei-Qin
Chen will be on sabbatical in the spring
2013 semester.
In August 2012, Dr. Rigoberto Flórez
joined the Department of Mathematics
and Computer Science as an assistant
professor. Rigo received his Ph. D. from
the State University of New York at
Binghamton under the guidance of Pro-
fessor Thomas Zaslavsky.
Effective with the start of the 2012-
2013 academic year, Dr. George L. Ru-
dolph was promoted to associate profes-
sor, and Dr. Shankar M. Banik was
awarded academic tenure and promoted
to associate professor.
Publications Cadet Uttaraparwanich and OC Finlay receiving their awards.
Student Accomplishments
Sridhar Radhakrishnan, Shankar M. Banik, Venkatesh Sarangan, Chandra N. Sekharan, Delay Constrained Subtree Homeo-
morphism Problem with Applications, IEEE Transactions on Parallel and Distributed Systems, December 2011, Vol . 22, No. 12,
pages 1978-1985.
Chandra N. Sekharan, Shankar M. Banik, Sridhar Radhakrishnan, On the Heterogeneous Postal Delivery Model for Multicasting,
Journal of Communications and Networks (JCN), October 2011, 13 (No. 5)(2011), 536-543.
Shankar M. Banik, Zachary C. Aardahl*, MMMDDVC: Multi-source Multicasting using Multi-cores with Delay and Delay Varia-
tion Constraints on Overlay Networks, In Proceedings of 2nd International Symposium on Middleware and Network Applications
(part of 8th International Conference on Information Technology New Generations – ITNG 2011), Las Vegas, Nevada, April 2011,
pages 661-666.
Leslie Cohn, On the Ubiquity of Gorenstein Quasi-Orders, Academic Publication, Ltd. Bulgaria. ISBN: 978-954-2940-05-0.
R. Florez and L. Junes, a Relation Between Triangular Numbers and Prime Numbers, Intergers 11, (2011).
R. Florez and D. A. Narayan, An Optimal K-Ranking Characterization of Oriented Paths and Cycles, Bulletin of the Institute of Com-
binatorics and Its Applications 61 (2011), pages 97-108.
C. W. Groetsch, Spurt Optimization, The Mathematical Gazette (London) 95 (2011), 69-70.
C. W. Groetsch, Matter Gravitates, But Does Gravity Matter?, PRIMUS 21 (2011), 142-148.
C. W. Groetsch, “Linear Inverse Problems”, pp 3-41, Chapter I, in Handbook of Mathematical Methods in Imaging (O. Scherzer,
Univ. Vienna, Ed.), Springer, New York and Berlin, 2011. ISBN 978-0-387-92919-4.
D. A. French and C. W. Groetsch, Olfactory Cilia: A Case Study in Inverse Modeling, pp. 1-12 in First Symposium on Inverse
Problems and Applications, (J. Delgado et al., Eds.), Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico City, Mexico, 2011, ISBN 978-
607-477-505-1.
Presentations
Page 11 Vol. 4 No. 1 Fall 2012
Shankar Banik (with Zachary C. Aardahl*), “MMMDDVC: Multi-source Multicasting using Multi-cores with Delay and Delay
Variation Constraints on Overlay networks”, 2nd International Symposium on Middleware and Network Applications (part of 8th
International Conference on Information Technology New Generations – ITNG 2011), Las Vegas, Nevada, April 2011.
Mei-Qin Chen “Eigenpairs of Adjacency Matrices of Balanced Signed Graphs”, Carolina Mathematics Seminar, The Citadel,
Charleston, SC, October 2011.
Stephen Cotter “How College is Different From High School”, Summerville HS Mathematics Department, 22 classes, Summer-
ville, SC, November 2011.
Rigoberto Florez “Projective Representation of Non-Representable Matroids (of Biased Graphs)”, The Combinatorics Seminar,
Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY, May 2011.
“A Representation of the Bias Matroid in a Projective Plane”, Combinatorics Seminar, Department of Mathematics, University of
South Carolina, Columbia, April 2011.
Chuck Groetsch “Inverse Problems and Regularization Theory I & II, a short course for postdocs and doctoral students, Texas
A&M University, College Station, Texas, 21-22 May 2011.
“Inverse Problems, von Neumann’s Theorem, and Stable Approximate Evaluation of Unbounded Operators”, 25 minute talk at the
Carolina Math Seminar, 28 October, 2011.
Upasana Kashyap “The Maximal W-Dilation and Morita Equivalence”, AMS Special Session on Recent Progress in Operator Al-
gebras, AMS Central Section Meeting, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, October 2011.
“A Morita Theorem for Dual Operator Algebras”, AMS Special Session on von Neumann Algebras, New Orleans, January 2011.
Antara Mukherjee “Isoperimetric Inequalities Using Varopoulos Transport”, MAA Southeast Section Meeting, Tuscaloosa, Ala-
bama, March 2011.
“Non-Euclidean Geometry – Euclid’s Chagrin or Gauss’s Triumph?”, Sigma Xi Brown Bag lunch talk, The Citadel, Charleston,
SC, October 2011.
George Rudolph “On the Structure of Algorithm Spaces”, International Joint Conference on Neural Networks 2011, San Jose, CA,
August 2011.
“AD-NEMO: Adaptive Dynamic Network Expansion with Mobile Robots”, STEM Innovation Institute 2011, The Citadel, Charles-
ton, SC, July 2011.
“Parallel Simulation of Electromagnetic Effects in Aircraft Design”, High Performance Computing – Getting Started Workshop,
MUSC, Charleston, SC, February 2011.
Michael P. Verdicchio (With S. Kim), “Identifying Targets for Intervention by Analyzing Basins of Attraction”, Pacific Symposium
on Biocomputing, 16, Hawaii, January 2011.
(With G. Alterovitz, S. Cavalcanti, M. Wang, and M. Ramoni), “Reverse Engineering and Synthesis of Biomolecular Systems”, Pa-
cific Symposium on Biocomputing, 16, Hawaii, January 2011.
Li Zhang “Special Case Studies of the Stochastic p-Hub Center Single Allocation Problem with Service Constraints”, The 12th IN-
FORMS computing Society Conference, Monterey, CA 2011.
Publications, Continued D. Joshi, A. Samal and L-. K. Soh: Extracting Information from Microblogs and Mobile Social Networks for Dynamic Decision
Support. Position paper for The NSF CyberGIS Project All-Hands Meeting 2011. Oak Ridge, TN.
U. Kashyap and D.P. Blecher, A Characterization and a generalization of W-modules, Transactions of the American Mathematical
Society 363 (2011), pp 345-363.
Peterson, Adam and Martinez, Tony and Rudolph, George. On the Structure of Algorithm Spaces. In Proceedings of Internation-
al Joint Conference on Neural Networks, San Jose, California, July 31-August 5, 2011, pp. 658-665.
Jung S., Verdicchio, M. P., Kiefer, J., Berens, M., and Kim, S. (2011) “Learning Contextual Gene Set Interaction Networks of Glio-
blastoma and Identifying Subtype Specificity.” In Eighth International Workshop on Computational Systems Biology (WCSB
2011), Zurich, Switzerland, June 6-8, 2011.
Verdicchio, M. P., and Kim, S. (2011) “Identifying Targets for Intervention by Analyzing Basins of Attraction.” Pacific Symposi-
um on Biocomputing, 16, Hawaii, January 3-7, 2011.
Li Zhang, Special Case Studies of the Stochastic p-Hub Center Single Allocation Problems with Service Constraints, pp 120-129.
In Proceedings of the 12th INFORMS Computing Society Conference. Monterey, CA, 2011.
Faculty Grants C. Groetsch - $4K (NASA-SC Space Consortium). Curriculum development project: Mathematics for Cosmic Exploration.
Page 12 ELEMENTS
Student Accomplishments
A team of three students complet-
ed the first prototype of the Atsa
Armrest Camera (AAC). The AAC
is the first version of the Atsa
Suborbital Observatory, which will
be an astronomical telescope
mounted to a manned commercial
suborbital space plane. Fit and
function testing were completed at
XCOR Aerospace in Mojave, CA,
using the engineering test bed
cockpit of XCOR’s Lynx space-
plane. The students were funded
through the South Carolina Space
Grant Consortium’s Palmetto
Academy Program, and represent-
ed three different institutions in
South Carolina.
A cadet physics major conducted
experiments for the Laser Desorp-
tion Infrared Spectroscopy pro-
gram at NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory under Caltech’s Sum-
mer Undergraduate Research Fel-
lowship Program during the sum-
mer of 2012.
A cadet physics major was a member
of the NASA Ames Academy for
Space Exploration. This is a college
internship for rising juniors through
second year graduate students.
Through this program, each intern has an
individual research project and together
they complete a group research project.
For individual research, Boodee did a
feasibility study into “Utilizing Martian
Caves in Future Habitation Trips to
Mars.” He worked as the head of the
structures team for the group project,
which was engineering a sampling appa-
ratus for a submersible that will monitor
very cold arctic lakes.
A physics major from the College of
Charleston worked in The Citadel Physics
Department undergraduate research labs
on setting up an experimental system for
performing laser-induced fluorescence
measurements of mesoscopic systems,
particularly carbon nanodots. He designed
and tested electronics for operating an
electrospray ionization system for loading
the ion traps that will levitate and store
the nanodots. He also set up a vacuum
chamber for housing the experiment and
fabricated an ion trap from a printed cir-
cuit board.
Undergraduate Research Focus
Cadet Honors
Cadet Erik Pratt received the first place Sigma Xi stu-
dent research award for his study of the compound
double pendulum. Cadet Pratt worked with his re-
search advisor Prof. J. Berlinghieri in developing an
innovative method for recording angular positions of
the two arms of the pendulum which allowed for the
analysis of the onset of chaotic motion.
Physics News
Cadet Erik Pratt
Presentations
Page 13 Vol. 4 No. 1 Fall 2012
J. Berlinghieri, R. Hilleke, M. Rowland*, E. Rooman, Plasma acoustic speaker, Winter meeting of AAPT, Jacksonville, Fl., 8-11
January 2011
M. Pratt*, E. Rooman, J. Berlinghieri, The double compound pendulum, Summer meeting AAPT, Omaha, NB, 30July – 3 August
2011.
J. Berlinghieri, R. Hilleke, M. Rowland*, E. Rooman, Plasma acoustic speaker, Winter meeting of AAPT, Jacksonville, Fl., 8-11
January 2011
P.R. Briggs, E. Aguirre, L. Sollitt; "A New Algorithm for Assigning Fluxpoint Energies to Solid State Detector Passbands"; Fall
2011 AGU (San Francisco); SH31B-2014
L. S. Sollitt. E. Aguirre, P. Briggs; "Toward A More General Technique to Infer Ionic Charge States of Solar Energetic Particles";
Fall 2011 AGU (San Francisco); SH31B-2019
P.R. Briggs, E. Aguirre, L. Sollitt; "A New Algorithm for Assigning Fluxpoint Energies to Solid State Detector Passbands"; Fall
2011 AGU (San Francisco); SH31B-2014
L. S. Sollitt. E. Aguirre, P. Briggs; "Toward A More General Technique to Infer Ionic Charge States of Solar Energetic Particles";
Fall 2011 AGU (San Francisco); SH31B-2019
S.A. Yost, V.V. Bytev, M.Yu. Kalmykov, and B.A. Kniehl, The Epsilon Expansion of Feynman Diagrams via Hypergeometric
Functions and Differential Reduction, Proceedings of the Meeting of the Division of Particles and Fields of the American Physical
Society, Providence, July 9-13, 2011, SLAC Electronic Proceedings, 2011.
Saul Adelman A Five-year Spectroscopic and Photometric Campaign on the Prototypical Cygni Variable and A –type Supergiant
Star Deneb (2011, Astronomical Journal, 141, 17, with N. D. Richardson, N. D. Morrison, and E. E. Kyrukova)
JS. Narayanan, N. Daniilidis, S. A. Möller, R. Clark, F. Ziesel, K. Singer, F. Schmidt-Kaler, and H. Häffner J.; Electric field sens-
ing and compensation with a single ion in a planar trap, Appl. Phys. 110 114909 (2011).
J. Berlinghieri, R. Hilleke, M. Rowland*, E. Rooman, Plasma acoustic speaker, Winter meeting of AAPT, Jacksonville, Fl., 8-11
January 2011
Tim H. Osborn, Olga V. Pupysheva, Rachel S. Aga and L. C. Lew Yan Voon, Ab initio simulations of silicene hydrogenation.
Chem. Phys. Lett. 511, 101 (2011).
G.G. Guzmán-Verri and L.C. Lew Yan Voon, Band structure of hydrogenated Si nanosheets and nanotubes J. Phys. Cond. Matter
23, 145502 (2011).
L. C. Lew Yan Voon and M. Willatzen, Electromechanical phenomena in semiconductor nanostructures. J. Appl. Phys. 109,
031101 (2011).
Faculty Grants Scott Yost - U.S. Department of Energy grant DE-PS02-09ER09-01 2010 – 13, Precision Studies of Hadronic and Electro-Weak
Interactions for the LHC $74,000 for 3 years. (The third year)
Publications
Cadet Hall internship at JPL Pittman presenting results of Atsa project
The Citadel receives less than 10 per-
cent of its operating budget from state
appropriations. Other revenue comes
from student tuition and fees. We could
not offer the caliber of education that
we do without the generous support of
those who believe in the college's mis-
sion to develop tomorrow's leaders. To
learn how you can help support the
School of Science and Mathematics at
The Citadel, please feel free to contact
any of the officials listed above.
Department Heads:
Dr. John E. Weinstein, Biology
Dr. Lisa Zuraw, Chemistry
Dr. Harry Davakos, Health, Exercise, and
Sport Science
Dr. John I. Moore, Jr., Mathematics and
Computer Science
Dr. Joel Berlinghieri, Physics
The Citadel
Grimsley Hall 210
171 Moultrie Street
Phone: 843-953-5300
Fax: 843-953-5293
E-mail: [email protected]
The Schoo l o f Sc i en ce
and Mathemat i cs
Lok C. Lew Yan Voon, Dean
Susan LaMontagne, Administrative Assistant
Krystal Oliveira, Interim Assistant Dean for
Development